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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Suburban Sketches
+
+Author: William Dean Howells
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7141]
+This file was first posted on March 15, 2003
+Last Updated: February 25, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUBURBAN SKETCHES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, David Widger, and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SUBURBAN SKETCHES
+
+By William Dean Howells
+
+
+Author Of “Venetian Life,” “Italian Journeys” Etc.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MRS. JOHNSON
+
+DOORSTEP ACQUAINTANCE
+
+A PEDESTRIAN TOUR
+
+BY HORSE-CAR TO BOSTON
+
+A DAY'S PLEASURE
+
+A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE
+
+SCENE
+
+JUBILEE DAYS
+
+SOME LESSONS FROM THE SCHOOL OF MORALS
+
+FLITTING
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS (not available)
+
+
+SHE LIGHTED A POTENT PIPE
+
+“BUT I SUPPOSE THIS WINE IS NOT MADE OF GRAPES, SIGNOR?”
+
+LOOKING ABOUT, I SAW TWO WOMEN
+
+THE YOUNG LADY IN BLACK, WHO ALIGHTED AT A MOST ORDINARY LITTLE STREET
+
+THAT SWEET YOUNG BLONDE, WHO ARRIVES BY MOST TRAINS
+
+FRANK AND LUCY STALKED AHEAD, WITH SHAWLS DRAGGING FROM THEIR ARMS
+
+THEY SKIRMISH ABOUT HIM WITH EVERY SORT OF QUERY.
+
+A GAUNT FIGURE OF FORLORN AND CURIOUS SMARTNESS.
+
+THE SPECTACLE AS WE BEHELD IT
+
+VACANT AND CEREMONIOUS ZEAL
+
+
+
+
+MRS. JOHNSON
+
+
+It was on a morning of the lovely New England May that we left the
+horse-car, and, spreading our umbrellas, walked down the street to our
+new home in Charlesbridge, through a storm of snow and rain so finely
+blent by the influences of this fortunate climate, that no flake knew
+itself from its sister drop, or could be better identified by the people
+against whom they beat in unison. A vernal gale from the east fanned our
+cheeks and pierced our marrow and chilled our blood, while the raw, cold
+green of the adventurous grass on the borders of the sopping sidewalks
+gave, as it peered through its veil of melting snow and freezing rain,
+a peculiar cheerfulness to the landscape. Here and there in the vacant
+lots abandoned hoop-skirts defied decay; and near the half-finished
+wooden houses, empty mortar-beds, and bits of lath and slate strewn over
+the scarred and mutilated ground, added their interest to the scene. A
+shaggy drift hung upon the trees before our own house (which had been
+built some years earlier), while its swollen eaves wept silently and
+incessantly upon the embankments lifting its base several feet above the
+common level.
+
+This heavenly weather, which the Pilgrim Fathers, with the idea of
+turning their thoughts effectually from earthly pleasures, came so far
+to discover, continued with slight amelioration throughout the month of
+May and far into June; and it was a matter of constant amazement with
+one who had known less austere climates, to behold how vegetable life
+struggled with the hostile skies, and, in an atmosphere as chill and
+damp as that of a cellar, shot forth the buds and blossoms upon the
+pear-trees, called out the sour Puritan courage of the currant-bushes,
+taught a reckless native grape-vine to wander and wanton over the
+southern side of the fence, and decked the banks with violets as
+fearless and as fragile as New England girls; so that about the end of
+June, when the heavens relented and the sun blazed out at last, there
+was little for him to do but to redden and darken the daring fruits that
+had attained almost their full growth without his countenance.
+
+Then, indeed, Charlesbridge appeared to us a kind of Paradise. The wind
+blew all day from the southwest, and all day in the grove across the way
+the orioles sang to their nestlings. The butcher's wagon rattled merrily
+up to our gate every morning; and if we had kept no other reckoning, we
+should have known it was Thursday by the grocer. We were living in the
+country with the conveniences and luxuries of the city about us. The
+house was almost new and in perfect repair; and, better than all, the
+kitchen had as yet given no signs of unrest in those volcanic agencies
+which are constantly at work there, and which, with sudden explosion,
+make Herculaneums and Pompeiis of so many smiling households. Breakfast,
+dinner, and tea came up with illusive regularity, and were all the most
+perfect of their kind; and we laughed and feasted in our vain security.
+We had out from the city to banquet with us the friends we loved, and
+we were inexpressibly proud before them of the Help, who first wrought
+miracles of cookery in our honor, and then appeared in a clean white
+apron, and the glossiest black hair, to wait upon the table. She was
+young, and certainly very pretty; she was as gay as a lark, and was
+courted by a young man whose clothes would have been a credit, if they
+had not been a reproach, to our lowly basement. She joyfully assented to
+the idea of staying with us till she married.
+
+In fact, there was much that was extremely pleasant about the little
+place when the warm weather came, and it was not wonderful to us that
+Jenny was willing to remain. It was very quiet; we called one another
+to the window if a large dog went by our door; and whole days passed
+without the movement of any wheels but the butcher's upon our street,
+which flourished in ragweed and butter-cups and daisies, and in
+the autumn burned, like the borders of nearly all the streets in
+Charlesbridge, with the pallid azure flame of the succory. The
+neighborhood was in all things a frontier between city and country.
+The horse-cars, the type of such civilization--full of imposture,
+discomfort, and sublime possibility--as we yet possess, went by the
+head of our street, and might, perhaps, be available to one skilled in
+calculating the movements of comets; while two minutes' walk would take
+us into a wood so wild and thick that no roof was visible through the
+trees. We learned, like innocent pastoral people of the golden age, to
+know the several voices of the cows pastured in the vacant lots, and,
+like engine-drivers of the iron age, to distinguish the different
+whistles of the locomotives passing on the neighboring railroad. The
+trains shook the house as they thundered along, and at night were a kind
+of company, while by day we had the society of the innumerable birds.
+Now and then, also, the little ragged boys in charge of the cows--which,
+tied by long ropes to trees, forever wound themselves tight up against
+the trunks, and had to be unwound with great ado of hooting and
+hammering--came and peered lustfully through the gate at our ripening
+pears. All round us carpenters were at work building new houses; but so
+far from troubling us, the strokes of their hammers fell softly upon the
+sense, like one's heart-beats upon one's own consciousness in the lapse
+from all fear of pain under the blessed charm of an anaesthetic.
+
+We played a little at gardening, of course, and planted tomatoes,
+which the chickens seemed to like, for they ate them up as fast as
+they ripened; and we watched with pride the growth of our Lawton
+blackberries, which, after attaining the most stalwart proportions, were
+still as bitter as the scrubbiest of their savage brethren, and which,
+when by advice left on the vines for a week after they turned black,
+were silently gorged by secret and gluttonous flocks of robins and
+orioles. As for our grapes, the frost cut them off in the hour of their
+triumph.
+
+So, as I have hinted, we were not surprised that Jenny should be willing
+to remain with us, and were as little prepared for her desertion as for
+any other change of our moral state. But one day in September she
+came to her nominal mistress with tears in her beautiful eyes and
+protestations of unexampled devotion upon her tongue, and said that she
+was afraid she must leave us. She liked the place, and she never had
+worked for any one that was more of a lady, but she had made up her
+mind to go into the city. All this, so far, was quite in the manner
+of domestics who, in ghost stories, give warning to the occupants of
+haunted houses; and Jenny's mistress listened in suspense for the motive
+of her desertion, expecting to hear no less than that it was something
+which walked up and down the stairs and dragged iron links after it,
+or something that came and groaned at the front door, like populace
+dissatisfied with a political candidate. But it was in fact nothing of
+this kind; simply, there were no lamps upon our street, and Jenny, after
+spending Sunday evening with friends in East Charlesbridge, was always
+alarmed, on her return, in walking from the horse-car to our door. The
+case was hopeless, and Jenny and our household parted with respect and
+regret.
+
+We had not before this thought it a grave disadvantage that our street
+was unlighted. Our street was not drained nor graded; no municipal cart
+ever came to carry away our ashes; there was not a water-butt within
+half a mile to save us from fire, nor more than the one thousandth part
+of a policeman to protect us from theft. Yet, as I paid a heavy tax, I
+somehow felt that we enjoyed the benefits of city government, and never
+looked upon Charlesbridge as in any way undesirable for residence.
+But when it became necessary to find help in Jenny's place, the frosty
+welcome given to application at the intelligence offices renewed a
+painful doubt awakened by her departure. To be sure, the heads of the
+offices were polite enough; but when the young housekeeper had stated
+her case at the first to which she applied, and the Intelligencer had
+called out to the invisible expectants in the adjoining room, “Anny
+wan wants to do giner'l housewark in Charlsbrudge?” there came from the
+maids invoked so loud, so fierce, so full a “No!” as shook the lady's
+heart with an indescribable shame and dread. The name that, with an
+innocent pride in its literary and historical associations, she had
+written at the heads of her letters, was suddenly become a matter of
+reproach to her; and she was almost tempted to conceal thereafter that
+she lived in Charlesbridge, and to pretend that she dwelt upon some
+wretched little street in Boston. “You see,” said the head of the
+office, “the gairls doesn't like to live so far away from the city. Now
+if it was on'y in the Port....”
+
+This pen is not graphic enough to give the remote reader an idea of the
+affront offered to an inhabitant of Old Charlesbridge in these closing
+words. Neither am I of sufficiently tragic mood to report here all the
+sufferings undergone by an unhappy family in finding servants, or to
+tell how the winter was passed with miserable makeshifts. Alas! is it
+not the history of a thousand experiences? Any one who looks upon this
+page could match it with a tale as full of heartbreak and disaster,
+while I conceive that, in hastening to speak of Mrs. Johnson, I approach
+a subject of unique interest.
+
+The winter that ensued after Jenny's departure was the true sister of
+the bitter and shrewish spring of the same year. But indeed it is always
+with a secret shiver that one must think of winter in our regrettable
+climate. It is a terrible potency, robbing us of half our lives, and
+threatening or desolating the moiety left us with rheumatisms and
+catarrhs. There is a much vaster sum of enjoyment possible to man in the
+more generous latitudes; and I have sometimes doubted whether even the
+energy characteristic of ours is altogether to be praised, seeing that
+it has its spring not so much in pure aspiration as in the instinct of
+self-preservation. Egyptian, Greek, Roman energy was an inner impulse;
+but ours is too often the sting of cold, the spur of famine. We
+must endure our winter, but let us not be guilty of the hypocrisy
+of pretending that we like it. Let us caress it with no more vain
+compliments, but use it with something of its own rude and savage
+sincerity.
+
+I say, our last Irish girl went with the last snow, and on one of those
+midsummer-like days that sometimes fall in early April to our yet bleak
+and desolate zone, our hearts sang of Africa and golden joys. A Libyan
+longing took us, and we would have chosen, if we could, to bear a strand
+of grotesque beads, or a handful of brazen gauds, and traffic them for
+some sable maid with crisped locks, whom, uncoffling from the captive
+train beside the desert, we should make to do our general housework
+forever, through the right of lawful purchase. But we knew that this was
+impossible, and that, if we desired colored help, we must seek it at the
+intelligence office, which is in one of those streets chiefly inhabited
+by the orphaned children and grandchildren of slavery. To tell the truth
+these orphans do not seem to grieve much for their bereavement, but lead
+a life of joyous and rather indolent oblivion in their quarter of the
+city. They are often to be seen sauntering up and down the street by
+which the Charlesbridge cars arrive,--the young with a harmless swagger,
+and the old with the generic limp which our Autocrat has already noted
+as attending advanced years in their race. They seem the natural
+human interest of a street so largely devoted to old clothes; and the
+thoughtful may see a felicity in their presence where the pawnbrokers'
+windows display the forfeited pledges of improvidence, and subtly remind
+us that we have yet to redeem a whole race, pawned in our needy and
+reckless national youth, and still held against us by the Uncle of
+Injustice, who is also the Father of Lies. How gayly are the young
+ladies of this race attired, as they trip up and down the side walks,
+and in and out through the pendent garments at the shop doors! They
+are the black pansies and marigolds and dark-blooded dahlias among
+womankind. They try to assume something of our colder race's demeanor,
+but even the passer on the horse-car can see that it is not native with
+them, and is better pleased when they forget us, and ungenteelly laugh
+in encountering friends, letting their white teeth glitter through the
+generous lips that open to their ears. In the streets branching upwards
+from this avenue, very little colored men and maids play with broken or
+enfeebled toys, or sport on the wooden pavements of the entrances to the
+inner courts. Now and then a colored soldier or sailor--looking strange
+in his uniform, even after the custom of several years--emerges from
+those passages; or, more rarely, a black gentleman, stricken in years,
+and cased in shining broadcloth, walks solidly down the brick sidewalk,
+cane in hand,--a vision of serene self-complacency, and so plainly the
+expression of virtuous public sentiment that the great colored louts,
+innocent enough till then in their idleness, are taken with a sudden
+sense of depravity, and loaf guiltily up against the house-walls. At
+the same moment, perhaps, a young damsel, amorously scuffling with an
+admirer through one of the low open windows, suspends the strife,
+and bids him, “Go along now, do!” More rarely yet than the gentleman
+described, one may see a white girl among the dark neighbors, whose
+frowzy head is uncovered, and whose sleeves are rolled up to her elbows,
+and who, though no doubt quite at home, looks as strange there as that
+pale anomaly which may sometimes be seen among a crew of blackbirds.
+
+An air not so much of decay as of unthrift, and yet hardly of unthrift,
+seems to prevail in the neighborhood, which has none of the aggressive
+and impudent squalor of an Irish quarter, and none of the surly
+wickedness of a low American street. A gayety not born of the things
+that bring its serious joy to the true New England heart--a ragged
+gayety, which comes of summer in the blood, and not in the pocket or the
+conscience, and which affects the countenance and the whole demeanor,
+setting the feet to some inward music, and at times bursting into a
+line of song or a child-like and irresponsible laugh--gives tone to
+the visible life, and wakens a very friendly spirit in the passer, who
+somehow thinks there of a milder climate, and is half persuaded that
+the orange-peel on the sidewalks came from fruit grown in the soft
+atmosphere of those back courts.
+
+It was in this quarter, then, that we heard of Mrs. Johnson; and it was
+from a colored boarding-house there that she came out to Charlesbridge
+to look at us, bringing her daughter of twelve years with her. She was
+a matron of mature age and portly figure, with a complexion like coffee
+soothed with the richest cream; and her manners were so full of a
+certain tranquillity and grace, that she charmed away all out will to
+ask for references. It was only her barbaric laughter and her lawless
+eye that betrayed how slightly her New England birth and breeding
+covered her ancestral traits, and bridged the gulf of a thousand years
+of civilization that lay between her race and ours. But in fact, she was
+doubly estranged by descent; for, as we learned later, a sylvan wildness
+mixed with that of the desert in her veins: her grandfather was an
+Indian, and her ancestors on this side had probably sold their lands for
+the same value in trinkets that bought the original African pair on the
+other side.
+
+The first day that Mrs. Johnson descended into our kitchen, she conjured
+from the malicious disorder in which it had been left by the flitting
+Irish kobold a dinner that revealed the inspirations of genius, and
+was quite different from a dinner of mere routine and laborious talent.
+Something original and authentic mingled with the accustomed flavors;
+and, though vague reminiscences of canal-boat travel and woodland
+camps arose from the relish of certain of the dishes, there was yet the
+assurance of such power in the preparation of the whole, that we
+knew her to be merely running over the chords of our appetite with
+preliminary savors, as a musician acquaints his touch with the keys
+of an unfamiliar piano before breaking into brilliant and triumphant
+execution. Within a week she had mastered her instrument; and thereafter
+there was no faltering in her performances, which she varied constantly,
+through inspiration or from suggestion. She was so quick to receive new
+ideas in her art, that, when the Roman statuary who stayed a few weeks
+with us explained the mystery of various purely Latin dishes, she caught
+their principle at once; and visions of the great white cathedral,
+the Coliseum, and the “dome of Brunelleschi” floated before us in the
+exhalations of the Milanese _risotto_, Roman _stufadino_, and Florentine
+_stracotto_ that smoked upon our board. But, after all, it was in
+puddings that Mrs. Johnson chiefly excelled. She was one of those
+cooks--rare as men of genius in literature--who love their own dishes;
+and she had, in her personally child-like simplicity of taste, and the
+inherited appetites of her savage forefathers, a dominant passion
+for sweets. So far as we could learn, she subsisted principally upon
+puddings and tea. Through the same primitive instincts, no doubt, she
+loved praise. She openly exulted in our artless flatteries of her skill;
+she waited jealously at the head of the kitchen stairs to hear what was
+said of her work, especially if there were guests; and she was never too
+weary to attempt emprises of cookery.
+
+While engaged in these, she wore a species of sightly handkerchief like
+a turban upon her head and about her person those mystical swathings in
+which old ladies of the African race delight. But she most pleasured our
+sense of beauty and moral fitness when, after the last pan was washed
+and the last pot was scraped, she lighted a potent pipe, and, taking her
+stand at the kitchen door, laded the soft evening air with its pungent
+odors. If we surprised her at these supreme moments, she took the pipe
+from her lips, and put it behind her, with a low mellow chuckle, and
+a look of half-defiant consciousness; never guessing that none of her
+merits took us half so much as the cheerful vice which she only feigned
+to conceal.
+
+Some things she could not do so perfectly as cooking, because of her
+failing eyesight; and we persuaded her that spectacles would both
+become and befriend a lady of her years, and so bought her a pair of
+steel-bowed glasses. She wore them in some great emergencies at first,
+but had clearly no pride in them. Before long she laid them aside
+altogether, and they had passed from our thoughts, when one day we heard
+her mellow note of laughter and her daughter's harsher cackle outside
+our door, and, opening it, beheld Mrs. Johnson in gold-bowed spectacles
+of massive frame. We then learned that their purchase was in fulfillment
+of a vow made long ago, in the life-time of Mr. Johnson, that, if ever
+she wore glasses, they should be gold-bowed; and I hope the manes of the
+dead were half as happy in these votive spectacles as the simple soul
+that offered them.
+
+She and her late partner were the parents of eleven children, some of
+whom were dead, and some of whom were wanderers in unknown parts. During
+his life-time she had kept a little shop in her native town; and it was
+only within a few years that she had gone into service. She cherished a
+natural haughtiness of spirit, and resented control, although disposed
+to do all she could of her own motion. Being told to say when she wanted
+an afternoon, she explained that when she wanted an afternoon she always
+took it without asking, but always planned so as not to discommode the
+ladies with whom she lived. These, she said, had numbered twenty-seven
+within three years, which made us doubt the success of her system in all
+cases, though she merely held out the fact as an assurance of her faith
+in the future, and a proof of the ease with which places were to be
+found. She contended, moreover, that a lady who had for thirty years
+had a house of her own, was in nowise bound to ask permission to receive
+visits from friends where she might be living, but that they ought
+freely to come and go like other guests. In this spirit she once invited
+her son-in-law, Professor Jones of Providence, to dine with her; and
+her defied mistress, on entering the dining-room, found the Professor
+at pudding and tea there,--an impressively respectable figure in black
+clothes, with a black face rendered yet more effective by a pair of
+green goggles. It appeared that this dark professor was a light of
+phrenology in Rhode Island, and that he was believed to have uncommon
+virtue in his science by reason of being blind as well as black.
+
+I am loath to confess that Mrs. Johnson had not a flattering opinion
+of the Caucasian race in all respects. In fact, she had very good
+philosophical and Scriptural reasons for looking upon us as an upstart
+people of new blood, who had come into their whiteness by no creditable
+or pleasant process. The late Mr. Johnson, who had died in the West
+Indies, whither he voyaged for his health in quality of cook upon a
+Down-East schooner, was a man of letters, and had written a book to
+show the superiority of the black over the white branches of the
+human family. In this he held that, as all islands have been at their
+discovery found peopled by blacks, we must needs believe that humanity
+was first created of that color. Mrs. Johnson could not show us her
+husband's work (a sole copy in the library of an English gentleman at
+Port au Prince is not to be bought for money), but she often developed
+its arguments to the lady of the house; and one day, with a great show
+of reluctance, and many protests that no personal slight was meant, let
+fall the fact that Mr. Johnson believed the white race descended from
+Gehazi the leper, upon whom the leprosy of Naaman fell when the latter
+returned by Divine favor to his original blackness. “And he went out
+from his presence a leper as white as snow,” said Mrs. Johnson,
+quoting irrefutable Scripture. “Leprosy, leprosy,” she added
+thoughtfully,--“nothing but leprosy bleached you out.”
+
+It seems to me much in her praise that she did not exult in our taint
+and degradation, as some white philosophers used to do in the opposite
+idea that a part of the human family were cursed to lasting blackness
+and slavery in Ham and his children, but even told us of a remarkable
+approach to whiteness in many of her own offspring. In a kindred spirit
+of charity, no doubt, she refused ever to attend church with people of
+her elder and wholesomer blood. When she went to church, she said, she
+always went to a white church, though while with us I am bound to say
+she never went to any. She professed to read her Bible in her bedroom on
+Sundays; but we suspected, from certain sounds and odors which used
+to steal out of this sanctuary, that her piety more commonly found
+expression in dozing and smoking.
+
+I would not make a wanton jest here of Mrs. Johnson's anxiety to claim
+honor for the African color, while denying this color in many of her
+own family. It afforded a glimpse of the pain which all her people must
+endure, however proudly they hide it or light-heartedly forget it, from
+the despite and contumely to which they are guiltlessly born; and when I
+thought how irreparable was this disgrace and calamity of a black skin,
+and how irreparable it must be for ages yet, in this world where every
+other shame and all manner of wilful guilt and wickedness may hope
+for covert and pardon, I had little heart to laugh. Indeed, it was so
+pathetic to hear this poor old soul talk of her dead and lost ones,
+and try, in spite of all Mr. Johnson's theories and her own arrogant
+generalizations, to establish their whiteness, that we must have been
+very cruel and silly people to turn her sacred fables even into matter
+of question. I have no doubt that her Antoinette Anastasia and her
+Thomas Jefferson Wilberforce--it is impossible to give a full idea
+of the splendor and scope of the baptismal names in Mrs. Johnson's
+family--have as light skins and as golden hair in heaven as her reverend
+maternal fancy painted for them in our world. There, certainly,
+they would not be subject to tanning, which had ruined the delicate
+complexion, and had knotted into black woolly tangles the once wavy
+blonde locks of our little maid-servant Naomi; and I would fain believe
+that Toussaint Washington Johnson, who ran away to sea so many years
+ago, has found some fortunate zone where his hair and skin keep the same
+sunny and rosy tints they wore to his mother's eyes in infancy. But I
+have no means of knowing this, or of telling whether he was the prodigy
+of intellect that he was declared to be. Naomi could no more be taken in
+proof, of the one assertion than of the other. When she came to us, it
+was agreed that she should go to school; but she overruled her mother
+in this as in everything else, and never went. Except Sunday-school
+lessons, she had no other instruction than that her mistress gave her in
+the evenings, when a heavy day's play and the natural influences of the
+hour conspired with original causes to render her powerless before words
+of one syllable.
+
+The first week of her service she was obedient and faithful to her
+duties; but, relaxing in the atmosphere of a house which seems to
+demoralize all menials, she shortly fell into disorderly ways of lying
+in wait for callers out of doors, and, when people rang, of running up
+the front steps, and letting them in from the outside. As the season
+expanded, and the fine weather became confirmed, she modified even this
+form of service, and spent her time in the fields, appearing at
+the house only when nature importunately craved molasses. She had a
+parrot-like quickness, so far as music was concerned, and learned from
+the Roman statuary to make the groves and half-finished houses resound,
+
+ “Camicia rossa,
+ Ove t' ascondi?
+ T' appella Italia,--
+ Tu non respondi!”
+
+She taught the Garibaldi song, moreover, to all the neighboring
+children, so that I sometimes wondered if our street were not about to
+march upon Rome in a body.
+
+In her untamable disobedience, Naomi alone betrayed her sylvan blood,
+for she was in all other respects negro and not Indian. But it was of
+her aboriginal ancestry that Mrs. Johnson chiefly boasted,--when not
+engaged in argument to maintain the superiority of the African race.
+She loved to descant upon it as the cause and explanation of her own
+arrogant habit of feeling; and she seemed indeed to have inherited
+something of the Indian's hauteur along with the Ethiop's supple cunning
+and abundant amiability. She gave many instances in which her pride had
+met and overcome the insolence of employers, and the kindly old creature
+was by no means singular in her pride of being reputed proud.
+
+She could never have been a woman of strong logical faculties, but she
+had in some things a very surprising and awful astuteness. She seldom
+introduced any purpose directly, but bore all about it and then suddenly
+sprung it upon her unprepared antagonist. At other times she obscurely
+hinted a reason, and left a conclusion to be inferred; as when she
+warded off reproach for some delinquency by saying in a general way that
+she had lived with ladies who used to come scolding into the kitchen
+after they had taken their bitters. “Quality ladies took their bitters
+regular,” she added, to remove any sting of personality from her remark;
+for, from many things she had let fall, we knew that she did not regard
+us as quality. On the contrary, she often tried to overbear us with the
+gentility of her former places; and would tell the lady over whom
+she reigned, that she had lived with folks worth their three and
+four hundred thousand dollars, who never complained as she did of the
+ironing. Yet she had a sufficient regard for the literary occupations
+of the family, Mr. Johnson having been an author. She even professed
+to have herself written a book, which was still in manuscript, and
+preserved somewhere among her best clothes.
+
+It was well, on many accounts, to be in contact with a mind so original
+and suggestive as Mrs. Johnson's. We loved to trace its intricate yet
+often transparent operations, and were perhaps too fond of explaining
+its peculiarities by facts of ancestry,--of finding hints of the Powwow
+or the Grand Custom in each grotesque development. We were conscious
+of something warmer in this old soul than in ourselves, and something
+wilder, and we chose to think it the tropic and the untracked forest.
+She had scarcely any being apart from her affection; she had no
+morality, but was good because she neither hated nor envied; and she
+might have been a saint far more easily than far more civilized people.
+
+There was that also in her sinuous yet malleable nature, so full of
+guile and so full of goodness, that reminded us pleasantly of lowly folk
+in elder lands, where relaxing oppressions have lifted the restraints of
+fear between master and servant, without disturbing the familiarity of
+their relation. She advised freely with us upon all household matters,
+and took a motherly interest in whatever concerned us. She could be
+flattered or caressed into almost any service, but no threat or command
+could move her. When she erred, she never acknowledged her wrong in
+words, but handsomely expressed her regrets in a pudding, or sent up her
+apologies in a favorite dish secretly prepared. We grew so well used to
+this form of exculpation, that, whenever Mrs. Johnson took an afternoon
+at an inconvenient season, we knew that for a week afterwards we should
+be feasted like princes. She owned frankly that she loved us, that she
+never had done half so much for people before, and that she never had
+been nearly so well suited in any other place; and for a brief and happy
+time we thought that we never should part.
+
+One day, however, our dividing destiny appeared in the basement, and was
+presented to us as Hippolyto Thucydides, the son of Mrs. Johnson,
+who had just arrived on a visit to his mother from the State of New
+Hampshire. He was a heavy and loutish youth, standing upon the borders
+of boyhood, and looking forward to the future with a vacant and listless
+eye. I mean that this was his figurative attitude; his actual manner, as
+he lolled upon a chair beside the kitchen window, was so eccentric, that
+we felt a little uncertain how to regard him, and Mrs. Johnson openly
+described him as peculiar. He was so deeply tanned by the fervid suns
+of the New Hampshire winter, and his hair had so far suffered from
+the example of the sheep lately under his charge, that he could not be
+classed by any stretch of compassion with the blonde and straight-haired
+members of Mrs. Johnson's family.
+
+He remained with us all the first day until late in the afternoon, when
+his mother took him out to get him a boarding-house. Then he departed
+in the van of her and Naomi, pausing at the gate to collect his spirits,
+and, after he had sufficiently animated himself by clapping his palms
+together, starting off down the street at a hand-gallop, to the manifest
+terror of the cows in the pastures, and the confusion of the less
+demonstrative people of our household. Other characteristic traits
+appeared in Hippolyto Thucydides within no very long period of time, and
+he ran away from his lodgings so often during the summer that he might
+be said to board round among the outlying corn-fields and turnip-patches
+of Charlesbridge. As a check upon this habit, Mrs. Johnson seemed to
+have invited him to spend his whole time in our basement; for whenever
+we went below we found him there, balanced--perhaps in homage to us,
+and perhaps as a token of extreme sensibility in himself--upon the low
+window-sill, the bottoms of his boots touching the floor inside, and his
+face buried in the grass without.
+
+We could formulate no very tenable objection to all this, and yet
+the presence of Thucydides in our kitchen unaccountably oppressed our
+imaginations. We beheld him all over the house, a monstrous eidolon,
+balanced upon every window-sill; and he certainly attracted unpleasant
+notice to our place, no less by his furtive and hang-dog manner
+of arrival than by the bold displays with which he celebrated his
+departures. We hinted this to Mrs. Johnson, but she could not enter into
+our feeling. Indeed, all the wild poetry of her maternal and primitive
+nature seemed to cast itself about this hapless boy; and if we had
+listened to her we should have believed there was no one so agreeable in
+society, or so quick-witted in affairs, as Hippolyto, when he chose. She
+used to rehearse us long epics concerning his industry, his courage, and
+his talent; and she put fine speeches in his mouth with no more regard
+to the truth than if she had been a historian, and not a poet. Perhaps
+she believed that he really said and did the things she attributed to
+him: it is the destiny of those who repeatedly tell great things either
+of themselves or others; and I think we may readily forgive the illusion
+to her zeal and fondness. In fact, she was not a wise woman, and she
+spoiled her children as if she had been a rich one.
+
+At last, when we said positively that Thucydides should come to us no
+more, and then qualified the prohibition by allowing him to come every
+Sunday, she answered that she never would hurt the child's feelings by
+telling him not to come where his mother was; that people who did not
+love her children did not love her; and that, if Hippy went, she went.
+We thought it a master-stroke of firmness to rejoin that Hippolyto must
+go in any event; but I am bound to own that he did not go, and that his
+mother stayed, and so fed us with every cunning propitiatory dainty,
+that we must have been Pagans to renew our threat. In fact, we begged
+Mrs. Johnson to go into the country with us, and she, after long
+reluctation on Hippy's account, consented, agreeing to send him away to
+friends during her absence.
+
+We made every preparation, and on the eve of our departure Mrs. Johnson
+went into the city to engage her son's passage to Bangor, while we
+awaited her return in untroubled security.
+
+But she did not appear till midnight, and then responded with but a sad
+“Well, sah!” to the cheerful “Well, Mrs. Johnson!” that greeted her.
+
+“All right, Mrs. Johnson?”
+
+Mrs. Johnson made a strange noise, half chuckle and half death-rattle,
+in her throat. “All wrong, sah. Hippy's off again; and I've been all
+over the city after him.”
+
+“Then you can't go with us in the morning?”
+
+“How _can_ I, sah?”
+
+Mrs. Johnson went sadly out of the room. Then she came back to the door
+again, and, opening it, uttered, for the first time in our service,
+words of apology and regret: “I hope I ha'n't put you out any. I
+_wanted_ to go with you, but I ought to _knowed_ I couldn't. All is, I
+loved you too much.”
+
+
+
+
+DOORSTEP ACQUAINTANCE
+
+
+Vagabonds the world would no doubt call many of my doorstep
+acquaintance, and I do not attempt to defend them altogether against
+the world, which paints but black and white and in general terms. Yet I
+would fain veil what is only half-truth under another name, for I know
+that the service of their Gay Science is not one of such disgraceful
+ease as we associate with ideas of vagrancy, though I must own that they
+lead the life they do because they love it. They always protest that
+nothing but their ignorance of our tongue prevents them from practicing
+some mechanical trade. “What work could be harder,” they ask, “than
+carrying this organ about all day?” but while I answer with honesty that
+nothing can be more irksome, I feel that they only pretend a disgust
+with it, and that they really like organ-grinding, if for no other
+reason than that they are the children of the summer, and it takes them
+into the beloved open weather. One of my friends, at least, who in the
+warmer months is to all appearance a blithesome troubadour, living
+
+ “A merry life in sun and shade,”
+
+as a coal-heaver in winter; and though this more honorable and useful
+occupation is doubtless open to him the whole year round, yet he does
+not devote himself to it, but prefers with the expanding spring to lay
+aside his grimy basket, and, shouldering his organ, to quit the dismal
+wharves and carts and cellars, and to wander forth into the suburbs,
+with his lazy, soft-eyed boy at his heels, who does nothing with his
+tambourine but take up a collection, and who, meeting me the other day
+in a chance passage of Ferry Street, knew me, and gave me so much of his
+father's personal history.
+
+It was winter even there in Ferry Street, in which so many Italians live
+that one might think to find it under a softer sky and in a gentler air,
+and which I had always figured in a wide unlikeness to all other streets
+in Boston,--with houses stuccoed outside, and with gratings at their
+ground-floor windows; with mouldering archways between the buildings,
+and at the corners feeble lamps glimmering before pictures of the
+Madonna; with weather-beaten shutters flapping overhead, and many
+balconies from which hung the linen swathings of young infants, and
+love-making maidens furtively lured the velvet-jacketed, leisurely youth
+below: a place haunted by windy voices of blessing and cursing, with the
+perpetual clack of wooden-heeled shoes upon the stones, and what perfume
+from the blossom of vines and almond-trees, mingling with less delicate
+smells, the travelled reader pleases to imagine. I do not say that I
+found Ferry Street actually different from this vision in most respects;
+but as for the vines and almond-trees, they were not in bloom at the
+moment of my encounter with the little tambourine-boy. As we stood and
+talked, the snow fell as heavily and thickly around us as elsewhere in
+Boston. With a vague pain,--the envy of a race toward another born to a
+happier clime,--I heard from him that his whole family was going back to
+Italy in a month. The father had at last got together money enough, and
+the mother, who had long been an invalid, must be taken home; and, so
+far as I know, the population of Ferry Street exists but in the hope of
+a return, soon or late, to the native or the ancestral land.
+
+More than one of my doorstep acquaintance, in fact, seemed to have no
+other stock in trade than this fond desire, and to thrive with it in our
+sympathetic community. It is scarcely possible but the reader has met
+the widow of Giovanni Cascamatto, a Vesuvian lunatic who has long set
+fire to their home on the slopes of the volcano, and perished in
+the flames. She was our first Italian acquaintance in Charlesbridge,
+presenting herself with a little subscription-book which she sent in
+for inspection, with a printed certificate to the facts of her history
+signed with the somewhat conventionally Saxon names of William Tompkins
+and John Johnson. These gentlemen set forth, in terms vaguer than can be
+reproduced, that her object in coming to America was to get money to go
+back to Italy; and the whole document had so fictitious an air that it
+made us doubt even the nationality of the bearer; but we were put to
+shame by the decent joy she manifested in an Italian salutation. There
+was no longer a question of imposture in anybody's mind; we gladly
+paid tribute to her poetic fiction, and she thanked us with a tranquil
+courtesy that placed the obligation where it belonged. As she turned to
+go with many good wishes, we pressed her to have some dinner, but
+she answered with a compliment insurpassably flattering, she had just
+dined--in another palace. The truth is, there is not a single palace on
+Benicia Street, and our little box of pine and paper would hardly have
+passed for a palace on the stage, where these things are often contrived
+with great simplicity; but as we had made a little Italy together, she
+touched it with the exquisite politeness of her race, and it became
+for the instant a lordly mansion, standing on the Chiaja, or the Via
+Nuovissima, or the Canalazzo.
+
+I say this woman seemed glad to be greeted in Italian, but not, so far
+as I could see, surprised; and altogether the most amazing thing about
+my doorstep acquaintance of her nation is, that they are never surprised
+to be spoken to in their own tongue, or, if they are, never show it.
+A chestnut-roaster, who has sold me twice the chestnuts the same money
+would have bought of him in English, has not otherwise recognized the
+fact that Tuscan is not the dialect of Charlesbridge, and the mortifying
+nonchalance with which my advances have always been received has long
+since persuaded me that to the grinder at the gate it is not remarkable
+that a man should open the door of his wooden house on Benicia Street,
+and welcome him in his native language. After the first shock of this
+indifference is past, it is not to be questioned but it flatters with
+an illusion, which a stare of amazement would forbid, reducing the
+encounter to a vulgar reality at once, and I could almost believe it
+in those wily and amiable folk to intend the sweeter effect of their
+unconcern, which tacitly implies that there is no other tongue in the
+world but Italian, and which makes all the earth and air Italian for the
+time. Nothing else could have been the purpose of that image-dealer whom
+I saw on a summer's day lying at the foot of one of our meeting-houses,
+and doing his best to make it a cathedral, and really giving a sentiment
+of medieval art to the noble sculptures of the facade which the
+carpenters had just nailed up, freshly painted and newly repaired. This
+poet was stretched upon his back, eating, in that convenient posture,
+his dinner out of an earthen pot, plucking the viand from it, whatever
+it was, with his thumb and fore-finger, and dropping it piecemeal into
+his mouth. When the passer asked him “Where are you from?” he held a
+morsel in air long enough to answer “Da Lucca, signore,” and then let it
+fall into his throat, and sank deeper into a reverie in which that crude
+accent even must have sounded like a gossip's or a kinsman's voice, but
+never otherwise moved muscle, nor looked to see who passed or lingered.
+There could have been little else in his circumstances to remind him of
+home, and if he was really in the sort of day-dream attributed to him,
+he was wise not to look about him. I have not myself been in Lucca,
+but I conceive that its piazza is not like our square, with a pump
+and horse-trough in the midst; but that it has probably a fountain and
+statuary, though not possibly so magnificent an elm towering above the
+bronze or marble groups as spreads its boughs of benison over our pump
+and the horse-car switchman, loitering near it to set the switch for the
+arriving cars, or lift the brimming buckets to the smoking nostrils of
+the horses, while out from the stable comes clanging and banging with
+a fresh team that famous African who has turned white, or, if he is
+off duty, one of his brethren who has not yet begun to turn.
+Figure, besides, an expressman watering his horse at the trough, a
+provision-cart backed up against the curb in front of one of the stores,
+various people looking from the car-office windows, and a conductor
+appearing at the door long enough to call out, “Ready for Boston!”--and
+you have a scene of such gayety as Lucca could never have witnessed in
+her piazza at high noon on a summer's day. Even our Campo Santo, if the
+Lucchese had cared to look round the corner of the meeting-house at its
+moss-grown head stones, could have had little to remind him of home,
+though it has antiquity and a proper quaintness. But not for him, not
+for them of his clime and faith, is the pathos of those simple memorial
+slates with their winged skulls, changing upon many later stones, as if
+by the softening of creeds and customs, to cherub's heads,--not for him
+is the pang I feel because of those who died, in our country's youth
+exiles or exiles' children, heirs of the wilderness and toil and
+hardship. Could they rise from their restful beds, and look on this
+wandering Italian with his plaster statuettes of Apollo, and Canovan
+dancers and deities, they would hold his wares little better than Romish
+saints and idolatries, and would scarcely have the sentimental interest
+in him felt by the modern citizen of Charlesbridge; but I think that
+even they must have respected that Lombard scissors-grinder who used to
+come to us, and put an edge to all the cutlery in the house.
+
+He has since gone back to Milan, whence he came eighteen years ago, and
+whither he has returned,--as he told me one acute day in the fall, when
+all the winter hinted itself, and the painted leaves shuddered earthward
+in the grove across the way,--to enjoy a little climate before he died
+(_per goder un po' di dima prima di morire_). Our climate was the only
+thing he had against us; in every other respect he was a New-Englander,
+even to the early stages of consumption. He told me the story of his
+whole life, and of how in his adventurous youth he had left Milan
+and sojourned some years in Naples, vainly seeking his fortune there.
+Afterwards he went to Greece, and set up his ancestral business of
+greengrocer in Athens, faring there no better, but rather worse than in
+Naples, because of the deeper wickedness of the Athenians, who cheated
+him right and left, and whose laws gave him no redress. The Neapolitans
+were bad enough, he said, making a wry face, but the Greeks!--and he
+spat the Greeks out in the grass. At last, after much misfortune
+in Europe, he bethought him of coming to America, and he had never
+regretted it, but for the climate. You spent a good deal here,--nearly
+all you earned,--but then a poor man was a man, and the people were
+honest. It was wonderful to him that they all knew how to read and
+write, and he viewed with inexpressible scorn those Irish who came to
+this country, and were so little sensible of the benefits it conferred
+upon them. Boston he believed the best city in America, and “Tell me,”
+ said he, “is there such a thing anywhere else in the world as that
+Public Library?” He, a poor man, and almost unknown, had taken books
+from it to his own room, and was master to do so whenever he liked. He
+had thus been enabled to read Botta's history of the United States, an
+enormous compliment both to the country and the work which I doubt ever
+to have been paid before; and he knew more about Washington than I did,
+and desired to know more than I could tell him of the financial question
+among us. So we came to national politics, and then to European affairs.
+“It appears that Garibaldi will not go to Rome this year,” remarks
+my scissors-grinder, who is very red in his sympathies. “The Emperor
+forbids! Well, patience! And that blessed Pope, what does he want, that
+Pope? He will be king find priest both, he will wear two pairs of shoes
+at once!” I must confess that no other of my door-step acquaintance had
+so clear an idea as this one of the difference between things here and
+at home. To the minds of most we seemed divided here as there into rich
+and poor,--_signori, persone eivili_, and _povera gente_,--and their
+thoughts about us did not go beyond a speculation as to our individual
+willingness or ability to pay for organ-grinding. But this Lombard was
+worthy of his adopted country, and I forgive him the frank expression
+of a doubt that one day occurred to him, when offered a glass of Italian
+wine. He held it daintily between him and the sun for a smiling
+moment, and then said, as if our wine must needs be as ungenuine as
+our Italian,--was perhaps some expression from the surrounding
+currant-bushes, harsh as that from the Northern tongues which could
+never give his language the true life and tonic charm,--“But I suppose
+this wine is not made of grapes, signor?” Yet he was a very courteous
+old man, elaborate in greeting and leave-taking, and with a quicker
+sense than usual. It was accounted delicacy in him, that, when he had
+bidden us a final adieu, he should never come near us again, though
+the date of his departure was postponed some weeks, and we heard him
+tinkling down the street, and stopping at the neighbors' houses. He
+was a keen-faced, thoughtful-looking man; and he wore a blouse of blue
+cotton, from the pocket of which always dangled the leaves of some wild
+salad culled from our wasteful vacant lots or prodigal waysides.
+
+[Illustration: “But I suppose this wine is not made of grapes, signor?”]
+
+Altogether different in character was that Triestine, who came one
+evening to be helped home at the close of a very disastrous career
+in Mexico. He Was a person of innumerable bows, and fluttered his
+bright-colored compliments about, till it appeared that never before
+had such amiable people been asked charity by such a worthy and generous
+sufferer. In Trieste he had been a journalist, and it was evident enough
+from his speech that he was of a good education. He was vain of his
+Italian accent, which was peculiarly good for his heterogeneously
+peopled native city; and he made a show of that marvelous facility of
+the Triestines in languages, by taking me down French books, Spanish
+books, German books, and reading from them all with the properest
+accent. Yet with this boyish pride and self-satisfaction there was mixed
+a tone of bitter and worldly cynicism, a belief in fortune as the sole
+providence. As nearly as I could make out, he was a Johnson man in
+American politics; upon the Mexican question he was independent,
+disdaining French and Mexicans alike. He was with the former from
+the first, and had continued in the service of Maximilian after their
+withdrawal, till the execution of that prince made Mexico no place
+for adventurous merit. He was now going back to his native country, an
+ungrateful land enough, which had ill treated him long ago, but to
+which he nevertheless returned in a perfect gayety of temper. What a
+light-hearted rogue he was,--with such merry eyes, and such a pleasant
+smile shaping his neatly trimmed beard and mustache! After he had
+supped, and he Stood with us at the door taking leave, something
+happened to be said of Italian songs, whereupon this blithe exile, whom
+the compassion of strangers was enabling to go home after many years of
+unprofitable toil and danger to a country that had loved him not, fell
+to caroling a Venetian barcarole, and went sweetly away in its cadence.
+I bore him company as far as the gate of another Italian-speaking
+signor, and was there bidden adieu with great effusion, so that I forgot
+till he had left me to charge him not to be in fear of the house-dog,
+which barked but did not bite. In calling this after him, I had the
+misfortune to blunder in my verb. A man of another nation--perhaps
+another man of his own nation--would have cared rather for what I said
+than how I said it; but he, as if too zealous for the honor of his
+beautiful language to endure a hurt to it even in that moment of grief,
+lifting his hat, and bowing for the last time, responded with a “Morde,
+non morsica, signore!” and passed in under the pines, and next day to
+Italy.
+
+There is a little old Genoese lady comes to sell us pins, needles,
+thread, tape, and the like _roba_, whom I regard as leading quite an
+ideal life in some respects. Her traffic is limited to a certain number
+of families who speak more or less Italian; and her days, so far as
+they are concerned, must be passed in an atmosphere of sympathy and
+kindliness. The truth is, we Northern and New World folk cannot help but
+cast a little romance about whoever comes to us from Italy, whether we
+have actually known the beauty and charm of that land or not. Then this
+old lady is in herself a very gentle and lovable kind of person, with
+a tender mother-face, which is also the face of a child. A smile plays
+always upon her wrinkled visage, and her quick and restless eyes are
+full of friendliness. There is never much stuff in her basket, however,
+and it is something of a mystery how she manages to live from it. None
+but an Italian could, I am sure; and her experience must test the full
+virtue of the national genius for cheap salads and much-extenuated
+soup-meat. I do not know whether it is native in her, or whether it is a
+grace acquired from long dealing with those kindly-hearted customers
+of hers in Charlesbridge, but she is of a most munificent spirit, and
+returns every smallest benefit with some present from her basket. She
+makes me ashamed of things I have written about the sordidness of her
+race, but I shall vainly seek to atone for them by open-handedness to
+her. She will give favor for favor; she will not even count the money
+she receives; our bargaining is a contest of the courtliest civilities,
+ending in many an “Adieu!” “To meet again!” “Remain well!” and
+“Finally!” not surpassed if rivaled in any Italian street. In her
+ineffectual way, she brings us news of her different customers, breaking
+up their stout Saxon names into tinkling polysyllables which suggest
+them only to the practiced sense, and is perfectly patient and contented
+if we mistake one for another. She loves them all, but she pities them
+as living in a terrible climate; and doubtless in her heart she purposes
+one day to go back to Italy, there to die. In the mean time she is
+very cheerful; she, too, has had her troubles,--what troubles I do not
+remember, but those that come by sickness and by death, and that really
+seem no sorrows until they come to us,--yet she never complains. It is
+hard to make a living, and the house-rent alone is six dollars a month;
+but still one lives, and does not fare so ill either. As it does not
+seem to be in her to dislike any one, it must be out of a harmless
+guile, felt to be comforting to servant-ridden householders, that she
+always speaks of “those Irish,” her neighbors, with a bated breath, a
+shaken head, a hand lifted to the cheek, and an averted countenance.
+
+Swarthiest of the organ-grinding tribe is he who peers up at my window
+out of infinitesimal black eyes, perceives me, louts low, and for
+form's sake grinds me out a tune before he begins to talk. As we
+parley together, say it is eleven o'clock in the forenoon, and a sober
+tranquillity reigns upon the dust and nodding weeds of Benicia Street.
+At that hour the organ-grinder and I are the only persons of our sex
+in the whole suburban population; all other husbands and fathers having
+eaten their breakfasts at seven o'clock, and stood up in the early
+horse-cars to Boston, whence they will return, with aching backs and
+quivering calves, half-pendant by leathern straps from the roofs of the
+same luxurious conveyances, in the evening. The Italian might go and
+grind his organ upon the front stoop of any one of a hundred French-roof
+houses around, and there would be no arm within strong enough to thrust
+him thence; but he is a gentleman in his way, and, as he prettily
+explains, he never stops to play except where the window smiles on
+him: a frowning lattice he will pass in silence. I behold in him a
+disappointed man,--a man broken in health, and of a liver baked by long
+sojourn in a tropical clime. In large and dim outline, made all the
+dimmer by his dialect, he sketches me the story of his life; how in his
+youth he ran away from the Milanese for love of a girl in France, who,
+dying, left him with so little purpose in the world that, after working
+at his trade of plasterer for some years in Lyons, he listened to a
+certain gentleman going out upon government service to a French colony
+in South America. This gentleman wanted a man-servant, and he said to
+my organ-grinder, “Go with me and I make your fortune.” So he, who cared
+not whither he went, went, and found himself in the tropics. It was a
+hard life he led there; and of the wages that had seemed so great in
+France, he paid nearly half to his laundress alone, being forced to be
+neat in his master's house. The service was not so irksome in-doors, but
+it was the hunting beasts in the forest all day that broke his patience
+at last.
+
+“Beasts in the forest?” I ask, forgetful of the familiar sense of
+_bestie_, and figuring cougars at least by the word.
+
+“Yes, those little beasts for the naturalists,--flies, bugs,
+beetles,--Heaven knows what.”
+
+“But this brought you money?”
+
+“It brought my master money, but me aches and pains as many as you will,
+and at last the fever. When that was burnt out, I made up my mind to
+ask for more pay, and, not getting it, to quit that service. I think
+the signor would have given it,--but the signora! So I left, empty as I
+came, and was cook on a vessel to New York.”
+
+This was the black and white of the man's story. I lose the color and
+atmosphere which his manner as well as his words bestowed upon it. He
+told it in a cheerful, impersonal kind of way as the romance of a poor
+devil which had interested him, and might possibly amuse me, leaving
+out no touch of character in his portrait of the fat, selfish
+master,--yielding enough, however, but for his grasping wife, who, with
+all her avarice and greed, he yet confessed to be very handsome. By the
+wave of a hand he housed them in a tropic residence, dim, cool, close
+shut, kept by servants in white linen moving with mute slippered feet
+over stone floors; and by another gesture he indicated the fierce thorny
+growths of the forest in which he hunted those vivid insects,--the
+luxuriant savannas, the gigantic ferns and palms, the hush and shining
+desolation, the presence of the invisible fever and death. There was a
+touch, too, of inexpressible sadness in his half-ignorant mention of
+the exiles at Cayenne, who were forbidden the wide ocean of escape about
+them by those swift gunboats keeping their coasts and swooping down upon
+every craft that left the shore. He himself had seen one such capture,
+and he made me see it, and the mortal despair of the fugitives, standing
+upright in their boat with the idle oars in their unconscious hands,
+while the corvette swept toward them.
+
+For all his misfortunes, he was not cast down. He had that lightness of
+temper which seems proper to most northern Italians, whereas those from
+the south are usually dark-mooded, sad-faced men. Nothing surpasses for
+unstudied misanthropy of expression the visages of different Neapolitan
+harpers who have visited us; but they have some right to their dejected
+countenances as being of a yet half-civilized stock, and as real artists
+and men of genius. Nearly all wandering violinists, as well as harpers,
+are of their race, and they are of every age, from that of mere
+children to men in their prime. They are very rarely old, as many of
+the organ-grinders are; they are not so handsome as the Italians of the
+north, though they have invariably fine eyes. They arrive in twos and
+threes; the violinist briefly tunes his fiddle, and the harper unslings
+his instrument, and, with faces of profound gloom, they go through their
+repertory,--pieces from the great composers, airs from the opera, not
+unmingled with such efforts of Anglo-Saxon genius as Champagne Charley
+and Captain Jenks of the Horse Marines, which, like the language of
+Shakespeare and Milton, hold us and our English cousins in tender bonds
+of mutual affection. Beyond the fact that they come “dal Basilicat',” or
+“dal Principat',” one gets very little out of these Neapolitans, though
+I dare say they are not so surly at heart as they look. Money does not
+brighten them to the eye, but yet it touches them, and they are good
+in playing or leaving off to him that pays. Long time two of them stood
+between the gateway firs on a pleasant summer's afternoon and twanged
+and scraped their harmonious strings, till all the idle boys of the
+neighborhood gathered about them, listening with a grave and still
+delight. It was a most serious company: the Neapolitans, with their
+cloudy brows, rapt in their music; and the Yankee children, with their
+impassive faces, warily guarding against the faintest expression of
+enjoyment; and when at last the minstrels played a brisk measure,
+and the music began to work in the blood of the boys, and one of them
+shuffling his reluctant feet upon the gravel, broke into a sudden and
+resistless dance, the spectacle became too sad for contemplation. The
+boy danced only from the hips down; no expression of his face gave the
+levity sanction, nor did any of his comrades: they beheld him with a
+silent fascination, but none was infected by the solemn indecorum; and
+when the legs and music ceased their play together, no comment was made,
+and the dancer turned unheated away. A chance passer asked for what he
+called the Gearybaldeye Hymn, but the Neapolitans apparently did not
+know what this was.
+
+My doorstep acquaintance were not all of one race; now and then an alien
+to the common Italian tribe appeared,--an Irish soldier, on his way to
+Salem, and willing to show me more of his mutilation than I cared to
+buy the sight of for twenty-five cents; and more rarely yet an American,
+also formerly of the army, but with something besides his wretchedness
+to sell. On the hottest day of last summer such a one rang the bell, and
+was discovered on the threshold wiping with his poor sole hand the sweat
+that stood upon his forehead. There was still enough of the independent
+citizen in his maimed and emaciated person to inspire him with
+deliberation and a show of that indifference with which we Americans
+like to encounter each other; but his voice was rather faint when he
+asked if I supposed we wanted any starch to-day.
+
+“Yes, certainly,” answered what heart there was within, taking note
+willfully, but I hope not wantonly, what an absurdly limp figure he was
+for a peddler of starch,--“certainly from you, brave fellow;” and the
+package being taken from his basket, the man turned to go away, so very
+wearily, that a cheap philanthropy protested: “For shame! ask him to sit
+down in-doors and drink a glass of water.”
+
+“No,” answered the poor fellow, when this indignant voice had been
+obeyed, and he had been taken at a disadvantage, and as it were
+surprised into the confession, “my family hadn't any breakfast this
+morning, and I've got to hurry back to them.”
+
+“Haven't _you_ had any breakfast?”
+
+“Well, I wa'n't rightly hungry when I left the house.”
+
+“Here, now,” popped in the virtue before named, “is an opportunity to
+discharge the debt we all owe to the brave fellows who gave us back our
+country. Make it beer.”
+
+So it was made beer and bread and cold meat, and, after a little
+pressing, the honest soul consented to the refreshment. He sat down in a
+cool doorway and began to eat and to tell of the fight before Vicksburg.
+And if you have never seen a one-armed soldier making a meal, I can
+assure you the sight is a pathetic one, and is rendered none the
+cheerfuller by his memories of the fights that mutilated him. This man
+had no very susceptible audience, but before he was carried off the
+field, shot through the body, and in the arm and foot, he had sold every
+package of starch in his basket. I am ashamed to say this now, for I
+suspect that a man with one arm, who indulged himself in going about
+under that broiling sun of July, peddling starch, was very probably an
+impostor. He computed a good day's profits of seventy-five cents, and
+when asked if that was not very little for the support of a sick wife
+and three children, he answered with a quaint effort at impressiveness,
+and with a trick, as I imagined, from the manner of the regimental
+chaplain, “You've done your duty, my friend, and more'n your duty. If
+every one did their duty like that, we should get along.” So he took
+leave, and shambled out into the furnace-heat, the sun beating upon his
+pale face, and his linen coat hugging him close, but with his basket
+lighter, and I hope his heart also. At any rate, this was the sentiment
+which cheap philanthropy offered in self-gratulation, as he passed out
+of sight: “There! you are quits with those maimed soldiers at last, and
+you have a country which you have paid for with cold victuals as they
+with blood.”
+
+We have been a good deal visited by one disbanded volunteer, not to the
+naked eye maimed, nor apparently suffering from any lingering illness,
+yet who bears, as he tells me, a secret disabling wound in his side from
+a spent shell, and who is certainly a prey to the most acute form
+of shiftlessness. I do not recall with exactness the date of our
+acquaintance, but it was one of those pleasant August afternoons when
+a dinner eaten in peace fills the digester with a millennial tenderness
+for the race too rarely felt in the nineteenth century. At such a moment
+it is a more natural action to loosen than to tighten the purse-strings,
+and when a very neatly dressed young man presented himself at the gate,
+and, in a note of indescribable plaintiveness, asked if I had any little
+job for him to do that he might pay for a night's lodging, I looked
+about the small domain with a vague longing to find some part of it in
+disrepair, and experienced a moment's absurd relief when he hinted that
+he would be willing to accept fifty cents in pledge of future service.
+Yet this was not the right principle: some work, real or apparent, must
+be done for the money, and the veteran was told that he might weed the
+strawberry bed, though, as matters then stood, it was clean enough for a
+strawberry bed that never bore anything. The veteran was neatly dressed,
+as I have said: his coat, which was good, was buttoned to the throat
+for reasons that shall be sacred against curiosity, and he had on a
+perfectly clean paper collar; he was a handsome young fellow, with
+regular features, and a solicitously kept imperial and mustache; his
+hair, when he lifted his hat, appeared elegantly oiled and brushed.
+I did not hope from this figure that the work done would be worth the
+money paid, and, as nearly as I can compute, the weeds he took from that
+bed cost me a cent apiece, to say nothing of a cup of tea given him in
+grace at the end of his labors.
+
+My acquaintance was, as the reader will be glad to learn, a native
+American, though it is to be regretted, for the sake of facts which his
+case went far to establish, that he was not a New-Englander by birth.
+The most that could be claimed was, that he came to Boston from Delaware
+when very young, and that there on that brine-washed granite he had
+grown as perfect a flower of helplessness and indolence, as fine a fruit
+of maturing civilization, as ever expanded or ripened in Latin lands.
+He lived, not only a protest in flesh and blood against the tendency of
+democracy to exclude mere beauty from our system, but a refutation
+of those Old World observers, who deny to our vulgar and bustling
+communities the refining and elevating grace of Repose. There was
+something very curious and original in his character, from which the
+sentiment of shame was absent, but which was not lacking in the fine
+instincts of personal cleanliness, of dress, of style. There was nothing
+of the rowdy in him; he was gentle as an Italian noble in his manners:
+what other traits they may have had in common, I do not know; perhaps an
+amiable habit of illusion. He was always going to bring me his discharge
+papers, but he never did, though he came often and had many a pleasant
+night's sleep at my cost. If sometimes he did a little work, he spent
+great part of the time contracted to me in the kitchen, where it was
+understood, quite upon his own agency, that his wages included board. At
+other times, he called for money too late in the evening to work it out
+that day, and it has happened that a new second girl, deceived by
+his genteel appearance in the uncertain light, has shown him into the
+parlor, where I have found him to his and my own great amusement, as
+the gentleman who wanted to see me. Nothing else seemed to raise his
+ordinarily dejected spirits so much. We all know how pleasant it is to
+laugh at people behind their backs; but this veteran afforded me at a
+very low rate the luxury of a fellow-being whom one might laugh at to
+his face as much as one liked.
+
+Yet with all his shamelessness, his pensiveness, his elegance, I felt
+that somehow our national triumph was not complete in him,--that there
+were yet more finished forms of self-abasement in the Old World, till
+one day I looked out of the window and saw at a little distance my
+veteran digging a cellar for an Irishman. I own that the spectacle gave
+me a shock of pleasure, and that I ran down to have a nearer view of
+what human eyes have seldom, if ever, beheld,--an American, pure blood,
+handling the pick, the shovel, and the wheelbarrow, while an Irishman
+directed his labors. Upon inspection, it appeared that none of the trees
+grew with their roots in the air, in recognition of this great reversal
+of the natural law; all the French-roof houses stood right side up. The
+phenomenon may become more common in future, unless the American
+race accomplishes its destiny of dying out before the more populatory
+foreigner, but as yet it graced the veteran with an exquisite and signal
+distinction. He, however, seemed to feel unpleasantly the anomaly of his
+case, and opened the conversation by saying that he should not work at
+that job to-morrow, it hurt his side; and went on to complain of the
+inhumanity of Americans to Americans. “Why,” said he, “they'd rather
+give out their jobs to a nigger than to one of their own kind. I was
+beatin' carpets for a gentleman on the Avenue, and the first thing I
+know he give most of 'em to a nigger. I beat seven of 'em in one day,
+and got two dollars; and the nigger beat 'em by the piece, and he got a
+dollar an' a half apiece. My luck!”
+
+Here the Irishman glanced at his hireling, and the rueful veteran
+hastened to pile up another wheelbarrow with earth. If ever we come to
+reverse positions generally with our Irish brethren, there is no doubt
+but they will get more work out of us than we do from them at present.
+
+It was shortly after this that the veteran offered to do second girl's
+work in my house if I would take him. The place was not vacant; and as
+the summer was now drawing to a close, and I feared to be left with
+him on my hands for the winter, it seemed well to speak to him upon
+the subject of economy. The next time he called, I had not about me the
+exact sum for a night's lodging,--fifty cents, namely--and asked him
+if he thought a dollar would do He smiled sadly, as if he did not like
+jesting upon such a very serious subject, but said he allowed to work it
+out, and took it.
+
+“Now, I hope you won't think I am interfering with your affairs,” said
+his benefactor, “but I really think you are a very poor financier.
+According to your own account, you have been going on from year to year
+for a long time, trusting to luck for a night's lodging. Sometimes I
+suppose you have to sleep out-of-doors.”
+
+“No, never!” answered the veteran, with something like scorn. “I never
+sleep out-doors. I wouldn't do it.”
+
+“Well, at any rate, some one has to pay for your lodging. Don't you
+think you'd come cheaper to your friends, if, instead of going to a
+hotel every night, you'd take a room somewhere, and pay for it by the
+month?”
+
+“I've thought of that. If I could get a good bed, I'd try it awhile
+anyhow. You see the hotels have raised. I used to get a lodgin' and a
+nice breakfast for a half a dollar, but now it is as much as you can do
+to get a lodgin' for the money, and it's just as dear in the Port as
+it is in the city. I've tried hotels pretty much everywhere, and one's
+about as bad as another.”
+
+If he had been a travelled Englishman writing a book, he could not have
+spoken of hotels with greater disdain.
+
+“You see, the trouble with me is, I ain't got any relations around here.
+Now,” he added, with the life and eagerness of an inspiration, “if I had
+a mother and sister livin' down at the Port, say, I wouldn't go hunting
+about for these mean little jobs everywheres. I'd just lay round home,
+and wait till something come up big. What I want is a home.”
+
+At the instigation of a malignant spirit I asked the homeless orphan,
+“Why don't you get married, then?”
+
+He gave me another smile, sadder, fainter, sweeter than before, and
+said: “When would you like to see me again, so I could work out this
+dollar?”
+
+A sudden and unreasonable disgust for the character which had given me
+so much entertainment succeeded to my past delight. I felt, moreover,
+that I had bought the right to use some frankness with the veteran, and
+I said to him: “Do you know now, I shouldn't care if I _never_ saw you
+again?”
+
+I can only conjecture that he took the confidence in good part, for he
+did not appear again after that.
+
+
+
+
+A PEDESTRIAN TOUR.
+
+
+Walking for walking's sake I do not like. The diversion appears to
+me one of the most factitious of modern enjoyments; and I cannot help
+looking upon those who pace their five miles in the teeth of a north
+wind, and profess to come home all the livelier and better for it,
+as guilty of a venial hypocrisy. It is in nature that after such an
+exercise the bones should ache and the flesh tremble; and I suspect that
+these harmless pretenders are all the while paying a secret penalty
+for their bravado. With a pleasant end in view, or with cheerful
+companionship, walking is far from being the worst thing in life; though
+doubtless a truly candid person must confess that he would rather
+ride under the same circumstances. Yet it is certain that some sort
+of recreation is necessary after a day spent within doors; and one is
+really obliged nowadays to take a little walk instead of medicine; for
+one's doctor is sure to have a mania on the subject, and there is no
+more getting pills or powders out of him for a slight indigestion than
+if they had all been shot away at the rebels during the war. For this
+reason I sometimes go upon a pedestrian tour, which is of no great
+extent in itself, and which I moreover modify by keeping always within
+sound of the horse-car bells, or easy reach of some steam-car station.
+
+I fear that I should find these rambles dull, but that their utter lack
+of interest amuses me. I will be honest with the reader, though, and any
+Master Pliable is free to forsake me at this point; for I cannot promise
+to be really livelier than my walk. There is a Slough of Despond in full
+view, and not a Delectable Mountain to be seen, unless you choose so
+to call the high lands about Waltham, which we shall behold dark blue
+against the western sky presently. As I sally forth upon Benicia Street,
+the whole suburb of Charlesbridge stretches about me,--a vast space upon
+which I can embroider any fancy I like as I saunter along. I have no
+associations with it, or memories of it, and, at some seasons, I might
+wander for days in the most frequented parts of it, and meet hardly any
+one I know. It is not, however, to these parts that I commonly turn,
+but northward, up a street upon which a flight of French-roof houses
+suddenly settled a year or two since, with families in them, and many
+outward signs of permanence, though their precipitate arrival might
+cast some doubt upon this. I have to admire their uniform neatness and
+prettiness, and I look at their dormer-windows with the envy of one
+to whose weak sentimentality dormer-windows long appeared the supreme
+architectural happiness. But, for all my admiration of the houses, I
+find a variety that is pleasanter in the landscape, when I reach, beyond
+them, a little bridge which appears to span a small stream. It unites
+banks lined with a growth of trees and briers nodding their heads above
+the neighboring levels, and suggesting a quiet water-course, though in
+fact it is the Fitchburg Railroad that purls between them, with rippling
+freight and passenger trains and ever-gurgling locomotives. The banks
+take the earliest green of spring upon their southward slope, and on a
+Sunday morning of May, when the bells are lamenting the Sabbaths of the
+past, I find their sunny tranquillity sufficient to give me a slight
+heart-ache for I know not what. If I descend them and follow the
+railroad westward half a mile, I come to vast brick-yards, which are
+not in themselves exciting to the imagination, and which yet, from an
+irresistible association of ideas, remind me of Egypt, and are forever
+newly forsaken of those who made bricks without straw; so that I have no
+trouble in erecting temples and dynastic tombs out of the kilns; while
+the mills for grinding the clay serve me very well for those sad-voiced
+_sakias_ or wheel-pumps which the Howadji Curtis heard wailing at their
+work of drawing water from the Nile. A little farther on I come to the
+boarding-house built at the railroad side for the French Canadians who
+have by this time succeeded the Hebrews in the toil of the brick-yards,
+and who, as they loiter in windy-voiced, good-humored groups about the
+doors of their lodgings, insist upon bringing before me the town of
+St. Michel at the mouth of the great Mont Cenis tunnel, where so
+many peasant folk like them are always amiably quarreling before the
+_cabarets_ when the diligence comes and goes. Somewhere, there must be a
+gendarme with a cocked hat and a sword on, standing with folded arms to
+represent the Empire and Peace among that rural population; if I
+looked in-doors, I am sure I should see the neatest of landladies and
+landladies' daughters and nieces in high black silk caps, bearing hither
+and thither smoking bowls of _bouillon_ and _café-au-lait_. Well, it
+takes as little to make one happy as miserable, thank Heaven! and I
+derive a cheerfulness from this scene which quite atones to me for the
+fleeting desolation suffered from the sunny verdure on the railroad
+bank. With repaired spirits I take my way up through the brick-yards
+towards the Irish settlement on the north, passing under the long sheds
+that shelter the kilns. The ashes lie cold about the mouths of most,
+and the bricks are burnt to the proper complexion; in others these are
+freshly arranged over flues in which the fire has not been kindled; but
+in whatever state I see them, I am reminded of brick-kilns of boyhood.
+They were then such palaces of enchantment as any architect should now
+vainly attempt to rival with bricks upon the most desirable corner
+lot of the Back Bay, and were the homes of men truly to be envied: men
+privileged to stay up all night; to sleep, as it were, out of doors; to
+hear the wild geese as they flew over in the darkness; to be waking in
+time to shoot the early ducks that visited the neighboring ponds; to
+roast corn upon the ends of sticks; to tell and to listen to stories
+that never ended, save in some sudden impulse to rise and dance a happy
+hoe-down in the ruddy light of the kiln-fires. If by day they were seen
+to have the redness of eyes of men that looked upon the whiskey when
+it was yellow and gave its color in the flask; if now and then the
+fragments of a broken bottle strewed the scene of their vigils, and
+a head broken to match appeared among those good comrades, the boyish
+imagination was not shocked by these things, but accepted them merely as
+the symbols of a free virile life. Some such life no doubt is still to
+be found in the Dublin to which I am come by the time my repertory of
+associations with brick-kilns is exhausted, but, oddly enough, I no
+longer care to encounter it.
+
+It is perhaps in a pious recognition of our mortality that Dublin is
+built around the Irish grave-yard. Most of its windows look out upon
+the sepulchral monuments and the pretty constant arrival of the funeral
+trains with their long lines of carriages bringing to the celebration of
+the sad ultimate rites those gay companies of Irish mourners. I suppose
+that the spectacle of such obsequies is not at all depressing to the
+inhabitants of Dublin; but that, on the contrary, it must beget in them
+a feeling which, if not resignation to death, is, at least, a sort of
+sub-acute cheerfulness in his presence. None but a Dubliner, however,
+would have been greatly animated by a scene which I witnessed during
+a stroll through this cemetery one afternoon of early spring. The fact
+that a marble slab or shaft more or less sculptured, and inscribed with
+words more or less helpless, is the utmost that we can give to one whom
+once we could caress with every tenderness of speech and touch, and
+that, after all, the memorial we raise is rather to our own grief, and
+is a decency, a mere conventionality,--this is a dreadful fact on
+which the heart breaks itself with such a pang, that it always seems
+a desolation never recognized, an anguish never felt before. Whilst I
+stood revolving this thought in my mind, and reading the Irish names
+upon the stones and the black head-boards,--the latter adorned with
+pictures of angels, once gilt, but now weather-worn down to the yellow
+paint,--a wail of intolerable pathos filled the air: “O my darling, O my
+darling! O--O--O!” with sobs and groans and sighs; and, looking about, I
+saw two women, one standing upright beside another that had cast herself
+upon a grave, and lay clasping it with her comfortless arms, uttering
+these cries. The grave was a year old at least, but the grief seemed of
+yesterday or of that morning. At times the friend that stood beside
+the prostrate woman stooped and spoke a soothing word to her, while she
+wailed out her woe; and in the midst some little ribald Irish boys came
+scuffling and quarreling up the pathway, singing snatches of an obscene
+song; and when both the wailing and the singing had died away, an old
+woman, decently clad, and with her many-wrinkled face softened by the
+old-fashioned frill running round the inside of her cap, dropped down
+upon her knees beside a very old grave, and clasped her hands in a
+silent prayer above it.
+
+[Illustration: “Looking about, I saw two women.”]
+
+If I had beheld all this in some village _campo santo_ in Italy, I
+should have been much more vividly impressed by it, as an aesthetical
+observer; whereas I was now merely touched as a human being, and had
+little desire to turn the scene to literary account. I could not help
+feeling that it wanted the atmosphere of sentimental association, the
+whole background was a blank or worse than a blank. Yet I have not
+been able to hide from myself so much as I would like certain points of
+resemblance between our Irish and the poorer classes of Italians. The
+likeness is one of the first things that strikes an American in Italy,
+and I am always reminded of it in Dublin. So much of the local life
+appears upon the street; there is so much gossip from house to house,
+and the talk is always such a resonant clamoring; the women, bareheaded,
+or with a shawl folded over the head and caught beneath the chin with
+the hand, have such a contented down-at-heel aspect, shuffling from door
+to door, or lounging, arms akimbo, among the cats and poultry at their
+own thresholds, that one beholding it all might well fancy himself upon
+some Italian _calle_ or _vicolo_. Of course the illusion does not hold
+good on a Sunday, when the Dubliners are coming home from church in
+their best,--their extraordinary best bonnets and their prodigious silk
+hats. It does not hold good in any way or at any time, except upon the
+surface, for there is beneath all this resemblance the difference that
+must exist between a race immemorially civilized and one which has
+lately emerged from barbarism “after six centuries of oppression.” You
+are likely to find a polite pagan under the mask of the modern Italian
+you feel pretty sure that any of his race would with a little washing
+and skillful manipulation, _restore_, like a neglected painting,
+into something genuinely graceful and pleasing; but if one of these
+Yankeefied Celts were scraped, it is but too possible that you might
+find a kern, a Whiteboy, or a Pikeman. The chance of discovering
+a scholar or a saint of the period when Ireland was the centre of
+learning, and the favorite seat of the Church, is scarcely one in three.
+
+Among the houses fronting on the main street of Dublin, every other
+one--I speak in all moderation--is a grocery, if I may judge by a tin
+case of corn-balls, a jar of candy, and a card of shirt-buttons, with an
+under layer of primers and ballads, in the windows. You descend from the
+street by several steps into these haunts, which are contrived to secure
+the greatest possible dampness and darkness; and if you have made an
+errand inside, you doubtless find a lady before the counter in the act
+of putting down a guilty-looking tumbler with one hand, while she
+neatly wipes her mouth on the back of the other. She has that effect,
+observable in all tippling women of low degree, of having no upper
+garment on but a shawl, which hangs about her in statuesque folds and
+lines. She slinks out directly, but the lady behind the counter gives
+you good evening with
+
+ “The affectation of a bright-eyed ease,”
+
+intended to deceive if you chance to be a State constable in disguise,
+and to propitiate if you are a veritable customer: “Who was that woman,
+lamenting so, over in the grave-yard?” “O, I don't know, sir,” answered
+the lady, making change for the price of a ballad. “Some Irish folks.
+They ginerally cries that way.”
+
+In yet earlier spring walks through Dublin, I found a depth of mud
+appalling even to one who had lived three years in Charlesbridge. The
+streets were passable only to pedestrians skilled in shifting themselves
+along the sides of fences and alert to take advantage of every
+projecting doorstep. There were no dry places, except in front of the
+groceries, where the ground was beaten hard by the broad feet of loafing
+geese and the coming and going of admirably small children making
+purchases there. The number of the little ones was quite as remarkable
+as their size, and ought to have been even more interesting, if, as
+sometimes appears probable, such increase shall--together with the
+well-known ambition of Dubliners to rule the land--one day make an end
+of us poor Yankees as a dominant plurality.
+
+The town was somewhat tainted with our architectural respectability,
+unless the newness of some of the buildings gave illusion of this; and,
+though the streets of Dublin were not at all cared for, and though every
+house on the main thoroughfare stood upon the brink of a slough, without
+yard, or any attempt at garden or shrubbery, there were many cottages in
+the less aristocratic quarters inclosed in palings, and embowered in
+the usual suburban pear-trees and currant-bushes. These, indeed, were
+dwellings of an elder sort, and had clearly been inherited from a
+population now as extinct in that region as the Pequots, and they were
+not always carefully cherished. On the border of the hamlet is to be
+seen an old farm-house of the poorer sort, built about the beginning of
+this century, and now thickly peopled by Dubliners. Its gate is thrown
+down, and the great wild-grown lilac hedge, no longer protected by a
+fence, shows skirts bedabbled by the familiarity of lawless poultry, as
+little like the steady-habited poultry of other times, as the people of
+the house are like the former inmates, long since dead or gone West. I
+offer the poor place a sentiment of regret as I pass, thinking of
+its better days. I think of its decorous, hard-working, cleanly,
+school-going, church-attending life, which was full of the pleasure of
+duty done, and was not without its own quaint beauty and grace. What
+long Sabbaths were kept in that old house, what scanty holidays!
+Yet from this and such as this came the dominion of the whole wild
+continent, the freedom of a race, the greatness of the greatest people.
+It may be that I regretted a little too exultantly, and that out of
+this particular house came only peddling of innumerable clocks and
+multitudinous tin-ware. But as yet, it is pretty certain that the
+general character of the population has not gained by the change. What
+is in the future, let the prophets say; any one can see that something
+not quite agreeable is in the present; something that takes the wrong
+side, as by instinct, in politics; something that mainly helps to prop
+up tottering priestcraft among us; something that one thinks of with
+dismay as destined to control so largely the civil and religious
+interests of the country. This, however, is only the aggregate aspect.
+Mrs. Clannahan's kitchen, as it may be seen by the desperate philosopher
+when he goes to engage her for the spring house-cleaning, is a strong
+argument against his fears. If Mrs. Clannahan, lately of an Irish cabin,
+can show a kitchen so capably appointed and so neatly kept as that, the
+country may yet be an inch or two from the brink of ruin, and the race
+which we trust as little as we love may turn out no more spendthrift
+than most heirs. It is encouraging, moreover, when any people can
+flatter themselves upon a superior prosperity and virtue, and we may
+take heart from the fact that the French Canadians, many of whom have
+lodgings in Dublin, are not well seen by the higher classes of the
+citizens there. Mrs. Clannahan, whose house stands over against the main
+gate of the grave-yard, and who may, therefore, be considered as moving
+in the best Dublin society, hints, that though good Catholics, the
+French are not thought perfectly honest,--“things have been missed”
+ since they came to blight with their crimes and vices the once
+happy seat of integrity. It is amusing to find Dublin fearful of the
+encroachment of the French, as we, in our turn, dread the advance of the
+Irish. We must make a jest of our own alarms, and even smile--since we
+cannot help ourselves--at the spiritual desolation occasioned by the
+settlement of an Irish family in one of our suburban neighborhoods. The
+householders view with fear and jealousy the erection of any dwelling of
+less than a stated cost, as portending a possible advent of Irish; and
+when the calamitous race actually appears, a mortal pang strikes to the
+bottom of every pocket. Values tremble throughout that neighborhood, to
+which the new-comers communicate a species of moral dry-rot. None but
+the Irish will build near the Irish; and the infection of fear spreads
+to the elder Yankee homes about, and the owners prepare to abandon
+them,--not always, however, let us hope, without turning, at the expense
+of the invaders, a Parthian penny in their flight. In my walk from
+Dublin to North Charlesbridge, I saw more than one token of the
+encroachment of the Celtic army, which had here and there invested a
+Yankee house with besieging shanties on every side, and thus given
+to its essential and otherwise quite hopeless ugliness a touch of the
+poetry that attends failing fortunes, and hallows decayed gentility of
+however poor a sort originally. The fortunes of such a house are, of
+course, not to be retrieved. Where the Celt sets his foot, there the
+Yankee (and it is perhaps wholesome if not agreeable to know that the
+Irish citizen whom we do not always honor as our equal in civilization
+loves to speak of us scornfully as Yankees) rarely, if ever, returns.
+The place remains to the intruder and his heirs forever. We gracefully
+retire before him even in politics, as the metropolis--if it is the
+metropolis--can witness; and we wait with an anxious curiosity the
+encounter of the Irish and the Chinese, now rapidly approaching each
+other from opposite shores of the continent. Shall we be crushed in the
+collision of these superior races? Every intelligence-office will soon
+be ringing with the cries of combat, and all our kitchens strewn with
+pig-tails and bark chignons. As yet we have gay hopes of our Buddhistic
+brethren; but how will it be when they begin to quarter the Dragon upon
+the Stars and Stripes, and buy up all the best sites for temples, and
+burn their joss-sticks, as it were, under our very noses? Our grasp upon
+the great problem grows a little lax, perhaps? Is it true that, when
+we look so anxiously for help from others, the virtue has gone out of
+ourselves? I should hope not.
+
+As I leave Dublin, the houses grow larger and handsomer; and as I
+draw near the Avenue, the Mansard-roofs look down upon me with their
+dormer-windows, and welcome me back to the American community. There are
+fences about all the houses, inclosing ampler and ampler dooryards; the
+children, which had swarmed in the thriftless and unenlightened purlieus
+of Dublin, diminish in number and finally disappear; the chickens have
+vanished; and I hear--I hear the pensive music of the horse-car bells,
+which in some alien land, I am sure, would be as pathetic to me as the
+Ranz des Vaches to the Swiss or the bagpipes to the Highlander: in the
+desert, where the traveller seems to hear the familiar bells of his
+far-off church, this tinkle would haunt the absolute silence, and recall
+the exile's fancy to Charlesbridge; and perhaps in the mocking mirage
+he would behold an airy horse-car track, and a phantasmagoric horse-car
+moving slowly along the edge of the horizon, with spectral passengers
+closely packed inside and overflowing either platform.
+
+But before I reach the Avenue, Dublin calls to me yet again, in the
+figure of an old, old man, wearing the clothes of other times, and a
+sort of ancestral round hat. In the act of striking a match he asks me
+the time of day, and, applying the fire to his pipe, he returns me his
+thanks in a volume of words and smoke. What a wrinkled and unshorn old
+man! Can age and neglect do so much for any of us? This ruinous person
+was associated with a hand-cart as decrepit as himself, but not nearly
+so cheerful; for though he spoke up briskly with a spirit uttered from
+far within the wrinkles and the stubble, the cart had preceded him with
+a very lugubrious creak. It groaned, in fact, under a load of tin cans,
+and I was to learn from the old man that there was, and had been, in his
+person, for thirteen years, such a thing in the world as a peddler
+of buttermilk, and that these cans were now filled with that pleasant
+drink. They did not invite me to prove their contents, being cans that
+apparently passed their vacant moments in stables and even manure-heaps,
+and that looked somehow emulous of that old man's stubble and wrinkles.
+I bought nothing, but I left the old peddler well content, seated upon
+a thill of his cart, smoking tranquilly, and filling the keen spring
+evening air with fumes which it dispersed abroad, and made to itself a
+pleasant incense of.
+
+I left him a whole epoch behind, as I entered the Avenue and lounged
+homeward along the stately street. Above the station it is far more
+picturesque than it is below, and the magnificent elms that shadow
+it might well have looked, in their saplinghood, upon the British
+straggling down the country road from the Concord fight; and there
+are some ancient houses yet standing that must have been filled with
+exultation at the same spectacle. Poor old revolutionaries! they would
+never have believed that their descendants would come to love the
+English as we do.
+
+The season has advanced rapidly during my progress from Dublin to the
+Avenue; and by the time I reach the famous old tavern, not far from the
+station, it is a Sunday morning of early summer, and the yellow sunlight
+falls upon a body of good comrades who are grooming a marvelous
+number of piebald steeds about the stable-doors. By token of these
+beasts--which always look so much more like works of art than of
+nature--I know that there is to be a circus somewhere very soon; and the
+gay bills pasted all over the stable-front tell me that there are to be
+two performances at the Port on the morrow. The grooms talk nothing and
+joke nothing but horse at their labor; and their life seems such a low,
+ignorant, happy life, that the secret nomad lurking in every respectable
+and stationary personality stirs within me and struggles to strike hands
+of fellowship with them. They lead a sort of pastoral existence in
+our age of railroads; they wander over the continent with their great
+caravan, and everywhere pursue the summer from South to North and from
+North to South again; in the mild forenoons they groom their herds,
+and in the afternoons they doze under their wagons, indifferent to
+the tumult of the crowd within and without the mighty canvas near
+them,--doze face downwards on the bruised, sweet-smelling grass; and
+in the starry midnight rise and strike their tents, and set forth again
+over the still country roads, to take the next village on the morrow
+with the blaze and splendor of their “Grand Entree.” The triumphal
+chariot in which the musicians are borne at the head of the procession
+is composed, as I perceive by the bills, of four colossal gilt swans,
+set tail to tail, with lifted wings and curving necks; but the chariot,
+as I behold it beside the stable, is mysteriously draped in white
+canvas, through which its gilding glitters only here and there. And does
+it move thus shrouded in the company's wanderings from place to place,
+and is the precious spottiness of the piebalds then hidden under envious
+drapery? O happy grooms,--not clean as to shirts, nor especially neat in
+your conversation, but displaying a Wealth of art in India-ink upon
+your manly chests and the swelling muscles of your arms, and speaking
+in every movement your freedom from all conventional gyves and shackles,
+_“seid umschlungen!”_--in spirit; for the rest, you are rather too damp,
+and seem to have applied your sudsy sponges too impartially to your
+own trousers and the horses' legs to receive an actual embrace from a
+_dilettante_ vagabond.
