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第39章

voyage of the paper canoe-第39章

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ig pine woods;〃 I kept a sharp lookout for the old women who were to give me so much trouble; but the raftsmen on the river explained that though Jim Gore had told me the truth; I had misunderstood his pronunciation of the word reaches; or river bends; which are called in this vicinity wretches。  The reaches referred to by Mr。 Gore were so long and straight as to afford open passages for wind to blow up them; and these fierce gusts of head winds give the raftsmen much trouble while poling their rafts against them。

My fears of ill treatment were now at rest; for my tiny craft; with her sharp…pointed bow; was well adapted for such work。  Landing at the ferry where a small scow or flat…boat was resting upon the firm land; the ferryman; Mr。 Daniel Dunkin; would not permit me to camp out of doors while his log…cabin was only one mile away on the pine…covered uplands。  He told me that the boundary…line between North and South Carolina crossed this swamp three and a half miles below Piraway Ferry; and that the first town on the river Waccamaw; in South Carolina; Conwayborough; was a distance of ninety miles by river and only thirty miles by land。  There was but one bridge over the river; from its head to Conwayborough; and it was built by Mr。 James Wortham; twenty years before; for his plantation。  This bridge was twenty miles below Piraway; and from it by land to a settlement on Little River; which empties into the Atlantic; was a distance of only five miles。  A short canal would connect this river and its lumber regions with Little River and the sea。

For the first time in my experience as a  traveller I had entered a country where the miles were short。  When fifteen years old I made my first journey alone and on foot from the vicinity of Boston to the White Mountains of New Hampshire。  This boyish pedestrian trip  occupied about twenty…one days; and covered some three hundred miles of hard tramping。  New England gives honest measure on the  finger…posts along her highways。  The traveller learns by well…earned experience the length of her miles; but in the wilderness of the south there is no standard of five thousand two hundred and eighty feet to a statute mile; and the watermen along the sea…coast are ignorant of the fact that one…sixtieth of a degree of latitude (about six thousand and eighty feet) is the geographical and nautical mile of the cartographer; as well as the 〃knot〃 of the sailor。

At Piraway Ferry no two of the raftsmen and lumbermen; ignorant or educated; would give the same distance; either upon the lengths of surveyed roads or unmeasured rivers。  〃It is one hundred and sixty…five miles by river from Piraway Ferry to Conwayborough;〃 said one who had travelled the route for years。 The most moderate estimate made was that of ninety miles by river。  The reader; therefore; must not accuse me of  overstating distances while absent from the seaboard; as my friends of the Coast Survey Bureau have not yet penetrated into these interior regions with their theodolites; plane…tables; and  telametrerods。  To the canoeist; who is ambitious to score up miles instead of collecting geographical notes; these wild rivers afford an excellent opportunity to satisfy his aims。

From sixty to eighty miles can be rowed in ten hours as easily as forty miles can be gone over upon a river of slow current in the  northern states。  There is; I am sorry to say; a class of American travellers who  〃do〃 all the capitals of Europe in the same business…like way; and if they have anything to say in regard to every…day life in the countries through which they pass; they forget to thank the compiler of the guide…book for the information they possess。

There was but one room in the cabin of my new acquaintance; who represented that class of piny…woods people called in the south  because they subsist largely upon corn;  Corn Crackers; or Crackers。 These Crackers are the 〃poor white folks〃 of the planter; and 〃de white trash〃 of the old slave; who now as a freedman is  beginning to feel the responsibility of his position。

These Crackers are a very kind…hearted people; but few of them can read or write。  The children of the negro; filled with curiosity and a  newborn pride; whenever opportunity permits;  attend the schools in large numbers; but the very indolent white man seems to be destitute of all ambition; and his children; in many places in the south; following close in the father's footsteps; grow up in an almost unimaginable ignorance。

The news of the arrival of the little Maria Theresa at Piraway Ferry spread with  astonishing rapidity through the woods; and on Sunday; after 〃de shoutings;〃 as the negroes call their meetings; were over; the blacks came in  numbers to see 〃dat Yankee…man's paper canno。〃

These simple people eyed me from head to foot with a grave sort of curiosity; their great mouths open; displaying pearly teeth of which a white man might well be proud。 〃You is a good man; capt'n  we knows dat;〃 they said; and when I asked why; the answer showed their childlike faith。  〃'Cause you couldn't hab come all dis way in a paper boat if de Lord hadn't helped you。 He dono help only good folks。〃

The Cracker also came with his children to view the wonder; while the raftsmen were so struck with the advantages of my double paddle; which originated with the inhabitants of the Arctic regions; that they laid it upon a board and drew its outlines with chalk。  They vowed they would introduce it upon the river。

These Crackers declared it would take more than 〃de shoutings;〃 or any other religious service; to improve the moral condition of the blacks。  They openly accused the colored preachers of disturbing the nocturnal rest of their hens and turkeys; and as to hog…stealing and cow…killing; 〃Why; we won't have any  critters left ef this carpet…bag government lasts much longer!〃 they feelingly exclaimed。

〃We does nothing to nobody。  We lets the niggers alone; but niggers will steal  they can't help it; the poor devils; it's in 'em。 Now; ef they eats us out of house and home; what can a poor man do? They puts 'em up for justices of peace; and sends 'em to the legislature; when they can't read more'n us; and they do say it's 'cause we fit in the Confederate sarvice that they razes the nigger over our heads。 Now; does the folkes up north like to see white people tyrannized over by niggers?  Jes tell 'em when you go back; stranger; that we's got soulds like yours up north; and we's got feelings too; by thunder! jes like other white men。  This was a white man's country once  now it's all niggers and dogs。 Why; them niggers in the legislature has  spitboxes lined with gold to spit in!  What's this country a…coming to? We wish the niggers no harm if they lets our hogs and chickens alone。〃

After this tirade it was amusing to see how friendly the whites and blacks were。 The  Crackers conversed with these children of Ham; who had been stealing their hams for so long a time; in the most kindly way; realizing; perhaps; that they had various peculiar traits of their own; and must; after all; endure their neighbors。

A traveller should place facts before his  readers; and leave to them the drawing of the moral。 Northern men and women who go to the  southern states and reside for even the short space of a year or two; invariably change their life…long views and principles regarding the negro as a moral and social creature。  When these people return to their homes in Maine or Massachusetts (as did the representatives of the Granges of the northern states after they had visited South  Carolina in 1875) a new light; derived from contact with facts; dawns upon them; while their  surprised and untravelled neighbors say: 〃So you have become Southern in your views。  I never would have thought that of you。〃

The railroad has become one of the great  mediums of enlightenment to mankind; and joins in a social fraternity the disunited elements of a country。  God grant that the resources of the great South may soon be developed by the  capital and free labor of the North。 Our sister states of the South; exhausted by the struggles of the late war which resulted in consolidating more firmly than ever the great Union; are now ready to receive every hone

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