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    Chapter 10 - Page 2

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    the whole of my voyage to
    Canton and back again. As for Neb, he rolled his dark eyes about in
    wonder, and took an occasion to say to me--"He'll make her talk,
    Masser Miles, afore he have done." I make no doubt the navigation from
    the Forelands to the bridges, as it was conducted thirty years since,
    had a great influence on the seamanship of the English. Steamers are
    doing away with much of this practice, though the colliers still have
    to rely on themselves. Coals will scarcely pay for tugging.

    I had been directed by Captain Williams to deliver the brig to her
    original consignee, an American merchant established in the modern
    Babylon, reserving the usual claim for salvage. This I did, and that
    gentleman sent hands on board to take charge of the vessel, relieving
    me entirely from all farther responsibility. As the captain in his
    letter had, inadvertently I trust, mentioned that he had put
    "Mr. Wallingford, his _third_ mate," in charge, I got no
    invitation to dinner from the consignee; though the affair of the
    capture under Dungeness found its way into the papers, _viâ_
    Deal, I have always thought, with the usual caption of "Yankee Trick."
    Yankee trick! This phrase, so often carelessly used, has probably done
    a great deal of harm in this country. The young and ambitious--there
    are all sorts of ambition, and, among others, that of being a rogue;
    as a proof of which, one daily hears people call envy, jealousy,
    covetousness, avarice, and half of the meaner vices, ambition--the
    young and _ambitious_, then, of this country, too often think to
    do a _good_ thing, that shall have some of the peculiar merit of
    a certain other good thing that they have heard laughed at and
    applauded, under this designation. I can account in no other manner
    for the great and increasing number of "Yankee tricks" that are of
    daily occurrence among us. Among other improvements in taste, not to
    say in morals, that might be introduced into the American press, would
    be the omission of the histories of these rare inventions. As
    two-thirds of the editors of the whole country, however, are Yankees,
    I suppose they must be permitted to go on exulting in the cleverness
    of their race. We are indebted to the Puritan stock for most of our
    instructors--editors and school-masters--and when one coolly regards

    the prodigious progress of the people in morals, public and private
    virtue, honesty, and other estimable qualities, he must indeed rejoice
    in the fact that our masters so early discovered "a church without a
    bishop."

    I had an opportunity, while in London, however, of ascertaining that
    the land of our fathers, which by the way has archbishops, contains
    something besides an unalloyed
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