Summary
The city of Portland, with its busy streets, and crowded wharfs, and handsome buildings, and railway depôts, rising as it does on the barren coast of the sterile State of Maine, fully bears out the first part of an assertion which I had already heard made by Americans, “We're a great people, the greatest nation on the face of the earth.”
A polite custom-house officer asked me if I had anything contraband in my trunks, and on my reply in the negative they were permitted to pass without even the formality of being uncorded. “Enlightened citizens” they are truly, I thought, and, with the pleasant consciousness of being in a perfectly free country, where every one can do as he pleases, I entered an hotel near the water and sat down in the ladies' parlour. I had not tasted food for twenty-five hours, my clothes were cold and wet, a severe cut was on my temple, and I felt thoroughly exhausted. These circumstances, I thought, justified me in ringing the bell and asking for a glass of wine. Visions of the agreeable refreshment which would be produced by the juice of the grape appeared simultaneously with the waiter. I made the request, and he brusquely replied, “You can't have it, it's contrary to law.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Englishwoman in America , pp. 90 - 103Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1856