<h2><SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
<p class="letter">
Journey to Philadelphia—Chesapeak and Delaware Canal—City of
Philadelphia—Miss Wright’s Lecture</p>
<p>In the latter part of August, 1830, we paid a visit to Philadelphia, and,
notwithstanding the season, we were so fortunate as to have both bright and
temperate weather for the expedition. The road from Washington to Baltimore,
which was our first day’s journey, is interesting in summer from the
variety of luxuriance of the foliage which borders great parts of it.</p>
<p>We passed the night at Baltimore, and embarked next morning on board a
steam-boat for Philadelphia. The scenery of the Elk river, upon which you enter
soon after leaving the port of Baltimore, is not beautiful. We embarked at six
in the morning, and at twelve reached the Chesapeak and Delaware canal; we then
quitted the steam-boat, and walked two or three hundred yards to the canal,
where we got on board a pretty little decked boat, sheltered by a neat awning,
and drawn by four horses. This canal cuts across the state of Delaware, and
connects the Chesapeak and Delaware rivers: it has been a work of great
expense, though the distance is not more than thirteen miles; for a
considerable part of this distance the cutting has been very deep, and the
banks are in many parts thatched, to prevent their crumbling. At the point
where the cutting is deepest, a light bridge is thrown across, which, from its
great height, forms a striking object to the travellers passing below it. Every
boat that passes this canal pays a toll of twenty dollars.</p>
<p>Nothing can be less interesting than that part of the state of Delaware through
which this cut passes, the Mississippi hardly excepted. At one, we reached the
Delaware river, at a point nearly opposite Delaware Fort, which looks recently
built, and is very handsome. [This fort was destroyed by fire a few months
afterwards.] Here we again changed our vessel, and got on board another of
their noble steam-boats; both these changes were made with the greatest
regularity and dispatch.</p>
<p>There is nothing remarkable in the scenery of the Delaware. The stream is wide
and the banks are flat; a short distance before you reach Philadelphia two
large buildings of singular appearance strike the eye. On enquiry I learnt that
they were erected for the purpose of sheltering two ships of war. They are
handsomely finished, with very neat roofs, and are ventilated by many windows.
The expense of these buildings must have been considerable, but, as the
construction of the vast machines they shelter was more so, it may be good
economy.</p>
<p>We reached Philadelphia at four o’clock in the afternoon. The approach to
this city is not so striking as that to Baltimore; though much larger, it does
not now show itself so well; it wants domes and columns: it is, nevertheless, a
beautiful city. Nothing can exceed its neatness; the streets are well paved,
the foot-way, as in all the old American cities, is of brick, like the old
pantile walk at Tunbridge Wells. This is almost entirely sheltered from the sun
by the awnings, which, in all the principal streets, are spread from the shop
windows to the edge of the pavement.</p>
<p>The city is built with extreme and almost wearisome regularity; the streets,
which run north and south, are distinguished by numbers, from one to—I
know not how many, but I paid a visit in Twelth Street; these are intersected
at right angles by others, which are known by the names of various trees;
Mulberry (more commonly called Arch-street), Chesnut, and Walnut, appear the
most fashionable: in each of these there is a theatre. This mode of
distinguishing the streets is commodious to strangers, from the facility it
gives of finding out whereabouts you are; if you ask for the United States
Bank, you are told it is in Chesnut, between Third and Fourth, and as the
streets are all divided from each other by equal distances, of about three
hundred feet, you are sure of not missing your mark. There are many handsome
houses, but none that are very splendid; they are generally of brick, and those
of the better order have white marble steps, and some few, door frames of the
same beautiful material; but, on the whole, there is less display of it in the
private dwellings than at Baltimore.</p>
<p>The Americans all seem greatly to admire this city, and to give it the
preference in point of beauty to all others in the Union, but I do not agree
with them. There are some very handsome buildings, but none of them so placed
as to produce a striking effect, as is the case both with the Capitol and the
President’s house, at Washington. Notwithstanding these fine buildings,
one or more of which are to be found in all the principal streets, the <i>coup
d’oeil</i> is every where the same. There is no Place de Louis Quinze or
Carrousel, no Regent Street, or Green Park, to make one exclaim “how
