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قراءة كتاب With the World's Great Travellers, Volume 2

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‏اللغة: English
With the World's Great Travellers, Volume 2

With the World's Great Travellers, Volume 2

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

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Canoe- and Camp-Life on the Madeira Franz Keller 212 Besieged by Peccaries James W. Wells 219 The Perils of Travel Ida Pfeiffer 232 Brazilian Ants and Monkeys Henry W. Bates 240 The Monarchs of the Andes James Orton 251 Inca High-Roads and Bridges E. George Squier 261

List of Illustrations

VOLUME II

Boston Common, Boston, Mass. Frontispiece
Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington 14
Memorial Monument to Samuel de Champlain, Founder of
Quebec
34
The Upper Yellowstone Falls 50
Grand Cañon, Arizona 66
Red Wood Tree, California 96
Regina Angelorum (Queen of the Angels) 116
A Waterfall in the Tropics 146
La Guayra, Venezuela 180
A South Sea Island 214
The Monarchs of the Andes 252

WITH THE WORLD’S

GREAT TRAVELLERS.


THE WORLD’S GREAT CAPITALS OF TO-DAY.

OLIVER H. G. LEIGH.


New York, Washington, Chicago.

The reflective voyager, on his first sight of New York, is baffled when he attempts to catalogue his sensations. All is so completely in contrast with the capitals of Europe. The gloriously bright sky, air that drinks like champagne, the resultant springiness of life and movement, that overdoes itself in excitement and premature exhaustion, and the obtrusively visible defects of this surface enthusiasm, monotonous streets, unfinished or unbegun city improvements, and the conspicuous lack of play-spaces for children—this is the rough portrait sketch New York draws of itself for the newcomer. It does not disguise the fact that money-making was for many years the dominant consideration. The city was laid out for business, and public comfort had to look out for itself. The workers, the poor, and the helpless were apparently overlooked.

But there are at least three New Yorks to explore. Old New York stretches from the bay up to once aristocratic Madison Square, and this is the section that first leaves its mark on the aforesaid visitor. Then comes new New York, the splendid modern metropolis that spreads from Central Park along the Hudson to the northern heights where the stately mausoleum of Grant, the transplanted Columbia University, and the great Cathedral-to-be add majestic dignity to the grandly picturesque panorama by the river. The antiquated brownstone wilderness of fashionable houses blossoms into white and gray and red clusters of mansions, richly varied in form and treatment, with the welcome grassy settings so pitifully missing in the older quarter. From a neglected span of prairie ground, pimpled with bare rocks and goat-sheltering shanties also shared by dago families, this section has in a few years qualified itself to rival the famous features of old-world cities. A nobler prospect than Riverside Drive alongside the mighty Hudson cannot be desired nor found. At last the city has discovered and worthily utilized its splendid opportunities. Then, thirdly, there is Greater New York. For the simplification of local government it is doubtless excellent policy for London and New York to lasso their humbler neighbor towns that the big cities may pose as suddenly greater than ever. The thing is done with a stroke of the pen and does not wound the pride of the newly scooped-in citizens, because the individuality of the suburban districts remains unchanged, but in our

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