+
+The old tavern is old only comparatively; but in our new and changeful
+life it is already quaint. It is very long, and low-studded in either
+story, with a row of windows in the roof, and a great porch, furnished
+with benches, running the whole length of the ground-floor. Perhaps
+because they take the dust of the street too freely, or because the
+guests find it more social and comfortable to gather in-doors in the
+wide, low-ceiled office, the benches are not worn, nor particularly
+whittled. The room has the desolate air characteristic of offices which
+have once been bar-rooms; but no doubt, on a winter's night, there is
+talk worth listening to there, of flocks, and herds and horse-trades,
+from the drovers and cattle-market men who patronize the tavern; and
+the artistic temperament, at least, could feel no regret if that
+sepulchrally penitent bar-room then developed a secret capacity for
+the wickedness that once boldly glittered behind the counter in rows of
+decanters.
+
+The house was formerly renowned for its suppers, of which all that
+was learned or gifted in the old college town of Charlesbridge used to
+partake; and I have heard lips which breathe the loftiest song and the
+sweetest humor--let alone being “dewy with the Greek of Plato”--smacked
+regretfully over the memory of those suppers' roast and broiled. No such
+suppers, they say, are cooked in the world any more; and I am somehow
+made to feel that their passing away is connected with the decay of good
+literature.
+
+I hope it may be very long before the predestined French-roof villa
+occupies the tavern's site, and turns into lawns and gardens its
+wide-spreading cattle-pens, and removes the great barn that now
+shows its broad, low gable to the street. This is yet older and
+quainter-looking than the tavern itself; it is mighty capacious, and
+gives a still profounder impression of vastness with its shed, of which
+the roof slopes southward down almost to a man's height from the ground,
+and shelters a row of mangers, running back half the length of the
+stable, and serving in former times for the baiting of such beasts
+as could not be provided for within. But the halcyon days of the
+cattle-market are past (though you may still see the white horns tossing
+above the fences of the pens, when a newly arrived herd lands from the
+train to be driven afoot to Brighton), and the place looks now so empty
+and forsaken, spite of the circus baggage-wagons, that it were hard to
+believe these mangers could ever have been in request, but for the fact
+that they are all gnawed, down to the quick as it were, by generations
+of horses--vanished forever on the deserted highways of the
+past--impatient for their oats or hungering for more.
+
+The day must come, of course, when the mangers will all be taken from
+the stable-shed, and exposed for sale at that wonderful second-hand shop
+which stands over against the tavern. I am no more surprised than one
+in a dream, to find it a week-day afternoon by the time I have crossed
+thither from the circus-men grooming their piebalds. It is an enchanted
+place to me, and I am a frequent and unprofitable customer there, buying
+only just enough to make good my footing with the custodian of its
+marvels, who is, of course, too true an American to show any desire to
+sell. Without, on either side of the doorway, I am pretty sure to find,
+among other articles of furniture, a mahogany and hair-cloth sofa, a
+family portrait, a landscape painting, a bath-tub, and a flower-stand,
+with now and then the variety of a boat and a dog-house; while under an
+adjoining shed is heaped a mass of miscellaneous movables, of a heavier
+sort, and fearlessly left there night and day, being on all accounts
+undesirable to steal. The door of the shop rings a bell in opening, and
+ushers the customer into a room which Chaos herself might have planned
+in one of her happier moments. Carpets, blankets, shawls, pictures,
+mirrors, rocking-chairs, and blue overalls hang from the ceiling, and
+devious pathways wind amidst piles of ready-made clothing, show-cases
+filled with every sort of knick-knack and half hidden under heaps of
+hats and boots and shoes, bookcases, secretaries, chests of drawers,
+mattresses, lounges, and bedsteads, to the stairway of a loft similarly
+appointed, and to a back room overflowing with glassware and crockery.
+These things are not all second-hand, but they are all old and equally
+pathetic. The melancholy of ruinous auction sales, of changing tastes
+or changing fashions, clings to them, whether they are things that have
+never had a home and have been on sale ever since they were made, or
+things that have been associated with every phase of human life.
+
+Among other objects, certain large glass vases, ornamented by the
+polite art of potichomanie, have long appealed to my fancy, wherein they
+capriciously allied themselves to the history of aging single women in
+lonely New England village houses,--pathetic sisters lingering upon the
+neutral ground between the faded hopes of marriage and the yet unrisen
+prospects of consumption. The work implies an imperfect yet real love of
+beauty, the leisure for it a degree of pecuniary ease: the thoughts of
+the sisters rise above the pickling and preserving that occupied their
+heartier and happier mother; they are in fact in that aesthetic, social,
+and intellectual mean, in which single women are thought soonest to
+wither and decline. With a little more power, and in our later era, they
+would be writing stories full of ambitious, unintelligible, self-devoted
+and sudden collapsing young girls and amazing doctors; but as they are,
+and in their time, they must do what they can. A sentimentalist
+may discern on these vases not only the gay designs with which they
+ornamented them, but their own dim faces looking wan from the windows of
+some huge old homestead, a world too wide for the shrunken family. All
+April long the door-yard trees crouch and shudder in the sour east, all
+June they rain canker-worms upon the roof, and then in autumn choke the
+eaves with a fall of tattered and hectic foliage. From the window the
+fading sisters gaze upon the unnatural liveliness of the summer streets
+through which the summer boarders are driving, or upon the death-white
+drifts of the intolerable winter. Their father, the captain, is dead;
+he died with the Calcutta trade, having survived their mother, and left
+them a hopeless competency and yonder bamboo chairs; their only brother
+is in California; one, though she loved, had never a lover; her sister's
+betrothed married West, whither he went to make a home for her,--and
+ah! is it vases for the desolate parlor mantel they decorate, or funeral
+urns? And when in time, they being gone, the Californian brother sends
+to sell out at auction the old place with the household and kitchen
+furniture, is it withered rose-leaves or ashes that the purchaser finds
+in these jars?
+
+They are empty now; and I wonder how came they here? How came the
+show-case of Dr. Merrifield, Surgeon-Chiropodist here? How came here yon
+Italian painting?--a poor, silly, little affected Madonna, simpering
+at me from her dingy gilt frame till I buy her, a great bargain, at a
+dollar. From what country church or family oratory, in what revolution,
+or stress of private fortunes,--then from what various cabinets of
+antiquities, in what dear Vicenza, or Ferrara, or Mantua, earnest
+thou, O Madonna? Whose likeness are you, poor girl, with your everyday
+prettiness of brows and chin, and your Raphaelesque crick in the neck?
+I think I know a part of your story. You were once the property of that
+ruined advocate, whose sensibilities would sometimes consent that a
+_valet de place_ of uncommon delicacy should bring to his ancestral
+palace some singularly meritorious foreigner desirous of purchasing from
+his rare collection,--a collection of rubbish scarcely to be equaled
+elsewhere in Italy. You hung in that family-room, reached after passage
+through stately vestibules and grand stairways; and O, I would be
+cheated to the bone, if only I might look out again from some such
+windows as were there, upon some such damp, mouldy, broken-statued,
+ruinous, enchanted garden as lay below! In that room sat the advocate's
+mother and hunchback sister, with their smoky _scaldini_ and their
+snuffy priest; and there the wife of the foreigner, self-elected the
+taste of his party, inflicted the pang courted by the advocate, and
+asked if you were for sale. And then the ruined advocate clasped his
+hands, rubbed them, set his head heart-brokenly on one side, took you
+down, heaved a sigh, shrugged his shoulders, and sold you--you! a family
+heirloom! Well, at least you are old, and you represent to me acres of
+dim, religious canvas in that beloved land; and here is the dollar now
+asked for you: I could not have bought you for so little at home.
+
+The Madonna is neighbored by several paintings, if the kind called
+Grecian for a reason never revealed by the inventor of an art as old as
+potichomanie itself. It was an art by which ordinary lithographs were
+given a ghastly transparency, and a tone as disagreeable as chromos; and
+I doubt if it could have been known to the Greeks in their best age.
+But I remember very well when it passed over whole neighborhoods in
+some parts of this country, wasting the time of many young women, and
+disfiguring parlor walls with the fruit of their accomplishment. It was
+always taught by Professors, a class of learned young men who acquired
+their title by abandoning the plough and anvil, and, in a suit of
+ready-made clothing, travelling about the country with portfolios under
+their arms. It was an experience to make loafers for life of them: and
+I fancy the girls who learnt their art never afterwards made so good
+butter and cheese.
+
+ “Non-ragioniam di lor, ma guarda e passa.”
+
+Besides the Grecian paintings there are some mezzotints; full length
+pictures of presidents and statesmen, chiefly General Jackson, Henry
+Clay, and Daniel Webster, which have hung their day in the offices
+or parlors of country politicians. They are all statesmanlike and
+presidential in attitude; and I know that if the mighty Webster's lips
+had language, he would take his hand out of his waistcoat front, and say
+to his fellow mezzotints: “Venerable men! you have come down to us from
+a former generation, bringing your household furniture and miscellaneous
+trumpery of all kinds with you.”
+
+Some old-fashioned entry lanterns divide my interest with certain old
+willow chairs of an hour-glass pattern, which never stood upright,
+probably, and have now all a confirmed droop to one side, as from
+having been fallen heavily asleep in, upon breezy porches, of hot summer
+afternoons. In the windows are small vases of alabaster, fly-specked
+Parian and plaster figures, and dolls with stiff wooden limbs and
+papier-maché heads, a sort of dolls no longer to be bought in these
+days of modish, blue-eyed blondes of biscuit and sturdy india-rubber
+brunettes. The show-case is full of an incredible variety, as photograph
+albums, fishing-hooks, socks, suspenders, steel pens, cutlery of all
+sorts, and curious old colored prints of Adelaide, and Kate, and Ellen.
+A rocking-horse is stabled near amid pendent lengths of second-hand
+carpeting, hat-racks, and mirrors; and standing cheek-by-jowl with
+painted washstands and bureaus are some plaster statues, aptly colored
+and varnished to represent bronze.
+
+There is nothing here but has a marked character of its own, some
+distinct yet intangible trait acquired from former circumstances; and
+doubtless all these things have that lurking likeness to former owners
+which clothes and furniture are apt to take on from long association,
+and which we should instantly recognize could they be confronted with
+their late proprietors. It seems, in very imaginative moments, as if the
+strange assemblage of incongruities must have a consciousness of these
+latent resemblances, which the individual pieces betray when their
+present keeper turns the key upon them, and abandons them to themselves
+at night; and I have sometimes fancied such an effect in the late
+twilight, when I have wandered into their resting-place, and have beheld
+them in the unnatural glare of a kerosene lamp burning before a brightly
+polished reflector, and casting every manner of grotesque shadow upon
+the floor and walls. But this may have been an illusion; at any rate I
+am satisfied that the bargain-driving capacity of the storekeeper is not
+in the least affected by a weird quality in his wares; though they have
+not failed to impart to him something of their own desultory character.
+He sometimes leaves a neighbor in charge when he goes to meals, and
+then, if I enter, I am watchfully followed about from corner to corner,
+and from room to room, lest I pocket a mattress or slip a book-case
+under my coat. The storekeeper himself never watches me; perhaps
+he knows that it is a purely professional interest I take in the
+collection; that I am in the trade and have a secondhand shop of my
+own, full of poetical rubbish, and every sort of literary odds and
+ends, picked up at random, and all cast higgledy-piggledy into the same
+chaotic receptacle. His customers are as little like ordinary shoppers
+as he is like common tradesmen. They are in part the Canadians who work
+in the brickyards, and it is surprising to find how much business can
+be transacted, and how many sharp bargains struck without the help of a
+common language. I am in the belief, which may be erroneous, that nobody
+is wronged in these trades. The taciturn storekeeper, who regards his
+customers with a stare of solemn amusement as Critturs born by some
+extraordinary vicissitude of nature to the use of a language that
+practically amounts to deafness and dumbness, never suffers his
+philosophical interest in them to affect his commercial efficiency;
+he drops them now and then a curt English phrase, or expressive Yankee
+idiom; he knows very well when they mean to buy and when they do
+not; and they equally wary and equally silent, unswayed by the glib
+allurements of a salesman, judge of price and quality for themselves,
+make their solitary offer, and stand or fall by it.
+
+I am seldom able to conclude a pedestrian tour without a glance at the
+wonderful interior of this cheap store, and I know all its contents
+familiarly. I recognize wares that have now been on sale there for
+years; I miss at first glance such accustomed objects as have been
+parted with between my frequent visits, and hail with pleasure the
+additions to that extraordinary variety. I can hardly, I suppose,
+expect the reader to sympathize with the joy I felt the other night, in
+discovering among the latter an adventurous and universally applicable
+sign-board advertising This House and Lot for Sale, and, intertwined
+with the cast-off suspenders which long garlanded a coffee-mill pendent
+from the roof, a newly added second-hand india-rubber ear-trumpet. Here
+and there, however, I hope a finer soul will relish, as I do, the poetry
+of thus buying and offering for sale the very most recondite, as well
+as the commonest articles of commerce, in the faith that one day the
+predestined purchaser will appear and carry off the article appointed
+him from the beginning of time. This faith is all the more touching,
+because the collector cannot expect to live until the whole stock is
+disposed of, and because, in the order of nature, much must at last fall
+to rein unbought, unless the reporter's Devouring Element appears and
+gives a sudden tragical turn to the poem.
+
+It is the whistle of a train drawing up at the neighboring station that
+calls me away from the second-hand store; for I never find myself able
+to resist the hackneyed prodigy of such an arrival. It cannot cease
+to be impressive. I stand beside the track while the familiar monster
+writhes up to the station and disgorges its passengers,--suburbanly
+packaged, and bundled, and bagged, and even when empty-handed somehow
+proclaiming the jaded character of men that hurry their work all day
+to catch the evening train out, and their dreams all night to catch the
+morning train in,--and then I climb the station-stairs, and “hang with
+grooms and porters on the bridge,” that I may not lose my ever-repeated
+sensation of having the train pass under my feet, and of seeing it rush
+away westward to the pretty blue hills beyond,--hills not too big for
+a man born in a plain-country to love. Twisting and trembling along the
+track, it dwindles rapidly in the perspective, and is presently out of
+sight. It has left the city and the suburbs behind, and has sought the
+woods and meadows; but Nature never in the least accepts it, and rarely
+makes its path a part of her landscape's loveliness. The train passes
+alien through all her moods and aspects; the wounds made in her face by
+the road's sharp cuts and excavations are slowest of all wounds to heal,
+and the iron rails remain to the last as shackles upon her. Yet when
+the rails are removed, as has happened with a non-paying track in
+Charlesbridge, the road inspires a real tenderness in her. Then she
+bids it take or the grace that belongs to all ruin; the grass creeps
+stealthily over the scarified sides of the embankments; the golden-rod,
+and the purple-topped iron-weed, and the lady's-slipper, spring up in
+the hollows on either side, and--I am still thinking of that deserted
+railroad which runs through Charlesbridge--hide with their leafage the
+empty tomato-cans and broken bottles and old boots on the ash-heaps
+dumped there; Nature sets her velvety willows a waving near, and lower
+than their airy tops plans a vista of trees arching above the track,
+which is as wild and pretty and illusive a vista as the sunset ever
+cared to look through and gild a board fence beyond.
+
+Most of our people come from Boston on the horse-cars, and it is only
+the dwellers on the Avenue and the neighboring streets whom hurrying
+homeward I follow away from the steam-car station. The Avenue is
+our handsomest street; and if it were in the cosmopolitan citizen of
+Charlesbridge to feel any local interest, I should be proud of it.
+As matters are, I perceive its beauty, and I often reflect, with a
+pardonable satisfaction, that it is not only handsome, but probably the
+very dullest street in the world. It is magnificently long and broad,
+and is flanked nearly the whole way from the station to the colleges by
+pine palaces rising from spacious lawns, or from the green of trees or
+the brightness of gardens. The splendor is all very new, but newness is
+not a fault that much affects architectural beauty, while it is the only
+one that time is certain to repair: and I find an honest and unceasing
+pleasure in the graceful lines of those palaces, which is not surpassed
+even by my appreciation of the vast quiet and monotony of the street
+itself. Commonly, when I emerge upon it from the grassy-bordered,
+succory-blossomed walks of Benicia Street, I behold, looking northward,
+a monumental horse-car standing--it appears for ages, if I wish to take
+it for Boston--at the head of Pliny Street; and looking southward I see
+that other emblem of suburban life, an express-wagon, fading rapidly
+in the distance. Haply the top of a buggy nods round the bend under the
+elms near the station; and, if fortune is so lavish, a lady appears from
+a side street, and, while tarrying for the car, thrusts the point of her
+sun-umbrella into the sandy sidewalk. This is the mid-afternoon
+effect of the Avenue; but later in the day, and well into the dusk, it
+remembers its former gayety as a trotting-course,--with here and there
+a spider-wagon, a twinkling-footed mare, and a guttural driver. On
+market-days its superb breadth is taken up by flocks of bleating sheep,
+and a pastoral tone is thus given to its tranquillity; anon a herd of
+beef-cattle appears under the elms; or a drove of pigs, many pausing,
+inquisitive of the gutters, and quarrelsome as if they were the heirs of
+prosperity instead of doom, is slowly urged on toward the shambles. In
+the spring or the autumn, the Avenue is exceptionally enlivened by the
+progress of a brace or so of students who, in training for one of the
+University Courses of base-ball or boating, trot slowly and earnestly
+along the sidewalk, fists up, elbows down, mouths shut, and a sense of
+immense responsibility visible in their faces.
+
+The summer is waning with the day as I turn from the Avenue into Benicia
+Street. This is the hour when the fly cedes to the mosquito, as the
+Tuscan poet says, and, as one may add, the frying grasshopper yields to
+the shrilly cricket in noisiness. The embrowning air rings with the
+sad music made by these innumerable little violinists, hid in all the
+gardens round, and the pedestrian feels a sinking of the spirits not
+to be accounted for upon the theory that the street is duller than the
+Avenue, for it really is not so.
+
+Quick now, the cheerful lamps of kerosene!--without their light, the
+cry of those crickets, dominated for an instant, but not stilled, by the
+bellowing of a near-passing locomotive, and the baying of a distant dog,
+were too much. If it were the last autumn that ever was to be, it could
+not be heralded with notes of dismaller effect. This is in fact the hour
+of supreme trial everywhere, and doubtless no one but a newly-accepted
+lover can be happy at twilight. In the city, even, it is oppressive; in
+the country it is desolate; in the suburbs it is a miracle that it
+is ever lived through. The night-winds have not risen yet to stir the
+languid foliage of the sidewalk maples; the lamps are not yet lighted,
+to take away the gloom from the blank, staring windows of the houses
+near; it is too late for letters, too early for a book. In town your
+fancy would turn to the theatres; in the country you would occupy
+yourself with cares of poultry or of stock: in the suburbs you can but
+sit upon your threshold, and fight the predatory mosquito.
+
+
+
+
+BY HORSE-CAR TO BOSTON
+
+
+At a former period the writer of this had the fortune to serve
+his country in an Italian city whose great claim upon the world's
+sentimental interest is the fact that--
+
+ “The sea is in her broad, her narrow streets
+ Ebbing and flowing,”
+
+and that she has no ways whatever for hoofs or wheels. In his quality
+of United States official, he was naturally called upon for information
+concerning the estates of Italians believed to have emigrated early in
+the century to Buenos Ayres, and was commissioned to learn why certain
+persons in Mexico and Brazil, and the parts of Peru, had not, if they
+were still living, written home to their friends. On the other hand, he
+was intrusted with business nearly as pertinent and hopeful by some of
+his own countrymen, and it was not quite with surprise that he one
+day received a neatly lithographed circular with his name and address
+written in it, signed by a famous projector of such enterprises, asking
+him to cooperate for the introduction of horse-railroads in Venice.
+The obstacles to the scheme were of such a nature that it seemed hardly
+worth while even to reply to the circular; but the proposal was one
+of those bold flights of imagination which forever lift objects out of
+vulgar association. It has cast an enduring, poetic charm even about the
+horse-car in my mind, and I naturally look for many unprosaic aspects of
+humanity there. I have an acquaintance who insists that it is the place
+above all others suited to see life in every striking phase. He pretends
+to have witnessed there the reunion of friends who had not met in many
+years, the embrace, figurative of course, of long lost brothers,
+the reconciliation of lovers; I do not know but also some scenes
+of love-making, and acceptance or rejection. But my friend is an
+imaginative man, and may make himself romances. I myself profess to have
+beheld for the most part only mysteries; and I think it not the least
+of these that, riding on the same cars day after day, one finds so many
+strange faces with so little variety. Whether or not that dull, jarring
+motion shakes inward and settles about the centres of mental life the
+sprightliness that should inform the visage, I do not know; but it is
+certain that the emptiness of the average passenger's countenance is
+something wonderful, considered with reference to Nature's abhorrence of
+a vacuum, and the intellectual repute which Boston enjoys among envious
+New-Yorkers. It is seldom that a journey out of our cold metropolis is
+enlivened by a mystery so positive in character as the young lady
+in black, who alighted at a most ordinary little street in Old
+Charlesbridge, and heightened her effect by going into a French-roof
+house there that had no more right than a dry goods box to receive a
+mystery. She was tall, and her lovely arms showed through the black
+gauze of her dress with an exquisite roundness and _morbidezza_. Upon
+her beautiful wrists she had heavy bracelets of dead gold, fashioned
+after some Etruscan device; and from her dainty ears hung great hoops of
+the same metal and design, which had the singular privilege of touching,
+now and then, her white columnar neck. A massive chain or necklace, also
+Etruscan, and also gold, rose and fell at her throat, and on one
+little ungloved hand glittered a multitude of rings. This hand was very
+expressive, and took a principal part in the talk which the lady held
+with her companion, and was as alert and quick as if trained in the
+gesticulation of Southern or Latin life somewhere. Her features, on the
+contrary, were rather insipid, being too small and fine; but they were
+redeemed by the liquid splendor of her beautiful eyes, and the mortal
+pallor of her complexion. She was altogether so startling an apparition,
+that all of us jaded, commonplace spectres turned and fastened our
+weary, lack-lustre eyes upon her looks, with an utter inability to
+remove them. There was one fat, unctuous person seated opposite, to whom
+his interest was a torture, for he would have gone to sleep except for
+her remarkable presence: as it was, his heavy eyelids fell half-way
+shut, and drooped there at an agonizing angle, while his eyes remained
+immovably fixed upon that strange, death-white face. How it could have
+come of that colorlessness,--whether through long sickness or long
+residence in a tropical climate,--was a question that perplexed another
+of the passengers, who would have expected to hear the lady speak any
+language in the world rather than English; and to whom her companion or
+attendant was hardly less than herself a mystery,--being a dragon-like,
+elderish female, clearly a Yankee by birth, but apparently of many
+years' absence from home. The propriety of extracting these people from
+the horse-cars and transferring them bodily to the first chapter of a
+romance was a thing about which there could be no manner of doubt, and
+nothing prevented the abduction but the unexpected voluntary exit of the
+pale lady. As she passed out everybody else awoke as from a dream, or as
+if freed from a potent fascination. It is part of the mystery that
+this lady should never have reappeared in that theatre of life, the
+horse-car; but I cannot regret having never seen her more; she was so
+inestimably precious to wonder that it would have been a kind of loss to
+learn anything about her.
+
+[Illustration: “The young lady in black, who alighted at a most ordinary
+little street.”]
+
+On the other hand, I should be glad if two young men who once presented
+themselves as mysteries upon the same stage could be so distinctly and
+sharply identified that all mankind should recognize them at the day of
+judgment. They were not so remarkable in the nature as in the degree of
+their offense; for the mystery that any man should keep his seat in a
+horse-car and let a woman stand is but too sadly common. They say
+that this, public unkindness to the sex has come about through the
+ingratitude of women, who have failed to return thanks for places
+offered them, and that it is a just and noble revenge we take upon
+them. There might be something advanced in favor of the idea that we
+law-making men, who do not oblige the companies to provide seats for
+every one, deserve no thanks from voteless, helpless women when we offer
+them places; nay, that we ought to be glad if they do not reproach us
+for making that a personal favor which ought to be a common right. I
+would prefer, on the whole, to believe that this selfishness is not a
+concerted act on our part, but a flower of advanced civilization; it is
+a ripe fruit in European countries, and it is more noticeable in Boston
+than anywhere else in America. It is, in fact, one of the points of our
+high polish which people from the interior say first strikes them on
+coming among us; for they declare--no doubt too modestly--that in their
+Boeotian wilds our Athenian habit is almost unknown. Yet it would not
+be fair to credit our whole population with it. I have seen a laborer
+or artisan rise from his place, and offer it to a lady, while a dozen
+well-dressed men kept theirs; and I know several conservative young
+gentlemen, who are still so old-fashioned as always to respect the
+weakness and weariness of women. One of them, I hear, has settled it
+in his own mind that if the family cook appears in a car where he is
+seated, he must rise and give her his place. This, perhaps, is a trifle
+idealistic; but it is magnificent, it is princely. From his difficult
+height, we decline--through ranks that sacrifice themselves for women
+with bundles or children in arms, for old ladies, or for very young and
+pretty ones--to the men who give no odds to the most helpless creature
+alive. These are the men who do not act upon the promptings of human
+nature like the laborer, and who do not refine upon their duty like my
+young gentlemen, and make it their privilege to befriend the idea of
+womanhood; they are men who have paid for their seats and are going to
+keep them. They have been at work, very probably, all day, and no
+doubt they are tired; they look so, and try hard not to look ashamed of
+publicly considering themselves before a sex which is born tired, and
+from which our climate and customs have drained so much health that
+society sometimes seems little better than a hospital for invalid woman,
+where every courtesy is likely to be a mercy done to a sufferer. Yet
+the two young men of whom I began to speak were not apparently of this
+class, and let us hope they were foreigners,--say Englishmen, since we
+hate Englishmen the most. They were the only men seated, in a car full
+of people; and when four or five ladies came in and occupied the aisle
+before them, they might have been puzzled which to offer their places
+to, if one of the ladies had not plainly been infirm. They settled the
+question--if there was any in their minds--by remaining seated, while
+the lady in front of them swung uneasily to and fro with the car, and
+appeared ready to sink at their feet. In another moment she had actually
+done so; and, too weary to rise, she continued to crouch upon the floor
+of the car for the course of a mile, the young men resolutely keeping
+their places, and not rising till they were ready to leave the car. It
+was a horrible scene, and incredible,--that well-dressed woman sitting
+on the floor, and those two well-dressed men keeping their places; it
+was as much out of keeping with our smug respectabilities as a hanging,
+and was a spectacle so paralyzing that public opinion took no action
+concerning it. A shabby person, standing upon the platform outside,
+swore about it, between expectorations: even the conductor's heart
+was touched; and he said he had seen a good many hard things aboard
+horse-cars, but that was a little the hardest; he had never expected to
+come to that. These were simple people enough, and could not interest me
+a great deal, but I should have liked to have a glimpse of the complex
+minds of those young men, and I should still like to know something of
+the previous life that could have made their behavior possible to them.
+They ought to make public the philosophic methods by which they reached
+that pass of unshamable selfishness. The information would be useful to
+a race which knows the sweetness of self-indulgence, and would fain know
+the art of so drugging or besotting the sensibilities that it shall no
+feel disgraced by any sort of meanness. They might really have much
+to say for themselves; as, that the lady, being conscious she could no
+longer keep her feet, had no right to crouch at theirs, and put them to
+so severe a test; or that, having suffered her to sink there, they fell
+no further in the ignorant public opinion by suffering her to continue
+there.
+
+But I doubt if that other young man could say anything for himself, who,
+when a pale, trembling woman was about to drop into the vacant place at
+his side, stretched his arm across it with, “This seat's engaged,” till
+a robust young fellow, his friend, appeared, and took it and kept it
+all the way out from Boston. The commission of such a tragical wrong,
+involving a violation of common usage as well as the infliction of a
+positive cruelty, would embitter the life of an ordinary man, if any
+ordinary man were capable of it; but let us trust that nature has
+provided fortitude of every kind for the offender, and that he is not
+wrung by keener remorse than most would feel for a petty larceny. I dare
+say he would be eager at the first opportunity to rebuke the ingratitude
+of women who do not thank their benefactors for giving them seats. It
+seems a little odd, by the way, and perhaps it is through the peculiar
+blessing of Providence, that, since men have determined by a savage
+egotism to teach the offending sex manners, their own comfort should
+be in the infliction of the penalty, and that it should be as much a
+pleasure as a duty to keep one's place.
+
+Perhaps when the ladies come to vote, they will abate, with other
+nuisances, the whole business of overloaded public conveyances. In the
+mean time the kindness of women to each other is a notable feature of
+all horse-car journeys. It is touching to see the smiling eagerness with
+which the poor things gather close their volumed skirts and make room
+for a weary sister, the tender looks of compassion which they bend upon
+the sufferers obliged to stand, the sweetness with which they rise, if
+they are young and strong, to offer their place to any infirm or heavily
+burdened person of their sex.
+
+But a journey to Boston is not entirely an experience of bitterness.
+On the contrary, there are many things besides the mutual amiability of
+these beautiful martyrs which relieve its tedium and horrors. A whole
+car-full of people, brought into the closest contact with one another,
+yet in the absence of introductions never exchanging a word, each being
+so sufficient to himself as to need no social stimulus whatever, is
+certainly an impressive and stately spectacle. It is a beautiful day,
+say; but far be it from me to intimate as much to my neighbor, who
+plainly would rather die than thus commit himself with me, and who, in
+fact, would well-nigh strike me speechless with surprise if he did so.
+If there is any necessity for communication, as with the conductor, we
+essay first to express ourselves by gesture, and then utter our desires
+with a certain hollow and remote effect, which is not otherwise to be
+described. I have sometimes tried to speak above my breath, when, being
+about to leave the car, I have made a virtue of offering my place to
+the prettiest young woman standing, but I have found it impossible; the
+_genius loci_, whatever it was, suppressed me, and I have gasped out my
+sham politeness as in a courteous nightmare. The silencing influence
+is quite successfully resisted by none but the tipsy people who
+occasionally ride out with us, and call up a smile, sad as a gleam of
+winter sunshine, to our faces by their artless prattle. I remember
+one eventful afternoon that we were all but moved to laughter by the
+gayeties of such a one, who, even after he had ceased to talk, continued
+to amuse us by falling asleep, and reposing himself against the shoulder
+of the lady next him. Perhaps it is in acknowledgment of the agreeable
+variety they contribute to horse-car life, that the conductor treats his
+inebriate passengers with such unfailing tenderness and forbearance.
+I have never seen them molested, though I have noticed them in the
+indulgence of many eccentricities, and happened once even to see one
+of them sit down in a lady's lap. But that was on the night of Saint
+Patrick's day. Generally all avoidable indecorums are rare in the
+horse-cars, though during the late forenoon and early afternoon, in the
+period of lighter travel, I have found curious figures there:--among
+others, two old women, in the old-clothes business, one of whom was
+dressed, not very fortunately, in a gown with short sleeves, and
+inferentially a low neck; a mender of umbrellas, with many unwholesome
+whity-brown wrecks of umbrellas about him; a peddler of soap, who
+offered cakes of it to his fellow-passengers at a discount, apparently
+for friendship's sake; and a certain gentleman with a pock-marked face,
+and a beard dyed an unscrupulous purple, who sang himself a hymn all the
+way to Boston, and who gave me no sufficient reason for thinking him a
+sea-captain. Not far from the end of the Long Bridge, there is apt to be
+a number of colored ladies waiting to get into the car, or to get out
+of it,--usually one solemn mother in Ethiopia, and two or three mirthful
+daughters, who find it hard to suppress a sense of adventure, and to
+keep in the laughter that struggles out through their glittering
+teeth and eyes, and who place each other at a disadvantage by divers
+accidental and intentional bumps and blows. If they are to get out, the
+old lady is not certain of the place where, and, after making the car
+stop, and parleying with the conductor, returns to her seat, and is
+mutely held up to public scorn by one taciturn wink of the conductor's
+eye.
+
+Among horse-car types, I am almost ashamed to note one so common and
+observable as that middle-aged lady who gets aboard and will not see the
+one vacant seat left, but stands tottering at the door, blind and
+deaf to all the modest beckonings and benevolent gasps of her
+fellow-passengers. An air as of better days clings about her; she seems
+a person who has known sickness and sorrow; but so far from pitying her,
+you view her with inexpressible rancor, for it is plain that she
+ought to sit down, and that she will not. But for a point of honor the
+conductor would show her the vacant place; this forbidding, however, how
+can he? There she stands and sniffs drearily when you glance at her, as
+you must from time to time, and no wild turkey caught in a trap was ever
+more incapable of looking down than this middle-aged (shall I say also
+unmarried?) lady.
+
+Of course every one knows the ladies and gentlemen who sit
+cater-cornered, and who will not move up; and equally familiar is
+that large and ponderous person, who, feigning to sit down beside you,
+practically sits down upon you, and is not incommoded by having your
+knee under him. He implies by this brutal conduct that you are taking up
+more space than belongs to you, and that you are justly made an example
+of.
+
+I had the pleasure one day to meet on the horse-car an advocate of one
+of the great reforms of the day. He held a green bag upon his knees, and
+without any notice passed from a question of crops to a discussion of
+suffrage for the negro, and so to womanhood suffrage. “Let the women
+vote,” said he,--“let 'em vote if they want to. _I_ don't care. Fact is,
+I should like to see 'em do it the first time. They're excitable,
+you know; they're excitable;” and he enforced his analysis of female
+character by thrusting his elbow sharply into my side. “Now, there's
+my wife; I'd like to see her vote. Be fun, I tell you. And the
+girls,--Lord, the girls! Circus wouldn't be anywhere.” Enchanted with
+the picture which he appeared to have conjured up for himself, he
+laughed with the utmost relish, and then patting the green bag in his
+lap, which plainly contained a violin, “You see,” he went on, “I go
+out playing for dancing-parties. Work all day at my trade,--I'm a
+carpenter,--and play in the evening. Take my little old ten dollars a
+night. And _I_ notice the women a good deal; and _I_ tell you they're
+_all_ excitable, and _I sh'd_ like to see 'em vote. Vote right and vote
+often,--that's the ticket, eh?” This friend of womanhood suffrage--whose
+attitude of curiosity and expectation seemed to me representative of
+that of a great many thinkers on the subject--no doubt was otherwise a
+reformer, and held that the coming man would not drink wine--if he could
+find whiskey. At least I should have said so, guessing from the odors he
+breathed along with his liberal sentiments.
+
+Something of the character of a college-town is observable nearly always
+in the presence of the students, who confound certain traditional ideas
+of students by their quietude of costume and manner, and whom Padua or
+Heidelberg would hardly know, but who nevertheless betray that they are
+banded to--
+
+ “Scorn delights and live laborious days,”
+
+by a uniformity in the cut of their trousers, or a clannishness of cane
+or scarf, or a talk of boats and base-ball held among themselves. One
+cannot see them without pleasure and kindness; and it is no wonder that
+their young-lady acquaintances brighten so to recognize them on the
+horse-cars. There is much good fortune in the world, but none
+better than being an undergraduate twenty years old, hale, handsome,
+fashionably dressed, with the whole promise of life before: it's a state
+of things to disarm even envy. With so much youth forever in her heart,
+it must be hard for our Charlesbridge to grow old: the generations arise
+and pass away but in her veins is still this tide of warm blood, century
+in and century out, so much the same from one age to another that it
+would be hardy to say it was not still one youthfulness. There is a
+print of the village as it was a cycle since, showing the oldest of
+the college buildings and upon the street in front a scholar in his
+scholar's-cap and gown, giving his arm to a very stylish girl of that
+period, who is dressed wonderfully like the girl of ours, so that but
+for the student's antique formality of costume, one might believe that
+he was handing her out to take the horse-car. There is no horse-car in
+the picture,--that is the only real difference between then and now in
+our Charlesbridge, perennially young and gay. Have there not ever been
+here the same grand ambitions, the same high hopes,--and is not the
+unbroken succession of youth in these?
+
+As for other life on the horse-car, it shows to little or no effect,
+as I have said. You can, of course, detect certain classes; as, in the
+morning the business-men going in, to their counters or their desks, and
+in the afternoon the shoppers coming out, laden with paper parcels. But
+I think no one can truly claim to know the regular from the occasional
+passengers by any greater cheerfulness in the faces of the latter. The
+horse-car will suffer no such inequality as this, but reduces us all to
+the same level of melancholy. It would be but a very unworthy kind of
+art which should seek to describe people by such merely external traits
+as a habit of carrying baskets or large travelling-bags in the car; and
+the present muse scorns it, but is not above speaking of the frequent
+presence of those lovely young girls in which Boston and the suburban
+towns abound, and who, whether they appear with rolls of music in their
+hands, or books from the circulating-libraries, or pretty parcels or
+hand-bags, would brighten even the horse-car if fresh young looks
+and gay and brilliant costumes could do so much. But they only add
+perplexity to the anomaly, which was already sufficiently trying with
+its contrasts of splendor and shabbiness, and such intimate association
+of velvets and patches as you see in the churches of Catholic countries,
+but nowhere else in the world except in our “coaches of the sovereign
+people.”
+
+In winter, the journey to or from Boston cannot appear otherwise than
+very dreary to the fondest imagination. Coming out, nothing can look
+more arctic and forlorn than the river, double-shrouded in ice and snow,
+or sadder than the contrast offered to the same prospect in summer. Then
+all is laughing, and it is a joy in every nerve to ride out over the
+Long Bridge at high tide, and, looking southward, to see the wide
+crinkle and glitter of that beautiful expanse of water, which laps on
+one hand the granite quays of the city, and on the other washes among
+the reeds and wild grasses of the salt-meadows. A ship coming slowly
+up the channel, or a dingy tug violently darting athwart it, gives an
+additional pleasure to the eye, and adds something dreamy or vivid
+to the beauty of the scene. It is hard to say at what hour of the
+summer's-day the prospect is loveliest; and I am certainly not going to
+speak of the sunset as the least of its delights. When this exquisite
+spectacle is presented, the horse-car passenger, happy to cling with one
+foot to the rear platform-steps, looks out over the shoulder next him
+into fairy-land. Crimson and purple the bay stretches westward till its
+waves darken into the grassy levels, where, here and there, a hay-rick
+shows perfectly black against the light. Afar off, southeastward and
+westward, the uplands wear a tinge of tenderest blue; and in the nearer
+distance, on the low shores of the river, hover the white plumes of
+arriving and departing trains. The windows of the stately houses that
+overlook the water take the sunset from it evanescently, and begin to
+chill and darken before the crimson burns out of the sky. The windows
+are, in fact, best after nightfall, when they are brilliantly lighted
+from within; and when, if it is a dark, warm night, and the briny
+fragrance comes up strong from the falling tide, the lights reflected
+far down in the still water, bring a dream, as I have heard travelled
+Bostonians say, of Venice and her magical effects in the same kind. But
+for me the beauty of the scene needs the help of no such association;
+I am content with it for what it is. I enjoy also the hints of spring
+which one gets in riding over the Long Bridge at low tide in the first
+open days. Then there is not only a vernal beating of carpets on the
+piers of the drawbridge, but the piles and walls left bare by the
+receding water show green patches of sea-weeds and mosses, and flatter
+the willing eye with a dim hint of summer. This reeking and saturated
+herbage--which always seems to me, in contrast with dry land growths,
+what the water-logged life of seafaring folk is to that which we happier
+men lead on shore,--taking so kindly the deceitful warmth and brightness
+of the sun, has then a charm which it loses when summer really comes;
+nor does one, later, have so keen an interest in the men wading about in
+the shallows below the bridge, who, as in the distance they stoop over
+to gather whatever shell-fish they seek, make a very fair show of being
+some ungainlier sort of storks, and are as near as we can hope to come
+to the spring-prophesying storks of song and story. A sentiment of
+the drowsiness that goes before the awakening of the year, and is so
+different from the drowsiness that precedes the great autumnal slumber,
+is in the air, but is gone when we leave the river behind, and strike
+into the straggling village beyond.
+
+I maintain that Boston, as one approaches it and passingly takes in
+the line of Bunker Hill Monument, soaring preëminent among the
+emulous foundry-chimneys of the sister city, is fine enough to need
+no comparison with other fine sights. Thanks to the mansard curves and
+dormer-windows of the newer houses, there is a singularly picturesque
+variety among the roofs that stretch along the bay, and rise one above
+another on the city's three hills, grouping themselves about the State
+House, and surmounted by its India-rubber dome. But, after all, does
+human weakness crave some legendary charm, some grace of uncertain
+antiquity, in the picturesqueness it sees? I own that the future, to
+which we are often referred for the “stuff that dreams are made of,” is
+more difficult for the fancy than the past, that the airy amplitude of
+its possibilities is somewhat chilly, and that we naturally long for the
+snug quarters of old, made warm by many generations of life. Besides,
+Europe spoils us ingenuous Americans, and flatters our sentimentality
+into ruinous extravagances. Looking at her many-storied former times,
+we forget our own past, neat, compact, and convenient for the poorest
+memory to dwell in. Yet an American not infected with the discontent of
+travel could hardly approach this superb city without feeling something
+of the coveted pleasure in her, without a reverie of her Puritan and
+Revolutionary times, and the great names and deeds of her heroic annals.
+I think, however, we were well to be rid of this yearning for a native
+American antiquity; for in its indulgence one cannot but regard
+himself and his contemporaries as cumberers of the ground, delaying
+the consummation of that hoary past which will be so fascinating to
+a semi-Chinese posterity, and will be, ages hence, the inspiration of
+Pigeon-English poetry and romance. Let us make much of our two
+hundred and fifty years, and cherish the present as our golden age. We
+healthy-minded people in the horse-cars are loath to lose a moment
+of it, and are aggrieved that the draw of the bridge should be up,
+naturally looking on what is constantly liable to happen as an especial
+malice of the fates. All the drivers of the vehicles that clog the draw
+on either side have a like sense of personal injury; and apparently it
+would go hard with the captain of that leisurely vessel below if he were
+delivered into our hands. But this impatience and anger are entirely
+illusive.
+
+We are really the most patient people in the world, especially as
+regards any incorporated, non-political oppressions. A lively Gaul, who
+travelled among us some thirty years ago, found that, in the absence
+of political control, we gratified the human instinct of obedience by
+submitting to small tyrannies unknown abroad, and were subject to the
+steamboat-captain, the hotel-clerk, the stage-driver, and the waiter,
+who all bullied us fearlessly; but though some vestiges of this bondage
+remain, it is probably passing away. The abusive Frenchman's assertion
+would not at least hold good concerning the horse-car conductors, who,
+in spite of a lingering preference for touching or punching passengers
+for their fare instead of asking for it, are commonly mild-mannered and
+good-tempered, and disposed to molest us as little as possible. I have
+even received from one of them a mark of such kindly familiarity as the
+offer of a check which he held between his lips, and thrust out his face
+to give me, both his hands being otherwise occupied; and their lives are
+in nowise such luxurious careers as we should expect in public despots.
+The oppression of the horse-car passenger is not from them, and the
+passenger himself is finally to blame for it. When the draw closes at
+last, and we rumble forward into the city street, a certain stir of
+expectation is felt among us. The long and eventful journey is nearly
+ended, and now we who are to get out of the cars can philosophically
+amuse ourselves with the passions and sufferings of those who are to
+return in our places. You must choose the time between five and six
+o'clock in the afternoon, if you would make this grand study of the
+national character in its perfection. Then the spectacle offered in any
+arriving horse-car will serve your purpose. At nearly every corner of
+the street up which it climbs stands an experienced suburban, who darts
+out upon the car, and seizes a vacant place in it. Presently all the
+places are taken, and before we reach Temple Street, where helpless
+groups of women are gathered to avail themselves of the first seats
+vacated, an alert citizen is stationed before each passenger who is to
+retire at the summons, “Please pass out forrad.” When this is heard in
+Bowdoin Square, we rise and push forward, knuckling one another's backs
+in our eagerness, and perhaps glancing behind us at the tumult within.
+Not only are all our places occupied, but the aisle is left full of
+passengers precariously supporting themselves by the straps in the roof.
+The rear platform is stormed and carried by a party with bundles; the
+driver is instantly surrounded by another detachment; and as the car
+moves away from the office, the platform steps are filled.
+
+“Is it possible,” I asked myself, when I had written as far as this in
+the present noble history, “that I am not exaggerating? It can't be
+that this and the other enormities I have been describing are of daily
+occurrence in Boston. Let me go verify, at least, my picture of the
+evening horse-car.” So I take my way to Bowdoin Square, and in the
+conscientious spirit of modern inquiry, I get aboard the first car that
+comes up. Like every other car, it is meant to seat twenty passengers.
+It does this, and besides it carries in the aisle and on the platform
+forty passengers standing. The air is what you may imagine, if you know
+that not only is the place so indecently crowded, but that in the centre
+of the car are two adopted citizens, far gone in drink, who have the
+aspect and the smell of having passed the day in an ash-heap. These
+citizens being quite helpless themselves, are supported by the public,
+and repose in singular comfort upon all the passengers near them; I,
+myself, contribute an aching back to the common charity, and a genteelly
+dressed young lady takes one of them from time to time on her knee. But
+they are comparatively an ornament to society till the conductor objects
+to the amount they offer him for fare; for after that they wish to fight
+him during the journey, and invite him at short intervals to step out
+and be shown what manner of men they are. The conductor passes it off
+for a joke, and so it is, and a very good one.
+
+In that unhappy mass it would be an audacious spirit who should say
+of any particular arm or leg, “It is mine,” and all the breath is in
+common. Nothing, it would seem, could add to our misery; but we discover
+our error when the conductor squeezes a tortuous path through us, and
+collects the money for our transportation. I never can tell, during the
+performance of this feat, whether he or the passengers are more to be
+pitied.
+
+The people who are thus indecorously huddled and jammed together,
+without regard to age or sex, otherwise lead lives of at least comfort,
+and a good half of them cherish themselves in every physical way with
+unparalleled zeal. They are handsomely clothed; they are delicately neat
+in linen; they eat well, or, if not well, as well as their cooks
+will let them, and at all events expensively; they house in dwellings
+appointed in a manner undreamt of elsewhere in the world,--dwellings
+wherein furnaces make a summer-heat, where fountains of hot and cold
+water flow at a touch, where light is created or quenched by the turning
+of a key, where all is luxurious upholstery, and magical ministry to
+real or fancied needs. They carry the same tastes with them to their
+places of business; and when they “attend divine service,” it is with
+the understanding that God is to receive them in a richly carpeted
+house, deliciously warmed and perfectly ventilated, where they may
+adore Him at their ease upon cushioned seats,--secured seats. Yet these
+spoiled children of comfort, when they ride to or from business or
+church, fail to assert rights that the benighted Cockney, who never
+heard of our plumbing and registers, or even the oppressed Parisian,
+who is believed not to change his linen from one revolution to another,
+having paid for, enjoys. When they enter the “full” horse-car, they find
+themselves in a place inexorable as the grave to their greenbacks, where
+not only is their adventitious consequence stripped from them, but the
+courtesies of life are impossible, the inherent dignity of the person is
+denied, and they are reduced below the level of the most uncomfortable
+nations of the Old World. The philosopher accustomed to draw consolation
+from the sufferings of his richer fellow-men, and to infer an overruling
+Providence from their disgraces, might well bless Heaven for the
+spectacle of such degradation, if his thanksgiving were not prevented
+by his knowledge that this is quite voluntary. And now consider that
+on every car leaving the city at this time the scene is much the same;
+reflect that the horror is enacting, not only in Boston, but in New
+York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, St. Louis, Chicago, Cincinnati,--wherever
+the horse-car, that tinkles well-nigh round the Continent, is known;
+remember that the same victims are thus daily sacrificed, without an
+effort to right themselves: and then you will begin to realize--dimly
+and imperfectly, of course--the unfathomable meekness of the American
+character. The “full” horse-car is a prodigy whose likeness is
+absolutely unknown elsewhere, since the Neapolitan gig went out; and I
+suppose it will be incredible to the future in our own country. When I
+see such a horse-car as I have sketched move away from its station, I
+feel that it is something not only emblematic and interpretative,
+but monumental; and I know that when art becomes truly national, the
+overloaded horse-car will be celebrated in painting and sculpture. And
+in after ages, when the oblique-eyed, swarthy American of that time,
+pausing before some commemorative bronze or historical picture of our
+epoch, contemplates this stupendous spectacle of human endurance, I hope
+he will be able to philosophize more satisfactorily than we can now,
+concerning the mystery of our strength as a nation and our weakness as a
+public.
+
+
+
+
+A DAY'S PLEASURE
+
+
+I.--THE MORNING.
+
+
+They were not a large family, and their pursuits and habits were very
+simple; yet the summer was lapsing toward the first pathos of autumn
+before they found themselves all in such case as to be able to take the
+day's pleasure they had planned so long. They had agreed often and often
+that nothing could be more charming than an excursion down the Harbor,
+either to Gloucester, or to Nahant, or to Nantasket Beach, or to Hull
+and Hingham, or to any point within the fatal bound beyond which is
+seasickness. They had studied the steamboat advertisements, day after
+day, for a long time, without making up their minds which of these
+charming excursions would be the most delightful; and when they had at
+last fixed upon one and chosen some day for it, that day was sure to be
+heralded by a long train of obstacles, or it dawned upon weather that
+was simply impossible. Besides, in the suburbs, you are apt to sleep
+late, unless the solitary ice-wagon of the neighborhood makes a very
+uncommon rumbling in going by; and I believe that the excursion was
+several times postponed by the tardy return of the pleasurers from
+dreamland, which, after all, is not the worst resort, or the least
+interesting--or profitable, for the matter of that. But at last the
+great day came,--a blameless Thursday alike removed from the cares of
+washing and ironing days, and from the fatigues with which every week
+closes. One of the family chose deliberately to stay at home; but
+the severest scrutiny could not detect a hindrance in the health
+or circumstances of any of the rest, and the weather was delicious.
+Everything, in fact, was so fair and so full of promise, that they could
+almost fancy a calamity of some sort hanging over its perfection, and
+possibly bred of it; for I suppose that we never have anything made
+perfectly easy for us without a certain reluctance and foreboding.
+That morning they all got up so early that they had time to waste over
+breakfast before taking the 7.30 train for Boston; and they naturally
+wasted so much of it that they reached the station only in season for
+the 8.00. But there is a difference between reaching the station and
+quietly taking the cars, especially if one of your company has been left
+at home, hoping to cut across and take the cars at a station which they
+reach some minutes later, and you, the head of the party, are obliged,
+at a loss of breath and personal comfort and dignity, to run down to
+that station and see that the belated member has arrived there, and then
+hurry back to your own, and embody the rest, with their accompanying
+hand-bags and wraps and sun-umbrellas, into some compact shape for
+removal into the cars, during the very scant minute that the train stops
+at Charlesbridge. Then when you are all aboard, and the tardy member has
+been duly taken up at the next station, and you would be glad to spend
+the time in looking about on the familiar variety of life which every
+car presents in every train on every road in this vast American world,
+you are oppressed and distracted by the cares which must attend the
+pleasure-seeker, and which the more thickly beset him the more deeply he
+plunges into enjoyment.
+
+I can learn very little from the note-book of the friend whose
+adventures I am relating in regard to the scenery of Somerville, and the
+region generally through which the railroad passes between Charlesbridge
+and Boston; but so much knowledge of it may be safely assumed on the
+part of the reader as to relieve me of the grave responsibility of
+describing it. Still, I may say that it is not unpicturesque, and that
+I have a pleasure, which I hope the reader shares, in anything like salt
+meadows and all spaces subject to the tide, whether flooded by it or
+left bare with their saturated grasses by its going down. I think, also,
+there is something fine in the many-roofed, many-chimneyed highlands of
+Chelsea (if it is Chelsea), as you draw near the railroad bridge, and
+there is a pretty stone church on a hill-side there which has the good
+fortune, so rare with modern architecture and so common with the old, of
+seeming a natural outgrowth of the spot where it stands, and which is
+as purely an object of aesthetic interest to me, who know nothing of
+its sect or doctrine, as any church in a picture could be; and there is,
+also, the Marine Hospital on the heights (if it is the Marine Hospital),
+from which I hope the inmates can behold the ocean, and exult in
+whatever misery keeps them ashore.
+
+But let me not so hasten over this part of my friend's journey as to
+omit all mention of the amphibious Irish houses which stand about on
+the low lands along the railroad-sides, and which you half expect to see
+plunge into the tidal mud of the neighborhood, with a series of hoarse
+croaks, as the train approaches. Perhaps twenty-four trains pass those
+houses every twenty-four hours, and it is a wonder that the inhabitants
+keep their interest in them, or have leisure to bestow upon any of
+them. Yet, as you dash along so bravely, you can see that you arrest
+the occupations of all these villagers as by a kind of enchantment; the
+children pause and turn their heads toward you from their mud-pies (to
+the production of which there is literally no limit in that region);
+the matron rests one parboiled hand on her hip, letting the other still
+linger listlessly upon the wash-board, while she lifts her eyes from
+the suds to look at you; the boys, who all summer long are forever just
+going into the water or just coming out of it, cease their buttoning or
+unbuttoning; the baby, which has been run after and caught and suitably
+posed, turns its anguished eyes upon you, where also falls the mother's
+gaze, while her descending palm is arrested in mid air. I forbear to
+comment upon the surprising populousness of these villages, where, in
+obedience to all the laws of health, the inhabitants ought to be wasting
+miserably away, but where they flourish in spite of them. Even Accident
+here seems to be robbed of half her malevolence; and that baby (who
+will presently be chastised with terrific uproar) passes an infancy of
+intrepid enjoyment amidst the local perils, and is no more affected
+by the engines and the cars than by so many fretful hens with their
+attendant broods of chickens.
+
+[Illustration: “That sweet young blonde, who arrives by most trains.”]
+
+When sometimes I long for the excitement and variety of travel, which,
+for no merit of mine, I knew in other days, I reproach myself, and
+silence all my repinings with some such question as, Where could you
+find more variety or greater excitement than abounds in and near the
+Fitchburg Depot when a train arrives? And to tell the truth, there
+is something very inspiring in the fine eagerness with which all the
+passengers rise as soon as the locomotive begins to slow, and huddle
+forward to the door, in their impatience to get out; while the
+suppressed vehemence of the hackmen is also thrilling in its way, not
+to mention the instant clamor of the baggage-men as they read and
+repeat the numbers of the checks in strident tones. It would be ever so
+interesting to depict all these people, but it would require volumes for
+the work, and I reluctantly let them all pass out without a word,--all
+but that sweet young blonde who arrives by most trains, and who, putting
+up her eye-glass with a ravishing air, bewitchingly peers round among
+the bearded faces, with little tender looks of hope and trepidation, for
+the face which she wants, and which presently bursts through the circle
+of strange visages. The owner of the face then hurries forward to meet
+that sweet blonde, who gives him a little drooping hand as if it were a
+delicate flower she laid in his; there is a brief mutual hesitation
+long enough merely for an electrical thrill to run from heart to
+heart through the clasping hands, and then he stoops toward her, and
+distractingly kisses her. And I say that there is no law of conscience
+or propriety worthy the name of law--barbarity, absurdity, call it
+rather--to prevent any one from availing himself of that providential
+near-sightedness, and beatifying himself upon those lips,--nothing to
+prevent it but that young fellow, whom one might not, of course, care to
+provoke.
+
+Among the people who now rush forward and heap themselves into the
+two horse-cars and one omnibus, placed before the depot by a wise
+forethought for the public comfort to accommodate the train-load of
+two hundred passengers, I always note a type that is both pleasing
+and interesting to me. It is a lady just passing middle life; from her
+kindly eyes the envious crow, whose footprints are just traceable at
+their corners, has not yet drunk the brightness, but she looks just a
+thought sadly, if very serenely, from them. I know nothing in the world
+of her; I may have seen her twice or a hundred times, but I must always
+be making bits of romances about her. That is she in faultless gray,
+with the neat leather bag in her lap, and a bouquet of the first
+autumnal blooms perched in her shapely hands which are prettily yet
+substantially gloved in some sort of gauntlets. She can be easy and
+dignified, my dear middle-aged heroine, even in one of our horse-cars,
+where people are for the most part packed like cattle in a pen. She
+shows no trace of dust or fatigue from the thirty or forty miles which I
+choose to fancy she has ridden from the handsome elm-shaded New England
+town of five or ten thousand people, where I choose to think she lives.
+From a vague horticultural association with those gauntlets, as well
+as from the autumnal blooms, I take it she loves flowers, and gardens a
+good deal with her own hands, and keeps house-plants in the winter, and
+of course a canary. Her dress, neither rich nor vulgar, makes me believe
+her fortunes modest and not recent; her gentle face has just so much
+intellectual character as it is good to see in a woman's face; I suspect
+that she reads pretty regularly the new poems and histories, and I know
+that she is the life and soul of the local book-club. Is she married, or
+widowed, or one of the superfluous forty thousand? That is what I never
+can tell. But I think that most probably she is married, and that her
+husband is very much in business, and does not share so much as he
+respects her tastes. I have no particular reason for thinking that she
+has no children now, and that the sorrow for the one she lost so long
+ago has become only a pensive silence, which, however, a long summer
+twilight can yet deepen to tears.... Upon my word! Am I then one to give
+way to this sort of thing? Madam, I ask pardon. I have no right to be
+sentimentalizing you. Yet your face is one to make people dream kind
+things of you, and I cannot keep my reveries away from it.
+
+But in the mean time I neglect the momentous history which I have
+proposed to write, and leave my day's pleasurers to fade into the
+background of a fantastic portrait. The truth is, I cannot look without
+pain upon the discomforts which they suffer at this stage of their
+joyous enterprise. At the best, the portables of such a party are apt
+to be grievous embarrassments: a package of shawls and parasols and
+umbrellas and India-rubbers, however neatly made up at first, quickly
+degenerates into a shapeless mass, which has finally to be carried with
+as great tenderness as an ailing child; and the lunch is pretty sure to
+overflow the hand-bags and to eddy about you in paper parcels; while the
+bottle of claret, that bulges the side of one of the bags, and
+
+ “That will show itself without,”
+
+defying your attempts to look as it were cold tea, gives a crushing
+touch of disreputability to the whole affair. Add to this the fact that
+but half the party have seats, and that the others have to sway and
+totter about the car in that sudden contact with all varieties of
+fellow-men, to which we are accustomed in the cars, and you must allow
+that these poor merrymakers have reasons enough to rejoice when this
+part of their day's pleasure is over. They are so plainly bent upon a
+sail down the Harbor, that before they leave the car they become
+objects of public interest, and are at last made to give some account of
+themselves.
+
+“Going for a sail, I presume?” says a person hitherto in conversation
+with the conductor. “Well, I wouldn't mind a sail myself to-day.”
+
+“Yes,” answers the head of the party, “going to Gloucester.”
+
+“Guess not,” says, very coldly and decidedly, one of the passengers,
+who is reading that morning's “Advertiser;” and when the subject of this
+surmise looks at him for explanations, he adds, “The City Council has
+chartered the boat for to-day.”
+
+Upon this the excursionists fall into great dismay and bitterness, and
+upbraid the City Council, and wonder why last night's “Transcript” said
+nothing about its oppressive action, and generally bewail their fate.
+But at last they resolve to go somewhere, and, being set down, they make
+up their warring minds upon Nahant, for the Nahant boat leaves the wharf
+nearest them; and so they hurry away to India Wharf, amidst barrels and
+bales and boxes and hacks and trucks, with interminable string-teams
+passing before them at every crossing.
+
+“At any rate,” says the leader of the expedition, “we shall see the
+Gardens of Maolis,--those enchanted gardens which have fairly been
+advertised into my dreams, and where I've been told,” he continues,
+with an effort to make the prospect an attractive one, yet not without
+a sense of the meagreness of the materials, “they have a grotto and a
+wooden bull.”
+
+Of course, there is no reason in nature why a wooden bull should be
+more pleasing than a flesh-and-blood bull, but it seems to encourage the
+company, and they set off again with renewed speed, and at last
+reach India Wharf in time to see the Nahant steamer packed full of
+excursionists, with a crowd of people still waiting to go aboard. It
+does not look inviting, and they hesitate. In a minute or two their
+spirits sink so low, that if they should see the wooden bull step out of
+a grotto on the deck of the steamer the spectacle could not revive them.
+At that instant they think, with a surprising singleness, of Nantasket
+Beach, and the bright colors in which the Gardens of Maolis but now
+appeared fade away, and they seem to see themselves sauntering along the
+beautiful shore, while the white-crested breakers crash upon the sand,
+and run up
+
+ “In tender-curving lines of creamy spray,”
+
+quite to the feet of that lotus-eating party.
+
+“Nahant is all rocks,” says the leader to Aunt Melissa, who hears
+him with a sweet and tranquil patience, and who would enjoy or suffer
+anything with the same expression; “and as you've never yet seen the
+open sea, it's fortunate that we go to Nantasket, for, of course, a
+beach is more characteristic. But now the object is to get there. The
+boat will be starting in a few moments, and I doubt whether we can walk
+it. How far is it,” he asks, turning toward a respectable-looking man,
+“to Liverpool Wharf?”
+
+“Well, it's consid'able ways,” says the man, smiling.
+
+“Then we must take a hack,” says the pleasurer to his party. “Come on.”
+
+“I've got a hack,” observes the man, in a casual way, as if the fact
+might possibly interest.
+
+“O, you have, have you? Well, then, put us into it, and drive to
+Liverpool Wharf; and hurry.”
+
+Either the distance was less than the hackman fancied, or else he drove
+thither with unheard-of speed, for two minutes later he set them down on
+Liverpool Wharf. But swiftly as they had come the steamer had been even
+more prompt, and she now turned toward them a beautiful wake, as she
+pushed farther and farther out into the harbor.
+
+The hackman took his two dollars for his four passengers, and was
+rapidly mounting his box,--probably to avoid idle reproaches. “Wait!”
+ said the chief pleasurer. Then, “When does the next boat leave?” he
+asked of the agent, who had emerged with a compassionate face from the
+waiting-rooms on the wharf.
+
+“At half past two.”
+
+“And it's now five minutes past nine,” moaned the merrymakers.
+
+“Why, I'll tell you what you can do,” said the agent; “you can go to
+Hingham by the Old Colony cars, and so come back by the Hull and Hingham
+boat.”
+
+“That's it!” chorused his listeners, “we'll go;” and “Now,” said their
+spokesman to the driver, “I dare say you didn't know that Liverpool
+Wharf was so near; but I don't think you've earned your money, and you
+ought to take us on to the Old Colony Depot for half-fares at the most.”
+
+The driver looked pained, as if some small tatters and shreds of
+conscience were flapping uncomfortably about his otherwise dismantled
+spirit. Then he seemed to think of his wife and family, for he put on
+the air of a man who had already made great sacrifices, and “I couldn't,
+really, I couldn't afford it,” said he; and as the victims turned from
+him in disgust, he chirruped to his horses and drove off.
+
+“Well,” said the pleasurers, “we won't give it up. We will have our
+day's pleasure after all. But what _can_ we do to kill five hours and
+a half? It's miles away from everything, and, besides, there's nothing
+even if we were there.” At this image of their remoteness and the
+inherent desolation of Boston they could not suppress some sighs, and in
+the mean time Aunt Melissa stepped into the waiting-room, which opened
+on the farther side upon the water, and sat contentedly down on one of
+the benches; the rest, from sheer vacuity and irresolution, followed,
+and thus, without debate, it was settled that they should wait there
+till the boat left. The agent, who was a kind man, did what he could to
+alleviate the situation: he gave them each the advertisement of his line
+of boats, neatly printed upon a card, and then he went away.
+
+All this prospect of waiting would do well enough for the ladies of the
+party, but there is an impatience in the masculine fibre which does
+not brook the notion of such prolonged repose; and the leader of the
+excursion presently pretended an important errand up town,--nothing
+less, in fact, than to buy a tumbler out of which to drink their claret
+on the beach. A holiday is never like any other day to the man who takes
+it, and a festive halo seemed to enwrap the excursionist as he pushed on
+through the busy streets in the cool shadow of the vast granite
+palaces wherein the genius of business loves to house itself in this
+money-making land, and inhaled the odors of great heaps of leather and
+spices and dry goods as he passed the open doorways,--odors that mixed
+pleasantly with the smell of the freshly watered streets. When
+he stepped into a crockery store to make his purchase a sense of
+pleasure-taking did not fail him, and he fell naturally into talk with
+the clerk about the weather and such pastoral topics. Even when he
+reached the establishment where his own business days were passed some
+glamour seemed to be cast upon familiar objects. To the disenchanted eye
+all things were as they were on all other dullish days of summer,
+even to the accustomed bore leaning up against his favorite desk and
+transfixing his habitual victim with his usual theme. Yet to the gaze of
+this pleasure-taker all was subtly changed, and he shook hands right
+and left as he entered, to the marked surprise of the objects of his
+effusion. He had merely come to get some newspapers to help pass away
+the long moments on the wharf, and when he had found these, he hurried
+back thither to hear what had happened during his absence.
+
+It seemed that there had hardly ever been such an eventful period in the
+lives of the family before, and he listened to a minute account of it
+from Cousin Lucy. “You know, Frank,” says she, “that Sallie's one idea
+in life is to keep the baby from getting the whooping-cough, and I
+declare that these premises have done nothing but reëcho with the most
+dolorous whoops ever since you've been gone, so that at times, in my
+fear that Sallie would think I'd been careless about the boy, I've been
+ready to throw myself into the water, and nothing's prevented me but the
+doubt whether it wouldn't be better to throw in the whoopers instead.”
+
+At this moment a pale little girl, with a face wan and sad through all
+its dirt, came and stood in the doorway nearest the baby, and in another
+instant she had burst into a whoop so terrific that, if she had meant
+to have his scalp next it could not have been more dreadful. Then she
+subsided into a deep and pathetic quiet, with that air peculiar to
+the victims of her disorder of having done nothing noticeable. But her
+outburst had set at work the mysterious machinery of half a dozen other
+whooping-coughers lurking about the building, and all unseen they wound
+themselves up with appalling rapidity, and in the utter silence which
+followed left one to think they had died at the climax.
+
+“Why, it's a perfect whooping-cough factory, this place,” cries Cousin
+Lucy in a desperation. “Go away, do, please, from the baby, you poor
+little dreadful object you,” she continues, turning upon the only
+visible operative in the establishment. “Here, take this,” and she
+bribes her with a bit of sponge-cake, on which the child runs lightly
+off along the edge of the wharf. “That's been another of their projects
+for driving me wild,” says Cousin Lucy,--“trying to take their own lives
+in a hundred ways before my face and eyes. Why _will_ their mothers let
+them come here to play?”
+
+Really, they were very melancholy little figures, and might have gone
+near to make one sad, even if they had not been constantly imperilling
+their lives. Thanks to its being summer-time, it did not much
+matter about the scantiness of their clothing, but their squalor
+was depressing, it seemed, even to themselves, for they were a
+mournful-looking set of children, and in their dangerous sports trifled
+silently and almost gloomily with death. There were none of them above
+eight or nine years of age, and most of them had the care of smaller
+brothers, or even babes in arms, whom they were thus early inuring to
+the perils of the situation. The boys were dressed in pantaloons and
+shirts which no excess of rolling up in the legs and arms could make
+small enough, and the incorrigible too-bigness of which rendered the
+favorite amusements still more hazardous from their liability to trip
+and entangle the wearers. The little girls had on each a solitary
+garment, which hung about her gaunt person with antique severity of
+outline; while the babies were multitudinously swathed in whatever
+fragments of dress could be tied or pinned or plastered on. Their faces
+were strikingly and almost ingeniously dirty, and their distractions
+among the coal-heaps and cord-wood constantly added to the variety and
+advantage of these effects.
+
+“Why do their mothers let them come here?” muses Frank aloud. “Why,
+because it's so safe, Cousin Lucy. At home, you know, they'd have to be
+playing upon the sills of fourth-floor windows, and here they're out
+of the way and can't hurt themselves. Why, Cousin Lucy, this is their
+park,--their Public Garden, their Bois de Boulogne, their Cascine. And
+look at their gloomy little faces! Aren't they taking their pleasure in
+the spirit of the very highest fashion? I was at Newport last summer,
+and saw the famous driving on the Avenue in those pony phaetons,
+dog-carts, and tubs, and three-story carriages with a pair of footmen
+perching like storks upon each gable, and I assure you that all those
+ornate and costly phantasms (it seems to me now like a sad, sweet
+vision) had just the expression of these poor children. We're taking
+a day's pleasure ourselves, cousin, but nobody would know it from our
+looks. And has nothing but whooping-cough happened since I've been
+gone?”
+
+“Yes, we seem to be so cut off from every-day associations that I've
+imagined myself a sort of tourist, and I've been to that Catholic church
+over yonder, in hopes of seeing the Murillos and Raphaels--but I found
+it locked up, and so I trudged back without a sight of the masterpieces.
+But what's the reason that all the shops hereabouts have nothing but
+luxuries for sale? The windows are perfect tropics of oranges, and
+lemons, and belated bananas, and tobacco, and peanuts.”
+
+“Well, the poor really seem to use more of those luxuries than anybody
+else. I don't blame them. I shouldn't care for the necessaries of life
+myself, if I found them so hard to get.”
+
+“When I came back here,” says Cousin Lucy, without heeding these
+flippant and heartless words, “I found an old gentleman who has
+something to do with the boats, and he sat down, as if it were a part of
+his business, and told me nearly the whole history of his life. Isn't
+it nice of them, keeping an Autobiographer? It makes the time pass so
+swiftly when you're waiting. This old gentleman was born--who'd ever
+think it?--up there in Pearl Street, where those pitiless big granite
+stores are now; and, I don't know why, but the idea of any human baby
+being born in Pearl Street seemed to me one of the saddest things I'd
+ever heard of.”
+
+Here Cousin Lucy went to the rescue of the nurse and the baby, who had
+got into one of their periodical difficulties, and her interlocutor
+turned to Aunt Melissa.
+
+“I think, Franklin,” says Aunt Melissa, “that it was wrong to let that
+nurse come and bring the baby.”
+
+“Yes, I know, Aunty, you have those old-established ideas, and they're
+very right,” answers her nephew; “but just consider how much she enjoys
+it, and how vastly the baby adds to the pleasure of this charming
+excursion!”
+
+Aunt Melissa made no reply, but sat thoughtfully out upon the bay. “I
+presume you think the excursion is a failure,” she said, after a while;
+“but I've been enjoying every minute of the time here. Of course, I've
+never seen the open sea, and I don't know about it, but I feel here just
+as if I were spending a day at the seaside.”
+
+“Well,” said her nephew, “I shouldn't call this exactly a
+watering-place. It lacks the splendor and gayety of Newport, in a
+certain degree, and it hasn't the illustrious seclusion of Nahant. The
+surf isn't very fine, nor the beach particularly adapted to bathing; and
+yet, I must confess, the outlook from here is as lovely as anything one
+need have.”
+
+And to tell the truth, it was very pretty and interesting. The landward
+environment was as commonplace and mean as it could be: a yardful of
+dismal sheds for coal and lumber, and shanties for offices, with each
+office its safe and its desk, its whittled arm-chair and its spittoon,
+its fly that shooed not, but buzzed desperately against the grimy pane,
+which, if it had really had that boasted microscopic eye, it never would
+have mistaken for the unblemished daylight. Outside of this yard was the
+usual wharfish neighborhood, with its turmoil of trucks and carts and
+fleet express-wagons, its building up and pulling down, its discomfort
+and clamor of every sort, and its shops for the sale, not only of those
+luxuries which Lucy had mentioned, but of such domestic refreshments as
+lemon-pie and hulled-corn.
+
+When, however, you turned your thoughts and eyes away from this aspect
+of it, and looked out upon the water, the neighborhood gloriously
+retrieved itself. There its poverty and vulgarity ceased; there its
+beauty and grace abounded. A light breeze ruffled the face of the bay,
+and the innumerable little sail-boats that dotted it took the sun and
+wind upon their wings, which they dipped almost into the sparkle of the
+water, and flew lightly hither and thither like gulls that loved the
+brine too well to rise wholly from it; larger ships, farther or nearer,
+puffed or shrank their sails as they came and went on the errands
+of commerce, but always moved as if bent upon some dreamy affair of
+pleasure; the steamboats that shot vehemently across their tranquil
+courses seemed only gayer and vivider visions, but not more substantial;
+yonder, a black sea-going steamer passed out between the far-off
+islands, and at last left in the sky above those reveries of
+fortification, a whiff of sombre smoke, dark and unreal as a memory
+of battle; to the right, on some line of railroad, long-plumed trains
+arrived and departed like pictures passed through the slide of a
+magic-lantern; even a pile-driver, at work in the same direction, seemed
+to have no malice in the blows which, after a loud clucking, it dealt
+the pile, and one understood that it was mere conventional violence like
+that of a Punch to his baby.
+
+“Why, what a lotus-eating life this is!” said Frank, at last. “Aunt
+Melissa, I don't wonder you think it's like the seaside. It's a great
+deal better than the seaside. And now, just as we've entered into the
+spirit of it, the time's up for the 'Rose Standish' to come and bear
+us from its delights. When will the boat be in?” he asked of the
+Autobiographer, whom Lucy had pointed out to him.
+
+“Well, she's _ben_ in half an hour, now. There she lays, just outside
+the 'John Romer.'”
+
+There, to be sure, she lay, and those pleasure-takers had been so lost
+in the rapture of waiting and the beauty of the scene as never to have
+noticed her arrival.
+
+
+II--THE AFTERNOON
+
+
+It is noticeable how many people there are in the world that seem bent
+always upon the same purpose of amusement or business as one's self.
+If you keep quietly about your accustomed affairs, there are all your
+neighbors and acquaintance hard at it too; if you go on a journey,
+choose what train you will, the cars are filled with travellers in your
+direction. You take a day's pleasure, and everybody abandons his usual
+occupation to crowd upon your boat, whether it is to Gloucester, or
+Nahant, or to Nantasket Beach you go. It is very hard to believe that,
+from whatever channel of life you abstract yourself, still the great sum
+of it presses forward as before: that business is carried on though you
+are idle, that men amuse themselves though you toil, that every train is
+as crowded as that you travel on, that the theatre or the church fills
+its boxes or pews without you perfectly well. I suppose it would not be
+quite agreeable to believe all this; the opposite illusion is far more
+flattering; for if each one of us did not take the world with him now at
+every turn, should he not have to leave it behind him when he died? And
+that, it must be owned, would not be agreeable, nor is the fact quite
+conceivable, though ever so many myriads in so many million years have
+proved it.
+
+When our friends first went aboard the “Rose Standish” that day they
+were almost the sole passengers, and they had a feeling of ownership
+and privacy which was pleasant enough in its way, but which they lost
+afterwards; though to lose it was also pleasant, for enjoyment no more
+likes to be solitary than sin does, which is notoriously gregarious, and
+I dare say would hardly exist if it could not be committed in company.
+The preacher, indeed, little knows the comfortable sensation we have in
+being called fellow-sinners, and what an effective shield for his guilt
+each makes of his neighbor's hard-heartedness.
+
+Cousin Frank never felt how strange was a lonely transgression till
+that day, when in the silence of the little cabin he took the bottle of
+claret from the handbag, and prepared to moisten the family lunch with
+it. “I think, Aunt Melissa,” he said, “we had better lunch now, for it's
+a quarter past two, and we shall not get to the beach before four. Let's
+improvise a beach of these chairs, and that water-urn yonder can stand
+for the breakers. Now, this is truly like Newport and Nahant,” he added,
+after the little arrangement was complete; and he was about to strip
+away the bottle's jacket of brown paper, when a lady much wrapped up
+came in, and, reclining upon one of the opposite seats, began to take
+them all in with a severe serenity of gaze that made them feel for a
+moment like a party of low foreigners,--like a set of German atheists,
+say. Frank kept on the bottle's paper jacket, and as the single tumbler
+of the party circled from mouth to mouth, each of them tried to give the
+honest drink the false air of a medicinal potion of some sort; and to
+see Aunt Melissa sipping it, no one could have put his hand on his heart
+and sworn it was not elderberry wine, at the worst. In spite of these
+efforts, they all knew that they had suffered a hopeless loss of repute;
+yet after the loss was confessed, I am not sure that they were not the
+gayer and happier through this “freedom of a broken law.” At any rate,
+the lunch passed off very merrily, and when they had put back the
+fragments of the feast into the bags, they went forward to the bow of
+the boat, to get good places for seeing the various people as they came
+aboard, and for an outlook upon the bay when the boat should start.
+
+I suppose that these were not very remarkable people, and that nothing
+but the indomitable interest our friends took in the human race could
+have enabled them to feel any concern in their companions. It was,
+no doubt, just such a company as goes down to Nantasket Beach every
+pleasant day in summer. Certain ones among them were distinguishable as
+sojourners at the beach, by an air of familiarity with the business of
+getting there, an indifference to the prospect, and an indefinable touch
+of superiority. These read their newspapers in quiet corners, or, if
+they were not of the newspaper sex, made themselves comfortable in the
+cabins, and looked about them at the other passengers with looks of
+lazy surprise, and just a hint of scorn for their interest in the boat's
+departure. Our day's pleasurers took it that the lady whose steady gaze
+had reduced them, when at lunch, to such a low ebb of shabbiness, was a
+regular boarder, at the least, in one of the beach hotels. A few other
+passengers were, like themselves, mere idlers for a day, and were eager
+to see all that the boat or the voyage offered of novelty. There were
+clerks and men who had book-keeping written in a neat mercantile hand
+upon their faces, and who had evidently been given that afternoon for
+a breathing-time; and there were strangers who were going down to the
+beach for the sake of the charming view of the harbor which the trip
+afforded. Here and there were people who were not to be classed with any
+certainty,--as a pale young man, handsome in his undesirable way, who
+looked like a steamboat pantry boy not yet risen to be bar-tender, but
+rapidly rising, and who sat carefully balanced upon the railing of the
+boat, chatting with two young girls, who heard his broad sallies with
+continual snickers, and interchanged saucy comments with that prompt
+up-and-coming manner which is so large a part of non-humorous humor, as
+Mr. Lowell calls it, and now and then pulled and pushed each other. It
+was a scene worth study, for in no other country could anything so bad
+have been without being vastly worse; but here it was evident that there
+was nothing worse than you saw; and, indeed, these persons formed a
+sort of relief to the other passengers, who were nearly all monotonously
+well-behaved. Amongst a few there seemed to be acquaintance, but the far
+greater part were unknown to one another, and there were no words wasted
+by any one. I believe the English traveller who has taxed our nation
+with inquisitiveness for half a century is at last beginning to find
+out that we do not ask questions because we have the still more vicious
+custom of not opening our mouths at all when with strangers.
+
+It was a good hour after our friends got aboard before the boat left her
+moorings, and then it was not without some secret dreads of sea-sickness
+that Aunt Melissa saw the seething brine widen between her and the
+familiar wharf-house, where she now seemed to have spent so large a
+part of her life. But the multitude of really charming and interesting
+objects that presently fell under her eye soon distracted her from those
+gloomy thoughts.
+
+There is always a shabbiness about the wharves of seaports; but I must
+own that as soon as you get a reasonable distance from them in Boston,
+they turn wholly beautiful. They no longer present that imposing array
+of mighty ships which they could show in the days of Consul Plancus,
+when the commerce of the world sought chiefly our port, yet the docks
+are still filled with the modester kinds of shipping, and if there is
+not that wilderness of spars and rigging which you see at New York, let
+us believe that there is an aspect of selection and refinement in
+the scene, so that one should describe it, not as a forest, but, less
+conventionally, as a gentleman's park of masts. The steamships of many
+coastwise freight lines gloom, with their black, capacious hulks,
+among the lighter sailing-craft, and among the white, green-shuttered
+passenger-boats; and behind them those desperate and grimy sheds assume
+a picturesqueness, their sagging roofs and crooked gables harmonizing
+agreeably with the shipping; and then growing up from all, rises the
+mellow-tinted brick-built city, roof, and spire, and dome,--a fair
+and noble sight, indeed, and one not surpassed for a certain quiet and
+cleanly beauty by any that I know.
+
+Our friends lingered long upon this pretty prospect, and, as inland
+people of light heart and easy fancy will, the ladies made imagined
+voyages in each of the more notable vessels they passed,--all cheap and
+safe trips, occupying half a second apiece. Then they came forward to
+the bow, that they might not lose any part of the harbor's beauty and
+variety, and informed themselves of the names of each of the fortressed
+islands as they passed, and forgot them, being passed, so that to this
+day Aunt Melissa has the Fort Warren rebel prisoners languishing in Fort
+Independence. But they made sure of the air of soft repose that hung
+about each, of that exquisite military neatness which distinguishes
+them, and which went to Aunt Melissa's housekeeping heart, of the green,
+thick turf covering the escarpments, of the great guns loafing on the
+crests of the ramparts and looking out over the water sleepily, of the
+sentries pacing slowly up and down with their gleaming muskets.
+
+“I never see one of those fellows,” says Cousin Frank, “without setting
+him to the music of that saddest and subtlest of Heine's poems. You know
+it, Lucy;” and he repeats:--
+
+ “Mein Herz, mein Herz is traurig,
+ Doch lustig leuchtet der Mai;
+ Ich stehe gelehnt an der Linde,
+ Hoch auf der alten Bastei.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ “Am alten grauen Thurme
+ Ein Schilderhäuschen steht;
+ Ein rothgeröckter Bursche
+ Dort auf und nieder geht.
+
+ “Er spielt mit seiner Flinte,
+ Sie funkelt im Sonnenroth,
+ Er präsentirt, und schultert,--
+ Ich wollt', er schösse mich todt.”
+
+
+“O!” says Cousin Lucy, either because the poignant melancholy of the
+sentiment has suddenly pierced her, or because she does not quite
+understand the German,--you never can tell about women. While Frank
+smiles down upon her in this amiable doubt, their party is approached by
+the tipsy man who has been making the excursion so merry for the other
+passengers, in spite of the fact that there is very much to make one sad
+in him. He is an old man, sweltering in rusty black, a two days' gray
+beard, and a narrow-brimmed, livid silk hat, set well back upon the nape
+of his neck. He explains to our friends, as he does to every one whose
+acquaintance he makes, that he was in former days a seafaring man, and
+that he has brought his two little grandsons here to show them something
+about a ship; and the poor old soul helplessly saturates his phrase with
+the rankest profanity. The boys are somewhat amused by their grandsire's
+state, being no doubt familiar with it, but a very grim-looking old lady
+who sits against the pilot-house, and keeps a sharp eye upon all three,
+and who is also doubtless familiar with the unhappy spectacle, seems not
+to find it a joke. Her stout matronly umbrella trembles in her hand when
+her husband draws near, and her eye flashes; but he gives her as wide a
+berth as he can, returning her glare with a propitiatory drunken smile
+and a wink to the passengers to let them into the fun. In fact, he is
+full of humor in his tipsy way, and one after another falls the prey of
+his free sarcasm, which does not spare the boat or any feature of the
+excursion. He holds for a long time, by swiftly successive stories of
+his seafaring days, a very quiet gentleman, who dares neither laugh too
+loudly nor show indifference for fear of rousing that terrible wit at
+his expense, and finds his account in looking down at his boots.