beautiful!” all is even, straight, uniform, and uninteresting.</p>
<p>There is one spot, however, about a mile from the town, which presents a lovely
scene. The water-works of Philadelphia have not yet perhaps as wide extended
fame as those of Marley, but they are not less deserving it. At a most
beautiful point of the Schuylkill River the water has been forced up into a
magnificent reservoir, ample and elevated enough to send it through the whole
city. The vast yet simple machinery by which this is achieved is open to the
public, who resort in such numbers to see it, that several evening stages run
from Philadelphia to Fair Mount for their accommodation. But interesting and
curious as this machinery is, Fair Mount would not be so attractive had it not
something else to offer. It is, in truth, one of the very prettiest spots the
eye can look upon. A broad weir is thrown across the Schuylkill, which produces
the sound and look of a cascade. On the farther side of the river is a
gentleman’s seat, the beautiful lawns of which slope to the water’s
edge, and groups of weeping-willows and other trees throw their shadows on the
stream. The works themselves are enclosed in a simple but very handsome
building of freestone, which has an extended front opening upon a terrace,
which overhangs the river: behind the building, and divided from it only by a
lawn, rises a lofty wall of solid limestone rock, which has, at one or two
points, been cut into, for the passage of the water into the noble reservoir
above. From the crevices of this rock the catalpa was every where pushing
forth, covered with its beautiful blossom. Beneath one of these trees an
artificial opening in the rock gives passage to a stream of water, clear and
bright as crystal, which is received in a stone basin of simple workmanship,
having a cup for the service of the thirsty traveller. At another point, a
portion of the water in its upward way to the reservoir, is permitted to spring
forth in a perpetual <i>jet d’eau</i>, that returns in a silver shower
upon the head of a marble <i>naiad</i> of snowy whiteness. The statue is not
the work of Phidias, but its dark, rocky background, the flowery catalpas which
shadow it, and the bright shower through which it shows itself, altogether make
the scene one of singular beauty; add to which, the evening on which I saw it
was very sultry, and the contrast of this cool spot to all besides certainly
enhanced its attraction; it was impossible not to envy the nymph her eternal
shower-bath.</p>
<p>On returning from this excursion we saw handbills in all parts of the city
announcing that Miss Wright was on that evening to deliver her parting address
to the citizens of Philadelphia, at the Arch Street theatre, previous to her
departure for Europe. I immediately determined to hear her, and did so, though
not without some difficulty, from the crowds who went thither with the same
intention. The house, which is a very pretty one, was filled in every part,
including the stage, with a well dressed and most attentive audience. There was
a larger proportion of ladies present than I ever saw on any other occasion in
an American theatre. One reason for this might be, perhaps, that they were
admitted gratis.</p>
<p>Miss Wright came on the stage surrounded by a body guard of Quaker ladies, in
the full costume of their sect. She was, as she always is, startling in her
theories, but powerfully eloquent, and, on the whole, was much applauded,
though one passage produced great emotion, and some hissing. She stated
broadly, on the authority of Jefferson, furnished by his posthumous works, that
“Washington was not a Christian.” One voice from the crowded pit
exclaimed, in an accent of indignation, “Washington was a
Christian.” but it was evident that the majority of the audience
considered Mr. Jefferson’s assertion as a compliment to the
country’s idol, for the hissing was soon triumphantly clapped down.
General Washington himself, however, gives a somewhat different account of his
own principles, for in his admirable farewell address on declining a
re-election to the Presidency, I find the following passage.</p>
<p>“Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity,
religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim
the tribute of patriotism who would labour to subvert these great pillars of
human happiness, these firmest props of the destinies of men and citizens. A
volume could not trace all their connections with private and public felicity.
And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained
without religion, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national
morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.”</p>
<p>Whether Mr. Jefferson or himself knew best what his principles were, I will not
decide, but, at least, it appears fair, when repeating one statement, to add
the other also.</p>
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