登陆注册
37606300000022

第22章

The Great West

In days before the railway had made possible a bulky commerce by overland routes, rivers furnished the chief means of access to inland regions.The fame of the Ganges, the Euphrates, the Nile, and the Danube shows the part which great rivers have played in history.Of North America's four greatest river systems, the two in the far north have become known in times so recent that their place in history is not yet determined.One of them, the Mackenzie, a mighty stream some two thousand miles long, flows into the Arctic Ocean through what remains chiefly a wilderness.

The waters of the other, the Saskatchewan, discharge into Hudson Bay more than a thousand miles from their source, flowing through rich prairie land which is still but scantily peopled.On the Saskatchewan, as on the remaining two systems, the St.Lawrence and the Mississippi, the French were the pioneers.Though today the regions drained by these four rivers are dominated by the rival race, the story which we now follow is one of romantic enterprise in which the honors are with France.

More perhaps by accident than by design had the French been the first to settle on the St.Lawrence.Fishing vessels had hovered round the entrance to the Gulf of St.Lawrence for years before, in 1535, the French sailor, Jacques Cartier, advanced up the river as far as the foot of the torrential rapids where now stands the city of Montreal.Cartier was seeking a route to the Far East.He half believed that this impressive waterway drained the plains of China and that around the next bend he might find the busy life of an oriental city.The time came when it was known that a great sea lay between America and Asia and the mystery of the pathway to this sea long fascinated the pioneers of the St.Lawrence.Canada was a colony, a trading-post, a mission, the favorite field of Jesuit activity, but it was also the land which offered by way of the St.Lawrence a route leading illimitably westward to the Far East.

One other route rivaled the St.Lawrence in promise, and that was the Mississippi.The two rivers are essentially different in their approaches and in type.The mouth of the St.Lawrence opens directly towards Europe and of all American rivers lies nearest to the seafaring peoples of Europe.Since it flows chiefly in a rocky bed, its course changes little; its waters are clear, and they become icy cold as they approach the sea and mingle with the tide which flows into the great Gulf of St.Lawrence from the Arctic regions.The Mississippi, on the other hand, is a turbid, warm stream, flowing through soft lands.Its shifting channel is divided at its mouth by deltas created from the vast quantity of soil which the river carries in its current.On the low-lying, forest-clad, northern shore of the Gulf of Mexico it was not easy to find the mouth of the Mississippi by approaching it from the sea.The voyage there from France was long and difficult; and, moreover, Spain claimed the lands bordering on the Gulf of Mexico and declared herself ready to drive out all intruders.

Nature, it is clear, dictated that, if France was to build up her power in the interior of the New World, it was the valley of the St.Lawrence which she should first occupy.Time has shown the riches of the lands drained by the St.Lawrence.On no other river system in the world is there now such a multitude of great cities.The modern traveler who advances by this route to the sources of the river beyond the Great Lakes surveys wonders ever more impressive.Before his view appear in succession Quebec, Montreal, Toronto, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Duluth, and many other cities and towns, with millions in population and an aggregate of wealth so vast as to stagger the imagination.

Step by step had the French advanced from Quebec to the interior.

Champlain was on Lake Huron in 1615, and there the Jesuits soon had a flourishing mission to the Huron Indians.They had only to follow the shore of Lake Huron to come to the St.Mary's River bearing towards the sea the chilly waters of Lake Superior.On this river, a much frequented fishing ground of the natives, they founded the mission of Sainte Marie du Saut.Farther to the south, on the narrow opening connecting Lake Huron and Lake Michigan, grew up the post known as Michilimackinac.It was then inevitable that explorers and missionaries should press on into both Lake Superior and Lake Michigan.By the time that Frontenac came first to Canada in 1672 the French had a post called St.

Esprit on the south shore of Lake Superior near its western end and they had also passed westward from Lake Michigan and founded posts on both the Illinois and the Wisconsin Rivers which flow into the Mississippi.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 倾城樱恋

    倾城樱恋

    一个女生,三个男生的毒药。她,经历了一次网上的告白,却在现实中见到了他。第一次,男生向她告白,第二次,男生强吻了她……她的闺蜜,魏小冉,青梅竹马的他…一次出国,改变了她的生活,回来后,青梅竹马的他,已经有了她…她漠然面对,却没想到,他蓦然回首,和她相恋……【初次发文,多多关照…】
  • 为你寂寞

    为你寂寞

    佳郁的一生有三个重要的男人:爸爸,何阳,展俊涛。第一个给她所有的爱,可是却无法陪伴她走更长的路;何阳,最美好的初恋,让她明白爱的反面不是恨,而是漠然;展俊涛,使她醒悟你能伤害到的人只能是这个世上最爱你的人……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 古灵剑诀

    古灵剑诀

    吴墨竹是修仙界的一个大家族——吴家的一名普通弟子,在一次偶然中。。。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 进入游戏称霸全服

    进入游戏称霸全服

    游戏天才秦洛,一个靠代打为生的宅男,在游戏《神迹》出现时,沉迷其中,谁知却陷入一个巨大的渊源
  • 玉箓资度午朝仪

    玉箓资度午朝仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 醉梦图腾

    醉梦图腾

    为何而战,为心,为情,为仇!没有人愿意从小就生活在仇恨当中,可是仇恨让文一步一步的成长。没有人愿意成为一个懦夫,这个世界的人渴望强大,选择了不断的战斗。没有任何的利益让人与人之间的感情中,文始终相信着他的队友。图腾大陆,因为文的降生变得精彩,从而解开了这个大陆最大的谜团。
  • 玄机兽游

    玄机兽游

    自古异兽充满神秘与玄奥,千万年前,异兽横行世间,开创了兽族争霸的旷世时代,千万年后,异兽行踪诡秘,鲜为人知,然而一个身世迷离的少年却注定要跟这些神奇的物种谱下纠葛的故事,他的使命,就是寻觅曾经辉煌的异兽,重塑兽族的神话,他就是这一世的兽皇。兽道艰险,面对无数困难,他会如何激发悠古的力量,如何战胜一个又一个强敌,如何写下这部奇诡的历史……
  • 财迷传送门

    财迷传送门

    突然拥有了一扇可以穿越空间的门,你可以去你任何想去的地方,你会去哪里?山巅?海岛?或者是金库?古墓?还是……可是这个传送门却贪财的很,男主与它斗智斗勇的同时,发现了一个惊天大秘密!