+
+“Well, sir,” says the deplorable old sinner, “we was forty days out from
+Liverpool, with a cargo of salt and iron, and we got caught on the Banks
+in a calm. 'Cap'n,' says I,--I 'us sec'n' mate,--''s they any man aboard
+this ship knows how to pray?' 'No,' says the cap'n; 'blast yer prayers!'
+'Well,' says I, 'cap'n, I'm no hand at all to pray, but I'm goin' to see
+if prayin' won't git us out 'n this.' And I down on my knees, and I made
+a first-class prayer; and a breeze sprung up in a minute and carried us
+smack into Boston.”
+
+At this bit of truculent burlesque the quiet man made a bold push, and
+walked away with a somewhat sickened face, and as no one now intervened
+between them, the inebriate laid a familiar hand upon Cousin Frank's
+collar, and said with a wink at his late listener: “Looks like a
+lerigious man, don't he? I guess I give him a good dose, if he _does_
+think himself the head-deacon of this boat.” And he went on to state his
+ideas of religion, from which it seemed that he was a person of the most
+advanced thinking, and believed in nothing worth mentioning.
+
+It is perhaps no worse for an Infidel to be drunk than a Christian, but
+my friend found this tipsy blasphemer's case so revolting, that he
+went to the hand-bag, took out the empty claret-bottle, and seeking a
+solitary corner of the boat, cast the bottle into the water, and felt
+a thrill of uncommon self-approval as this scapegoat of all the wine
+at his grocer's bobbed off upon the little waves. “Besides, it saves
+carrying the bottle home,” he thought, not without a half-conscious
+reserve, that if his penitence were ever too much for him, he could
+easily abandon it. And without the reflection that the gate is always
+open behind him, who could consent to enter upon any course of perfect
+behavior? If good resolutions could not be broken, who would ever have
+the courage to form them? Would it not be intolerable to be made as good
+as we ought to be? Then, admirable reader, thank Heaven even for your
+lapses, since it is so wholesome and saving to be well ashamed of
+yourself, from time to time.
+
+“What an outrage,” said Cousin Frank, in the glow of virtue, as he
+rejoined the ladies, “that that tipsy rascal should be allowed to go on
+with his ribaldry. He seems to pervade the whole boat, and to subject
+everybody to his sway. He's a perfect despot to us helpless sober
+people,--I wouldn't openly disagree with him on any account. We ought
+to send a Round Robin to the captain, and ask him to put that religious
+liberal in irons during the rest of the voyage.”
+
+In the mean time, however, the object of his indignation had used up
+all the conversible material in that part of the boat, and had deviously
+started for the other end. The elderly woman with the umbrella rose and
+followed him, somewhat wearily, and with a sadness that appeared more in
+her movement than in her face; and as the two went down the cabin, did
+the comical affair look, after all, something like tragedy? My reader,
+who expects a little novelty in tragedy, and not these stale and common
+effects, will never think so.
+
+“You'll not pretend, Frank,” says Lucy, “that in such an intellectual
+place as Boston a crowd as large as this can be got together, and no
+distinguished literary people in it. I know there are some notables
+aboard: do point them out to me. Pretty near everybody has a literary
+look.”
+
+“Why, that's what we call our Boston look, Cousin Lucy. You needn't have
+written anything to have it,--it's as general as tubercular consumption,
+and is the effect of our universal culture and habits of reading. I
+heard a New-Yorker say once that if you went into a corner grocery in
+Boston to buy a codfish, the man would ask you how you liked 'Lucille,'
+whilst he was tying it up. No, no; you mustn't be taken in by that
+literary look; I'm afraid the real literary men don't always have it.
+But I _do_ see a literary man aboard yonder,” he added, craning his neck
+to one side, and then furtively pointing,--“the most literary man I ever
+knew, one of the most literary men that ever lived. His whole existence
+is really bound up in books; he never talks of anything else, and never
+thinks of anything else, I believe. Look at him,--what kind and
+pleasant eyes he's got! There, he sees me!” cries Cousin Frank, with a
+pleasurable excitement. “How d'ye do?” he calls out.
+
+“O Cousin Frank, introduce us,” sighs Lucy.
+
+“Not I! He wouldn't thank me. He doesn't care for pretty girls outside
+of books; he'd be afraid of 'em; he's the bashfullest man alive, and
+all his heroines are fifty years old, at the least. But before I go any
+further, tell me solemnly, Lucy, you're not interviewing me? You're not
+going to write it to a New York newspaper? No? Well, I think it's best
+to ask, always. Our friend there--he's everybody's friend, if you mean
+nobody's enemy, by that, not even his own--is really what I say,--the
+most literary man I ever knew. He loves all epochs and phases of
+literature, but his passion is the Charles Lamb period and all Lamb's
+friends. He loves them as if they were living men; and Lamb would have
+loved him if he could have known him. He speaks rapidly, and rather
+indistinctly, and when you meet him and say Good day, and you suppose
+he answers with something about the weather, ten to one he's asking
+you what you think of Hazlitt's essays on Shakespeare, or Leigh Hunt's
+Italian Poets, or Lamb's roast pig, or Barry Cornwall's songs. He
+couldn't get by a bookstall without stopping--for half an hour, at any
+rate. He knows just when all the new books in town are to be published,
+and when each bookseller is to get his invoice of old English books.
+He has no particular address, but if you leave your card for him at any
+bookstore in Boston, he's sure to get it within two days; and in the
+summer-time you're apt to meet him on these excursions. Of course, he
+writes about books, and very tastefully and modestly; there's hardly any
+of the brand-new immortal English poets, who die off so rapidly, but has
+had a good word from him; but his heart is with the older fellows, from
+Chaucer down; and, after the Charles Lamb epoch, I don't know whether
+he loves better the Elizabethan age or that of Queen Anne. Think of him
+making me stop the other day at a bookstall, and read through an essay
+out of the “Spectator!” I did it all for love of him, though money
+couldn't have persuaded me that I had time; and I'm always telling him
+lies, and pretending to be as well acquainted as he is with authors
+I hardly know by name,--he seems so fondly to expect it. He's really
+almost a disembodied spirit as concerns most mundane interests--his soul
+is in literature, as a lover's in his mistress's beauty; and in the next
+world, where, as the Swedenborgians believe, spirits seen at a distance
+appear like the things they most resemble in disposition, as doves,
+hawks, goats, lambs, swine, and so on, I'm sure that I shall see
+his true and kindly soul in the guise of a noble old Folio, quaintly
+lettered across his back in old English text, _Tom. I._”
+
+While our friends talked and looked about them, a sudden change had come
+over the brightness and warmth of the day; the blue heaven had turned a
+chilly gray, and the water looked harsh and cold. Now, too, they noted
+that they were drawing near a wooden pier built into the water, and that
+they had been winding about in a crooked channel between muddy shallows,
+and that their course was overrun with long, disheveled sea-weed. The
+shawls had been unstrapped, and the ladies made comfortable in them.
+
+“Ho for the beach!” cried Cousin Frank, with a vehement show of
+enthusiasm. “Now, then, Aunt Melissa, prepare for the great enjoyment of
+the day. In a few moments we shall be of the elves
+
+ 'That on the sand with printless foot
+ Do chase the ebbing Neptune, and do fly him
+ When he comes back.'
+
+Come! we shall have three hours on the beach, and that will bring us
+well into the cool of the evening, and we can return by the last boat.”
+
+“As to the cool of the evening,” said Aunt Melissa, “I don't know. It's
+quite cool enough for comfort at present, and I'm sure that anything
+more wouldn't be wholesome. What's become of our beautiful weather?” she
+asked, deeply plotting to gain time.
+
+“It's one of our Boston peculiarities, not to say merits,” answered
+Frank, “which you must have noticed already, that we can get rid of a
+fine day sooner than any other region. While you're saying how lovely
+it is, a subtle change is wrought, and under skies still blue and a sun
+still warm the keen spirit of the east wind pierces every nerve, and
+all the fine weather within you is chilled and extinguished. The gray
+atmosphere follows, but the day first languishes in yourself. But for
+this, life in Boston would be insupportably perfect, if this is indeed a
+drawback. You'd find Bostonians to defend it, I dare say. But this isn't
+a regular east wind to-day; it's merely our nearness to the sea.”
+
+“I think, Franklin,” said Aunt Melissa, “that we won't go down to the
+beach this afternoon,” as if she had been there yesterday, and would go
+to-morrow. “It's too late in the day; and it wouldn't be good for the
+child, I'm sure.”
+
+“Well, aunty, it was you determined us to wait for the boat, and it's
+your right to say whether we shall leave it or not. I'm very willing
+not to go ashore. I always find that, after working up to an object
+with great effort, it's surpassingly sweet to leave it unaccomplished
+at last. Then it remains forever in the region of the ideal, amongst the
+songs that never were sung, the pictures that never were painted. Why,
+in fact, should we force this pleasure? We've eaten our lunch, we've
+lost the warm heart of the day; why should we poorly drag over to that
+damp and sullen beach, where we should find three hours very long, when
+by going back now we can keep intact that glorious image of a day by the
+sea which we've been cherishing all summer? You're right, Aunt Melissa;
+we won't go ashore; we will stay here, and respect our illusions.”
+
+At heart, perhaps, Lucy did not quite like this retreat; it was not in
+harmony with the youthful spirit of her sex, but she reflected that she
+could come again,--O beneficent cheat of Another Time, how much thou
+sparest us in our over-worked, over-enjoyed world!--she was very
+comfortable where she was, in a seat commanding a perfect view for the
+return trip; and she submitted without a murmur. Besides, now that the
+boat had drawn up to the pier, and discharged part of her passengers,
+and was waiting to take on others, Lucy was interested in a mass of
+fluttering dresses and wide-rimmed straw hats that drew down toward
+the “Rose Standish,” and gracefully thronged the pier, and prettily
+hesitated about, and finally came aboard with laughter and little false
+cries of terror, attended through all by the New England disproportion
+of that sex which is so foolish when it is silly. It was a large picnic
+party which had been spending the day upon the beach, as each of the
+ladies showed in her face, where, if the roses upon her cheeks were
+somewhat obscured by the imbrowning seaside sun, a bright pink had been
+compensatingly bestowed upon the point of her nose. A mysterious quiet
+fell upon them all when they were got aboard and had taken conspicuous
+places, which was accounted for presently when a loud shout was heard
+from the shore, and a man beside an ambulant photographic machine was
+seen wildly waving his hat. It is impossible to resist a temptation of
+this kind, and our party all yielded, and posed themselves in striking
+and characteristic attitudes,--even Aunt Melissa sharing the ambition to
+appear in a picture which she should never see, and the nurse coming
+out strong from the abeyance in which she had been held, and lifting the
+baby high into the air for a good likeness. The frantic gesticulator on
+the shore gave an impressive wave with both hands, took the cap from the
+instrument, turned his back, as photographers always do, with that air
+of hiding their tears, for the brief space that seems so long, and then
+clapped on the cap again, while a great sigh of relief went up from the
+whole boat-load of passengers. They were taken.
+
+But the interval had been a luckless one for the “Rose Standish,” and
+when she stirred her wheels, clouds of mud rose to the top of the water,
+and there was no responsive movement of the boat. She was aground in the
+falling tide.
+
+“There seems a pretty fair prospect of our spending some time here,
+after all,” said Frank, while the ladies, who had reluctantly given up
+the idea of staying, were now in a quiver of impatience to be off. The
+picnic was shifted from side to side; the engine groaned and tugged,
+Captain Miles Standish and his crew bestirred themselves vigorously, and
+at last the boat swung loose, and strode down the sea-weedy channels;
+while our friends, who had already done the great sights of the
+harbor, now settled themselves to the enjoyment of its minor traits and
+beauties. Here and there they passed small parties on the shore, which,
+with their yachts anchored near, or their boats drawn up from the water,
+were cooking an out-door meal by a fire that burned bright red upon the
+sands in the late afternoon air. In such cases, people willingly indulge
+themselves in saluting whatever craft goes by, and the ladies of these
+small picnics, as they sat round the fires, kept up a great waving
+of handkerchiefs, and sometimes cheered the “Rose Standish,” though
+I believe the Bostonians are ordinarily not a demonstrative race. Of
+course the large picnic on board fluttered multitudinous handkerchiefs
+in response, both to these people ashore and to those who hailed them
+from vessels which they met. They did not refuse the politeness even
+to the passengers on a rival boat when she passed them, though at heart
+they must have felt some natural pangs at being passed. The water was
+peopled everywhere by all sorts of sail lagging slowly homeward in
+the light evening breeze; and on some of the larger vessels there were
+family groups to be seen, and a graceful smoke, suggestive of supper,
+curled from the cook's galley. I suppose these ships were chiefly
+coasting craft, of one kind or another, come from the Provinces at
+farthest; but to the ignorance and the fancy of our friends, they
+arrived from all remote and romantic parts of the world,--from India,
+from China, and from the South Seas, with cargoes of spices and gums and
+tropical fruits; and I see no reason why one should ever deny himself
+the easy pleasure they felt in painting the unknown in such lively hues.
+The truth is, a strange ship, if you will let her, always brings you
+precious freight, always arrives from Wonderland under the command of
+Captain Sinbad. How like a beautiful sprite she looks afar off, as if
+she came from some finer and fairer world than ours! Nay, we will not go
+out to meet her; we will not go on board; Captain Sinbad shall bring us
+the invoice of gold-dust, slaves, and rocs' eggs to-night, and we will
+have some of the eggs for breakfast; or if he never comes, are we
+not just as rich? But I think these friends of ours got a yet keener
+pleasure out of the spectacle of a large and stately ship, that with all
+sails spread moved silently and steadily out toward the open sea. It is
+yet grander and sweeter to sail toward the unknown than to come from it;
+and every vessel that leaves port has this destination, and will bear
+you thither if you will.
+
+ “It may be that the gulf shall wash us down;
+ It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
+ And see the great Achilles, whom we knew,”
+
+absently murmured Lucy, looking on this beautiful apparition.
+
+“But I can't help thinking of Ulysses' cabin-boy, yonder,” said Cousin
+Frank, after a pause; “can you, Aunt Melissa?”
+
+“I don't understand what you're talking about Franklin,” answered Aunt
+Melissa, somewhat severely.
+
+“Why, I mean that there is a poor wretch of a boy on board there, who's
+run away, and whose heart must be aching just now at the thought of the
+home he has left. I hope Ulysses will be good to him, and not swear at
+him for a day or two, or knock him about with a belaying-pin. Just about
+this time his mother, up in the country, is getting ready his supper,
+and wondering what's become of him, and torturing herself with hopes
+that break one by one; and to-night when she goes up to his empty room,
+having tried to persuade herself that the truant's come back and climbed
+in at the window”--“Why, Franklin, this isn't true, is it?” asks Aunt
+Melissa.
+
+“Well, no, let's pray Heaven it isn't, in this case. It's been true
+often enough to be false for once.”
+
+“What a great, ugly, black object a ship is!” said Cousin Lucy.
+
+Slowly the city rose up against the distance, sharpening all its
+outlines, and filling in all its familiar details,--like a fact which
+one dreams is a dream, and which, as the mists of sleep break away,
+shows itself for reality.
+
+The air grows closer and warmer,--it is the breath of the hot and
+toil-worn land.
+
+The boat makes her way up through the shipping, seeks her landing, and
+presently rubs herself affectionately against the wharf. The passengers
+quickly disperse themselves upon shore, dismissed each with an
+appropriate sarcasm by the tipsy man, who has had the means of keeping
+himself drunk throughout, and who now looks to the discharge of the
+boat's cargo.
+
+As our friends leave the wharf-house behind them, and straggle uneasily,
+and very conscious of sunburn, up the now silent length of Pearl Street
+to seek the nearest horse-cars, they are aware of a curious fidgeting
+of the nurse, who flies from one side of the pavement to the other and
+violently shifts the baby from one arm to the other.
+
+“What's the matter?” asks Frank; but before the nurse can answer, “Thim
+little divils,” he perceives that the whooping-coughers of the morning
+have taken the occasion to renew a pleasant acquaintance, and are
+surrounding the baby and nurse with an atmosphere of whooping-cough.
+
+“I say, friends! we can't stand this, you know,” says the anxious
+father. “We must part some time, and this is a favorable moment. Now
+I'll give you all this, if you don't come another step!” and he empties
+out to them, from the hand-bags he carries, the fragments of lunch which
+the frugal mind of Aunt Melissa had caused her to store there. Upon
+these the whooping-coughers hurl themselves in a body, and are soon left
+round the corner. Yet they would have been no disgrace to our party,
+whose appearance was now most disreputable: Frank and Lucy stalked
+ahead, with shawls dragging from their arms, the former loaded down
+with hand-bags and the latter with India-rubbers; Aunt Melissa came next
+under a burden of bloated umbrellas; the nurse last, with her hat awry,
+and the baby a caricature of its morning trimness, in her embrace. A
+day's pleasure is so demoralizing, that no party can stand it, and come
+out neat and orderly.
+
+[Illustration: “Frank and Lucy stalked ahead, with shawls dragging from
+their arms.”]
+
+“Cousin Frank,” asked Lucy, awfully, “what if we should meet the
+Mayflowers now?”--the Mayflowers being a very ancient and noble Boston
+family whose acquaintance was the great pride and terror of our friends'
+lives.
+
+“I should cut them dead,” said Frank, and scarcely spoke again till his
+party dragged slowly up the steps of their minute suburban villa.
+
+At the door his wife met them with a troubled and anxious face.
+
+“Calamities?” asked Frank, desperately.
+
+“O, calamities upon calamities! We've got a lost child in the kitchen,”
+ answered Mrs. Sallie.
+
+“O good heavens!” cried her husband. “Adieu, my dreams of repose, so
+desirable after the quantity of active enjoyment I've had! Well, where
+is the lost child?”
+
+
+III.--THE EVENING
+
+
+“Where is the lost child?” repeats Frank, desperately. “Where have you
+got him?”
+
+“In the kitchen.”
+
+“Why in the kitchen?”
+
+“How's baby?” demands Mrs. Sallie, with the incoherent suddenness of
+her sex, and running halfway down the steps to meet the nurse. “Um, um,
+um-m-m-m,” sounds, which may stand for smothered kisses of rapture and
+thanksgiving that baby is not a lost child. “Has he been good, Lucy?
+Take him off and give him some cocoa, Mrs. O'Gonegal,” she adds in her
+business-like way, and with a little push to the combined nurse and
+baby, while Lucy answers, “O beautiful!” and from that moment, being
+warned through all her being by something in the other's tone, casts
+aside the matronly manner which she has worn during the day, and lapses
+into the comfortable irresponsibility of young-ladyhood.
+
+“What kind of a time did you have?”
+
+“Splendid!” answers Lucy. “Delightful, _I_ think,” she adds, as if she
+thought others might not think so.
+
+“I suppose you found Gloucester a quaint old place.”
+
+“O,” says Frank, “we didn't go to Gloucester; we found that the City
+Fathers had chartered the boat for the day, so we thought we'd go to
+Nahant.”
+
+“Then you've seen your favorite Gardens of Maolis! What in the world
+_are_ they like?”
+
+“Well; we didn't see the Gardens of Maolis; the Nahant boat was so
+crowded that we couldn't think of going on her, and so we decided we'd
+drive over to the Liverpool Wharf and go down to Nantasket Beach.”
+
+“That was nice. I'm so glad on Aunt Melissa's account. It's much better
+to see the ocean from a long beach than from those Nahant rocks.”
+
+“That's what _I_ said. But, you know, when we got to the wharf the boat
+had just left.”
+
+“You _don't_ mean it! Well, then, what under the canopy _did_ you do?”
+
+“Why, we sat down in the wharf-house, and waited from nine o'clock till
+half-past two for the next boat.”
+
+“Well, I'm glad you didn't back out, at any rate. You did show pluck,
+you poor things! I hope you enjoyed the beach after you _did_ get
+there.”
+
+“Why,” says Frank, looking down, “we never got there.”
+
+“Never got there!” gasps Mrs. Sallie. “Didn't you go down on the
+afternoon boat?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Why didn't you get to the beach, then?”
+
+“We didn't go ashore.”
+
+“Well, that's _like_ you, Frank.”
+
+“It's a great deal more like Aunt Melissa,” answers Frank. “The air felt
+so raw and chilly by the time we reached the pier, that she declared the
+baby would perish if it was taken to the beach. Besides, nothing would
+persuade her that Nantasket Beach was at all different from Liverpool
+Wharf.”
+
+“Never mind, never mind!” says Mrs. Sallie. “I don't wish to hear
+anything more. That's your idea of a day's pleasure, is it? I call it
+a day's disgrace, a day's miserable giving-up. There, go in, go in;
+I'm ashamed of you all. Don't let the neighbors see you, for pity's
+sake.--We keep him in the kitchen,” she continues, recurring to Frank's
+long-unanswered question concerning the lost child, “because he prefers
+it as being the room nearest to the closet where the cookies are. He's
+taken advantage of our sympathies to refuse everything but cookies.”
+
+“I suppose that's one of the rights of lost childhood,” comments Frank,
+languidly; “there's no law that can compel him to touch even cracker.”
+
+“Well, you'd better go down and see what _you_ can make of him. He's
+driven _us_ all wild.”
+
+So Frank descends to the region now redolent of the preparing tea, and
+finds upon a chair, in the middle of the kitchen floor, a very forlorn
+little figure of a boy, mutely munching a sweet-cake, while now and then
+a tear steals down his cheeks and moistens the grimy traces of former
+tears. He and baby are, in the mean time regarding each other with a
+steadfast glare, the cook and the nurse supporting baby in this rite of
+hospitality.
+
+“Well, my little man,” says his host, “how did you get here?”
+
+The little man, perhaps because he is heartily sick of the question, is
+somewhat slow to answer that there was a fire; and that he ran after the
+steamer; and a girl found him and brought him up here.
+
+“And that's all the blessed thing you can get out of him,” says cook;
+and the lost boy looks as if he felt cook to be perfectly right.
+
+In spite of the well-meant endeavors of the household to wash him and
+brush him, he is still a dreadfully travel-stained little boy, and he
+is powdered in every secret crease and wrinkle by that dust of old
+Charlesbridge, of which we always speak with an air of affected disgust,
+and a feeling of ill-concealed pride in an abomination so strikingly
+and peculiarly our own. He looks very much as if he had been following
+fire-engines about the streets of our learned and pulverous suburb ever
+since he could walk, and he certainly seems to feel himself in trouble
+to a certain degree; but there is easily imaginable in his bearing
+a conviction that after all the chief care is with others, and that,
+though unhappy, he is not responsible. The principal victim of his
+sorrows is also penetrated by this opinion, and after gazing forlornly
+upon him for a while, asks mechanically, “What's your name?”
+
+“Freddy,” is the laconic answer.
+
+“Freddy--?” trying with an artful inflection to lead him on to his
+surname.
+
+“Freddy,” decidedly and conclusively.
+
+“O, bless me! What's the name of the street your papa lives on?”
+
+This problem is far too deep for Freddy, and he takes a bite of
+sweet-cake in sign that he does not think of solving it. Frank looks at
+him gloomily for a moment, and then determines that he can grapple with
+the difficulty more successfully after he has had tea. “Send up the
+supper, Bridget. I think, my dear,” he says, after they have sat down,
+“we'd better all question our lost child when we've finished.”
+
+So, when they have finished, they have him up in the sitting-room, and
+the inquisition begins.
+
+“Now, Freddy,” his host says, with a cheerful air of lifelong friendship
+and confidence, “you know that everybody has got two names. Of course
+your first name is Freddy, and it's a very pretty name. Well, I want you
+to think real hard, and then tell me what your other name is, so I can
+take you back to your mamma.”
+
+At this allusion the child looks round on the circle of eager and
+compassionate faces, and begins to shed tears and to wring all hearts.
+
+“What's your name?” asks Frank, cheerfully,--“your _other_ name, you
+know?”
+
+“Freddy,” sobbed the forlorn creature.
+
+“O good heaven! this'll never do,” groaned the chief inquisitor. “Now,
+Freddy, try not to cry. What is your papa's name,--Mr.--?” with the
+leading inflection as before.
+
+“Papa,” says Freddy.
+
+[Illustration: “They skirmish about him with every sort of query.”]
+
+“O, that'll never do! Not Mr. Papa?”
+
+“Yes,” persists Freddy.
+
+“But, Freddy,” interposes Mrs. Sallie, as her husband falls back
+baffled, “when ladies come to see your mamma, what do they call her?
+Mrs.--?” adopting Frank's alluring inflection.
+
+“Mrs. Mamma,” answers Freddy, confirmed in his error by this course; and
+a secret dismay possesses his questioners. They skirmish about him with
+every sort of query; they try to entrap him into some kind of revelation
+by apparently irrelevant remarks; they plan ambuscades and surprises;
+but Freddy looks vigilantly round upon them, and guards his personal
+history from every approach, and seems in every way so to have the best
+of it, that it is almost exasperating.
+
+“Kindness has proved futile,” observes Frank, “and I think we ought as a
+last resort, before yielding ourselves to despair, to use intimidation.
+Now, Fred,” he says, with sudden and terrible severity, “what's your
+father's name?”
+
+The hapless little soul is really moved to an effort of memory by this,
+and blubbers out something that proves in the end to resemble the family
+name, though for the present it is merely a puzzle of unintelligible
+sounds.”
+
+“Blackman?” cries Aunt Melissa, catching desperately at these sounds.
+
+On this, all the man and brother is roused in Freddy's bosom, and he
+roars fiercely, “No! he ain't a black man! He's white!”
+
+“I give it up,” says Frank, who has been looking for his hat. “I'm
+afraid we can't make anything out of him; and I'll have to go and report
+the case to the police. But, put him to bed, do, Sallie; he's dropping
+with sleep.”
+
+So he went out, of course supported morally by a sense of duty, but I am
+afraid also by a sense of adventure in some degree. It is not every day
+that, in so quiet a place as Charlesbridge, you can have a lost child
+cast upon your sympathies; and I believe that when an appeal is not
+really agonizing, we like so well to have our sympathies touched, we
+favorites of the prosperous commonplace, that most of us would enter
+eagerly into a pathetic case of this kind, even after a day's pleasure.
+Such was certainly the mood of my friend, and he unconsciously prepared
+himself for an equal interest on the part of the police; but this was
+an error. The police heard his statement with all proper attention,
+and wrote it in full upon the station-slate, but they showed no feeling
+whatever, and behaved as if they valued a lost child no more than a
+child snug at home in his own crib. They said that no doubt his parents
+would be asking at the police-stations for him during the night, and,
+as if my friend would otherwise have thought of putting him into the
+street, they suggested that he should just keep the lost child till he
+was sent for. Modestly enough Frank proposed that they should make some
+inquiry for his parents, and was answered by the question whether they
+could take a man off his beat for that purpose; and remembering that
+beats in Charlesbridge were of such vastness that during his whole
+residence there he had never yet seen a policeman on his street, he was
+obliged to own to himself that his proposal was absurd. He felt the need
+of reinstating himself by something more sensible, and so he said he
+thought he would go down to the Port and leave word at the station
+there; and the police tacitly assenting to this he went.
+
+I who have sometimes hinted that the Square is not a centre of gayety,
+or a scene of the greatest activity by day, feel it right to say that
+it has some modest charms of its own on a summer's night, about the hour
+when Frank passed through it, when the post-office has just been shut,
+and when the different groups that haunt the place in front of the
+closing shops have dwindled to the loungers fit though few who will keep
+it well into the night, and may there be found, by the passenger on the
+last horse-car out from Boston, wrapt in a kind of social silence,
+and honorably attended by the policeman whose favored beat is in
+that neighborhood. They seem a feature of the bygone village life of
+Charlesbridge, and accord pleasantly with the town-pump and the public
+horse-trough, and the noble elm that by night droops its boughs so
+pensively, and probably dreams of its happy younger days when there were
+no canker-worms in the world. Sometimes this choice company sits on the
+curbing that goes round the terrace at the elm-tree's foot, and then I
+envy every soul in it,--so tranquil it seems, so cool, so careless, so
+morrowless. I cannot see the faces of that luxurious society, but there
+I imagine is the local albino, and a certain blind man, who resorts
+thither much by day, and makes a strange kind of jest of his own, with
+a flicker of humor upon his sightless face, and a faith that others less
+unkindly treated by nature will be able to see the point apparently not
+always discernible to himself. Late at night I have a fancy that the
+darkness puts him on an equality with other wits, and that he enjoys his
+own brilliancy as well as any one.
+
+At the Port station Frank was pleased and soothed by the tranquil air of
+the policeman, who sat in his shirt-sleeves outside the door, and seemed
+to announce, by his attitude of final disoccupation, that crimes and
+misdemeanors were no more. This officer at once showed a desirable
+interest in the case. He put on his blue coat that he might listen
+to the whole story in a proper figure, and then he took down the main
+points on the slate, and said that they would send word round to the
+other stations in the city, and the boy's parents could hardly help
+hearing of him that night.
+
+Returned home, Frank gave his news, and then he and Mrs. Sallie went up
+to look at the lost child as he slept. The sumptuous diet to which he
+had confined himself from the first seemed to agree with him perfectly,
+for he slept unbrokenly, and apparently without a consciousness of his
+woes. On a chair lay his clothes, in a dusty little pathetic heap; they
+were well-kept clothes, except for the wrong his wanderings had done
+them, and they showed a motherly care here and there, which it was not
+easy to look at with composure. The spectators of his sleep both thought
+of the curious chance that had thrown this little one into their charge,
+and considered that he was almost as completely a gift of the Unknown
+as if he had been following a steamer in another planet, and had thence
+dropped into their yard. His helplessness in accounting for himself was
+as affecting as that of the sublimest metaphysician; and no learned man,
+no superior intellect, no subtle inquirer among us lost children of the
+divine, forgotten home, could have been less able to say how or whence
+he came to be just where he found himself. We wander away and away; the
+dust of the road-side gathers upon us; and when some strange shelter
+receives us, we lie down to our sleep, inarticulate, and haunted with
+dreams of memory, or the memory of dreams, knowing scarcely more of the
+past than of the future.
+
+“What a strange world!” sighed Mrs. Sallie; and then, as this was a
+mood far too speculative for her, she recalled herself to practical life
+suddenly. “If we should have to adopt this child, Frank”--“Why, bless
+my soul, we're not obliged to adopt him! Even a lost child can't demand
+that.”
+
+“We shall adopt him, if they don't come for him. And now, I want to
+know” (Mrs. Sallie spoke as if the adoption had been effected) “whether
+we shall give him our name, or some other?”
+
+“Well, I don't know. It's the first child I've ever adopted,” said Frank
+“and upon my word, I can't say whether you have to give him a new name
+or not. In fact, if I'd thought of this affair of a name, I'd never have
+adopted him. It's the greatest part of the burden, and if his father
+will only come for him, I'll give him up without a murmur.”
+
+In the interval that followed the proposal of this alarming difficulty,
+and while he sat and waited vaguely for whatever should be going
+to happen next, Frank was not able to repress a sense of personal
+resentment towards the little vagrant sleeping so carelessly there,
+though at the bottom of his heart there was all imaginable tenderness
+for him. In the fantastic character which, to his weariness, the day's
+pleasure took on, it seemed an extraordinary unkindness of fate that
+this lost child should have been kept in reserve for him after all
+the rest; and he had so small consciousness of bestowing shelter and
+charity, and so profound a feeling of having himself been turned out of
+house and home by some surprising and potent agency, that if the lost
+child had been a regiment of Fenians billeted upon him, it could not
+have oppressed him more. While he remained perplexed in this perverse
+sentiment of invasion and dispossession, “Hark!” said Mrs. Sallie,
+“what's that?”
+
+It was a noise of dragging and shuffling on the walk in front of the
+house, and a low, hoarse whispering.
+
+“I don't know,” said Frank, “but from the kind of pleasure I've got
+out of it so far, I should say that this holiday was capable of an
+earthquake before midnight.”
+
+“Listen!”
+
+They listened, as they must, and heard the outer darkness rehearse
+a raucous dialogue between an unseen Bill and Jim, who were the more
+terrible to the imagination from being so realistically named, and who
+seemed to have in charge some nameless third person, a mute actor in the
+invisible scene. There was doubt, which he uttered, in the mind of Jim,
+whether they could get this silent comrade along much farther without
+carrying him; and there was a growling assent from Bill that he _was_
+pretty far gone, that was a fact, and that maybe Jim _had_ better go for
+the wagon; then there were quick, retreating steps; and then there was
+a profound silence, in which the audience of this strange drama sat
+thrilled and speechless. The effect was not less dreadful when there
+rose a dull sound, as of a helpless body rubbing against the fence, and
+at last lowered heavily to the ground.
+
+“O!” cried Mrs. Sallie. “Do go out and help. He's dying!”
+
+But even as she spoke the noise of wheels was heard. A wagon stopped
+before the door; there came a tugging and lifting, with a sound as of
+crunching gravel, and then a “There!” of great relief.
+
+“Frank!” said Mrs. Sallie very solemnly, “if you don't go out and help
+those men, I'll never forgive you.”
+
+Really, the drama had grown very impressive; it was a mystery, to say
+the least; and so it must remain forever, for when Frank, infected at
+last by Mrs. Sallie's faith in tragedy, opened the door and offered his
+tardy services, the wagon was driven rapidly away without reply. They
+never learned what it had all been; and I think that if one actually
+honors mysteries, it is best not to look into them. How much finer,
+after all, if you have such a thing as this happen before your door at
+midnight, not to throw any light upon it! Then your probable tipsy man
+cannot be proved other than a tragical presence, which you can match
+with any inscrutable creation of fiction; and if you should ever come to
+write a romance, as one is very liable to do in this age, there is your
+unknown, a figure of strange and fearful interest, made to your hand,
+and capable of being used, in or out of the body, with a very gloomy
+effect.
+
+While our friends yet trembled with this sensation, quick steps ascended
+to their door, and then followed a sharp, anxious tug at the bell.
+
+“Ah!” cried Frank, prophetically, “here's the father of our adopted
+son;” and he opened the door.
+
+The gentleman who appeared there could scarcely frame the question to
+which Frank replied so cheerfully: “O yes; he's here, and snug in bed,
+and fast asleep. Come up-stairs and look at him. Better let him be
+till morning, and then come after him,” he added, as they looked down a
+moment on the little sleeper.
+
+“O no, I couldn't,” said the father, _con expressione_; and then he told
+how he had heard of this child's whereabouts at the Port station, and
+had hurried to get him, and how his mother did not know he was found
+yet, and was almost wild about him. They had no idea how he had got
+lost, and his own blind story was the only tale of his adventure that
+ever became known.
+
+By this time his father had got the child partly awake, and the two men
+were dressing him in men's clumsy fashion; and finally they gave it up,
+and rolled him in a shawl. The father lifted the slight burden, and two
+small arms fell about his neck. The weary child slept again.
+
+“How has he behaved?” asked the father.
+
+“Like a little hero,” said Frank, “but he's been a cormorant for
+cookies. I think it right to tell you, in case he shouldn't be very
+brilliant to-morrow, that he wouldn't eat a bit of anything else.”
+
+The father said he was the life of their house; and Frank said he knew
+how that was,--that he had a life of the house of his own; and then the
+father thanked him very simply and touchingly, and with the decent New
+England self-restraint, which is doubtless so much better than any sort
+of effusion. “Say good-night to the gentleman, Freddy,” he said at the
+door; and Freddy with closed eyes murmured a good-night from far within
+the land of dreams, and then was borne away to the house out of which
+the life had wandered with his little feet.
+
+“I don't know, Sallie,” said Frank, when he had given all the eagerly
+demanded particulars about the child's father,--“I don't know whether I
+should want many such holidays as this, in the course of the summer.
+On the whole, I think I'd better overwork myself and not take any
+relaxation, if I mean to live long. And yet I'm not sure that the day's
+been altogether a failure, though all our purposes of enjoyment have
+miscarried. I didn't plan to find a lost child here, when I got home,
+and I'm afraid I haven't had always the most Christian feeling towards
+him; but he's really the saving grace of the affair; and if this were a
+little comedy I had been playing, I should turn him to account with the
+jaded audience, and advancing to the foot-lights, should say, with my
+hand on my waistcoat, and a neat bow, that although every hope of the
+day had been disappointed, and nothing I had meant to do had been done,
+yet the man who had ended at midnight by restoring a lost child to the
+arms of its father, must own that, in spite of adverse fortune, he had
+enjoyed A Day's Pleasure.”
+
+[Illustration: “A gaunt figure of forlorn and curious smartness.”]
+
+
+
+
+A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE
+
+
+It was long past the twilight hour, which has been already mentioned as
+so oppressive in suburban places, and it was even too late for visitors,
+when a resident, whom I shall briefly describe as a Contributor to the
+magazines, was startled by a ring at his door. As any thoughtful person
+would have done upon the like occasion, he ran over his acquaintance in
+his mind, speculating whether it were such or such a one, and dismissing
+the whole list of improbabilities, before he laid down the book he
+was reading, and answered the bell. When at last he did this, he was
+rewarded by the apparition of an utter stranger on his threshold,--a
+gaunt figure of forlorn and curious smartness towering far above him,
+that jerked him a nod of the head, and asked if Mr. Hapford lived there.
+The face which the lamp-light revealed was remarkable for a harsh
+two days' growth of beard, and a single bloodshot eye; yet it was not
+otherwise a sinister countenance, and there was something in the strange
+presence that appealed and touched. The contributor, revolving the facts
+vaguely in his mind, was not sure, after all, that it was not the man's
+clothes rather than his expression that softened him toward the rugged
+visage: they were so tragically cheap, and the misery of helpless
+needlewomen, and the poverty and ignorance of the purchaser, were so
+apparent in their shabby newness, of which they appeared still conscious
+enough to have led the way to the very window, in the Semitic quarter of
+the city, where they had lain ticketed, “This nobby suit for $15.”
+
+But the stranger's manner put both his face and his clothes out of mind,
+and claimed a deeper interest when, being answered that the person
+for whom he asked did not live there, he set his bristling lips hard
+together, and sighed heavily.
+
+“They told me,” he said, in a hopeless way, “that he lived on this
+street, and I've been to every other house. I'm very anxious to find
+him, Cap'n,”--the contributor, of course, had no claim to the title with
+which he was thus decorated,--“for I've a daughter living with him,
+and I want to see her; I've just got home from a two years' voyage,
+and”--there was a struggle of the Adam's-apple in the man's gaunt
+throat--“I find she's about all there is left of my family.”
+
+How complex is every human motive! This contributor had been lately
+thinking, whenever he turned the pages of some foolish traveller,--some
+empty prattler of Southern or Eastern lands, where all sensation was
+long ago exhausted, and the oxygen has perished from every sentiment,
+so has it been breathed and breathed again,--that nowadays the wise
+adventurer sat down beside his own register and waited for incidents
+to seek him out. It seemed to him that the cultivation of a patient and
+receptive spirit was the sole condition needed to insure the occurrence
+of all manner of surprising facts within the range of one's own personal
+knowledge; that not only the Greeks were at our doors, but the fairies
+and the genii, and all the people of romance, who had but to be
+hospitably treated in order to develop the deepest interest of fiction,
+and to become the characters of plots so ingenious that the most cunning
+invention were poor beside them. I myself am not so confident of this,
+and would rather trust Mr. Charles Reade, say, for my amusement than any
+chance combination of events. But I should be afraid to say how much
+his pride in the character of the stranger's sorrows, as proof of the
+correctness of his theory, prevailed with the contributor to ask him
+to come in and sit down; though I hope that some abstract impulse
+of humanity, some compassionate and unselfish care for the man's
+misfortunes as misfortunes, was not wholly wanting. Indeed, the helpless
+simplicity with which he had confided his case might have touched
+a harder heart. “Thank you,” said the poor fellow, after a moment's
+hesitation. “I believe I will come in. I've been on foot all day, and
+after such a long voyage it makes a man dreadfully sore to walk about
+so much. Perhaps you can think of a Mr. Hapford living somewhere in the
+neighborhood.”
+
+He sat down, and, after a pondering silence, in which he had remained
+with his head fallen upon his breast, “My name is Jonathan Tinker,”
+ he said, with the unaffected air which had already impressed the
+contributor, and as if he felt that some form of introduction was
+necessary, “and the girl that I want to find is Julia Tinker.” Then
+he added, resuming the eventful personal history which the listener
+exulted, while he regretted, to hear: “You see, I shipped first to
+Liverpool, and there I heard from my family; and then I shipped again
+for Hong-Kong, and after that I never heard a word: I seemed to miss
+the letters everywhere. This morning, at four o'clock, I left my ship as
+soon as she had hauled into the dock, and hurried up home. The house was
+shut, and not a soul in it; and I didn't know what to do, and I sat down
+on the doorstep to wait till the neighbors woke up, to ask them what had
+become of my family. And the first one come out he told me my wife had
+been dead a year and a half, and the baby I'd never seen, with her;
+and one of my boys was dead; and he didn't know where the rest of the
+children was, but he'd heard two of the little ones was with a family in
+the city.”
+
+The man mentioned these things with the half-apologetic air observable
+in a certain kind of Americans when some accident obliges them to
+confess the infirmity of the natural feelings. They do not ask your
+sympathy, and you offer it quite at your own risk, with a chance of
+having it thrown back upon your hands. The contributor assumed the risk
+so far as to say, “Pretty rough!” when the stranger caused; and perhaps
+these homely words were best suited to reach the homely heart. The man's
+quavering lips closed hard again, a kind of spasm passed over his dark
+face, and then two very small drops of brine shone upon his weather-worn
+cheeks. This demonstration, into which he had been surprised, seemed to
+stand for the passion of tears into which the emotional races fall
+at such times. He opened his lips with a kind of dry click, and went
+on:--“I hunted about the whole forenoon in the city, and at last I found
+the children. I'd been gone so long they didn't know me, and somehow
+I thought the people they were with weren't over-glad I'd turned up.
+Finally the oldest child told me that Julia was living with a Mr.
+Hapford on this street, and I started out here to-night to look her up.
+If I can find her, I'm all right. I can get the family together, then,
+and start new.”
+
+“It seems rather odd,” mused the listener aloud, “that the neighbors let
+them break up so, and that they should all scatter as they did.”
+
+“Well, it ain't so curious as it seems, Cap'n. There was money for them
+at the owners', all the time; I'd left part of my wages when I sailed;
+but they didn't know how to get at it, and what could a parcel of
+children do? Julia's a good girl, and when I find her I'm all right.”
+
+The writer could only repeat that there was no Mr. Hapford living on
+that street, and never had been, so far as he knew. Yet there might be
+such a person in the neighborhood; and they would go out together, and
+ask at some of the houses about. But the stranger must first take a
+glass of wine; for he looked used up.
+
+The sailor awkwardly but civilly enough protested that he did not want
+to give so much trouble, but took the glass, and, as he put it to his
+lips, said formally, as if it were a toast or a kind of grace, “I hope
+I may have the opportunity of returning the compliment.” The contributor
+thanked him; though, as he thought of all the circumstances of the case,
+and considered the cost at which the stranger had come to enjoy his
+politeness, he felt little eagerness to secure the return of the
+compliment at the same price, and added, with the consequence of another
+set phrase, “Not at all.” But the thought had made him the more anxious
+to befriend the luckless soul fortune had cast in his way; and so the
+two sallied out together, and rang door-bells wherever lights were
+still seen burning in the windows, and asked the astonished people who
+answered their summons whether any Mr. Hapford were known to live in the
+neighborhood.
+
+And although the search for this gentleman proved vain, the contributor
+could not feel that an expedition which set familiar objects in such
+novel light? was altogether a failure. He entered so intimately into the
+cares and anxieties of his _protege,_ that at times he felt himself
+in some inexplicable sort a shipmate of Jonathan Tinker, and almost
+personally a partner of his calamities. The estrangement of all things
+which takes place, within doors and without, about midnight may have
+helped to cast this doubt upon his identity;--he seemed to be visiting
+now for the first time the streets and neighborhoods nearest his own,
+and his feet stumbled over the accustomed walks. In his quality
+of houseless wanderer, and--so far as appeared to others--possibly
+worthless vagabond, he also got a new and instructive effect upon the
+faces which, in his real character, he knew so well by their looks of
+neighborly greeting; and it is his belief that the first hospitable
+prompting of the human heart is to shut the door in the eyes of homeless
+strangers who present themselves after eleven o'clock. By that time the
+servants are all abed, and the gentleman of the house answers the bell,
+and looks out with a loath and bewildered face, which gradually changes
+to one of suspicion, and of wonder as to what those fellows can possibly
+want of _him,_ till at last the prevailing expression is one of contrite
+desire to atone for the first reluctance by any sort of service. The
+contributor professes to have observed these changing phases in the
+visages of those whom he that night called from their dreams, or
+arrested in the act of going to bed; and he drew the conclusion--very
+proper for his imaginable connection with the garroting and other
+adventurous brotherhoods--that the most flattering moment for knocking
+on the head people who answer a late ring at night is either in their
+first selfish bewilderment, or their final self-abandonment to their
+better impulses. It does not seem to have occurred to him that he would
+himself have been a much more favorable subject for the predatory arts
+that any of his neighbors, if his shipmate, the unknown companion of his
+researches for Mr. Hapford, had been at all so minded. But the faith
+of the gaunt giant upon which he reposed was good, and the contributor
+continued to wander about with him in perfect safety. Not a soul among
+those they asked had ever heard of a Mr. Hapford,--far less of a Julia
+Tinker living with him. But they all listened to the contributor's
+explanation with interest and eventual sympathy; and in truth,--briefly
+told, with a word now and then thrown in by Jonathan Tinker, who kept at
+the bottom of the steps, showing like a gloomy spectre in the night,
+or, in his grotesque length and gauntness, like the other's shadow
+cast there by the lamplight,--it was a story which could hardly fail to
+awaken pity.
+
+At last, after ringing several bells where there were no lights, in
+the mere wantonness of good-will, and going away before they could be
+answered (it would be entertaining to know what dreams they caused the
+sleepers within), there seemed to be nothing for it but to give up the
+search till morning, and go to the main street and wait for the last
+horse-car to the city.
+
+There, seated upon the curbstone, Jonathan Tinker, being plied with a
+few leading questions, told in hints and scraps the story of his hard
+life, which was at present that of a second mate, and had been that of
+a cabin-boy and of a seaman before the mast. The second mate's place he
+held to be the hardest aboard ship. You got only a few dollars more than
+the men, and you did not rank with the officers; you took your meals
+alone, and in every thing you belonged by yourself. The men did not
+respect you, and sometimes the captain abused you awfully before the
+passengers. The hardest captain that Jonathan Tinker ever sailed with
+was Captain Gooding of the Cape. It had got to be so that no man would
+ship second mate under Captain Gooding; and Jonathan Tinker was with him
+only one voyage. When he had been home awhile, he saw an advertisement
+for a second mate, and he went round to the owners'. They had kept it
+secret who the captain was; but there was Captain Gooding in the owners'
+office. “Why, here's the man, now, that I want for a second mate,” said
+he, when Jonathan Tinker entered; “he knows me.”--“Captain Gooding, I
+know you 'most too well to want to sail under you,” answered Jonathan.
+“I might go if I hadn't been with you one voyage too many already.”
+
+“And then the men!” said Jonathan, “the men coming aboard drunk, and
+having to be pounded sober! And the hardest of the fight falls on the
+second mate! Why, there isn't an inch of me that hasn't been cut over or
+smashed into a jell. I've had three ribs broken; I've got a scar from a
+knife on my cheek; and I've been stabbed bad enough, half a dozen times,
+to lay me up.”
+
+Here he gave a sort of desperate laugh, as if the notion of so much
+misery and such various mutilation were too grotesque not to be amusing.
+“Well, what can you do?” he went on. “If you don't strike, the men think
+you're afraid of them; and so you have to begin hard and go on hard.
+I always tell a man, 'Now, my man, I always begin with a man the way
+I mean to keep on. You do your duty and you're all right. But if you
+don't'--Well, the men ain't Americans any more,--Dutch, Spaniards,
+Chinese, Portuguee,--and it ain't like abusing a white man.”
+
+Jonathan Tinker was plainly part of the horrible tyranny which we all
+know exists on shipboard; and his listener respected him the more that,
+though he had heart enough to be ashamed of it, he was too honest not to
+own it.
+
+Why did he still follow the sea? Because he did not know what else to
+do. When he was younger, he used to love it, but now he hated it. Yet
+there was not a prettier life in the world if you got to be captain. He
+used to hope for that once, but not now; though he _thought_ he could
+navigate a ship. Only let him get his family together again, and he
+would--yes, he would--try to do something ashore.
+
+No car had yet come in sight, and so the contributor suggested that they
+should walk to the car-office, and look in the “Directory,” which is
+kept there, for the name of Hapford, in search of whom it had already
+been arranged that they should renew their acquaintance on the
+morrow. Jonathan Tinker, when they had reached the office, heard with
+constitutional phlegm that the name of the Hapford, for whom he inquired
+was not in the “Directory.” “Never mind,” said the other; “come round
+to my house in the morning. We'll find him yet.” So they parted with a
+shake of the hand, the second mate saying that he believed he should go
+down to the vessel and sleep aboard,--if he could sleep,--and murmuring
+at the last moment the hope of returning the compliment, while the other
+walked homeward, weary as to the flesh, but, in spite of his sympathy
+for Jonathan Tinker, very elate in spirit. The truth is,--and however
+disgraceful to human nature, let the truth still be told,--he had
+recurred to his primal satisfaction in the man as calamity capable of
+being used for such and such literary ends, and, while he pitied
+him, rejoiced in him as an episode of real life quite as striking and
+complete as anything in fiction. It was literature made to his hand.
+Nothing could be better, he mused; and once more he passed the details
+of the story in review, and beheld all those pictures which the poor
+fellow's artless words had so vividly conjured up: he saw him leaping
+ashore in the gray summer dawn as soon as the ship hauled into the
+dock, and making his way, with his vague sea-legs unaccustomed to the
+pavements, up through the silent and empty city streets; he imagined
+the tumult of fear and hope which the sight of the man's home must have
+caused in him, and the benumbing shock of finding it blind and deaf
+to all his appeals; he saw him sitting down upon what had been his
+own threshold, and waiting in a sort of bewildered patience till the
+neighbors should be awake, while the noises of the streets gradually
+arose, and the wheels began to rattle over the stones, and the milk-man
+and the ice-man came and went, and the waiting figure began to be stared
+at, and to challenge the curiosity of the passing policeman; he fancied
+the opening of the neighbor's door, and the slow, cold understanding of
+the case; the manner, whatever it was, in which the sailor was told that
+one year before his wife had died, with her babe, and that his children
+were scattered, none knew where. As the contributor dwelt pityingly upon
+these things, but at the same time estimated their aesthetic value one
+by one, he drew near the head of his street, and found himself a few
+paces behind a boy slouching onward through the night, to whom he called
+out, adventurously, and with no real hope of information,--“Do you
+happen to know anybody on this street by the name of Hapford?”
+
+“Why no, not in this town,” said the boy; but he added that there was
+a street of the same name in a neighboring suburb, and that there was a
+Hapford living on it.
+
+“By Jove!” thought the contributor, “this is more like literature
+than ever;” and he hardly knew whether to be more provoked at his own
+stupidity in not thinking of a street of the same name in the next
+village, or delighted at the element of fatality which the fact
+introduced into the story; for Tinker, according to his own account,
+must have landed from the cars a few rods from the very door he was
+seeking, and so walked farther and farther from it every moment. He
+thought the case so curious, that he laid it briefly before the boy,
+who, however he might have been inwardly affected, was sufficiently true
+to the national traditions not to make the smallest conceivable outward
+sign of concern in it.
+
+At home, however, the contributor related his adventures and the story
+of Tinker's life, adding the fact that he had just found out where Mr.
+Hapford lived. “It was the only touch wanting,” said he; “the whole
+thing is now perfect.”
+
+“It's _too_ perfect,” was answered from a sad enthusiasm. “Don't speak
+of it! I can't take it in.”
+
+“But the question is,” said the contributor, penitently taking himself
+to task for forgetting the hero of these excellent misfortunes in his
+delight at their perfection, “how am I to sleep to-night, thinking
+of that poor soul's suspense and uncertainty? Never mind,--I'll be up
+early, and run over and make sure that it is Tinker's Hapford, before he
+gets out here, and have a pleasant surprise for him. Would it not be a
+justifiable _coup de théâtre_ to fetch his daughter here, and let her
+answer his ring at the door when he comes in the morning?”
+
+This plan was discouraged. “No, no; let them meet in their own way. Just
+take him to Hapford's house and leave him.”
+
+“Very well. But he's too good a character to lose sight of. He's got to
+come back here and tell us what he intends to do.”
+
+The birds, next morning, not having had the second mate on their minds
+either as an unhappy man or a most fortunate episode, but having slept
+long and soundly, were singing in a very sprightly way in the way-side
+trees; and the sweetness of their notes made the contributor's heart
+light as he climbed the hill and rang at Mr. Hapford's door.
+
+The door was opened by a young girl of fifteen or sixteen, whom he knew
+at a glance for the second mate's daughter, but of whom, for form's
+sake, he asked if there were a girl named Julia Tinker living there.
+
+“My name's Julia Tinker,” answered the maid, who had rather a
+disappointing face.
+
+“Well,” said the contributor, “your father's got back from his Hong-Kong
+voyage.”
+
+“Hong-Kong voyage?” echoed the girl, with a stare of helpless inquiry,
+but no other visible emotion.
+
+“Yes. He had never heard of your mother's death. He came home yesterday
+morning, and was looking for you all day.”
+
+Julia Tinker remained open-mouthed but mute; and the other was puzzled
+at the want of feeling shown, which he could not account for even as a
+national trait. “Perhaps there's some mistake,” he said.
+
+“There must be,” answered Julia: “my father hasn't been to sea for
+a good many years. _My_ father,” she added, with a diffidence
+indescribably mingled with a sense of distinction,--“_my_ father's in
+State's Prison. What kind of looking man was this?”
+
+The contributor mechanically described him.
+
+Julia Tinker broke into a loud, hoarse laugh. “Yes, it's him, sure
+enough.” And then, as if the joke were too good to keep: “Miss Hapford,
+Miss Hapford, father's got out. Do come here!” she called into a back
+room.
+
+When Mrs. Hapford appeared, Julia fell back, and, having deftly caught
+a fly on the door-post, occupied herself in plucking it to pieces, while
+she listened to the conversation of the others.
+
+“It's all true enough,” said Mrs. Hapford, when the writer had recounted
+the moving story of Jonathan Tinker, “so far as the death of his wife
+and baby goes. But he hasn't been to sea for a good many years, and he
+must have just come out of State's Prison, where he was put for bigamy.
+There's always two sides to a story, you know; but they say it broke his
+first wife's heart, and she died. His friends don't want him to find his
+children, and this girl especially.”
+
+“He's found his children in the city,” said the contributor, gloomily,
+being at a loss what to do or say, in view of the wreck of his romance.
+
+“O, he's found 'em has he?” cried Julia, with heightened amusement.
+“Then he'll have me next, if I don't pack and go.”
+
+“I'm very, very sorry,” said the contributor, secretly resolved never to
+do another good deed, no matter how temptingly the opportunity presented
+itself. “But you may depend he won't find out from _me_ where you are.
+Of course I had no earthly reason for supposing his story was not true.”
+
+“Of course,” said kind-hearted Mrs. Hapford, mingling a drop of honey
+with the gall in the contributor's soul, “you only did your duty.”
+
+And indeed, as he turned away he did not feel altogether without
+compensation. However Jonathan Tinker had fallen in his esteem as a
+man, he had even risen as literature. The episode which had appeared so
+perfect in its pathetic phases did not seem less finished as a farce;
+and this person, to whom all things of every-day life presented
+themselves in periods more or less rounded, and capable of use as facts
+or illustrations, could not but rejoice in these new incidents, as
+dramatically fashioned as the rest. It occurred to him that, wrought
+into a story, even better use might be made of the facts now than
+before, for they had developed questions of character and of human
+nature which could not fail to interest. The more he pondered upon
+his acquaintance with Jonathan Tinker, the more fascinating the erring
+mariner became, in his complex truth and falsehood, his delicately
+blending shades of artifice and _naïveté._ He must, it was felt, have
+believed to a certain point in his own inventions: nay, starting with
+that groundwork of truth,--the fact that his wife was really dead, and
+that he had not seen his family for two years,--why should he not place
+implicit faith in all the fictions reared upon it? It was probable
+that he felt a real sorrow for her loss, and that he found a fantastic
+consolation in depicting the circumstances of her death so that they
+should look like his inevitable misfortunes rather than his faults. He
+might well have repented his offense during those two years of prison;
+and why should he not now cast their dreariness and shame out of his
+memory, and replace them with the freedom and adventure of a two years'
+voyage to China,--so probable, in all respects, that the fact should
+appear an impossible nightmare? In the experiences of his life he had
+abundant material to furnish forth the facts of such a voyage, and in
+the weariness and lassitude that should follow a day's walking equally
+after a two years' voyage and two years' imprisonment, he had as much
+physical proof in favor of one hypothesis as the other. It was doubtless
+true, also, as he said, that he had gone to his house at dawn, and sat
+down on the threshold of his ruined home; and perhaps he felt the desire
+he had expressed to see his daughter, with a purpose of beginning life
+anew; and it may have cost him a veritable pang when he found that his
+little ones did not know him. All the sentiments of the situation
+were such as might persuade a lively fancy of the truth of its
+own inventions; and as he heard these continually repeated by the
+contributor in their search for Mr. Hapford, they must have acquired an
+objective force and repute scarcely to be resisted. At the same time,
+there were touches of nature throughout Jonathan Tinker's narrative
+which could not fail to take the faith of another. The contributor, in
+reviewing it, thought it particularly charming that his mariner had not
+overdrawn himself, or attempted to paint his character otherwise than as
+it probably was; that he had shown his ideas and practices of life to be
+those of a second mate, nor more nor less, without the gloss of regret
+or the pretenses to refinement that might be pleasing to the supposed
+philanthropist with whom he had fallen in. Captain Gooding was of course
+a true portrait; and there was nothing in Jonathan Tinker's statement of
+the relations of a second mate to his superiors and his inferiors which
+did not agree perfectly with what the contributor had just read in “Two
+Years before the Mast,”--a book which had possibly cast its glamour upon
+the adventure. He admired also the just and perfectly characteristic air
+of grief in the bereaved husband and father,--those occasional escapes
+from the sense of loss into a brief hilarity and forgetfulness, and
+those relapses into the hovering gloom, which every one has observed
+in this poor, crazy human nature when oppressed by sorrow, and which
+it would have been hard to simulate. But, above all, he exulted in that
+supreme stroke of the imagination given by the second mate when, at
+parting, he said he believed he would go down and sleep on board the
+vessel. In view of this, the State's Prison theory almost appeared a
+malign and foolish scandal.
+
+Yet even if this theory were correct, was the second mate wholly
+answerable for beginning his life again with the imposture he had
+practiced? The contributor had either so fallen in love with the
+literary advantages of his forlorn deceiver that he would see no
+moral obliquity in him, or he had touched a subtler verity at last in
+pondering the affair. It seemed now no longer a farce, but had a pathos
+which, though very different from that of its first aspect, was hardly
+less tragical. Knowing with what coldness, or, at the best, uncandor, he
+(representing Society in its attitude toward convicted Error) would have
+met the fact had it been owned to him at first, he had not virtue enough
+to condemn the illusory stranger, who must have been helpless to make at
+once evident any repentance he felt or good purpose he cherished. Was it
+not one of the saddest consequences of the man's past,--a dark necessity
+of misdoing,--that, even with the best will in the world to retrieve
+himself, his first endeavor must involve a wrong? Might he not, indeed,
+be considered a martyr, in some sort, to his own admirable impulses?
+I can see clearly enough where the contributor was astray in this
+reasoning, but I can also understand how one accustomed to value
+realities only as they resembled fables should be won with such pensive
+sophistry; and I can certainly sympathize with his feeling that the
+mariner's failure to reappear according to appointment added its final
+and most agreeable charm to the whole affair, and completed the mystery
+from which the man emerged and which swallowed him up again.
+
+
+
+
+SCENE
+
+
+On that loveliest autumn morning, the swollen tide had spread over
+all the russet levels, and gleamed in the sunlight a mile away. As the
+contributor moved onward down the street, luminous on either hand
+with crimsoning and yellowing maples, he was so filled with the tender
+serenity of the scene, as not to be troubled by the spectacle of small
+Irish houses standing miserably about on the flats ankle deep, as it
+were, in little pools of the tide, or to be aware at first, of a strange
+stir of people upon the streets: a fluttering to and fro and lively
+encounter and separation of groups of bareheaded women, a flying of
+children through the broken fences of the neighborhood, and across the
+vacant lots on which the insulted sign-boards forbade them to trespass;
+a sluggish movement of men through all, and a pause of different
+vehicles along the sidewalks. When a sense of these facts had penetrated
+his enjoyment, he asked a matron whose snowy arms, freshly taken from
+the wash-tub, were folded across a mighty chest, “What is the matter?”
+
+“A girl drowned herself, sir-r-r, over there on the flats, last
+Saturday, and they're looking for her.”
+
+“It was the best thing she could do,” said another matron grimly.
+
+Upon this answer that literary soul fell at once to patching himself
+up a romantic story for the suicide, after the pitiful fashion of this
+fiction-ridden age, when we must relate everything we see to something
+we have read. He was the less to blame for it, because he could not help
+it; but certainly he is not to be praised for his associations with the
+tragic fact brought to his notice. Nothing could have been more trite
+or obvious, and he felt his intellectual poverty so keenly that he might
+almost have believed his discomfort a sympathy for the girl who had
+drowned herself last Saturday. But of course, this could not be, for
+he had but lately been thinking what a very tiresome figure to the
+imagination the Fallen Woman had become. As a fact of Christian
+civilization, she was a spectacle to wring one's heart, he owned; but
+he wished she were well out of the romances, and it really seemed a
+fatality that she should be the principal personage of this little
+scene. The preparation for it, whatever it was to be, was so deliberate,
+and the reality had so slight relation to the French roofs and modern
+improvements of the comfortable Charlesbridge which he knew, that he
+could not consider himself other than as a spectator awaiting some
+entertainment, with a faint inclination to be critical.
+
+In the mean time there passed through the motley crowd, not so much a
+cry as a sensation of “They've found her, they've found her!” and then
+the one terrible picturesque fact, “She was standing upright!”
+
+Upon this there was wilder and wilder clamor among the people, dropping
+by degrees and almost dying away, before a flight of boys came down
+the street with the tidings, “They are bringing her--bringing her in a
+wagon.”
+
+The contributor knew that she whom they were bringing in the wagon, had
+had the poetry of love to her dismal and otherwise squalid death;
+but the history was of fancy, not of fact in his mind. Of course, he
+reflected, her lot must have been obscure and hard; the aspect of those
+concerned about her death implied that. But of her hopes and her fears,
+who could tell him anything? To be sure he could imagine the lovers, and
+how they first met, and where, and who he was that was doomed to work
+her shame and death; but here his fancy came upon something coarse and
+common: a man of her own race and grade, handsome after that manner of
+beauty which is so much more hateful than ugliness is; or, worse still,
+another kind of man whose deceit must have been subtler and wickeder;
+but whatever the person, a presence defiant of sympathy or even
+interest, and simply horrible. Then there were the details of the
+affair, in great degree common to all love affairs, and not varying so
+widely in any condition of life; for the passion which is so rich and
+infinite to those within its charm, is apt to seem a little tedious
+and monotonous in its character, and poor in resources to the cold
+looker-on.
+
+Then, finally, there was the crazy purpose and its fulfillment: the
+headlong plunge from bank or bridge; the eddy, and the bubbles on the
+current that calmed itself above the suicide; the tide that rose and
+stretched itself abroad in the sunshine, carrying hither and thither the
+burden with which it knew not what to do; the arrest, as by some ghastly
+caprice of fate, of the dead girl, in that upright posture, in which she
+should meet the quest for her, as it were defiantly.
+
+And now they were bringing her in a wagon.
+
+Involuntarily all stood aside, and waited till the funeral car, which
+they saw, should come up toward them through the long vista of the
+maple-shaded street, a noiseless riot stirring the legs and arms of the
+boys into frantic demonstration, while the women remained quiet with
+arms folded or akimbo. Before and behind the wagon, driven slowly,
+went a guard of ragged urchins, while on the raised seat above sat
+two Americans, unperturbed by anything, and concerned merely with the
+business of the affair.
+
+The vehicle was a grocer's cart which had perhaps been pressed into the
+service; and inevitably the contributor thought of Zenobia, and of
+Miles Coverdale's belief that if she could have foreboded all the
+_post-mortem_ ugliness and grotesqueness of suicide, she never would
+have drowned herself. This girl, too, had doubtless had her own ideas
+of the effect that her death was to make, her conviction that it was to
+wring one heart, at least, and to strike awe and pity to every other;
+and her woman's soul must have been shocked from death could she have
+known in what a ghastly comedy the body she put off was to play a part.
+
+In the bottom of the cart lay something long and straight and terrible,
+covered with a red shawl that drooped over the end of the wagon; and
+on this thing were piled the baskets in which the grocers had delivered
+their orders for sugar and flour, and coffee and tea. As the cart jolted
+through their lines, the boys could no longer be restrained; they broke
+out with wild yells, and danced madly about it, while the red shawl
+hanging from the rigid feet nodded to their frantic mirth; and the sun
+dropped its light through the maples and shone bright upon the flooded
+date.
+
+
+
+
+JUBILEE DAYS
+
+
+I believe I have no good reason for including among these suburban
+sketches my recollections of the Peace Jubilee, celebrated by a monster
+musical entertainment at Boston, in June, 1869; and I do not know if it
+will serve as excuse for their intrusion to say that the exhibition was
+not urban in character, and that I attended it in a feeling of curiosity
+and amusement which the Bostonians did not seem to feel, and which I
+suspect was a strictly suburban if not rural sentiment.
+
+I thought, on that Tuesday morning, as our horse-car drew near the Long
+Bridge, and we saw the Coliseum spectral through the rain, that Boston
+was going to show people representing other parts of the country her
+Notion of weather. I looked forward to a forenoon of clammy warmth, and
+an afternoon of clammy cold and of east wind, with a misty nightfall
+soaking men to the bones. But the day really turned out well enough; it
+was showery, but not shrewish, and it smiled pleasantly at sunset, as if
+content with the opening ceremonies of the Great Peace Jubilee.
+
+The city, as we entered it, gave due token of excitement, and we felt
+the celebration even in the air, which had a holiday quality very
+different from that of ordinary workday air. The crowds filled the
+decorous streets, and the trim pathways of the Common and the Public
+Garden, and flowed in an orderly course towards the vast edifice on the
+Back Bay, presenting the interesting points which always distinguish a
+crowd come to town from a city crowd. You get so used to the Boston face
+and the Boston dress, that a coat from New York or a visage from Chicago
+is at once conspicuous to you; and in these people there was not only
+this strangeness, but the different oddities that lurk in out-of-way
+corners of society everywhere had started suddenly into notice.
+Long-haired men, popularly supposed to have perished with the
+institution of slavery, appeared before me, and men with various causes
+and manias looking from their wild eyes confronted each other, let alone
+such charlatans as had clothed themselves quaintly or grotesquely to add
+a charm to the virtue of whatever nostrum they peddled. It was, however,
+for the most part, a remarkably well-dressed crowd; and therein it
+probably differed more than in any other respect from the crowd which a
+holiday would have assembled in former times. There was little rusticity
+to be noted anywhere, and the uncouthness which has already disappeared
+from the national face seemed to be passing from the national wardrobe.
+Nearly all the visitors seemed to be Americans, but neither the Yankee
+type nor the Hoosier was to be found. They were apparently very happy,
+too; the ancestral solemnity of the race that amuses itself sadly was
+not to be seen in them, and, if they were not making it a duty to be
+gay, they were really taking their pleasure in a cheerful spirit.
+
+There was, in fact, something in the sight of the Coliseum, as we
+approached it, which was a sufficient cause of elation to whoever is
+buoyed up by the flutter of bright flags, and the movement in and about
+holiday booths, as I think we all are apt to be. One may not have the
+stomach of happier days for the swing or the whirligig; he may not
+drink soda-water intemperately; pop-corn may not tempt him, nor
+tropical fruits allure; but he beholds them without gloom,--nay, a grin
+inevitably lights up his countenance at the sight of a great show of
+these amusements and refreshments. And any Bostonian might have
+felt proud that morning that his city did not hide the light of her
+mercantile merit under a bushel, but blazoned it about on the booths and
+walls in every variety of printed and painted advertisement. To the mere
+aesthetic observer, these vast placards gave the delight of brilliant
+color, and blended prettily enough in effect with the flags; and at
+first glance I received quite as much pleasure from the frescoes that
+advised me where to buy my summer clothing, as from any bunting I saw.
+
+I had the good fortune on the morning of this first Jubilee day to view
+the interior of the Coliseum when there was scarcely anybody there,--a
+trifle of ten thousand singers at one end, and a few thousand other
+people scattered about over the wide expanses of parquet and galleries.
+The decorations within, as without, were a pleasure to the eyes that
+love gayety of color; and the interior was certainly magnificent, with
+those long lines of white and blue drapery roofing the balconies, the
+slim, lofty columns festooned with flags and drooping banners, the arms
+of the States decking the fronts of the galleries, and the arabesques of
+painted muslin everywhere. I do not know that my taste concerned itself
+with the decorations, or that I have any taste in such things; but I
+testify that these tints and draperies gave no small part of the
+comfort of being where all things conspired for one's pleasure. The airy
+amplitude of the building, the perfect order and the perfect freedom
+of movement, the ease of access and exit, the completeness of the
+arrangements that in the afternoon gave all of us thirty thousand
+spectators a chance to behold the great spectacle as well as to hear
+the music, were felt, I am sure, as personal favors by every one. These
+minor particulars, in fact, served greatly to assist you in identifying
+yourself, when the vast hive swarmed with humanity, and you became a
+mere sentient atom of the mass.
+
+It was rumored in the morning that the ceremonies were to begin with
+prayer by a hundred ministers, but I missed this striking feature of the
+exhibition, for I did not arrive in the afternoon till the last speech
+was being made by a gentleman whom I saw gesticulating effectively, and
+whom I suppose to have been intelligible to a matter of twenty thousand
+people in his vicinity, but who was to me, of the remote, outlying
+thirty thousand, a voice merely. One word only I caught, and I report
+it here that posterity may know as much as we thirty thousand
+contemporaries did of
+
+THE PRESIDENT'S SPEECH.
+
+. . . . . . . (_sensation_.) . . . . . . . . . . (_cheers_.). . . .
+refinement . . . . . . . . . . (_great applause_.)
+
+I do not know if I shall be able to give an idea of the immensity of
+this scene; but if such a reader as has the dimensions of the Coliseum
+accurately fixed in his mind will, in imagination, densely hide all that
+interminable array of benching in the parquet and the galleries and
+the slopes at either end of the edifice with human heads, showing here
+crowns, there occiputs, and yonder faces, he will perhaps have some
+notion of the spectacle as we beheld it from the northern hill-side.
+Some thousands of heads nearest were recognizable as attached by the
+usual neck to the customary human body, but for the rest, we seemed
+to have entered a world of cherubim. Especially did the multitudinous
+singers seated far opposite encourage this illusion; and their
+fluttering fans and handkerchiefs wonderfully mocked the movement of
+those cravat-like pinions which the fancy attributed to them. They rose
+or sank at the wave of the director's baton; and still looked like an
+innumerable flock of cherubs drifting over some slope of Paradise, or
+settling upon it,--if cherubs _can_ settle.
+
+[Illustration: “The spectacle as we beheld it.”]
+
+The immensity was quite as striking to the mind as to the eye, and an
+absolute democracy was appreciable in it. Not only did all artificial
+distinctions cease, but those of nature were practically obliterated,
+and you felt for once the full meaning of unanimity. No one was at a
+disadvantage; one was as wise, as good, as handsome as another. In most
+public assemblages, the foolish eye roves in search of the vanity of
+female beauty, and rests upon some lovely visage, or pretty figure;
+but here it seemed to matter nothing whether ladies were well or
+ill-looking; and one might have been perfectly ascetic without
+self-denial. A blue eye or a black,--what of it? A mass of blonde or
+chestnut hair, this sort of walking-dress or that,--you might note the
+difference casually in a few hundred around you; but a sense of those
+myriads of other eyes and chignons and walking-dresses absorbed the
+impression in an instant, and left a dim, strange sense of loss, as if
+all women had suddenly become Woman. For the time, one would have been
+preposterously conceited to have felt his littleness in that crowd; you
+never thought of yourself in an individual capacity at all. It was as
+if you were a private in an army, or a very ordinary billow of the sea,
+feeling the battle or the storm, in a collective sort of way, but unable
+to distinguish your sensations from those of the mass. If a rafter had
+fallen and crushed you and your unimportant row of people, you could
+scarcely have regarded it as a personal calamity, but might have found
+it disagreeable as a shock to that great body of humanity. Recall, then,
+how astonished you were to be recognized by some one, and to have your
+hand shaken in your individual character of Smith. “Smith? My dear
+What's-your-name, I am for the present the fifty-thousandth part of an
+enormous emotion!”
+
+It was as difficult to distribute the various facts of the whole effect,
+as to identify one's self. I had only a public and general consciousness
+of the delight given by the harmony of hues in the parquet below; and
+concerning the orchestra I had at first no distinct impression save of
+the three hundred and thirty violin-bows held erect like standing wheat
+at one motion of the director's wand, and then falling as if with the
+next he swept them down. Afterwards files of men with horns, and other
+files of men with drums and cymbals, discovered themselves; while far
+above all, certain laborious figures pumped or ground with incessant
+obeisance at the apparatus supplying the organ with wind.
+
+What helped, more than anything else, to restore you your dispersed and
+wandering individuality was the singing of Parepa-Rosa, as she triumphed
+over the harmonious rivalry of the orchestra. There was something in
+the generous amplitude and robust cheerfulness of this great artist that
+accorded well with the ideal of the occasion; she was in herself a great
+musical festival; and one felt, as she floated down the stage with
+her far-spreading white draperies, and swept the audience a colossal
+courtesy, that here was the embodied genius of the Jubilee. I do not
+trust myself to speak particularly of her singing, for I have the
+natural modesty of people who know nothing about music, and I have not
+at command the phraseology of those who pretend to understand it; but I
+say that her voice filled the whole edifice with delicious melody, that
+it soothed and composed and utterly enchanted, that, though two hundred
+violins accompanied her, the greater sweetness of her note prevailed
+over all, like a mighty will commanding many. What a sublime ovation for
+her when a hundred thousand hands thundered their acclaim! A victorious
+general, an accepted lover, a successful young author,--these know a
+measure of bliss, I dare say; but in one throb, the singer's heart, as
+it leaps in exultation at the loud delight of her applausive thousands,
+must out-enjoy them all. Let me lay these poor little artificial flowers
+of rhetoric at the feet of the divine singer, as a faint token of
+gratitude and eloquent intention.
+
+When Parepa (or Prepper, as I have heard her name popularly pronounced)
+had sung, the revived consciousness of an individual life rose in
+rebellion against the oppression of that dominant vastness. In fact,
+human nature can stand only so much of any one thing. To a certain
+degree you accept and conceive of facts truthfully, but beyond this a
+mere fantasticality rules; and having got enough of grandeur, the senses
+played themselves false. That array of fluttering and tuning people on
+the southern slope began to look minute, like the myriad heads assembled
+in the infinitesimal photograph which you view through one of those
+little half-inch lorgnettes; and you had the satisfaction of knowing
+that to any lovely infinitesimality yonder you showed no bigger than
+a carpet-tack. The whole performance now seemed to be worked by those
+tireless figures pumping at the organ, in obedience to signals from
+a very alert figure on the platform below. The choral and orchestral
+thousands sang and piped and played; and at a given point in the _scena_
+from Verdi, a hundred fairies in red shirts marched down through the
+sombre mass of puppets and beat upon as many invisible anvils.
+
+This was the stroke of anti-climax; and the droll sound of those anvils,
+so far above all the voices and instruments in its pitch, thoroughly
+disillusioned you and restored you finally to your proper entity and
+proportions. It was the great error of the great Jubilee, and where
+almost everything else was noble and impressive,--where the direction
+was faultless, and the singing and instrumentation as perfectly
+controlled as if they were the result of one volition,--this
+anvil-beating was alone ignoble and discordant,--trivial and huge
+merely. Not even the artillery accompaniment, in which the cannon were
+made to pronounce words of two syllables, was so bad.
+
+The dimensions of this sketch bear so little proportion to those of the
+Jubilee, that I must perforce leave most of its features unnoticed; but
+I wish to express the sense of enjoyment which prevailed (whenever the
+anvils were not beaten) over every other feeling, even over wonder. To
+the ear as to the eye it was a delight, and it was an assured success in
+the popular affections from the performance of the first piece. For
+my own part, if one pleasurable sensation, besides that received from
+Parepa's singing, distinguished itself from the rest, it was that given
+by the performance of the exquisite Coronation March from Meyerbeer's
+“Prophet;” but I say this under protest of the pleasure taken in
+the choral rendering of the “Star-Spangled Banner.” Closely allying
+themselves to these great raptures were the minor joys of wandering
+freely about from point to point, of receiving fresh sensations from
+the varying lights and aspects in which the novel scene presented itself
+with its strange fascinations, and of noting, half consciously, the
+incessant movement of the crowd as it revealed itself in changing
+effects of color. Then the gay tumult of the fifteen minutes of
+intermission between the parts, when all rose with a _susurrus_ of
+innumerable silks, and the thousands of pretty singers fluttered
+about, and gossiped tremulously and delightedly over the glory of the
+performance, revealing themselves as charming feminine personalities,
+each with her share in the difficulty and the achievement, each with
+her pique or pride, and each her something to tell her friend of the
+conduct, agreeable or displeasing, of some particular him! Even the
+quick dispersion of the mass at the close was a marvel of orderliness
+and grace, as the melting and separating parts, falling asunder,
+radiated from the centre, and flowed and rippled rapidly away, and left
+the great hall empty and bare at last.
+
+And as you emerged from the building, what bizarre and perverse feeling
+was that you knew? Something as if all-out-doors were cramped and
+small, and it were better to return to the freedom and amplitude of the
+interior?
+
+On the second day, much that was wonderful in a first experience of the
+festival was gone; but though the novelty had passed away, the cause for
+wonder was even greater. If on the first day the crowd was immense, it
+was now something which the imperfect state of the language will not
+permit me to describe; perhaps _awful_ will serve the purpose as well as
+any other word now in use. As you looked round, from the centre of the
+building, on that restless, fanning, fluttering multitude, to right and
+left and north and south, all comparisons and similitudes abandoned you.
+If you were to write of the scene, you felt that your effort, at the
+best, must be a meagre sketch, suggesting something to those who had
+seen the fact, but conveying no intelligible impression of it to any
+one else. The galleries swarmed, the vast slopes were packed, in the
+pampa-like parquet even the aisles were half filled with chairs, while
+a cloud of placeless wanderers moved ceaselessly on the borders of the
+mass under the balconies.
+
+When that common-looking, uncommon little man whom we have called to
+rule over us entered the house, and walked quietly down to his seat in
+the centre of it, a wild, inarticulate clamor, like no other noise in
+the world, swelled from every side, till General Grant rose and showed
+himself, when it grew louder than ever, and then gradully subsided into
+silence. Then a voice, which might be uttering some mortal alarm,
+broke repeatedly across the stillness from one of the balconies, and a
+thousand glasses were leveled in that direction, while everywhere else
+the mass hushed itself with a mute sense of peril. The capacity of such
+an assemblage for self-destruction was, in fact, but too evident. From
+fire, in an edifice of which the sides could be knocked out in a moment,
+there could have been little danger; the fabric's strength had been
+perfectly tested the day before, and its fall was not to be apprehended;
+but we had ourselves greatly to dread. A panic could have been caused by
+any mad or wanton person, in which thousands might have been instantly
+trampled to death; and it seemed long till that foolish voice was
+stilled, and the house lapsed back into tranquillity, and the enjoyment
+of the music. In the performance I recall nothing disagreeable, nothing
+that to my ignorance seemed imperfect, though I leave it to the wise in
+music to say how far the great concert was a success. I saw a flourish
+of the director's wand, and I heard the voices or the instruments,
+or both, respond, and I knew by my programme that I was enjoying an
+unprecedented quantity of Haydn or Handel or Meyerbeer or Rossini or
+Mozart, afforded with an unquestionable precision and promptness; but I
+own that I liked better to stroll about the three-acre house, and that
+for me the music was, at best, only one of the joys of the festival.
+
+There was good hearing outside for those that desired to listen to the
+music, with seats to let in the surrounding tents and booths; and there
+was unlimited seeing for the mere looker-on. At least fifty thousand
+people seemed to have come to the Jubilee with no other purpose than
+to gaze upon the outside of the building. The crowd was incomparably
+greater than that of the day before; all the main thoroughfares of the
+city roared with a tide of feet that swept through the side streets, and
+swelled aimlessly up the places, and eddied there, and poured out again
+over the pavements. The carriage-ways were packed with every sort of
+vehicle, with foot-passengers crowded from the sidewalks, and with
+the fragments of the military parade in honor of the President, with
+infantry, with straggling cavalrymen, with artillery. All the paths of
+the Common and the Garden were filled, and near the Coliseum the throngs
+densified on every side into an almost impenetrable mass, that made the
+doors of the building difficult to approach and at times inaccessible.
+
+The crowd differed from that of the first day chiefly in size. There
+were more country faces and country garbs to be seen, though it was
+still, on the whole, a regular-featured and well-dressed crowd, with
+still very few but American visages. It seemed to be also a very
+frugal-minded crowd, and to spend little upon the refreshments and
+amusements provided for it. In these, oddly enough, there was nothing
+of the march of mind to be observed; they Were the refreshments and
+amusements of a former generation. I think it would not be extravagant
+to say that there were tons of pie for sale in a multitude of booths,
+with lemonade, soda-water, and ice-cream in proportion; but I doubt if
+there was a ton of pie sold, and towards the last the venerable pastry
+was quite covered with dust. Neither did people seem to care much for
+oranges or bananas or peanuts, or even pop-corn,--five cents a package
+and a prize in each package. Many booths stood unlet, and in others the
+pulverous ladies and gentlemen, their proprietors, were in the enjoyment
+of a leisure which would have been elegant if it had not been forced.
+There was one shanty, not otherwise distinguished from the rest,
+in which French soups were declared to be for sale; but these alien
+pottages seemed to be no more favored than the most poisonous of our
+national viands. But perhaps they were not French soups, or perhaps
+the vicinage of the shanty was not such as to impress a belief in their
+genuineness upon people who like French soups. Let us not be too easily
+disheartened by the popular neglect of them. If the daring reformer who
+inscribed French soups upon his sign will reappear ten years hence, we
+shall all flock to his standard. Slavery is abolished; pie must follow.
