The Englishwoman in America Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Englishwoman in America Book

In 1856, Isabella Bird published this lively account of her trip to America. She entertainingly describes the difficulties and surprises of her travels by sea from England to Halifax and by road to Boston, Cincinnati, and Chicago, and the energy and diversity of American society.Read More

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  • Product Description

    Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER II. An inhospitable reception ? Halifax and the Blue Noses?The heat ? Disappointed expectations ? The great departed ? What the Blue Noses might be ? What the coach was not ? Nova Scotia and its capabilities ? The roads and their annoyances ? A tea dinner ? A night journey and a Highland cabin ? A nautical catastrophe ? A joyful reunion. The Cunard steamers are powerful, punctual, and safe, their cuisine excellent, their arrangements admirable, till they reach Halifax, which is usually the destination of many of the passengers. I will suppose that the voyage has been propitious, and our guns have thundered forth the announcement that the news of the Old World has reached the New; that the stewards have been fee'd and the captain complimented; and that we have parted on the best possible terms with the Company, the ship, and our fellow-passengers. The steamer generally remains for two or three hours at Halifax to coal, and unship a portion of her cargo, and there is a very natural desire on the part of the passengers to leave what to many is at best a floating prison, and set foot on firm ground, even for an hour. Those who, like ourselves, land at Halifax for the interior, are anxious to obtain rooms at the hotel, and all who have nothing else to do hurry to the ice-shop, where the luxury of a tumbler of raspberry-cream ice can be obtained for threepence. Besides the hurriedrush of those who with these varied objects in view leave the steamer, there are crowds of incomers in the shape of porters, visitors, and coalheavers, and passengers for the States, who prefer the comfort and known punctuality of the Royal Mail steamers to the delay, danger, and uncertainty of the intercolonial route, though the expense of the former is nearly double. There are the friends of the...

  • 0217078990
  • 9780217078993
  • Isabella Lucy Bird
  • 8 August 2009
  • General Books LLC
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 244
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