RETROSPECT OF WESTERN TRAVEL. SOCIETY IN AMERICA,' IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II. LONDON: PUBLISHED BY SAUNDERS AND OTLEY. NEW-YORK: SOLD BY HARPER & BROTHERS. RETROSPECT OF WESTERN TRAVEL. MISSISSIPPI VOYAGE. "That it was full of monsters who devoured canoes as well as men; that the devil stopped its passage, and sunk all those who ventured to approach the place where he stood; and that the river itself at last was swallowed up in the bottomless gulf of a tremendous whirlpool."— Quarterly Review. "Hic ver purpureum : varios hic flumina circum VIRGIL. ABOUT four o'clock in the afternoon of the 6th of May we were convoyed, by a large party of friends, to the "Henry Clay," on board of which accommodations had been secured for us by great exertion on the part of a fellow-voyager. The "Henry Clay" had the highest reputation of any boat on the river, having made ninety-six trips without accident; a rare feat on this dangerous river. As I was stepping on board, Judge P. said he hoped we were each provided with a life-preserver. I concluded he was in joke; but he declared himself perfectly serious, adding that we should probably find ourselves the only cabin passengers unprovided with this means of safety. We should have been informed of this before; it was too late now. Mr. E., of our party on board, told me all that this inquiry made me anxious to know. He had been accustomed to ascend and descend the river annually with his family, and he made his arrangements according to his knowledge of the danger of the navigation. It was his custom to sit up till near the time of other people's VOL. II.-B |