+Doubtless in the year 1900, the managers of a Jubilee would even let the
+refreshment-rooms within their Coliseum to a cook who would offer the
+public something not so much worse than the worst that could be found in
+the vilest shanty restaurant on the ground. At the Jubilee, of which
+I am writing, the unhappy person who went into the Coliseum rooms to
+refresh himself was offered for coffee a salty and unctuous wash, in
+one of those thick cups which are supposed to be proof against the hard
+usage of “guests” and scullions in humble eating-houses, and which are
+always so indescribably nicked and cracked, and had pushed towards him
+a bowl of veteran sugar, and a tin spoon that had never been cleaned in
+the world, while a young person stood by, and watched him, asking, “Have
+you paid for that coffee?”
+
+The side-shows and the other amusements seemed to have addressed
+themselves to the crowd with the same mistaken notion of its character
+and requirements; though I confess that I witnessed their neglect with
+regret, whether from a feeling that they were at least harmless, or an
+unconscious sympathy with any quite idle and unprofitable thing. Those
+rotary, legless horses, on which children love to ride in a perpetual
+sickening circle,--the type of all our effort,--were nearly always
+mounted; but those other whirligigs, or whatever the dreadful circles
+with their swinging seats are called, were often so empty that they must
+have been distressing, from their want of balance, to the muscles as
+well as the spirits of their proprietors. The society of monsters was
+also generally shunned, and a cow with five legs gave milk from the
+top of her back to an audience of not more than six persons. The public
+apathy had visibly wrought upon the temper of the gentleman who lectured
+upon this gifted animal, and he took inquiries in an ironical manner
+that contrasted disadvantageously with the philosophical serenity of the
+person who had a weighing-machine outside, and whom I saw sitting in the
+chair and weighing himself by the hour, with an expression of profound
+enjoyment. Perhaps a man of less bulk could not have entered so keenly
+into that simple pleasure.
+
+There was a large tent on the grounds for dramatical entertainments,
+with six performances a day, into which I was lured by a profusion of
+high-colored posters, and some such announcement, as that the beautiful
+serio-comic danseuse and world-renowned cloggist, Mile. Brown, would
+appear. About a dozen people were assembled within, and we waited a
+half-hour beyond the time announced for the curtain to rise, during
+which the spectacle of a young man in black broadcloth, eating a
+cocoa-nut with his pen-knife, had a strange and painful fascination. At
+the end of this half-hour, our number was increased to eighteen, when
+the orchestra appeared,--a snare-drummer and two buglers. These took
+their place at the back of the tent; the buglers, who were Germans, blew
+seriously and industriously at their horns; but the native-born citizen,
+who played the drum, beat it very much at random, and in the mean time
+smoked a cigar, while his humorous friend kept time upon his shoulders
+by striking him there with a cane. How long this might have lasted, I
+cannot tell; but, after another delay, I suddenly bethought me whether
+it were not better not to see Mile. Brown, after all? I rose, and
+stole softly out behind the rhythmic back of the drummer; and the
+world-renowned cloggist is to me at this moment only a beautiful
+dream,--an airy shape fashioned upon a hint supplied by the engraver of
+the posters.
+
+What, then, did the public desire, if it would not smile upon the
+swings, or monsters, or dramatic amusements that had pleased so long?
+Was the music, as it floated out from the Coliseum, a sufficient
+delight? Or did the crowd, averse to the shows provided for it, crave
+something higher and more intellectual,--like, for example, a course
+of the Lowell Lectures? Its general expression had changed: it had no
+longer that entire gayety of the first day, but had taken on something
+of the sarcastic pathos with which we Americans bear most oppressive and
+fatiguing things as a good joke. The dust was blown about in clouds; and
+here and there, sitting upon the vacant steps that led up and down
+among the booths, were dejected and motionless men and women, passively
+gathering dust, and apparently awaiting burial under the accumulating
+sand,--the mute, melancholy sphinxes of the Jubilee, with their unsolved
+riddle, “Why did we come?” At intervals, the heavens shook out fierce,
+sudden showers of rain, that scattered the surging masses, and sent them
+flying impotently hither and thither for shelter where no shelter was,
+only to gather again, and move aimlessly and comfortlessly to and fro,
+like a lost child.
+
+So the multitude roared within and without the Coliseum as I turned
+homeward; and yet I found it wandering with weary feet through the
+Garden, and the Common, and all the streets, and it dragged its
+innumerable aching legs with me to the railroad station, and, entering
+the train, stood up on them,--having paid for the tickets with which the
+companies professed to sell seats.
+
+How still and cool and fresh it was at our suburban station, when
+the train, speeding away with a sardonic yell over the misery of the
+passengers yet standing up in it, left us to walk across the quiet
+fields and pleasant lanes to Benicia Street, through groups of little
+idyllic Irish boys playing base-ball, with milch-goats here and there
+pastorally cropping the herbage!
+
+In this pleasant seclusion I let all Bunker Hill Day thunder by, with
+its cannons, and processions, and speeches, and patriotic musical
+uproar, hearing only through my open window the note of the birds
+singing in a leafy coliseum across the street, and making very fair
+music without an anvil among them. “Ah, signer!” said one of my doorstep
+acquaintance, who came next morning and played me Captain Jenks,--the
+new air he has had added to his instrument,--“never in my life, neither
+at Torino, nor at Milano, nor even at Genoa, never did I see such
+a crowd or hear such a noise, as at that Colosseo yesterday. The
+carriages, the horses, the feet! And the dust, O Dio mio! All those
+millions of people were as white as so many millers!”
+
+On the afternoon of the fourth day the city looked quite like the mill
+in which these millers had been grinding; and even those unpromisingly
+elegant streets of the Back Bay showed mansions powdered with dust
+enough for sentiment to strike root in, and so soften them with its
+tender green against the time when they shall be ruinous and sentiment
+shall swallow them up. The crowd had perceptibly diminished, but it was
+still great, and on the Common it was allured by a greater variety
+of recreations and bargains than I had yet seen there. There were, of
+course, all sorts of useful and instructive amusements,--at least a
+half-dozen telescopes, and as many galvanic batteries, with numerous
+patented inventions; and I fancied that most of the peddlers and
+charlatans addressed themselves to a utilitarian spirit supposed to
+exist in us. A man that sold whistles capable of reproducing exactly the
+notes of the mocking-bird and the guinea-pig set forth the durability of
+the invention. “Now, you see this whistle, gentlemen. It is rubber, all
+rubber; and rubber, you know, enters into the composition of a great
+many valuable articles. This whistle, then, is entirely of rubber,--no
+worthless or flimsy material that drops to pieces the moment you put
+it to your lips,”--as if it were not utterly desirable that it should.
+“Now, I'll give you the mocking-bird, gentlemen, and then I'll give you
+the guinea-pig, upon this pure _India_-rubber whistle.” And he did so
+with a great animation,--this young man with a perfectly intelligent and
+very handsome face. “Try your strength, and renovate your system!” cried
+the proprietor of a piston padded at one end and working into a cylinder
+when you struck it a blow with your fist; and the owners of lung-testing
+machines called upon you from every side to try their consumption
+cure; while the galvanic-battery men sat still and mutely appealed with
+inscriptions attached to their cap-visors declaring that electricity
+taken from their batteries would rid you of every ache and pain known
+to suffering humanity. Yet they were themselves as a class in a state
+of sad physical disrepair, and one of them was the visible prey of
+rheumatism which he might have sent flying from his joints with a single
+shock. The only person whom I saw improving his health with the
+battery was a rosy-faced school-boy, who was taking ten cents' worth
+of electricity; and I hope it did not disagree with his pop-corn and
+soda-water.
+
+Farther on was a picturesque group of street-musicians,--violinists
+and harpers; a brother and four sisters, by their looks,--who afforded
+almost the only unpractical amusement to be enjoyed on the Common,
+though not far from them was a blind old negro, playing upon an
+accordion, and singing to it in the faintest and thinnest of black
+voices, who could hardly have profited any listener. No one appeared to
+mind him, till a jolly Jack-tar with both arms cut off, but dressed in
+full sailor's togs, lurched heavily towards him. This mariner had got
+quite a good effect of sea-legs by some means, and looked rather drunker
+than a man with both arms ought to be; but he was very affectionate,
+and, putting his face close to the other's, at once entered into talk
+with the blind man, forming with him a picture curiously pathetic
+and grotesque. He was the only tipsy person I saw during the Jubilee
+days,--if he was tipsy, for after all they may have been real sea-legs
+he had on.
+
+If the throng upon the streets was thinner, it was greater in the
+Coliseum than on the second day; and matters had settled there into
+regular working order. The limits of individual liberty had been better
+ascertained; there was no longer any movement in the aisles, but a
+constant passing to and fro, between the pieces, in the promenades. The
+house presented, as before, that appearance in which reality forsook
+it, and it became merely an amazing picture. The audience supported the
+notion of its unreality by having exactly the character of the former
+audiences, and impressed you, despite its restlessness and incessant
+agitation, with the feeling that it had remained there from the first
+day, and would always continue there; and it was only in wandering upon
+its borders through the promenades, that you regained possession of
+facts concerning it. In no other way was its vastness more observable
+than in the perfect indifference of persons one to another. Each found
+himself, as it were, in a solitude; and, sequestered in that wilderness
+of strangers, each was freed of his bashfulness and trepidation. Young
+people lounged at ease upon the floors, about the windows, on the upper
+promenades; and in this seclusion I saw such betrayals of tenderness as
+melt the heart of the traveller on our desolate railway trains,--Fellows
+moving to and fro or standing, careless of other eyes, with their arms
+around the waists of their Girls. These were, of course, people who
+had only attained a certain grade of civilization, and were not
+characteristic of the crowd, or, indeed, worthy of notice except as
+expressions of its unconsciousness. I fancied that I saw a number of
+their class outside listening to the address of the agent of a patent
+liniment, proclaimed to be an unfailing specific for neuralgia and
+headache,--if used in the right spirit. “For,” said the orator, “we like
+to cure people who treat us and our medicine with respect. Folks say,
+'What is there about that man?--some magnetism or electricity.' And the
+other day at New Britain, Connecticut, a young man he come up to the
+carriage, sneering like, and he tried the cure, and it didn't have the
+least effect upon him.” There seemed reason in this, and it produced a
+visible sensation in the Fellows and Girls, who grinned sheepishly at
+each other.
+
+Why will the young man with long hair force himself at this point into
+a history, which is striving to devote itself to graver interests? There
+he stood with the other people, gazing up at the gay line of streamers
+on the summit of the Coliseum, and taking in the Anvil Chorus with the
+rest,--a young man well-enough dressed, and of a pretty sensible face,
+with his long black locks falling from under his cylinder hat, and
+covering his shoulders. What awful spell was on him, obliging him to
+make that figure before his fellow-creatures? He had nothing to sell;
+he was not, apparently, an advertisement of any kind. Was he in the
+performance of a vow? Was he in his right mind? For shame! a person may
+wear his hair long if he will. But why not, then, in a top-knot? This
+young man's long hair was not in keeping with his frock-coat and his
+cylinder hat, and he had not at all the excuse of the old gentleman
+who sold salve in the costume of Washington's time; one could not take
+pleasure in him as in the negro advertiser, who paraded the grounds in
+a costume compounded of a consular _chapeau bras_ and a fox-hunter's
+top-boots--the American diplomatic uniform of the future--and offered
+every one a printed billet; he had not even the attraction of the
+cabalistic herald of Hunkidori. Who was he? what was he? why was he?
+The mind played forever around these questions in a maze of hopeless
+conjecture.
+
+Had all those quacks and peddlers been bawling ever since Tuesday to
+the same listeners? Had all those swings and whirligigs incessantly
+performed their rounds? The cow that gave milk from the top of her back,
+had she never changed her small circle of admirers, or ceased her flow?
+And the gentleman who sat in the chair of his own balance, how much did
+he weigh by this time? One could scarcely rid one's self of the illusion
+of perpetuity concerning these things, and I could not believe that,
+if I went back to the Coliseum grounds at any future time, I should not
+behold all that vast machinery in motion.
+
+It was curious to see, amid this holiday turmoil men pursuing the
+ordinary business of their lives, and one was strangely rescued and
+consoled by the spectacle of the Irish hod-carriers, and the bricklayers
+at work on a first-class swell-front residence in the very heart of the
+city of tents and booths. Even the locomotive, being associated with
+quieter days and scenes, appealed, as it whistled to and fro upon the
+Providence Railroad, to some soft bucolic sentiment in the listener, and
+sending its note, ordinarily so discordant, across that human uproar,
+seemed to “babble of green fields.” And at last it wooed us away, and
+the Jubilee was again swallowed up by night.
+
+There was yet another Jubilee Day, on the morning of which the thousands
+of public-school children clustered in gauzy pink and white in the place
+of the mighty chorus, while the Coliseum swarmed once more with people
+who listened to those shrill, sweet pipes blending in unison; but I
+leave the reader to imagine what he will about it. A week later, after
+all was over, I was minded to walk down towards the Coliseum, and behold
+it in its desertion. The city streets were restored to their wonted
+summer-afternoon tranquillity; the Public Garden presented its customary
+phases of two people sitting under a tree and talking intimately
+together on some theme of common interest,--“Bees, bees, was it your
+hydromel?”--of the swans sailing in full view upon the little lake of
+half a dozen idlers hanging upon the bridge to look at them; of
+children gayly dotting the paths here and there; and, to heighten the
+peacefulness of the effect, a pretty, pale invalid lady sat, half in
+shade and half in sun, reading in an easy-chair. Far down the broad
+avenue a single horse-car tinkled slowly; on the steps of one of the
+mansions charming little girls stood in a picturesque group full of the
+bright color which abounds in the lovely dresses of this time. As I drew
+near the Coliseum, I could perceive the desolation which had fallen
+upon the festival scene; the white tents were gone; the place where the
+world-renowned cloggist gave her serio-comic dances was as lonely and
+silent as the site of Carthage; in the middle distance two men were
+dismantling a motionless whirligig; the hut for the sale of French soups
+was closed; farther away, a solitary policeman moved gloomily across the
+deserted spaces, showing his dark-blue figure against the sky. The vast
+fabric of the Coliseum reared itself, hushed and deserted within and
+without; and a boy in his shirt-sleeves pressed his nose against one
+of the painted window-panes in the vain effort to behold the nothing
+inside. But sadder than this loneliness surrounding the Coliseum, sadder
+than the festooned and knotted banners that drooped funereally upon its
+facade, was the fact that some of those luckless refreshment-saloons
+were still open, displaying viands as little edible now as carnival
+_confetti_. It was as if the proprietors, in an unavailing remorse, had
+condemned themselves to spend the rest of their days there, and, slowly
+consuming their own cake and pop-corn, washed down with their own
+soda-water and lemonade, to perish of dyspepsia and despair.
+
+
+
+
+SOME LESSONS FROM THE SCHOOL OF MORALS.
+
+
+Any study of suburban life would be very imperfect without some glance
+at that larger part of it which is spent in the painful pursuit
+of pleasures such as are offered at the ordinary places of public
+amusement; and for this reason I excuse myself for rehearsing certain
+impressions here which are not more directly suburban, to say the least,
+than those recounted in the foregoing chapter.
+
+It became, shortly after life in Charlesbridge began, a question whether
+any entertainment that Boston could offer were worth the trouble of
+going to it, or, still worse, coming from it; for if it was misery to
+hurry from tea to catch the inward horse-car at the head of the street,
+what sullen lexicon will afford a name for the experience of getting
+home again by the last car out from the city? You have watched the clock
+much more closely than the stage during the last act, and have left your
+play incomplete by its final marriage or death, and have rushed up to
+Bowdoin Square, where you achieve a standing place in the car, and,
+utterly spent as you are with the enjoyment of the evening, you endure
+for the next hour all that is horrible in riding or walking. At the end
+of this time you declare that you will never go to the theatre again;
+and after years of suffering you come at last to keep your word.
+
+While yet, however, in the state of formation as regards this
+resolution, I went frequently to the theatre--or school of morals,
+as its friends have humorously called it. I will not say whether any
+desired amelioration took place or not in my own morals through the
+agency of the stage; but if not enlightened and refined by everything I
+saw there, I sometimes was certainly very much surprised. Now that I go
+no more, or very, very rarely, I avail myself of the resulting
+leisure to set down, for the instruction of posterity, some account of
+performances I witnessed in the years 1868-69, which I am persuaded will
+grow all the more curious, if not incredible, with the lapse of time.
+
+There is this satisfaction in living, namely, that whatever we do will
+one day wear an air of picturesqueness and romance, and will win the
+fancy of people coming after us. This stupid and commonplace present
+shall yet appear the fascinating past; and is it not a pleasure to think
+how our rogues of descendants--who are to enjoy us aesthetically--will
+be taken in with us, when they read, in the files of old newspapers,
+of the quantity of entertainment offered us at the theatres during the
+years mentioned, and judge us by it? I imagine them two hundred years
+hence looking back at us, and sighing, “Ah! there was a touch of the
+old Greek life in those Athenians! How they loved the drama in the
+jolly Boston of that day! That was the golden age of the theatre: in the
+winter of 1868-69, they had dramatic performances in seven places, of
+every degree of excellence, and the managers coined money.” As we always
+figure our ancestors going to and from church, they will probably figure
+us thronging the doors of theatres, and no doubt there will be some
+historical gossiper among them to sketch a Boston audience in 1869, with
+all our famous poets and politicians grouped together in the orchestra
+seats, and several now dead introduced with the pleasant inaccuracy and
+uncertainty of historical gossipers. “On this night, when the beautiful
+Tostée reappeared, the whole house rose to greet her. If Mr. Alcott was
+on one of his winter visits to Boston, no doubt he stepped in from the
+Marlborough House,--it was a famous temperance hotel, then in the height
+of its repute,--not only to welcome back the great actress, but to enjoy
+a chat between the acts with his many friends. Here, doubtless, was seen
+the broad forehead of Webster; there the courtly Everett, conversing in
+studied tones with the gifted So-and-so. Did not the lovely Such-a-one
+grace the evening with her presence? The brilliant and versatile Edmund
+Kirke was dead; but the humorous Artemas Ward and his friend Nasby
+may have attracted many eyes, having come hither at the close of their
+lectures, to testify their love of the beautiful in nature and art;
+while, perhaps, Mr. Sumner, in the intervals of state cares, relaxed
+into the enjoyment,” etc. “Vous voyez bien le tableau!”
+
+That far-off posterity, learning that all our theatres are filled every
+night, will never understand but we were a theatre-going people in the
+sense that it is the highest fashion to be seen at the play; and yet we
+are sensible that it is not so, and that the Boston which makes itself
+known in civilization--in letters, politics, reform--goes as little to
+the theatre as fashionable Boston.
+
+The stage is not an Institution with us, I should say; yet it affords
+recreation to a very large and increasing number of persons, and while
+it would be easy to over-estimate its influence for good or evil even
+with these, there is no doubt that the stage, if not the drama, is
+popular. Fortunately an inquiry like this into a now waning taste
+in theatricals concerns the fact rather than the effect of the taste
+otherwise the task might become indefinitely hard alike for writer and
+for reader. No one can lay his hand on his heart, and declare that he
+is the worse for having seen “La Belle Hélène,” for example, or say more
+than that it is a thing which ought not to be seen by any one else; yet
+I suppose there is no one ready to deny that “La Belle Hélène” was the
+motive of those performances that have most pleased the most
+people during recent years. There was something fascinating in the
+circumstances and auspices under which the united Irma and Tostée
+troupes appeared in Boston--_opéra bouffe_ led gayly forward by _finance
+bouffe_, and suggesting Erie shares by its watered music and morals; but
+there is no doubt that Tostée's grand reception was owing mainly to the
+personal favor which she enjoyed here and which we do not vouchsafe to
+every one. Ristori did not win it; we did our duty by her, following her
+carefully with the libretto, and in her most intense effects turning the
+leaves of a thousand pamphlets with a rustle that must have shattered
+every delicate nerve in her; but we were always cold to her greatness.
+It was not for Tosteés singing, which was but a little thing in itself;
+it was not for her beauty, for that was no more than a reminiscence, if
+it was not always an illusion; was it because she rendered the spirit of
+M. Offenbach's operas so perfectly, that we liked her so much? “Ah, that
+movement!” cried an enthusiast, “that swing, that--that--wriggle!” She
+was undoubtedly a great actress, full of subtle surprises, and with
+an audacious appearance of unconsciousness in those exigencies where
+consciousness would summon the police--or should; she was so near, yet
+so far from, the worst that could be intended; in tones, in gestures, in
+attitudes, she was to the libretto just as the music was, now making
+it appear insolently and unjustly coarse, now feebly inadequate in its
+explicit immodesty.
+
+To see this famous lady in “La Grande Duchesse” or “La Belle Hélène” was
+an experience never to be forgotten, and certainly not to be described.
+The former opera has undoubtedly its proper and blameless charm. There
+is something pretty and arch in the notion of the Duchess's falling
+in love with the impregnably faithful and innocent Fritz; and the
+extravagance of the whole, with the satire upon the typical little
+German court, is delightful. But “La Belle Helene” is a wittier play
+than “La Grande Duchesse,” and it is the vividest expression of the
+spirit of _opéra bouffe_. It is full of such lively mockeries as that of
+Helen when she gazes upon the picture of Leda and the Swan: “J'aime á
+me recueiller devant ce tableau de famille! Mon père, ma mère, les voici
+tous les deux! O mon père, tourne vers ton enfant un bec favorable!”--or
+of Paris when he represses the zeal of Calchas, who desires to present
+him at once to Helen: “Soit! mais sans lui dire qui je suis;--je désire
+garder le plus strict incognito, jusq'au moment où la situation sera
+favorable á un coup de théâtre.” But it must be owned that our audiences
+seemed not to take much pleasure in these and other witticisms, though
+they obliged Mademoiselle Tostée to sing “Un Mari sage” three times,
+with all those actions and postures which seem incredible the moment
+they have ceased. They possibly understood this song no better than the
+strokes of wit, and encored it merely for the music's sake. The effect
+was, nevertheless, unfortunate, and calculated to give those French
+ladies but a bad opinion of our morals. How could they comprehend that
+the taste was, like themselves, imported, and that its indulgence here
+did not characterize us? It was only in appearance that, while we did
+not enjoy the wit we delighted in the coarseness. And how coarse this
+travesty of the old fable mainly is! That priest Calchas, with his
+unspeakable snicker his avarice, his infidelity, his hypocrisy, is alone
+infamy enough to provoke the destruction of a city. Then that scene
+interrupted by Menelaus! It is indisputably witty, and since all those
+people are so purely creatures of fable, and dwell so entirely in an
+unmoral atmosphere, it appears as absurd to blame it as the murders in
+a pantomime. To be sure there is something about murder, some inherent
+grace or refinement perhaps, that makes its actual representation upon
+the stage more tolerable than the most diffident suggestion of adultery.
+Not that “La Belle Hélène” is open to the reproach of over-delicacy
+in this scene, or any other, for the matter of that, though there is a
+strain of real poetry in the conception of this whole episode of
+Helen's intention to pass all Paris's love-making off upon herself for a
+dream,--poetry such as might have been inspired by a muse that had
+taken too much nectar. There is excellent character, also, as well
+as caricature in the drama; not only Calchas is admirably done, but
+Agamemnon, and Achilles, and Helen, and Menelaus, “pas un mari ordinaire
+... un mari épique,”--and the burlesque is good of its kind. It is
+artistic, as it seems French dramatic effort must almost necessarily
+be. It could scarcely be called the fault of the _opéra bouffe_ that the
+English burlesque should have come of its success; nor could the public
+blame it for the great favor the burlesque won in those far-off winters,
+if indeed the public wishes to bestow blame for this. No one, however,
+could see one of these curious travesties without being reminded, in
+an awkward way, of the _morale_ of the _opéra bouffe_, and of the
+_personnel_--as I may say--of “The Black Crook,” “The White Fawn,” and
+the “Devil's Auction.” There was the same intention of merriment at the
+cost of what may be called the marital prejudices, though it cannot be
+claimed that the wit was the same as in “La Belle Hélène;” there was the
+same physical unreserve as in the ballets of a former season; while in
+its dramatic form the burlesque discovered very marked parental traits.
+
+This English burlesque, this child of M. Offenbach's genius, and the now
+somewhat faded spectacular muse, flourished at the time of which I write
+in three of our seven theatres for months,--five, from the highest to
+the lowest being in turn open to it,--and had begun, in a tentative way,
+to invade the deserted stage even so long ago as the previous summer;
+and I have sometimes flattered myself that it was my fortune to witness
+the first exhibition of its most characteristic feature in a theatre
+into which I wandered one sultry night because it was the nearest
+theatre. They were giving a play called “The Three Fast Men,” which had
+a moral of such powerful virtue that it ought to have reformed everybody
+in the neighborhood. Three ladies being in love with the three fast men,
+and resolved to win them back to regular hours and the paths of
+sobriety by every device of the female heart, dress themselves in men's
+clothes,--such is the subtlety of the female heart in the bosoms of
+modern young ladies of fashion,--and follow their lovers about from
+one haunt of dissipation to another and become themselves exemplarily
+vicious,--drunkards, gamblers, and the like. The first lady, who was a
+star in her lowly orbit, was very great in all her different _rôles_,
+appearing now as a sailor with the hornpipe of his calling, now as an
+organ-grinder, and now as a dissolute young gentleman,--whatever was the
+exigency of good morals. The dramatist seemed to have had an eye to
+her peculiar capabilities, and to have expressly invented edifying
+characters and situations that her talents might enforce them. The
+second young lady had also a personal didactic gift, rivaling, and
+even surpassing in some respects, that of the star; and was very rowdy
+indeed. In due time the devoted conduct of the young ladies has its just
+effect: the three fast men begin to reflect upon the folly of their wild
+courses; and at this point the dramatist delivers his great stroke. The
+first lady gives a _soirée dansante et chantante_, and the three fast
+men have invitations. The guests seat themselves, as at a fashionable
+party, in a semicircle, and the gayety of the evening begins with
+conundrums and playing upon the banjo; the gentlemen are in their
+morning-coats, and the ladies in a display of hosiery which is now no
+longer surprising, and which need not have been mentioned at all except
+for the fact that, in the case of the first lady, it seemed not to have
+been freshly put on for that party. In this instance an element comical
+beyond intention was present, in three young gentlemen, an amateur
+musical trio, who had kindly consented to sing their favorite song of
+“The Rolling Zuyder Zee,” as they now kindly did, with flushed faces,
+unmanageable hands, and much repetition of
+
+ The ro-o-o-o-
+ The ro-o-o-o-
+ The ro-o-o-o-ll-
+ Ing Zuyder Zee,
+ Zuyder Zee,
+ Zuyder Zee-e-e!
+
+Then the turn of the three guardian angels of the fast men being
+come again they get up and dance each one a breakdown which seems to
+establish their lovers (now at last in the secret of the generous ruse
+played upon them) firmly in their resolution to lead a better life. They
+are in nowise shaken from it by the displeasure which soon shows itself
+in the manner of the first and second ladies. The former is greatest in
+the so-called Protean parts of the play, and is obscured somewhat by the
+dancing of the latter; but she has a daughter who now comes on and sings
+a song. The pensive occasion, the favorable mood of the audience, the
+sympathetic attitude of the players, invite her to sing “The Maiden's
+Prayer,” and so we have “The Maiden's Prayer.” We may be a low set,
+and the song may be affected and insipid enough, but the purity of its
+intention touches, and the little girl is vehemently applauded. She is
+such a pretty child with her innocent face, and her artless white dress,
+and blue ribbons to her waist and hair, that we will have her back
+again; whereupon she runs out upon the stage, strikes up a rowdy, rowdy
+air, dances a shocking little dance, and vanishes from the dismayed
+vision, leaving us a considerably lower set than we were at first, and
+glad of our lowness. This is the second lady's own ground, however, and
+now she comes out--in a way that banishes far from our fickle minds
+all thoughts of the first lady and her mistaken child--with a medley of
+singing and dancing, a bit of breakdown, of cancan, of jig, a bit of
+“Le Sabre de mon Père,” and of all memorable slang songs, given with
+the most grotesque and clownish spirit that ever inspired a woman. Each
+member of the company follows in his or her _pas seul_, and then they
+all dance together to the plain confusion of the amateur trio, whose
+eyes roll like so many Zuyder Zees, as they sit lonely and motionless in
+the midst. All stiffness and formality are overcome. The evening party
+in fact disappears entirely, and we are suffered to see the artists
+in their moments of social relaxation sitting as it were around the
+theatrical fireside. They appear to forget us altogether; they exchange
+winks, and nods, and jests of quite personal application; they call each
+other by name, by their Christian names, their nicknames. It is not
+an evening party, it is a family party, and the suggestion of home
+enjoyment completes the reformation of the three fast men. We see them
+marry the three fast women before we leave the house.
+
+On another occasion, two suburban friends of the drama beheld a more
+explicit precursor of the coming burlesque at one of the minor theatres
+last summer. The great actress whom they had come to see on another
+scene was ill, and in their disappointment they embraced the hope of
+entertainment offered them at the smaller playhouse. The drama itself
+was neither here nor there as to intent, but the public appetite or the
+manager's conception of it--for I am by no means sure that this whole
+business was not a misunderstanding--had exacted that the actresses
+should appear in so much stocking, and so little else, that it was
+a horror to look upon them. There was no such exigency of dialogue,
+situation, or character as asked the indecorum, and the effect upon the
+unprepared spectator was all the more stupefying from the fact that most
+of the ladies were not dancers, and had not countenances that consorted
+with impropriety. Their faces had merely the conventional Yankee
+sharpness and wanness of feature, and such difference of air and
+character as should say for one and another, shop-girl, shoe-binder,
+seamstress; and it seemed an absurdity and an injustice to refer to them
+in any way the disclosures of the ruthlessly scant drapery. A grotesque
+fancy would sport with their identity: “Did not this or that one write
+poetry for her local newspaper?” so much she looked the average culture
+and crudeness, and when such a one, coldly yielding to the manager's
+ideas of the public taste, stretched herself on a green baize bank with
+her feet towards us, or did a similar grossness, it was hard to keep
+from crying aloud in protest, that she need not do it; that nobody
+really expected or wanted it of her. Nobody? Alas! there were people
+there--poor souls who had the appearance of coming every night--who
+plainly did expect it, and who were loud in their applauses of the chief
+actress. This was a young person of a powerful physical expression,
+quite unlike the rest,--who were dyspeptic and consumptive in the range
+of their charms,--and she triumphed and wantoned through the scenes with
+a fierce excess of animal vigor. She was all stocking, as one may
+say, being habited to represent a prince; she had a raucous voice, an
+insolent twist of the mouth, and a terrible trick of defying her enemies
+by standing erect, chin up, hand on hip, and right foot advanced,
+patting the floor. It was impossible, even in the orchestra seats, to
+look at her in this attitude and not shrink before her; and on the stage
+she visibly tyrannized over the invalid sisterhood with her full-blown
+fascinations. These unhappy girls personated, with a pathetic effect not
+to be described, such arch and fantastic creations of the poet's mind
+as Bewitchingcreature and Exquisitelittlepet, and the play was a kind
+of fairy burlesque in rhyme, of the most melancholy stupidity that
+ever was. Yet there was something very comical in the conditions of its
+performance, and in the possibility that public and manager were
+playing at cross-purposes. There we were in the pit, an assemblage of
+hard-working Yankees of decently moral lives and simple traditions,
+country-bred many of us and of plebeian stock and training, vulgar
+enough perhaps, but probably not depraved, and, excepting the first
+lady's friends, certainly not educated to the critical enjoyment of such
+spectacles; and there on the stage were those mistaken women, in
+such sad variety of boniness and flabbiness as I have tried to hint,
+addressing their pitiable exposure to a supposed vileness in us, and
+wrenching from all original intent the innocent dullness of the
+drama, which for the most part could have been as well played in
+walking-dresses, to say the least.
+
+The scene was not less amusing, as regarded the audiences, the ensuing
+winter, when the English burlesque troupes which London sent us,
+arrived; but it was not quite so pathetic as regarded the performers. Of
+their beauty and their abandon, the historical gossiper, whom I descry
+far down the future, waiting to refer to me as “A scandalous writer
+of the period,” shall learn very little to his purpose of warming his
+sketch with a color from mine. But I hope I may describe these ladies
+as very pretty, very blonde, and very unscrupulously clever, and still
+disappoint the historical gossiper. They seemed in all cases to be
+English; no Yankee faces, voices, or accents were to be detected
+among them. Where they were associated with people of another race,
+as happened with one troupe, the advantage of beauty was upon the
+Anglo-Saxon side, while that of some small shreds of propriety was with
+the Latins. These appeared at times almost modest, perhaps because
+they were the conventional _ballerine_, and wore the old-fashioned
+ballet-skirt with its volumed gauze,--a coyness which the Englishry had
+greatly modified, through an exigency of the burlesque,--perhaps because
+indecorum seems, like blasphemy and untruth, somehow more graceful and
+becoming in southern than in northern races.
+
+As for the burlesques themselves, they were nothing, the performers
+personally everything. M. Offenbach had opened Lemprière's Dictionary
+to the authors with “La Belle Hélène,” and there, was commonly a flimsy
+raveling of parodied myth, that held together the different dances and
+songs, though sometimes it was a novel or an opera burlesqued; but there
+was always a song and always a dance for each lady, song and dance being
+equally slangy, and depending for their effect mainly upon the natural
+or simulated personal charms of the performer.
+
+It was also an indispensable condition of the burlesque's success, that
+the characters should be reversed in their representation,--that the
+men's _rôles_ should be played by women, and that at least one female
+part should be done by a man. It must be owned that the fun all came
+from this character, the ladies being too much occupied with the more
+serious business of bewitching us with their pretty figures to be very
+amusing; whereas this wholesome man and brother, with his blonde wig,
+his _panier_, his dainty feminine simperings and languishings, his
+falsetto tones, and his general air of extreme fashion, was always
+exceedingly droll. He was the saving grace of these stupid plays; and
+I cannot help thinking that the _cancan_, as danced, in “Ivanhoe,” by
+Isaac of York and the masculine Rebecca, was a moral spectacle; it
+was the _cancan_ made forever absurd and harmless. But otherwise, the
+burlesques were as little cheerful as profitable. The playwrights who
+had adapted them to the American stage--for they were all of English
+authorship--had been good enough to throw in some political allusions
+which were supposed to be effective with us, but which it was sad to see
+received with apathy. It was conceivable from a certain air with which
+the actors delivered these, that they were in the habit of stirring
+London audiences greatly with like strokes of satire; but except
+where Rebecca offered a bottle of Medford rum to Cedric the Saxon, who
+appeared in the figure of ex-President Johnson, they had no effect upon
+us. We were cold, very cold, to suggestions of Mr. Reverdy Johnson's now
+historical speech-making and dining; General Butler's spoons moved us
+just a little; at the name of Grant we roared and stamped, of course,
+though in a perfectly mechanical fashion, and without thought of any
+meaning offered us; those lovely women might have coupled the hero's
+name with whatever insult they chose, and still his name would have made
+us cheer them. We seemed not to care for points that were intended
+to flatter us nationally. I am not aware that anybody signified
+consciousness when the burlesque supported our side of the Alabama
+controversy, or acknowledged the self-devotion with which a threat that
+England should be made to pay was delivered by these English performers.
+With an equal impassiveness we greeted allusions to Erie shares and to
+the late Mr. Fiske.
+
+The burlesque chiefly betrayed its descent from the spectacular ballet
+in its undressing; but that ballet, while it demanded personal exposure,
+had something very observable in its scenic splendors, and all that
+marching and processioning in it was rather pretty; while in the
+burlesque there seemed nothing of innocent intent. No matter what the
+plot, it led always to a final great scene of breakdown,--which was
+doubtless most impressive in that particular burlesque where this scene
+represented the infernal world, and the ladies gave the dances of the
+country with a happy conception of the deportment of lost souls. There,
+after some vague and inconsequent dialogue, the wit springing from a
+perennial source of humor (not to specify the violation of the seventh
+commandment), the dancing commenced, each performer beginning with the
+Walk-round of the negro minstrels, rendering its grotesqueness with a
+wonderful frankness of movement, and then plunging into the mysteries
+of her dance with a kind of infuriate grace and a fierce delight very
+curious to look upon. I am aware of the historical gossiper still on the
+alert for me, and I dare not say how sketchily these ladies were dressed
+or indeed, more than that they were dressed to resemble circus-riders
+of the other sex, but as to their own deceived nobody,--possibly did not
+intend deceit. One of them was so good a player that it seemed needless
+for her to go so far as she did in the dance; but she spared herself
+nothing, and it remained for her merely stalwart friends to surpass her,
+if possible. This inspired each who succeeded her to wantoner excesses,
+to wilder insolences of hose, to fiercer bravadoes of corsage; while
+those not dancing responded to the sentiment of the music by singing
+shrill glees in tune with it, clapping their hands, and patting Juba, as
+the act is called,--a peculiarly graceful and modest thing in woman. The
+frenzy grew with every moment, and, as in another Vision of Sin,--
+
+ “Then they started from their places,
+ Moved with violence, changed in hue,
+ Caught each other with wild grimaces,
+ Half-invisible to the view,
+ Wheeling with precipitate paces
+ To the melody, till they flew,
+ Hair, and eyes, and limbs, and faces
+ Twisted hard in fierce embraces,
+ Like to Furies, like to Graces,”--
+
+with an occasional exchange of cuffs and kicks perfectly human. The
+spectator found now himself and now the scene incredible, and indeed
+they were hardly conceivable in relation to each other. A melancholy
+sense of the absurdity, of the incongruity, of the whole absorbed at
+last even a sense of the indecency. The audience was much the same in
+appearance as other audiences, witnessing like displays at the other
+theatres, and did not differ greatly from the usual theatrical house.
+Not so much fashion smiled upon the efforts of these young ladies, as
+upon the _cancan_ of the Signorina Morlacchi a winter earlier; but there
+was a most fair appearance of honest-looking, handsomely dressed men
+and women; and you could pick out, all over the parquet, faces of one
+descent from the deaconship, which you wondered were not afraid
+to behold one another there. The truth is, we spectators, like the
+performers themselves, lacked that tradition of error, of transgression,
+which casts its romance about the people of a lighter race. We had not
+yet set off one corner of the Common for a Jardin Mabille; we had not
+even the concert-cellars of the gay and elegant New Yorker; and nothing,
+really, had happened in Boston to educate us to this new taste in
+theatricals, since the fair Quakers felt moved to testify in the streets
+and churches against our spiritual nakedness. Yet it was to be noted
+with regret that our innocence, our respectability, had no restraining
+influence upon the performance; and the fatuity of the hope cherished
+by some courageous people, that the presence of virtuous persons would
+reform the stage, was but too painfully evident. The doubt whether they
+were not nearer right who have denounced the theatre as essentially and
+incorrigibly bad would force itself upon the mind, though there was a
+little comfort in the thought that, if virtue had been actually allowed
+to frown upon these burlesques, the burlesques might have been abashed
+into propriety. The caressing arm of the law was cast very tenderly
+about the performers, and in the only case where a spectator presumed
+to hiss,--it was at a _pas seul_ of the indescribable,--a policeman
+descended upon him, and with the succor of two friends of the free
+ballet, rent him from his place, and triumphed forth with him. Here was
+an end of ungenial criticism; we all applauded zealously after that.
+
+The peculiar character of the drama to which they devoted themselves had
+produced, in these ladies, some effects doubtless more interesting than
+profitable to observe. One of them, whose unhappiness it was to take
+the part of _soubrette_ in the Laughable Commedietta preceding the
+burlesque, was so ill at ease in drapery, so full of awkward jerks and
+twitches, that she seemed quite another being when she came on later
+as a radiant young gentleman in pink silk hose, and nothing of feminine
+modesty in her dress excepting the very low corsage. A strange and
+compassionable satisfaction beamed from her face; it was evident that
+this sad business was the poor thing's _forte_. In another company was a
+lady who had conquered all the easy attitudes of young men of the second
+or third fashion, and who must have been at something of a loss to
+identify herself when personating a woman off the stage. But Nature
+asserted herself in a way that gave a curious and scarcely explicable
+shock in the case of that dancer whose impudent song required the action
+of fondling a child, and who rendered the passage with an instinctive
+tenderness and grace, all the more pathetic for the profaning boldness
+of her super masculine dress or undress. Commonly, however, the members
+of these burlesque troupes, though they were not like men, were in most
+things as unlike women, and seemed creatures of a kind of alien sex,
+parodying both. It was certainly a shocking thing to look at them with
+their horrible prettiness, their archness in which was no charm, their
+grace which put to shame. Yet whoever beheld these burlesque sisters,
+must have fallen into perplexing question in his own mind as to whose
+was the wrong involved. It was not the fault of the public--all of us
+felt that: was it the fault of the hard-working sisterhood, bred to this
+as to any other business, and not necessarily conscious of the
+indecorum which pains my reader,--obliged to please somehow, and aiming,
+doubtless, at nothing but applause? “La Belle Hélène” suggests the only
+reasonable explanation: _“C'est la fatalité_.”
+
+
+
+
+FLITTING
+
+
+I would not willingly repose upon the friendship of a man whose local
+attachments are weak. I should not demand of my intimate that he have a
+yearning for the homes of his ancestors, or even the scenes of his own
+boyhood; that is not in American nature; on the contrary, he is but a
+poor creature who does not hate the village where he was born; yet a
+sentiment for the place where one has lived two or three years, the
+hotel where one has spent a week, the sleeping car in which one has
+ridden from Albany to Buffalo,--so much I should think it well to exact
+from my friend in proof of that sensibility and constancy without which
+true friendship does not exist. So much I am ready to yield on my
+own part to a friend's demand, and I profess to have all the possible
+regrets for Benicia Street, now I have left it. Over its deficiencies
+I cast a veil of decent oblivion, and shall always try to look upon its
+worthy and consoling aspects, which were far the more numerous. It was
+never otherwise, I imagine, than an ideal region in very great measure;
+and if the reader whom I have sometimes seemed to direct thither,
+should seek it out, he would hardly find my Benicia Street by the city
+sign-board. Yet this is not wholly because it was an ideal locality, but
+because much of its reality has now become merely historical, a portion
+of the tragical poetry of the past. Many of the vacant lots abutting
+upon Benicia and the intersecting streets flourished up, during the four
+years we knew it, into fresh-painted wooden houses, and the time came
+to be when one might have looked in vain for the abandoned hoop-skirts
+which used to decorate the desirable building-sites. The lessening
+pasturage also reduced the herds which formerly fed in the vicinity, and
+at last we caught the tinkle of the cow-bells only as the cattle were
+driven past to remoter meadows. And one autumn afternoon two laborers,
+hired by the city, came and threw up an earthwork on the opposite side
+of the street, which they said was a sidewalk, and would add to
+the value of property in the neighborhood. Not being dressed with
+coal-ashes, however, during the winter, the sidewalk vanished next
+summer under a growth of rag-weed, and hid the increased values with
+it, and it is now an even question whether this monument of municipal
+grandeur will finally be held by Art or resumed by Nature,--who indeed
+has a perpetual motherly longing for her own, and may be seen in all
+outlying and suburban places, pathetically striving to steal back any
+neglected bits of ground and conceal them under her skirts of tattered
+and shabby verdure. But whatever is the event of this contest, and
+whatever the other changes wrought in the locality, it has not yet been
+quite stripped of the characteristic charms which first took our hearts,
+and which have been duly celebrated in these pages.
+
+When the new house was chosen, we made preparations to leave the old
+one, but preparations so gradual, that, if we had cared much more than
+we did, we might have suffered greatly by the prolongation of the
+agony. We proposed to ourselves to escape the miseries of moving by
+transferring the contents of one room at a time, and if we did not laugh
+incredulously at people who said we had better have it over at once and
+be done with it, it was because we respected their feelings, and not
+because we believed them. We took up one carpet after another; one wall
+after another we stripped of its pictures; we sent away all the books
+to begin with; and by this subtle and ingenious process, we reduced
+ourselves to the discomfort of living in no house at all, as it were,
+and of being at home in neither one place nor the other. Yet the logic
+of our scheme remained perfect; and I do not regret its failure in
+practice, for if we had been ever so loath to quit the old house, its
+inhospitable barrenness would finally have hurried us forth. In fact,
+does not life itself in some such fashion dismantle its tenement until
+it is at last forced out of the uninhabitable place? Are not the poor
+little comforts and pleasures and ornaments removed one by one, till
+life, if it would be saved, must go too? We took a lesson from the
+teachings of mortality, which are so rarely heeded, and we lingered over
+our moving. We made the process so gradual, indeed, that I do not feel
+myself all gone yet from the familiar work-room, and for aught I can
+say, I still write there; and as to the guest-chamber, it is so densely
+peopled by those it has lodged that it will never quite be emptied of
+them. Friends also are yet in the habit of calling in the parlor, and
+talking with us; and will the children never come off the stairs? Does
+life, our high exemplar, leave so much behind as we did? Is this what
+fills the world with ghosts?
+
+In the getting ready to go, nothing hurt half so much as the sight of
+the little girl packing her doll's things for removal. The trousseaux
+of all those elegant creatures, the wooden, the waxen, the biscuit, the
+india-rubber, were carefully assorted, and arranged in various small
+drawers and boxes; their house was thoughtfully put in order and locked
+for transportation; their innumerable broken sets of dishes were packed
+in paper and set out upon the floor, a heart-breaking little basketful.
+Nothing real in this world is so affecting as some image of reality,
+and this travesty of our own flitting was almost intolerable. I will not
+pretend to sentiment about anything else, for everything else had in it
+the element of self-support belonging to all actual afflictions. When
+the day of moving finally came, and the furniture wagon, which ought to
+have been only a shade less dreadful to us than a hearse, drew up at our
+door, our hearts were of a Neronian hardness.
+
+“Were I Diogenes,” says wrathful Charles Lamb in one of his letters, “I
+would not move out of a kilderkin into a hogshead, though the first had
+nothing but small beer in it, and the second reeked claret.” I fancy
+this loathing of the transitionary state came in great part from the
+rude and elemental nature of the means of moving in Lamb's day. In
+our own time, in Charlesbridge at least, everything is so perfectly
+contrived, that it is in some ways a pleasant excitement to move; though
+I do not commend the diversion to any but people of entire leisure, for
+it cannot be denied that it is, at any rate, an interruption to work.
+But little is broken, little is defaced, nothing is heedlessly outraged
+or put to shame. Of course there are in every house certain objects of
+comfort and even ornament which in a state of repose derive a sort of
+dignity from being cracked, or scratched, or organically debilitated,
+and give an idea of ancestral possession and of long descent to the
+actual owner; and you must not hope that this venerable quality will
+survive their public exposure upon the furniture wagon. There it
+instantly perishes, like the consequence of some country notable huddled
+and hustled about in the graceless and ignorant tumult of a great city.
+To tell the truth, the number of things that turn shabby under the
+ordeal of moving strikes a pang of unaccustomed poverty to the
+heart which, loving all manner of makeshifts, is rich even in its
+dilapidations. For the time you feel degraded by the spectacle of that
+forlornness, and if you are a man of spirit, you try to sneak out of
+association with it in the mind of the passer-by; you keep scrupulously
+in-doors, or if a fancied exigency obliges you to go back and forth
+between the old house and the new, you seek obscure by-ways remote from
+the great street down which the wagon flaunts your ruin and decay,
+and time your arrivals and departures so as to have the air of merely
+dropping in at either place. This consoles you; but it deceives no one;
+for the man who is moving is unmistakably stamped with transition.
+
+Yet the momentary eclipse of these things is not the worst. It _is_
+momentary; for if you will but plant them in kindly corners and
+favorable exposures of the new house, a mould of respectability will
+gradually overspread them again, and they will once more account for
+their presence by the air of having been a long time in the family; but
+there is danger that in the first moments of mortification you will be
+tempted to replace them with new and costly articles. Even the best of
+the old things are nothing to boast of in the hard, unpitying light
+to which they are exposed, and a difficult and indocile spirit of
+extravagance is evoked in the least profuse. Because of this fact alone
+I should not commend the diversion of moving save to people of very
+ample means as well as perfect leisure; there are more reasons than the
+misery of flitting why the dweller in the kilderkin should not covet the
+hogshead reeking of claret.
+
+But the grosser misery of moving is, as I have hinted, vastly mitigated
+by modern science, and what remains of it one may use himself to with
+no tremendous effort. I have found that in the dentist's chair,--that
+ironically luxurious seat, cushioned in satirical suggestion of
+impossible repose,--after a certain initial period of clawing, filing,
+scraping, and punching, one's nerves accommodate themselves to the
+torment, and one takes almost an objective interest in the operation of
+tooth-filling; and in like manner after two or three wagon-loads of your
+household stuff have passed down the public street, and all your morbid
+associations with them have been desecrated, you begin almost to like
+it. Yet I cannot regard this abandon as a perfectly healthy emotion, and
+I do not counsel my reader to mount himself upon the wagon and ride to
+and fro even once, for afterwards the remembrance of such an excess will
+grieve him.
+
+Of course, I meant to imply by this that moving sometimes comes to an
+end, though it is not easy to believe so while moving. The time really
+arrives when you sit down in your new house, and amid whatever disorder
+take your first meal there. This meal is pretty sure to be that gloomy
+tea, that loathly repast of butter and toast, and some kind of cake,
+with which the soul of the early-dining American is daily cast down
+between the hours of six and seven in the evening; and instinctively
+you compare it with the last meal you took in your old house, seeking in
+vain to decide whether this is more dispiriting than that. At any rate
+that was not at all the meal which the last meal in any house which
+has been a home ought to be in fact, and is in books. It was hurriedly
+cooked; it was served upon fugitive and irregular crockery; and it was
+eaten in deplorable disorder, with the professional movers waiting
+for the table outside the dining-room. It ought to have been an act of
+serious devotion; it was nothing but an expiation. It should have been a
+solemn commemoration of all past dinners in the place, an invocation to
+their pleasant apparitions. But I, for my part, could not recall these
+at all, though now I think of them with the requisite pathos, and I
+know they were perfectly worthy of remembrance. I salute mournfully
+the companies that have sat down at dinner there, for they are sadly
+scattered now; some beyond seas, some beyond the narrow gulf, so
+impassably deeper to our longing and tenderness than the seas. But
+more sadly still I hail the host himself, and desire to know of him if
+literature was not somehow a gayer science in those days, and if his
+peculiar kind of drolling had not rather more heart in it then. In an
+odd, not quite expressible fashion, something of him seems dispersed
+abroad and perished in the guests he loved. I trust, of course, that all
+will be restored to him when he turns--as every man past thirty feels he
+may when he likes, and has the time--and resumes his youth. Or if this
+feeling is only a part of the great tacit promise of eternity, I am all
+the more certain of his getting back his losses.
+
+I say that now these apposite reflections occur to me with a sufficient
+ease, but that upon the true occasion for them they were absent.
+So, too, at the first meal in the new house, there was none of
+that desirable sense of setting up a family altar, but a calamitous
+impression of irretrievable upheaval, in honor of which sackcloth and
+ashes seemed the only wear. Yet even the next day the Lares and Penates
+had regained something of their wonted cheerfulness, and life had begun
+again with the first breakfast. In fact, I found myself already so
+firmly established that, meeting the furniture cart which had moved me
+the day before, I had the face to ask the driver whom they were turning
+out of house and home, as if my own flitting were a memory of the
+far-off past.
+
+Not that I think the professional mover expects to be addressed in a
+joking mood. I have a fancy that he cultivates a serious spirit himself,
+in which he finds it easy to sympathize with any melancholy on the part
+of the moving family. There is a slight flavor of undertaking in his
+manner, which is nevertheless full of a subdued firmness very consoling
+and supporting; though the life that he leads must be a troubled and
+uncheerful one, trying alike to the muscles and the nerves. How often
+must he have been charged by anxious and fluttered ladies to be very
+careful of that basket of china, and those vases! How often must he have
+been vexed by the ignorant terrors of gentlemen asking if he thinks
+that the library-table, poised upon the top of his load, will hold!
+His planning is not infallible, and when he breaks something uncommonly
+precious, what does a man of his sensibility do? Is the demolition of
+old homes really distressing to him, or is he inwardly buoyed up by
+hopes of other and better homes for the people he moves? Can there
+be any ideal of moving? Does he, perhaps, feel a pride in an artfully
+constructed load, and has he something like an artist's pang in
+unloading it? Is there a choice in families to be moved, and are some
+worse or better than others? Next to the lawyer and the doctor, it
+appears to me that the professional mover holds the most confidential
+relations towards his fellow-men. He is let into all manner of little
+domestic secrets and subterfuges; I dare say he knows where half the
+people in town keep their skeleton, and what manner of skeleton it
+is. As for me, when I saw him making towards a certain closet door, I
+planted myself firmly against it. He smiled intelligence; he knew the
+skeleton was there, and that it would be carried to the new house after
+dark.
+
+I began by saying that I should wish my friend to have some sort of
+local attachment; but I suppose it must be owned that this sentiment,
+like pity, and the modern love-passion, is a thing so largely produced
+by culture that nature seems to have little or nothing to do with it.
+The first men were homeless wanderers; the patriarchs dwelt in tents,
+and shifted their place to follow the pasturage, without a sigh; and for
+children--the pre-historic, the antique people, of our day--moving is a
+rapture. The last dinner in the old house, the first tea in the new, so
+doleful to their elders, are partaken of by them with joyous riot. Their
+shrill trebles echo gleefully from the naked walls and floors; they race
+up and down the carpetless stairs; they menace the dislocated mirrors
+and crockery; through all the chambers of desolation they frolic with
+a gayety indomitable save by bodily exhaustion. If the reader is of a
+moving family,--and so he is as he is an American,--he can recall
+the zest he found during childhood in the moving which had for his
+elders--poor victims of a factitious and conventional sentiment!--only
+the salt and bitterness of tears. His spirits never fell till the
+carpets were down; no sorrow touched him till order returned; if Heaven
+so blessed him that his bed was made upon the floor for one night,
+the angels visited his dreams. Why, then, is the mature soul, however
+sincere and humble, not only grieved but mortified by flitting? Why
+cannot one move without feeling the great public eye fixed in pitying
+contempt upon him? This sense of abasement seems to be something quite
+inseparable from the act, which is often laudable, and in every way wise
+and desirable; and he whom it has afflicted is the first to turn,
+after his own establishment, and look with scornful compassion upon the
+overflowing furniture wagon as it passes. But I imagine that Abraham's
+neighbors, when he struck his tent, and packed his parlor and kitchen
+furniture upon his camels, and started off with Mrs. Sarah to seek a new
+camping-ground, did not smile at the procession, or find it worthy of
+ridicule or lament. Nor did Abraham, once settled, and reposing in the
+cool of the evening at the door of his tent, gaze sarcastically upon the
+moving of any of his brother patriarchs.
+
+To some such philosophical serenity we shall also return, I suppose,
+when we have wisely theorized life in our climate, and shall all have
+become nomads once more, following June and October up and down and
+across the continent, and not suffering the full malice of the winter
+and summer anywhere. But as yet, the derision that attaches to moving
+attends even the goer-out of town, and the man of many trunks and a
+retinue of linen-suited womankind is a pitiable and despicable object
+to all the other passengers at the railroad station and on the steamboat
+wharf.
+
+This is but one of many ways in which mere tradition oppresses us. I
+protest that as moving is now managed in Charlesbridge, there is hardly
+any reason why the master or mistress of the household should put hand
+to anything; but it is a tradition that they shall dress themselves in
+their worst, as for heavy work, and shall go about very shabby for
+at least a day before and a day after the transition. It is a kind of
+sacrifice, I suppose, to a venerable ideal; and I would never be the
+first to omit it. In others I observe that this vacant and ceremonious
+zeal is in proportion to an incapacity to do anything that happens
+really to be required; and I believe that the truly sage person would
+devote moving-day to paying visits of ceremony in his finest clothes.
+
+[Illustration: “Vacant and ceremonious zeal.”]
+
+As to the house which one has left, I think it would be preferable to
+have it occupied as soon as possible after one's flitting. Pilgrimages
+to the dismantled shrine are certainly to be avoided by the friend of
+cheerfulness. A day's absence and emptiness wholly change its character,
+though the familiarity continues, with a ghastly difference, as in the
+beloved face that the life has left. It is not at all the vacant house
+it was when you came first to look at it: for then hopes peopled it, and
+now memories. In that golden prime you had long been boarding, and
+any place in which you could keep house seemed utterly desirable. How
+distinctly you recall that wet day, or that fair day, on which you went
+through it and decided that this should be the guest chamber and that
+the family room, and what could be done with the little back attic in
+a pinch! The children could play in the dining-room; and to be sure the
+parlor was rather small if you wanted to have company; but then, who
+would ever want to give a party? and besides, the pump in the kitchen
+was a compensation for anything. How lightly the dumb waiter ran up and
+down,--
+
+ “Qual piuma al vento!”
+
+you sang, in very glad-heartedness. Then estimates of the number of
+yards of carpeting; and how you could easily save the cost from the
+difference between boarding and house-keeping. Adieu, Mrs. Brown!
+henceforth let your “desirable apartments, _en suite_ or single,
+furnished or unfurnished, to gentlemen only!”--this married pair is
+about to escape forever from your extortions.
+
+Well, if the years passed without making us sadder, should we be much
+the wiser for their going? Now you know, little couple, that there are
+extortions in this wicked world beside Mrs. Brown's; and some other
+things. But if you go into the empty house that was lately your home,
+you will not, I believe, be haunted by these sordid disappointments, for
+the place should evoke other regrets and meditations. Truly, though the
+great fear has not come upon you here, in this room you may have known
+moments when it seemed very near, and when the quick, fevered breathings
+of the little one timed your own heart-beats. To that door, with many
+other missives of joy and pain, came haply the dispatch which hurried
+you off to face your greatest sorrow--came by night, like a voice of
+God, speaking and warning, and making all your work idle and your aims
+foolish. These walls have answered, how many times, to your laughter;
+they have had friendly ears for the trouble that seemed to grow by
+utterance. You have sat upon the threshold so many summer days; so many
+winter mornings you have seen the snows drifted high about it; so often
+your step has been light and heavy upon it. There is the study, where
+your magnificent performances were planned, and your exceeding small
+performances were achieved; hither you hurried with the first criticism
+of your first book, and read it with the rapture that nothing but
+a love-letter and a favorable review can awaken. Out there is the
+well-known humble prospect, that was commonly but a vista into
+dreamland; on the other hand is the pretty grove,--its leaves now a
+little painted with the autumn, and faltering to their fall.
+
+Yes, the place must always be sacred, but painfully sacred; and I say
+again one should not go near it unless as a penance. If the reader will
+suffer me the confidence, I will own that there is always a pang in the
+past which is more than any pleasure it can give, and I believe that
+he, if he were perfectly honest,--as Heaven forbid I or any one should
+be,--would also confess as much. There is no house to which one would
+return, having left it, though it were the hogshead out of which one had
+moved into a kilderkin; for those associations whose perishing leaves
+us free, and preserves to us what little youth we have, were otherwise
+perpetuated to our burden and bondage. Let some one else, who has also
+escaped from his past, have your old house; he will find it new and
+untroubled by memories, while you, under another roof, enjoy a present
+that borders only upon the future.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
+ </title>
+ <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
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+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Suburban Sketches
+
+Author: William Dean Howells
+
+Illustrator: Augustus Hoppin
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7141]
+This file was first posted on March 15, 2003
+Last Updated: February 25, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUBURBAN SKETCHES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, David Widger,
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ SUBURBAN SKETCHES
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ <b> By William Dean Howells </b>
+ </h3>
+ <h4>
+ Author Of &ldquo;Venetian Life,&rdquo; &ldquo;Italian Journeys&rdquo; Etc.
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="frontispiece " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/frontispiece.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" />
+ </a>
+ </h5>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> MRS. JOHNSON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> DOORSTEP ACQUAINTANCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> A PEDESTRIAN TOUR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> BY HORSE-CAR TO BOSTON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> A DAY'S PLEASURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> SCENE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> JUBILEE DAYS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> SOME LESSONS FROM THE SCHOOL OF MORALS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> FLITTING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Illustrations
+ </h3>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> &ldquo;But I Suppose This Wine is Not Made of
+ Grapes, Signor?&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> &ldquo;Looking About, I Saw Two Women.&rdquo;
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0003"> &ldquo;The Young Lady in Black, Who Alighted at
+ a Most Ordinary Little Street.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> &ldquo;That Sweet Young Blonde, Who Arrives by
+ Most Trains.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> &ldquo;Frank and Lucy Stalked Ahead, With
+ Shawls Dragging From Their Arms.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> &ldquo;They Skirmish About Him With Every Sort
+ of Query.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> &ldquo;A Gaunt Figure of Forlorn and Curious
+ Smartness.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> &ldquo;The Spectacle As We Beheld It.&rdquo;
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> &ldquo;Vacant and Ceremonious Zeal.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MRS. JOHNSON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was on a morning of the lovely New England May that we left the
+ horse-car, and, spreading our umbrellas, walked down the street to our new
+ home in Charlesbridge, through a storm of snow and rain so finely blent by
+ the influences of this fortunate climate, that no flake knew itself from
+ its sister drop, or could be better identified by the people against whom
+ they beat in unison. A vernal gale from the east fanned our cheeks and
+ pierced our marrow and chilled our blood, while the raw, cold green of the
+ adventurous grass on the borders of the sopping sidewalks gave, as it
+ peered through its veil of melting snow and freezing rain, a peculiar
+ cheerfulness to the landscape. Here and there in the vacant lots abandoned
+ hoop-skirts defied decay; and near the half-finished wooden houses, empty
+ mortar-beds, and bits of lath and slate strewn over the scarred and
+ mutilated ground, added their interest to the scene. A shaggy drift hung
+ upon the trees before our own house (which had been built some years
+ earlier), while its swollen eaves wept silently and incessantly upon the
+ embankments lifting its base several feet above the common level.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This heavenly weather, which the Pilgrim Fathers, with the idea of turning
+ their thoughts effectually from earthly pleasures, came so far to
+ discover, continued with slight amelioration throughout the month of May
+ and far into June; and it was a matter of constant amazement with one who
+ had known less austere climates, to behold how vegetable life struggled
+ with the hostile skies, and, in an atmosphere as chill and damp as that of
+ a cellar, shot forth the buds and blossoms upon the pear-trees, called out
+ the sour Puritan courage of the currant-bushes, taught a reckless native
+ grape-vine to wander and wanton over the southern side of the fence, and
+ decked the banks with violets as fearless and as fragile as New England
+ girls; so that about the end of June, when the heavens relented and the
+ sun blazed out at last, there was little for him to do but to redden and
+ darken the daring fruits that had attained almost their full growth
+ without his countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, indeed, Charlesbridge appeared to us a kind of Paradise. The wind
+ blew all day from the southwest, and all day in the grove across the way
+ the orioles sang to their nestlings. The butcher's wagon rattled
+ merrily up to our gate every morning; and if we had kept no other
+ reckoning, we should have known it was Thursday by the grocer. We were
+ living in the country with the conveniences and luxuries of the city about
+ us. The house was almost new and in perfect repair; and, better than all,
+ the kitchen had as yet given no signs of unrest in those volcanic agencies
+ which are constantly at work there, and which, with sudden explosion, make
+ Herculaneums and Pompeiis of so many smiling households. Breakfast,
+ dinner, and tea came up with illusive regularity, and were all the most
+ perfect of their kind; and we laughed and feasted in our vain security. We
+ had out from the city to banquet with us the friends we loved, and we were
+ inexpressibly proud before them of the Help, who first wrought miracles of
+ cookery in our honor, and then appeared in a clean white apron, and the
+ glossiest black hair, to wait upon the table. She was young, and certainly
+ very pretty; she was as gay as a lark, and was courted by a young man
+ whose clothes would have been a credit, if they had not been a reproach,
+ to our lowly basement. She joyfully assented to the idea of staying with
+ us till she married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, there was much that was extremely pleasant about the little place
+ when the warm weather came, and it was not wonderful to us that Jenny was
+ willing to remain. It was very quiet; we called one another to the window
+ if a large dog went by our door; and whole days passed without the
+ movement of any wheels but the butcher's upon our street, which
+ flourished in ragweed and butter-cups and daisies, and in the autumn
+ burned, like the borders of nearly all the streets in Charlesbridge, with
+ the pallid azure flame of the succory. The neighborhood was in all things
+ a frontier between city and country. The horse-cars, the type of such
+ civilization&mdash;full of imposture, discomfort, and sublime possibility&mdash;as
+ we yet possess, went by the head of our street, and might, perhaps, be
+ available to one skilled in calculating the movements of comets; while two
+ minutes' walk would take us into a wood so wild and thick that no
+ roof was visible through the trees. We learned, like innocent pastoral
+ people of the golden age, to know the several voices of the cows pastured
+ in the vacant lots, and, like engine-drivers of the iron age, to
+ distinguish the different whistles of the locomotives passing on the
+ neighboring railroad. The trains shook the house as they thundered along,
+ and at night were a kind of company, while by day we had the society of
+ the innumerable birds. Now and then, also, the little ragged boys in
+ charge of the cows&mdash;which, tied by long ropes to trees, forever wound
+ themselves tight up against the trunks, and had to be unwound with great
+ ado of hooting and hammering&mdash;came and peered lustfully through the
+ gate at our ripening pears. All round us carpenters were at work building
+ new houses; but so far from troubling us, the strokes of their hammers
+ fell softly upon the sense, like one's heart-beats upon one's
+ own consciousness in the lapse from all fear of pain under the blessed
+ charm of an anaesthetic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We played a little at gardening, of course, and planted tomatoes, which
+ the chickens seemed to like, for they ate them up as fast as they ripened;
+ and we watched with pride the growth of our Lawton blackberries, which,
+ after attaining the most stalwart proportions, were still as bitter as the
+ scrubbiest of their savage brethren, and which, when by advice left on the
+ vines for a week after they turned black, were silently gorged by secret
+ and gluttonous flocks of robins and orioles. As for our grapes, the frost
+ cut them off in the hour of their triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, as I have hinted, we were not surprised that Jenny should be willing
+ to remain with us, and were as little prepared for her desertion as for
+ any other change of our moral state. But one day in September she came to
+ her nominal mistress with tears in her beautiful eyes and protestations of
+ unexampled devotion upon her tongue, and said that she was afraid she must
+ leave us. She liked the place, and she never had worked for any one that
+ was more of a lady, but she had made up her mind to go into the city. All
+ this, so far, was quite in the manner of domestics who, in ghost stories,
+ give warning to the occupants of haunted houses; and Jenny's
+ mistress listened in suspense for the motive of her desertion, expecting
+ to hear no less than that it was something which walked up and down the
+ stairs and dragged iron links after it, or something that came and groaned
+ at the front door, like populace dissatisfied with a political candidate.
+ But it was in fact nothing of this kind; simply, there were no lamps upon
+ our street, and Jenny, after spending Sunday evening with friends in East
+ Charlesbridge, was always alarmed, on her return, in walking from the
+ horse-car to our door. The case was hopeless, and Jenny and our household
+ parted with respect and regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had not before this thought it a grave disadvantage that our street was
+ unlighted. Our street was not drained nor graded; no municipal cart ever
+ came to carry away our ashes; there was not a water-butt within half a
+ mile to save us from fire, nor more than the one thousandth part of a
+ policeman to protect us from theft. Yet, as I paid a heavy tax, I somehow
+ felt that we enjoyed the benefits of city government, and never looked
+ upon Charlesbridge as in any way undesirable for residence. But when it
+ became necessary to find help in Jenny's place, the frosty welcome
+ given to application at the intelligence offices renewed a painful doubt
+ awakened by her departure. To be sure, the heads of the offices were
+ polite enough; but when the young housekeeper had stated her case at the
+ first to which she applied, and the Intelligencer had called out to the
+ invisible expectants in the adjoining room, &ldquo;Anny wan wants to do
+ giner'l housewark in Charlsbrudge?&rdquo; there came from the maids
+ invoked so loud, so fierce, so full a &ldquo;No!&rdquo; as shook the lady's
+ heart with an indescribable shame and dread. The name that, with an
+ innocent pride in its literary and historical associations, she had
+ written at the heads of her letters, was suddenly become a matter of
+ reproach to her; and she was almost tempted to conceal thereafter that she
+ lived in Charlesbridge, and to pretend that she dwelt upon some wretched
+ little street in Boston. &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said the head of the
+ office, &ldquo;the gairls doesn't like to live so far away from the
+ city. Now if it was on'y in the Port....&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This pen is not graphic enough to give the remote reader an idea of the
+ affront offered to an inhabitant of Old Charlesbridge in these closing
+ words. Neither am I of sufficiently tragic mood to report here all the
+ sufferings undergone by an unhappy family in finding servants, or to tell
+ how the winter was passed with miserable makeshifts. Alas! is it not the
+ history of a thousand experiences? Any one who looks upon this page could
+ match it with a tale as full of heartbreak and disaster, while I conceive
+ that, in hastening to speak of Mrs. Johnson, I approach a subject of
+ unique interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter that ensued after Jenny's departure was the true sister
+ of the bitter and shrewish spring of the same year. But indeed it is
+ always with a secret shiver that one must think of winter in our
+ regrettable climate. It is a terrible potency, robbing us of half our
+ lives, and threatening or desolating the moiety left us with rheumatisms
+ and catarrhs. There is a much vaster sum of enjoyment possible to man in
+ the more generous latitudes; and I have sometimes doubted whether even the
+ energy characteristic of ours is altogether to be praised, seeing that it
+ has its spring not so much in pure aspiration as in the instinct of
+ self-preservation. Egyptian, Greek, Roman energy was an inner impulse; but
+ ours is too often the sting of cold, the spur of famine. We must endure
+ our winter, but let us not be guilty of the hypocrisy of pretending that
+ we like it. Let us caress it with no more vain compliments, but use it
+ with something of its own rude and savage sincerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say, our last Irish girl went with the last snow, and on one of those
+ midsummer-like days that sometimes fall in early April to our yet bleak
+ and desolate zone, our hearts sang of Africa and golden joys. A Libyan
+ longing took us, and we would have chosen, if we could, to bear a strand
+ of grotesque beads, or a handful of brazen gauds, and traffic them for
+ some sable maid with crisped locks, whom, uncoffling from the captive
+ train beside the desert, we should make to do our general housework
+ forever, through the right of lawful purchase. But we knew that this was
+ impossible, and that, if we desired colored help, we must seek it at the
+ intelligence office, which is in one of those streets chiefly inhabited by
+ the orphaned children and grandchildren of slavery. To tell the truth
+ these orphans do not seem to grieve much for their bereavement, but lead a
+ life of joyous and rather indolent oblivion in their quarter of the city.
+ They are often to be seen sauntering up and down the street by which the
+ Charlesbridge cars arrive,&mdash;the young with a harmless swagger, and
+ the old with the generic limp which our Autocrat has already noted as
+ attending advanced years in their race. They seem the natural human
+ interest of a street so largely devoted to old clothes; and the thoughtful
+ may see a felicity in their presence where the pawnbrokers' windows
+ display the forfeited pledges of improvidence, and subtly remind us that
+ we have yet to redeem a whole race, pawned in our needy and reckless
+ national youth, and still held against us by the Uncle of Injustice, who
+ is also the Father of Lies. How gayly are the young ladies of this race
+ attired, as they trip up and down the side walks, and in and out through
+ the pendent garments at the shop doors! They are the black pansies and
+ marigolds and dark-blooded dahlias among womankind. They try to assume
+ something of our colder race's demeanor, but even the passer on the
+ horse-car can see that it is not native with them, and is better pleased
+ when they forget us, and ungenteelly laugh in encountering friends,
+ letting their white teeth glitter through the generous lips that open to
+ their ears. In the streets branching upwards from this avenue, very little
+ colored men and maids play with broken or enfeebled toys, or sport on the
+ wooden pavements of the entrances to the inner courts. Now and then a
+ colored soldier or sailor&mdash;looking strange in his uniform, even after
+ the custom of several years&mdash;emerges from those passages; or, more
+ rarely, a black gentleman, stricken in years, and cased in shining
+ broadcloth, walks solidly down the brick sidewalk, cane in hand,&mdash;a
+ vision of serene self-complacency, and so plainly the expression of
+ virtuous public sentiment that the great colored louts, innocent enough
+ till then in their idleness, are taken with a sudden sense of depravity,
+ and loaf guiltily up against the house-walls. At the same moment, perhaps,
+ a young damsel, amorously scuffling with an admirer through one of the low
+ open windows, suspends the strife, and bids him, &ldquo;Go along now, do!&rdquo;
+ More rarely yet than the gentleman described, one may see a white girl
+ among the dark neighbors, whose frowzy head is uncovered, and whose
+ sleeves are rolled up to her elbows, and who, though no doubt quite at
+ home, looks as strange there as that pale anomaly which may sometimes be
+ seen among a crew of blackbirds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An air not so much of decay as of unthrift, and yet hardly of unthrift,
+ seems to prevail in the neighborhood, which has none of the aggressive and
+ impudent squalor of an Irish quarter, and none of the surly wickedness of
+ a low American street. A gayety not born of the things that bring its
+ serious joy to the true New England heart&mdash;a ragged gayety, which
+ comes of summer in the blood, and not in the pocket or the conscience, and
+ which affects the countenance and the whole demeanor, setting the feet to
+ some inward music, and at times bursting into a line of song or a
+ child-like and irresponsible laugh&mdash;gives tone to the visible life,
+ and wakens a very friendly spirit in the passer, who somehow thinks there
+ of a milder climate, and is half persuaded that the orange-peel on the
+ sidewalks came from fruit grown in the soft atmosphere of those back
+ courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this quarter, then, that we heard of Mrs. Johnson; and it was
+ from a colored boarding-house there that she came out to Charlesbridge to
+ look at us, bringing her daughter of twelve years with her. She was a
+ matron of mature age and portly figure, with a complexion like coffee
+ soothed with the richest cream; and her manners were so full of a certain
+ tranquillity and grace, that she charmed away all out will to ask for
+ references. It was only her barbaric laughter and her lawless eye that
+ betrayed how slightly her New England birth and breeding covered her
+ ancestral traits, and bridged the gulf of a thousand years of civilization
+ that lay between her race and ours. But in fact, she was doubly estranged
+ by descent; for, as we learned later, a sylvan wildness mixed with that of
+ the desert in her veins: her grandfather was an Indian, and her ancestors
+ on this side had probably sold their lands for the same value in trinkets
+ that bought the original African pair on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first day that Mrs. Johnson descended into our kitchen, she conjured
+ from the malicious disorder in which it had been left by the flitting
+ Irish kobold a dinner that revealed the inspirations of genius, and was
+ quite different from a dinner of mere routine and laborious talent.
+ Something original and authentic mingled with the accustomed flavors; and,
+ though vague reminiscences of canal-boat travel and woodland camps arose
+ from the relish of certain of the dishes, there was yet the assurance of
+ such power in the preparation of the whole, that we knew her to be merely
+ running over the chords of our appetite with preliminary savors, as a
+ musician acquaints his touch with the keys of an unfamiliar piano before
+ breaking into brilliant and triumphant execution. Within a week she had
+ mastered her instrument; and thereafter there was no faltering in her
+ performances, which she varied constantly, through inspiration or from
+ suggestion. She was so quick to receive new ideas in her art, that, when
+ the Roman statuary who stayed a few weeks with us explained the mystery of
+ various purely Latin dishes, she caught their principle at once; and
+ visions of the great white cathedral, the Coliseum, and the &ldquo;dome of
+ Brunelleschi&rdquo; floated before us in the exhalations of the Milanese
+ <i>risotto</i>, Roman <i>stufadino</i>, and Florentine <i>stracotto</i>
+ that smoked upon our board. But, after all, it was in puddings that Mrs.
+ Johnson chiefly excelled. She was one of those cooks&mdash;rare as men of
+ genius in literature&mdash;who love their own dishes; and she had, in her
+ personally child-like simplicity of taste, and the inherited appetites of
+ her savage forefathers, a dominant passion for sweets. So far as we could
+ learn, she subsisted principally upon puddings and tea. Through the same
+ primitive instincts, no doubt, she loved praise. She openly exulted in our
+ artless flatteries of her skill; she waited jealously at the head of the
+ kitchen stairs to hear what was said of her work, especially if there were
+ guests; and she was never too weary to attempt emprises of cookery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While engaged in these, she wore a species of sightly handkerchief like a
+ turban upon her head and about her person those mystical swathings in
+ which old ladies of the African race delight. But she most pleasured our
+ sense of beauty and moral fitness when, after the last pan was washed and
+ the last pot was scraped, she lighted a potent pipe, and, taking her stand
+ at the kitchen door, laded the soft evening air with its pungent odors. If
+ we surprised her at these supreme moments, she took the pipe from her
+ lips, and put it behind her, with a low mellow chuckle, and a look of
+ half-defiant consciousness; never guessing that none of her merits took us
+ half so much as the cheerful vice which she only feigned to conceal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some things she could not do so perfectly as cooking, because of her
+ failing eyesight; and we persuaded her that spectacles would both become
+ and befriend a lady of her years, and so bought her a pair of steel-bowed
+ glasses. She wore them in some great emergencies at first, but had clearly
+ no pride in them. Before long she laid them aside altogether, and they had
+ passed from our thoughts, when one day we heard her mellow note of
+ laughter and her daughter's harsher cackle outside our door, and,
+ opening it, beheld Mrs. Johnson in gold-bowed spectacles of massive frame.
+ We then learned that their purchase was in fulfillment of a vow made long
+ ago, in the life-time of Mr. Johnson, that, if ever she wore glasses, they
+ should be gold-bowed; and I hope the manes of the dead were half as happy
+ in these votive spectacles as the simple soul that offered them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She and her late partner were the parents of eleven children, some of whom
+ were dead, and some of whom were wanderers in unknown parts. During his
+ life-time she had kept a little shop in her native town; and it was only
+ within a few years that she had gone into service. She cherished a natural
+ haughtiness of spirit, and resented control, although disposed to do all
+ she could of her own motion. Being told to say when she wanted an
+ afternoon, she explained that when she wanted an afternoon she always took
+ it without asking, but always planned so as not to discommode the ladies
+ with whom she lived. These, she said, had numbered twenty-seven within
+ three years, which made us doubt the success of her system in all cases,
+ though she merely held out the fact as an assurance of her faith in the
+ future, and a proof of the ease with which places were to be found. She
+ contended, moreover, that a lady who had for thirty years had a house of
+ her own, was in nowise bound to ask permission to receive visits from
+ friends where she might be living, but that they ought freely to come and
+ go like other guests. In this spirit she once invited her son-in-law,
+ Professor Jones of Providence, to dine with her; and her defied mistress,
+ on entering the dining-room, found the Professor at pudding and tea there,&mdash;an
+ impressively respectable figure in black clothes, with a black face
+ rendered yet more effective by a pair of green goggles. It appeared that
+ this dark professor was a light of phrenology in Rhode Island, and that he
+ was believed to have uncommon virtue in his science by reason of being
+ blind as well as black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am loath to confess that Mrs. Johnson had not a flattering opinion of
+ the Caucasian race in all respects. In fact, she had very good
+ philosophical and Scriptural reasons for looking upon us as an upstart
+ people of new blood, who had come into their whiteness by no creditable or
+ pleasant process. The late Mr. Johnson, who had died in the West Indies,
+ whither he voyaged for his health in quality of cook upon a Down-East
+ schooner, was a man of letters, and had written a book to show the
+ superiority of the black over the white branches of the human family. In
+ this he held that, as all islands have been at their discovery found
+ peopled by blacks, we must needs believe that humanity was first created
+ of that color. Mrs. Johnson could not show us her husband's work (a
+ sole copy in the library of an English gentleman at Port au Prince is not
+ to be bought for money), but she often developed its arguments to the lady
+ of the house; and one day, with a great show of reluctance, and many
+ protests that no personal slight was meant, let fall the fact that Mr.
+ Johnson believed the white race descended from Gehazi the leper, upon whom
+ the leprosy of Naaman fell when the latter returned by Divine favor to his
+ original blackness. &ldquo;And he went out from his presence a leper as
+ white as snow,&rdquo; said Mrs. Johnson, quoting irrefutable Scripture.
+ &ldquo;Leprosy, leprosy,&rdquo; she added thoughtfully,&mdash;&ldquo;nothing
+ but leprosy bleached you out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems to me much in her praise that she did not exult in our taint and
+ degradation, as some white philosophers used to do in the opposite idea
+ that a part of the human family were cursed to lasting blackness and
+ slavery in Ham and his children, but even told us of a remarkable approach
+ to whiteness in many of her own offspring. In a kindred spirit of charity,
+ no doubt, she refused ever to attend church with people of her elder and
+ wholesomer blood. When she went to church, she said, she always went to a
+ white church, though while with us I am bound to say she never went to
+ any. She professed to read her Bible in her bedroom on Sundays; but we
+ suspected, from certain sounds and odors which used to steal out of this
+ sanctuary, that her piety more commonly found expression in dozing and
+ smoking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would not make a wanton jest here of Mrs. Johnson's anxiety to
+ claim honor for the African color, while denying this color in many of her
+ own family. It afforded a glimpse of the pain which all her people must
+ endure, however proudly they hide it or light-heartedly forget it, from
+ the despite and contumely to which they are guiltlessly born; and when I
+ thought how irreparable was this disgrace and calamity of a black skin,
+ and how irreparable it must be for ages yet, in this world where every
+ other shame and all manner of wilful guilt and wickedness may hope for
+ covert and pardon, I had little heart to laugh. Indeed, it was so pathetic
+ to hear this poor old soul talk of her dead and lost ones, and try, in
+ spite of all Mr. Johnson's theories and her own arrogant
+ generalizations, to establish their whiteness, that we must have been very
+ cruel and silly people to turn her sacred fables even into matter of
+ question. I have no doubt that her Antoinette Anastasia and her Thomas
+ Jefferson Wilberforce&mdash;it is impossible to give a full idea of the
+ splendor and scope of the baptismal names in Mrs. Johnson's family&mdash;have
+ as light skins and as golden hair in heaven as her reverend maternal fancy
+ painted for them in our world. There, certainly, they would not be subject
+ to tanning, which had ruined the delicate complexion, and had knotted into
+ black woolly tangles the once wavy blonde locks of our little maid-servant
+ Naomi; and I would fain believe that Toussaint Washington Johnson, who ran
+ away to sea so many years ago, has found some fortunate zone where his
+ hair and skin keep the same sunny and rosy tints they wore to his mother's
+ eyes in infancy. But I have no means of knowing this, or of telling
+ whether he was the prodigy of intellect that he was declared to be. Naomi
+ could no more be taken in proof, of the one assertion than of the other.
+ When she came to us, it was agreed that she should go to school; but she
+ overruled her mother in this as in everything else, and never went. Except
+ Sunday-school lessons, she had no other instruction than that her mistress
+ gave her in the evenings, when a heavy day's play and the natural
+ influences of the hour conspired with original causes to render her
+ powerless before words of one syllable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first week of her service she was obedient and faithful to her duties;
+ but, relaxing in the atmosphere of a house which seems to demoralize all
+ menials, she shortly fell into disorderly ways of lying in wait for
+ callers out of doors, and, when people rang, of running up the front
+ steps, and letting them in from the outside. As the season expanded, and
+ the fine weather became confirmed, she modified even this form of service,
+ and spent her time in the fields, appearing at the house only when nature
+ importunately craved molasses. She had a parrot-like quickness, so far as
+ music was concerned, and learned from the Roman statuary to make the
+ groves and half-finished houses resound,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Camicia rossa,
+ Ove t' ascondi?
