Summary
We have arrived at Panama in perfect safety, and the glorious Pacific, that mightiest world of waters, is at this moment rolling its majestic waves under my windows as I write. I must give an account, as well as I can, of our voyage and journey.
Through General C––'s kind offices everything was most comfortably and delightfully arranged for us on board the magnificent steamer “Georgia,” and through his considerate attention and kindness I had also the advantage and comfort of an agreeable acquaintance with an amiable American lady on board, who was going with her little boy to join her husband in California.
This steamer is commanded by an officer of the United States navy, Lieutenant Porter, son of the celebrated Commodore Porter. It is impossible anywhere to meet with a more perfect, high-bred, and finished gentleman than Lieutenant Porter. He seemed indefatigable in his kind endeavours to render the passengers comfortable, and his courteous attentions to all could not be too highly praised. There was an immense number of passengers altogether, chiefly deck passengers, en route to California (report said thirteen hundred, but I believe that was a little exaggeration), and yet everything was conducted with as much order and regularity, and the ship was as perfectly quiet as if there had only been thirty. Our cabins were large, and exceedingly commodious and particularly nicely furnished.
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- Travels in the United States, etc. during 1849 and 1850 , pp. 235 - 256Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1851