CHAPTER IV.
THE ECONOMY OF VIRGINIA.
An Englishman will cross three thousand miles of sea, and,
landing in our Free States, find, under a different sky and
climate, a people speaking the same language, influenced by
the same literature, giving allegiance to the same common
law, and with not very dissimilar tastes, manners, or opinions,
on the whole, to those of his own people. What most strikes
him is an apparent indifference to conditions of living which
he would at home call shabby. He will find men, however,
at whose homes he will hardly see anything, either of substance,
custom, or manner, by which he would know that he
was out of England, and if he asks how these manage to get
waiters who do not smell of the stable; and grooms who keep
stirrups bright; roofs which do not leak; lawns which are
better than stubble fields; walks which are not grassy; fences
which do not need shoreing up; staunch dogs; clean guns;
strong boots and clothes that will go whole through a thicket;
the true answer will be, by taking double the pains and
paying double as much as would be necessary to secure the
same results in England, and that few men are willing or able
to do this.
I make half a day's journey southward here, and I find, with an equal resemblance between the people and those I left, an indifference to conditions of living, which Mrs. Stowe's Ophelia describes as "shiftless," and which makes the same