+ T' appella Italia,&mdash;
+ Tu non respondi!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She taught the Garibaldi song, moreover, to all the neighboring children,
+ so that I sometimes wondered if our street were not about to march upon
+ Rome in a body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her untamable disobedience, Naomi alone betrayed her sylvan blood, for
+ she was in all other respects negro and not Indian. But it was of her
+ aboriginal ancestry that Mrs. Johnson chiefly boasted,&mdash;when not
+ engaged in argument to maintain the superiority of the African race. She
+ loved to descant upon it as the cause and explanation of her own arrogant
+ habit of feeling; and she seemed indeed to have inherited something of the
+ Indian's hauteur along with the Ethiop's supple cunning and
+ abundant amiability. She gave many instances in which her pride had met
+ and overcome the insolence of employers, and the kindly old creature was
+ by no means singular in her pride of being reputed proud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could never have been a woman of strong logical faculties, but she had
+ in some things a very surprising and awful astuteness. She seldom
+ introduced any purpose directly, but bore all about it and then suddenly
+ sprung it upon her unprepared antagonist. At other times she obscurely
+ hinted a reason, and left a conclusion to be inferred; as when she warded
+ off reproach for some delinquency by saying in a general way that she had
+ lived with ladies who used to come scolding into the kitchen after they
+ had taken their bitters. &ldquo;Quality ladies took their bitters regular,&rdquo;
+ she added, to remove any sting of personality from her remark; for, from
+ many things she had let fall, we knew that she did not regard us as
+ quality. On the contrary, she often tried to overbear us with the
+ gentility of her former places; and would tell the lady over whom she
+ reigned, that she had lived with folks worth their three and four hundred
+ thousand dollars, who never complained as she did of the ironing. Yet she
+ had a sufficient regard for the literary occupations of the family, Mr.
+ Johnson having been an author. She even professed to have herself written
+ a book, which was still in manuscript, and preserved somewhere among her
+ best clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was well, on many accounts, to be in contact with a mind so original
+ and suggestive as Mrs. Johnson's. We loved to trace its intricate
+ yet often transparent operations, and were perhaps too fond of explaining
+ its peculiarities by facts of ancestry,&mdash;of finding hints of the
+ Powwow or the Grand Custom in each grotesque development. We were
+ conscious of something warmer in this old soul than in ourselves, and
+ something wilder, and we chose to think it the tropic and the untracked
+ forest. She had scarcely any being apart from her affection; she had no
+ morality, but was good because she neither hated nor envied; and she might
+ have been a saint far more easily than far more civilized people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was that also in her sinuous yet malleable nature, so full of guile
+ and so full of goodness, that reminded us pleasantly of lowly folk in
+ elder lands, where relaxing oppressions have lifted the restraints of fear
+ between master and servant, without disturbing the familiarity of their
+ relation. She advised freely with us upon all household matters, and took
+ a motherly interest in whatever concerned us. She could be flattered or
+ caressed into almost any service, but no threat or command could move her.
+ When she erred, she never acknowledged her wrong in words, but handsomely
+ expressed her regrets in a pudding, or sent up her apologies in a favorite
+ dish secretly prepared. We grew so well used to this form of exculpation,
+ that, whenever Mrs. Johnson took an afternoon at an inconvenient season,
+ we knew that for a week afterwards we should be feasted like princes. She
+ owned frankly that she loved us, that she never had done half so much for
+ people before, and that she never had been nearly so well suited in any
+ other place; and for a brief and happy time we thought that we never
+ should part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, however, our dividing destiny appeared in the basement, and was
+ presented to us as Hippolyto Thucydides, the son of Mrs. Johnson, who had
+ just arrived on a visit to his mother from the State of New Hampshire. He
+ was a heavy and loutish youth, standing upon the borders of boyhood, and
+ looking forward to the future with a vacant and listless eye. I mean that
+ this was his figurative attitude; his actual manner, as he lolled upon a
+ chair beside the kitchen window, was so eccentric, that we felt a little
+ uncertain how to regard him, and Mrs. Johnson openly described him as
+ peculiar. He was so deeply tanned by the fervid suns of the New Hampshire
+ winter, and his hair had so far suffered from the example of the sheep
+ lately under his charge, that he could not be classed by any stretch of
+ compassion with the blonde and straight-haired members of Mrs. Johnson's
+ family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remained with us all the first day until late in the afternoon, when
+ his mother took him out to get him a boarding-house. Then he departed in
+ the van of her and Naomi, pausing at the gate to collect his spirits, and,
+ after he had sufficiently animated himself by clapping his palms together,
+ starting off down the street at a hand-gallop, to the manifest terror of
+ the cows in the pastures, and the confusion of the less demonstrative
+ people of our household. Other characteristic traits appeared in Hippolyto
+ Thucydides within no very long period of time, and he ran away from his
+ lodgings so often during the summer that he might be said to board round
+ among the outlying corn-fields and turnip-patches of Charlesbridge. As a
+ check upon this habit, Mrs. Johnson seemed to have invited him to spend
+ his whole time in our basement; for whenever we went below we found him
+ there, balanced&mdash;perhaps in homage to us, and perhaps as a token of
+ extreme sensibility in himself&mdash;upon the low window-sill, the bottoms
+ of his boots touching the floor inside, and his face buried in the grass
+ without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We could formulate no very tenable objection to all this, and yet the
+ presence of Thucydides in our kitchen unaccountably oppressed our
+ imaginations. We beheld him all over the house, a monstrous eidolon,
+ balanced upon every window-sill; and he certainly attracted unpleasant
+ notice to our place, no less by his furtive and hang-dog manner of arrival
+ than by the bold displays with which he celebrated his departures. We
+ hinted this to Mrs. Johnson, but she could not enter into our feeling.
+ Indeed, all the wild poetry of her maternal and primitive nature seemed to
+ cast itself about this hapless boy; and if we had listened to her we
+ should have believed there was no one so agreeable in society, or so
+ quick-witted in affairs, as Hippolyto, when he chose. She used to rehearse
+ us long epics concerning his industry, his courage, and his talent; and
+ she put fine speeches in his mouth with no more regard to the truth than
+ if she had been a historian, and not a poet. Perhaps she believed that he
+ really said and did the things she attributed to him: it is the destiny of
+ those who repeatedly tell great things either of themselves or others; and
+ I think we may readily forgive the illusion to her zeal and fondness. In
+ fact, she was not a wise woman, and she spoiled her children as if she had
+ been a rich one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, when we said positively that Thucydides should come to us no
+ more, and then qualified the prohibition by allowing him to come every
+ Sunday, she answered that she never would hurt the child's feelings
+ by telling him not to come where his mother was; that people who did not
+ love her children did not love her; and that, if Hippy went, she went. We
+ thought it a master-stroke of firmness to rejoin that Hippolyto must go in
+ any event; but I am bound to own that he did not go, and that his mother
+ stayed, and so fed us with every cunning propitiatory dainty, that we must
+ have been Pagans to renew our threat. In fact, we begged Mrs. Johnson to
+ go into the country with us, and she, after long reluctation on Hippy's
+ account, consented, agreeing to send him away to friends during her
+ absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We made every preparation, and on the eve of our departure Mrs. Johnson
+ went into the city to engage her son's passage to Bangor, while we
+ awaited her return in untroubled security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she did not appear till midnight, and then responded with but a sad
+ &ldquo;Well, sah!&rdquo; to the cheerful &ldquo;Well, Mrs. Johnson!&rdquo;
+ that greeted her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, Mrs. Johnson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Johnson made a strange noise, half chuckle and half death-rattle, in
+ her throat. &ldquo;All wrong, sah. Hippy's off again; and I've
+ been all over the city after him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you can't go with us in the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How <i>can</i> I, sah?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Johnson went sadly out of the room. Then she came back to the door
+ again, and, opening it, uttered, for the first time in our service, words
+ of apology and regret: &ldquo;I hope I ha'n't put you out any.
+ I <i>wanted</i> to go with you, but I ought to <i>knowed</i> I couldn't.
+ All is, I loved you too much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DOORSTEP ACQUAINTANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Vagabonds the world would no doubt call many of my doorstep acquaintance,
+ and I do not attempt to defend them altogether against the world, which
+ paints but black and white and in general terms. Yet I would fain veil
+ what is only half-truth under another name, for I know that the service of
+ their Gay Science is not one of such disgraceful ease as we associate with
+ ideas of vagrancy, though I must own that they lead the life they do
+ because they love it. They always protest that nothing but their ignorance
+ of our tongue prevents them from practicing some mechanical trade. &ldquo;What
+ work could be harder,&rdquo; they ask, &ldquo;than carrying this organ
+ about all day?&rdquo; but while I answer with honesty that nothing can be
+ more irksome, I feel that they only pretend a disgust with it, and that
+ they really like organ-grinding, if for no other reason than that they are
+ the children of the summer, and it takes them into the beloved open
+ weather. One of my friends, at least, who in the warmer months is to all
+ appearance a blithesome troubadour, living
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A merry life in sun and shade,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ as a coal-heaver in winter; and though this more honorable and useful
+ occupation is doubtless open to him the whole year round, yet he does not
+ devote himself to it, but prefers with the expanding spring to lay aside
+ his grimy basket, and, shouldering his organ, to quit the dismal wharves
+ and carts and cellars, and to wander forth into the suburbs, with his
+ lazy, soft-eyed boy at his heels, who does nothing with his tambourine but
+ take up a collection, and who, meeting me the other day in a chance
+ passage of Ferry Street, knew me, and gave me so much of his father's
+ personal history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was winter even there in Ferry Street, in which so many Italians live
+ that one might think to find it under a softer sky and in a gentler air,
+ and which I had always figured in a wide unlikeness to all other streets
+ in Boston,&mdash;with houses stuccoed outside, and with gratings at their
+ ground-floor windows; with mouldering archways between the buildings, and
+ at the corners feeble lamps glimmering before pictures of the Madonna;
+ with weather-beaten shutters flapping overhead, and many balconies from
+ which hung the linen swathings of young infants, and love-making maidens
+ furtively lured the velvet-jacketed, leisurely youth below: a place
+ haunted by windy voices of blessing and cursing, with the perpetual clack
+ of wooden-heeled shoes upon the stones, and what perfume from the blossom
+ of vines and almond-trees, mingling with less delicate smells, the
+ travelled reader pleases to imagine. I do not say that I found Ferry
+ Street actually different from this vision in most respects; but as for
+ the vines and almond-trees, they were not in bloom at the moment of my
+ encounter with the little tambourine-boy. As we stood and talked, the snow
+ fell as heavily and thickly around us as elsewhere in Boston. With a vague
+ pain,&mdash;the envy of a race toward another born to a happier clime,&mdash;I
+ heard from him that his whole family was going back to Italy in a month.
+ The father had at last got together money enough, and the mother, who had
+ long been an invalid, must be taken home; and, so far as I know, the
+ population of Ferry Street exists but in the hope of a return, soon or
+ late, to the native or the ancestral land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More than one of my doorstep acquaintance, in fact, seemed to have no
+ other stock in trade than this fond desire, and to thrive with it in our
+ sympathetic community. It is scarcely possible but the reader has met the
+ widow of Giovanni Cascamatto, a Vesuvian lunatic who has long set fire to
+ their home on the slopes of the volcano, and perished in the flames. She
+ was our first Italian acquaintance in Charlesbridge, presenting herself
+ with a little subscription-book which she sent in for inspection, with a
+ printed certificate to the facts of her history signed with the somewhat
+ conventionally Saxon names of William Tompkins and John Johnson. These
+ gentlemen set forth, in terms vaguer than can be reproduced, that her
+ object in coming to America was to get money to go back to Italy; and the
+ whole document had so fictitious an air that it made us doubt even the
+ nationality of the bearer; but we were put to shame by the decent joy she
+ manifested in an Italian salutation. There was no longer a question of
+ imposture in anybody's mind; we gladly paid tribute to her poetic
+ fiction, and she thanked us with a tranquil courtesy that placed the
+ obligation where it belonged. As she turned to go with many good wishes,
+ we pressed her to have some dinner, but she answered with a compliment
+ insurpassably flattering, she had just dined&mdash;in another palace. The
+ truth is, there is not a single palace on Benicia Street, and our little
+ box of pine and paper would hardly have passed for a palace on the stage,
+ where these things are often contrived with great simplicity; but as we
+ had made a little Italy together, she touched it with the exquisite
+ politeness of her race, and it became for the instant a lordly mansion,
+ standing on the Chiaja, or the Via Nuovissima, or the Canalazzo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say this woman seemed glad to be greeted in Italian, but not, so far as
+ I could see, surprised; and altogether the most amazing thing about my
+ doorstep acquaintance of her nation is, that they are never surprised to
+ be spoken to in their own tongue, or, if they are, never show it. A
+ chestnut-roaster, who has sold me twice the chestnuts the same money would
+ have bought of him in English, has not otherwise recognized the fact that
+ Tuscan is not the dialect of Charlesbridge, and the mortifying nonchalance
+ with which my advances have always been received has long since persuaded
+ me that to the grinder at the gate it is not remarkable that a man should
+ open the door of his wooden house on Benicia Street, and welcome him in
+ his native language. After the first shock of this indifference is past,
+ it is not to be questioned but it flatters with an illusion, which a stare
+ of amazement would forbid, reducing the encounter to a vulgar reality at
+ once, and I could almost believe it in those wily and amiable folk to
+ intend the sweeter effect of their unconcern, which tacitly implies that
+ there is no other tongue in the world but Italian, and which makes all the
+ earth and air Italian for the time. Nothing else could have been the
+ purpose of that image-dealer whom I saw on a summer's day lying at
+ the foot of one of our meeting-houses, and doing his best to make it a
+ cathedral, and really giving a sentiment of medieval art to the noble
+ sculptures of the facade which the carpenters had just nailed up, freshly
+ painted and newly repaired. This poet was stretched upon his back, eating,
+ in that convenient posture, his dinner out of an earthen pot, plucking the
+ viand from it, whatever it was, with his thumb and fore-finger, and
+ dropping it piecemeal into his mouth. When the passer asked him &ldquo;Where
+ are you from?&rdquo; he held a morsel in air long enough to answer &ldquo;Da
+ Lucca, signore,&rdquo; and then let it fall into his throat, and sank
+ deeper into a reverie in which that crude accent even must have sounded
+ like a gossip's or a kinsman's voice, but never otherwise
+ moved muscle, nor looked to see who passed or lingered. There could have
+ been little else in his circumstances to remind him of home, and if he was
+ really in the sort of day-dream attributed to him, he was wise not to look
+ about him. I have not myself been in Lucca, but I conceive that its piazza
+ is not like our square, with a pump and horse-trough in the midst; but
+ that it has probably a fountain and statuary, though not possibly so
+ magnificent an elm towering above the bronze or marble groups as spreads
+ its boughs of benison over our pump and the horse-car switchman, loitering
+ near it to set the switch for the arriving cars, or lift the brimming
+ buckets to the smoking nostrils of the horses, while out from the stable
+ comes clanging and banging with a fresh team that famous African who has
+ turned white, or, if he is off duty, one of his brethren who has not yet
+ begun to turn. Figure, besides, an expressman watering his horse at the
+ trough, a provision-cart backed up against the curb in front of one of the
+ stores, various people looking from the car-office windows, and a
+ conductor appearing at the door long enough to call out, &ldquo;Ready for
+ Boston!&rdquo;&mdash;and you have a scene of such gayety as Lucca could
+ never have witnessed in her piazza at high noon on a summer's day.
+ Even our Campo Santo, if the Lucchese had cared to look round the corner
+ of the meeting-house at its moss-grown head stones, could have had little
+ to remind him of home, though it has antiquity and a proper quaintness.
+ But not for him, not for them of his clime and faith, is the pathos of
+ those simple memorial slates with their winged skulls, changing upon many
+ later stones, as if by the softening of creeds and customs, to cherub's
+ heads,&mdash;not for him is the pang I feel because of those who died, in
+ our country's youth exiles or exiles' children, heirs of the
+ wilderness and toil and hardship. Could they rise from their restful beds,
+ and look on this wandering Italian with his plaster statuettes of Apollo,
+ and Canovan dancers and deities, they would hold his wares little better
+ than Romish saints and idolatries, and would scarcely have the sentimental
+ interest in him felt by the modern citizen of Charlesbridge; but I think
+ that even they must have respected that Lombard scissors-grinder who used
+ to come to us, and put an edge to all the cutlery in the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has since gone back to Milan, whence he came eighteen years ago, and
+ whither he has returned,&mdash;as he told me one acute day in the fall,
+ when all the winter hinted itself, and the painted leaves shuddered
+ earthward in the grove across the way,&mdash;to enjoy a little climate
+ before he died (<i>per goder un po' di dima prima di morire</i>).
+ Our climate was the only thing he had against us; in every other respect
+ he was a New-Englander, even to the early stages of consumption. He told
+ me the story of his whole life, and of how in his adventurous youth he had
+ left Milan and sojourned some years in Naples, vainly seeking his fortune
+ there. Afterwards he went to Greece, and set up his ancestral business of
+ greengrocer in Athens, faring there no better, but rather worse than in
+ Naples, because of the deeper wickedness of the Athenians, who cheated him
+ right and left, and whose laws gave him no redress. The Neapolitans were
+ bad enough, he said, making a wry face, but the Greeks!&mdash;and he spat
+ the Greeks out in the grass. At last, after much misfortune in Europe, he
+ bethought him of coming to America, and he had never regretted it, but for
+ the climate. You spent a good deal here,&mdash;nearly all you earned,&mdash;but
+ then a poor man was a man, and the people were honest. It was wonderful to
+ him that they all knew how to read and write, and he viewed with
+ inexpressible scorn those Irish who came to this country, and were so
+ little sensible of the benefits it conferred upon them. Boston he believed
+ the best city in America, and &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is
+ there such a thing anywhere else in the world as that Public Library?&rdquo;
+ He, a poor man, and almost unknown, had taken books from it to his own
+ room, and was master to do so whenever he liked. He had thus been enabled
+ to read Botta's history of the United States, an enormous compliment
+ both to the country and the work which I doubt ever to have been paid
+ before; and he knew more about Washington than I did, and desired to know
+ more than I could tell him of the financial question among us. So we came
+ to national politics, and then to European affairs. &ldquo;It appears that
+ Garibaldi will not go to Rome this year,&rdquo; remarks my
+ scissors-grinder, who is very red in his sympathies. &ldquo;The Emperor
+ forbids! Well, patience! And that blessed Pope, what does he want, that
+ Pope? He will be king find priest both, he will wear two pairs of shoes at
+ once!&rdquo; I must confess that no other of my door-step acquaintance had
+ so clear an idea as this one of the difference between things here and at
+ home. To the minds of most we seemed divided here as there into rich and
+ poor,&mdash;<i>signori, persone eivili</i>, and <i>povera gente</i>,&mdash;and
+ their thoughts about us did not go beyond a speculation as to our
+ individual willingness or ability to pay for organ-grinding. But this
+ Lombard was worthy of his adopted country, and I forgive him the frank
+ expression of a doubt that one day occurred to him, when offered a glass
+ of Italian wine. He held it daintily between him and the sun for a smiling
+ moment, and then said, as if our wine must needs be as ungenuine as our
+ Italian,&mdash;was perhaps some expression from the surrounding
+ currant-bushes, harsh as that from the Northern tongues which could never
+ give his language the true life and tonic charm,&mdash;&ldquo;But I
+ suppose this wine is not made of grapes, signor?&rdquo; Yet he was a very
+ courteous old man, elaborate in greeting and leave-taking, and with a
+ quicker sense than usual. It was accounted delicacy in him, that, when he
+ had bidden us a final adieu, he should never come near us again, though
+ the date of his departure was postponed some weeks, and we heard him
+ tinkling down the street, and stopping at the neighbors' houses. He
+ was a keen-faced, thoughtful-looking man; and he wore a blouse of blue
+ cotton, from the pocket of which always dangled the leaves of some wild
+ salad culled from our wasteful vacant lots or prodigal waysides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/1000.jpg" alt="1000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/1000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Altogether different in character was that Triestine, who came one evening
+ to be helped home at the close of a very disastrous career in Mexico. He
+ Was a person of innumerable bows, and fluttered his bright-colored
+ compliments about, till it appeared that never before had such amiable
+ people been asked charity by such a worthy and generous sufferer. In
+ Trieste he had been a journalist, and it was evident enough from his
+ speech that he was of a good education. He was vain of his Italian accent,
+ which was peculiarly good for his heterogeneously peopled native city; and
+ he made a show of that marvelous facility of the Triestines in languages,
+ by taking me down French books, Spanish books, German books, and reading
+ from them all with the properest accent. Yet with this boyish pride and
+ self-satisfaction there was mixed a tone of bitter and worldly cynicism, a
+ belief in fortune as the sole providence. As nearly as I could make out,
+ he was a Johnson man in American politics; upon the Mexican question he
+ was independent, disdaining French and Mexicans alike. He was with the
+ former from the first, and had continued in the service of Maximilian
+ after their withdrawal, till the execution of that prince made Mexico no
+ place for adventurous merit. He was now going back to his native country,
+ an ungrateful land enough, which had ill treated him long ago, but to
+ which he nevertheless returned in a perfect gayety of temper. What a
+ light-hearted rogue he was,&mdash;with such merry eyes, and such a
+ pleasant smile shaping his neatly trimmed beard and mustache! After he had
+ supped, and he Stood with us at the door taking leave, something happened
+ to be said of Italian songs, whereupon this blithe exile, whom the
+ compassion of strangers was enabling to go home after many years of
+ unprofitable toil and danger to a country that had loved him not, fell to
+ caroling a Venetian barcarole, and went sweetly away in its cadence. I
+ bore him company as far as the gate of another Italian-speaking signor,
+ and was there bidden adieu with great effusion, so that I forgot till he
+ had left me to charge him not to be in fear of the house-dog, which barked
+ but did not bite. In calling this after him, I had the misfortune to
+ blunder in my verb. A man of another nation&mdash;perhaps another man of
+ his own nation&mdash;would have cared rather for what I said than how I
+ said it; but he, as if too zealous for the honor of his beautiful language
+ to endure a hurt to it even in that moment of grief, lifting his hat, and
+ bowing for the last time, responded with a &ldquo;Morde, non morsica,
+ signore!&rdquo; and passed in under the pines, and next day to Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a little old Genoese lady comes to sell us pins, needles, thread,
+ tape, and the like <i>roba</i>, whom I regard as leading quite an ideal
+ life in some respects. Her traffic is limited to a certain number of
+ families who speak more or less Italian; and her days, so far as they are
+ concerned, must be passed in an atmosphere of sympathy and kindliness. The
+ truth is, we Northern and New World folk cannot help but cast a little
+ romance about whoever comes to us from Italy, whether we have actually
+ known the beauty and charm of that land or not. Then this old lady is in
+ herself a very gentle and lovable kind of person, with a tender
+ mother-face, which is also the face of a child. A smile plays always upon
+ her wrinkled visage, and her quick and restless eyes are full of
+ friendliness. There is never much stuff in her basket, however, and it is
+ something of a mystery how she manages to live from it. None but an
+ Italian could, I am sure; and her experience must test the full virtue of
+ the national genius for cheap salads and much-extenuated soup-meat. I do
+ not know whether it is native in her, or whether it is a grace acquired
+ from long dealing with those kindly-hearted customers of hers in
+ Charlesbridge, but she is of a most munificent spirit, and returns every
+ smallest benefit with some present from her basket. She makes me ashamed
+ of things I have written about the sordidness of her race, but I shall
+ vainly seek to atone for them by open-handedness to her. She will give
+ favor for favor; she will not even count the money she receives; our
+ bargaining is a contest of the courtliest civilities, ending in many an
+ &ldquo;Adieu!&rdquo; &ldquo;To meet again!&rdquo; &ldquo;Remain well!&rdquo;
+ and &ldquo;Finally!&rdquo; not surpassed if rivaled in any Italian street.
+ In her ineffectual way, she brings us news of her different customers,
+ breaking up their stout Saxon names into tinkling polysyllables which
+ suggest them only to the practiced sense, and is perfectly patient and
+ contented if we mistake one for another. She loves them all, but she
+ pities them as living in a terrible climate; and doubtless in her heart
+ she purposes one day to go back to Italy, there to die. In the mean time
+ she is very cheerful; she, too, has had her troubles,&mdash;what troubles
+ I do not remember, but those that come by sickness and by death, and that
+ really seem no sorrows until they come to us,&mdash;yet she never
+ complains. It is hard to make a living, and the house-rent alone is six
+ dollars a month; but still one lives, and does not fare so ill either. As
+ it does not seem to be in her to dislike any one, it must be out of a
+ harmless guile, felt to be comforting to servant-ridden householders, that
+ she always speaks of &ldquo;those Irish,&rdquo; her neighbors, with a
+ bated breath, a shaken head, a hand lifted to the cheek, and an averted
+ countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swarthiest of the organ-grinding tribe is he who peers up at my window out
+ of infinitesimal black eyes, perceives me, louts low, and for form's
+ sake grinds me out a tune before he begins to talk. As we parley together,
+ say it is eleven o'clock in the forenoon, and a sober tranquillity
+ reigns upon the dust and nodding weeds of Benicia Street. At that hour the
+ organ-grinder and I are the only persons of our sex in the whole suburban
+ population; all other husbands and fathers having eaten their breakfasts
+ at seven o'clock, and stood up in the early horse-cars to Boston,
+ whence they will return, with aching backs and quivering calves,
+ half-pendant by leathern straps from the roofs of the same luxurious
+ conveyances, in the evening. The Italian might go and grind his organ upon
+ the front stoop of any one of a hundred French-roof houses around, and
+ there would be no arm within strong enough to thrust him thence; but he is
+ a gentleman in his way, and, as he prettily explains, he never stops to
+ play except where the window smiles on him: a frowning lattice he will
+ pass in silence. I behold in him a disappointed man,&mdash;a man broken in
+ health, and of a liver baked by long sojourn in a tropical clime. In large
+ and dim outline, made all the dimmer by his dialect, he sketches me the
+ story of his life; how in his youth he ran away from the Milanese for love
+ of a girl in France, who, dying, left him with so little purpose in the
+ world that, after working at his trade of plasterer for some years in
+ Lyons, he listened to a certain gentleman going out upon government
+ service to a French colony in South America. This gentleman wanted a
+ man-servant, and he said to my organ-grinder, &ldquo;Go with me and I make
+ your fortune.&rdquo; So he, who cared not whither he went, went, and found
+ himself in the tropics. It was a hard life he led there; and of the wages
+ that had seemed so great in France, he paid nearly half to his laundress
+ alone, being forced to be neat in his master's house. The service
+ was not so irksome in-doors, but it was the hunting beasts in the forest
+ all day that broke his patience at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beasts in the forest?&rdquo; I ask, forgetful of the familiar sense
+ of <i>bestie</i>, and figuring cougars at least by the word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, those little beasts for the naturalists,&mdash;flies, bugs,
+ beetles,&mdash;Heaven knows what.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this brought you money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It brought my master money, but me aches and pains as many as you
+ will, and at last the fever. When that was burnt out, I made up my mind to
+ ask for more pay, and, not getting it, to quit that service. I think the
+ signor would have given it,&mdash;but the signora! So I left, empty as I
+ came, and was cook on a vessel to New York.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the black and white of the man's story. I lose the color
+ and atmosphere which his manner as well as his words bestowed upon it. He
+ told it in a cheerful, impersonal kind of way as the romance of a poor
+ devil which had interested him, and might possibly amuse me, leaving out
+ no touch of character in his portrait of the fat, selfish master,&mdash;yielding
+ enough, however, but for his grasping wife, who, with all her avarice and
+ greed, he yet confessed to be very handsome. By the wave of a hand he
+ housed them in a tropic residence, dim, cool, close shut, kept by servants
+ in white linen moving with mute slippered feet over stone floors; and by
+ another gesture he indicated the fierce thorny growths of the forest in
+ which he hunted those vivid insects,&mdash;the luxuriant savannas, the
+ gigantic ferns and palms, the hush and shining desolation, the presence of
+ the invisible fever and death. There was a touch, too, of inexpressible
+ sadness in his half-ignorant mention of the exiles at Cayenne, who were
+ forbidden the wide ocean of escape about them by those swift gunboats
+ keeping their coasts and swooping down upon every craft that left the
+ shore. He himself had seen one such capture, and he made me see it, and
+ the mortal despair of the fugitives, standing upright in their boat with
+ the idle oars in their unconscious hands, while the corvette swept toward
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all his misfortunes, he was not cast down. He had that lightness of
+ temper which seems proper to most northern Italians, whereas those from
+ the south are usually dark-mooded, sad-faced men. Nothing surpasses for
+ unstudied misanthropy of expression the visages of different Neapolitan
+ harpers who have visited us; but they have some right to their dejected
+ countenances as being of a yet half-civilized stock, and as real artists
+ and men of genius. Nearly all wandering violinists, as well as harpers,
+ are of their race, and they are of every age, from that of mere children
+ to men in their prime. They are very rarely old, as many of the
+ organ-grinders are; they are not so handsome as the Italians of the north,
+ though they have invariably fine eyes. They arrive in twos and threes; the
+ violinist briefly tunes his fiddle, and the harper unslings his
+ instrument, and, with faces of profound gloom, they go through their
+ repertory,&mdash;pieces from the great composers, airs from the opera, not
+ unmingled with such efforts of Anglo-Saxon genius as Champagne Charley and
+ Captain Jenks of the Horse Marines, which, like the language of
+ Shakespeare and Milton, hold us and our English cousins in tender bonds of
+ mutual affection. Beyond the fact that they come &ldquo;dal Basilicat',&rdquo;
+ or &ldquo;dal Principat',&rdquo; one gets very little out of these
+ Neapolitans, though I dare say they are not so surly at heart as they
+ look. Money does not brighten them to the eye, but yet it touches them,
+ and they are good in playing or leaving off to him that pays. Long time
+ two of them stood between the gateway firs on a pleasant summer's
+ afternoon and twanged and scraped their harmonious strings, till all the
+ idle boys of the neighborhood gathered about them, listening with a grave
+ and still delight. It was a most serious company: the Neapolitans, with
+ their cloudy brows, rapt in their music; and the Yankee children, with
+ their impassive faces, warily guarding against the faintest expression of
+ enjoyment; and when at last the minstrels played a brisk measure, and the
+ music began to work in the blood of the boys, and one of them shuffling
+ his reluctant feet upon the gravel, broke into a sudden and resistless
+ dance, the spectacle became too sad for contemplation. The boy danced only
+ from the hips down; no expression of his face gave the levity sanction,
+ nor did any of his comrades: they beheld him with a silent fascination,
+ but none was infected by the solemn indecorum; and when the legs and music
+ ceased their play together, no comment was made, and the dancer turned
+ unheated away. A chance passer asked for what he called the Gearybaldeye
+ Hymn, but the Neapolitans apparently did not know what this was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My doorstep acquaintance were not all of one race; now and then an alien
+ to the common Italian tribe appeared,&mdash;an Irish soldier, on his way
+ to Salem, and willing to show me more of his mutilation than I cared to
+ buy the sight of for twenty-five cents; and more rarely yet an American,
+ also formerly of the army, but with something besides his wretchedness to
+ sell. On the hottest day of last summer such a one rang the bell, and was
+ discovered on the threshold wiping with his poor sole hand the sweat that
+ stood upon his forehead. There was still enough of the independent citizen
+ in his maimed and emaciated person to inspire him with deliberation and a
+ show of that indifference with which we Americans like to encounter each
+ other; but his voice was rather faint when he asked if I supposed we
+ wanted any starch to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, certainly,&rdquo; answered what heart there was within, taking
+ note willfully, but I hope not wantonly, what an absurdly limp figure he
+ was for a peddler of starch,&mdash;&ldquo;certainly from you, brave
+ fellow;&rdquo; and the package being taken from his basket, the man turned
+ to go away, so very wearily, that a cheap philanthropy protested: &ldquo;For
+ shame! ask him to sit down in-doors and drink a glass of water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered the poor fellow, when this indignant voice had
+ been obeyed, and he had been taken at a disadvantage, and as it were
+ surprised into the confession, &ldquo;my family hadn't any breakfast
+ this morning, and I've got to hurry back to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haven't <i>you</i> had any breakfast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I wa'n't rightly hungry when I left the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, now,&rdquo; popped in the virtue before named, &ldquo;is an
+ opportunity to discharge the debt we all owe to the brave fellows who gave
+ us back our country. Make it beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was made beer and bread and cold meat, and, after a little pressing,
+ the honest soul consented to the refreshment. He sat down in a cool
+ doorway and began to eat and to tell of the fight before Vicksburg. And if
+ you have never seen a one-armed soldier making a meal, I can assure you
+ the sight is a pathetic one, and is rendered none the cheerfuller by his
+ memories of the fights that mutilated him. This man had no very
+ susceptible audience, but before he was carried off the field, shot
+ through the body, and in the arm and foot, he had sold every package of
+ starch in his basket. I am ashamed to say this now, for I suspect that a
+ man with one arm, who indulged himself in going about under that broiling
+ sun of July, peddling starch, was very probably an impostor. He computed a
+ good day's profits of seventy-five cents, and when asked if that was
+ not very little for the support of a sick wife and three children, he
+ answered with a quaint effort at impressiveness, and with a trick, as I
+ imagined, from the manner of the regimental chaplain, &ldquo;You've
+ done your duty, my friend, and more'n your duty. If every one did
+ their duty like that, we should get along.&rdquo; So he took leave, and
+ shambled out into the furnace-heat, the sun beating upon his pale face,
+ and his linen coat hugging him close, but with his basket lighter, and I
+ hope his heart also. At any rate, this was the sentiment which cheap
+ philanthropy offered in self-gratulation, as he passed out of sight:
+ &ldquo;There! you are quits with those maimed soldiers at last, and you
+ have a country which you have paid for with cold victuals as they with
+ blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have been a good deal visited by one disbanded volunteer, not to the
+ naked eye maimed, nor apparently suffering from any lingering illness, yet
+ who bears, as he tells me, a secret disabling wound in his side from a
+ spent shell, and who is certainly a prey to the most acute form of
+ shiftlessness. I do not recall with exactness the date of our
+ acquaintance, but it was one of those pleasant August afternoons when a
+ dinner eaten in peace fills the digester with a millennial tenderness for
+ the race too rarely felt in the nineteenth century. At such a moment it is
+ a more natural action to loosen than to tighten the purse-strings, and
+ when a very neatly dressed young man presented himself at the gate, and,
+ in a note of indescribable plaintiveness, asked if I had any little job
+ for him to do that he might pay for a night's lodging, I looked
+ about the small domain with a vague longing to find some part of it in
+ disrepair, and experienced a moment's absurd relief when he hinted
+ that he would be willing to accept fifty cents in pledge of future
+ service. Yet this was not the right principle: some work, real or
+ apparent, must be done for the money, and the veteran was told that he
+ might weed the strawberry bed, though, as matters then stood, it was clean
+ enough for a strawberry bed that never bore anything. The veteran was
+ neatly dressed, as I have said: his coat, which was good, was buttoned to
+ the throat for reasons that shall be sacred against curiosity, and he had
+ on a perfectly clean paper collar; he was a handsome young fellow, with
+ regular features, and a solicitously kept imperial and mustache; his hair,
+ when he lifted his hat, appeared elegantly oiled and brushed. I did not
+ hope from this figure that the work done would be worth the money paid,
+ and, as nearly as I can compute, the weeds he took from that bed cost me a
+ cent apiece, to say nothing of a cup of tea given him in grace at the end
+ of his labors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My acquaintance was, as the reader will be glad to learn, a native
+ American, though it is to be regretted, for the sake of facts which his
+ case went far to establish, that he was not a New-Englander by birth. The
+ most that could be claimed was, that he came to Boston from Delaware when
+ very young, and that there on that brine-washed granite he had grown as
+ perfect a flower of helplessness and indolence, as fine a fruit of
+ maturing civilization, as ever expanded or ripened in Latin lands. He
+ lived, not only a protest in flesh and blood against the tendency of
+ democracy to exclude mere beauty from our system, but a refutation of
+ those Old World observers, who deny to our vulgar and bustling communities
+ the refining and elevating grace of Repose. There was something very
+ curious and original in his character, from which the sentiment of shame
+ was absent, but which was not lacking in the fine instincts of personal
+ cleanliness, of dress, of style. There was nothing of the rowdy in him; he
+ was gentle as an Italian noble in his manners: what other traits they may
+ have had in common, I do not know; perhaps an amiable habit of illusion.
+ He was always going to bring me his discharge papers, but he never did,
+ though he came often and had many a pleasant night's sleep at my
+ cost. If sometimes he did a little work, he spent great part of the time
+ contracted to me in the kitchen, where it was understood, quite upon his
+ own agency, that his wages included board. At other times, he called for
+ money too late in the evening to work it out that day, and it has happened
+ that a new second girl, deceived by his genteel appearance in the
+ uncertain light, has shown him into the parlor, where I have found him to
+ his and my own great amusement, as the gentleman who wanted to see me.
+ Nothing else seemed to raise his ordinarily dejected spirits so much. We
+ all know how pleasant it is to laugh at people behind their backs; but
+ this veteran afforded me at a very low rate the luxury of a fellow-being
+ whom one might laugh at to his face as much as one liked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet with all his shamelessness, his pensiveness, his elegance, I felt that
+ somehow our national triumph was not complete in him,&mdash;that there
+ were yet more finished forms of self-abasement in the Old World, till one
+ day I looked out of the window and saw at a little distance my veteran
+ digging a cellar for an Irishman. I own that the spectacle gave me a shock
+ of pleasure, and that I ran down to have a nearer view of what human eyes
+ have seldom, if ever, beheld,&mdash;an American, pure blood, handling the
+ pick, the shovel, and the wheelbarrow, while an Irishman directed his
+ labors. Upon inspection, it appeared that none of the trees grew with
+ their roots in the air, in recognition of this great reversal of the
+ natural law; all the French-roof houses stood right side up. The
+ phenomenon may become more common in future, unless the American race
+ accomplishes its destiny of dying out before the more populatory
+ foreigner, but as yet it graced the veteran with an exquisite and signal
+ distinction. He, however, seemed to feel unpleasantly the anomaly of his
+ case, and opened the conversation by saying that he should not work at
+ that job to-morrow, it hurt his side; and went on to complain of the
+ inhumanity of Americans to Americans. &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;they'd
+ rather give out their jobs to a nigger than to one of their own kind. I
+ was beatin' carpets for a gentleman on the Avenue, and the first
+ thing I know he give most of 'em to a nigger. I beat seven of
+ 'em in one day, and got two dollars; and the nigger beat 'em
+ by the piece, and he got a dollar an' a half apiece. My luck!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Irishman glanced at his hireling, and the rueful veteran hastened
+ to pile up another wheelbarrow with earth. If ever we come to reverse
+ positions generally with our Irish brethren, there is no doubt but they
+ will get more work out of us than we do from them at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shortly after this that the veteran offered to do second girl's
+ work in my house if I would take him. The place was not vacant; and as the
+ summer was now drawing to a close, and I feared to be left with him on my
+ hands for the winter, it seemed well to speak to him upon the subject of
+ economy. The next time he called, I had not about me the exact sum for a
+ night's lodging,&mdash;fifty cents, namely&mdash;and asked him if he
+ thought a dollar would do He smiled sadly, as if he did not like jesting
+ upon such a very serious subject, but said he allowed to work it out, and
+ took it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, I hope you won't think I am interfering with your
+ affairs,&rdquo; said his benefactor, &ldquo;but I really think you are a
+ very poor financier. According to your own account, you have been going on
+ from year to year for a long time, trusting to luck for a night's
+ lodging. Sometimes I suppose you have to sleep out-of-doors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, never!&rdquo; answered the veteran, with something like scorn.
+ &ldquo;I never sleep out-doors. I wouldn't do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, at any rate, some one has to pay for your lodging. Don't
+ you think you'd come cheaper to your friends, if, instead of going
+ to a hotel every night, you'd take a room somewhere, and pay for it
+ by the month?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've thought of that. If I could get a good bed, I'd
+ try it awhile anyhow. You see the hotels have raised. I used to get a
+ lodgin' and a nice breakfast for a half a dollar, but now it is as
+ much as you can do to get a lodgin' for the money, and it's
+ just as dear in the Port as it is in the city. I've tried hotels
+ pretty much everywhere, and one's about as bad as another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he had been a travelled Englishman writing a book, he could not have
+ spoken of hotels with greater disdain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, the trouble with me is, I ain't got any relations
+ around here. Now,&rdquo; he added, with the life and eagerness of an
+ inspiration, &ldquo;if I had a mother and sister livin' down at the
+ Port, say, I wouldn't go hunting about for these mean little jobs
+ everywheres. I'd just lay round home, and wait till something come
+ up big. What I want is a home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the instigation of a malignant spirit I asked the homeless orphan,
+ &ldquo;Why don't you get married, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave me another smile, sadder, fainter, sweeter than before, and said:
+ &ldquo;When would you like to see me again, so I could work out this
+ dollar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden and unreasonable disgust for the character which had given me so
+ much entertainment succeeded to my past delight. I felt, moreover, that I
+ had bought the right to use some frankness with the veteran, and I said to
+ him: &ldquo;Do you know now, I shouldn't care if I <i>never</i> saw
+ you again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can only conjecture that he took the confidence in good part, for he did
+ not appear again after that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A PEDESTRIAN TOUR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Walking for walking's sake I do not like. The diversion appears to
+ me one of the most factitious of modern enjoyments; and I cannot help
+ looking upon those who pace their five miles in the teeth of a north wind,
+ and profess to come home all the livelier and better for it, as guilty of
+ a venial hypocrisy. It is in nature that after such an exercise the bones
+ should ache and the flesh tremble; and I suspect that these harmless
+ pretenders are all the while paying a secret penalty for their bravado.
+ With a pleasant end in view, or with cheerful companionship, walking is
+ far from being the worst thing in life; though doubtless a truly candid
+ person must confess that he would rather ride under the same
+ circumstances. Yet it is certain that some sort of recreation is necessary
+ after a day spent within doors; and one is really obliged nowadays to take
+ a little walk instead of medicine; for one's doctor is sure to have
+ a mania on the subject, and there is no more getting pills or powders out
+ of him for a slight indigestion than if they had all been shot away at the
+ rebels during the war. For this reason I sometimes go upon a pedestrian
+ tour, which is of no great extent in itself, and which I moreover modify
+ by keeping always within sound of the horse-car bells, or easy reach of
+ some steam-car station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I fear that I should find these rambles dull, but that their utter lack of
+ interest amuses me. I will be honest with the reader, though, and any
+ Master Pliable is free to forsake me at this point; for I cannot promise
+ to be really livelier than my walk. There is a Slough of Despond in full
+ view, and not a Delectable Mountain to be seen, unless you choose so to
+ call the high lands about Waltham, which we shall behold dark blue against
+ the western sky presently. As I sally forth upon Benicia Street, the whole
+ suburb of Charlesbridge stretches about me,&mdash;a vast space upon which
+ I can embroider any fancy I like as I saunter along. I have no
+ associations with it, or memories of it, and, at some seasons, I might
+ wander for days in the most frequented parts of it, and meet hardly any
+ one I know. It is not, however, to these parts that I commonly turn, but
+ northward, up a street upon which a flight of French-roof houses suddenly
+ settled a year or two since, with families in them, and many outward signs
+ of permanence, though their precipitate arrival might cast some doubt upon
+ this. I have to admire their uniform neatness and prettiness, and I look
+ at their dormer-windows with the envy of one to whose weak sentimentality
+ dormer-windows long appeared the supreme architectural happiness. But, for
+ all my admiration of the houses, I find a variety that is pleasanter in
+ the landscape, when I reach, beyond them, a little bridge which appears to
+ span a small stream. It unites banks lined with a growth of trees and
+ briers nodding their heads above the neighboring levels, and suggesting a
+ quiet water-course, though in fact it is the Fitchburg Railroad that purls
+ between them, with rippling freight and passenger trains and ever-gurgling
+ locomotives. The banks take the earliest green of spring upon their
+ southward slope, and on a Sunday morning of May, when the bells are
+ lamenting the Sabbaths of the past, I find their sunny tranquillity
+ sufficient to give me a slight heart-ache for I know not what. If I
+ descend them and follow the railroad westward half a mile, I come to vast
+ brick-yards, which are not in themselves exciting to the imagination, and
+ which yet, from an irresistible association of ideas, remind me of Egypt,
+ and are forever newly forsaken of those who made bricks without straw; so
+ that I have no trouble in erecting temples and dynastic tombs out of the
+ kilns; while the mills for grinding the clay serve me very well for those
+ sad-voiced <i>sakias</i> or wheel-pumps which the Howadji Curtis heard
+ wailing at their work of drawing water from the Nile. A little farther on
+ I come to the boarding-house built at the railroad side for the French
+ Canadians who have by this time succeeded the Hebrews in the toil of the
+ brick-yards, and who, as they loiter in windy-voiced, good-humored groups
+ about the doors of their lodgings, insist upon bringing before me the town
+ of St. Michel at the mouth of the great Mont Cenis tunnel, where so many
+ peasant folk like them are always amiably quarreling before the <i>cabarets</i>
+ when the diligence comes and goes. Somewhere, there must be a gendarme
+ with a cocked hat and a sword on, standing with folded arms to represent
+ the Empire and Peace among that rural population; if I looked in-doors, I
+ am sure I should see the neatest of landladies and landladies'
+ daughters and nieces in high black silk caps, bearing hither and thither
+ smoking bowls of <i>bouillon</i> and <i>café-au-lait</i>. Well, it takes
+ as little to make one happy as miserable, thank Heaven! and I derive a
+ cheerfulness from this scene which quite atones to me for the fleeting
+ desolation suffered from the sunny verdure on the railroad bank. With
+ repaired spirits I take my way up through the brick-yards towards the
+ Irish settlement on the north, passing under the long sheds that shelter
+ the kilns. The ashes lie cold about the mouths of most, and the bricks are
+ burnt to the proper complexion; in others these are freshly arranged over
+ flues in which the fire has not been kindled; but in whatever state I see
+ them, I am reminded of brick-kilns of boyhood. They were then such palaces
+ of enchantment as any architect should now vainly attempt to rival with
+ bricks upon the most desirable corner lot of the Back Bay, and were the
+ homes of men truly to be envied: men privileged to stay up all night; to
+ sleep, as it were, out of doors; to hear the wild geese as they flew over
+ in the darkness; to be waking in time to shoot the early ducks that
+ visited the neighboring ponds; to roast corn upon the ends of sticks; to
+ tell and to listen to stories that never ended, save in some sudden
+ impulse to rise and dance a happy hoe-down in the ruddy light of the
+ kiln-fires. If by day they were seen to have the redness of eyes of men
+ that looked upon the whiskey when it was yellow and gave its color in the
+ flask; if now and then the fragments of a broken bottle strewed the scene
+ of their vigils, and a head broken to match appeared among those good
+ comrades, the boyish imagination was not shocked by these things, but
+ accepted them merely as the symbols of a free virile life. Some such life
+ no doubt is still to be found in the Dublin to which I am come by the time
+ my repertory of associations with brick-kilns is exhausted, but, oddly
+ enough, I no longer care to encounter it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perhaps in a pious recognition of our mortality that Dublin is built
+ around the Irish grave-yard. Most of its windows look out upon the
+ sepulchral monuments and the pretty constant arrival of the funeral trains
+ with their long lines of carriages bringing to the celebration of the sad
+ ultimate rites those gay companies of Irish mourners. I suppose that the
+ spectacle of such obsequies is not at all depressing to the inhabitants of
+ Dublin; but that, on the contrary, it must beget in them a feeling which,
+ if not resignation to death, is, at least, a sort of sub-acute
+ cheerfulness in his presence. None but a Dubliner, however, would have
+ been greatly animated by a scene which I witnessed during a stroll through
+ this cemetery one afternoon of early spring. The fact that a marble slab
+ or shaft more or less sculptured, and inscribed with words more or less
+ helpless, is the utmost that we can give to one whom once we could caress
+ with every tenderness of speech and touch, and that, after all, the
+ memorial we raise is rather to our own grief, and is a decency, a mere
+ conventionality,&mdash;this is a dreadful fact on which the heart breaks
+ itself with such a pang, that it always seems a desolation never
+ recognized, an anguish never felt before. Whilst I stood revolving this
+ thought in my mind, and reading the Irish names upon the stones and the
+ black head-boards,&mdash;the latter adorned with pictures of angels, once
+ gilt, but now weather-worn down to the yellow paint,&mdash;a wail of
+ intolerable pathos filled the air: &ldquo;O my darling, O my darling! O&mdash;O&mdash;O!&rdquo;
+ with sobs and groans and sighs; and, looking about, I saw two women, one
+ standing upright beside another that had cast herself upon a grave, and
+ lay clasping it with her comfortless arms, uttering these cries. The grave
+ was a year old at least, but the grief seemed of yesterday or of that
+ morning. At times the friend that stood beside the prostrate woman stooped
+ and spoke a soothing word to her, while she wailed out her woe; and in the
+ midst some little ribald Irish boys came scuffling and quarreling up the
+ pathway, singing snatches of an obscene song; and when both the wailing
+ and the singing had died away, an old woman, decently clad, and with her
+ many-wrinkled face softened by the old-fashioned frill running round the
+ inside of her cap, dropped down upon her knees beside a very old grave,
+ and clasped her hands in a silent prayer above it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/2000.jpg" alt="2000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/2000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ If I had beheld all this in some village <i>campo santo</i> in Italy, I
+ should have been much more vividly impressed by it, as an aesthetical
+ observer; whereas I was now merely touched as a human being, and had
+ little desire to turn the scene to literary account. I could not help
+ feeling that it wanted the atmosphere of sentimental association, the
+ whole background was a blank or worse than a blank. Yet I have not been
+ able to hide from myself so much as I would like certain points of
+ resemblance between our Irish and the poorer classes of Italians. The
+ likeness is one of the first things that strikes an American in Italy, and
+ I am always reminded of it in Dublin. So much of the local life appears
+ upon the street; there is so much gossip from house to house, and the talk
+ is always such a resonant clamoring; the women, bareheaded, or with a
+ shawl folded over the head and caught beneath the chin with the hand, have
+ such a contented down-at-heel aspect, shuffling from door to door, or
+ lounging, arms akimbo, among the cats and poultry at their own thresholds,
+ that one beholding it all might well fancy himself upon some Italian <i>calle</i>
+ or <i>vicolo</i>. Of course the illusion does not hold good on a Sunday,
+ when the Dubliners are coming home from church in their best,&mdash;their
+ extraordinary best bonnets and their prodigious silk hats. It does not
+ hold good in any way or at any time, except upon the surface, for there is
+ beneath all this resemblance the difference that must exist between a race
+ immemorially civilized and one which has lately emerged from barbarism
+ &ldquo;after six centuries of oppression.&rdquo; You are likely to find a
+ polite pagan under the mask of the modern Italian you feel pretty sure
+ that any of his race would with a little washing and skillful
+ manipulation, <i>restore</i>, like a neglected painting, into something
+ genuinely graceful and pleasing; but if one of these Yankeefied Celts were
+ scraped, it is but too possible that you might find a kern, a Whiteboy, or
+ a Pikeman. The chance of discovering a scholar or a saint of the period
+ when Ireland was the centre of learning, and the favorite seat of the
+ Church, is scarcely one in three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the houses fronting on the main street of Dublin, every other one&mdash;I
+ speak in all moderation&mdash;is a grocery, if I may judge by a tin case
+ of corn-balls, a jar of candy, and a card of shirt-buttons, with an under
+ layer of primers and ballads, in the windows. You descend from the street
+ by several steps into these haunts, which are contrived to secure the
+ greatest possible dampness and darkness; and if you have made an errand
+ inside, you doubtless find a lady before the counter in the act of putting
+ down a guilty-looking tumbler with one hand, while she neatly wipes her
+ mouth on the back of the other. She has that effect, observable in all
+ tippling women of low degree, of having no upper garment on but a shawl,
+ which hangs about her in statuesque folds and lines. She slinks out
+ directly, but the lady behind the counter gives you good evening with
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The affectation of a bright-eyed ease,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ intended to deceive if you chance to be a State constable in disguise, and
+ to propitiate if you are a veritable customer: &ldquo;Who was that woman,
+ lamenting so, over in the grave-yard?&rdquo; &ldquo;O, I don't know,
+ sir,&rdquo; answered the lady, making change for the price of a ballad.
+ &ldquo;Some Irish folks. They ginerally cries that way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In yet earlier spring walks through Dublin, I found a depth of mud
+ appalling even to one who had lived three years in Charlesbridge. The
+ streets were passable only to pedestrians skilled in shifting themselves
+ along the sides of fences and alert to take advantage of every projecting
+ doorstep. There were no dry places, except in front of the groceries,
+ where the ground was beaten hard by the broad feet of loafing geese and
+ the coming and going of admirably small children making purchases there.
+ The number of the little ones was quite as remarkable as their size, and
+ ought to have been even more interesting, if, as sometimes appears
+ probable, such increase shall&mdash;together with the well-known ambition
+ of Dubliners to rule the land&mdash;one day make an end of us poor Yankees
+ as a dominant plurality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town was somewhat tainted with our architectural respectability,
+ unless the newness of some of the buildings gave illusion of this; and,
+ though the streets of Dublin were not at all cared for, and though every
+ house on the main thoroughfare stood upon the brink of a slough, without
+ yard, or any attempt at garden or shrubbery, there were many cottages in
+ the less aristocratic quarters inclosed in palings, and embowered in the
+ usual suburban pear-trees and currant-bushes. These, indeed, were
+ dwellings of an elder sort, and had clearly been inherited from a
+ population now as extinct in that region as the Pequots, and they were not
+ always carefully cherished. On the border of the hamlet is to be seen an
+ old farm-house of the poorer sort, built about the beginning of this
+ century, and now thickly peopled by Dubliners. Its gate is thrown down,
+ and the great wild-grown lilac hedge, no longer protected by a fence,
+ shows skirts bedabbled by the familiarity of lawless poultry, as little
+ like the steady-habited poultry of other times, as the people of the house
+ are like the former inmates, long since dead or gone West. I offer the
+ poor place a sentiment of regret as I pass, thinking of its better days. I
+ think of its decorous, hard-working, cleanly, school-going,
+ church-attending life, which was full of the pleasure of duty done, and
+ was not without its own quaint beauty and grace. What long Sabbaths were
+ kept in that old house, what scanty holidays! Yet from this and such as
+ this came the dominion of the whole wild continent, the freedom of a race,
+ the greatness of the greatest people. It may be that I regretted a little
+ too exultantly, and that out of this particular house came only peddling
+ of innumerable clocks and multitudinous tin-ware. But as yet, it is pretty
+ certain that the general character of the population has not gained by the
+ change. What is in the future, let the prophets say; any one can see that
+ something not quite agreeable is in the present; something that takes the
+ wrong side, as by instinct, in politics; something that mainly helps to
+ prop up tottering priestcraft among us; something that one thinks of with
+ dismay as destined to control so largely the civil and religious interests
+ of the country. This, however, is only the aggregate aspect. Mrs.
+ Clannahan's kitchen, as it may be seen by the desperate philosopher
+ when he goes to engage her for the spring house-cleaning, is a strong
+ argument against his fears. If Mrs. Clannahan, lately of an Irish cabin,
+ can show a kitchen so capably appointed and so neatly kept as that, the
+ country may yet be an inch or two from the brink of ruin, and the race
+ which we trust as little as we love may turn out no more spendthrift than
+ most heirs. It is encouraging, moreover, when any people can flatter
+ themselves upon a superior prosperity and virtue, and we may take heart
+ from the fact that the French Canadians, many of whom have lodgings in
+ Dublin, are not well seen by the higher classes of the citizens there.
+ Mrs. Clannahan, whose house stands over against the main gate of the
+ grave-yard, and who may, therefore, be considered as moving in the best
+ Dublin society, hints, that though good Catholics, the French are not
+ thought perfectly honest,&mdash;&ldquo;things have been missed&rdquo;
+ since they came to blight with their crimes and vices the once happy seat
+ of integrity. It is amusing to find Dublin fearful of the encroachment of
+ the French, as we, in our turn, dread the advance of the Irish. We must
+ make a jest of our own alarms, and even smile&mdash;since we cannot help
+ ourselves&mdash;at the spiritual desolation occasioned by the settlement
+ of an Irish family in one of our suburban neighborhoods. The householders
+ view with fear and jealousy the erection of any dwelling of less than a
+ stated cost, as portending a possible advent of Irish; and when the
+ calamitous race actually appears, a mortal pang strikes to the bottom of
+ every pocket. Values tremble throughout that neighborhood, to which the
+ new-comers communicate a species of moral dry-rot. None but the Irish will
+ build near the Irish; and the infection of fear spreads to the elder
+ Yankee homes about, and the owners prepare to abandon them,&mdash;not
+ always, however, let us hope, without turning, at the expense of the
+ invaders, a Parthian penny in their flight. In my walk from Dublin to
+ North Charlesbridge, I saw more than one token of the encroachment of the
+ Celtic army, which had here and there invested a Yankee house with
+ besieging shanties on every side, and thus given to its essential and
+ otherwise quite hopeless ugliness a touch of the poetry that attends
+ failing fortunes, and hallows decayed gentility of however poor a sort
+ originally. The fortunes of such a house are, of course, not to be
+ retrieved. Where the Celt sets his foot, there the Yankee (and it is
+ perhaps wholesome if not agreeable to know that the Irish citizen whom we
+ do not always honor as our equal in civilization loves to speak of us
+ scornfully as Yankees) rarely, if ever, returns. The place remains to the
+ intruder and his heirs forever. We gracefully retire before him even in
+ politics, as the metropolis&mdash;if it is the metropolis&mdash;can
+ witness; and we wait with an anxious curiosity the encounter of the Irish
+ and the Chinese, now rapidly approaching each other from opposite shores
+ of the continent. Shall we be crushed in the collision of these superior
+ races? Every intelligence-office will soon be ringing with the cries of
+ combat, and all our kitchens strewn with pig-tails and bark chignons. As
+ yet we have gay hopes of our Buddhistic brethren; but how will it be when
+ they begin to quarter the Dragon upon the Stars and Stripes, and buy up
+ all the best sites for temples, and burn their joss-sticks, as it were,
+ under our very noses? Our grasp upon the great problem grows a little lax,
+ perhaps? Is it true that, when we look so anxiously for help from others,
+ the virtue has gone out of ourselves? I should hope not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I leave Dublin, the houses grow larger and handsomer; and as I draw
+ near the Avenue, the Mansard-roofs look down upon me with their
+ dormer-windows, and welcome me back to the American community. There are
+ fences about all the houses, inclosing ampler and ampler dooryards; the
+ children, which had swarmed in the thriftless and unenlightened purlieus
+ of Dublin, diminish in number and finally disappear; the chickens have
+ vanished; and I hear&mdash;I hear the pensive music of the horse-car
+ bells, which in some alien land, I am sure, would be as pathetic to me as
+ the Ranz des Vaches to the Swiss or the bagpipes to the Highlander: in the
+ desert, where the traveller seems to hear the familiar bells of his
+ far-off church, this tinkle would haunt the absolute silence, and recall
+ the exile's fancy to Charlesbridge; and perhaps in the mocking
+ mirage he would behold an airy horse-car track, and a phantasmagoric
+ horse-car moving slowly along the edge of the horizon, with spectral
+ passengers closely packed inside and overflowing either platform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before I reach the Avenue, Dublin calls to me yet again, in the figure
+ of an old, old man, wearing the clothes of other times, and a sort of
+ ancestral round hat. In the act of striking a match he asks me the time of
+ day, and, applying the fire to his pipe, he returns me his thanks in a
+ volume of words and smoke. What a wrinkled and unshorn old man! Can age
+ and neglect do so much for any of us? This ruinous person was associated
+ with a hand-cart as decrepit as himself, but not nearly so cheerful; for
+ though he spoke up briskly with a spirit uttered from far within the
+ wrinkles and the stubble, the cart had preceded him with a very lugubrious
+ creak. It groaned, in fact, under a load of tin cans, and I was to learn
+ from the old man that there was, and had been, in his person, for thirteen
+ years, such a thing in the world as a peddler of buttermilk, and that
+ these cans were now filled with that pleasant drink. They did not invite
+ me to prove their contents, being cans that apparently passed their vacant
+ moments in stables and even manure-heaps, and that looked somehow emulous
+ of that old man's stubble and wrinkles. I bought nothing, but I left
+ the old peddler well content, seated upon a thill of his cart, smoking
+ tranquilly, and filling the keen spring evening air with fumes which it
+ dispersed abroad, and made to itself a pleasant incense of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left him a whole epoch behind, as I entered the Avenue and lounged
+ homeward along the stately street. Above the station it is far more
+ picturesque than it is below, and the magnificent elms that shadow it
+ might well have looked, in their saplinghood, upon the British straggling
+ down the country road from the Concord fight; and there are some ancient
+ houses yet standing that must have been filled with exultation at the same
+ spectacle. Poor old revolutionaries! they would never have believed that
+ their descendants would come to love the English as we do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The season has advanced rapidly during my progress from Dublin to the
+ Avenue; and by the time I reach the famous old tavern, not far from the
+ station, it is a Sunday morning of early summer, and the yellow sunlight
+ falls upon a body of good comrades who are grooming a marvelous number of
+ piebald steeds about the stable-doors. By token of these beasts&mdash;which
+ always look so much more like works of art than of nature&mdash;I know
+ that there is to be a circus somewhere very soon; and the gay bills pasted
+ all over the stable-front tell me that there are to be two performances at
+ the Port on the morrow. The grooms talk nothing and joke nothing but horse
+ at their labor; and their life seems such a low, ignorant, happy life,
+ that the secret nomad lurking in every respectable and stationary
+ personality stirs within me and struggles to strike hands of fellowship
+ with them. They lead a sort of pastoral existence in our age of railroads;
+ they wander over the continent with their great caravan, and everywhere
+ pursue the summer from South to North and from North to South again; in
+ the mild forenoons they groom their herds, and in the afternoons they doze
+ under their wagons, indifferent to the tumult of the crowd within and
+ without the mighty canvas near them,&mdash;doze face downwards on the
+ bruised, sweet-smelling grass; and in the starry midnight rise and strike
+ their tents, and set forth again over the still country roads, to take the
+ next village on the morrow with the blaze and splendor of their &ldquo;Grand
+ Entree.&rdquo; The triumphal chariot in which the musicians are borne at
+ the head of the procession is composed, as I perceive by the bills, of
+ four colossal gilt swans, set tail to tail, with lifted wings and curving
+ necks; but the chariot, as I behold it beside the stable, is mysteriously
+ draped in white canvas, through which its gilding glitters only here and
+ there. And does it move thus shrouded in the company's wanderings
+ from place to place, and is the precious spottiness of the piebalds then
+ hidden under envious drapery? O happy grooms,&mdash;not clean as to
+ shirts, nor especially neat in your conversation, but displaying a Wealth
+ of art in India-ink upon your manly chests and the swelling muscles of
+ your arms, and speaking in every movement your freedom from all
+ conventional gyves and shackles, <i>&ldquo;seid umschlungen!&rdquo;</i>&mdash;in
+ spirit; for the rest, you are rather too damp, and seem to have applied
+ your sudsy sponges too impartially to your own trousers and the horses'
+ legs to receive an actual embrace from a <i>dilettante</i> vagabond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old tavern is old only comparatively; but in our new and changeful
+ life it is already quaint. It is very long, and low-studded in either
+ story, with a row of windows in the roof, and a great porch, furnished
+ with benches, running the whole length of the ground-floor. Perhaps
+ because they take the dust of the street too freely, or because the guests
+ find it more social and comfortable to gather in-doors in the wide,
+ low-ceiled office, the benches are not worn, nor particularly whittled.
+ The room has the desolate air characteristic of offices which have once
+ been bar-rooms; but no doubt, on a winter's night, there is talk
+ worth listening to there, of flocks, and herds and horse-trades, from the
+ drovers and cattle-market men who patronize the tavern; and the artistic
+ temperament, at least, could feel no regret if that sepulchrally penitent
+ bar-room then developed a secret capacity for the wickedness that once
+ boldly glittered behind the counter in rows of decanters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house was formerly renowned for its suppers, of which all that was
+ learned or gifted in the old college town of Charlesbridge used to
+ partake; and I have heard lips which breathe the loftiest song and the
+ sweetest humor&mdash;let alone being &ldquo;dewy with the Greek of Plato&rdquo;&mdash;smacked
+ regretfully over the memory of those suppers' roast and broiled. No
+ such suppers, they say, are cooked in the world any more; and I am somehow
+ made to feel that their passing away is connected with the decay of good
+ literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hope it may be very long before the predestined French-roof villa
+ occupies the tavern's site, and turns into lawns and gardens its
+ wide-spreading cattle-pens, and removes the great barn that now shows its
+ broad, low gable to the street. This is yet older and quainter-looking
+ than the tavern itself; it is mighty capacious, and gives a still
+ profounder impression of vastness with its shed, of which the roof slopes
+ southward down almost to a man's height from the ground, and
+ shelters a row of mangers, running back half the length of the stable, and
+ serving in former times for the baiting of such beasts as could not be
+ provided for within. But the halcyon days of the cattle-market are past
+ (though you may still see the white horns tossing above the fences of the
+ pens, when a newly arrived herd lands from the train to be driven afoot to
+ Brighton), and the place looks now so empty and forsaken, spite of the
+ circus baggage-wagons, that it were hard to believe these mangers could
+ ever have been in request, but for the fact that they are all gnawed, down
+ to the quick as it were, by generations of horses&mdash;vanished forever
+ on the deserted highways of the past&mdash;impatient for their oats or
+ hungering for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day must come, of course, when the mangers will all be taken from the
+ stable-shed, and exposed for sale at that wonderful second-hand shop which
+ stands over against the tavern. I am no more surprised than one in a
+ dream, to find it a week-day afternoon by the time I have crossed thither
+ from the circus-men grooming their piebalds. It is an enchanted place to
+ me, and I am a frequent and unprofitable customer there, buying only just
+ enough to make good my footing with the custodian of its marvels, who is,
+ of course, too true an American to show any desire to sell. Without, on
+ either side of the doorway, I am pretty sure to find, among other articles
+ of furniture, a mahogany and hair-cloth sofa, a family portrait, a
+ landscape painting, a bath-tub, and a flower-stand, with now and then the
+ variety of a boat and a dog-house; while under an adjoining shed is heaped
+ a mass of miscellaneous movables, of a heavier sort, and fearlessly left
+ there night and day, being on all accounts undesirable to steal. The door
+ of the shop rings a bell in opening, and ushers the customer into a room
+ which Chaos herself might have planned in one of her happier moments.
+ Carpets, blankets, shawls, pictures, mirrors, rocking-chairs, and blue
+ overalls hang from the ceiling, and devious pathways wind amidst piles of
+ ready-made clothing, show-cases filled with every sort of knick-knack and
+ half hidden under heaps of hats and boots and shoes, bookcases,
+ secretaries, chests of drawers, mattresses, lounges, and bedsteads, to the
+ stairway of a loft similarly appointed, and to a back room overflowing
+ with glassware and crockery. These things are not all second-hand, but
+ they are all old and equally pathetic. The melancholy of ruinous auction
+ sales, of changing tastes or changing fashions, clings to them, whether
+ they are things that have never had a home and have been on sale ever
+ since they were made, or things that have been associated with every phase
+ of human life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other objects, certain large glass vases, ornamented by the polite
+ art of potichomanie, have long appealed to my fancy, wherein they
+ capriciously allied themselves to the history of aging single women in
+ lonely New England village houses,&mdash;pathetic sisters lingering upon
+ the neutral ground between the faded hopes of marriage and the yet unrisen
+ prospects of consumption. The work implies an imperfect yet real love of
+ beauty, the leisure for it a degree of pecuniary ease: the thoughts of the
+ sisters rise above the pickling and preserving that occupied their
+ heartier and happier mother; they are in fact in that aesthetic, social,
+ and intellectual mean, in which single women are thought soonest to wither
+ and decline. With a little more power, and in our later era, they would be
+ writing stories full of ambitious, unintelligible, self-devoted and sudden
+ collapsing young girls and amazing doctors; but as they are, and in their
+ time, they must do what they can. A sentimentalist may discern on these
+ vases not only the gay designs with which they ornamented them, but their
+ own dim faces looking wan from the windows of some huge old homestead, a
+ world too wide for the shrunken family. All April long the door-yard trees
+ crouch and shudder in the sour east, all June they rain canker-worms upon
+ the roof, and then in autumn choke the eaves with a fall of tattered and
+ hectic foliage. From the window the fading sisters gaze upon the unnatural
+ liveliness of the summer streets through which the summer boarders are
+ driving, or upon the death-white drifts of the intolerable winter. Their
+ father, the captain, is dead; he died with the Calcutta trade, having
+ survived their mother, and left them a hopeless competency and yonder
+ bamboo chairs; their only brother is in California; one, though she loved,
+ had never a lover; her sister's betrothed married West, whither he
+ went to make a home for her,&mdash;and ah! is it vases for the desolate
+ parlor mantel they decorate, or funeral urns? And when in time, they being
+ gone, the Californian brother sends to sell out at auction the old place
+ with the household and kitchen furniture, is it withered rose-leaves or
+ ashes that the purchaser finds in these jars?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are empty now; and I wonder how came they here? How came the
+ show-case of Dr. Merrifield, Surgeon-Chiropodist here? How came here yon
+ Italian painting?&mdash;a poor, silly, little affected Madonna, simpering
+ at me from her dingy gilt frame till I buy her, a great bargain, at a
+ dollar. From what country church or family oratory, in what revolution, or
+ stress of private fortunes,&mdash;then from what various cabinets of
+ antiquities, in what dear Vicenza, or Ferrara, or Mantua, earnest thou, O
+ Madonna? Whose likeness are you, poor girl, with your everyday prettiness
+ of brows and chin, and your Raphaelesque crick in the neck? I think I know
+ a part of your story. You were once the property of that ruined advocate,
+ whose sensibilities would sometimes consent that a <i>valet de place</i>
+ of uncommon delicacy should bring to his ancestral palace some singularly
+ meritorious foreigner desirous of purchasing from his rare collection,&mdash;a
+ collection of rubbish scarcely to be equaled elsewhere in Italy. You hung
+ in that family-room, reached after passage through stately vestibules and
+ grand stairways; and O, I would be cheated to the bone, if only I might
+ look out again from some such windows as were there, upon some such damp,
+ mouldy, broken-statued, ruinous, enchanted garden as lay below! In that
+ room sat the advocate's mother and hunchback sister, with their
+ smoky <i>scaldini</i> and their snuffy priest; and there the wife of the
+ foreigner, self-elected the taste of his party, inflicted the pang courted
+ by the advocate, and asked if you were for sale. And then the ruined
+ advocate clasped his hands, rubbed them, set his head heart-brokenly on
+ one side, took you down, heaved a sigh, shrugged his shoulders, and sold
+ you&mdash;you! a family heirloom! Well, at least you are old, and you
+ represent to me acres of dim, religious canvas in that beloved land; and
+ here is the dollar now asked for you: I could not have bought you for so
+ little at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Madonna is neighbored by several paintings, if the kind called Grecian
+ for a reason never revealed by the inventor of an art as old as
+ potichomanie itself. It was an art by which ordinary lithographs were
+ given a ghastly transparency, and a tone as disagreeable as chromos; and I
+ doubt if it could have been known to the Greeks in their best age. But I
+ remember very well when it passed over whole neighborhoods in some parts
+ of this country, wasting the time of many young women, and disfiguring
+ parlor walls with the fruit of their accomplishment. It was always taught
+ by Professors, a class of learned young men who acquired their title by
+ abandoning the plough and anvil, and, in a suit of ready-made clothing,
+ travelling about the country with portfolios under their arms. It was an
+ experience to make loafers for life of them: and I fancy the girls who
+ learnt their art never afterwards made so good butter and cheese.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Non-ragioniam di lor, ma guarda e passa.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Grecian paintings there are some mezzotints; full length
+ pictures of presidents and statesmen, chiefly General Jackson, Henry Clay,
+ and Daniel Webster, which have hung their day in the offices or parlors of
+ country politicians. They are all statesmanlike and presidential in
+ attitude; and I know that if the mighty Webster's lips had language,
+ he would take his hand out of his waistcoat front, and say to his fellow
+ mezzotints: &ldquo;Venerable men! you have come down to us from a former
+ generation, bringing your household furniture and miscellaneous trumpery
+ of all kinds with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some old-fashioned entry lanterns divide my interest with certain old
+ willow chairs of an hour-glass pattern, which never stood upright,
+ probably, and have now all a confirmed droop to one side, as from having
+ been fallen heavily asleep in, upon breezy porches, of hot summer
+ afternoons. In the windows are small vases of alabaster, fly-specked
+ Parian and plaster figures, and dolls with stiff wooden limbs and
+ papier-maché heads, a sort of dolls no longer to be bought in these days
+ of modish, blue-eyed blondes of biscuit and sturdy india-rubber brunettes.
+ The show-case is full of an incredible variety, as photograph albums,
+ fishing-hooks, socks, suspenders, steel pens, cutlery of all sorts, and
+ curious old colored prints of Adelaide, and Kate, and Ellen. A
+ rocking-horse is stabled near amid pendent lengths of second-hand
+ carpeting, hat-racks, and mirrors; and standing cheek-by-jowl with painted
+ washstands and bureaus are some plaster statues, aptly colored and
+ varnished to represent bronze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing here but has a marked character of its own, some distinct
+ yet intangible trait acquired from former circumstances; and doubtless all
+ these things have that lurking likeness to former owners which clothes and
+ furniture are apt to take on from long association, and which we should
+ instantly recognize could they be confronted with their late proprietors.
+ It seems, in very imaginative moments, as if the strange assemblage of
+ incongruities must have a consciousness of these latent resemblances,
+ which the individual pieces betray when their present keeper turns the key
+ upon them, and abandons them to themselves at night; and I have sometimes
+ fancied such an effect in the late twilight, when I have wandered into
+ their resting-place, and have beheld them in the unnatural glare of a
+ kerosene lamp burning before a brightly polished reflector, and casting
+ every manner of grotesque shadow upon the floor and walls. But this may
+ have been an illusion; at any rate I am satisfied that the bargain-driving
+ capacity of the storekeeper is not in the least affected by a weird
+ quality in his wares; though they have not failed to impart to him
+ something of their own desultory character. He sometimes leaves a neighbor
+ in charge when he goes to meals, and then, if I enter, I am watchfully
+ followed about from corner to corner, and from room to room, lest I pocket
+ a mattress or slip a book-case under my coat. The storekeeper himself
+ never watches me; perhaps he knows that it is a purely professional
+ interest I take in the collection; that I am in the trade and have a
+ secondhand shop of my own, full of poetical rubbish, and every sort of
+ literary odds and ends, picked up at random, and all cast
+ higgledy-piggledy into the same chaotic receptacle. His customers are as
+ little like ordinary shoppers as he is like common tradesmen. They are in
+ part the Canadians who work in the brickyards, and it is surprising to
+ find how much business can be transacted, and how many sharp bargains
+ struck without the help of a common language. I am in the belief, which
+ may be erroneous, that nobody is wronged in these trades. The taciturn
+ storekeeper, who regards his customers with a stare of solemn amusement as
+ Critturs born by some extraordinary vicissitude of nature to the use of a
+ language that practically amounts to deafness and dumbness, never suffers
+ his philosophical interest in them to affect his commercial efficiency; he
+ drops them now and then a curt English phrase, or expressive Yankee idiom;
+ he knows very well when they mean to buy and when they do not; and they
+ equally wary and equally silent, unswayed by the glib allurements of a
+ salesman, judge of price and quality for themselves, make their solitary
+ offer, and stand or fall by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am seldom able to conclude a pedestrian tour without a glance at the
+ wonderful interior of this cheap store, and I know all its contents
+ familiarly. I recognize wares that have now been on sale there for years;
+ I miss at first glance such accustomed objects as have been parted with
+ between my frequent visits, and hail with pleasure the additions to that
+ extraordinary variety. I can hardly, I suppose, expect the reader to
+ sympathize with the joy I felt the other night, in discovering among the
+ latter an adventurous and universally applicable sign-board advertising
+ This House and Lot for Sale, and, intertwined with the cast-off suspenders
+ which long garlanded a coffee-mill pendent from the roof, a newly added
+ second-hand india-rubber ear-trumpet. Here and there, however, I hope a
+ finer soul will relish, as I do, the poetry of thus buying and offering
+ for sale the very most recondite, as well as the commonest articles of
+ commerce, in the faith that one day the predestined purchaser will appear
+ and carry off the article appointed him from the beginning of time. This
+ faith is all the more touching, because the collector cannot expect to
+ live until the whole stock is disposed of, and because, in the order of
+ nature, much must at last fall to rein unbought, unless the reporter's
+ Devouring Element appears and gives a sudden tragical turn to the poem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the whistle of a train drawing up at the neighboring station that
+ calls me away from the second-hand store; for I never find myself able to
+ resist the hackneyed prodigy of such an arrival. It cannot cease to be
+ impressive. I stand beside the track while the familiar monster writhes up
+ to the station and disgorges its passengers,&mdash;suburbanly packaged,
+ and bundled, and bagged, and even when empty-handed somehow proclaiming
+ the jaded character of men that hurry their work all day to catch the
+ evening train out, and their dreams all night to catch the morning train
+ in,&mdash;and then I climb the station-stairs, and &ldquo;hang with grooms
+ and porters on the bridge,&rdquo; that I may not lose my ever-repeated
+ sensation of having the train pass under my feet, and of seeing it rush
+ away westward to the pretty blue hills beyond,&mdash;hills not too big for
+ a man born in a plain-country to love. Twisting and trembling along the
+ track, it dwindles rapidly in the perspective, and is presently out of
+ sight. It has left the city and the suburbs behind, and has sought the
+ woods and meadows; but Nature never in the least accepts it, and rarely
+ makes its path a part of her landscape's loveliness. The train
+ passes alien through all her moods and aspects; the wounds made in her
+ face by the road's sharp cuts and excavations are slowest of all
+ wounds to heal, and the iron rails remain to the last as shackles upon
+ her. Yet when the rails are removed, as has happened with a non-paying
+ track in Charlesbridge, the road inspires a real tenderness in her. Then
+ she bids it take or the grace that belongs to all ruin; the grass creeps
+ stealthily over the scarified sides of the embankments; the golden-rod,
+ and the purple-topped iron-weed, and the lady's-slipper, spring up
+ in the hollows on either side, and&mdash;I am still thinking of that
+ deserted railroad which runs through Charlesbridge&mdash;hide with their
+ leafage the empty tomato-cans and broken bottles and old boots on the
+ ash-heaps dumped there; Nature sets her velvety willows a waving near, and
+ lower than their airy tops plans a vista of trees arching above the track,
+ which is as wild and pretty and illusive a vista as the sunset ever cared
+ to look through and gild a board fence beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of our people come from Boston on the horse-cars, and it is only the
+ dwellers on the Avenue and the neighboring streets whom hurrying homeward
+ I follow away from the steam-car station. The Avenue is our handsomest
+ street; and if it were in the cosmopolitan citizen of Charlesbridge to
+ feel any local interest, I should be proud of it. As matters are, I
+ perceive its beauty, and I often reflect, with a pardonable satisfaction,
+ that it is not only handsome, but probably the very dullest street in the
+ world. It is magnificently long and broad, and is flanked nearly the whole
+ way from the station to the colleges by pine palaces rising from spacious
+ lawns, or from the green of trees or the brightness of gardens. The
+ splendor is all very new, but newness is not a fault that much affects
+ architectural beauty, while it is the only one that time is certain to
+ repair: and I find an honest and unceasing pleasure in the graceful lines
+ of those palaces, which is not surpassed even by my appreciation of the
+ vast quiet and monotony of the street itself. Commonly, when I emerge upon
+ it from the grassy-bordered, succory-blossomed walks of Benicia Street, I
+ behold, looking northward, a monumental horse-car standing&mdash;it
+ appears for ages, if I wish to take it for Boston&mdash;at the head of
+ Pliny Street; and looking southward I see that other emblem of suburban
+ life, an express-wagon, fading rapidly in the distance. Haply the top of a
+ buggy nods round the bend under the elms near the station; and, if fortune
+ is so lavish, a lady appears from a side street, and, while tarrying for
+ the car, thrusts the point of her sun-umbrella into the sandy sidewalk.
+ This is the mid-afternoon effect of the Avenue; but later in the day, and
+ well into the dusk, it remembers its former gayety as a trotting-course,&mdash;with
+ here and there a spider-wagon, a twinkling-footed mare, and a guttural
+ driver. On market-days its superb breadth is taken up by flocks of
+ bleating sheep, and a pastoral tone is thus given to its tranquillity;
+ anon a herd of beef-cattle appears under the elms; or a drove of pigs,
+ many pausing, inquisitive of the gutters, and quarrelsome as if they were
+ the heirs of prosperity instead of doom, is slowly urged on toward the
+ shambles. In the spring or the autumn, the Avenue is exceptionally
+ enlivened by the progress of a brace or so of students who, in training
+ for one of the University Courses of base-ball or boating, trot slowly and
+ earnestly along the sidewalk, fists up, elbows down, mouths shut, and a
+ sense of immense responsibility visible in their faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The summer is waning with the day as I turn from the Avenue into Benicia
+ Street. This is the hour when the fly cedes to the mosquito, as the Tuscan
+ poet says, and, as one may add, the frying grasshopper yields to the
+ shrilly cricket in noisiness. The embrowning air rings with the sad music
+ made by these innumerable little violinists, hid in all the gardens round,
+ and the pedestrian feels a sinking of the spirits not to be accounted for
+ upon the theory that the street is duller than the Avenue, for it really
+ is not so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quick now, the cheerful lamps of kerosene!&mdash;without their light, the
+ cry of those crickets, dominated for an instant, but not stilled, by the
+ bellowing of a near-passing locomotive, and the baying of a distant dog,
+ were too much. If it were the last autumn that ever was to be, it could
+ not be heralded with notes of dismaller effect. This is in fact the hour
+ of supreme trial everywhere, and doubtless no one but a newly-accepted
+ lover can be happy at twilight. In the city, even, it is oppressive; in
+ the country it is desolate; in the suburbs it is a miracle that it is ever
+ lived through. The night-winds have not risen yet to stir the languid
+ foliage of the sidewalk maples; the lamps are not yet lighted, to take
+ away the gloom from the blank, staring windows of the houses near; it is
+ too late for letters, too early for a book. In town your fancy would turn
+ to the theatres; in the country you would occupy yourself with cares of
+ poultry or of stock: in the suburbs you can but sit upon your threshold,
+ and fight the predatory mosquito.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BY HORSE-CAR TO BOSTON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At a former period the writer of this had the fortune to serve his country
+ in an Italian city whose great claim upon the world's sentimental
+ interest is the fact that&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The sea is in her broad, her narrow streets
+ Ebbing and flowing,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ and that she has no ways whatever for hoofs or wheels. In his quality of
+ United States official, he was naturally called upon for information
+ concerning the estates of Italians believed to have emigrated early in the
+ century to Buenos Ayres, and was commissioned to learn why certain persons
+ in Mexico and Brazil, and the parts of Peru, had not, if they were still
+ living, written home to their friends. On the other hand, he was intrusted
+ with business nearly as pertinent and hopeful by some of his own
+ countrymen, and it was not quite with surprise that he one day received a
+ neatly lithographed circular with his name and address written in it,
+ signed by a famous projector of such enterprises, asking him to cooperate
+ for the introduction of horse-railroads in Venice. The obstacles to the
+ scheme were of such a nature that it seemed hardly worth while even to
+ reply to the circular; but the proposal was one of those bold flights of
+ imagination which forever lift objects out of vulgar association. It has
+ cast an enduring, poetic charm even about the horse-car in my mind, and I
+ naturally look for many unprosaic aspects of humanity there. I have an
+ acquaintance who insists that it is the place above all others suited to
+ see life in every striking phase. He pretends to have witnessed there the
+ reunion of friends who had not met in many years, the embrace, figurative
+ of course, of long lost brothers, the reconciliation of lovers; I do not
+ know but also some scenes of love-making, and acceptance or rejection. But
+ my friend is an imaginative man, and may make himself romances. I myself
+ profess to have beheld for the most part only mysteries; and I think it
+ not the least of these that, riding on the same cars day after day, one
+ finds so many strange faces with so little variety. Whether or not that
+ dull, jarring motion shakes inward and settles about the centres of mental
+ life the sprightliness that should inform the visage, I do not know; but
+ it is certain that the emptiness of the average passenger's
+ countenance is something wonderful, considered with reference to Nature's
+ abhorrence of a vacuum, and the intellectual repute which Boston enjoys
+ among envious New-Yorkers. It is seldom that a journey out of our cold
+ metropolis is enlivened by a mystery so positive in character as the young
+ lady in black, who alighted at a most ordinary little street in Old
+ Charlesbridge, and heightened her effect by going into a French-roof house
+ there that had no more right than a dry goods box to receive a mystery.
