American Notes by Rudyard Kipling
page 94 of 101 (93%)
page 94 of 101 (93%)
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from San Francisco to Long Branch; and three first-class
ironclads would account for New York, Bartholdi's Statue and all. Reflect on this. 'Twould be "Pay up or go up" round the entire coast of the United States. To this furiously answers the patriotic American:--"We should not pay. We should invent a Columbiad in Pittsburg or--or anywhere else, and blow any outsider into h--l." They might invent. They might lay waste their cities and retire inland, for they can subsist entirely on their own produce. Meantime, in a war waged the only way it could be waged by an unscrupulous Power, their coast cities and their dock-yards would be ashes. They could construct their navy inland if they liked, but you could never bring a ship down to the water-ways, as they stand now. They could not, with an ordinary water patrol, despatch one regiment of men six miles across the seas. There would be about five million excessively angry, armed men pent up within American limits. These men would require ships to get themselves afloat. The country has no such ships, and until the ships were built New York need not be allowed a single-wheeled carriage within her limits. Behold now the glorious condition of this Republic which has no fear. There is ransom and loot past the counting of man on her seaboard alone--plunder that would enrich a nation--and she has neither a navy nor half a dozen first-class ports to guard the whole. No man catches a snake by the tail, because the creature |
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