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    Chapter 1 - Page 2

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    not quite a third of a mile in the two hundred
    years which have elapsed since the river took its place in history.
    The belief of the scientific people is, that the mouth used to be
    at Baton Rouge, where the hills cease, and that the two hundred
    miles of land between there and the Gulf was built by the river.
    This gives us the age of that piece of country, without any
    trouble at all--one hundred and twenty thousand years.
    Yet it is much the youthfullest batch of country that lies
    around there anywhere.

    The Mississippi is remarkable in still another way--
    its disposition to make prodigious jumps by cutting through narrow
    necks of land, and thus straightening and shortening itself.
    More than once it has shortened itself thirty miles at
    a single jump! These cut-offs have had curious effects:
    they have thrown several river towns out into the rural districts,
    and built up sand bars and forests in front of them.
    The town of Delta used to be three miles below Vicksburg:
    a recent cutoff has radically changed the position, and Delta is now TWO
    MILES ABOVE Vicksburg.

    Both of these river towns have been retired to the country by that
    cut-off. A cut-off plays havoc with boundary lines and jurisdictions:
    for instance, a man is living in the State of Mississippi to-day,
    a cut-off occurs to-night, and to-morrow the man finds himself
    and his land over on the other side of the river, within the
    boundaries and subject to the laws of the State of Louisiana!
    Such a thing, happening in the upper river in the old times,
    could have transferred a slave from Missouri to Illinois and made
    a free man of him.

    The Mississippi does not alter its locality by cut-offs alone:
    it is always changing its habitat BODILY--is always moving bodily SIDEWISE.
    At Hard Times, La., the river is two miles west of the region it
    used to occupy. As a result, the original SITE of that settlement
    is not now in Louisiana at all, but on the other side of the river,
    in the State of Mississippi. NEARLY THE WHOLE OF THAT ONE THOUSAND
    THREE HUNDRED MILES OF OLD MISSISSIPPI RIVER WHICH LA SALLE FLOATED DOWN
    IN HIS CANOES, TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO, IS GOOD SOLID DRY GROUND NOW.
    The river lies to the right of it, in places, and to the left of it
    in other places.

    Although the Mississippi's mud builds land but slowly, down at
    the mouth, where the Gulfs billows interfere with its work,
    it builds fast enough in better protected regions higher up:
    for instance, Prophet's Island contained one thousand five
    hundred acres of land thirty years ago; since then the river has
    added seven hundred acres to it.

    But enough of these examples of the mighty stream's eccentricities
    for the present--I will give a few more of them further
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