+ She was tall, and her lovely arms showed through the black gauze of her
+ dress with an exquisite roundness and <i>morbidezza</i>. Upon her
+ beautiful wrists she had heavy bracelets of dead gold, fashioned after
+ some Etruscan device; and from her dainty ears hung great hoops of the
+ same metal and design, which had the singular privilege of touching, now
+ and then, her white columnar neck. A massive chain or necklace, also
+ Etruscan, and also gold, rose and fell at her throat, and on one little
+ ungloved hand glittered a multitude of rings. This hand was very
+ expressive, and took a principal part in the talk which the lady held with
+ her companion, and was as alert and quick as if trained in the
+ gesticulation of Southern or Latin life somewhere. Her features, on the
+ contrary, were rather insipid, being too small and fine; but they were
+ redeemed by the liquid splendor of her beautiful eyes, and the mortal
+ pallor of her complexion. She was altogether so startling an apparition,
+ that all of us jaded, commonplace spectres turned and fastened our weary,
+ lack-lustre eyes upon her looks, with an utter inability to remove them.
+ There was one fat, unctuous person seated opposite, to whom his interest
+ was a torture, for he would have gone to sleep except for her remarkable
+ presence: as it was, his heavy eyelids fell half-way shut, and drooped
+ there at an agonizing angle, while his eyes remained immovably fixed upon
+ that strange, death-white face. How it could have come of that
+ colorlessness,&mdash;whether through long sickness or long residence in a
+ tropical climate,&mdash;was a question that perplexed another of the
+ passengers, who would have expected to hear the lady speak any language in
+ the world rather than English; and to whom her companion or attendant was
+ hardly less than herself a mystery,&mdash;being a dragon-like, elderish
+ female, clearly a Yankee by birth, but apparently of many years'
+ absence from home. The propriety of extracting these people from the
+ horse-cars and transferring them bodily to the first chapter of a romance
+ was a thing about which there could be no manner of doubt, and nothing
+ prevented the abduction but the unexpected voluntary exit of the pale
+ lady. As she passed out everybody else awoke as from a dream, or as if
+ freed from a potent fascination. It is part of the mystery that this lady
+ should never have reappeared in that theatre of life, the horse-car; but I
+ cannot regret having never seen her more; she was so inestimably precious
+ to wonder that it would have been a kind of loss to learn anything about
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/3000.jpg" alt="3009 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/3000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, I should be glad if two young men who once presented
+ themselves as mysteries upon the same stage could be so distinctly and
+ sharply identified that all mankind should recognize them at the day of
+ judgment. They were not so remarkable in the nature as in the degree of
+ their offense; for the mystery that any man should keep his seat in a
+ horse-car and let a woman stand is but too sadly common. They say that
+ this, public unkindness to the sex has come about through the ingratitude
+ of women, who have failed to return thanks for places offered them, and
+ that it is a just and noble revenge we take upon them. There might be
+ something advanced in favor of the idea that we law-making men, who do not
+ oblige the companies to provide seats for every one, deserve no thanks
+ from voteless, helpless women when we offer them places; nay, that we
+ ought to be glad if they do not reproach us for making that a personal
+ favor which ought to be a common right. I would prefer, on the whole, to
+ believe that this selfishness is not a concerted act on our part, but a
+ flower of advanced civilization; it is a ripe fruit in European countries,
+ and it is more noticeable in Boston than anywhere else in America. It is,
+ in fact, one of the points of our high polish which people from the
+ interior say first strikes them on coming among us; for they declare&mdash;no
+ doubt too modestly&mdash;that in their Boeotian wilds our Athenian habit
+ is almost unknown. Yet it would not be fair to credit our whole population
+ with it. I have seen a laborer or artisan rise from his place, and offer
+ it to a lady, while a dozen well-dressed men kept theirs; and I know
+ several conservative young gentlemen, who are still so old-fashioned as
+ always to respect the weakness and weariness of women. One of them, I
+ hear, has settled it in his own mind that if the family cook appears in a
+ car where he is seated, he must rise and give her his place. This,
+ perhaps, is a trifle idealistic; but it is magnificent, it is princely.
+ From his difficult height, we decline&mdash;through ranks that sacrifice
+ themselves for women with bundles or children in arms, for old ladies, or
+ for very young and pretty ones&mdash;to the men who give no odds to the
+ most helpless creature alive. These are the men who do not act upon the
+ promptings of human nature like the laborer, and who do not refine upon
+ their duty like my young gentlemen, and make it their privilege to
+ befriend the idea of womanhood; they are men who have paid for their seats
+ and are going to keep them. They have been at work, very probably, all
+ day, and no doubt they are tired; they look so, and try hard not to look
+ ashamed of publicly considering themselves before a sex which is born
+ tired, and from which our climate and customs have drained so much health
+ that society sometimes seems little better than a hospital for invalid
+ woman, where every courtesy is likely to be a mercy done to a sufferer.
+ Yet the two young men of whom I began to speak were not apparently of this
+ class, and let us hope they were foreigners,&mdash;say Englishmen, since
+ we hate Englishmen the most. They were the only men seated, in a car full
+ of people; and when four or five ladies came in and occupied the aisle
+ before them, they might have been puzzled which to offer their places to,
+ if one of the ladies had not plainly been infirm. They settled the
+ question&mdash;if there was any in their minds&mdash;by remaining seated,
+ while the lady in front of them swung uneasily to and fro with the car,
+ and appeared ready to sink at their feet. In another moment she had
+ actually done so; and, too weary to rise, she continued to crouch upon the
+ floor of the car for the course of a mile, the young men resolutely
+ keeping their places, and not rising till they were ready to leave the
+ car. It was a horrible scene, and incredible,&mdash;that well-dressed
+ woman sitting on the floor, and those two well-dressed men keeping their
+ places; it was as much out of keeping with our smug respectabilities as a
+ hanging, and was a spectacle so paralyzing that public opinion took no
+ action concerning it. A shabby person, standing upon the platform outside,
+ swore about it, between expectorations: even the conductor's heart
+ was touched; and he said he had seen a good many hard things aboard
+ horse-cars, but that was a little the hardest; he had never expected to
+ come to that. These were simple people enough, and could not interest me a
+ great deal, but I should have liked to have a glimpse of the complex minds
+ of those young men, and I should still like to know something of the
+ previous life that could have made their behavior possible to them. They
+ ought to make public the philosophic methods by which they reached that
+ pass of unshamable selfishness. The information would be useful to a race
+ which knows the sweetness of self-indulgence, and would fain know the art
+ of so drugging or besotting the sensibilities that it shall no feel
+ disgraced by any sort of meanness. They might really have much to say for
+ themselves; as, that the lady, being conscious she could no longer keep
+ her feet, had no right to crouch at theirs, and put them to so severe a
+ test; or that, having suffered her to sink there, they fell no further in
+ the ignorant public opinion by suffering her to continue there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I doubt if that other young man could say anything for himself, who,
+ when a pale, trembling woman was about to drop into the vacant place at
+ his side, stretched his arm across it with, &ldquo;This seat's
+ engaged,&rdquo; till a robust young fellow, his friend, appeared, and took
+ it and kept it all the way out from Boston. The commission of such a
+ tragical wrong, involving a violation of common usage as well as the
+ infliction of a positive cruelty, would embitter the life of an ordinary
+ man, if any ordinary man were capable of it; but let us trust that nature
+ has provided fortitude of every kind for the offender, and that he is not
+ wrung by keener remorse than most would feel for a petty larceny. I dare
+ say he would be eager at the first opportunity to rebuke the ingratitude
+ of women who do not thank their benefactors for giving them seats. It
+ seems a little odd, by the way, and perhaps it is through the peculiar
+ blessing of Providence, that, since men have determined by a savage
+ egotism to teach the offending sex manners, their own comfort should be in
+ the infliction of the penalty, and that it should be as much a pleasure as
+ a duty to keep one's place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps when the ladies come to vote, they will abate, with other
+ nuisances, the whole business of overloaded public conveyances. In the
+ mean time the kindness of women to each other is a notable feature of all
+ horse-car journeys. It is touching to see the smiling eagerness with which
+ the poor things gather close their volumed skirts and make room for a
+ weary sister, the tender looks of compassion which they bend upon the
+ sufferers obliged to stand, the sweetness with which they rise, if they
+ are young and strong, to offer their place to any infirm or heavily
+ burdened person of their sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a journey to Boston is not entirely an experience of bitterness. On
+ the contrary, there are many things besides the mutual amiability of these
+ beautiful martyrs which relieve its tedium and horrors. A whole car-full
+ of people, brought into the closest contact with one another, yet in the
+ absence of introductions never exchanging a word, each being so sufficient
+ to himself as to need no social stimulus whatever, is certainly an
+ impressive and stately spectacle. It is a beautiful day, say; but far be
+ it from me to intimate as much to my neighbor, who plainly would rather
+ die than thus commit himself with me, and who, in fact, would well-nigh
+ strike me speechless with surprise if he did so. If there is any necessity
+ for communication, as with the conductor, we essay first to express
+ ourselves by gesture, and then utter our desires with a certain hollow and
+ remote effect, which is not otherwise to be described. I have sometimes
+ tried to speak above my breath, when, being about to leave the car, I have
+ made a virtue of offering my place to the prettiest young woman standing,
+ but I have found it impossible; the <i>genius loci</i>, whatever it was,
+ suppressed me, and I have gasped out my sham politeness as in a courteous
+ nightmare. The silencing influence is quite successfully resisted by none
+ but the tipsy people who occasionally ride out with us, and call up a
+ smile, sad as a gleam of winter sunshine, to our faces by their artless
+ prattle. I remember one eventful afternoon that we were all but moved to
+ laughter by the gayeties of such a one, who, even after he had ceased to
+ talk, continued to amuse us by falling asleep, and reposing himself
+ against the shoulder of the lady next him. Perhaps it is in acknowledgment
+ of the agreeable variety they contribute to horse-car life, that the
+ conductor treats his inebriate passengers with such unfailing tenderness
+ and forbearance. I have never seen them molested, though I have noticed
+ them in the indulgence of many eccentricities, and happened once even to
+ see one of them sit down in a lady's lap. But that was on the night
+ of Saint Patrick's day. Generally all avoidable indecorums are rare
+ in the horse-cars, though during the late forenoon and early afternoon, in
+ the period of lighter travel, I have found curious figures there:&mdash;among
+ others, two old women, in the old-clothes business, one of whom was
+ dressed, not very fortunately, in a gown with short sleeves, and
+ inferentially a low neck; a mender of umbrellas, with many unwholesome
+ whity-brown wrecks of umbrellas about him; a peddler of soap, who offered
+ cakes of it to his fellow-passengers at a discount, apparently for
+ friendship's sake; and a certain gentleman with a pock-marked face,
+ and a beard dyed an unscrupulous purple, who sang himself a hymn all the
+ way to Boston, and who gave me no sufficient reason for thinking him a
+ sea-captain. Not far from the end of the Long Bridge, there is apt to be a
+ number of colored ladies waiting to get into the car, or to get out of it,&mdash;usually
+ one solemn mother in Ethiopia, and two or three mirthful daughters, who
+ find it hard to suppress a sense of adventure, and to keep in the laughter
+ that struggles out through their glittering teeth and eyes, and who place
+ each other at a disadvantage by divers accidental and intentional bumps
+ and blows. If they are to get out, the old lady is not certain of the
+ place where, and, after making the car stop, and parleying with the
+ conductor, returns to her seat, and is mutely held up to public scorn by
+ one taciturn wink of the conductor's eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among horse-car types, I am almost ashamed to note one so common and
+ observable as that middle-aged lady who gets aboard and will not see the
+ one vacant seat left, but stands tottering at the door, blind and deaf to
+ all the modest beckonings and benevolent gasps of her fellow-passengers.
+ An air as of better days clings about her; she seems a person who has
+ known sickness and sorrow; but so far from pitying her, you view her with
+ inexpressible rancor, for it is plain that she ought to sit down, and that
+ she will not. But for a point of honor the conductor would show her the
+ vacant place; this forbidding, however, how can he? There she stands and
+ sniffs drearily when you glance at her, as you must from time to time, and
+ no wild turkey caught in a trap was ever more incapable of looking down
+ than this middle-aged (shall I say also unmarried?) lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course every one knows the ladies and gentlemen who sit cater-cornered,
+ and who will not move up; and equally familiar is that large and ponderous
+ person, who, feigning to sit down beside you, practically sits down upon
+ you, and is not incommoded by having your knee under him. He implies by
+ this brutal conduct that you are taking up more space than belongs to you,
+ and that you are justly made an example of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had the pleasure one day to meet on the horse-car an advocate of one of
+ the great reforms of the day. He held a green bag upon his knees, and
+ without any notice passed from a question of crops to a discussion of
+ suffrage for the negro, and so to womanhood suffrage. &ldquo;Let the women
+ vote,&rdquo; said he,&mdash;&ldquo;let 'em vote if they want to. <i>I</i>
+ don't care. Fact is, I should like to see 'em do it the first
+ time. They're excitable, you know; they're excitable;&rdquo;
+ and he enforced his analysis of female character by thrusting his elbow
+ sharply into my side. &ldquo;Now, there's my wife; I'd like to
+ see her vote. Be fun, I tell you. And the girls,&mdash;Lord, the girls!
+ Circus wouldn't be anywhere.&rdquo; Enchanted with the picture which
+ he appeared to have conjured up for himself, he laughed with the utmost
+ relish, and then patting the green bag in his lap, which plainly contained
+ a violin, &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;I go out playing for
+ dancing-parties. Work all day at my trade,&mdash;I'm a carpenter,&mdash;and
+ play in the evening. Take my little old ten dollars a night. And <i>I</i>
+ notice the women a good deal; and <i>I</i> tell you they're <i>all</i>
+ excitable, and <i>I sh'd</i> like to see 'em vote. Vote right
+ and vote often,&mdash;that's the ticket, eh?&rdquo; This friend of
+ womanhood suffrage&mdash;whose attitude of curiosity and expectation
+ seemed to me representative of that of a great many thinkers on the
+ subject&mdash;no doubt was otherwise a reformer, and held that the coming
+ man would not drink wine&mdash;if he could find whiskey. At least I should
+ have said so, guessing from the odors he breathed along with his liberal
+ sentiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something of the character of a college-town is observable nearly always
+ in the presence of the students, who confound certain traditional ideas of
+ students by their quietude of costume and manner, and whom Padua or
+ Heidelberg would hardly know, but who nevertheless betray that they are
+ banded to&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Scorn delights and live laborious days,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ by a uniformity in the cut of their trousers, or a clannishness of cane or
+ scarf, or a talk of boats and base-ball held among themselves. One cannot
+ see them without pleasure and kindness; and it is no wonder that their
+ young-lady acquaintances brighten so to recognize them on the horse-cars.
+ There is much good fortune in the world, but none better than being an
+ undergraduate twenty years old, hale, handsome, fashionably dressed, with
+ the whole promise of life before: it's a state of things to disarm
+ even envy. With so much youth forever in her heart, it must be hard for
+ our Charlesbridge to grow old: the generations arise and pass away but in
+ her veins is still this tide of warm blood, century in and century out, so
+ much the same from one age to another that it would be hardy to say it was
+ not still one youthfulness. There is a print of the village as it was a
+ cycle since, showing the oldest of the college buildings and upon the
+ street in front a scholar in his scholar's-cap and gown, giving his
+ arm to a very stylish girl of that period, who is dressed wonderfully like
+ the girl of ours, so that but for the student's antique formality of
+ costume, one might believe that he was handing her out to take the
+ horse-car. There is no horse-car in the picture,&mdash;that is the only
+ real difference between then and now in our Charlesbridge, perennially
+ young and gay. Have there not ever been here the same grand ambitions, the
+ same high hopes,&mdash;and is not the unbroken succession of youth in
+ these?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for other life on the horse-car, it shows to little or no effect, as I
+ have said. You can, of course, detect certain classes; as, in the morning
+ the business-men going in, to their counters or their desks, and in the
+ afternoon the shoppers coming out, laden with paper parcels. But I think
+ no one can truly claim to know the regular from the occasional passengers
+ by any greater cheerfulness in the faces of the latter. The horse-car will
+ suffer no such inequality as this, but reduces us all to the same level of
+ melancholy. It would be but a very unworthy kind of art which should seek
+ to describe people by such merely external traits as a habit of carrying
+ baskets or large travelling-bags in the car; and the present muse scorns
+ it, but is not above speaking of the frequent presence of those lovely
+ young girls in which Boston and the suburban towns abound, and who,
+ whether they appear with rolls of music in their hands, or books from the
+ circulating-libraries, or pretty parcels or hand-bags, would brighten even
+ the horse-car if fresh young looks and gay and brilliant costumes could do
+ so much. But they only add perplexity to the anomaly, which was already
+ sufficiently trying with its contrasts of splendor and shabbiness, and
+ such intimate association of velvets and patches as you see in the
+ churches of Catholic countries, but nowhere else in the world except in
+ our &ldquo;coaches of the sovereign people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In winter, the journey to or from Boston cannot appear otherwise than very
+ dreary to the fondest imagination. Coming out, nothing can look more
+ arctic and forlorn than the river, double-shrouded in ice and snow, or
+ sadder than the contrast offered to the same prospect in summer. Then all
+ is laughing, and it is a joy in every nerve to ride out over the Long
+ Bridge at high tide, and, looking southward, to see the wide crinkle and
+ glitter of that beautiful expanse of water, which laps on one hand the
+ granite quays of the city, and on the other washes among the reeds and
+ wild grasses of the salt-meadows. A ship coming slowly up the channel, or
+ a dingy tug violently darting athwart it, gives an additional pleasure to
+ the eye, and adds something dreamy or vivid to the beauty of the scene. It
+ is hard to say at what hour of the summer's-day the prospect is
+ loveliest; and I am certainly not going to speak of the sunset as the
+ least of its delights. When this exquisite spectacle is presented, the
+ horse-car passenger, happy to cling with one foot to the rear
+ platform-steps, looks out over the shoulder next him into fairy-land.
+ Crimson and purple the bay stretches westward till its waves darken into
+ the grassy levels, where, here and there, a hay-rick shows perfectly black
+ against the light. Afar off, southeastward and westward, the uplands wear
+ a tinge of tenderest blue; and in the nearer distance, on the low shores
+ of the river, hover the white plumes of arriving and departing trains. The
+ windows of the stately houses that overlook the water take the sunset from
+ it evanescently, and begin to chill and darken before the crimson burns
+ out of the sky. The windows are, in fact, best after nightfall, when they
+ are brilliantly lighted from within; and when, if it is a dark, warm
+ night, and the briny fragrance comes up strong from the falling tide, the
+ lights reflected far down in the still water, bring a dream, as I have
+ heard travelled Bostonians say, of Venice and her magical effects in the
+ same kind. But for me the beauty of the scene needs the help of no such
+ association; I am content with it for what it is. I enjoy also the hints
+ of spring which one gets in riding over the Long Bridge at low tide in the
+ first open days. Then there is not only a vernal beating of carpets on the
+ piers of the drawbridge, but the piles and walls left bare by the receding
+ water show green patches of sea-weeds and mosses, and flatter the willing
+ eye with a dim hint of summer. This reeking and saturated herbage&mdash;which
+ always seems to me, in contrast with dry land growths, what the
+ water-logged life of seafaring folk is to that which we happier men lead
+ on shore,&mdash;taking so kindly the deceitful warmth and brightness of
+ the sun, has then a charm which it loses when summer really comes; nor
+ does one, later, have so keen an interest in the men wading about in the
+ shallows below the bridge, who, as in the distance they stoop over to
+ gather whatever shell-fish they seek, make a very fair show of being some
+ ungainlier sort of storks, and are as near as we can hope to come to the
+ spring-prophesying storks of song and story. A sentiment of the drowsiness
+ that goes before the awakening of the year, and is so different from the
+ drowsiness that precedes the great autumnal slumber, is in the air, but is
+ gone when we leave the river behind, and strike into the straggling
+ village beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I maintain that Boston, as one approaches it and passingly takes in the
+ line of Bunker Hill Monument, soaring preëminent among the emulous
+ foundry-chimneys of the sister city, is fine enough to need no comparison
+ with other fine sights. Thanks to the mansard curves and dormer-windows of
+ the newer houses, there is a singularly picturesque variety among the
+ roofs that stretch along the bay, and rise one above another on the city's
+ three hills, grouping themselves about the State House, and surmounted by
+ its India-rubber dome. But, after all, does human weakness crave some
+ legendary charm, some grace of uncertain antiquity, in the picturesqueness
+ it sees? I own that the future, to which we are often referred for the
+ &ldquo;stuff that dreams are made of,&rdquo; is more difficult for the
+ fancy than the past, that the airy amplitude of its possibilities is
+ somewhat chilly, and that we naturally long for the snug quarters of old,
+ made warm by many generations of life. Besides, Europe spoils us ingenuous
+ Americans, and flatters our sentimentality into ruinous extravagances.
+ Looking at her many-storied former times, we forget our own past, neat,
+ compact, and convenient for the poorest memory to dwell in. Yet an
+ American not infected with the discontent of travel could hardly approach
+ this superb city without feeling something of the coveted pleasure in her,
+ without a reverie of her Puritan and Revolutionary times, and the great
+ names and deeds of her heroic annals. I think, however, we were well to be
+ rid of this yearning for a native American antiquity; for in its
+ indulgence one cannot but regard himself and his contemporaries as
+ cumberers of the ground, delaying the consummation of that hoary past
+ which will be so fascinating to a semi-Chinese posterity, and will be,
+ ages hence, the inspiration of Pigeon-English poetry and romance. Let us
+ make much of our two hundred and fifty years, and cherish the present as
+ our golden age. We healthy-minded people in the horse-cars are loath to
+ lose a moment of it, and are aggrieved that the draw of the bridge should
+ be up, naturally looking on what is constantly liable to happen as an
+ especial malice of the fates. All the drivers of the vehicles that clog
+ the draw on either side have a like sense of personal injury; and
+ apparently it would go hard with the captain of that leisurely vessel
+ below if he were delivered into our hands. But this impatience and anger
+ are entirely illusive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are really the most patient people in the world, especially as regards
+ any incorporated, non-political oppressions. A lively Gaul, who travelled
+ among us some thirty years ago, found that, in the absence of political
+ control, we gratified the human instinct of obedience by submitting to
+ small tyrannies unknown abroad, and were subject to the steamboat-captain,
+ the hotel-clerk, the stage-driver, and the waiter, who all bullied us
+ fearlessly; but though some vestiges of this bondage remain, it is
+ probably passing away. The abusive Frenchman's assertion would not
+ at least hold good concerning the horse-car conductors, who, in spite of a
+ lingering preference for touching or punching passengers for their fare
+ instead of asking for it, are commonly mild-mannered and good-tempered,
+ and disposed to molest us as little as possible. I have even received from
+ one of them a mark of such kindly familiarity as the offer of a check
+ which he held between his lips, and thrust out his face to give me, both
+ his hands being otherwise occupied; and their lives are in nowise such
+ luxurious careers as we should expect in public despots. The oppression of
+ the horse-car passenger is not from them, and the passenger himself is
+ finally to blame for it. When the draw closes at last, and we rumble
+ forward into the city street, a certain stir of expectation is felt among
+ us. The long and eventful journey is nearly ended, and now we who are to
+ get out of the cars can philosophically amuse ourselves with the passions
+ and sufferings of those who are to return in our places. You must choose
+ the time between five and six o'clock in the afternoon, if you would
+ make this grand study of the national character in its perfection. Then
+ the spectacle offered in any arriving horse-car will serve your purpose.
+ At nearly every corner of the street up which it climbs stands an
+ experienced suburban, who darts out upon the car, and seizes a vacant
+ place in it. Presently all the places are taken, and before we reach
+ Temple Street, where helpless groups of women are gathered to avail
+ themselves of the first seats vacated, an alert citizen is stationed
+ before each passenger who is to retire at the summons, &ldquo;Please pass
+ out forrad.&rdquo; When this is heard in Bowdoin Square, we rise and push
+ forward, knuckling one another's backs in our eagerness, and perhaps
+ glancing behind us at the tumult within. Not only are all our places
+ occupied, but the aisle is left full of passengers precariously supporting
+ themselves by the straps in the roof. The rear platform is stormed and
+ carried by a party with bundles; the driver is instantly surrounded by
+ another detachment; and as the car moves away from the office, the
+ platform steps are filled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it possible,&rdquo; I asked myself, when I had written as far as
+ this in the present noble history, &ldquo;that I am not exaggerating? It
+ can't be that this and the other enormities I have been describing
+ are of daily occurrence in Boston. Let me go verify, at least, my picture
+ of the evening horse-car.&rdquo; So I take my way to Bowdoin Square, and
+ in the conscientious spirit of modern inquiry, I get aboard the first car
+ that comes up. Like every other car, it is meant to seat twenty
+ passengers. It does this, and besides it carries in the aisle and on the
+ platform forty passengers standing. The air is what you may imagine, if
+ you know that not only is the place so indecently crowded, but that in the
+ centre of the car are two adopted citizens, far gone in drink, who have
+ the aspect and the smell of having passed the day in an ash-heap. These
+ citizens being quite helpless themselves, are supported by the public, and
+ repose in singular comfort upon all the passengers near them; I, myself,
+ contribute an aching back to the common charity, and a genteelly dressed
+ young lady takes one of them from time to time on her knee. But they are
+ comparatively an ornament to society till the conductor objects to the
+ amount they offer him for fare; for after that they wish to fight him
+ during the journey, and invite him at short intervals to step out and be
+ shown what manner of men they are. The conductor passes it off for a joke,
+ and so it is, and a very good one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that unhappy mass it would be an audacious spirit who should say of any
+ particular arm or leg, &ldquo;It is mine,&rdquo; and all the breath is in
+ common. Nothing, it would seem, could add to our misery; but we discover
+ our error when the conductor squeezes a tortuous path through us, and
+ collects the money for our transportation. I never can tell, during the
+ performance of this feat, whether he or the passengers are more to be
+ pitied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people who are thus indecorously huddled and jammed together, without
+ regard to age or sex, otherwise lead lives of at least comfort, and a good
+ half of them cherish themselves in every physical way with unparalleled
+ zeal. They are handsomely clothed; they are delicately neat in linen; they
+ eat well, or, if not well, as well as their cooks will let them, and at
+ all events expensively; they house in dwellings appointed in a manner
+ undreamt of elsewhere in the world,&mdash;dwellings wherein furnaces make
+ a summer-heat, where fountains of hot and cold water flow at a touch,
+ where light is created or quenched by the turning of a key, where all is
+ luxurious upholstery, and magical ministry to real or fancied needs. They
+ carry the same tastes with them to their places of business; and when they
+ &ldquo;attend divine service,&rdquo; it is with the understanding that God
+ is to receive them in a richly carpeted house, deliciously warmed and
+ perfectly ventilated, where they may adore Him at their ease upon
+ cushioned seats,&mdash;secured seats. Yet these spoiled children of
+ comfort, when they ride to or from business or church, fail to assert
+ rights that the benighted Cockney, who never heard of our plumbing and
+ registers, or even the oppressed Parisian, who is believed not to change
+ his linen from one revolution to another, having paid for, enjoys. When
+ they enter the &ldquo;full&rdquo; horse-car, they find themselves in a
+ place inexorable as the grave to their greenbacks, where not only is their
+ adventitious consequence stripped from them, but the courtesies of life
+ are impossible, the inherent dignity of the person is denied, and they are
+ reduced below the level of the most uncomfortable nations of the Old
+ World. The philosopher accustomed to draw consolation from the sufferings
+ of his richer fellow-men, and to infer an overruling Providence from their
+ disgraces, might well bless Heaven for the spectacle of such degradation,
+ if his thanksgiving were not prevented by his knowledge that this is quite
+ voluntary. And now consider that on every car leaving the city at this
+ time the scene is much the same; reflect that the horror is enacting, not
+ only in Boston, but in New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, St. Louis,
+ Chicago, Cincinnati,&mdash;wherever the horse-car, that tinkles well-nigh
+ round the Continent, is known; remember that the same victims are thus
+ daily sacrificed, without an effort to right themselves: and then you will
+ begin to realize&mdash;dimly and imperfectly, of course&mdash;the
+ unfathomable meekness of the American character. The &ldquo;full&rdquo;
+ horse-car is a prodigy whose likeness is absolutely unknown elsewhere,
+ since the Neapolitan gig went out; and I suppose it will be incredible to
+ the future in our own country. When I see such a horse-car as I have
+ sketched move away from its station, I feel that it is something not only
+ emblematic and interpretative, but monumental; and I know that when art
+ becomes truly national, the overloaded horse-car will be celebrated in
+ painting and sculpture. And in after ages, when the oblique-eyed, swarthy
+ American of that time, pausing before some commemorative bronze or
+ historical picture of our epoch, contemplates this stupendous spectacle of
+ human endurance, I hope he will be able to philosophize more
+ satisfactorily than we can now, concerning the mystery of our strength as
+ a nation and our weakness as a public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A DAY'S PLEASURE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.&mdash;THE MORNING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ They were not a large family, and their pursuits and habits were very
+ simple; yet the summer was lapsing toward the first pathos of autumn
+ before they found themselves all in such case as to be able to take the
+ day's pleasure they had planned so long. They had agreed often and
+ often that nothing could be more charming than an excursion down the
+ Harbor, either to Gloucester, or to Nahant, or to Nantasket Beach, or to
+ Hull and Hingham, or to any point within the fatal bound beyond which is
+ seasickness. They had studied the steamboat advertisements, day after day,
+ for a long time, without making up their minds which of these charming
+ excursions would be the most delightful; and when they had at last fixed
+ upon one and chosen some day for it, that day was sure to be heralded by a
+ long train of obstacles, or it dawned upon weather that was simply
+ impossible. Besides, in the suburbs, you are apt to sleep late, unless the
+ solitary ice-wagon of the neighborhood makes a very uncommon rumbling in
+ going by; and I believe that the excursion was several times postponed by
+ the tardy return of the pleasurers from dreamland, which, after all, is
+ not the worst resort, or the least interesting&mdash;or profitable, for
+ the matter of that. But at last the great day came,&mdash;a blameless
+ Thursday alike removed from the cares of washing and ironing days, and
+ from the fatigues with which every week closes. One of the family chose
+ deliberately to stay at home; but the severest scrutiny could not detect a
+ hindrance in the health or circumstances of any of the rest, and the
+ weather was delicious. Everything, in fact, was so fair and so full of
+ promise, that they could almost fancy a calamity of some sort hanging over
+ its perfection, and possibly bred of it; for I suppose that we never have
+ anything made perfectly easy for us without a certain reluctance and
+ foreboding. That morning they all got up so early that they had time to
+ waste over breakfast before taking the 7.30 train for Boston; and they
+ naturally wasted so much of it that they reached the station only in
+ season for the 8.00. But there is a difference between reaching the
+ station and quietly taking the cars, especially if one of your company has
+ been left at home, hoping to cut across and take the cars at a station
+ which they reach some minutes later, and you, the head of the party, are
+ obliged, at a loss of breath and personal comfort and dignity, to run down
+ to that station and see that the belated member has arrived there, and
+ then hurry back to your own, and embody the rest, with their accompanying
+ hand-bags and wraps and sun-umbrellas, into some compact shape for removal
+ into the cars, during the very scant minute that the train stops at
+ Charlesbridge. Then when you are all aboard, and the tardy member has been
+ duly taken up at the next station, and you would be glad to spend the time
+ in looking about on the familiar variety of life which every car presents
+ in every train on every road in this vast American world, you are
+ oppressed and distracted by the cares which must attend the
+ pleasure-seeker, and which the more thickly beset him the more deeply he
+ plunges into enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can learn very little from the note-book of the friend whose adventures
+ I am relating in regard to the scenery of Somerville, and the region
+ generally through which the railroad passes between Charlesbridge and
+ Boston; but so much knowledge of it may be safely assumed on the part of
+ the reader as to relieve me of the grave responsibility of describing it.
+ Still, I may say that it is not unpicturesque, and that I have a pleasure,
+ which I hope the reader shares, in anything like salt meadows and all
+ spaces subject to the tide, whether flooded by it or left bare with their
+ saturated grasses by its going down. I think, also, there is something
+ fine in the many-roofed, many-chimneyed highlands of Chelsea (if it is
+ Chelsea), as you draw near the railroad bridge, and there is a pretty
+ stone church on a hill-side there which has the good fortune, so rare with
+ modern architecture and so common with the old, of seeming a natural
+ outgrowth of the spot where it stands, and which is as purely an object of
+ aesthetic interest to me, who know nothing of its sect or doctrine, as any
+ church in a picture could be; and there is, also, the Marine Hospital on
+ the heights (if it is the Marine Hospital), from which I hope the inmates
+ can behold the ocean, and exult in whatever misery keeps them ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let me not so hasten over this part of my friend's journey as to
+ omit all mention of the amphibious Irish houses which stand about on the
+ low lands along the railroad-sides, and which you half expect to see
+ plunge into the tidal mud of the neighborhood, with a series of hoarse
+ croaks, as the train approaches. Perhaps twenty-four trains pass those
+ houses every twenty-four hours, and it is a wonder that the inhabitants
+ keep their interest in them, or have leisure to bestow upon any of them.
+ Yet, as you dash along so bravely, you can see that you arrest the
+ occupations of all these villagers as by a kind of enchantment; the
+ children pause and turn their heads toward you from their mud-pies (to the
+ production of which there is literally no limit in that region); the
+ matron rests one parboiled hand on her hip, letting the other still linger
+ listlessly upon the wash-board, while she lifts her eyes from the suds to
+ look at you; the boys, who all summer long are forever just going into the
+ water or just coming out of it, cease their buttoning or unbuttoning; the
+ baby, which has been run after and caught and suitably posed, turns its
+ anguished eyes upon you, where also falls the mother's gaze, while
+ her descending palm is arrested in mid air. I forbear to comment upon the
+ surprising populousness of these villages, where, in obedience to all the
+ laws of health, the inhabitants ought to be wasting miserably away, but
+ where they flourish in spite of them. Even Accident here seems to be
+ robbed of half her malevolence; and that baby (who will presently be
+ chastised with terrific uproar) passes an infancy of intrepid enjoyment
+ amidst the local perils, and is no more affected by the engines and the
+ cars than by so many fretful hens with their attendant broods of chickens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/4000.jpg" alt="4000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/4000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ When sometimes I long for the excitement and variety of travel, which, for
+ no merit of mine, I knew in other days, I reproach myself, and silence all
+ my repinings with some such question as, Where could you find more variety
+ or greater excitement than abounds in and near the Fitchburg Depot when a
+ train arrives? And to tell the truth, there is something very inspiring in
+ the fine eagerness with which all the passengers rise as soon as the
+ locomotive begins to slow, and huddle forward to the door, in their
+ impatience to get out; while the suppressed vehemence of the hackmen is
+ also thrilling in its way, not to mention the instant clamor of the
+ baggage-men as they read and repeat the numbers of the checks in strident
+ tones. It would be ever so interesting to depict all these people, but it
+ would require volumes for the work, and I reluctantly let them all pass
+ out without a word,&mdash;all but that sweet young blonde who arrives by
+ most trains, and who, putting up her eye-glass with a ravishing air,
+ bewitchingly peers round among the bearded faces, with little tender looks
+ of hope and trepidation, for the face which she wants, and which presently
+ bursts through the circle of strange visages. The owner of the face then
+ hurries forward to meet that sweet blonde, who gives him a little drooping
+ hand as if it were a delicate flower she laid in his; there is a brief
+ mutual hesitation long enough merely for an electrical thrill to run from
+ heart to heart through the clasping hands, and then he stoops toward her,
+ and distractingly kisses her. And I say that there is no law of conscience
+ or propriety worthy the name of law&mdash;barbarity, absurdity, call it
+ rather&mdash;to prevent any one from availing himself of that providential
+ near-sightedness, and beatifying himself upon those lips,&mdash;nothing to
+ prevent it but that young fellow, whom one might not, of course, care to
+ provoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the people who now rush forward and heap themselves into the two
+ horse-cars and one omnibus, placed before the depot by a wise forethought
+ for the public comfort to accommodate the train-load of two hundred
+ passengers, I always note a type that is both pleasing and interesting to
+ me. It is a lady just passing middle life; from her kindly eyes the
+ envious crow, whose footprints are just traceable at their corners, has
+ not yet drunk the brightness, but she looks just a thought sadly, if very
+ serenely, from them. I know nothing in the world of her; I may have seen
+ her twice or a hundred times, but I must always be making bits of romances
+ about her. That is she in faultless gray, with the neat leather bag in her
+ lap, and a bouquet of the first autumnal blooms perched in her shapely
+ hands which are prettily yet substantially gloved in some sort of
+ gauntlets. She can be easy and dignified, my dear middle-aged heroine,
+ even in one of our horse-cars, where people are for the most part packed
+ like cattle in a pen. She shows no trace of dust or fatigue from the
+ thirty or forty miles which I choose to fancy she has ridden from the
+ handsome elm-shaded New England town of five or ten thousand people, where
+ I choose to think she lives. From a vague horticultural association with
+ those gauntlets, as well as from the autumnal blooms, I take it she loves
+ flowers, and gardens a good deal with her own hands, and keeps
+ house-plants in the winter, and of course a canary. Her dress, neither
+ rich nor vulgar, makes me believe her fortunes modest and not recent; her
+ gentle face has just so much intellectual character as it is good to see
+ in a woman's face; I suspect that she reads pretty regularly the new
+ poems and histories, and I know that she is the life and soul of the local
+ book-club. Is she married, or widowed, or one of the superfluous forty
+ thousand? That is what I never can tell. But I think that most probably
+ she is married, and that her husband is very much in business, and does
+ not share so much as he respects her tastes. I have no particular reason
+ for thinking that she has no children now, and that the sorrow for the one
+ she lost so long ago has become only a pensive silence, which, however, a
+ long summer twilight can yet deepen to tears.... Upon my word! Am I then
+ one to give way to this sort of thing? Madam, I ask pardon. I have no
+ right to be sentimentalizing you. Yet your face is one to make people
+ dream kind things of you, and I cannot keep my reveries away from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the mean time I neglect the momentous history which I have proposed
+ to write, and leave my day's pleasurers to fade into the background
+ of a fantastic portrait. The truth is, I cannot look without pain upon the
+ discomforts which they suffer at this stage of their joyous enterprise. At
+ the best, the portables of such a party are apt to be grievous
+ embarrassments: a package of shawls and parasols and umbrellas and
+ India-rubbers, however neatly made up at first, quickly degenerates into a
+ shapeless mass, which has finally to be carried with as great tenderness
+ as an ailing child; and the lunch is pretty sure to overflow the hand-bags
+ and to eddy about you in paper parcels; while the bottle of claret, that
+ bulges the side of one of the bags, and
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;That will show itself without,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ defying your attempts to look as it were cold tea, gives a crushing touch
+ of disreputability to the whole affair. Add to this the fact that but half
+ the party have seats, and that the others have to sway and totter about
+ the car in that sudden contact with all varieties of fellow-men, to which
+ we are accustomed in the cars, and you must allow that these poor
+ merrymakers have reasons enough to rejoice when this part of their day's
+ pleasure is over. They are so plainly bent upon a sail down the Harbor,
+ that before they leave the car they become objects of public interest, and
+ are at last made to give some account of themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Going for a sail, I presume?&rdquo; says a person hitherto in
+ conversation with the conductor. &ldquo;Well, I wouldn't mind a sail
+ myself to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answers the head of the party, &ldquo;going to
+ Gloucester.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guess not,&rdquo; says, very coldly and decidedly, one of the
+ passengers, who is reading that morning's &ldquo;Advertiser;&rdquo;
+ and when the subject of this surmise looks at him for explanations, he
+ adds, &ldquo;The City Council has chartered the boat for to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this the excursionists fall into great dismay and bitterness, and
+ upbraid the City Council, and wonder why last night's &ldquo;Transcript&rdquo;
+ said nothing about its oppressive action, and generally bewail their fate.
+ But at last they resolve to go somewhere, and, being set down, they make
+ up their warring minds upon Nahant, for the Nahant boat leaves the wharf
+ nearest them; and so they hurry away to India Wharf, amidst barrels and
+ bales and boxes and hacks and trucks, with interminable string-teams
+ passing before them at every crossing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At any rate,&rdquo; says the leader of the expedition, &ldquo;we
+ shall see the Gardens of Maolis,&mdash;those enchanted gardens which have
+ fairly been advertised into my dreams, and where I've been told,&rdquo;
+ he continues, with an effort to make the prospect an attractive one, yet
+ not without a sense of the meagreness of the materials, &ldquo;they have a
+ grotto and a wooden bull.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, there is no reason in nature why a wooden bull should be more
+ pleasing than a flesh-and-blood bull, but it seems to encourage the
+ company, and they set off again with renewed speed, and at last reach
+ India Wharf in time to see the Nahant steamer packed full of
+ excursionists, with a crowd of people still waiting to go aboard. It does
+ not look inviting, and they hesitate. In a minute or two their spirits
+ sink so low, that if they should see the wooden bull step out of a grotto
+ on the deck of the steamer the spectacle could not revive them. At that
+ instant they think, with a surprising singleness, of Nantasket Beach, and
+ the bright colors in which the Gardens of Maolis but now appeared fade
+ away, and they seem to see themselves sauntering along the beautiful
+ shore, while the white-crested breakers crash upon the sand, and run up
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In tender-curving lines of creamy spray,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ quite to the feet of that lotus-eating party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nahant is all rocks,&rdquo; says the leader to Aunt Melissa, who
+ hears him with a sweet and tranquil patience, and who would enjoy or
+ suffer anything with the same expression; &ldquo;and as you've never
+ yet seen the open sea, it's fortunate that we go to Nantasket, for,
+ of course, a beach is more characteristic. But now the object is to get
+ there. The boat will be starting in a few moments, and I doubt whether we
+ can walk it. How far is it,&rdquo; he asks, turning toward a
+ respectable-looking man, &ldquo;to Liverpool Wharf?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it's consid'able ways,&rdquo; says the man,
+ smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we must take a hack,&rdquo; says the pleasurer to his party.
+ &ldquo;Come on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've got a hack,&rdquo; observes the man, in a casual way, as
+ if the fact might possibly interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, you have, have you? Well, then, put us into it, and drive to
+ Liverpool Wharf; and hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Either the distance was less than the hackman fancied, or else he drove
+ thither with unheard-of speed, for two minutes later he set them down on
+ Liverpool Wharf. But swiftly as they had come the steamer had been even
+ more prompt, and she now turned toward them a beautiful wake, as she
+ pushed farther and farther out into the harbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hackman took his two dollars for his four passengers, and was rapidly
+ mounting his box,&mdash;probably to avoid idle reproaches. &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo;
+ said the chief pleasurer. Then, &ldquo;When does the next boat leave?&rdquo;
+ he asked of the agent, who had emerged with a compassionate face from the
+ waiting-rooms on the wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At half past two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it's now five minutes past nine,&rdquo; moaned the
+ merrymakers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I'll tell you what you can do,&rdquo; said the agent;
+ &ldquo;you can go to Hingham by the Old Colony cars, and so come back by
+ the Hull and Hingham boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's it!&rdquo; chorused his listeners, &ldquo;we'll
+ go;&rdquo; and &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said their spokesman to the driver,
+ &ldquo;I dare say you didn't know that Liverpool Wharf was so near;
+ but I don't think you've earned your money, and you ought to
+ take us on to the Old Colony Depot for half-fares at the most.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The driver looked pained, as if some small tatters and shreds of
+ conscience were flapping uncomfortably about his otherwise dismantled
+ spirit. Then he seemed to think of his wife and family, for he put on the
+ air of a man who had already made great sacrifices, and &ldquo;I couldn't,
+ really, I couldn't afford it,&rdquo; said he; and as the victims
+ turned from him in disgust, he chirruped to his horses and drove off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the pleasurers, &ldquo;we won't give it up.
+ We will have our day's pleasure after all. But what <i>can</i> we do
+ to kill five hours and a half? It's miles away from everything, and,
+ besides, there's nothing even if we were there.&rdquo; At this image
+ of their remoteness and the inherent desolation of Boston they could not
+ suppress some sighs, and in the mean time Aunt Melissa stepped into the
+ waiting-room, which opened on the farther side upon the water, and sat
+ contentedly down on one of the benches; the rest, from sheer vacuity and
+ irresolution, followed, and thus, without debate, it was settled that they
+ should wait there till the boat left. The agent, who was a kind man, did
+ what he could to alleviate the situation: he gave them each the
+ advertisement of his line of boats, neatly printed upon a card, and then
+ he went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this prospect of waiting would do well enough for the ladies of the
+ party, but there is an impatience in the masculine fibre which does not
+ brook the notion of such prolonged repose; and the leader of the excursion
+ presently pretended an important errand up town,&mdash;nothing less, in
+ fact, than to buy a tumbler out of which to drink their claret on the
+ beach. A holiday is never like any other day to the man who takes it, and
+ a festive halo seemed to enwrap the excursionist as he pushed on through
+ the busy streets in the cool shadow of the vast granite palaces wherein
+ the genius of business loves to house itself in this money-making land,
+ and inhaled the odors of great heaps of leather and spices and dry goods
+ as he passed the open doorways,&mdash;odors that mixed pleasantly with the
+ smell of the freshly watered streets. When he stepped into a crockery
+ store to make his purchase a sense of pleasure-taking did not fail him,
+ and he fell naturally into talk with the clerk about the weather and such
+ pastoral topics. Even when he reached the establishment where his own
+ business days were passed some glamour seemed to be cast upon familiar
+ objects. To the disenchanted eye all things were as they were on all other
+ dullish days of summer, even to the accustomed bore leaning up against his
+ favorite desk and transfixing his habitual victim with his usual theme.
+ Yet to the gaze of this pleasure-taker all was subtly changed, and he
+ shook hands right and left as he entered, to the marked surprise of the
+ objects of his effusion. He had merely come to get some newspapers to help
+ pass away the long moments on the wharf, and when he had found these, he
+ hurried back thither to hear what had happened during his absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed that there had hardly ever been such an eventful period in the
+ lives of the family before, and he listened to a minute account of it from
+ Cousin Lucy. &ldquo;You know, Frank,&rdquo; says she, &ldquo;that Sallie's
+ one idea in life is to keep the baby from getting the whooping-cough, and
+ I declare that these premises have done nothing but reëcho with the most
+ dolorous whoops ever since you've been gone, so that at times, in my
+ fear that Sallie would think I'd been careless about the boy, I've
+ been ready to throw myself into the water, and nothing's prevented
+ me but the doubt whether it wouldn't be better to throw in the
+ whoopers instead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a pale little girl, with a face wan and sad through all its
+ dirt, came and stood in the doorway nearest the baby, and in another
+ instant she had burst into a whoop so terrific that, if she had meant to
+ have his scalp next it could not have been more dreadful. Then she
+ subsided into a deep and pathetic quiet, with that air peculiar to the
+ victims of her disorder of having done nothing noticeable. But her
+ outburst had set at work the mysterious machinery of half a dozen other
+ whooping-coughers lurking about the building, and all unseen they wound
+ themselves up with appalling rapidity, and in the utter silence which
+ followed left one to think they had died at the climax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it's a perfect whooping-cough factory, this place,&rdquo;
+ cries Cousin Lucy in a desperation. &ldquo;Go away, do, please, from the
+ baby, you poor little dreadful object you,&rdquo; she continues, turning
+ upon the only visible operative in the establishment. &ldquo;Here, take
+ this,&rdquo; and she bribes her with a bit of sponge-cake, on which the
+ child runs lightly off along the edge of the wharf. &ldquo;That's
+ been another of their projects for driving me wild,&rdquo; says Cousin
+ Lucy,&mdash;&ldquo;trying to take their own lives in a hundred ways before
+ my face and eyes. Why <i>will</i> their mothers let them come here to
+ play?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Really, they were very melancholy little figures, and might have gone near
+ to make one sad, even if they had not been constantly imperilling their
+ lives. Thanks to its being summer-time, it did not much matter about the
+ scantiness of their clothing, but their squalor was depressing, it seemed,
+ even to themselves, for they were a mournful-looking set of children, and
+ in their dangerous sports trifled silently and almost gloomily with death.
+ There were none of them above eight or nine years of age, and most of them
+ had the care of smaller brothers, or even babes in arms, whom they were
+ thus early inuring to the perils of the situation. The boys were dressed
+ in pantaloons and shirts which no excess of rolling up in the legs and
+ arms could make small enough, and the incorrigible too-bigness of which
+ rendered the favorite amusements still more hazardous from their liability
+ to trip and entangle the wearers. The little girls had on each a solitary
+ garment, which hung about her gaunt person with antique severity of
+ outline; while the babies were multitudinously swathed in whatever
+ fragments of dress could be tied or pinned or plastered on. Their faces
+ were strikingly and almost ingeniously dirty, and their distractions among
+ the coal-heaps and cord-wood constantly added to the variety and advantage
+ of these effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do their mothers let them come here?&rdquo; muses Frank aloud.
+ &ldquo;Why, because it's so safe, Cousin Lucy. At home, you know,
+ they'd have to be playing upon the sills of fourth-floor windows,
+ and here they're out of the way and can't hurt themselves.
+ Why, Cousin Lucy, this is their park,&mdash;their Public Garden, their
+ Bois de Boulogne, their Cascine. And look at their gloomy little faces!
+ Aren't they taking their pleasure in the spirit of the very highest
+ fashion? I was at Newport last summer, and saw the famous driving on the
+ Avenue in those pony phaetons, dog-carts, and tubs, and three-story
+ carriages with a pair of footmen perching like storks upon each gable, and
+ I assure you that all those ornate and costly phantasms (it seems to me
+ now like a sad, sweet vision) had just the expression of these poor
+ children. We're taking a day's pleasure ourselves, cousin, but
+ nobody would know it from our looks. And has nothing but whooping-cough
+ happened since I've been gone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, we seem to be so cut off from every-day associations that I've
+ imagined myself a sort of tourist, and I've been to that Catholic
+ church over yonder, in hopes of seeing the Murillos and Raphaels&mdash;but
+ I found it locked up, and so I trudged back without a sight of the
+ masterpieces. But what's the reason that all the shops hereabouts
+ have nothing but luxuries for sale? The windows are perfect tropics of
+ oranges, and lemons, and belated bananas, and tobacco, and peanuts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, the poor really seem to use more of those luxuries than
+ anybody else. I don't blame them. I shouldn't care for the
+ necessaries of life myself, if I found them so hard to get.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I came back here,&rdquo; says Cousin Lucy, without heeding
+ these flippant and heartless words, &ldquo;I found an old gentleman who
+ has something to do with the boats, and he sat down, as if it were a part
+ of his business, and told me nearly the whole history of his life. Isn't
+ it nice of them, keeping an Autobiographer? It makes the time pass so
+ swiftly when you're waiting. This old gentleman was born&mdash;who'd
+ ever think it?&mdash;up there in Pearl Street, where those pitiless big
+ granite stores are now; and, I don't know why, but the idea of any
+ human baby being born in Pearl Street seemed to me one of the saddest
+ things I'd ever heard of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Cousin Lucy went to the rescue of the nurse and the baby, who had got
+ into one of their periodical difficulties, and her interlocutor turned to
+ Aunt Melissa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, Franklin,&rdquo; says Aunt Melissa, &ldquo;that it was
+ wrong to let that nurse come and bring the baby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know, Aunty, you have those old-established ideas, and they're
+ very right,&rdquo; answers her nephew; &ldquo;but just consider how much
+ she enjoys it, and how vastly the baby adds to the pleasure of this
+ charming excursion!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Melissa made no reply, but sat thoughtfully out upon the bay. &ldquo;I
+ presume you think the excursion is a failure,&rdquo; she said, after a
+ while; &ldquo;but I've been enjoying every minute of the time here.
+ Of course, I've never seen the open sea, and I don't know
+ about it, but I feel here just as if I were spending a day at the seaside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said her nephew, &ldquo;I shouldn't call this
+ exactly a watering-place. It lacks the splendor and gayety of Newport, in
+ a certain degree, and it hasn't the illustrious seclusion of Nahant.
+ The surf isn't very fine, nor the beach particularly adapted to
+ bathing; and yet, I must confess, the outlook from here is as lovely as
+ anything one need have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to tell the truth, it was very pretty and interesting. The landward
+ environment was as commonplace and mean as it could be: a yardful of
+ dismal sheds for coal and lumber, and shanties for offices, with each
+ office its safe and its desk, its whittled arm-chair and its spittoon, its
+ fly that shooed not, but buzzed desperately against the grimy pane, which,
+ if it had really had that boasted microscopic eye, it never would have
+ mistaken for the unblemished daylight. Outside of this yard was the usual
+ wharfish neighborhood, with its turmoil of trucks and carts and fleet
+ express-wagons, its building up and pulling down, its discomfort and
+ clamor of every sort, and its shops for the sale, not only of those
+ luxuries which Lucy had mentioned, but of such domestic refreshments as
+ lemon-pie and hulled-corn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, however, you turned your thoughts and eyes away from this aspect of
+ it, and looked out upon the water, the neighborhood gloriously retrieved
+ itself. There its poverty and vulgarity ceased; there its beauty and grace
+ abounded. A light breeze ruffled the face of the bay, and the innumerable
+ little sail-boats that dotted it took the sun and wind upon their wings,
+ which they dipped almost into the sparkle of the water, and flew lightly
+ hither and thither like gulls that loved the brine too well to rise wholly
+ from it; larger ships, farther or nearer, puffed or shrank their sails as
+ they came and went on the errands of commerce, but always moved as if bent
+ upon some dreamy affair of pleasure; the steamboats that shot vehemently
+ across their tranquil courses seemed only gayer and vivider visions, but
+ not more substantial; yonder, a black sea-going steamer passed out between
+ the far-off islands, and at last left in the sky above those reveries of
+ fortification, a whiff of sombre smoke, dark and unreal as a memory of
+ battle; to the right, on some line of railroad, long-plumed trains arrived
+ and departed like pictures passed through the slide of a magic-lantern;
+ even a pile-driver, at work in the same direction, seemed to have no
+ malice in the blows which, after a loud clucking, it dealt the pile, and
+ one understood that it was mere conventional violence like that of a Punch
+ to his baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what a lotus-eating life this is!&rdquo; said Frank, at last.
+ &ldquo;Aunt Melissa, I don't wonder you think it's like the
+ seaside. It's a great deal better than the seaside. And now, just as
+ we've entered into the spirit of it, the time's up for the
+ 'Rose Standish' to come and bear us from its delights. When
+ will the boat be in?&rdquo; he asked of the Autobiographer, whom Lucy had
+ pointed out to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she's <i>ben</i> in half an hour, now. There she lays,
+ just outside the 'John Romer.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, to be sure, she lay, and those pleasure-takers had been so lost in
+ the rapture of waiting and the beauty of the scene as never to have
+ noticed her arrival.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ II&mdash;THE AFTERNOON
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is noticeable how many people there are in the world that seem bent
+ always upon the same purpose of amusement or business as one's self.
+ If you keep quietly about your accustomed affairs, there are all your
+ neighbors and acquaintance hard at it too; if you go on a journey, choose
+ what train you will, the cars are filled with travellers in your
+ direction. You take a day's pleasure, and everybody abandons his
+ usual occupation to crowd upon your boat, whether it is to Gloucester, or
+ Nahant, or to Nantasket Beach you go. It is very hard to believe that,
+ from whatever channel of life you abstract yourself, still the great sum
+ of it presses forward as before: that business is carried on though you
+ are idle, that men amuse themselves though you toil, that every train is
+ as crowded as that you travel on, that the theatre or the church fills its
+ boxes or pews without you perfectly well. I suppose it would not be quite
+ agreeable to believe all this; the opposite illusion is far more
+ flattering; for if each one of us did not take the world with him now at
+ every turn, should he not have to leave it behind him when he died? And
+ that, it must be owned, would not be agreeable, nor is the fact quite
+ conceivable, though ever so many myriads in so many million years have
+ proved it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When our friends first went aboard the &ldquo;Rose Standish&rdquo; that
+ day they were almost the sole passengers, and they had a feeling of
+ ownership and privacy which was pleasant enough in its way, but which they
+ lost afterwards; though to lose it was also pleasant, for enjoyment no
+ more likes to be solitary than sin does, which is notoriously gregarious,
+ and I dare say would hardly exist if it could not be committed in company.
+ The preacher, indeed, little knows the comfortable sensation we have in
+ being called fellow-sinners, and what an effective shield for his guilt
+ each makes of his neighbor's hard-heartedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Frank never felt how strange was a lonely transgression till that
+ day, when in the silence of the little cabin he took the bottle of claret
+ from the handbag, and prepared to moisten the family lunch with it.
+ &ldquo;I think, Aunt Melissa,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we had better lunch
+ now, for it's a quarter past two, and we shall not get to the beach
+ before four. Let's improvise a beach of these chairs, and that
+ water-urn yonder can stand for the breakers. Now, this is truly like
+ Newport and Nahant,&rdquo; he added, after the little arrangement was
+ complete; and he was about to strip away the bottle's jacket of
+ brown paper, when a lady much wrapped up came in, and, reclining upon one
+ of the opposite seats, began to take them all in with a severe serenity of
+ gaze that made them feel for a moment like a party of low foreigners,&mdash;like
+ a set of German atheists, say. Frank kept on the bottle's paper
+ jacket, and as the single tumbler of the party circled from mouth to
+ mouth, each of them tried to give the honest drink the false air of a
+ medicinal potion of some sort; and to see Aunt Melissa sipping it, no one
+ could have put his hand on his heart and sworn it was not elderberry wine,
+ at the worst. In spite of these efforts, they all knew that they had
+ suffered a hopeless loss of repute; yet after the loss was confessed, I am
+ not sure that they were not the gayer and happier through this &ldquo;freedom
+ of a broken law.&rdquo; At any rate, the lunch passed off very merrily,
+ and when they had put back the fragments of the feast into the bags, they
+ went forward to the bow of the boat, to get good places for seeing the
+ various people as they came aboard, and for an outlook upon the bay when
+ the boat should start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suppose that these were not very remarkable people, and that nothing but
+ the indomitable interest our friends took in the human race could have
+ enabled them to feel any concern in their companions. It was, no doubt,
+ just such a company as goes down to Nantasket Beach every pleasant day in
+ summer. Certain ones among them were distinguishable as sojourners at the
+ beach, by an air of familiarity with the business of getting there, an
+ indifference to the prospect, and an indefinable touch of superiority.
+ These read their newspapers in quiet corners, or, if they were not of the
+ newspaper sex, made themselves comfortable in the cabins, and looked about
+ them at the other passengers with looks of lazy surprise, and just a hint
+ of scorn for their interest in the boat's departure. Our day's
+ pleasurers took it that the lady whose steady gaze had reduced them, when
+ at lunch, to such a low ebb of shabbiness, was a regular boarder, at the
+ least, in one of the beach hotels. A few other passengers were, like
+ themselves, mere idlers for a day, and were eager to see all that the boat
+ or the voyage offered of novelty. There were clerks and men who had
+ book-keeping written in a neat mercantile hand upon their faces, and who
+ had evidently been given that afternoon for a breathing-time; and there
+ were strangers who were going down to the beach for the sake of the
+ charming view of the harbor which the trip afforded. Here and there were
+ people who were not to be classed with any certainty,&mdash;as a pale
+ young man, handsome in his undesirable way, who looked like a steamboat
+ pantry boy not yet risen to be bar-tender, but rapidly rising, and who sat
+ carefully balanced upon the railing of the boat, chatting with two young
+ girls, who heard his broad sallies with continual snickers, and
+ interchanged saucy comments with that prompt up-and-coming manner which is
+ so large a part of non-humorous humor, as Mr. Lowell calls it, and now and
+ then pulled and pushed each other. It was a scene worth study, for in no
+ other country could anything so bad have been without being vastly worse;
+ but here it was evident that there was nothing worse than you saw; and,
+ indeed, these persons formed a sort of relief to the other passengers, who
+ were nearly all monotonously well-behaved. Amongst a few there seemed to
+ be acquaintance, but the far greater part were unknown to one another, and
+ there were no words wasted by any one. I believe the English traveller who
+ has taxed our nation with inquisitiveness for half a century is at last
+ beginning to find out that we do not ask questions because we have the
+ still more vicious custom of not opening our mouths at all when with
+ strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a good hour after our friends got aboard before the boat left her
+ moorings, and then it was not without some secret dreads of sea-sickness
+ that Aunt Melissa saw the seething brine widen between her and the
+ familiar wharf-house, where she now seemed to have spent so large a part
+ of her life. But the multitude of really charming and interesting objects
+ that presently fell under her eye soon distracted her from those gloomy
+ thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is always a shabbiness about the wharves of seaports; but I must own
+ that as soon as you get a reasonable distance from them in Boston, they
+ turn wholly beautiful. They no longer present that imposing array of
+ mighty ships which they could show in the days of Consul Plancus, when the
+ commerce of the world sought chiefly our port, yet the docks are still
+ filled with the modester kinds of shipping, and if there is not that
+ wilderness of spars and rigging which you see at New York, let us believe
+ that there is an aspect of selection and refinement in the scene, so that
+ one should describe it, not as a forest, but, less conventionally, as a
+ gentleman's park of masts. The steamships of many coastwise freight
+ lines gloom, with their black, capacious hulks, among the lighter
+ sailing-craft, and among the white, green-shuttered passenger-boats; and
+ behind them those desperate and grimy sheds assume a picturesqueness,
+ their sagging roofs and crooked gables harmonizing agreeably with the
+ shipping; and then growing up from all, rises the mellow-tinted
+ brick-built city, roof, and spire, and dome,&mdash;a fair and noble sight,
+ indeed, and one not surpassed for a certain quiet and cleanly beauty by
+ any that I know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our friends lingered long upon this pretty prospect, and, as inland people
+ of light heart and easy fancy will, the ladies made imagined voyages in
+ each of the more notable vessels they passed,&mdash;all cheap and safe
+ trips, occupying half a second apiece. Then they came forward to the bow,
+ that they might not lose any part of the harbor's beauty and
+ variety, and informed themselves of the names of each of the fortressed
+ islands as they passed, and forgot them, being passed, so that to this day
+ Aunt Melissa has the Fort Warren rebel prisoners languishing in Fort
+ Independence. But they made sure of the air of soft repose that hung about
+ each, of that exquisite military neatness which distinguishes them, and
+ which went to Aunt Melissa's housekeeping heart, of the green, thick
+ turf covering the escarpments, of the great guns loafing on the crests of
+ the ramparts and looking out over the water sleepily, of the sentries
+ pacing slowly up and down with their gleaming muskets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never see one of those fellows,&rdquo; says Cousin Frank, &ldquo;without
+ setting him to the music of that saddest and subtlest of Heine's
+ poems. You know it, Lucy;&rdquo; and he repeats:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Mein Herz, mein Herz is traurig,
+ Doch lustig leuchtet der Mai;
+ Ich stehe gelehnt an der Linde,
+ Hoch auf der alten Bastei.
+
+</pre>
+ <hr />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Am alten grauen Thurme
+ Ein Schilderhäuschen steht;
+ Ein rothgeröckter Bursche
+ Dort auf und nieder geht.
+
+ &ldquo;Er spielt mit seiner Flinte,
+ Sie funkelt im Sonnenroth,
+ Er präsentirt, und schultert,&mdash;
+ Ich wollt', er schösse mich todt.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; says Cousin Lucy, either because the poignant melancholy
+ of the sentiment has suddenly pierced her, or because she does not quite
+ understand the German,&mdash;you never can tell about women. While Frank
+ smiles down upon her in this amiable doubt, their party is approached by
+ the tipsy man who has been making the excursion so merry for the other
+ passengers, in spite of the fact that there is very much to make one sad
+ in him. He is an old man, sweltering in rusty black, a two days'
+ gray beard, and a narrow-brimmed, livid silk hat, set well back upon the
+ nape of his neck. He explains to our friends, as he does to every one
+ whose acquaintance he makes, that he was in former days a seafaring man,
+ and that he has brought his two little grandsons here to show them
+ something about a ship; and the poor old soul helplessly saturates his
+ phrase with the rankest profanity. The boys are somewhat amused by their
+ grandsire's state, being no doubt familiar with it, but a very
+ grim-looking old lady who sits against the pilot-house, and keeps a sharp
+ eye upon all three, and who is also doubtless familiar with the unhappy
+ spectacle, seems not to find it a joke. Her stout matronly umbrella
+ trembles in her hand when her husband draws near, and her eye flashes; but
+ he gives her as wide a berth as he can, returning her glare with a
+ propitiatory drunken smile and a wink to the passengers to let them into
+ the fun. In fact, he is full of humor in his tipsy way, and one after
+ another falls the prey of his free sarcasm, which does not spare the boat
+ or any feature of the excursion. He holds for a long time, by swiftly
+ successive stories of his seafaring days, a very quiet gentleman, who
+ dares neither laugh too loudly nor show indifference for fear of rousing
+ that terrible wit at his expense, and finds his account in looking down at
+ his boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; says the deplorable old sinner, &ldquo;we was
+ forty days out from Liverpool, with a cargo of salt and iron, and we got
+ caught on the Banks in a calm. 'Cap'n,' says I,&mdash;I
+ 'us sec'n' mate,&mdash;''s they any man
+ aboard this ship knows how to pray?' 'No,' says the cap'n;
+ 'blast yer prayers!' 'Well,' says I, 'cap'n,
+ I'm no hand at all to pray, but I'm goin' to see if
+ prayin' won't git us out 'n this.' And I down on
+ my knees, and I made a first-class prayer; and a breeze sprung up in a
+ minute and carried us smack into Boston.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this bit of truculent burlesque the quiet man made a bold push, and
+ walked away with a somewhat sickened face, and as no one now intervened
+ between them, the inebriate laid a familiar hand upon Cousin Frank's
+ collar, and said with a wink at his late listener: &ldquo;Looks like a
+ lerigious man, don't he? I guess I give him a good dose, if he <i>does</i>
+ think himself the head-deacon of this boat.&rdquo; And he went on to state
+ his ideas of religion, from which it seemed that he was a person of the
+ most advanced thinking, and believed in nothing worth mentioning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perhaps no worse for an Infidel to be drunk than a Christian, but my
+ friend found this tipsy blasphemer's case so revolting, that he went
+ to the hand-bag, took out the empty claret-bottle, and seeking a solitary
+ corner of the boat, cast the bottle into the water, and felt a thrill of
+ uncommon self-approval as this scapegoat of all the wine at his grocer's
+ bobbed off upon the little waves. &ldquo;Besides, it saves carrying the
+ bottle home,&rdquo; he thought, not without a half-conscious reserve, that
+ if his penitence were ever too much for him, he could easily abandon it.
+ And without the reflection that the gate is always open behind him, who
+ could consent to enter upon any course of perfect behavior? If good
+ resolutions could not be broken, who would ever have the courage to form
+ them? Would it not be intolerable to be made as good as we ought to be?
+ Then, admirable reader, thank Heaven even for your lapses, since it is so
+ wholesome and saving to be well ashamed of yourself, from time to time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What an outrage,&rdquo; said Cousin Frank, in the glow of virtue,
+ as he rejoined the ladies, &ldquo;that that tipsy rascal should be allowed
+ to go on with his ribaldry. He seems to pervade the whole boat, and to
+ subject everybody to his sway. He's a perfect despot to us helpless
+ sober people,&mdash;I wouldn't openly disagree with him on any
+ account. We ought to send a Round Robin to the captain, and ask him to put
+ that religious liberal in irons during the rest of the voyage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mean time, however, the object of his indignation had used up all
+ the conversible material in that part of the boat, and had deviously
+ started for the other end. The elderly woman with the umbrella rose and
+ followed him, somewhat wearily, and with a sadness that appeared more in
+ her movement than in her face; and as the two went down the cabin, did the
+ comical affair look, after all, something like tragedy? My reader, who
+ expects a little novelty in tragedy, and not these stale and common
+ effects, will never think so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll not pretend, Frank,&rdquo; says Lucy, &ldquo;that in
+ such an intellectual place as Boston a crowd as large as this can be got
+ together, and no distinguished literary people in it. I know there are
+ some notables aboard: do point them out to me. Pretty near everybody has a
+ literary look.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, that's what we call our Boston look, Cousin Lucy. You
+ needn't have written anything to have it,&mdash;it's as
+ general as tubercular consumption, and is the effect of our universal
+ culture and habits of reading. I heard a New-Yorker say once that if you
+ went into a corner grocery in Boston to buy a codfish, the man would ask
+ you how you liked 'Lucille,' whilst he was tying it up. No,
+ no; you mustn't be taken in by that literary look; I'm afraid
+ the real literary men don't always have it. But I <i>do</i> see a
+ literary man aboard yonder,&rdquo; he added, craning his neck to one side,
+ and then furtively pointing,&mdash;&ldquo;the most literary man I ever
+ knew, one of the most literary men that ever lived. His whole existence is
+ really bound up in books; he never talks of anything else, and never
+ thinks of anything else, I believe. Look at him,&mdash;what kind and
+ pleasant eyes he's got! There, he sees me!&rdquo; cries Cousin
+ Frank, with a pleasurable excitement. &ldquo;How d'ye do?&rdquo; he
+ calls out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Cousin Frank, introduce us,&rdquo; sighs Lucy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I! He wouldn't thank me. He doesn't care for pretty
+ girls outside of books; he'd be afraid of 'em; he's the
+ bashfullest man alive, and all his heroines are fifty years old, at the
+ least. But before I go any further, tell me solemnly, Lucy, you're
+ not interviewing me? You're not going to write it to a New York
+ newspaper? No? Well, I think it's best to ask, always. Our friend
+ there&mdash;he's everybody's friend, if you mean nobody's
+ enemy, by that, not even his own&mdash;is really what I say,&mdash;the
+ most literary man I ever knew. He loves all epochs and phases of
+ literature, but his passion is the Charles Lamb period and all Lamb's
+ friends. He loves them as if they were living men; and Lamb would have
+ loved him if he could have known him. He speaks rapidly, and rather
+ indistinctly, and when you meet him and say Good day, and you suppose he
+ answers with something about the weather, ten to one he's asking you
+ what you think of Hazlitt's essays on Shakespeare, or Leigh Hunt's
+ Italian Poets, or Lamb's roast pig, or Barry Cornwall's songs.
+ He couldn't get by a bookstall without stopping&mdash;for half an
+ hour, at any rate. He knows just when all the new books in town are to be
+ published, and when each bookseller is to get his invoice of old English
+ books. He has no particular address, but if you leave your card for him at
+ any bookstore in Boston, he's sure to get it within two days; and in
+ the summer-time you're apt to meet him on these excursions. Of
+ course, he writes about books, and very tastefully and modestly; there's
+ hardly any of the brand-new immortal English poets, who die off so
+ rapidly, but has had a good word from him; but his heart is with the older
+ fellows, from Chaucer down; and, after the Charles Lamb epoch, I don't
+ know whether he loves better the Elizabethan age or that of Queen Anne.
+ Think of him making me stop the other day at a bookstall, and read through
+ an essay out of the &ldquo;Spectator!&rdquo; I did it all for love of him,
+ though money couldn't have persuaded me that I had time; and I'm
+ always telling him lies, and pretending to be as well acquainted as he is
+ with authors I hardly know by name,&mdash;he seems so fondly to expect it.
+ He's really almost a disembodied spirit as concerns most mundane
+ interests&mdash;his soul is in literature, as a lover's in his
+ mistress's beauty; and in the next world, where, as the
+ Swedenborgians believe, spirits seen at a distance appear like the things
+ they most resemble in disposition, as doves, hawks, goats, lambs, swine,
+ and so on, I'm sure that I shall see his true and kindly soul in the
+ guise of a noble old Folio, quaintly lettered across his back in old
+ English text, <i>Tom. I.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While our friends talked and looked about them, a sudden change had come
+ over the brightness and warmth of the day; the blue heaven had turned a
+ chilly gray, and the water looked harsh and cold. Now, too, they noted
+ that they were drawing near a wooden pier built into the water, and that
+ they had been winding about in a crooked channel between muddy shallows,
+ and that their course was overrun with long, disheveled sea-weed. The
+ shawls had been unstrapped, and the ladies made comfortable in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho for the beach!&rdquo; cried Cousin Frank, with a vehement show
+ of enthusiasm. &ldquo;Now, then, Aunt Melissa, prepare for the great
+ enjoyment of the day. In a few moments we shall be of the elves
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'That on the sand with printless foot
+ Do chase the ebbing Neptune, and do fly him
+ When he comes back.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Come! we shall have three hours on the beach, and that will bring us well
+ into the cool of the evening, and we can return by the last boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As to the cool of the evening,&rdquo; said Aunt Melissa, &ldquo;I
+ don't know. It's quite cool enough for comfort at present, and
+ I'm sure that anything more wouldn't be wholesome. What's
+ become of our beautiful weather?&rdquo; she asked, deeply plotting to gain
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's one of our Boston peculiarities, not to say merits,&rdquo;
+ answered Frank, &ldquo;which you must have noticed already, that we can
+ get rid of a fine day sooner than any other region. While you're
+ saying how lovely it is, a subtle change is wrought, and under skies still
+ blue and a sun still warm the keen spirit of the east wind pierces every
+ nerve, and all the fine weather within you is chilled and extinguished.
+ The gray atmosphere follows, but the day first languishes in yourself. But
+ for this, life in Boston would be insupportably perfect, if this is indeed
+ a drawback. You'd find Bostonians to defend it, I dare say. But this
+ isn't a regular east wind to-day; it's merely our nearness to
+ the sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, Franklin,&rdquo; said Aunt Melissa, &ldquo;that we won't
+ go down to the beach this afternoon,&rdquo; as if she had been there
+ yesterday, and would go to-morrow. &ldquo;It's too late in the day;
+ and it wouldn't be good for the child, I'm sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, aunty, it was you determined us to wait for the boat, and it's
+ your right to say whether we shall leave it or not. I'm very willing
+ not to go ashore. I always find that, after working up to an object with
+ great effort, it's surpassingly sweet to leave it unaccomplished at
+ last. Then it remains forever in the region of the ideal, amongst the
+ songs that never were sung, the pictures that never were painted. Why, in
+ fact, should we force this pleasure? We've eaten our lunch, we've
+ lost the warm heart of the day; why should we poorly drag over to that
+ damp and sullen beach, where we should find three hours very long, when by
+ going back now we can keep intact that glorious image of a day by the sea
+ which we've been cherishing all summer? You're right, Aunt
+ Melissa; we won't go ashore; we will stay here, and respect our
+ illusions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At heart, perhaps, Lucy did not quite like this retreat; it was not in
+ harmony with the youthful spirit of her sex, but she reflected that she
+ could come again,&mdash;O beneficent cheat of Another Time, how much thou
+ sparest us in our over-worked, over-enjoyed world!&mdash;she was very
+ comfortable where she was, in a seat commanding a perfect view for the
+ return trip; and she submitted without a murmur. Besides, now that the
+ boat had drawn up to the pier, and discharged part of her passengers, and
+ was waiting to take on others, Lucy was interested in a mass of fluttering
+ dresses and wide-rimmed straw hats that drew down toward the &ldquo;Rose
+ Standish,&rdquo; and gracefully thronged the pier, and prettily hesitated
+ about, and finally came aboard with laughter and little false cries of
+ terror, attended through all by the New England disproportion of that sex
+ which is so foolish when it is silly. It was a large picnic party which
+ had been spending the day upon the beach, as each of the ladies showed in
+ her face, where, if the roses upon her cheeks were somewhat obscured by
+ the imbrowning seaside sun, a bright pink had been compensatingly bestowed
+ upon the point of her nose. A mysterious quiet fell upon them all when
+ they were got aboard and had taken conspicuous places, which was accounted
+ for presently when a loud shout was heard from the shore, and a man beside
+ an ambulant photographic machine was seen wildly waving his hat. It is
+ impossible to resist a temptation of this kind, and our party all yielded,
+ and posed themselves in striking and characteristic attitudes,&mdash;even
+ Aunt Melissa sharing the ambition to appear in a picture which she should
+ never see, and the nurse coming out strong from the abeyance in which she
+ had been held, and lifting the baby high into the air for a good likeness.
+ The frantic gesticulator on the shore gave an impressive wave with both
+ hands, took the cap from the instrument, turned his back, as photographers
+ always do, with that air of hiding their tears, for the brief space that
+ seems so long, and then clapped on the cap again, while a great sigh of
+ relief went up from the whole boat-load of passengers. They were taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the interval had been a luckless one for the &ldquo;Rose Standish,&rdquo;
+ and when she stirred her wheels, clouds of mud rose to the top of the
+ water, and there was no responsive movement of the boat. She was aground
+ in the falling tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There seems a pretty fair prospect of our spending some time here,
+ after all,&rdquo; said Frank, while the ladies, who had reluctantly given
+ up the idea of staying, were now in a quiver of impatience to be off. The
+ picnic was shifted from side to side; the engine groaned and tugged,
+ Captain Miles Standish and his crew bestirred themselves vigorously, and
+ at last the boat swung loose, and strode down the sea-weedy channels;
+ while our friends, who had already done the great sights of the harbor,
+ now settled themselves to the enjoyment of its minor traits and beauties.
+ Here and there they passed small parties on the shore, which, with their
+ yachts anchored near, or their boats drawn up from the water, were cooking
+ an out-door meal by a fire that burned bright red upon the sands in the
+ late afternoon air. In such cases, people willingly indulge themselves in
+ saluting whatever craft goes by, and the ladies of these small picnics, as
+ they sat round the fires, kept up a great waving of handkerchiefs, and
+ sometimes cheered the &ldquo;Rose Standish,&rdquo; though I believe the
+ Bostonians are ordinarily not a demonstrative race. Of course the large
+ picnic on board fluttered multitudinous handkerchiefs in response, both to
+ these people ashore and to those who hailed them from vessels which they
+ met. They did not refuse the politeness even to the passengers on a rival
+ boat when she passed them, though at heart they must have felt some
+ natural pangs at being passed. The water was peopled everywhere by all
+ sorts of sail lagging slowly homeward in the light evening breeze; and on
+ some of the larger vessels there were family groups to be seen, and a
+ graceful smoke, suggestive of supper, curled from the cook's galley.
+ I suppose these ships were chiefly coasting craft, of one kind or another,
+ come from the Provinces at farthest; but to the ignorance and the fancy of
+ our friends, they arrived from all remote and romantic parts of the world,&mdash;from
+ India, from China, and from the South Seas, with cargoes of spices and
+ gums and tropical fruits; and I see no reason why one should ever deny
+ himself the easy pleasure they felt in painting the unknown in such lively
+ hues. The truth is, a strange ship, if you will let her, always brings you
+ precious freight, always arrives from Wonderland under the command of
+ Captain Sinbad. How like a beautiful sprite she looks afar off, as if she
+ came from some finer and fairer world than ours! Nay, we will not go out
+ to meet her; we will not go on board; Captain Sinbad shall bring us the
+ invoice of gold-dust, slaves, and rocs' eggs to-night, and we will
+ have some of the eggs for breakfast; or if he never comes, are we not just
+ as rich? But I think these friends of ours got a yet keener pleasure out
+ of the spectacle of a large and stately ship, that with all sails spread
+ moved silently and steadily out toward the open sea. It is yet grander and
+ sweeter to sail toward the unknown than to come from it; and every vessel
+ that leaves port has this destination, and will bear you thither if you
+ will.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;It may be that the gulf shall wash us down;
+ It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
+ And see the great Achilles, whom we knew,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ absently murmured Lucy, looking on this beautiful apparition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I can't help thinking of Ulysses' cabin-boy,
+ yonder,&rdquo; said Cousin Frank, after a pause; &ldquo;can you, Aunt
+ Melissa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand what you're talking about Franklin,&rdquo;
+ answered Aunt Melissa, somewhat severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I mean that there is a poor wretch of a boy on board there,
+ who's run away, and whose heart must be aching just now at the
+ thought of the home he has left. I hope Ulysses will be good to him, and
+ not swear at him for a day or two, or knock him about with a belaying-pin.
