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snort of the iron horse; coal and iron are found to abound on the plains as soon as the railroad kings have need of them; the very desert becomes fruitful; and at Humboldt Wells, on the Central Pacific Railroad, in the midst of the sage-brush and alkali country, you will see corn, wheat, potatoes, and fruits of different kinds growing luxuriantly, with the help of culture and irrigation, - proving that this vast tract, long supposed to be worthless, needs only skillful treatment to become valuable.

8. One can not help but speculate upon what kind of men Americans will be when all these now desolate plains are filled; when cities shall be found where now only the lonely depot or the infrequent cabin stands; when the iron and coal of these regions shall have become, as they soon must, the foundation of great manufacturing populations; and when, perhaps, the whole continent will be covered by our Stars and Stripes. No other nation has ever spread over so large a territory or so diversified a surface as ours. From the low, seawashed shores of the Atlantic, your California journey carries you over boundless plains which lie nearly as high as the summit of Mount Washington.

9. Americans are digging silver ore in Colorado, three thousand feet higher than the highest point of the White Mountains. At Virginia City, in Nevada, one of the busiest centers of mining, the traveler finds it hard to draw in breath enough for rapid motion; and many persons, when they first arrive there, suffer from bleeding at the nose by reason of the rarity of the air. Again, in Maine half the farmer's year is spent in accumulating supplies for the other and frozen half; all over the Northern States the preparation for winter is an important part of our lives: but in San Francisco the winter is the pleasantest part of the year; in Los Angeles they do not think it needful to build fire-places, and scarcely chimneys, in their houses.

10. And one people, speaking the same language, reading the same books, holding a common religion, and paying taxes to the same government, pervades these various altitudes and climates, and is, with the potent help of the railroad, fused constantly more closely together as a nation. What manner of man will be the American of 1972, the product of so many different climes, of so various a range as to altitude?

11. In the plains and on the mountains, the railroad is the one great fact. Whatever you notice by the way, that is the handiwork of man, appears to be there solely for the convenience or safety of those who are passing over the road. On the Union Pacific you see miles upon miles of snow-fences. On the Central Pacific, thirty or forty miles of solid snowsheds, thoroughly built, and fully guarded by gangs of laborers, make the passage safe in the severest snow-storms. Great snow-plows, eleven feet high, stand at intervals on the plains and in the mountains, ready to drive, with three or four, or even seven or eight, locomotives behind them, the snow out of the cuts.

12. The telegraph accompanies you on your whole long journey Coal mines are opened to furnish fuel to your locomotives. At intervals of a hundred miles, night and day, you hear mon beating the wheels of the train to see if they are sound. Eating-stations furnish you your meals; ice is supplied on the way; laborers stand aside in the desert and on the mountains as the train sweeps by, and close up behind it to repair the track and keep it in order; there is a Chinaman on every mile of the Central Pacific Railroad.

13. And this road is not only a marvel of engineering skill and daring, running through a most difficult country, and abounding in deep rock-cuts, tunnels, and snow-sheds, but you will find its road-bed everywhere firm and solid, as though it had been laid for years, the cuts clean and clear, and on every part of the work an air of finish and

precision, which shows the confidence of its owners, and the thorough spirit in which it was conceived and completed, and is maintained.

14. You reach San Francisco by passing through the great Sacramento Plain, one of the famous wheat-fields of the State, to Vallejo (Val la' ho), whence you sail down the magnificent bay of San Francisco to the city; and thus you have, to the last hour of your journey, some new scene opening to your eyes; and when you go to sleep in your hotel at last, you may dream of the Cliff House ride as a pleasure still to come. Charles Nordhoff.

DEFINITIONS.

Ac ces'so ry, that which belongs to something else as its principal. Cañ ́on (kăn’yun), a deep gorge between high and steep banks worn by water-courses.

Flume, a stream; an artificial channel of water for gold-washing.
Im'pe tus, the force with which any body is driven; momentum.

Si ĕr'ra (Spanish, a saw), a chain of mountains.

Ver'i ta ble (veritas, truth), agreeable to truth; actual.

LESSON XXXIV.

CHOICE EXTRACTS.

1. THE RAINBOW.

My heart leaps up when I behold
A rainbow in the sky;
So was it when my life began;
So is it now I am a man;
So be it when I shall grow old,

Or let me die!

The child is father of the man,
And I could wish my days to be
Bound each to each by natural piety.

2. AVOID ENVY.

Wordsworth.

Let no mean jealousies pervert your mind,
A blemish in another's fame to find:
Be grateful for the gifts that you possess,
Nor deem a rival's merits makes yours less.

3. PRAYER.

Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,

Uttered or unexpressed,

The motion of a hidden fire

That trembles in the breast.

Prayer is the simplest form of speech
That infant lips can try ;

Prayer, the sublimest strains that reach

The Majesty on high.

4. DOMESTIC PEACE.

Tell me, on what holy ground
May Domestic Peace be found?
Halcyon daughter of the skies,
Far on fearful wings she flies,
From the pomp of sceptered state,
From the rebel's noisy hate.
In a cottaged vale she dwells,
Listening to the Sabbath bells.
Still around her steps are seen
Spotless Honor's meeker mien,
Love, the sire of pleasing fears,
Sorrow smiling through her tears,

Cowper.

Montgomery.

And, conscious of the past employ,
Memory, bosom-spring of joy.

5. THE PATRIOTIC BRAVE.

How sleep the brave who sink to rest,
By all their country's wishes blest!
When Spring, with dewy fingers cold,
Returns to deck their hallowed mold,
She there shall dress a sweeter sod
Than Fancy's feet have ever trod.
By fairy hands their knell is rung,
By forms unseen their dirge is sung;
There Honor comes, a pilgrim gray,
To bless the turf that wraps their clay,
And Freedom shall awhile repair,
And dwell a weeping hermit there.

Coleridge.

Collins.

6. THE SOUL ON EARTH.

The soul on earth is an immortal guest
Compelled to starve at an unreal feast;

A spark, which upward tends by nature's force,
A stream diverted from its parent source,

A drop dissevered from the boundless sea,
A moment parted from eternity,

A pilgrim panting for a rest to come,

An exile anxious for his native home.

7. SYMPATHY.

The heart, the heart! O, let it spare

A sigh for others' pain;

The breath that soothes a brother's care
Is never spent in vain.

T. More.

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