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Chapter 2 New Orleans - Society - Creoles and Quadroons V

Word Count: 2726    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

erable excitement and deep interest in almost every object that meets us. New Orleans presents very little that c

ons, the occasional groups of wild and savage looking Indians, the unwonted aspect of the vegetation, the huge and turbid river, w

guage about equally French and English. The market is handsome and well supplied, all produce being conveyed by the river. We were much pleased by the chant with which the Negro

which I could learn no other name than "Spanish moss;" it hangs gracefully from the boughs, converting the outline of all the trees it hangs upon into that of weeping willows. The chief beauty of the forest in this region is from the luxuriant undergrowth of palmetos, which is decidedly the loveliest coloured and most graceful plant I know. The pawpaw, too, is a splendid shrub, and in great a

t orange hedge attracted our attention; here we saw green peas fit for the table, and a fine crop of red pepper ripening in the sun. A young Negress was employed on the steps of the house; that she was a slave made her an object of interest to us. She was the first slave we had ever spoken to, and I believe we all felt that we could hardly address her with sufficient gentleness. She little dre

every Negro man, woman, and child that passed, my fancy wove some little romance of misery, as belonging to each of them; since I have know

ng laws to ribbon and to wire, and ushering caps and bonnets into existence. She was an English woman, and I was told that she possessed great intellectual endowments, and much information; I really believe this was true. Her manner was easy and graceful, with a good deal of French tournure; and the gentleness with

and set it down as a national peculiarity, or republican custom, that milliners took the lead in the best society, I should greatly falsify facts. I do not remember the same thing happening to me again, and this is one instance among a thousand, of the impression every circums

by founding a philosophical school at New Harmony. There was something in the hollow square legislations of Mr. Owen, that struck him as admirable, and he seems, as far as I can understand, to have intended aiding his views, by a sort of incipient hollow square drilling; teaching the young ideas of all he could catch, to shoot into parallelogramic form and order. This venerable philosopher, like all of his school that I ever heard of, loved better to originate lofty imaginings of faultless systems, than to watch their application to practice. With much liberality he p

nial to its peculiar formation, and, therefore, took its flight to Mexico, leaving the body to perform the operations of both, in whatever manner it liked best; and the body, being a French body, found no difficulty in setting actively to work without troubling the soul about it; and soon becoming conscious that the more simple was a machine, the more perfect were its operations, she threw out all that related to the intellectual part of the busi

eole families, who are chiefly planters and merchants, with their wives and daughters; these meet together, eat together, and are very grand and aristocratic; each of their balls is a little Almack's, and every portly dame of the set is as exclusive in her princip

ntle, and amiable, these are not admitted, nay, are not on any terms admissable, into the society of the Creole families of Louisiana. They cannot marry; that is to say, no ceremony can render an union with them legal or binding; yet such is the powerful effect of their very peculiar grace, beauty, and sweetness of manner, that unfortunately they perpetually become th

Europe to care much for either; or, indeed, for any other of the town delights

England with her, dedicated to a pursuit widely different from her subsequent occupations. Instead of becoming a public orator in every town throughout America, she was about, as she said, to seclude herself for life in the deepest forests of the western world, that her fortune, her time, and her talents might be exclusively devoted to aid the cause of the suffering Africans. Her first object was to shew that nature had

nterest, and has certainly never yet been fairly tried; and I expected for my children and myself bot

les bains Vigier) at Paris. The annexed drawing will give a correct idea of their form. The room to which the double line of windows belongs, is a very handsome apartment; before each window a neat little cot is arranged in such a manner as to give its drapery the a

gh the customhouse, and finished our sight-seeing. We found the room destined for the use of the ladies dismal enough, as its only windows were below the stem gallery; but both this and the gentlemen's cabin were handsomely fitted up, and the former well carpeted; but oh! that carpet! I will not, I may not describe its condition; indeed it r

" I may be too general. The United States form a continent of almost distinct nations, and I must now, and always, be understood to speak only of that portion of them which I have seen. In conversing with Americans I have constantly found that if I alluded to anything which they thought I considered as uncouth, they would assure me it was local, and not

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Contents

Chapter 1 Entrance of the Mississippi - Balize Chapter 2 New Orleans - Society - Creoles and Quadroons V Chapter 3 Company on board the Steam Boat - Scenery of the Chapter 4 Departure from Memphis - Ohio River Louisville - Chapter 5 Cincinnati - Forest Farm - Mr. Bullock Chapter 6 Servants - Society - Evening Parties Chapter 7 Market - Museum - Picture Gallery - Academy o Chapter 8 Absence of public and private Amusement - Churche Chapter 9 Schools - Climate - Water Melons - Fourth of Chapter 10 Removal to the country - Walk in the forest - Chapter 11 Religion
Chapter 12 Peasantry, compared to that of England - Early m
Chapter 13 Theatre - Fine Arts - Delicacy - Shaking Qua
Chapter 14 American Spring - Controversy between Messrs. Ow
Chapter 15 Camp-Meeting
Chapter 16 Danger of rural excursions - Sickness
Chapter 17 Departure from Cincinnati - Society on board the
Chapter 18 Departure for the mountains in the Stage - Scene
Chapter 19 Baltimore - Catholic Cathedral - St. Mary's -
Chapter 20 Voyage to Washington - Capitol - City of Washi
Chapter 21 Stonington - Great Falls of the Potomac
Chapter 22 Small Landed Proprietors - Slavery
Chapter 23 Fruits and Flowers of Maryland and Virginia - Co
Chapter 24 Journey to Philadelphia - Chesapeak and Delaware
Chapter 25 Washington Square - American Beauty - Gallery
Chapter 26 Quakers - Presbyterians - Itinerant Methodist
Chapter 27 Return to Stonington - Thunderstorm - Emigrant
Chapter 28 American Cooking - Evening Parties - Dress -
Chapter 29 Literature - Extracts - Fine Arts - Educatio
Chapter 30 Journey to New York
Chapter 31 Reception of Captain Basil Hall's Book in the Un
Chapter 32 Journey to Niagara - Hudson
Chapter 33 Niagara - Arrival at Forsythes
Chapter 34 Return to New York - Conclusion
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