+ Just about this time his mother, up in the country, is getting ready his
+ supper, and wondering what's become of him, and torturing herself
+ with hopes that break one by one; and to-night when she goes up to his
+ empty room, having tried to persuade herself that the truant's come
+ back and climbed in at the window&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Why, Franklin, this
+ isn't true, is it?&rdquo; asks Aunt Melissa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no, let's pray Heaven it isn't, in this case. It's
+ been true often enough to be false for once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a great, ugly, black object a ship is!&rdquo; said Cousin
+ Lucy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly the city rose up against the distance, sharpening all its outlines,
+ and filling in all its familiar details,&mdash;like a fact which one
+ dreams is a dream, and which, as the mists of sleep break away, shows
+ itself for reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The air grows closer and warmer,&mdash;it is the breath of the hot and
+ toil-worn land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat makes her way up through the shipping, seeks her landing, and
+ presently rubs herself affectionately against the wharf. The passengers
+ quickly disperse themselves upon shore, dismissed each with an appropriate
+ sarcasm by the tipsy man, who has had the means of keeping himself drunk
+ throughout, and who now looks to the discharge of the boat's cargo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As our friends leave the wharf-house behind them, and straggle uneasily,
+ and very conscious of sunburn, up the now silent length of Pearl Street to
+ seek the nearest horse-cars, they are aware of a curious fidgeting of the
+ nurse, who flies from one side of the pavement to the other and violently
+ shifts the baby from one arm to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; asks Frank; but before the nurse
+ can answer, &ldquo;Thim little divils,&rdquo; he perceives that the
+ whooping-coughers of the morning have taken the occasion to renew a
+ pleasant acquaintance, and are surrounding the baby and nurse with an
+ atmosphere of whooping-cough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say, friends! we can't stand this, you know,&rdquo; says
+ the anxious father. &ldquo;We must part some time, and this is a favorable
+ moment. Now I'll give you all this, if you don't come another
+ step!&rdquo; and he empties out to them, from the hand-bags he carries,
+ the fragments of lunch which the frugal mind of Aunt Melissa had caused
+ her to store there. Upon these the whooping-coughers hurl themselves in a
+ body, and are soon left round the corner. Yet they would have been no
+ disgrace to our party, whose appearance was now most disreputable: Frank
+ and Lucy stalked ahead, with shawls dragging from their arms, the former
+ loaded down with hand-bags and the latter with India-rubbers; Aunt Melissa
+ came next under a burden of bloated umbrellas; the nurse last, with her
+ hat awry, and the baby a caricature of its morning trimness, in her
+ embrace. A day's pleasure is so demoralizing, that no party can
+ stand it, and come out neat and orderly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/5000.jpg" alt="5000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/5000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Frank,&rdquo; asked Lucy, awfully, &ldquo;what if we should
+ meet the Mayflowers now?&rdquo;&mdash;the Mayflowers being a very ancient
+ and noble Boston family whose acquaintance was the great pride and terror
+ of our friends' lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should cut them dead,&rdquo; said Frank, and scarcely spoke again
+ till his party dragged slowly up the steps of their minute suburban villa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door his wife met them with a troubled and anxious face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Calamities?&rdquo; asked Frank, desperately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, calamities upon calamities! We've got a lost child in the
+ kitchen,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Sallie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O good heavens!&rdquo; cried her husband. &ldquo;Adieu, my dreams
+ of repose, so desirable after the quantity of active enjoyment I've
+ had! Well, where is the lost child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ III.&mdash;THE EVENING
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the lost child?&rdquo; repeats Frank, desperately. &ldquo;Where
+ have you got him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the kitchen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why in the kitchen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How's baby?&rdquo; demands Mrs. Sallie, with the incoherent
+ suddenness of her sex, and running halfway down the steps to meet the
+ nurse. &ldquo;Um, um, um-m-m-m,&rdquo; sounds, which may stand for
+ smothered kisses of rapture and thanksgiving that baby is not a lost
+ child. &ldquo;Has he been good, Lucy? Take him off and give him some
+ cocoa, Mrs. O'Gonegal,&rdquo; she adds in her business-like way, and
+ with a little push to the combined nurse and baby, while Lucy answers,
+ &ldquo;O beautiful!&rdquo; and from that moment, being warned through all
+ her being by something in the other's tone, casts aside the matronly
+ manner which she has worn during the day, and lapses into the comfortable
+ irresponsibility of young-ladyhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What kind of a time did you have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Splendid!&rdquo; answers Lucy. &ldquo;Delightful, <i>I</i> think,&rdquo;
+ she adds, as if she thought others might not think so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose you found Gloucester a quaint old place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O,&rdquo; says Frank, &ldquo;we didn't go to Gloucester; we
+ found that the City Fathers had chartered the boat for the day, so we
+ thought we'd go to Nahant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you've seen your favorite Gardens of Maolis! What in the
+ world <i>are</i> they like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; we didn't see the Gardens of Maolis; the Nahant boat
+ was so crowded that we couldn't think of going on her, and so we
+ decided we'd drive over to the Liverpool Wharf and go down to
+ Nantasket Beach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was nice. I'm so glad on Aunt Melissa's account.
+ It's much better to see the ocean from a long beach than from those
+ Nahant rocks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's what <i>I</i> said. But, you know, when we got to the
+ wharf the boat had just left.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You <i>don't</i> mean it! Well, then, what under the canopy
+ <i>did</i> you do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, we sat down in the wharf-house, and waited from nine o'clock
+ till half-past two for the next boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'm glad you didn't back out, at any rate. You
+ did show pluck, you poor things! I hope you enjoyed the beach after you <i>did</i>
+ get there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; says Frank, looking down, &ldquo;we never got there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never got there!&rdquo; gasps Mrs. Sallie. &ldquo;Didn't you
+ go down on the afternoon boat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why didn't you get to the beach, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We didn't go ashore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that's <i>like</i> you, Frank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a great deal more like Aunt Melissa,&rdquo; answers
+ Frank. &ldquo;The air felt so raw and chilly by the time we reached the
+ pier, that she declared the baby would perish if it was taken to the
+ beach. Besides, nothing would persuade her that Nantasket Beach was at all
+ different from Liverpool Wharf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, never mind!&rdquo; says Mrs. Sallie. &ldquo;I don't
+ wish to hear anything more. That's your idea of a day's
+ pleasure, is it? I call it a day's disgrace, a day's miserable
+ giving-up. There, go in, go in; I'm ashamed of you all. Don't
+ let the neighbors see you, for pity's sake.&mdash;We keep him in the
+ kitchen,&rdquo; she continues, recurring to Frank's long-unanswered
+ question concerning the lost child, &ldquo;because he prefers it as being
+ the room nearest to the closet where the cookies are. He's taken
+ advantage of our sympathies to refuse everything but cookies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose that's one of the rights of lost childhood,&rdquo;
+ comments Frank, languidly; &ldquo;there's no law that can compel him
+ to touch even cracker.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you'd better go down and see what <i>you</i> can make
+ of him. He's driven <i>us</i> all wild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Frank descends to the region now redolent of the preparing tea, and
+ finds upon a chair, in the middle of the kitchen floor, a very forlorn
+ little figure of a boy, mutely munching a sweet-cake, while now and then a
+ tear steals down his cheeks and moistens the grimy traces of former tears.
+ He and baby are, in the mean time regarding each other with a steadfast
+ glare, the cook and the nurse supporting baby in this rite of hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my little man,&rdquo; says his host, &ldquo;how did you get
+ here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little man, perhaps because he is heartily sick of the question, is
+ somewhat slow to answer that there was a fire; and that he ran after the
+ steamer; and a girl found him and brought him up here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that's all the blessed thing you can get out of him,&rdquo;
+ says cook; and the lost boy looks as if he felt cook to be perfectly
+ right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the well-meant endeavors of the household to wash him and
+ brush him, he is still a dreadfully travel-stained little boy, and he is
+ powdered in every secret crease and wrinkle by that dust of old
+ Charlesbridge, of which we always speak with an air of affected disgust,
+ and a feeling of ill-concealed pride in an abomination so strikingly and
+ peculiarly our own. He looks very much as if he had been following
+ fire-engines about the streets of our learned and pulverous suburb ever
+ since he could walk, and he certainly seems to feel himself in trouble to
+ a certain degree; but there is easily imaginable in his bearing a
+ conviction that after all the chief care is with others, and that, though
+ unhappy, he is not responsible. The principal victim of his sorrows is
+ also penetrated by this opinion, and after gazing forlornly upon him for a
+ while, asks mechanically, &ldquo;What's your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy,&rdquo; is the laconic answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy&mdash;?&rdquo; trying with an artful inflection to lead him
+ on to his surname.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy,&rdquo; decidedly and conclusively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, bless me! What's the name of the street your papa lives
+ on?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This problem is far too deep for Freddy, and he takes a bite of sweet-cake
+ in sign that he does not think of solving it. Frank looks at him gloomily
+ for a moment, and then determines that he can grapple with the difficulty
+ more successfully after he has had tea. &ldquo;Send up the supper,
+ Bridget. I think, my dear,&rdquo; he says, after they have sat down,
+ &ldquo;we'd better all question our lost child when we've
+ finished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, when they have finished, they have him up in the sitting-room, and the
+ inquisition begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Freddy,&rdquo; his host says, with a cheerful air of lifelong
+ friendship and confidence, &ldquo;you know that everybody has got two
+ names. Of course your first name is Freddy, and it's a very pretty
+ name. Well, I want you to think real hard, and then tell me what your
+ other name is, so I can take you back to your mamma.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this allusion the child looks round on the circle of eager and
+ compassionate faces, and begins to shed tears and to wring all hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's your name?&rdquo; asks Frank, cheerfully,&mdash;&ldquo;your
+ <i>other</i> name, you know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy,&rdquo; sobbed the forlorn creature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O good heaven! this'll never do,&rdquo; groaned the chief
+ inquisitor. &ldquo;Now, Freddy, try not to cry. What is your papa's
+ name,&mdash;Mr.&mdash;?&rdquo; with the leading inflection as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa,&rdquo; says Freddy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/6000.jpg" alt="6000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/6000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, that'll never do! Not Mr. Papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; persists Freddy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Freddy,&rdquo; interposes Mrs. Sallie, as her husband falls
+ back baffled, &ldquo;when ladies come to see your mamma, what do they call
+ her? Mrs.&mdash;?&rdquo; adopting Frank's alluring inflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Mamma,&rdquo; answers Freddy, confirmed in his error by this
+ course; and a secret dismay possesses his questioners. They skirmish about
+ him with every sort of query; they try to entrap him into some kind of
+ revelation by apparently irrelevant remarks; they plan ambuscades and
+ surprises; but Freddy looks vigilantly round upon them, and guards his
+ personal history from every approach, and seems in every way so to have
+ the best of it, that it is almost exasperating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kindness has proved futile,&rdquo; observes Frank, &ldquo;and I
+ think we ought as a last resort, before yielding ourselves to despair, to
+ use intimidation. Now, Fred,&rdquo; he says, with sudden and terrible
+ severity, &ldquo;what's your father's name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hapless little soul is really moved to an effort of memory by this,
+ and blubbers out something that proves in the end to resemble the family
+ name, though for the present it is merely a puzzle of unintelligible
+ sounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blackman?&rdquo; cries Aunt Melissa, catching desperately at these
+ sounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this, all the man and brother is roused in Freddy's bosom, and he
+ roars fiercely, &ldquo;No! he ain't a black man! He's white!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I give it up,&rdquo; says Frank, who has been looking for his hat.
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid we can't make anything out of him; and I'll
+ have to go and report the case to the police. But, put him to bed, do,
+ Sallie; he's dropping with sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he went out, of course supported morally by a sense of duty, but I am
+ afraid also by a sense of adventure in some degree. It is not every day
+ that, in so quiet a place as Charlesbridge, you can have a lost child cast
+ upon your sympathies; and I believe that when an appeal is not really
+ agonizing, we like so well to have our sympathies touched, we favorites of
+ the prosperous commonplace, that most of us would enter eagerly into a
+ pathetic case of this kind, even after a day's pleasure. Such was
+ certainly the mood of my friend, and he unconsciously prepared himself for
+ an equal interest on the part of the police; but this was an error. The
+ police heard his statement with all proper attention, and wrote it in full
+ upon the station-slate, but they showed no feeling whatever, and behaved
+ as if they valued a lost child no more than a child snug at home in his
+ own crib. They said that no doubt his parents would be asking at the
+ police-stations for him during the night, and, as if my friend would
+ otherwise have thought of putting him into the street, they suggested that
+ he should just keep the lost child till he was sent for. Modestly enough
+ Frank proposed that they should make some inquiry for his parents, and was
+ answered by the question whether they could take a man off his beat for
+ that purpose; and remembering that beats in Charlesbridge were of such
+ vastness that during his whole residence there he had never yet seen a
+ policeman on his street, he was obliged to own to himself that his
+ proposal was absurd. He felt the need of reinstating himself by something
+ more sensible, and so he said he thought he would go down to the Port and
+ leave word at the station there; and the police tacitly assenting to this
+ he went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I who have sometimes hinted that the Square is not a centre of gayety, or
+ a scene of the greatest activity by day, feel it right to say that it has
+ some modest charms of its own on a summer's night, about the hour
+ when Frank passed through it, when the post-office has just been shut, and
+ when the different groups that haunt the place in front of the closing
+ shops have dwindled to the loungers fit though few who will keep it well
+ into the night, and may there be found, by the passenger on the last
+ horse-car out from Boston, wrapt in a kind of social silence, and
+ honorably attended by the policeman whose favored beat is in that
+ neighborhood. They seem a feature of the bygone village life of
+ Charlesbridge, and accord pleasantly with the town-pump and the public
+ horse-trough, and the noble elm that by night droops its boughs so
+ pensively, and probably dreams of its happy younger days when there were
+ no canker-worms in the world. Sometimes this choice company sits on the
+ curbing that goes round the terrace at the elm-tree's foot, and then
+ I envy every soul in it,&mdash;so tranquil it seems, so cool, so careless,
+ so morrowless. I cannot see the faces of that luxurious society, but there
+ I imagine is the local albino, and a certain blind man, who resorts
+ thither much by day, and makes a strange kind of jest of his own, with a
+ flicker of humor upon his sightless face, and a faith that others less
+ unkindly treated by nature will be able to see the point apparently not
+ always discernible to himself. Late at night I have a fancy that the
+ darkness puts him on an equality with other wits, and that he enjoys his
+ own brilliancy as well as any one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Port station Frank was pleased and soothed by the tranquil air of
+ the policeman, who sat in his shirt-sleeves outside the door, and seemed
+ to announce, by his attitude of final disoccupation, that crimes and
+ misdemeanors were no more. This officer at once showed a desirable
+ interest in the case. He put on his blue coat that he might listen to the
+ whole story in a proper figure, and then he took down the main points on
+ the slate, and said that they would send word round to the other stations
+ in the city, and the boy's parents could hardly help hearing of him
+ that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returned home, Frank gave his news, and then he and Mrs. Sallie went up to
+ look at the lost child as he slept. The sumptuous diet to which he had
+ confined himself from the first seemed to agree with him perfectly, for he
+ slept unbrokenly, and apparently without a consciousness of his woes. On a
+ chair lay his clothes, in a dusty little pathetic heap; they were
+ well-kept clothes, except for the wrong his wanderings had done them, and
+ they showed a motherly care here and there, which it was not easy to look
+ at with composure. The spectators of his sleep both thought of the curious
+ chance that had thrown this little one into their charge, and considered
+ that he was almost as completely a gift of the Unknown as if he had been
+ following a steamer in another planet, and had thence dropped into their
+ yard. His helplessness in accounting for himself was as affecting as that
+ of the sublimest metaphysician; and no learned man, no superior intellect,
+ no subtle inquirer among us lost children of the divine, forgotten home,
+ could have been less able to say how or whence he came to be just where he
+ found himself. We wander away and away; the dust of the road-side gathers
+ upon us; and when some strange shelter receives us, we lie down to our
+ sleep, inarticulate, and haunted with dreams of memory, or the memory of
+ dreams, knowing scarcely more of the past than of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a strange world!&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Sallie; and then, as this
+ was a mood far too speculative for her, she recalled herself to practical
+ life suddenly. &ldquo;If we should have to adopt this child, Frank&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Why,
+ bless my soul, we're not obliged to adopt him! Even a lost child can't
+ demand that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall adopt him, if they don't come for him. And now, I
+ want to know&rdquo; (Mrs. Sallie spoke as if the adoption had been
+ effected) &ldquo;whether we shall give him our name, or some other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don't know. It's the first child I've
+ ever adopted,&rdquo; said Frank &ldquo;and upon my word, I can't say
+ whether you have to give him a new name or not. In fact, if I'd
+ thought of this affair of a name, I'd never have adopted him. It's
+ the greatest part of the burden, and if his father will only come for him,
+ I'll give him up without a murmur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the interval that followed the proposal of this alarming difficulty,
+ and while he sat and waited vaguely for whatever should be going to happen
+ next, Frank was not able to repress a sense of personal resentment towards
+ the little vagrant sleeping so carelessly there, though at the bottom of
+ his heart there was all imaginable tenderness for him. In the fantastic
+ character which, to his weariness, the day's pleasure took on, it
+ seemed an extraordinary unkindness of fate that this lost child should
+ have been kept in reserve for him after all the rest; and he had so small
+ consciousness of bestowing shelter and charity, and so profound a feeling
+ of having himself been turned out of house and home by some surprising and
+ potent agency, that if the lost child had been a regiment of Fenians
+ billeted upon him, it could not have oppressed him more. While he remained
+ perplexed in this perverse sentiment of invasion and dispossession,
+ &ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; said Mrs. Sallie, &ldquo;what's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a noise of dragging and shuffling on the walk in front of the
+ house, and a low, hoarse whispering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Frank, &ldquo;but from the kind of
+ pleasure I've got out of it so far, I should say that this holiday
+ was capable of an earthquake before midnight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They listened, as they must, and heard the outer darkness rehearse a
+ raucous dialogue between an unseen Bill and Jim, who were the more
+ terrible to the imagination from being so realistically named, and who
+ seemed to have in charge some nameless third person, a mute actor in the
+ invisible scene. There was doubt, which he uttered, in the mind of Jim,
+ whether they could get this silent comrade along much farther without
+ carrying him; and there was a growling assent from Bill that he <i>was</i>
+ pretty far gone, that was a fact, and that maybe Jim <i>had</i> better go
+ for the wagon; then there were quick, retreating steps; and then there was
+ a profound silence, in which the audience of this strange drama sat
+ thrilled and speechless. The effect was not less dreadful when there rose
+ a dull sound, as of a helpless body rubbing against the fence, and at last
+ lowered heavily to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Sallie. &ldquo;Do go out and help. He's
+ dying!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even as she spoke the noise of wheels was heard. A wagon stopped
+ before the door; there came a tugging and lifting, with a sound as of
+ crunching gravel, and then a &ldquo;There!&rdquo; of great relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frank!&rdquo; said Mrs. Sallie very solemnly, &ldquo;if you don't
+ go out and help those men, I'll never forgive you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Really, the drama had grown very impressive; it was a mystery, to say the
+ least; and so it must remain forever, for when Frank, infected at last by
+ Mrs. Sallie's faith in tragedy, opened the door and offered his
+ tardy services, the wagon was driven rapidly away without reply. They
+ never learned what it had all been; and I think that if one actually
+ honors mysteries, it is best not to look into them. How much finer, after
+ all, if you have such a thing as this happen before your door at midnight,
+ not to throw any light upon it! Then your probable tipsy man cannot be
+ proved other than a tragical presence, which you can match with any
+ inscrutable creation of fiction; and if you should ever come to write a
+ romance, as one is very liable to do in this age, there is your unknown, a
+ figure of strange and fearful interest, made to your hand, and capable of
+ being used, in or out of the body, with a very gloomy effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While our friends yet trembled with this sensation, quick steps ascended
+ to their door, and then followed a sharp, anxious tug at the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Frank, prophetically, &ldquo;here's the
+ father of our adopted son;&rdquo; and he opened the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman who appeared there could scarcely frame the question to
+ which Frank replied so cheerfully: &ldquo;O yes; he's here, and snug
+ in bed, and fast asleep. Come up-stairs and look at him. Better let him be
+ till morning, and then come after him,&rdquo; he added, as they looked
+ down a moment on the little sleeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O no, I couldn't,&rdquo; said the father, <i>con expressione</i>;
+ and then he told how he had heard of this child's whereabouts at the
+ Port station, and had hurried to get him, and how his mother did not know
+ he was found yet, and was almost wild about him. They had no idea how he
+ had got lost, and his own blind story was the only tale of his adventure
+ that ever became known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time his father had got the child partly awake, and the two men
+ were dressing him in men's clumsy fashion; and finally they gave it
+ up, and rolled him in a shawl. The father lifted the slight burden, and
+ two small arms fell about his neck. The weary child slept again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How has he behaved?&rdquo; asked the father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like a little hero,&rdquo; said Frank, &ldquo;but he's been a
+ cormorant for cookies. I think it right to tell you, in case he shouldn't
+ be very brilliant to-morrow, that he wouldn't eat a bit of anything
+ else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father said he was the life of their house; and Frank said he knew how
+ that was,&mdash;that he had a life of the house of his own; and then the
+ father thanked him very simply and touchingly, and with the decent New
+ England self-restraint, which is doubtless so much better than any sort of
+ effusion. &ldquo;Say good-night to the gentleman, Freddy,&rdquo; he said
+ at the door; and Freddy with closed eyes murmured a good-night from far
+ within the land of dreams, and then was borne away to the house out of
+ which the life had wandered with his little feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know, Sallie,&rdquo; said Frank, when he had given
+ all the eagerly demanded particulars about the child's father,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ don't know whether I should want many such holidays as this, in the
+ course of the summer. On the whole, I think I'd better overwork
+ myself and not take any relaxation, if I mean to live long. And yet I'm
+ not sure that the day's been altogether a failure, though all our
+ purposes of enjoyment have miscarried. I didn't plan to find a lost
+ child here, when I got home, and I'm afraid I haven't had
+ always the most Christian feeling towards him; but he's really the
+ saving grace of the affair; and if this were a little comedy I had been
+ playing, I should turn him to account with the jaded audience, and
+ advancing to the foot-lights, should say, with my hand on my waistcoat,
+ and a neat bow, that although every hope of the day had been disappointed,
+ and nothing I had meant to do had been done, yet the man who had ended at
+ midnight by restoring a lost child to the arms of its father, must own
+ that, in spite of adverse fortune, he had enjoyed A Day's Pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/7000.jpg" alt="7000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/7000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was long past the twilight hour, which has been already mentioned as so
+ oppressive in suburban places, and it was even too late for visitors, when
+ a resident, whom I shall briefly describe as a Contributor to the
+ magazines, was startled by a ring at his door. As any thoughtful person
+ would have done upon the like occasion, he ran over his acquaintance in
+ his mind, speculating whether it were such or such a one, and dismissing
+ the whole list of improbabilities, before he laid down the book he was
+ reading, and answered the bell. When at last he did this, he was rewarded
+ by the apparition of an utter stranger on his threshold,&mdash;a gaunt
+ figure of forlorn and curious smartness towering far above him, that
+ jerked him a nod of the head, and asked if Mr. Hapford lived there. The
+ face which the lamp-light revealed was remarkable for a harsh two days'
+ growth of beard, and a single bloodshot eye; yet it was not otherwise a
+ sinister countenance, and there was something in the strange presence that
+ appealed and touched. The contributor, revolving the facts vaguely in his
+ mind, was not sure, after all, that it was not the man's clothes
+ rather than his expression that softened him toward the rugged visage:
+ they were so tragically cheap, and the misery of helpless needlewomen, and
+ the poverty and ignorance of the purchaser, were so apparent in their
+ shabby newness, of which they appeared still conscious enough to have led
+ the way to the very window, in the Semitic quarter of the city, where they
+ had lain ticketed, &ldquo;This nobby suit for $15.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the stranger's manner put both his face and his clothes out of
+ mind, and claimed a deeper interest when, being answered that the person
+ for whom he asked did not live there, he set his bristling lips hard
+ together, and sighed heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They told me,&rdquo; he said, in a hopeless way, &ldquo;that he
+ lived on this street, and I've been to every other house. I'm
+ very anxious to find him, Cap'n,&rdquo;&mdash;the contributor, of
+ course, had no claim to the title with which he was thus decorated,&mdash;&ldquo;for
+ I've a daughter living with him, and I want to see her; I've
+ just got home from a two years' voyage, and&rdquo;&mdash;there was a
+ struggle of the Adam's-apple in the man's gaunt throat&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ find she's about all there is left of my family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How complex is every human motive! This contributor had been lately
+ thinking, whenever he turned the pages of some foolish traveller,&mdash;some
+ empty prattler of Southern or Eastern lands, where all sensation was long
+ ago exhausted, and the oxygen has perished from every sentiment, so has it
+ been breathed and breathed again,&mdash;that nowadays the wise adventurer
+ sat down beside his own register and waited for incidents to seek him out.
+ It seemed to him that the cultivation of a patient and receptive spirit
+ was the sole condition needed to insure the occurrence of all manner of
+ surprising facts within the range of one's own personal knowledge;
+ that not only the Greeks were at our doors, but the fairies and the genii,
+ and all the people of romance, who had but to be hospitably treated in
+ order to develop the deepest interest of fiction, and to become the
+ characters of plots so ingenious that the most cunning invention were poor
+ beside them. I myself am not so confident of this, and would rather trust
+ Mr. Charles Reade, say, for my amusement than any chance combination of
+ events. But I should be afraid to say how much his pride in the character
+ of the stranger's sorrows, as proof of the correctness of his
+ theory, prevailed with the contributor to ask him to come in and sit down;
+ though I hope that some abstract impulse of humanity, some compassionate
+ and unselfish care for the man's misfortunes as misfortunes, was not
+ wholly wanting. Indeed, the helpless simplicity with which he had confided
+ his case might have touched a harder heart. &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said
+ the poor fellow, after a moment's hesitation. &ldquo;I believe I
+ will come in. I've been on foot all day, and after such a long
+ voyage it makes a man dreadfully sore to walk about so much. Perhaps you
+ can think of a Mr. Hapford living somewhere in the neighborhood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down, and, after a pondering silence, in which he had remained with
+ his head fallen upon his breast, &ldquo;My name is Jonathan Tinker,&rdquo;
+ he said, with the unaffected air which had already impressed the
+ contributor, and as if he felt that some form of introduction was
+ necessary, &ldquo;and the girl that I want to find is Julia Tinker.&rdquo;
+ Then he added, resuming the eventful personal history which the listener
+ exulted, while he regretted, to hear: &ldquo;You see, I shipped first to
+ Liverpool, and there I heard from my family; and then I shipped again for
+ Hong-Kong, and after that I never heard a word: I seemed to miss the
+ letters everywhere. This morning, at four o'clock, I left my ship as
+ soon as she had hauled into the dock, and hurried up home. The house was
+ shut, and not a soul in it; and I didn't know what to do, and I sat
+ down on the doorstep to wait till the neighbors woke up, to ask them what
+ had become of my family. And the first one come out he told me my wife had
+ been dead a year and a half, and the baby I'd never seen, with her;
+ and one of my boys was dead; and he didn't know where the rest of
+ the children was, but he'd heard two of the little ones was with a
+ family in the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man mentioned these things with the half-apologetic air observable in
+ a certain kind of Americans when some accident obliges them to confess the
+ infirmity of the natural feelings. They do not ask your sympathy, and you
+ offer it quite at your own risk, with a chance of having it thrown back
+ upon your hands. The contributor assumed the risk so far as to say,
+ &ldquo;Pretty rough!&rdquo; when the stranger caused; and perhaps these
+ homely words were best suited to reach the homely heart. The man's
+ quavering lips closed hard again, a kind of spasm passed over his dark
+ face, and then two very small drops of brine shone upon his weather-worn
+ cheeks. This demonstration, into which he had been surprised, seemed to
+ stand for the passion of tears into which the emotional races fall at such
+ times. He opened his lips with a kind of dry click, and went on:&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ hunted about the whole forenoon in the city, and at last I found the
+ children. I'd been gone so long they didn't know me, and
+ somehow I thought the people they were with weren't over-glad I'd
+ turned up. Finally the oldest child told me that Julia was living with a
+ Mr. Hapford on this street, and I started out here to-night to look her
+ up. If I can find her, I'm all right. I can get the family together,
+ then, and start new.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems rather odd,&rdquo; mused the listener aloud, &ldquo;that
+ the neighbors let them break up so, and that they should all scatter as
+ they did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it ain't so curious as it seems, Cap'n. There was
+ money for them at the owners', all the time; I'd left part of
+ my wages when I sailed; but they didn't know how to get at it, and
+ what could a parcel of children do? Julia's a good girl, and when I
+ find her I'm all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writer could only repeat that there was no Mr. Hapford living on that
+ street, and never had been, so far as he knew. Yet there might be such a
+ person in the neighborhood; and they would go out together, and ask at
+ some of the houses about. But the stranger must first take a glass of
+ wine; for he looked used up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailor awkwardly but civilly enough protested that he did not want to
+ give so much trouble, but took the glass, and, as he put it to his lips,
+ said formally, as if it were a toast or a kind of grace, &ldquo;I hope I
+ may have the opportunity of returning the compliment.&rdquo; The
+ contributor thanked him; though, as he thought of all the circumstances of
+ the case, and considered the cost at which the stranger had come to enjoy
+ his politeness, he felt little eagerness to secure the return of the
+ compliment at the same price, and added, with the consequence of another
+ set phrase, &ldquo;Not at all.&rdquo; But the thought had made him the
+ more anxious to befriend the luckless soul fortune had cast in his way;
+ and so the two sallied out together, and rang door-bells wherever lights
+ were still seen burning in the windows, and asked the astonished people
+ who answered their summons whether any Mr. Hapford were known to live in
+ the neighborhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And although the search for this gentleman proved vain, the contributor
+ could not feel that an expedition which set familiar objects in such novel
+ light? was altogether a failure. He entered so intimately into the cares
+ and anxieties of his <i>protege,</i> that at times he felt himself in some
+ inexplicable sort a shipmate of Jonathan Tinker, and almost personally a
+ partner of his calamities. The estrangement of all things which takes
+ place, within doors and without, about midnight may have helped to cast
+ this doubt upon his identity;&mdash;he seemed to be visiting now for the
+ first time the streets and neighborhoods nearest his own, and his feet
+ stumbled over the accustomed walks. In his quality of houseless wanderer,
+ and&mdash;so far as appeared to others&mdash;possibly worthless vagabond,
+ he also got a new and instructive effect upon the faces which, in his real
+ character, he knew so well by their looks of neighborly greeting; and it
+ is his belief that the first hospitable prompting of the human heart is to
+ shut the door in the eyes of homeless strangers who present themselves
+ after eleven o'clock. By that time the servants are all abed, and
+ the gentleman of the house answers the bell, and looks out with a loath
+ and bewildered face, which gradually changes to one of suspicion, and of
+ wonder as to what those fellows can possibly want of <i>him,</i> till at
+ last the prevailing expression is one of contrite desire to atone for the
+ first reluctance by any sort of service. The contributor professes to have
+ observed these changing phases in the visages of those whom he that night
+ called from their dreams, or arrested in the act of going to bed; and he
+ drew the conclusion&mdash;very proper for his imaginable connection with
+ the garroting and other adventurous brotherhoods&mdash;that the most
+ flattering moment for knocking on the head people who answer a late ring
+ at night is either in their first selfish bewilderment, or their final
+ self-abandonment to their better impulses. It does not seem to have
+ occurred to him that he would himself have been a much more favorable
+ subject for the predatory arts that any of his neighbors, if his shipmate,
+ the unknown companion of his researches for Mr. Hapford, had been at all
+ so minded. But the faith of the gaunt giant upon which he reposed was
+ good, and the contributor continued to wander about with him in perfect
+ safety. Not a soul among those they asked had ever heard of a Mr. Hapford,&mdash;far
+ less of a Julia Tinker living with him. But they all listened to the
+ contributor's explanation with interest and eventual sympathy; and
+ in truth,&mdash;briefly told, with a word now and then thrown in by
+ Jonathan Tinker, who kept at the bottom of the steps, showing like a
+ gloomy spectre in the night, or, in his grotesque length and gauntness,
+ like the other's shadow cast there by the lamplight,&mdash;it was a
+ story which could hardly fail to awaken pity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, after ringing several bells where there were no lights, in the
+ mere wantonness of good-will, and going away before they could be answered
+ (it would be entertaining to know what dreams they caused the sleepers
+ within), there seemed to be nothing for it but to give up the search till
+ morning, and go to the main street and wait for the last horse-car to the
+ city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, seated upon the curbstone, Jonathan Tinker, being plied with a few
+ leading questions, told in hints and scraps the story of his hard life,
+ which was at present that of a second mate, and had been that of a
+ cabin-boy and of a seaman before the mast. The second mate's place
+ he held to be the hardest aboard ship. You got only a few dollars more
+ than the men, and you did not rank with the officers; you took your meals
+ alone, and in every thing you belonged by yourself. The men did not
+ respect you, and sometimes the captain abused you awfully before the
+ passengers. The hardest captain that Jonathan Tinker ever sailed with was
+ Captain Gooding of the Cape. It had got to be so that no man would ship
+ second mate under Captain Gooding; and Jonathan Tinker was with him only
+ one voyage. When he had been home awhile, he saw an advertisement for a
+ second mate, and he went round to the owners'. They had kept it
+ secret who the captain was; but there was Captain Gooding in the owners'
+ office. &ldquo;Why, here's the man, now, that I want for a second
+ mate,&rdquo; said he, when Jonathan Tinker entered; &ldquo;he knows me.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Captain
+ Gooding, I know you 'most too well to want to sail under you,&rdquo;
+ answered Jonathan. &ldquo;I might go if I hadn't been with you one
+ voyage too many already.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then the men!&rdquo; said Jonathan, &ldquo;the men coming
+ aboard drunk, and having to be pounded sober! And the hardest of the fight
+ falls on the second mate! Why, there isn't an inch of me that hasn't
+ been cut over or smashed into a jell. I've had three ribs broken; I've
+ got a scar from a knife on my cheek; and I've been stabbed bad
+ enough, half a dozen times, to lay me up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he gave a sort of desperate laugh, as if the notion of so much misery
+ and such various mutilation were too grotesque not to be amusing. &ldquo;Well,
+ what can you do?&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;If you don't strike, the
+ men think you're afraid of them; and so you have to begin hard and
+ go on hard. I always tell a man, 'Now, my man, I always begin with a
+ man the way I mean to keep on. You do your duty and you're all
+ right. But if you don't'&mdash;Well, the men ain't
+ Americans any more,&mdash;Dutch, Spaniards, Chinese, Portuguee,&mdash;and
+ it ain't like abusing a white man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jonathan Tinker was plainly part of the horrible tyranny which we all know
+ exists on shipboard; and his listener respected him the more that, though
+ he had heart enough to be ashamed of it, he was too honest not to own it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did he still follow the sea? Because he did not know what else to do.
+ When he was younger, he used to love it, but now he hated it. Yet there
+ was not a prettier life in the world if you got to be captain. He used to
+ hope for that once, but not now; though he <i>thought</i> he could
+ navigate a ship. Only let him get his family together again, and he would&mdash;yes,
+ he would&mdash;try to do something ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No car had yet come in sight, and so the contributor suggested that they
+ should walk to the car-office, and look in the &ldquo;Directory,&rdquo;
+ which is kept there, for the name of Hapford, in search of whom it had
+ already been arranged that they should renew their acquaintance on the
+ morrow. Jonathan Tinker, when they had reached the office, heard with
+ constitutional phlegm that the name of the Hapford, for whom he inquired
+ was not in the &ldquo;Directory.&rdquo; &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said the
+ other; &ldquo;come round to my house in the morning. We'll find him
+ yet.&rdquo; So they parted with a shake of the hand, the second mate
+ saying that he believed he should go down to the vessel and sleep aboard,&mdash;if
+ he could sleep,&mdash;and murmuring at the last moment the hope of
+ returning the compliment, while the other walked homeward, weary as to the
+ flesh, but, in spite of his sympathy for Jonathan Tinker, very elate in
+ spirit. The truth is,&mdash;and however disgraceful to human nature, let
+ the truth still be told,&mdash;he had recurred to his primal satisfaction
+ in the man as calamity capable of being used for such and such literary
+ ends, and, while he pitied him, rejoiced in him as an episode of real life
+ quite as striking and complete as anything in fiction. It was literature
+ made to his hand. Nothing could be better, he mused; and once more he
+ passed the details of the story in review, and beheld all those pictures
+ which the poor fellow's artless words had so vividly conjured up: he
+ saw him leaping ashore in the gray summer dawn as soon as the ship hauled
+ into the dock, and making his way, with his vague sea-legs unaccustomed to
+ the pavements, up through the silent and empty city streets; he imagined
+ the tumult of fear and hope which the sight of the man's home must
+ have caused in him, and the benumbing shock of finding it blind and deaf
+ to all his appeals; he saw him sitting down upon what had been his own
+ threshold, and waiting in a sort of bewildered patience till the neighbors
+ should be awake, while the noises of the streets gradually arose, and the
+ wheels began to rattle over the stones, and the milk-man and the ice-man
+ came and went, and the waiting figure began to be stared at, and to
+ challenge the curiosity of the passing policeman; he fancied the opening
+ of the neighbor's door, and the slow, cold understanding of the
+ case; the manner, whatever it was, in which the sailor was told that one
+ year before his wife had died, with her babe, and that his children were
+ scattered, none knew where. As the contributor dwelt pityingly upon these
+ things, but at the same time estimated their aesthetic value one by one,
+ he drew near the head of his street, and found himself a few paces behind
+ a boy slouching onward through the night, to whom he called out,
+ adventurously, and with no real hope of information,&mdash;&ldquo;Do you
+ happen to know anybody on this street by the name of Hapford?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why no, not in this town,&rdquo; said the boy; but he added that
+ there was a street of the same name in a neighboring suburb, and that
+ there was a Hapford living on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Jove!&rdquo; thought the contributor, &ldquo;this is more like
+ literature than ever;&rdquo; and he hardly knew whether to be more
+ provoked at his own stupidity in not thinking of a street of the same name
+ in the next village, or delighted at the element of fatality which the
+ fact introduced into the story; for Tinker, according to his own account,
+ must have landed from the cars a few rods from the very door he was
+ seeking, and so walked farther and farther from it every moment. He
+ thought the case so curious, that he laid it briefly before the boy, who,
+ however he might have been inwardly affected, was sufficiently true to the
+ national traditions not to make the smallest conceivable outward sign of
+ concern in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home, however, the contributor related his adventures and the story of
+ Tinker's life, adding the fact that he had just found out where Mr.
+ Hapford lived. &ldquo;It was the only touch wanting,&rdquo; said he;
+ &ldquo;the whole thing is now perfect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's <i>too</i> perfect,&rdquo; was answered from a sad
+ enthusiasm. &ldquo;Don't speak of it! I can't take it in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the question is,&rdquo; said the contributor, penitently taking
+ himself to task for forgetting the hero of these excellent misfortunes in
+ his delight at their perfection, &ldquo;how am I to sleep to-night,
+ thinking of that poor soul's suspense and uncertainty? Never mind,&mdash;I'll
+ be up early, and run over and make sure that it is Tinker's Hapford,
+ before he gets out here, and have a pleasant surprise for him. Would it
+ not be a justifiable <i>coup de théâtre</i> to fetch his daughter here,
+ and let her answer his ring at the door when he comes in the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plan was discouraged. &ldquo;No, no; let them meet in their own way.
+ Just take him to Hapford's house and leave him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well. But he's too good a character to lose sight of. He's
+ got to come back here and tell us what he intends to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The birds, next morning, not having had the second mate on their minds
+ either as an unhappy man or a most fortunate episode, but having slept
+ long and soundly, were singing in a very sprightly way in the way-side
+ trees; and the sweetness of their notes made the contributor's heart
+ light as he climbed the hill and rang at Mr. Hapford's door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was opened by a young girl of fifteen or sixteen, whom he knew at
+ a glance for the second mate's daughter, but of whom, for form's
+ sake, he asked if there were a girl named Julia Tinker living there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name's Julia Tinker,&rdquo; answered the maid, who had
+ rather a disappointing face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the contributor, &ldquo;your father's got
+ back from his Hong-Kong voyage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hong-Kong voyage?&rdquo; echoed the girl, with a stare of helpless
+ inquiry, but no other visible emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. He had never heard of your mother's death. He came home
+ yesterday morning, and was looking for you all day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julia Tinker remained open-mouthed but mute; and the other was puzzled at
+ the want of feeling shown, which he could not account for even as a
+ national trait. &ldquo;Perhaps there's some mistake,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There must be,&rdquo; answered Julia: &ldquo;my father hasn't
+ been to sea for a good many years. <i>My</i> father,&rdquo; she added,
+ with a diffidence indescribably mingled with a sense of distinction,&mdash;&ldquo;<i>my</i>
+ father's in State's Prison. What kind of looking man was this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contributor mechanically described him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julia Tinker broke into a loud, hoarse laugh. &ldquo;Yes, it's him,
+ sure enough.&rdquo; And then, as if the joke were too good to keep:
+ &ldquo;Miss Hapford, Miss Hapford, father's got out. Do come here!&rdquo;
+ she called into a back room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Mrs. Hapford appeared, Julia fell back, and, having deftly caught a
+ fly on the door-post, occupied herself in plucking it to pieces, while she
+ listened to the conversation of the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's all true enough,&rdquo; said Mrs. Hapford, when the
+ writer had recounted the moving story of Jonathan Tinker, &ldquo;so far as
+ the death of his wife and baby goes. But he hasn't been to sea for a
+ good many years, and he must have just come out of State's Prison,
+ where he was put for bigamy. There's always two sides to a story,
+ you know; but they say it broke his first wife's heart, and she
+ died. His friends don't want him to find his children, and this girl
+ especially.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's found his children in the city,&rdquo; said the
+ contributor, gloomily, being at a loss what to do or say, in view of the
+ wreck of his romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, he's found 'em has he?&rdquo; cried Julia, with
+ heightened amusement. &ldquo;Then he'll have me next, if I don't
+ pack and go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm very, very sorry,&rdquo; said the contributor, secretly
+ resolved never to do another good deed, no matter how temptingly the
+ opportunity presented itself. &ldquo;But you may depend he won't
+ find out from <i>me</i> where you are. Of course I had no earthly reason
+ for supposing his story was not true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said kind-hearted Mrs. Hapford, mingling a drop
+ of honey with the gall in the contributor's soul, &ldquo;you only
+ did your duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed, as he turned away he did not feel altogether without
+ compensation. However Jonathan Tinker had fallen in his esteem as a man,
+ he had even risen as literature. The episode which had appeared so perfect
+ in its pathetic phases did not seem less finished as a farce; and this
+ person, to whom all things of every-day life presented themselves in
+ periods more or less rounded, and capable of use as facts or
+ illustrations, could not but rejoice in these new incidents, as
+ dramatically fashioned as the rest. It occurred to him that, wrought into
+ a story, even better use might be made of the facts now than before, for
+ they had developed questions of character and of human nature which could
+ not fail to interest. The more he pondered upon his acquaintance with
+ Jonathan Tinker, the more fascinating the erring mariner became, in his
+ complex truth and falsehood, his delicately blending shades of artifice
+ and <i>naïveté.</i> He must, it was felt, have believed to a certain point
+ in his own inventions: nay, starting with that groundwork of truth,&mdash;the
+ fact that his wife was really dead, and that he had not seen his family
+ for two years,&mdash;why should he not place implicit faith in all the
+ fictions reared upon it? It was probable that he felt a real sorrow for
+ her loss, and that he found a fantastic consolation in depicting the
+ circumstances of her death so that they should look like his inevitable
+ misfortunes rather than his faults. He might well have repented his
+ offense during those two years of prison; and why should he not now cast
+ their dreariness and shame out of his memory, and replace them with the
+ freedom and adventure of a two years' voyage to China,&mdash;so
+ probable, in all respects, that the fact should appear an impossible
+ nightmare? In the experiences of his life he had abundant material to
+ furnish forth the facts of such a voyage, and in the weariness and
+ lassitude that should follow a day's walking equally after a two
+ years' voyage and two years' imprisonment, he had as much
+ physical proof in favor of one hypothesis as the other. It was doubtless
+ true, also, as he said, that he had gone to his house at dawn, and sat
+ down on the threshold of his ruined home; and perhaps he felt the desire
+ he had expressed to see his daughter, with a purpose of beginning life
+ anew; and it may have cost him a veritable pang when he found that his
+ little ones did not know him. All the sentiments of the situation were
+ such as might persuade a lively fancy of the truth of its own inventions;
+ and as he heard these continually repeated by the contributor in their
+ search for Mr. Hapford, they must have acquired an objective force and
+ repute scarcely to be resisted. At the same time, there were touches of
+ nature throughout Jonathan Tinker's narrative which could not fail
+ to take the faith of another. The contributor, in reviewing it, thought it
+ particularly charming that his mariner had not overdrawn himself, or
+ attempted to paint his character otherwise than as it probably was; that
+ he had shown his ideas and practices of life to be those of a second mate,
+ nor more nor less, without the gloss of regret or the pretenses to
+ refinement that might be pleasing to the supposed philanthropist with whom
+ he had fallen in. Captain Gooding was of course a true portrait; and there
+ was nothing in Jonathan Tinker's statement of the relations of a
+ second mate to his superiors and his inferiors which did not agree
+ perfectly with what the contributor had just read in &ldquo;Two Years
+ before the Mast,&rdquo;&mdash;a book which had possibly cast its glamour
+ upon the adventure. He admired also the just and perfectly characteristic
+ air of grief in the bereaved husband and father,&mdash;those occasional
+ escapes from the sense of loss into a brief hilarity and forgetfulness,
+ and those relapses into the hovering gloom, which every one has observed
+ in this poor, crazy human nature when oppressed by sorrow, and which it
+ would have been hard to simulate. But, above all, he exulted in that
+ supreme stroke of the imagination given by the second mate when, at
+ parting, he said he believed he would go down and sleep on board the
+ vessel. In view of this, the State's Prison theory almost appeared a
+ malign and foolish scandal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet even if this theory were correct, was the second mate wholly
+ answerable for beginning his life again with the imposture he had
+ practiced? The contributor had either so fallen in love with the literary
+ advantages of his forlorn deceiver that he would see no moral obliquity in
+ him, or he had touched a subtler verity at last in pondering the affair.
+ It seemed now no longer a farce, but had a pathos which, though very
+ different from that of its first aspect, was hardly less tragical. Knowing
+ with what coldness, or, at the best, uncandor, he (representing Society in
+ its attitude toward convicted Error) would have met the fact had it been
+ owned to him at first, he had not virtue enough to condemn the illusory
+ stranger, who must have been helpless to make at once evident any
+ repentance he felt or good purpose he cherished. Was it not one of the
+ saddest consequences of the man's past,&mdash;a dark necessity of
+ misdoing,&mdash;that, even with the best will in the world to retrieve
+ himself, his first endeavor must involve a wrong? Might he not, indeed, be
+ considered a martyr, in some sort, to his own admirable impulses? I can
+ see clearly enough where the contributor was astray in this reasoning, but
+ I can also understand how one accustomed to value realities only as they
+ resembled fables should be won with such pensive sophistry; and I can
+ certainly sympathize with his feeling that the mariner's failure to
+ reappear according to appointment added its final and most agreeable charm
+ to the whole affair, and completed the mystery from which the man emerged
+ and which swallowed him up again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SCENE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On that loveliest autumn morning, the swollen tide had spread over all the
+ russet levels, and gleamed in the sunlight a mile away. As the contributor
+ moved onward down the street, luminous on either hand with crimsoning and
+ yellowing maples, he was so filled with the tender serenity of the scene,
+ as not to be troubled by the spectacle of small Irish houses standing
+ miserably about on the flats ankle deep, as it were, in little pools of
+ the tide, or to be aware at first, of a strange stir of people upon the
+ streets: a fluttering to and fro and lively encounter and separation of
+ groups of bareheaded women, a flying of children through the broken fences
+ of the neighborhood, and across the vacant lots on which the insulted
+ sign-boards forbade them to trespass; a sluggish movement of men through
+ all, and a pause of different vehicles along the sidewalks. When a sense
+ of these facts had penetrated his enjoyment, he asked a matron whose snowy
+ arms, freshly taken from the wash-tub, were folded across a mighty chest,
+ &ldquo;What is the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A girl drowned herself, sir-r-r, over there on the flats, last
+ Saturday, and they're looking for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the best thing she could do,&rdquo; said another matron
+ grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this answer that literary soul fell at once to patching himself up a
+ romantic story for the suicide, after the pitiful fashion of this
+ fiction-ridden age, when we must relate everything we see to something we
+ have read. He was the less to blame for it, because he could not help it;
+ but certainly he is not to be praised for his associations with the tragic
+ fact brought to his notice. Nothing could have been more trite or obvious,
+ and he felt his intellectual poverty so keenly that he might almost have
+ believed his discomfort a sympathy for the girl who had drowned herself
+ last Saturday. But of course, this could not be, for he had but lately
+ been thinking what a very tiresome figure to the imagination the Fallen
+ Woman had become. As a fact of Christian civilization, she was a spectacle
+ to wring one's heart, he owned; but he wished she were well out of
+ the romances, and it really seemed a fatality that she should be the
+ principal personage of this little scene. The preparation for it, whatever
+ it was to be, was so deliberate, and the reality had so slight relation to
+ the French roofs and modern improvements of the comfortable Charlesbridge
+ which he knew, that he could not consider himself other than as a
+ spectator awaiting some entertainment, with a faint inclination to be
+ critical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mean time there passed through the motley crowd, not so much a cry
+ as a sensation of &ldquo;They've found her, they've found her!&rdquo;
+ and then the one terrible picturesque fact, &ldquo;She was standing
+ upright!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this there was wilder and wilder clamor among the people, dropping by
+ degrees and almost dying away, before a flight of boys came down the
+ street with the tidings, &ldquo;They are bringing her&mdash;bringing her
+ in a wagon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contributor knew that she whom they were bringing in the wagon, had
+ had the poetry of love to her dismal and otherwise squalid death; but the
+ history was of fancy, not of fact in his mind. Of course, he reflected,
+ her lot must have been obscure and hard; the aspect of those concerned
+ about her death implied that. But of her hopes and her fears, who could
+ tell him anything? To be sure he could imagine the lovers, and how they
+ first met, and where, and who he was that was doomed to work her shame and
+ death; but here his fancy came upon something coarse and common: a man of
+ her own race and grade, handsome after that manner of beauty which is so
+ much more hateful than ugliness is; or, worse still, another kind of man
+ whose deceit must have been subtler and wickeder; but whatever the person,
+ a presence defiant of sympathy or even interest, and simply horrible. Then
+ there were the details of the affair, in great degree common to all love
+ affairs, and not varying so widely in any condition of life; for the
+ passion which is so rich and infinite to those within its charm, is apt to
+ seem a little tedious and monotonous in its character, and poor in
+ resources to the cold looker-on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, finally, there was the crazy purpose and its fulfillment: the
+ headlong plunge from bank or bridge; the eddy, and the bubbles on the
+ current that calmed itself above the suicide; the tide that rose and
+ stretched itself abroad in the sunshine, carrying hither and thither the
+ burden with which it knew not what to do; the arrest, as by some ghastly
+ caprice of fate, of the dead girl, in that upright posture, in which she
+ should meet the quest for her, as it were defiantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now they were bringing her in a wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Involuntarily all stood aside, and waited till the funeral car, which they
+ saw, should come up toward them through the long vista of the maple-shaded
+ street, a noiseless riot stirring the legs and arms of the boys into
+ frantic demonstration, while the women remained quiet with arms folded or
+ akimbo. Before and behind the wagon, driven slowly, went a guard of ragged
+ urchins, while on the raised seat above sat two Americans, unperturbed by
+ anything, and concerned merely with the business of the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vehicle was a grocer's cart which had perhaps been pressed into
+ the service; and inevitably the contributor thought of Zenobia, and of
+ Miles Coverdale's belief that if she could have foreboded all the <i>post-mortem</i>
+ ugliness and grotesqueness of suicide, she never would have drowned
+ herself. This girl, too, had doubtless had her own ideas of the effect
+ that her death was to make, her conviction that it was to wring one heart,
+ at least, and to strike awe and pity to every other; and her woman's
+ soul must have been shocked from death could she have known in what a
+ ghastly comedy the body she put off was to play a part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the bottom of the cart lay something long and straight and terrible,
+ covered with a red shawl that drooped over the end of the wagon; and on
+ this thing were piled the baskets in which the grocers had delivered their
+ orders for sugar and flour, and coffee and tea. As the cart jolted through
+ their lines, the boys could no longer be restrained; they broke out with
+ wild yells, and danced madly about it, while the red shawl hanging from
+ the rigid feet nodded to their frantic mirth; and the sun dropped its
+ light through the maples and shone bright upon the flooded date.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JUBILEE DAYS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I believe I have no good reason for including among these suburban
+ sketches my recollections of the Peace Jubilee, celebrated by a monster
+ musical entertainment at Boston, in June, 1869; and I do not know if it
+ will serve as excuse for their intrusion to say that the exhibition was
+ not urban in character, and that I attended it in a feeling of curiosity
+ and amusement which the Bostonians did not seem to feel, and which I
+ suspect was a strictly suburban if not rural sentiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought, on that Tuesday morning, as our horse-car drew near the Long
+ Bridge, and we saw the Coliseum spectral through the rain, that Boston was
+ going to show people representing other parts of the country her Notion of
+ weather. I looked forward to a forenoon of clammy warmth, and an afternoon
+ of clammy cold and of east wind, with a misty nightfall soaking men to the
+ bones. But the day really turned out well enough; it was showery, but not
+ shrewish, and it smiled pleasantly at sunset, as if content with the
+ opening ceremonies of the Great Peace Jubilee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city, as we entered it, gave due token of excitement, and we felt the
+ celebration even in the air, which had a holiday quality very different
+ from that of ordinary workday air. The crowds filled the decorous streets,
+ and the trim pathways of the Common and the Public Garden, and flowed in
+ an orderly course towards the vast edifice on the Back Bay, presenting the
+ interesting points which always distinguish a crowd come to town from a
+ city crowd. You get so used to the Boston face and the Boston dress, that
+ a coat from New York or a visage from Chicago is at once conspicuous to
+ you; and in these people there was not only this strangeness, but the
+ different oddities that lurk in out-of-way corners of society everywhere
+ had started suddenly into notice. Long-haired men, popularly supposed to
+ have perished with the institution of slavery, appeared before me, and men
+ with various causes and manias looking from their wild eyes confronted
+ each other, let alone such charlatans as had clothed themselves quaintly
+ or grotesquely to add a charm to the virtue of whatever nostrum they
+ peddled. It was, however, for the most part, a remarkably well-dressed
+ crowd; and therein it probably differed more than in any other respect
+ from the crowd which a holiday would have assembled in former times. There
+ was little rusticity to be noted anywhere, and the uncouthness which has
+ already disappeared from the national face seemed to be passing from the
+ national wardrobe. Nearly all the visitors seemed to be Americans, but
+ neither the Yankee type nor the Hoosier was to be found. They were
+ apparently very happy, too; the ancestral solemnity of the race that
+ amuses itself sadly was not to be seen in them, and, if they were not
+ making it a duty to be gay, they were really taking their pleasure in a
+ cheerful spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, in fact, something in the sight of the Coliseum, as we
+ approached it, which was a sufficient cause of elation to whoever is
+ buoyed up by the flutter of bright flags, and the movement in and about
+ holiday booths, as I think we all are apt to be. One may not have the
+ stomach of happier days for the swing or the whirligig; he may not drink
+ soda-water intemperately; pop-corn may not tempt him, nor tropical fruits
+ allure; but he beholds them without gloom,&mdash;nay, a grin inevitably
+ lights up his countenance at the sight of a great show of these amusements
+ and refreshments. And any Bostonian might have felt proud that morning
+ that his city did not hide the light of her mercantile merit under a
+ bushel, but blazoned it about on the booths and walls in every variety of
+ printed and painted advertisement. To the mere aesthetic observer, these
+ vast placards gave the delight of brilliant color, and blended prettily
+ enough in effect with the flags; and at first glance I received quite as
+ much pleasure from the frescoes that advised me where to buy my summer
+ clothing, as from any bunting I saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had the good fortune on the morning of this first Jubilee day to view
+ the interior of the Coliseum when there was scarcely anybody there,&mdash;a
+ trifle of ten thousand singers at one end, and a few thousand other people
+ scattered about over the wide expanses of parquet and galleries. The
+ decorations within, as without, were a pleasure to the eyes that love
+ gayety of color; and the interior was certainly magnificent, with those
+ long lines of white and blue drapery roofing the balconies, the slim,
+ lofty columns festooned with flags and drooping banners, the arms of the
+ States decking the fronts of the galleries, and the arabesques of painted
+ muslin everywhere. I do not know that my taste concerned itself with the
+ decorations, or that I have any taste in such things; but I testify that
+ these tints and draperies gave no small part of the comfort of being where
+ all things conspired for one's pleasure. The airy amplitude of the
+ building, the perfect order and the perfect freedom of movement, the ease
+ of access and exit, the completeness of the arrangements that in the
+ afternoon gave all of us thirty thousand spectators a chance to behold the
+ great spectacle as well as to hear the music, were felt, I am sure, as
+ personal favors by every one. These minor particulars, in fact, served
+ greatly to assist you in identifying yourself, when the vast hive swarmed
+ with humanity, and you became a mere sentient atom of the mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was rumored in the morning that the ceremonies were to begin with
+ prayer by a hundred ministers, but I missed this striking feature of the
+ exhibition, for I did not arrive in the afternoon till the last speech was
+ being made by a gentleman whom I saw gesticulating effectively, and whom I
+ suppose to have been intelligible to a matter of twenty thousand people in
+ his vicinity, but who was to me, of the remote, outlying thirty thousand,
+ a voice merely. One word only I caught, and I report it here that
+ posterity may know as much as we thirty thousand contemporaries did of
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE PRESIDENT'S SPEECH.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ . . . . . . . (<i>sensation</i>.) . . . . . . . . . . (<i>cheers</i>.). .
+ . . refinement . . . . . . . . . . (<i>great applause</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know if I shall be able to give an idea of the immensity of this
+ scene; but if such a reader as has the dimensions of the Coliseum
+ accurately fixed in his mind will, in imagination, densely hide all that
+ interminable array of benching in the parquet and the galleries and the
+ slopes at either end of the edifice with human heads, showing here crowns,
+ there occiputs, and yonder faces, he will perhaps have some notion of the
+ spectacle as we beheld it from the northern hill-side. Some thousands of
+ heads nearest were recognizable as attached by the usual neck to the
+ customary human body, but for the rest, we seemed to have entered a world
+ of cherubim. Especially did the multitudinous singers seated far opposite
+ encourage this illusion; and their fluttering fans and handkerchiefs
+ wonderfully mocked the movement of those cravat-like pinions which the
+ fancy attributed to them. They rose or sank at the wave of the director's
+ baton; and still looked like an innumerable flock of cherubs drifting over
+ some slope of Paradise, or settling upon it,&mdash;if cherubs <i>can</i>
+ settle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/8000.jpg" alt="8000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/8000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ The immensity was quite as striking to the mind as to the eye, and an
+ absolute democracy was appreciable in it. Not only did all artificial
+ distinctions cease, but those of nature were practically obliterated, and
+ you felt for once the full meaning of unanimity. No one was at a
+ disadvantage; one was as wise, as good, as handsome as another. In most
+ public assemblages, the foolish eye roves in search of the vanity of
+ female beauty, and rests upon some lovely visage, or pretty figure; but
+ here it seemed to matter nothing whether ladies were well or ill-looking;
+ and one might have been perfectly ascetic without self-denial. A blue eye
+ or a black,&mdash;what of it? A mass of blonde or chestnut hair, this sort
+ of walking-dress or that,&mdash;you might note the difference casually in
+ a few hundred around you; but a sense of those myriads of other eyes and
+ chignons and walking-dresses absorbed the impression in an instant, and
+ left a dim, strange sense of loss, as if all women had suddenly become
+ Woman. For the time, one would have been preposterously conceited to have
+ felt his littleness in that crowd; you never thought of yourself in an
+ individual capacity at all. It was as if you were a private in an army, or
+ a very ordinary billow of the sea, feeling the battle or the storm, in a
+ collective sort of way, but unable to distinguish your sensations from
+ those of the mass. If a rafter had fallen and crushed you and your
+ unimportant row of people, you could scarcely have regarded it as a
+ personal calamity, but might have found it disagreeable as a shock to that
+ great body of humanity. Recall, then, how astonished you were to be
+ recognized by some one, and to have your hand shaken in your individual
+ character of Smith. &ldquo;Smith? My dear What's-your-name, I am for
+ the present the fifty-thousandth part of an enormous emotion!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was as difficult to distribute the various facts of the whole effect,
+ as to identify one's self. I had only a public and general
+ consciousness of the delight given by the harmony of hues in the parquet
+ below; and concerning the orchestra I had at first no distinct impression
+ save of the three hundred and thirty violin-bows held erect like standing
+ wheat at one motion of the director's wand, and then falling as if
+ with the next he swept them down. Afterwards files of men with horns, and
+ other files of men with drums and cymbals, discovered themselves; while
+ far above all, certain laborious figures pumped or ground with incessant
+ obeisance at the apparatus supplying the organ with wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What helped, more than anything else, to restore you your dispersed and
+ wandering individuality was the singing of Parepa-Rosa, as she triumphed
+ over the harmonious rivalry of the orchestra. There was something in the
+ generous amplitude and robust cheerfulness of this great artist that
+ accorded well with the ideal of the occasion; she was in herself a great
+ musical festival; and one felt, as she floated down the stage with her
+ far-spreading white draperies, and swept the audience a colossal courtesy,
+ that here was the embodied genius of the Jubilee. I do not trust myself to
+ speak particularly of her singing, for I have the natural modesty of
+ people who know nothing about music, and I have not at command the
+ phraseology of those who pretend to understand it; but I say that her
+ voice filled the whole edifice with delicious melody, that it soothed and
+ composed and utterly enchanted, that, though two hundred violins
+ accompanied her, the greater sweetness of her note prevailed over all,
+ like a mighty will commanding many. What a sublime ovation for her when a
+ hundred thousand hands thundered their acclaim! A victorious general, an
+ accepted lover, a successful young author,&mdash;these know a measure of
+ bliss, I dare say; but in one throb, the singer's heart, as it leaps
+ in exultation at the loud delight of her applausive thousands, must
+ out-enjoy them all. Let me lay these poor little artificial flowers of
+ rhetoric at the feet of the divine singer, as a faint token of gratitude
+ and eloquent intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Parepa (or Prepper, as I have heard her name popularly pronounced)
+ had sung, the revived consciousness of an individual life rose in
+ rebellion against the oppression of that dominant vastness. In fact, human
+ nature can stand only so much of any one thing. To a certain degree you
+ accept and conceive of facts truthfully, but beyond this a mere
+ fantasticality rules; and having got enough of grandeur, the senses played
+ themselves false. That array of fluttering and tuning people on the
+ southern slope began to look minute, like the myriad heads assembled in
+ the infinitesimal photograph which you view through one of those little
+ half-inch lorgnettes; and you had the satisfaction of knowing that to any
+ lovely infinitesimality yonder you showed no bigger than a carpet-tack.
+ The whole performance now seemed to be worked by those tireless figures
+ pumping at the organ, in obedience to signals from a very alert figure on
+ the platform below. The choral and orchestral thousands sang and piped and
+ played; and at a given point in the <i>scena</i> from Verdi, a hundred
+ fairies in red shirts marched down through the sombre mass of puppets and
+ beat upon as many invisible anvils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the stroke of anti-climax; and the droll sound of those anvils,
+ so far above all the voices and instruments in its pitch, thoroughly
+ disillusioned you and restored you finally to your proper entity and
+ proportions. It was the great error of the great Jubilee, and where almost
+ everything else was noble and impressive,&mdash;where the direction was
+ faultless, and the singing and instrumentation as perfectly controlled as
+ if they were the result of one volition,&mdash;this anvil-beating was
+ alone ignoble and discordant,&mdash;trivial and huge merely. Not even the
+ artillery accompaniment, in which the cannon were made to pronounce words
+ of two syllables, was so bad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dimensions of this sketch bear so little proportion to those of the
+ Jubilee, that I must perforce leave most of its features unnoticed; but I
+ wish to express the sense of enjoyment which prevailed (whenever the
+ anvils were not beaten) over every other feeling, even over wonder. To the
+ ear as to the eye it was a delight, and it was an assured success in the
+ popular affections from the performance of the first piece. For my own
+ part, if one pleasurable sensation, besides that received from Parepa's
+ singing, distinguished itself from the rest, it was that given by the
+ performance of the exquisite Coronation March from Meyerbeer's
+ &ldquo;Prophet;&rdquo; but I say this under protest of the pleasure taken
+ in the choral rendering of the &ldquo;Star-Spangled Banner.&rdquo; Closely
+ allying themselves to these great raptures were the minor joys of
+ wandering freely about from point to point, of receiving fresh sensations
+ from the varying lights and aspects in which the novel scene presented
+ itself with its strange fascinations, and of noting, half consciously, the
+ incessant movement of the crowd as it revealed itself in changing effects
+ of color. Then the gay tumult of the fifteen minutes of intermission
+ between the parts, when all rose with a <i>susurrus</i> of innumerable
+ silks, and the thousands of pretty singers fluttered about, and gossiped
+ tremulously and delightedly over the glory of the performance, revealing
+ themselves as charming feminine personalities, each with her share in the
+ difficulty and the achievement, each with her pique or pride, and each her
+ something to tell her friend of the conduct, agreeable or displeasing, of
+ some particular him! Even the quick dispersion of the mass at the close
+ was a marvel of orderliness and grace, as the melting and separating
+ parts, falling asunder, radiated from the centre, and flowed and rippled
+ rapidly away, and left the great hall empty and bare at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as you emerged from the building, what bizarre and perverse feeling
+ was that you knew? Something as if all-out-doors were cramped and small,
+ and it were better to return to the freedom and amplitude of the interior?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the second day, much that was wonderful in a first experience of the
+ festival was gone; but though the novelty had passed away, the cause for
+ wonder was even greater. If on the first day the crowd was immense, it was
+ now something which the imperfect state of the language will not permit me
+ to describe; perhaps <i>awful</i> will serve the purpose as well as any
+ other word now in use. As you looked round, from the centre of the
+ building, on that restless, fanning, fluttering multitude, to right and
+ left and north and south, all comparisons and similitudes abandoned you.
+ If you were to write of the scene, you felt that your effort, at the best,
+ must be a meagre sketch, suggesting something to those who had seen the
+ fact, but conveying no intelligible impression of it to any one else. The
+ galleries swarmed, the vast slopes were packed, in the pampa-like parquet
+ even the aisles were half filled with chairs, while a cloud of placeless
+ wanderers moved ceaselessly on the borders of the mass under the
+ balconies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When that common-looking, uncommon little man whom we have called to rule
+ over us entered the house, and walked quietly down to his seat in the
+ centre of it, a wild, inarticulate clamor, like no other noise in the
+ world, swelled from every side, till General Grant rose and showed
+ himself, when it grew louder than ever, and then gradully subsided into
+ silence. Then a voice, which might be uttering some mortal alarm, broke
+ repeatedly across the stillness from one of the balconies, and a thousand
+ glasses were leveled in that direction, while everywhere else the mass
+ hushed itself with a mute sense of peril. The capacity of such an
+ assemblage for self-destruction was, in fact, but too evident. From fire,
+ in an edifice of which the sides could be knocked out in a moment, there
+ could have been little danger; the fabric's strength had been
+ perfectly tested the day before, and its fall was not to be apprehended;
+ but we had ourselves greatly to dread. A panic could have been caused by
+ any mad or wanton person, in which thousands might have been instantly
+ trampled to death; and it seemed long till that foolish voice was stilled,
+ and the house lapsed back into tranquillity, and the enjoyment of the
+ music. In the performance I recall nothing disagreeable, nothing that to
+ my ignorance seemed imperfect, though I leave it to the wise in music to
+ say how far the great concert was a success. I saw a flourish of the
+ director's wand, and I heard the voices or the instruments, or both,
+ respond, and I knew by my programme that I was enjoying an unprecedented
+ quantity of Haydn or Handel or Meyerbeer or Rossini or Mozart, afforded
+ with an unquestionable precision and promptness; but I own that I liked
+ better to stroll about the three-acre house, and that for me the music
+ was, at best, only one of the joys of the festival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was good hearing outside for those that desired to listen to the
+ music, with seats to let in the surrounding tents and booths; and there
+ was unlimited seeing for the mere looker-on. At least fifty thousand
+ people seemed to have come to the Jubilee with no other purpose than to
+ gaze upon the outside of the building. The crowd was incomparably greater
+ than that of the day before; all the main thoroughfares of the city roared
+ with a tide of feet that swept through the side streets, and swelled
+ aimlessly up the places, and eddied there, and poured out again over the
+ pavements. The carriage-ways were packed with every sort of vehicle, with
+ foot-passengers crowded from the sidewalks, and with the fragments of the
+ military parade in honor of the President, with infantry, with straggling
+ cavalrymen, with artillery. All the paths of the Common and the Garden
+ were filled, and near the Coliseum the throngs densified on every side
+ into an almost impenetrable mass, that made the doors of the building
+ difficult to approach and at times inaccessible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd differed from that of the first day chiefly in size. There were
+ more country faces and country garbs to be seen, though it was still, on
+ the whole, a regular-featured and well-dressed crowd, with still very few
+ but American visages. It seemed to be also a very frugal-minded crowd, and
+ to spend little upon the refreshments and amusements provided for it. In
+ these, oddly enough, there was nothing of the march of mind to be
+ observed; they Were the refreshments and amusements of a former
+ generation. I think it would not be extravagant to say that there were
+ tons of pie for sale in a multitude of booths, with lemonade, soda-water,
+ and ice-cream in proportion; but I doubt if there was a ton of pie sold,
+ and towards the last the venerable pastry was quite covered with dust.
+ Neither did people seem to care much for oranges or bananas or peanuts, or
+ even pop-corn,&mdash;five cents a package and a prize in each package.
+ Many booths stood unlet, and in others the pulverous ladies and gentlemen,
+ their proprietors, were in the enjoyment of a leisure which would have
+ been elegant if it had not been forced. There was one shanty, not
+ otherwise distinguished from the rest, in which French soups were declared
+ to be for sale; but these alien pottages seemed to be no more favored than
+ the most poisonous of our national viands. But perhaps they were not
+ French soups, or perhaps the vicinage of the shanty was not such as to
+ impress a belief in their genuineness upon people who like French soups.
+ Let us not be too easily disheartened by the popular neglect of them. If
+ the daring reformer who inscribed French soups upon his sign will reappear
+ ten years hence, we shall all flock to his standard. Slavery is abolished;
+ pie must follow. Doubtless in the year 1900, the managers of a Jubilee
+ would even let the refreshment-rooms within their Coliseum to a cook who
+ would offer the public something not so much worse than the worst that
+ could be found in the vilest shanty restaurant on the ground. At the
+ Jubilee, of which I am writing, the unhappy person who went into the
+ Coliseum rooms to refresh himself was offered for coffee a salty and
+ unctuous wash, in one of those thick cups which are supposed to be proof
+ against the hard usage of &ldquo;guests&rdquo; and scullions in humble
+ eating-houses, and which are always so indescribably nicked and cracked,
+ and had pushed towards him a bowl of veteran sugar, and a tin spoon that
+ had never been cleaned in the world, while a young person stood by, and
+ watched him, asking, &ldquo;Have you paid for that coffee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The side-shows and the other amusements seemed to have addressed
+ themselves to the crowd with the same mistaken notion of its character and
+ requirements; though I confess that I witnessed their neglect with regret,
+ whether from a feeling that they were at least harmless, or an unconscious
+ sympathy with any quite idle and unprofitable thing. Those rotary, legless
+ horses, on which children love to ride in a perpetual sickening circle,&mdash;the
+ type of all our effort,&mdash;were nearly always mounted; but those other
+ whirligigs, or whatever the dreadful circles with their swinging seats are
+ called, were often so empty that they must have been distressing, from
+ their want of balance, to the muscles as well as the spirits of their
+ proprietors. The society of monsters was also generally shunned, and a cow
+ with five legs gave milk from the top of her back to an audience of not
+ more than six persons. The public apathy had visibly wrought upon the
+ temper of the gentleman who lectured upon this gifted animal, and he took
+ inquiries in an ironical manner that contrasted disadvantageously with the
+ philosophical serenity of the person who had a weighing-machine outside,
+ and whom I saw sitting in the chair and weighing himself by the hour, with
+ an expression of profound enjoyment. Perhaps a man of less bulk could not
+ have entered so keenly into that simple pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a large tent on the grounds for dramatical entertainments, with
+ six performances a day, into which I was lured by a profusion of
+ high-colored posters, and some such announcement, as that the beautiful
+ serio-comic danseuse and world-renowned cloggist, Mile. Brown, would
+ appear. About a dozen people were assembled within, and we waited a
+ half-hour beyond the time announced for the curtain to rise, during which
+ the spectacle of a young man in black broadcloth, eating a cocoa-nut with
+ his pen-knife, had a strange and painful fascination. At the end of this
+ half-hour, our number was increased to eighteen, when the orchestra
+ appeared,&mdash;a snare-drummer and two buglers. These took their place at
+ the back of the tent; the buglers, who were Germans, blew seriously and
+ industriously at their horns; but the native-born citizen, who played the
+ drum, beat it very much at random, and in the mean time smoked a cigar,
+ while his humorous friend kept time upon his shoulders by striking him
+ there with a cane. How long this might have lasted, I cannot tell; but,
+ after another delay, I suddenly bethought me whether it were not better
+ not to see Mile. Brown, after all? I rose, and stole softly out behind the
+ rhythmic back of the drummer; and the world-renowned cloggist is to me at
+ this moment only a beautiful dream,&mdash;an airy shape fashioned upon a
+ hint supplied by the engraver of the posters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, then, did the public desire, if it would not smile upon the swings,
+ or monsters, or dramatic amusements that had pleased so long? Was the
+ music, as it floated out from the Coliseum, a sufficient delight? Or did
+ the crowd, averse to the shows provided for it, crave something higher and
+ more intellectual,&mdash;like, for example, a course of the Lowell
+ Lectures? Its general expression had changed: it had no longer that entire
+ gayety of the first day, but had taken on something of the sarcastic
+ pathos with which we Americans bear most oppressive and fatiguing things
+ as a good joke. The dust was blown about in clouds; and here and there,
+ sitting upon the vacant steps that led up and down among the booths, were
+ dejected and motionless men and women, passively gathering dust, and
+ apparently awaiting burial under the accumulating sand,&mdash;the mute,
+ melancholy sphinxes of the Jubilee, with their unsolved riddle, &ldquo;Why
+ did we come?&rdquo; At intervals, the heavens shook out fierce, sudden
+ showers of rain, that scattered the surging masses, and sent them flying
+ impotently hither and thither for shelter where no shelter was, only to
+ gather again, and move aimlessly and comfortlessly to and fro, like a lost
+ child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the multitude roared within and without the Coliseum as I turned
+ homeward; and yet I found it wandering with weary feet through the Garden,
+ and the Common, and all the streets, and it dragged its innumerable aching
+ legs with me to the railroad station, and, entering the train, stood up on
+ them,&mdash;having paid for the tickets with which the companies professed
+ to sell seats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How still and cool and fresh it was at our suburban station, when the
+ train, speeding away with a sardonic yell over the misery of the
+ passengers yet standing up in it, left us to walk across the quiet fields
+ and pleasant lanes to Benicia Street, through groups of little idyllic
+ Irish boys playing base-ball, with milch-goats here and there pastorally
+ cropping the herbage!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this pleasant seclusion I let all Bunker Hill Day thunder by, with its
+ cannons, and processions, and speeches, and patriotic musical uproar,
+ hearing only through my open window the note of the birds singing in a
+ leafy coliseum across the street, and making very fair music without an
+ anvil among them. &ldquo;Ah, signer!&rdquo; said one of my doorstep
+ acquaintance, who came next morning and played me Captain Jenks,&mdash;the
+ new air he has had added to his instrument,&mdash;&ldquo;never in my life,
+ neither at Torino, nor at Milano, nor even at Genoa, never did I see such
+ a crowd or hear such a noise, as at that Colosseo yesterday. The
+ carriages, the horses, the feet! And the dust, O Dio mio! All those
+ millions of people were as white as so many millers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the afternoon of the fourth day the city looked quite like the mill in
+ which these millers had been grinding; and even those unpromisingly
+ elegant streets of the Back Bay showed mansions powdered with dust enough
+ for sentiment to strike root in, and so soften them with its tender green
+ against the time when they shall be ruinous and sentiment shall swallow
+ them up. The crowd had perceptibly diminished, but it was still great, and
+ on the Common it was allured by a greater variety of recreations and
+ bargains than I had yet seen there. There were, of course, all sorts of
+ useful and instructive amusements,&mdash;at least a half-dozen telescopes,
+ and as many galvanic batteries, with numerous patented inventions; and I
+ fancied that most of the peddlers and charlatans addressed themselves to a
+ utilitarian spirit supposed to exist in us. A man that sold whistles
+ capable of reproducing exactly the notes of the mocking-bird and the
+ guinea-pig set forth the durability of the invention. &ldquo;Now, you see
+ this whistle, gentlemen. It is rubber, all rubber; and rubber, you know,
+ enters into the composition of a great many valuable articles. This
+ whistle, then, is entirely of rubber,&mdash;no worthless or flimsy
+ material that drops to pieces the moment you put it to your lips,&rdquo;&mdash;as
+ if it were not utterly desirable that it should. &ldquo;Now, I'll
+ give you the mocking-bird, gentlemen, and then I'll give you the
+ guinea-pig, upon this pure <i>India</i>-rubber whistle.&rdquo; And he did
+ so with a great animation,&mdash;this young man with a perfectly
+ intelligent and very handsome face. &ldquo;Try your strength, and renovate
+ your system!&rdquo; cried the proprietor of a piston padded at one end and
+ working into a cylinder when you struck it a blow with your fist; and the
+ owners of lung-testing machines called upon you from every side to try
+ their consumption cure; while the galvanic-battery men sat still and
+ mutely appealed with inscriptions attached to their cap-visors declaring
+ that electricity taken from their batteries would rid you of every ache
+ and pain known to suffering humanity. Yet they were themselves as a class
+ in a state of sad physical disrepair, and one of them was the visible prey
+ of rheumatism which he might have sent flying from his joints with a
+ single shock. The only person whom I saw improving his health with the
+ battery was a rosy-faced school-boy, who was taking ten cents' worth
+ of electricity; and I hope it did not disagree with his pop-corn and
+ soda-water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther on was a picturesque group of street-musicians,&mdash;violinists
+ and harpers; a brother and four sisters, by their looks,&mdash;who
+ afforded almost the only unpractical amusement to be enjoyed on the
+ Common, though not far from them was a blind old negro, playing upon an
+ accordion, and singing to it in the faintest and thinnest of black voices,
+ who could hardly have profited any listener. No one appeared to mind him,
+ till a jolly Jack-tar with both arms cut off, but dressed in full sailor's
+ togs, lurched heavily towards him. This mariner had got quite a good
+ effect of sea-legs by some means, and looked rather drunker than a man
+ with both arms ought to be; but he was very affectionate, and, putting his
+ face close to the other's, at once entered into talk with the blind
+ man, forming with him a picture curiously pathetic and grotesque. He was
+ the only tipsy person I saw during the Jubilee days,&mdash;if he was
+ tipsy, for after all they may have been real sea-legs he had on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the throng upon the streets was thinner, it was greater in the Coliseum
+ than on the second day; and matters had settled there into regular working
+ order. The limits of individual liberty had been better ascertained; there
+ was no longer any movement in the aisles, but a constant passing to and
+ fro, between the pieces, in the promenades. The house presented, as
+ before, that appearance in which reality forsook it, and it became merely
+ an amazing picture. The audience supported the notion of its unreality by
+ having exactly the character of the former audiences, and impressed you,
+ despite its restlessness and incessant agitation, with the feeling that it
+ had remained there from the first day, and would always continue there;
+ and it was only in wandering upon its borders through the promenades, that
+ you regained possession of facts concerning it. In no other way was its
+ vastness more observable than in the perfect indifference of persons one
+ to another. Each found himself, as it were, in a solitude; and,
+ sequestered in that wilderness of strangers, each was freed of his
+ bashfulness and trepidation. Young people lounged at ease upon the floors,
+ about the windows, on the upper promenades; and in this seclusion I saw
+ such betrayals of tenderness as melt the heart of the traveller on our
+ desolate railway trains,&mdash;Fellows moving to and fro or standing,
+ careless of other eyes, with their arms around the waists of their Girls.
