[Astoria by Washington Irving]@TWC D-Link bookAstoria CHAPTER III 14/21
In this dilemma the government had applied to Mr.Astor, as one conversant in this branch of trade, for information that might point out a way to remedy the evil.
This circumstance had suggested to him the idea of supplying the Russian establishment regularly by means of the annual ship that should visit the settlement at the mouth of the Columbia (or Oregon); by this means the casual trading vessels would be excluded from those parts of the coast where their malpractices were so injurious to the Russians. Such is a brief outline of the enterprise projected by Mr.Astor, but which continually expanded in his mind.
Indeed it is due to him to say that he was not actuated by mere motives of individual profit.
He was already wealthy beyond the ordinary desires of man, but he now aspired to that honorable fame which is awarded to men of similar scope of mind, who by their great commercial enterprises have enriched nations, peopled wildernesses, and extended the bounds of empire.
He considered his projected establishment at the mouth of the Columbia as the emporium to an immense commerce; as a colony that would form the germ of a wide civilization; that would, in fact, carry the American population across the Rocky Mountains and spread it along the shores of the Pacific, as it already animated the shores of the Atlantic.
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