Minnesota; Its Character and Climate eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 159 pages of information about Minnesota; Its Character and Climate.

Minnesota; Its Character and Climate eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 159 pages of information about Minnesota; Its Character and Climate.

Longfellow’s exquisite picture—­in words—­of these falls seems so perfect and complete that we cannot forbear to quote it.  He says: 

  “Sweet Minne-ha-ha like a child at play,
  Comes gaily dancing o’er her pebbly way,
  ’Till reaching with surprise the rocky ledge,
  With gleeful laugh bounds from its crested edge.”

And what can we say of them that shall be new or of fresh interest either to those who have read of, or what is better, have seen them?  After viewing and listening to their laughing-leap we easily understand the fitness of the name they bear—­the “Laughing Waters.”

The first sight of the falls is captivating, and there seems little of praise which you could wish to withhold.  They are the very antipodes of those of Niagara—­instead of volume and power inspiring awe, they win your love and enhance your views of the beautiful and good.

The waters

  “Flash and gleam among the oak trees,
   Laugh and leap into the valley,”

and move gaily and gleefully among the maples, oaks, and vines which line and wreathe its banks; rivalling in song the wild birds that linger in the cool shadows of the embowering trees.

Minnehaha Creek has its rise in Lake Minnetonka, a dozen miles or more distant, where it is quite a diminutive little brook; from thence runs to and through Lakes Calhoun and Harriet, meandering along the surface of the country, till it makes its graceful leap at the falls to the chasm, some forty feet below, then empties into the Mississippi about half-a-mile distant to the eastward.  The width of the stream and falls does net much exceed twenty feet.

We lingered long, and reluctantly turned our feet away from this enchanting scene where both real and imaginary heroes and heroines have dwelt, and in the bright waters of which their picturesque encampments have been often mirrored.

St. Anthony—­opposite Minneapolis—­is one of the oldest towns in the State, and was, in ante bellum times, quite a fashionable resort for the Southerners.  The war ended that, while the latter city gave to it its final coup de grace, and soon after the business set to the west bank of the river.

Its chief object of interest is the State University, which has but just entered upon its career of usefulness.

Tourists will enjoy a few days in and around Minneapolis.  It is the centre of a number of attractive objects of natural curiosity.  A drive to Lake Calhoun and a day’s sport in fishing is both practicable and pleasant.

We cannot regard the City of St. Anthony as equalling Minneapolis as a place of residence in point of health.  Even in the latter city it is important that a home be had as remote from the neighborhood of the Falls as is convenient.  Its adaptability to the needs of the invalid consists more in the walks and drives, the ample boarding-house and hotel accommodations, good markets, and cheerful, pleasant society, than in the particular location of the town itself or in the character of the soil on which it is built.

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Minnesota; Its Character and Climate from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.