A Journey through Texas; or, a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern FrontierUniversity of Texas Press, 22. 7. 2010 - Počet stran: 564 Early in the year 1854 Frederick Law Olmsted, a young New England journalist, crossed the Louisiana border and set off on horseback into the teeth of the Texas winter. In A Journey through Texas he recounts his travels along the Old San Antonio Road through East Texas' piney woods, the dry prairies further west, the chaparral of South Texas, the coastal prairies, and the rich bottomlands around Houston and Galveston. Olmsted does not romanticize the discomforts of his trip—the monotonous food, crude housing, wet and dry northers, rough companions—yet his book reflects a sense of limitless possibility for this new and open country. The cultured Easterner remembers in relentless detail the squalor and brutality met with in parts of East Texas, but he writes fondly of the civility and cleanliness of the German settlements around New Braunfels. In his introductory "A Letter to a Southern Friend," omitted in earlier reprints, Olmsted sets forth his views opposing the extension of slavery into the West and promoting free-soil agriculture for frontier states. The remarkably versatile Olmsted is best known as the founder of landscape architecture in America and for works including Central Park and Stanford University. In his Foreword, Larry McMurtry calls A Journey through Texas an "intelligent, lively, readable book, packed with keen observation and lightened by a delicate strain of humor." |
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... Cotton Kingdom ( 1861 ) had a good deal of influence , both at home and abroad . Though in some ways clumsier than the original volumes , thanks to some rather hasty updating , it still provides a very readable survey of antebellum ...
... cotton is yet too low to permit him to invest money where it does not promise to be immediately and directly pro- ductive . The Iowan may still have one or two thousand dollars , to be lent to merchants , mechanics , or manufacturers ...
... cotton — for cotton , almost alone , of all he can produce under these disadvantages , bears the cost of transportation to cash customers . He will rarely , as I have supposed , invest in a carpenter ; he will rarely undertake the ...
... cotton — a quality so valua- ble that Texans sell scarcely anything out of the State but cotton , which they even find it profitable to exchange for corn raised in Ohio , and taxed with the expense of a great transportation , and ...
... cotton and wool stuffs more by the yard . Will you say that no superficial observations of a passing stranger can shake your confidence in the great higher law of demand and supply ? That slavery cannot be forced by any legis- lation to ...