ES, in a thousand years people will fly on the
wings of steam through the air, over the ocean! The young inhabitants of America
will become visitors of old Europe. They will come over to see the monuments and
the great cities, which will then be in ruins, just as we in our time make
pilgrimages to the tottering splendors of Southern Asia. In a thousand years
they will come!
The Thames, the Danube, and the Rhine still roll their course, Mont Blanc
stands firm with its snow-capped summit, and the Northern Lights gleam over the
land of the North; but generation after generation has become dust, whole rows
of the mighty of the moment are forgotten, like those who already slumber under
the hill on which the rich trader, whose ground it is, has built a bench, on
which he can sit and look out across his waving corn fields.
“To Europe!” cry the young sons of America; “to the land of our ancestors,
the glorious land of monuments and fancy—to Europe!”
The ship of the air comes. It is crowded with passengers, for the transit is
quicker than by sea. The electro-magnetic wire under the ocean has already
telegraphed the number of the aerial caravan. Europe is in sight. It is the
coast of Ireland that they see, but the passengers are still asleep; they will
not be called till they are exactly over England. There they will first step on
European shore, in the land of Shakespeare, as the educated call it; in the land
of politics, the land of machines, as it is called by others.
Here they stay a whole day. That is all the time the busy race can devote to
the whole of England and Scotland. Then the journey is continued through the
tunnel under the English Channel, to France, the land of Charlemagne and
Napoleon. Moliere is named, the learned men talk of the classic school of remote
antiquity. There is rejoicing and shouting for the names of heroes, poets, and
men of science, whom our time does not know, but who will be born after our time
in Paris, the centre of Europe, and elsewhere.
The air steamboat flies over the country whence Columbus went forth, where
Cortez was born, and where Calderon sang dramas in sounding verse. Beautiful
black-eyed women live still in the blooming valleys, and the oldest songs speak
of the Cid and the Alhambra.
Then through the air, over the sea, to Italy, where once lay old, everlasting
Rome. It has vanished! The Campagna lies desert. A single ruined wall is shown
as the remains of St. Peter's, but there is a doubt if this ruin be genuine.
Next to Greece, to sleep a night in the grand hotel at the top of Mount
Olympus, to say that they have been there; and the journey is continued to the
Bosphorus, to rest there a few hours, and see the place where Byzantium lay; and
where the legend tells that the harem stood in the time of the Turks, poor
fishermen are now spreading their nets.
Over the remains of mighty cities on the broad Danube, cities which we in our
time know not, the travellers pass; but here and there, on the rich sites of
those that time shall bring forth, the caravan sometimes descends, and departs
thence again.
Down below lies Germany, that was once covered with a close net of railway
and canals, the region where Luther spoke, where Goethe sang, and Mozart once
held the sceptre of harmony. Great names shine there, in science and in art,
names that are unknown to us. One day devoted to seeing Germany, and one for the
North, the country of Oersted and Linnaeus, and for Norway, the land of the old
heroes and the young Normans. Iceland is visited on the journey home. The
geysers burn no more, Hecla is an extinct volcano, but the rocky island is still
fixed in the midst of the foaming sea, a continual monument of legend and
poetry.
“There is really a great deal to be seen in Europe,” says the young American,
“and we have seen it in a week, according to the directions of the great
traveller” (and here he mentions the name of one of his contemporaries) “in his
celebrated work, ‘How to See All Europe in a Week.’”