+ These were, of course, people who had only attained a certain grade of
+ civilization, and were not characteristic of the crowd, or, indeed, worthy
+ of notice except as expressions of its unconsciousness. I fancied that I
+ saw a number of their class outside listening to the address of the agent
+ of a patent liniment, proclaimed to be an unfailing specific for neuralgia
+ and headache,&mdash;if used in the right spirit. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; said
+ the orator, &ldquo;we like to cure people who treat us and our medicine
+ with respect. Folks say, 'What is there about that man?&mdash;some
+ magnetism or electricity.' And the other day at New Britain,
+ Connecticut, a young man he come up to the carriage, sneering like, and he
+ tried the cure, and it didn't have the least effect upon him.&rdquo;
+ There seemed reason in this, and it produced a visible sensation in the
+ Fellows and Girls, who grinned sheepishly at each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why will the young man with long hair force himself at this point into a
+ history, which is striving to devote itself to graver interests? There he
+ stood with the other people, gazing up at the gay line of streamers on the
+ summit of the Coliseum, and taking in the Anvil Chorus with the rest,&mdash;a
+ young man well-enough dressed, and of a pretty sensible face, with his
+ long black locks falling from under his cylinder hat, and covering his
+ shoulders. What awful spell was on him, obliging him to make that figure
+ before his fellow-creatures? He had nothing to sell; he was not,
+ apparently, an advertisement of any kind. Was he in the performance of a
+ vow? Was he in his right mind? For shame! a person may wear his hair long
+ if he will. But why not, then, in a top-knot? This young man's long
+ hair was not in keeping with his frock-coat and his cylinder hat, and he
+ had not at all the excuse of the old gentleman who sold salve in the
+ costume of Washington's time; one could not take pleasure in him as
+ in the negro advertiser, who paraded the grounds in a costume compounded
+ of a consular <i>chapeau bras</i> and a fox-hunter's top-boots&mdash;the
+ American diplomatic uniform of the future&mdash;and offered every one a
+ printed billet; he had not even the attraction of the cabalistic herald of
+ Hunkidori. Who was he? what was he? why was he? The mind played forever
+ around these questions in a maze of hopeless conjecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had all those quacks and peddlers been bawling ever since Tuesday to the
+ same listeners? Had all those swings and whirligigs incessantly performed
+ their rounds? The cow that gave milk from the top of her back, had she
+ never changed her small circle of admirers, or ceased her flow? And the
+ gentleman who sat in the chair of his own balance, how much did he weigh
+ by this time? One could scarcely rid one's self of the illusion of
+ perpetuity concerning these things, and I could not believe that, if I
+ went back to the Coliseum grounds at any future time, I should not behold
+ all that vast machinery in motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was curious to see, amid this holiday turmoil men pursuing the ordinary
+ business of their lives, and one was strangely rescued and consoled by the
+ spectacle of the Irish hod-carriers, and the bricklayers at work on a
+ first-class swell-front residence in the very heart of the city of tents
+ and booths. Even the locomotive, being associated with quieter days and
+ scenes, appealed, as it whistled to and fro upon the Providence Railroad,
+ to some soft bucolic sentiment in the listener, and sending its note,
+ ordinarily so discordant, across that human uproar, seemed to &ldquo;babble
+ of green fields.&rdquo; And at last it wooed us away, and the Jubilee was
+ again swallowed up by night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was yet another Jubilee Day, on the morning of which the thousands
+ of public-school children clustered in gauzy pink and white in the place
+ of the mighty chorus, while the Coliseum swarmed once more with people who
+ listened to those shrill, sweet pipes blending in unison; but I leave the
+ reader to imagine what he will about it. A week later, after all was over,
+ I was minded to walk down towards the Coliseum, and behold it in its
+ desertion. The city streets were restored to their wonted summer-afternoon
+ tranquillity; the Public Garden presented its customary phases of two
+ people sitting under a tree and talking intimately together on some theme
+ of common interest,&mdash;&ldquo;Bees, bees, was it your hydromel?&rdquo;&mdash;of
+ the swans sailing in full view upon the little lake of half a dozen idlers
+ hanging upon the bridge to look at them; of children gayly dotting the
+ paths here and there; and, to heighten the peacefulness of the effect, a
+ pretty, pale invalid lady sat, half in shade and half in sun, reading in
+ an easy-chair. Far down the broad avenue a single horse-car tinkled
+ slowly; on the steps of one of the mansions charming little girls stood in
+ a picturesque group full of the bright color which abounds in the lovely
+ dresses of this time. As I drew near the Coliseum, I could perceive the
+ desolation which had fallen upon the festival scene; the white tents were
+ gone; the place where the world-renowned cloggist gave her serio-comic
+ dances was as lonely and silent as the site of Carthage; in the middle
+ distance two men were dismantling a motionless whirligig; the hut for the
+ sale of French soups was closed; farther away, a solitary policeman moved
+ gloomily across the deserted spaces, showing his dark-blue figure against
+ the sky. The vast fabric of the Coliseum reared itself, hushed and
+ deserted within and without; and a boy in his shirt-sleeves pressed his
+ nose against one of the painted window-panes in the vain effort to behold
+ the nothing inside. But sadder than this loneliness surrounding the
+ Coliseum, sadder than the festooned and knotted banners that drooped
+ funereally upon its facade, was the fact that some of those luckless
+ refreshment-saloons were still open, displaying viands as little edible
+ now as carnival <i>confetti</i>. It was as if the proprietors, in an
+ unavailing remorse, had condemned themselves to spend the rest of their
+ days there, and, slowly consuming their own cake and pop-corn, washed down
+ with their own soda-water and lemonade, to perish of dyspepsia and
+ despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SOME LESSONS FROM THE SCHOOL OF MORALS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Any study of suburban life would be very imperfect without some glance at
+ that larger part of it which is spent in the painful pursuit of pleasures
+ such as are offered at the ordinary places of public amusement; and for
+ this reason I excuse myself for rehearsing certain impressions here which
+ are not more directly suburban, to say the least, than those recounted in
+ the foregoing chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It became, shortly after life in Charlesbridge began, a question whether
+ any entertainment that Boston could offer were worth the trouble of going
+ to it, or, still worse, coming from it; for if it was misery to hurry from
+ tea to catch the inward horse-car at the head of the street, what sullen
+ lexicon will afford a name for the experience of getting home again by the
+ last car out from the city? You have watched the clock much more closely
+ than the stage during the last act, and have left your play incomplete by
+ its final marriage or death, and have rushed up to Bowdoin Square, where
+ you achieve a standing place in the car, and, utterly spent as you are
+ with the enjoyment of the evening, you endure for the next hour all that
+ is horrible in riding or walking. At the end of this time you declare that
+ you will never go to the theatre again; and after years of suffering you
+ come at last to keep your word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While yet, however, in the state of formation as regards this resolution,
+ I went frequently to the theatre&mdash;or school of morals, as its friends
+ have humorously called it. I will not say whether any desired amelioration
+ took place or not in my own morals through the agency of the stage; but if
+ not enlightened and refined by everything I saw there, I sometimes was
+ certainly very much surprised. Now that I go no more, or very, very
+ rarely, I avail myself of the resulting leisure to set down, for the
+ instruction of posterity, some account of performances I witnessed in the
+ years 1868-69, which I am persuaded will grow all the more curious, if not
+ incredible, with the lapse of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is this satisfaction in living, namely, that whatever we do will one
+ day wear an air of picturesqueness and romance, and will win the fancy of
+ people coming after us. This stupid and commonplace present shall yet
+ appear the fascinating past; and is it not a pleasure to think how our
+ rogues of descendants&mdash;who are to enjoy us aesthetically&mdash;will
+ be taken in with us, when they read, in the files of old newspapers, of
+ the quantity of entertainment offered us at the theatres during the years
+ mentioned, and judge us by it? I imagine them two hundred years hence
+ looking back at us, and sighing, &ldquo;Ah! there was a touch of the old
+ Greek life in those Athenians! How they loved the drama in the jolly
+ Boston of that day! That was the golden age of the theatre: in the winter
+ of 1868-69, they had dramatic performances in seven places, of every
+ degree of excellence, and the managers coined money.&rdquo; As we always
+ figure our ancestors going to and from church, they will probably figure
+ us thronging the doors of theatres, and no doubt there will be some
+ historical gossiper among them to sketch a Boston audience in 1869, with
+ all our famous poets and politicians grouped together in the orchestra
+ seats, and several now dead introduced with the pleasant inaccuracy and
+ uncertainty of historical gossipers. &ldquo;On this night, when the
+ beautiful Tostée reappeared, the whole house rose to greet her. If Mr.
+ Alcott was on one of his winter visits to Boston, no doubt he stepped in
+ from the Marlborough House,&mdash;it was a famous temperance hotel, then
+ in the height of its repute,&mdash;not only to welcome back the great
+ actress, but to enjoy a chat between the acts with his many friends. Here,
+ doubtless, was seen the broad forehead of Webster; there the courtly
+ Everett, conversing in studied tones with the gifted So-and-so. Did not
+ the lovely Such-a-one grace the evening with her presence? The brilliant
+ and versatile Edmund Kirke was dead; but the humorous Artemas Ward and his
+ friend Nasby may have attracted many eyes, having come hither at the close
+ of their lectures, to testify their love of the beautiful in nature and
+ art; while, perhaps, Mr. Sumner, in the intervals of state cares, relaxed
+ into the enjoyment,&rdquo; etc. &ldquo;Vous voyez bien le tableau!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That far-off posterity, learning that all our theatres are filled every
+ night, will never understand but we were a theatre-going people in the
+ sense that it is the highest fashion to be seen at the play; and yet we
+ are sensible that it is not so, and that the Boston which makes itself
+ known in civilization&mdash;in letters, politics, reform&mdash;goes as
+ little to the theatre as fashionable Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stage is not an Institution with us, I should say; yet it affords
+ recreation to a very large and increasing number of persons, and while it
+ would be easy to over-estimate its influence for good or evil even with
+ these, there is no doubt that the stage, if not the drama, is popular.
+ Fortunately an inquiry like this into a now waning taste in theatricals
+ concerns the fact rather than the effect of the taste otherwise the task
+ might become indefinitely hard alike for writer and for reader. No one can
+ lay his hand on his heart, and declare that he is the worse for having
+ seen &ldquo;La Belle Hélène,&rdquo; for example, or say more than that it
+ is a thing which ought not to be seen by any one else; yet I suppose there
+ is no one ready to deny that &ldquo;La Belle Hélène&rdquo; was the motive
+ of those performances that have most pleased the most people during recent
+ years. There was something fascinating in the circumstances and auspices
+ under which the united Irma and Tostée troupes appeared in Boston&mdash;<i>opéra
+ bouffe</i> led gayly forward by <i>finance bouffe</i>, and suggesting Erie
+ shares by its watered music and morals; but there is no doubt that Tostée's
+ grand reception was owing mainly to the personal favor which she enjoyed
+ here and which we do not vouchsafe to every one. Ristori did not win it;
+ we did our duty by her, following her carefully with the libretto, and in
+ her most intense effects turning the leaves of a thousand pamphlets with a
+ rustle that must have shattered every delicate nerve in her; but we were
+ always cold to her greatness. It was not for Tosteés singing, which was
+ but a little thing in itself; it was not for her beauty, for that was no
+ more than a reminiscence, if it was not always an illusion; was it because
+ she rendered the spirit of M. Offenbach's operas so perfectly, that
+ we liked her so much? &ldquo;Ah, that movement!&rdquo; cried an
+ enthusiast, &ldquo;that swing, that&mdash;that&mdash;wriggle!&rdquo; She
+ was undoubtedly a great actress, full of subtle surprises, and with an
+ audacious appearance of unconsciousness in those exigencies where
+ consciousness would summon the police&mdash;or should; she was so near,
+ yet so far from, the worst that could be intended; in tones, in gestures,
+ in attitudes, she was to the libretto just as the music was, now making it
+ appear insolently and unjustly coarse, now feebly inadequate in its
+ explicit immodesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To see this famous lady in &ldquo;La Grande Duchesse&rdquo; or &ldquo;La
+ Belle Hélène&rdquo; was an experience never to be forgotten, and certainly
+ not to be described. The former opera has undoubtedly its proper and
+ blameless charm. There is something pretty and arch in the notion of the
+ Duchess's falling in love with the impregnably faithful and innocent
+ Fritz; and the extravagance of the whole, with the satire upon the typical
+ little German court, is delightful. But &ldquo;La Belle Helene&rdquo; is a
+ wittier play than &ldquo;La Grande Duchesse,&rdquo; and it is the vividest
+ expression of the spirit of <i>opéra bouffe</i>. It is full of such lively
+ mockeries as that of Helen when she gazes upon the picture of Leda and the
+ Swan: &ldquo;J'aime á me recueiller devant ce tableau de famille!
+ Mon père, ma mère, les voici tous les deux! O mon père, tourne vers ton
+ enfant un bec favorable!&rdquo;&mdash;or of Paris when he represses the
+ zeal of Calchas, who desires to present him at once to Helen: &ldquo;Soit!
+ mais sans lui dire qui je suis;&mdash;je désire garder le plus strict
+ incognito, jusq'au moment où la situation sera favorable á un coup
+ de théâtre.&rdquo; But it must be owned that our audiences seemed not to
+ take much pleasure in these and other witticisms, though they obliged
+ Mademoiselle Tostée to sing &ldquo;Un Mari sage&rdquo; three times, with
+ all those actions and postures which seem incredible the moment they have
+ ceased. They possibly understood this song no better than the strokes of
+ wit, and encored it merely for the music's sake. The effect was,
+ nevertheless, unfortunate, and calculated to give those French ladies but
+ a bad opinion of our morals. How could they comprehend that the taste was,
+ like themselves, imported, and that its indulgence here did not
+ characterize us? It was only in appearance that, while we did not enjoy
+ the wit we delighted in the coarseness. And how coarse this travesty of
+ the old fable mainly is! That priest Calchas, with his unspeakable snicker
+ his avarice, his infidelity, his hypocrisy, is alone infamy enough to
+ provoke the destruction of a city. Then that scene interrupted by
+ Menelaus! It is indisputably witty, and since all those people are so
+ purely creatures of fable, and dwell so entirely in an unmoral atmosphere,
+ it appears as absurd to blame it as the murders in a pantomime. To be sure
+ there is something about murder, some inherent grace or refinement
+ perhaps, that makes its actual representation upon the stage more
+ tolerable than the most diffident suggestion of adultery. Not that &ldquo;La
+ Belle Hélène&rdquo; is open to the reproach of over-delicacy in this
+ scene, or any other, for the matter of that, though there is a strain of
+ real poetry in the conception of this whole episode of Helen's
+ intention to pass all Paris's love-making off upon herself for a
+ dream,&mdash;poetry such as might have been inspired by a muse that had
+ taken too much nectar. There is excellent character, also, as well as
+ caricature in the drama; not only Calchas is admirably done, but
+ Agamemnon, and Achilles, and Helen, and Menelaus, &ldquo;pas un mari
+ ordinaire ... un mari épique,&rdquo;&mdash;and the burlesque is good of
+ its kind. It is artistic, as it seems French dramatic effort must almost
+ necessarily be. It could scarcely be called the fault of the <i>opéra
+ bouffe</i> that the English burlesque should have come of its success; nor
+ could the public blame it for the great favor the burlesque won in those
+ far-off winters, if indeed the public wishes to bestow blame for this. No
+ one, however, could see one of these curious travesties without being
+ reminded, in an awkward way, of the <i>morale</i> of the <i>opéra bouffe</i>,
+ and of the <i>personnel</i>&mdash;as I may say&mdash;of &ldquo;The Black
+ Crook,&rdquo; &ldquo;The White Fawn,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Devil's
+ Auction.&rdquo; There was the same intention of merriment at the cost of
+ what may be called the marital prejudices, though it cannot be claimed
+ that the wit was the same as in &ldquo;La Belle Hélène;&rdquo; there was
+ the same physical unreserve as in the ballets of a former season; while in
+ its dramatic form the burlesque discovered very marked parental traits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This English burlesque, this child of M. Offenbach's genius, and the
+ now somewhat faded spectacular muse, flourished at the time of which I
+ write in three of our seven theatres for months,&mdash;five, from the
+ highest to the lowest being in turn open to it,&mdash;and had begun, in a
+ tentative way, to invade the deserted stage even so long ago as the
+ previous summer; and I have sometimes flattered myself that it was my
+ fortune to witness the first exhibition of its most characteristic feature
+ in a theatre into which I wandered one sultry night because it was the
+ nearest theatre. They were giving a play called &ldquo;The Three Fast Men,&rdquo;
+ which had a moral of such powerful virtue that it ought to have reformed
+ everybody in the neighborhood. Three ladies being in love with the three
+ fast men, and resolved to win them back to regular hours and the paths of
+ sobriety by every device of the female heart, dress themselves in men's
+ clothes,&mdash;such is the subtlety of the female heart in the bosoms of
+ modern young ladies of fashion,&mdash;and follow their lovers about from
+ one haunt of dissipation to another and become themselves exemplarily
+ vicious,&mdash;drunkards, gamblers, and the like. The first lady, who was
+ a star in her lowly orbit, was very great in all her different <i>rôles</i>,
+ appearing now as a sailor with the hornpipe of his calling, now as an
+ organ-grinder, and now as a dissolute young gentleman,&mdash;whatever was
+ the exigency of good morals. The dramatist seemed to have had an eye to
+ her peculiar capabilities, and to have expressly invented edifying
+ characters and situations that her talents might enforce them. The second
+ young lady had also a personal didactic gift, rivaling, and even
+ surpassing in some respects, that of the star; and was very rowdy indeed.
+ In due time the devoted conduct of the young ladies has its just effect:
+ the three fast men begin to reflect upon the folly of their wild courses;
+ and at this point the dramatist delivers his great stroke. The first lady
+ gives a <i>soirée dansante et chantante</i>, and the three fast men have
+ invitations. The guests seat themselves, as at a fashionable party, in a
+ semicircle, and the gayety of the evening begins with conundrums and
+ playing upon the banjo; the gentlemen are in their morning-coats, and the
+ ladies in a display of hosiery which is now no longer surprising, and
+ which need not have been mentioned at all except for the fact that, in the
+ case of the first lady, it seemed not to have been freshly put on for that
+ party. In this instance an element comical beyond intention was present,
+ in three young gentlemen, an amateur musical trio, who had kindly
+ consented to sing their favorite song of &ldquo;The Rolling Zuyder Zee,&rdquo;
+ as they now kindly did, with flushed faces, unmanageable hands, and much
+ repetition of
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The ro-o-o-o-
+ The ro-o-o-o-
+ The ro-o-o-o-ll-
+ Ing Zuyder Zee,
+ Zuyder Zee,
+ Zuyder Zee-e-e!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then the turn of the three guardian angels of the fast men being come
+ again they get up and dance each one a breakdown which seems to establish
+ their lovers (now at last in the secret of the generous ruse played upon
+ them) firmly in their resolution to lead a better life. They are in nowise
+ shaken from it by the displeasure which soon shows itself in the manner of
+ the first and second ladies. The former is greatest in the so-called
+ Protean parts of the play, and is obscured somewhat by the dancing of the
+ latter; but she has a daughter who now comes on and sings a song. The
+ pensive occasion, the favorable mood of the audience, the sympathetic
+ attitude of the players, invite her to sing &ldquo;The Maiden's
+ Prayer,&rdquo; and so we have &ldquo;The Maiden's Prayer.&rdquo; We
+ may be a low set, and the song may be affected and insipid enough, but the
+ purity of its intention touches, and the little girl is vehemently
+ applauded. She is such a pretty child with her innocent face, and her
+ artless white dress, and blue ribbons to her waist and hair, that we will
+ have her back again; whereupon she runs out upon the stage, strikes up a
+ rowdy, rowdy air, dances a shocking little dance, and vanishes from the
+ dismayed vision, leaving us a considerably lower set than we were at
+ first, and glad of our lowness. This is the second lady's own
+ ground, however, and now she comes out&mdash;in a way that banishes far
+ from our fickle minds all thoughts of the first lady and her mistaken
+ child&mdash;with a medley of singing and dancing, a bit of breakdown, of
+ cancan, of jig, a bit of &ldquo;Le Sabre de mon Père,&rdquo; and of all
+ memorable slang songs, given with the most grotesque and clownish spirit
+ that ever inspired a woman. Each member of the company follows in his or
+ her <i>pas seul</i>, and then they all dance together to the plain
+ confusion of the amateur trio, whose eyes roll like so many Zuyder Zees,
+ as they sit lonely and motionless in the midst. All stiffness and
+ formality are overcome. The evening party in fact disappears entirely, and
+ we are suffered to see the artists in their moments of social relaxation
+ sitting as it were around the theatrical fireside. They appear to forget
+ us altogether; they exchange winks, and nods, and jests of quite personal
+ application; they call each other by name, by their Christian names, their
+ nicknames. It is not an evening party, it is a family party, and the
+ suggestion of home enjoyment completes the reformation of the three fast
+ men. We see them marry the three fast women before we leave the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion, two suburban friends of the drama beheld a more
+ explicit precursor of the coming burlesque at one of the minor theatres
+ last summer. The great actress whom they had come to see on another scene
+ was ill, and in their disappointment they embraced the hope of
+ entertainment offered them at the smaller playhouse. The drama itself was
+ neither here nor there as to intent, but the public appetite or the
+ manager's conception of it&mdash;for I am by no means sure that this
+ whole business was not a misunderstanding&mdash;had exacted that the
+ actresses should appear in so much stocking, and so little else, that it
+ was a horror to look upon them. There was no such exigency of dialogue,
+ situation, or character as asked the indecorum, and the effect upon the
+ unprepared spectator was all the more stupefying from the fact that most
+ of the ladies were not dancers, and had not countenances that consorted
+ with impropriety. Their faces had merely the conventional Yankee sharpness
+ and wanness of feature, and such difference of air and character as should
+ say for one and another, shop-girl, shoe-binder, seamstress; and it seemed
+ an absurdity and an injustice to refer to them in any way the disclosures
+ of the ruthlessly scant drapery. A grotesque fancy would sport with their
+ identity: &ldquo;Did not this or that one write poetry for her local
+ newspaper?&rdquo; so much she looked the average culture and crudeness,
+ and when such a one, coldly yielding to the manager's ideas of the
+ public taste, stretched herself on a green baize bank with her feet
+ towards us, or did a similar grossness, it was hard to keep from crying
+ aloud in protest, that she need not do it; that nobody really expected or
+ wanted it of her. Nobody? Alas! there were people there&mdash;poor souls
+ who had the appearance of coming every night&mdash;who plainly did expect
+ it, and who were loud in their applauses of the chief actress. This was a
+ young person of a powerful physical expression, quite unlike the rest,&mdash;who
+ were dyspeptic and consumptive in the range of their charms,&mdash;and she
+ triumphed and wantoned through the scenes with a fierce excess of animal
+ vigor. She was all stocking, as one may say, being habited to represent a
+ prince; she had a raucous voice, an insolent twist of the mouth, and a
+ terrible trick of defying her enemies by standing erect, chin up, hand on
+ hip, and right foot advanced, patting the floor. It was impossible, even
+ in the orchestra seats, to look at her in this attitude and not shrink
+ before her; and on the stage she visibly tyrannized over the invalid
+ sisterhood with her full-blown fascinations. These unhappy girls
+ personated, with a pathetic effect not to be described, such arch and
+ fantastic creations of the poet's mind as Bewitchingcreature and
+ Exquisitelittlepet, and the play was a kind of fairy burlesque in rhyme,
+ of the most melancholy stupidity that ever was. Yet there was something
+ very comical in the conditions of its performance, and in the possibility
+ that public and manager were playing at cross-purposes. There we were in
+ the pit, an assemblage of hard-working Yankees of decently moral lives and
+ simple traditions, country-bred many of us and of plebeian stock and
+ training, vulgar enough perhaps, but probably not depraved, and, excepting
+ the first lady's friends, certainly not educated to the critical
+ enjoyment of such spectacles; and there on the stage were those mistaken
+ women, in such sad variety of boniness and flabbiness as I have tried to
+ hint, addressing their pitiable exposure to a supposed vileness in us, and
+ wrenching from all original intent the innocent dullness of the drama,
+ which for the most part could have been as well played in walking-dresses,
+ to say the least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scene was not less amusing, as regarded the audiences, the ensuing
+ winter, when the English burlesque troupes which London sent us, arrived;
+ but it was not quite so pathetic as regarded the performers. Of their
+ beauty and their abandon, the historical gossiper, whom I descry far down
+ the future, waiting to refer to me as &ldquo;A scandalous writer of the
+ period,&rdquo; shall learn very little to his purpose of warming his
+ sketch with a color from mine. But I hope I may describe these ladies as
+ very pretty, very blonde, and very unscrupulously clever, and still
+ disappoint the historical gossiper. They seemed in all cases to be
+ English; no Yankee faces, voices, or accents were to be detected among
+ them. Where they were associated with people of another race, as happened
+ with one troupe, the advantage of beauty was upon the Anglo-Saxon side,
+ while that of some small shreds of propriety was with the Latins. These
+ appeared at times almost modest, perhaps because they were the
+ conventional <i>ballerine</i>, and wore the old-fashioned ballet-skirt
+ with its volumed gauze,&mdash;a coyness which the Englishry had greatly
+ modified, through an exigency of the burlesque,&mdash;perhaps because
+ indecorum seems, like blasphemy and untruth, somehow more graceful and
+ becoming in southern than in northern races.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the burlesques themselves, they were nothing, the performers
+ personally everything. M. Offenbach had opened Lemprière's
+ Dictionary to the authors with &ldquo;La Belle Hélène,&rdquo; and there,
+ was commonly a flimsy raveling of parodied myth, that held together the
+ different dances and songs, though sometimes it was a novel or an opera
+ burlesqued; but there was always a song and always a dance for each lady,
+ song and dance being equally slangy, and depending for their effect mainly
+ upon the natural or simulated personal charms of the performer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was also an indispensable condition of the burlesque's success,
+ that the characters should be reversed in their representation,&mdash;that
+ the men's <i>rôles</i> should be played by women, and that at least
+ one female part should be done by a man. It must be owned that the fun all
+ came from this character, the ladies being too much occupied with the more
+ serious business of bewitching us with their pretty figures to be very
+ amusing; whereas this wholesome man and brother, with his blonde wig, his
+ <i>panier</i>, his dainty feminine simperings and languishings, his
+ falsetto tones, and his general air of extreme fashion, was always
+ exceedingly droll. He was the saving grace of these stupid plays; and I
+ cannot help thinking that the <i>cancan</i>, as danced, in &ldquo;Ivanhoe,&rdquo;
+ by Isaac of York and the masculine Rebecca, was a moral spectacle; it was
+ the <i>cancan</i> made forever absurd and harmless. But otherwise, the
+ burlesques were as little cheerful as profitable. The playwrights who had
+ adapted them to the American stage&mdash;for they were all of English
+ authorship&mdash;had been good enough to throw in some political allusions
+ which were supposed to be effective with us, but which it was sad to see
+ received with apathy. It was conceivable from a certain air with which the
+ actors delivered these, that they were in the habit of stirring London
+ audiences greatly with like strokes of satire; but except where Rebecca
+ offered a bottle of Medford rum to Cedric the Saxon, who appeared in the
+ figure of ex-President Johnson, they had no effect upon us. We were cold,
+ very cold, to suggestions of Mr. Reverdy Johnson's now historical
+ speech-making and dining; General Butler's spoons moved us just a
+ little; at the name of Grant we roared and stamped, of course, though in a
+ perfectly mechanical fashion, and without thought of any meaning offered
+ us; those lovely women might have coupled the hero's name with
+ whatever insult they chose, and still his name would have made us cheer
+ them. We seemed not to care for points that were intended to flatter us
+ nationally. I am not aware that anybody signified consciousness when the
+ burlesque supported our side of the Alabama controversy, or acknowledged
+ the self-devotion with which a threat that England should be made to pay
+ was delivered by these English performers. With an equal impassiveness we
+ greeted allusions to Erie shares and to the late Mr. Fiske.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burlesque chiefly betrayed its descent from the spectacular ballet in
+ its undressing; but that ballet, while it demanded personal exposure, had
+ something very observable in its scenic splendors, and all that marching
+ and processioning in it was rather pretty; while in the burlesque there
+ seemed nothing of innocent intent. No matter what the plot, it led always
+ to a final great scene of breakdown,&mdash;which was doubtless most
+ impressive in that particular burlesque where this scene represented the
+ infernal world, and the ladies gave the dances of the country with a happy
+ conception of the deportment of lost souls. There, after some vague and
+ inconsequent dialogue, the wit springing from a perennial source of humor
+ (not to specify the violation of the seventh commandment), the dancing
+ commenced, each performer beginning with the Walk-round of the negro
+ minstrels, rendering its grotesqueness with a wonderful frankness of
+ movement, and then plunging into the mysteries of her dance with a kind of
+ infuriate grace and a fierce delight very curious to look upon. I am aware
+ of the historical gossiper still on the alert for me, and I dare not say
+ how sketchily these ladies were dressed or indeed, more than that they
+ were dressed to resemble circus-riders of the other sex, but as to their
+ own deceived nobody,&mdash;possibly did not intend deceit. One of them was
+ so good a player that it seemed needless for her to go so far as she did
+ in the dance; but she spared herself nothing, and it remained for her
+ merely stalwart friends to surpass her, if possible. This inspired each
+ who succeeded her to wantoner excesses, to wilder insolences of hose, to
+ fiercer bravadoes of corsage; while those not dancing responded to the
+ sentiment of the music by singing shrill glees in tune with it, clapping
+ their hands, and patting Juba, as the act is called,&mdash;a peculiarly
+ graceful and modest thing in woman. The frenzy grew with every moment,
+ and, as in another Vision of Sin,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Then they started from their places,
+ Moved with violence, changed in hue,
+ Caught each other with wild grimaces,
+ Half-invisible to the view,
+ Wheeling with precipitate paces
+ To the melody, till they flew,
+ Hair, and eyes, and limbs, and faces
+ Twisted hard in fierce embraces,
+ Like to Furies, like to Graces,&rdquo;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ with an occasional exchange of cuffs and kicks perfectly human. The
+ spectator found now himself and now the scene incredible, and indeed they
+ were hardly conceivable in relation to each other. A melancholy sense of
+ the absurdity, of the incongruity, of the whole absorbed at last even a
+ sense of the indecency. The audience was much the same in appearance as
+ other audiences, witnessing like displays at the other theatres, and did
+ not differ greatly from the usual theatrical house. Not so much fashion
+ smiled upon the efforts of these young ladies, as upon the <i>cancan</i>
+ of the Signorina Morlacchi a winter earlier; but there was a most fair
+ appearance of honest-looking, handsomely dressed men and women; and you
+ could pick out, all over the parquet, faces of one descent from the
+ deaconship, which you wondered were not afraid to behold one another
+ there. The truth is, we spectators, like the performers themselves, lacked
+ that tradition of error, of transgression, which casts its romance about
+ the people of a lighter race. We had not yet set off one corner of the
+ Common for a Jardin Mabille; we had not even the concert-cellars of the
+ gay and elegant New Yorker; and nothing, really, had happened in Boston to
+ educate us to this new taste in theatricals, since the fair Quakers felt
+ moved to testify in the streets and churches against our spiritual
+ nakedness. Yet it was to be noted with regret that our innocence, our
+ respectability, had no restraining influence upon the performance; and the
+ fatuity of the hope cherished by some courageous people, that the presence
+ of virtuous persons would reform the stage, was but too painfully evident.
+ The doubt whether they were not nearer right who have denounced the
+ theatre as essentially and incorrigibly bad would force itself upon the
+ mind, though there was a little comfort in the thought that, if virtue had
+ been actually allowed to frown upon these burlesques, the burlesques might
+ have been abashed into propriety. The caressing arm of the law was cast
+ very tenderly about the performers, and in the only case where a spectator
+ presumed to hiss,&mdash;it was at a <i>pas seul</i> of the indescribable,&mdash;a
+ policeman descended upon him, and with the succor of two friends of the
+ free ballet, rent him from his place, and triumphed forth with him. Here
+ was an end of ungenial criticism; we all applauded zealously after that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiar character of the drama to which they devoted themselves had
+ produced, in these ladies, some effects doubtless more interesting than
+ profitable to observe. One of them, whose unhappiness it was to take the
+ part of <i>soubrette</i> in the Laughable Commedietta preceding the
+ burlesque, was so ill at ease in drapery, so full of awkward jerks and
+ twitches, that she seemed quite another being when she came on later as a
+ radiant young gentleman in pink silk hose, and nothing of feminine modesty
+ in her dress excepting the very low corsage. A strange and compassionable
+ satisfaction beamed from her face; it was evident that this sad business
+ was the poor thing's <i>forte</i>. In another company was a lady who
+ had conquered all the easy attitudes of young men of the second or third
+ fashion, and who must have been at something of a loss to identify herself
+ when personating a woman off the stage. But Nature asserted herself in a
+ way that gave a curious and scarcely explicable shock in the case of that
+ dancer whose impudent song required the action of fondling a child, and
+ who rendered the passage with an instinctive tenderness and grace, all the
+ more pathetic for the profaning boldness of her super masculine dress or
+ undress. Commonly, however, the members of these burlesque troupes, though
+ they were not like men, were in most things as unlike women, and seemed
+ creatures of a kind of alien sex, parodying both. It was certainly a
+ shocking thing to look at them with their horrible prettiness, their
+ archness in which was no charm, their grace which put to shame. Yet
+ whoever beheld these burlesque sisters, must have fallen into perplexing
+ question in his own mind as to whose was the wrong involved. It was not
+ the fault of the public&mdash;all of us felt that: was it the fault of the
+ hard-working sisterhood, bred to this as to any other business, and not
+ necessarily conscious of the indecorum which pains my reader,&mdash;obliged
+ to please somehow, and aiming, doubtless, at nothing but applause? &ldquo;La
+ Belle Hélène&rdquo; suggests the only reasonable explanation: <i>&ldquo;C'est
+ la fatalité</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FLITTING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I would not willingly repose upon the friendship of a man whose local
+ attachments are weak. I should not demand of my intimate that he have a
+ yearning for the homes of his ancestors, or even the scenes of his own
+ boyhood; that is not in American nature; on the contrary, he is but a poor
+ creature who does not hate the village where he was born; yet a sentiment
+ for the place where one has lived two or three years, the hotel where one
+ has spent a week, the sleeping car in which one has ridden from Albany to
+ Buffalo,&mdash;so much I should think it well to exact from my friend in
+ proof of that sensibility and constancy without which true friendship does
+ not exist. So much I am ready to yield on my own part to a friend's
+ demand, and I profess to have all the possible regrets for Benicia Street,
+ now I have left it. Over its deficiencies I cast a veil of decent
+ oblivion, and shall always try to look upon its worthy and consoling
+ aspects, which were far the more numerous. It was never otherwise, I
+ imagine, than an ideal region in very great measure; and if the reader
+ whom I have sometimes seemed to direct thither, should seek it out, he
+ would hardly find my Benicia Street by the city sign-board. Yet this is
+ not wholly because it was an ideal locality, but because much of its
+ reality has now become merely historical, a portion of the tragical poetry
+ of the past. Many of the vacant lots abutting upon Benicia and the
+ intersecting streets flourished up, during the four years we knew it, into
+ fresh-painted wooden houses, and the time came to be when one might have
+ looked in vain for the abandoned hoop-skirts which used to decorate the
+ desirable building-sites. The lessening pasturage also reduced the herds
+ which formerly fed in the vicinity, and at last we caught the tinkle of
+ the cow-bells only as the cattle were driven past to remoter meadows. And
+ one autumn afternoon two laborers, hired by the city, came and threw up an
+ earthwork on the opposite side of the street, which they said was a
+ sidewalk, and would add to the value of property in the neighborhood. Not
+ being dressed with coal-ashes, however, during the winter, the sidewalk
+ vanished next summer under a growth of rag-weed, and hid the increased
+ values with it, and it is now an even question whether this monument of
+ municipal grandeur will finally be held by Art or resumed by Nature,&mdash;who
+ indeed has a perpetual motherly longing for her own, and may be seen in
+ all outlying and suburban places, pathetically striving to steal back any
+ neglected bits of ground and conceal them under her skirts of tattered and
+ shabby verdure. But whatever is the event of this contest, and whatever
+ the other changes wrought in the locality, it has not yet been quite
+ stripped of the characteristic charms which first took our hearts, and
+ which have been duly celebrated in these pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the new house was chosen, we made preparations to leave the old one,
+ but preparations so gradual, that, if we had cared much more than we did,
+ we might have suffered greatly by the prolongation of the agony. We
+ proposed to ourselves to escape the miseries of moving by transferring the
+ contents of one room at a time, and if we did not laugh incredulously at
+ people who said we had better have it over at once and be done with it, it
+ was because we respected their feelings, and not because we believed them.
+ We took up one carpet after another; one wall after another we stripped of
+ its pictures; we sent away all the books to begin with; and by this subtle
+ and ingenious process, we reduced ourselves to the discomfort of living in
+ no house at all, as it were, and of being at home in neither one place nor
+ the other. Yet the logic of our scheme remained perfect; and I do not
+ regret its failure in practice, for if we had been ever so loath to quit
+ the old house, its inhospitable barrenness would finally have hurried us
+ forth. In fact, does not life itself in some such fashion dismantle its
+ tenement until it is at last forced out of the uninhabitable place? Are
+ not the poor little comforts and pleasures and ornaments removed one by
+ one, till life, if it would be saved, must go too? We took a lesson from
+ the teachings of mortality, which are so rarely heeded, and we lingered
+ over our moving. We made the process so gradual, indeed, that I do not
+ feel myself all gone yet from the familiar work-room, and for aught I can
+ say, I still write there; and as to the guest-chamber, it is so densely
+ peopled by those it has lodged that it will never quite be emptied of
+ them. Friends also are yet in the habit of calling in the parlor, and
+ talking with us; and will the children never come off the stairs? Does
+ life, our high exemplar, leave so much behind as we did? Is this what
+ fills the world with ghosts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the getting ready to go, nothing hurt half so much as the sight of the
+ little girl packing her doll's things for removal. The trousseaux of
+ all those elegant creatures, the wooden, the waxen, the biscuit, the
+ india-rubber, were carefully assorted, and arranged in various small
+ drawers and boxes; their house was thoughtfully put in order and locked
+ for transportation; their innumerable broken sets of dishes were packed in
+ paper and set out upon the floor, a heart-breaking little basketful.
+ Nothing real in this world is so affecting as some image of reality, and
+ this travesty of our own flitting was almost intolerable. I will not
+ pretend to sentiment about anything else, for everything else had in it
+ the element of self-support belonging to all actual afflictions. When the
+ day of moving finally came, and the furniture wagon, which ought to have
+ been only a shade less dreadful to us than a hearse, drew up at our door,
+ our hearts were of a Neronian hardness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were I Diogenes,&rdquo; says wrathful Charles Lamb in one of his
+ letters, &ldquo;I would not move out of a kilderkin into a hogshead,
+ though the first had nothing but small beer in it, and the second reeked
+ claret.&rdquo; I fancy this loathing of the transitionary state came in
+ great part from the rude and elemental nature of the means of moving in
+ Lamb's day. In our own time, in Charlesbridge at least, everything
+ is so perfectly contrived, that it is in some ways a pleasant excitement
+ to move; though I do not commend the diversion to any but people of entire
+ leisure, for it cannot be denied that it is, at any rate, an interruption
+ to work. But little is broken, little is defaced, nothing is heedlessly
+ outraged or put to shame. Of course there are in every house certain
+ objects of comfort and even ornament which in a state of repose derive a
+ sort of dignity from being cracked, or scratched, or organically
+ debilitated, and give an idea of ancestral possession and of long descent
+ to the actual owner; and you must not hope that this venerable quality
+ will survive their public exposure upon the furniture wagon. There it
+ instantly perishes, like the consequence of some country notable huddled
+ and hustled about in the graceless and ignorant tumult of a great city. To
+ tell the truth, the number of things that turn shabby under the ordeal of
+ moving strikes a pang of unaccustomed poverty to the heart which, loving
+ all manner of makeshifts, is rich even in its dilapidations. For the time
+ you feel degraded by the spectacle of that forlornness, and if you are a
+ man of spirit, you try to sneak out of association with it in the mind of
+ the passer-by; you keep scrupulously in-doors, or if a fancied exigency
+ obliges you to go back and forth between the old house and the new, you
+ seek obscure by-ways remote from the great street down which the wagon
+ flaunts your ruin and decay, and time your arrivals and departures so as
+ to have the air of merely dropping in at either place. This consoles you;
+ but it deceives no one; for the man who is moving is unmistakably stamped
+ with transition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the momentary eclipse of these things is not the worst. It <i>is</i>
+ momentary; for if you will but plant them in kindly corners and favorable
+ exposures of the new house, a mould of respectability will gradually
+ overspread them again, and they will once more account for their presence
+ by the air of having been a long time in the family; but there is danger
+ that in the first moments of mortification you will be tempted to replace
+ them with new and costly articles. Even the best of the old things are
+ nothing to boast of in the hard, unpitying light to which they are
+ exposed, and a difficult and indocile spirit of extravagance is evoked in
+ the least profuse. Because of this fact alone I should not commend the
+ diversion of moving save to people of very ample means as well as perfect
+ leisure; there are more reasons than the misery of flitting why the
+ dweller in the kilderkin should not covet the hogshead reeking of claret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the grosser misery of moving is, as I have hinted, vastly mitigated by
+ modern science, and what remains of it one may use himself to with no
+ tremendous effort. I have found that in the dentist's chair,&mdash;that
+ ironically luxurious seat, cushioned in satirical suggestion of impossible
+ repose,&mdash;after a certain initial period of clawing, filing, scraping,
+ and punching, one's nerves accommodate themselves to the torment,
+ and one takes almost an objective interest in the operation of
+ tooth-filling; and in like manner after two or three wagon-loads of your
+ household stuff have passed down the public street, and all your morbid
+ associations with them have been desecrated, you begin almost to like it.
+ Yet I cannot regard this abandon as a perfectly healthy emotion, and I do
+ not counsel my reader to mount himself upon the wagon and ride to and fro
+ even once, for afterwards the remembrance of such an excess will grieve
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, I meant to imply by this that moving sometimes comes to an end,
+ though it is not easy to believe so while moving. The time really arrives
+ when you sit down in your new house, and amid whatever disorder take your
+ first meal there. This meal is pretty sure to be that gloomy tea, that
+ loathly repast of butter and toast, and some kind of cake, with which the
+ soul of the early-dining American is daily cast down between the hours of
+ six and seven in the evening; and instinctively you compare it with the
+ last meal you took in your old house, seeking in vain to decide whether
+ this is more dispiriting than that. At any rate that was not at all the
+ meal which the last meal in any house which has been a home ought to be in
+ fact, and is in books. It was hurriedly cooked; it was served upon
+ fugitive and irregular crockery; and it was eaten in deplorable disorder,
+ with the professional movers waiting for the table outside the
+ dining-room. It ought to have been an act of serious devotion; it was
+ nothing but an expiation. It should have been a solemn commemoration of
+ all past dinners in the place, an invocation to their pleasant
+ apparitions. But I, for my part, could not recall these at all, though now
+ I think of them with the requisite pathos, and I know they were perfectly
+ worthy of remembrance. I salute mournfully the companies that have sat
+ down at dinner there, for they are sadly scattered now; some beyond seas,
+ some beyond the narrow gulf, so impassably deeper to our longing and
+ tenderness than the seas. But more sadly still I hail the host himself,
+ and desire to know of him if literature was not somehow a gayer science in
+ those days, and if his peculiar kind of drolling had not rather more heart
+ in it then. In an odd, not quite expressible fashion, something of him
+ seems dispersed abroad and perished in the guests he loved. I trust, of
+ course, that all will be restored to him when he turns&mdash;as every man
+ past thirty feels he may when he likes, and has the time&mdash;and resumes
+ his youth. Or if this feeling is only a part of the great tacit promise of
+ eternity, I am all the more certain of his getting back his losses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say that now these apposite reflections occur to me with a sufficient
+ ease, but that upon the true occasion for them they were absent. So, too,
+ at the first meal in the new house, there was none of that desirable sense
+ of setting up a family altar, but a calamitous impression of irretrievable
+ upheaval, in honor of which sackcloth and ashes seemed the only wear. Yet
+ even the next day the Lares and Penates had regained something of their
+ wonted cheerfulness, and life had begun again with the first breakfast. In
+ fact, I found myself already so firmly established that, meeting the
+ furniture cart which had moved me the day before, I had the face to ask
+ the driver whom they were turning out of house and home, as if my own
+ flitting were a memory of the far-off past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that I think the professional mover expects to be addressed in a
+ joking mood. I have a fancy that he cultivates a serious spirit himself,
+ in which he finds it easy to sympathize with any melancholy on the part of
+ the moving family. There is a slight flavor of undertaking in his manner,
+ which is nevertheless full of a subdued firmness very consoling and
+ supporting; though the life that he leads must be a troubled and
+ uncheerful one, trying alike to the muscles and the nerves. How often must
+ he have been charged by anxious and fluttered ladies to be very careful of
+ that basket of china, and those vases! How often must he have been vexed
+ by the ignorant terrors of gentlemen asking if he thinks that the
+ library-table, poised upon the top of his load, will hold! His planning is
+ not infallible, and when he breaks something uncommonly precious, what
+ does a man of his sensibility do? Is the demolition of old homes really
+ distressing to him, or is he inwardly buoyed up by hopes of other and
+ better homes for the people he moves? Can there be any ideal of moving?
+ Does he, perhaps, feel a pride in an artfully constructed load, and has he
+ something like an artist's pang in unloading it? Is there a choice
+ in families to be moved, and are some worse or better than others? Next to
+ the lawyer and the doctor, it appears to me that the professional mover
+ holds the most confidential relations towards his fellow-men. He is let
+ into all manner of little domestic secrets and subterfuges; I dare say he
+ knows where half the people in town keep their skeleton, and what manner
+ of skeleton it is. As for me, when I saw him making towards a certain
+ closet door, I planted myself firmly against it. He smiled intelligence;
+ he knew the skeleton was there, and that it would be carried to the new
+ house after dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I began by saying that I should wish my friend to have some sort of local
+ attachment; but I suppose it must be owned that this sentiment, like pity,
+ and the modern love-passion, is a thing so largely produced by culture
+ that nature seems to have little or nothing to do with it. The first men
+ were homeless wanderers; the patriarchs dwelt in tents, and shifted their
+ place to follow the pasturage, without a sigh; and for children&mdash;the
+ pre-historic, the antique people, of our day&mdash;moving is a rapture.
+ The last dinner in the old house, the first tea in the new, so doleful to
+ their elders, are partaken of by them with joyous riot. Their shrill
+ trebles echo gleefully from the naked walls and floors; they race up and
+ down the carpetless stairs; they menace the dislocated mirrors and
+ crockery; through all the chambers of desolation they frolic with a gayety
+ indomitable save by bodily exhaustion. If the reader is of a moving
+ family,&mdash;and so he is as he is an American,&mdash;he can recall the
+ zest he found during childhood in the moving which had for his elders&mdash;poor
+ victims of a factitious and conventional sentiment!&mdash;only the salt
+ and bitterness of tears. His spirits never fell till the carpets were
+ down; no sorrow touched him till order returned; if Heaven so blessed him
+ that his bed was made upon the floor for one night, the angels visited his
+ dreams. Why, then, is the mature soul, however sincere and humble, not
+ only grieved but mortified by flitting? Why cannot one move without
+ feeling the great public eye fixed in pitying contempt upon him? This
+ sense of abasement seems to be something quite inseparable from the act,
+ which is often laudable, and in every way wise and desirable; and he whom
+ it has afflicted is the first to turn, after his own establishment, and
+ look with scornful compassion upon the overflowing furniture wagon as it
+ passes. But I imagine that Abraham's neighbors, when he struck his
+ tent, and packed his parlor and kitchen furniture upon his camels, and
+ started off with Mrs. Sarah to seek a new camping-ground, did not smile at
+ the procession, or find it worthy of ridicule or lament. Nor did Abraham,
+ once settled, and reposing in the cool of the evening at the door of his
+ tent, gaze sarcastically upon the moving of any of his brother patriarchs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To some such philosophical serenity we shall also return, I suppose, when
+ we have wisely theorized life in our climate, and shall all have become
+ nomads once more, following June and October up and down and across the
+ continent, and not suffering the full malice of the winter and summer
+ anywhere. But as yet, the derision that attaches to moving attends even
+ the goer-out of town, and the man of many trunks and a retinue of
+ linen-suited womankind is a pitiable and despicable object to all the
+ other passengers at the railroad station and on the steamboat wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is but one of many ways in which mere tradition oppresses us. I
+ protest that as moving is now managed in Charlesbridge, there is hardly
+ any reason why the master or mistress of the household should put hand to
+ anything; but it is a tradition that they shall dress themselves in their
+ worst, as for heavy work, and shall go about very shabby for at least a
+ day before and a day after the transition. It is a kind of sacrifice, I
+ suppose, to a venerable ideal; and I would never be the first to omit it.
+ In others I observe that this vacant and ceremonious zeal is in proportion
+ to an incapacity to do anything that happens really to be required; and I
+ believe that the truly sage person would devote moving-day to paying
+ visits of ceremony in his finest clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/9000.jpg" alt="9000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/9000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ As to the house which one has left, I think it would be preferable to have
+ it occupied as soon as possible after one's flitting. Pilgrimages to
+ the dismantled shrine are certainly to be avoided by the friend of
+ cheerfulness. A day's absence and emptiness wholly change its
+ character, though the familiarity continues, with a ghastly difference, as
+ in the beloved face that the life has left. It is not at all the vacant
+ house it was when you came first to look at it: for then hopes peopled it,
+ and now memories. In that golden prime you had long been boarding, and any
+ place in which you could keep house seemed utterly desirable. How
+ distinctly you recall that wet day, or that fair day, on which you went
+ through it and decided that this should be the guest chamber and that the
+ family room, and what could be done with the little back attic in a pinch!
+ The children could play in the dining-room; and to be sure the parlor was
+ rather small if you wanted to have company; but then, who would ever want
+ to give a party? and besides, the pump in the kitchen was a compensation
+ for anything. How lightly the dumb waiter ran up and down,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Qual piuma al vento!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ you sang, in very glad-heartedness. Then estimates of the number of yards
+ of carpeting; and how you could easily save the cost from the difference
+ between boarding and house-keeping. Adieu, Mrs. Brown! henceforth let your
+ &ldquo;desirable apartments, <i>en suite</i> or single, furnished or
+ unfurnished, to gentlemen only!&rdquo;&mdash;this married pair is about to
+ escape forever from your extortions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, if the years passed without making us sadder, should we be much the
+ wiser for their going? Now you know, little couple, that there are
+ extortions in this wicked world beside Mrs. Brown's; and some other
+ things. But if you go into the empty house that was lately your home, you
+ will not, I believe, be haunted by these sordid disappointments, for the
+ place should evoke other regrets and meditations. Truly, though the great
+ fear has not come upon you here, in this room you may have known moments
+ when it seemed very near, and when the quick, fevered breathings of the
+ little one timed your own heart-beats. To that door, with many other
+ missives of joy and pain, came haply the dispatch which hurried you off to
+ face your greatest sorrow&mdash;came by night, like a voice of God,
+ speaking and warning, and making all your work idle and your aims foolish.
+ These walls have answered, how many times, to your laughter; they have had
+ friendly ears for the trouble that seemed to grow by utterance. You have
+ sat upon the threshold so many summer days; so many winter mornings you
+ have seen the snows drifted high about it; so often your step has been
+ light and heavy upon it. There is the study, where your magnificent
+ performances were planned, and your exceeding small performances were
+ achieved; hither you hurried with the first criticism of your first book,
+ and read it with the rapture that nothing but a love-letter and a
+ favorable review can awaken. Out there is the well-known humble prospect,
+ that was commonly but a vista into dreamland; on the other hand is the
+ pretty grove,&mdash;its leaves now a little painted with the autumn, and
+ faltering to their fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, the place must always be sacred, but painfully sacred; and I say
+ again one should not go near it unless as a penance. If the reader will
+ suffer me the confidence, I will own that there is always a pang in the
+ past which is more than any pleasure it can give, and I believe that he,
+ if he were perfectly honest,&mdash;as Heaven forbid I or any one should
+ be,&mdash;would also confess as much. There is no house to which one would
+ return, having left it, though it were the hogshead out of which one had
+ moved into a kilderkin; for those associations whose perishing leaves us
+ free, and preserves to us what little youth we have, were otherwise
+ perpetuated to our burden and bondage. Let some one else, who has also
+ escaped from his past, have your old house; he will find it new and
+ untroubled by memories, while you, under another roof, enjoy a present
+ that borders only upon the future.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
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diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #7141 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7141)
diff --git a/old/7141-h.htm.2021-01-26 b/old/7141-h.htm.2021-01-26
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
+ </title>
+ <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Suburban Sketches
+
+Author: William Dean Howells
+
+Illustrator: Augustus Hoppin
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7141]
+This file was first posted on March 15, 2003
+Last Updated: February 25, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUBURBAN SKETCHES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Olaf Voss, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, David Widger,
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ SUBURBAN SKETCHES
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ <b> By William Dean Howells </b>
+ </h3>
+ <h4>
+ Author Of &ldquo;Venetian Life,&rdquo; &ldquo;Italian Journeys&rdquo; Etc.
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="frontispiece " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/frontispiece.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" />
+ </a>
+ </h5>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> MRS. JOHNSON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> DOORSTEP ACQUAINTANCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> A PEDESTRIAN TOUR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> BY HORSE-CAR TO BOSTON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> A DAY'S PLEASURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> SCENE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> JUBILEE DAYS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> SOME LESSONS FROM THE SCHOOL OF MORALS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> FLITTING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Illustrations
+ </h3>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> &ldquo;But I Suppose This Wine is Not Made of
+ Grapes, Signor?&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> &ldquo;Looking About, I Saw Two Women.&rdquo;
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0003"> &ldquo;The Young Lady in Black, Who Alighted at
+ a Most Ordinary Little Street.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> &ldquo;That Sweet Young Blonde, Who Arrives by
+ Most Trains.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> &ldquo;Frank and Lucy Stalked Ahead, With
+ Shawls Dragging From Their Arms.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> &ldquo;They Skirmish About Him With Every Sort
+ of Query.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> &ldquo;A Gaunt Figure of Forlorn and Curious
+ Smartness.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> &ldquo;The Spectacle As We Beheld It.&rdquo;
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> &ldquo;Vacant and Ceremonious Zeal.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MRS. JOHNSON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was on a morning of the lovely New England May that we left the
+ horse-car, and, spreading our umbrellas, walked down the street to our new
+ home in Charlesbridge, through a storm of snow and rain so finely blent by
+ the influences of this fortunate climate, that no flake knew itself from
+ its sister drop, or could be better identified by the people against whom
+ they beat in unison. A vernal gale from the east fanned our cheeks and
+ pierced our marrow and chilled our blood, while the raw, cold green of the
+ adventurous grass on the borders of the sopping sidewalks gave, as it
+ peered through its veil of melting snow and freezing rain, a peculiar
+ cheerfulness to the landscape. Here and there in the vacant lots abandoned
+ hoop-skirts defied decay; and near the half-finished wooden houses, empty
+ mortar-beds, and bits of lath and slate strewn over the scarred and
+ mutilated ground, added their interest to the scene. A shaggy drift hung
+ upon the trees before our own house (which had been built some years
+ earlier), while its swollen eaves wept silently and incessantly upon the
+ embankments lifting its base several feet above the common level.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This heavenly weather, which the Pilgrim Fathers, with the idea of turning
+ their thoughts effectually from earthly pleasures, came so far to
+ discover, continued with slight amelioration throughout the month of May
+ and far into June; and it was a matter of constant amazement with one who
+ had known less austere climates, to behold how vegetable life struggled
+ with the hostile skies, and, in an atmosphere as chill and damp as that of
+ a cellar, shot forth the buds and blossoms upon the pear-trees, called out
+ the sour Puritan courage of the currant-bushes, taught a reckless native
+ grape-vine to wander and wanton over the southern side of the fence, and
+ decked the banks with violets as fearless and as fragile as New England
+ girls; so that about the end of June, when the heavens relented and the
+ sun blazed out at last, there was little for him to do but to redden and
+ darken the daring fruits that had attained almost their full growth
+ without his countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, indeed, Charlesbridge appeared to us a kind of Paradise. The wind
+ blew all day from the southwest, and all day in the grove across the way
+ the orioles sang to their nestlings. The butcher's wagon rattled
+ merrily up to our gate every morning; and if we had kept no other
+ reckoning, we should have known it was Thursday by the grocer. We were
+ living in the country with the conveniences and luxuries of the city about
+ us. The house was almost new and in perfect repair; and, better than all,
+ the kitchen had as yet given no signs of unrest in those volcanic agencies
+ which are constantly at work there, and which, with sudden explosion, make
+ Herculaneums and Pompeiis of so many smiling households. Breakfast,
+ dinner, and tea came up with illusive regularity, and were all the most
+ perfect of their kind; and we laughed and feasted in our vain security. We
+ had out from the city to banquet with us the friends we loved, and we were
+ inexpressibly proud before them of the Help, who first wrought miracles of
+ cookery in our honor, and then appeared in a clean white apron, and the
+ glossiest black hair, to wait upon the table. She was young, and certainly
+ very pretty; she was as gay as a lark, and was courted by a young man
+ whose clothes would have been a credit, if they had not been a reproach,
+ to our lowly basement. She joyfully assented to the idea of staying with
+ us till she married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, there was much that was extremely pleasant about the little place
+ when the warm weather came, and it was not wonderful to us that Jenny was
+ willing to remain. It was very quiet; we called one another to the window
+ if a large dog went by our door; and whole days passed without the
+ movement of any wheels but the butcher's upon our street, which
+ flourished in ragweed and butter-cups and daisies, and in the autumn
+ burned, like the borders of nearly all the streets in Charlesbridge, with
+ the pallid azure flame of the succory. The neighborhood was in all things
+ a frontier between city and country. The horse-cars, the type of such
+ civilization&mdash;full of imposture, discomfort, and sublime possibility&mdash;as
+ we yet possess, went by the head of our street, and might, perhaps, be
+ available to one skilled in calculating the movements of comets; while two
+ minutes' walk would take us into a wood so wild and thick that no
+ roof was visible through the trees. We learned, like innocent pastoral
+ people of the golden age, to know the several voices of the cows pastured
+ in the vacant lots, and, like engine-drivers of the iron age, to
+ distinguish the different whistles of the locomotives passing on the
+ neighboring railroad. The trains shook the house as they thundered along,
+ and at night were a kind of company, while by day we had the society of
+ the innumerable birds. Now and then, also, the little ragged boys in
+ charge of the cows&mdash;which, tied by long ropes to trees, forever wound
+ themselves tight up against the trunks, and had to be unwound with great
+ ado of hooting and hammering&mdash;came and peered lustfully through the
+ gate at our ripening pears. All round us carpenters were at work building
+ new houses; but so far from troubling us, the strokes of their hammers
+ fell softly upon the sense, like one's heart-beats upon one's
+ own consciousness in the lapse from all fear of pain under the blessed
+ charm of an anaesthetic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We played a little at gardening, of course, and planted tomatoes, which
+ the chickens seemed to like, for they ate them up as fast as they ripened;
+ and we watched with pride the growth of our Lawton blackberries, which,
+ after attaining the most stalwart proportions, were still as bitter as the
+ scrubbiest of their savage brethren, and which, when by advice left on the
+ vines for a week after they turned black, were silently gorged by secret
+ and gluttonous flocks of robins and orioles. As for our grapes, the frost
+ cut them off in the hour of their triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, as I have hinted, we were not surprised that Jenny should be willing
+ to remain with us, and were as little prepared for her desertion as for
+ any other change of our moral state. But one day in September she came to
+ her nominal mistress with tears in her beautiful eyes and protestations of
+ unexampled devotion upon her tongue, and said that she was afraid she must
+ leave us. She liked the place, and she never had worked for any one that
+ was more of a lady, but she had made up her mind to go into the city. All
+ this, so far, was quite in the manner of domestics who, in ghost stories,
+ give warning to the occupants of haunted houses; and Jenny's
+ mistress listened in suspense for the motive of her desertion, expecting
+ to hear no less than that it was something which walked up and down the
+ stairs and dragged iron links after it, or something that came and groaned
+ at the front door, like populace dissatisfied with a political candidate.
+ But it was in fact nothing of this kind; simply, there were no lamps upon
+ our street, and Jenny, after spending Sunday evening with friends in East
+ Charlesbridge, was always alarmed, on her return, in walking from the
+ horse-car to our door. The case was hopeless, and Jenny and our household
+ parted with respect and regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had not before this thought it a grave disadvantage that our street was
+ unlighted. Our street was not drained nor graded; no municipal cart ever
+ came to carry away our ashes; there was not a water-butt within half a
+ mile to save us from fire, nor more than the one thousandth part of a
+ policeman to protect us from theft. Yet, as I paid a heavy tax, I somehow
+ felt that we enjoyed the benefits of city government, and never looked
+ upon Charlesbridge as in any way undesirable for residence. But when it
+ became necessary to find help in Jenny's place, the frosty welcome
+ given to application at the intelligence offices renewed a painful doubt
+ awakened by her departure. To be sure, the heads of the offices were
+ polite enough; but when the young housekeeper had stated her case at the
+ first to which she applied, and the Intelligencer had called out to the
+ invisible expectants in the adjoining room, &ldquo;Anny wan wants to do
+ giner'l housewark in Charlsbrudge?&rdquo; there came from the maids
+ invoked so loud, so fierce, so full a &ldquo;No!&rdquo; as shook the lady's
+ heart with an indescribable shame and dread. The name that, with an
+ innocent pride in its literary and historical associations, she had
+ written at the heads of her letters, was suddenly become a matter of
+ reproach to her; and she was almost tempted to conceal thereafter that she
+ lived in Charlesbridge, and to pretend that she dwelt upon some wretched
+ little street in Boston. &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said the head of the
+ office, &ldquo;the gairls doesn't like to live so far away from the
+ city. Now if it was on'y in the Port....&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This pen is not graphic enough to give the remote reader an idea of the
+ affront offered to an inhabitant of Old Charlesbridge in these closing
+ words. Neither am I of sufficiently tragic mood to report here all the
+ sufferings undergone by an unhappy family in finding servants, or to tell
+ how the winter was passed with miserable makeshifts. Alas! is it not the
+ history of a thousand experiences? Any one who looks upon this page could
+ match it with a tale as full of heartbreak and disaster, while I conceive
+ that, in hastening to speak of Mrs. Johnson, I approach a subject of
+ unique interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter that ensued after Jenny's departure was the true sister
+ of the bitter and shrewish spring of the same year. But indeed it is
+ always with a secret shiver that one must think of winter in our
+ regrettable climate. It is a terrible potency, robbing us of half our
+ lives, and threatening or desolating the moiety left us with rheumatisms
+ and catarrhs. There is a much vaster sum of enjoyment possible to man in
+ the more generous latitudes; and I have sometimes doubted whether even the
+ energy characteristic of ours is altogether to be praised, seeing that it
+ has its spring not so much in pure aspiration as in the instinct of
+ self-preservation. Egyptian, Greek, Roman energy was an inner impulse; but
+ ours is too often the sting of cold, the spur of famine. We must endure
+ our winter, but let us not be guilty of the hypocrisy of pretending that
+ we like it. Let us caress it with no more vain compliments, but use it
+ with something of its own rude and savage sincerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say, our last Irish girl went with the last snow, and on one of those
+ midsummer-like days that sometimes fall in early April to our yet bleak
+ and desolate zone, our hearts sang of Africa and golden joys. A Libyan
+ longing took us, and we would have chosen, if we could, to bear a strand
+ of grotesque beads, or a handful of brazen gauds, and traffic them for
+ some sable maid with crisped locks, whom, uncoffling from the captive
+ train beside the desert, we should make to do our general housework
+ forever, through the right of lawful purchase. But we knew that this was
+ impossible, and that, if we desired colored help, we must seek it at the
+ intelligence office, which is in one of those streets chiefly inhabited by
+ the orphaned children and grandchildren of slavery. To tell the truth
+ these orphans do not seem to grieve much for their bereavement, but lead a
+ life of joyous and rather indolent oblivion in their quarter of the city.
+ They are often to be seen sauntering up and down the street by which the
+ Charlesbridge cars arrive,&mdash;the young with a harmless swagger, and
+ the old with the generic limp which our Autocrat has already noted as
+ attending advanced years in their race. They seem the natural human
+ interest of a street so largely devoted to old clothes; and the thoughtful
+ may see a felicity in their presence where the pawnbrokers' windows
+ display the forfeited pledges of improvidence, and subtly remind us that
+ we have yet to redeem a whole race, pawned in our needy and reckless
+ national youth, and still held against us by the Uncle of Injustice, who
+ is also the Father of Lies. How gayly are the young ladies of this race
+ attired, as they trip up and down the side walks, and in and out through
+ the pendent garments at the shop doors! They are the black pansies and
+ marigolds and dark-blooded dahlias among womankind. They try to assume
+ something of our colder race's demeanor, but even the passer on the
+ horse-car can see that it is not native with them, and is better pleased
+ when they forget us, and ungenteelly laugh in encountering friends,
+ letting their white teeth glitter through the generous lips that open to
+ their ears. In the streets branching upwards from this avenue, very little
+ colored men and maids play with broken or enfeebled toys, or sport on the
+ wooden pavements of the entrances to the inner courts. Now and then a
+ colored soldier or sailor&mdash;looking strange in his uniform, even after
+ the custom of several years&mdash;emerges from those passages; or, more
+ rarely, a black gentleman, stricken in years, and cased in shining
+ broadcloth, walks solidly down the brick sidewalk, cane in hand,&mdash;a
+ vision of serene self-complacency, and so plainly the expression of
+ virtuous public sentiment that the great colored louts, innocent enough
+ till then in their idleness, are taken with a sudden sense of depravity,
+ and loaf guiltily up against the house-walls. At the same moment, perhaps,
+ a young damsel, amorously scuffling with an admirer through one of the low
+ open windows, suspends the strife, and bids him, &ldquo;Go along now, do!&rdquo;
+ More rarely yet than the gentleman described, one may see a white girl
+ among the dark neighbors, whose frowzy head is uncovered, and whose
+ sleeves are rolled up to her elbows, and who, though no doubt quite at
+ home, looks as strange there as that pale anomaly which may sometimes be
+ seen among a crew of blackbirds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An air not so much of decay as of unthrift, and yet hardly of unthrift,
+ seems to prevail in the neighborhood, which has none of the aggressive and
+ impudent squalor of an Irish quarter, and none of the surly wickedness of
+ a low American street. A gayety not born of the things that bring its
+ serious joy to the true New England heart&mdash;a ragged gayety, which
+ comes of summer in the blood, and not in the pocket or the conscience, and
+ which affects the countenance and the whole demeanor, setting the feet to
+ some inward music, and at times bursting into a line of song or a
+ child-like and irresponsible laugh&mdash;gives tone to the visible life,
+ and wakens a very friendly spirit in the passer, who somehow thinks there
+ of a milder climate, and is half persuaded that the orange-peel on the
+ sidewalks came from fruit grown in the soft atmosphere of those back
+ courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this quarter, then, that we heard of Mrs. Johnson; and it was
+ from a colored boarding-house there that she came out to Charlesbridge to
+ look at us, bringing her daughter of twelve years with her. She was a
+ matron of mature age and portly figure, with a complexion like coffee
+ soothed with the richest cream; and her manners were so full of a certain
+ tranquillity and grace, that she charmed away all out will to ask for
+ references. It was only her barbaric laughter and her lawless eye that
+ betrayed how slightly her New England birth and breeding covered her
+ ancestral traits, and bridged the gulf of a thousand years of civilization
+ that lay between her race and ours. But in fact, she was doubly estranged
+ by descent; for, as we learned later, a sylvan wildness mixed with that of
+ the desert in her veins: her grandfather was an Indian, and her ancestors
+ on this side had probably sold their lands for the same value in trinkets
+ that bought the original African pair on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first day that Mrs. Johnson descended into our kitchen, she conjured
+ from the malicious disorder in which it had been left by the flitting
+ Irish kobold a dinner that revealed the inspirations of genius, and was
+ quite different from a dinner of mere routine and laborious talent.
+ Something original and authentic mingled with the accustomed flavors; and,
+ though vague reminiscences of canal-boat travel and woodland camps arose
+ from the relish of certain of the dishes, there was yet the assurance of
+ such power in the preparation of the whole, that we knew her to be merely
+ running over the chords of our appetite with preliminary savors, as a
+ musician acquaints his touch with the keys of an unfamiliar piano before
+ breaking into brilliant and triumphant execution. Within a week she had
+ mastered her instrument; and thereafter there was no faltering in her
+ performances, which she varied constantly, through inspiration or from
+ suggestion. She was so quick to receive new ideas in her art, that, when
+ the Roman statuary who stayed a few weeks with us explained the mystery of
+ various purely Latin dishes, she caught their principle at once; and
+ visions of the great white cathedral, the Coliseum, and the &ldquo;dome of
+ Brunelleschi&rdquo; floated before us in the exhalations of the Milanese
+ <i>risotto</i>, Roman <i>stufadino</i>, and Florentine <i>stracotto</i>
+ that smoked upon our board. But, after all, it was in puddings that Mrs.
+ Johnson chiefly excelled. She was one of those cooks&mdash;rare as men of
+ genius in literature&mdash;who love their own dishes; and she had, in her
+ personally child-like simplicity of taste, and the inherited appetites of
+ her savage forefathers, a dominant passion for sweets. So far as we could
+ learn, she subsisted principally upon puddings and tea. Through the same
+ primitive instincts, no doubt, she loved praise. She openly exulted in our
+ artless flatteries of her skill; she waited jealously at the head of the
+ kitchen stairs to hear what was said of her work, especially if there were
+ guests; and she was never too weary to attempt emprises of cookery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While engaged in these, she wore a species of sightly handkerchief like a
+ turban upon her head and about her person those mystical swathings in
+ which old ladies of the African race delight. But she most pleasured our
+ sense of beauty and moral fitness when, after the last pan was washed and
+ the last pot was scraped, she lighted a potent pipe, and, taking her stand
+ at the kitchen door, laded the soft evening air with its pungent odors. If
+ we surprised her at these supreme moments, she took the pipe from her
+ lips, and put it behind her, with a low mellow chuckle, and a look of
+ half-defiant consciousness; never guessing that none of her merits took us
+ half so much as the cheerful vice which she only feigned to conceal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some things she could not do so perfectly as cooking, because of her
+ failing eyesight; and we persuaded her that spectacles would both become
+ and befriend a lady of her years, and so bought her a pair of steel-bowed
+ glasses. She wore them in some great emergencies at first, but had clearly
+ no pride in them. Before long she laid them aside altogether, and they had
+ passed from our thoughts, when one day we heard her mellow note of
+ laughter and her daughter's harsher cackle outside our door, and,
+ opening it, beheld Mrs. Johnson in gold-bowed spectacles of massive frame.
+ We then learned that their purchase was in fulfillment of a vow made long
+ ago, in the life-time of Mr. Johnson, that, if ever she wore glasses, they
+ should be gold-bowed; and I hope the manes of the dead were half as happy
+ in these votive spectacles as the simple soul that offered them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She and her late partner were the parents of eleven children, some of whom
+ were dead, and some of whom were wanderers in unknown parts. During his
+ life-time she had kept a little shop in her native town; and it was only
+ within a few years that she had gone into service. She cherished a natural
+ haughtiness of spirit, and resented control, although disposed to do all
+ she could of her own motion. Being told to say when she wanted an
+ afternoon, she explained that when she wanted an afternoon she always took
+ it without asking, but always planned so as not to discommode the ladies
+ with whom she lived. These, she said, had numbered twenty-seven within
+ three years, which made us doubt the success of her system in all cases,
+ though she merely held out the fact as an assurance of her faith in the
+ future, and a proof of the ease with which places were to be found. She
+ contended, moreover, that a lady who had for thirty years had a house of
+ her own, was in nowise bound to ask permission to receive visits from
+ friends where she might be living, but that they ought freely to come and
+ go like other guests. In this spirit she once invited her son-in-law,
+ Professor Jones of Providence, to dine with her; and her defied mistress,
+ on entering the dining-room, found the Professor at pudding and tea there,&mdash;an
+ impressively respectable figure in black clothes, with a black face
+ rendered yet more effective by a pair of green goggles. It appeared that
+ this dark professor was a light of phrenology in Rhode Island, and that he
+ was believed to have uncommon virtue in his science by reason of being
+ blind as well as black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am loath to confess that Mrs. Johnson had not a flattering opinion of
+ the Caucasian race in all respects. In fact, she had very good
+ philosophical and Scriptural reasons for looking upon us as an upstart
+ people of new blood, who had come into their whiteness by no creditable or
+ pleasant process. The late Mr. Johnson, who had died in the West Indies,
+ whither he voyaged for his health in quality of cook upon a Down-East
+ schooner, was a man of letters, and had written a book to show the
+ superiority of the black over the white branches of the human family. In
+ this he held that, as all islands have been at their discovery found
+ peopled by blacks, we must needs believe that humanity was first created
+ of that color. Mrs. Johnson could not show us her husband's work (a
+ sole copy in the library of an English gentleman at Port au Prince is not
+ to be bought for money), but she often developed its arguments to the lady
+ of the house; and one day, with a great show of reluctance, and many
+ protests that no personal slight was meant, let fall the fact that Mr.
+ Johnson believed the white race descended from Gehazi the leper, upon whom
+ the leprosy of Naaman fell when the latter returned by Divine favor to his
+ original blackness. &ldquo;And he went out from his presence a leper as
+ white as snow,&rdquo; said Mrs. Johnson, quoting irrefutable Scripture.
+ &ldquo;Leprosy, leprosy,&rdquo; she added thoughtfully,&mdash;&ldquo;nothing
+ but leprosy bleached you out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems to me much in her praise that she did not exult in our taint and
+ degradation, as some white philosophers used to do in the opposite idea
+ that a part of the human family were cursed to lasting blackness and
+ slavery in Ham and his children, but even told us of a remarkable approach
+ to whiteness in many of her own offspring. In a kindred spirit of charity,
+ no doubt, she refused ever to attend church with people of her elder and
+ wholesomer blood. When she went to church, she said, she always went to a
+ white church, though while with us I am bound to say she never went to
+ any. She professed to read her Bible in her bedroom on Sundays; but we
+ suspected, from certain sounds and odors which used to steal out of this
+ sanctuary, that her piety more commonly found expression in dozing and
+ smoking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would not make a wanton jest here of Mrs. Johnson's anxiety to
+ claim honor for the African color, while denying this color in many of her
+ own family. It afforded a glimpse of the pain which all her people must
+ endure, however proudly they hide it or light-heartedly forget it, from
+ the despite and contumely to which they are guiltlessly born; and when I
+ thought how irreparable was this disgrace and calamity of a black skin,
+ and how irreparable it must be for ages yet, in this world where every
+ other shame and all manner of wilful guilt and wickedness may hope for
+ covert and pardon, I had little heart to laugh. Indeed, it was so pathetic
+ to hear this poor old soul talk of her dead and lost ones, and try, in
+ spite of all Mr. Johnson's theories and her own arrogant
+ generalizations, to establish their whiteness, that we must have been very
+ cruel and silly people to turn her sacred fables even into matter of
+ question. I have no doubt that her Antoinette Anastasia and her Thomas
+ Jefferson Wilberforce&mdash;it is impossible to give a full idea of the
+ splendor and scope of the baptismal names in Mrs. Johnson's family&mdash;have
+ as light skins and as golden hair in heaven as her reverend maternal fancy
+ painted for them in our world. There, certainly, they would not be subject
+ to tanning, which had ruined the delicate complexion, and had knotted into
+ black woolly tangles the once wavy blonde locks of our little maid-servant
+ Naomi; and I would fain believe that Toussaint Washington Johnson, who ran
+ away to sea so many years ago, has found some fortunate zone where his
+ hair and skin keep the same sunny and rosy tints they wore to his mother's
+ eyes in infancy. But I have no means of knowing this, or of telling
+ whether he was the prodigy of intellect that he was declared to be. Naomi
+ could no more be taken in proof, of the one assertion than of the other.
+ When she came to us, it was agreed that she should go to school; but she
+ overruled her mother in this as in everything else, and never went. Except
+ Sunday-school lessons, she had no other instruction than that her mistress
+ gave her in the evenings, when a heavy day's play and the natural
+ influences of the hour conspired with original causes to render her
+ powerless before words of one syllable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first week of her service she was obedient and faithful to her duties;
+ but, relaxing in the atmosphere of a house which seems to demoralize all
+ menials, she shortly fell into disorderly ways of lying in wait for
+ callers out of doors, and, when people rang, of running up the front
+ steps, and letting them in from the outside. As the season expanded, and
+ the fine weather became confirmed, she modified even this form of service,
+ and spent her time in the fields, appearing at the house only when nature
+ importunately craved molasses. She had a parrot-like quickness, so far as
+ music was concerned, and learned from the Roman statuary to make the
+ groves and half-finished houses resound,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Camicia rossa,
+ Ove t' ascondi?
+ T' appella Italia,&mdash;
+ Tu non respondi!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She taught the Garibaldi song, moreover, to all the neighboring children,
+ so that I sometimes wondered if our street were not about to march upon
+ Rome in a body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her untamable disobedience, Naomi alone betrayed her sylvan blood, for
+ she was in all other respects negro and not Indian. But it was of her
+ aboriginal ancestry that Mrs. Johnson chiefly boasted,&mdash;when not
+ engaged in argument to maintain the superiority of the African race. She
+ loved to descant upon it as the cause and explanation of her own arrogant
+ habit of feeling; and she seemed indeed to have inherited something of the
+ Indian's hauteur along with the Ethiop's supple cunning and
+ abundant amiability. She gave many instances in which her pride had met
+ and overcome the insolence of employers, and the kindly old creature was
+ by no means singular in her pride of being reputed proud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could never have been a woman of strong logical faculties, but she had
+ in some things a very surprising and awful astuteness. She seldom
+ introduced any purpose directly, but bore all about it and then suddenly
+ sprung it upon her unprepared antagonist. At other times she obscurely
+ hinted a reason, and left a conclusion to be inferred; as when she warded
+ off reproach for some delinquency by saying in a general way that she had
+ lived with ladies who used to come scolding into the kitchen after they
+ had taken their bitters. &ldquo;Quality ladies took their bitters regular,&rdquo;
+ she added, to remove any sting of personality from her remark; for, from
+ many things she had let fall, we knew that she did not regard us as
+ quality. On the contrary, she often tried to overbear us with the
+ gentility of her former places; and would tell the lady over whom she
+ reigned, that she had lived with folks worth their three and four hundred
+ thousand dollars, who never complained as she did of the ironing. Yet she
+ had a sufficient regard for the literary occupations of the family, Mr.
+ Johnson having been an author. She even professed to have herself written
+ a book, which was still in manuscript, and preserved somewhere among her
+ best clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was well, on many accounts, to be in contact with a mind so original
+ and suggestive as Mrs. Johnson's. We loved to trace its intricate
+ yet often transparent operations, and were perhaps too fond of explaining
+ its peculiarities by facts of ancestry,&mdash;of finding hints of the
+ Powwow or the Grand Custom in each grotesque development. We were
+ conscious of something warmer in this old soul than in ourselves, and
+ something wilder, and we chose to think it the tropic and the untracked
+ forest. She had scarcely any being apart from her affection; she had no
+ morality, but was good because she neither hated nor envied; and she might
+ have been a saint far more easily than far more civilized people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was that also in her sinuous yet malleable nature, so full of guile
+ and so full of goodness, that reminded us pleasantly of lowly folk in
+ elder lands, where relaxing oppressions have lifted the restraints of fear
+ between master and servant, without disturbing the familiarity of their
+ relation. She advised freely with us upon all household matters, and took
+ a motherly interest in whatever concerned us. She could be flattered or
+ caressed into almost any service, but no threat or command could move her.
+ When she erred, she never acknowledged her wrong in words, but handsomely
+ expressed her regrets in a pudding, or sent up her apologies in a favorite
+ dish secretly prepared. We grew so well used to this form of exculpation,
+ that, whenever Mrs. Johnson took an afternoon at an inconvenient season,
+ we knew that for a week afterwards we should be feasted like princes. She
+ owned frankly that she loved us, that she never had done half so much for
+ people before, and that she never had been nearly so well suited in any
+ other place; and for a brief and happy time we thought that we never
+ should part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, however, our dividing destiny appeared in the basement, and was
+ presented to us as Hippolyto Thucydides, the son of Mrs. Johnson, who had
+ just arrived on a visit to his mother from the State of New Hampshire. He
+ was a heavy and loutish youth, standing upon the borders of boyhood, and
+ looking forward to the future with a vacant and listless eye. I mean that
+ this was his figurative attitude; his actual manner, as he lolled upon a
+ chair beside the kitchen window, was so eccentric, that we felt a little
+ uncertain how to regard him, and Mrs. Johnson openly described him as
+ peculiar. He was so deeply tanned by the fervid suns of the New Hampshire
+ winter, and his hair had so far suffered from the example of the sheep
+ lately under his charge, that he could not be classed by any stretch of
+ compassion with the blonde and straight-haired members of Mrs. Johnson's
+ family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remained with us all the first day until late in the afternoon, when
+ his mother took him out to get him a boarding-house. Then he departed in
+ the van of her and Naomi, pausing at the gate to collect his spirits, and,
+ after he had sufficiently animated himself by clapping his palms together,
+ starting off down the street at a hand-gallop, to the manifest terror of
+ the cows in the pastures, and the confusion of the less demonstrative
+ people of our household. Other characteristic traits appeared in Hippolyto
+ Thucydides within no very long period of time, and he ran away from his
+ lodgings so often during the summer that he might be said to board round
+ among the outlying corn-fields and turnip-patches of Charlesbridge. As a
+ check upon this habit, Mrs. Johnson seemed to have invited him to spend
+ his whole time in our basement; for whenever we went below we found him
+ there, balanced&mdash;perhaps in homage to us, and perhaps as a token of
+ extreme sensibility in himself&mdash;upon the low window-sill, the bottoms
+ of his boots touching the floor inside, and his face buried in the grass
+ without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We could formulate no very tenable objection to all this, and yet the
+ presence of Thucydides in our kitchen unaccountably oppressed our
+ imaginations. We beheld him all over the house, a monstrous eidolon,
+ balanced upon every window-sill; and he certainly attracted unpleasant
+ notice to our place, no less by his furtive and hang-dog manner of arrival
+ than by the bold displays with which he celebrated his departures. We
+ hinted this to Mrs. Johnson, but she could not enter into our feeling.
+ Indeed, all the wild poetry of her maternal and primitive nature seemed to
+ cast itself about this hapless boy; and if we had listened to her we
+ should have believed there was no one so agreeable in society, or so
+ quick-witted in affairs, as Hippolyto, when he chose. She used to rehearse
+ us long epics concerning his industry, his courage, and his talent; and
+ she put fine speeches in his mouth with no more regard to the truth than
+ if she had been a historian, and not a poet. Perhaps she believed that he
+ really said and did the things she attributed to him: it is the destiny of
+ those who repeatedly tell great things either of themselves or others; and
+ I think we may readily forgive the illusion to her zeal and fondness. In
+ fact, she was not a wise woman, and she spoiled her children as if she had
+ been a rich one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, when we said positively that Thucydides should come to us no
+ more, and then qualified the prohibition by allowing him to come every
+ Sunday, she answered that she never would hurt the child's feelings
+ by telling him not to come where his mother was; that people who did not
+ love her children did not love her; and that, if Hippy went, she went. We
+ thought it a master-stroke of firmness to rejoin that Hippolyto must go in
+ any event; but I am bound to own that he did not go, and that his mother
+ stayed, and so fed us with every cunning propitiatory dainty, that we must
+ have been Pagans to renew our threat. In fact, we begged Mrs. Johnson to
+ go into the country with us, and she, after long reluctation on Hippy's
+ account, consented, agreeing to send him away to friends during her
+ absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We made every preparation, and on the eve of our departure Mrs. Johnson
+ went into the city to engage her son's passage to Bangor, while we
+ awaited her return in untroubled security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she did not appear till midnight, and then responded with but a sad
+ &ldquo;Well, sah!&rdquo; to the cheerful &ldquo;Well, Mrs. Johnson!&rdquo;
+ that greeted her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, Mrs. Johnson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Johnson made a strange noise, half chuckle and half death-rattle, in
+ her throat. &ldquo;All wrong, sah. Hippy's off again; and I've
+ been all over the city after him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you can't go with us in the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How <i>can</i> I, sah?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Johnson went sadly out of the room. Then she came back to the door
+ again, and, opening it, uttered, for the first time in our service, words
+ of apology and regret: &ldquo;I hope I ha'n't put you out any.
+ I <i>wanted</i> to go with you, but I ought to <i>knowed</i> I couldn't.
+ All is, I loved you too much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DOORSTEP ACQUAINTANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Vagabonds the world would no doubt call many of my doorstep acquaintance,
+ and I do not attempt to defend them altogether against the world, which
+ paints but black and white and in general terms. Yet I would fain veil
+ what is only half-truth under another name, for I know that the service of
+ their Gay Science is not one of such disgraceful ease as we associate with
+ ideas of vagrancy, though I must own that they lead the life they do
+ because they love it. They always protest that nothing but their ignorance
+ of our tongue prevents them from practicing some mechanical trade. &ldquo;What
+ work could be harder,&rdquo; they ask, &ldquo;than carrying this organ
+ about all day?&rdquo; but while I answer with honesty that nothing can be
+ more irksome, I feel that they only pretend a disgust with it, and that
+ they really like organ-grinding, if for no other reason than that they are
+ the children of the summer, and it takes them into the beloved open
+ weather. One of my friends, at least, who in the warmer months is to all
+ appearance a blithesome troubadour, living
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A merry life in sun and shade,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ as a coal-heaver in winter; and though this more honorable and useful
+ occupation is doubtless open to him the whole year round, yet he does not
+ devote himself to it, but prefers with the expanding spring to lay aside
+ his grimy basket, and, shouldering his organ, to quit the dismal wharves
+ and carts and cellars, and to wander forth into the suburbs, with his
+ lazy, soft-eyed boy at his heels, who does nothing with his tambourine but
+ take up a collection, and who, meeting me the other day in a chance
+ passage of Ferry Street, knew me, and gave me so much of his father's
+ personal history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was winter even there in Ferry Street, in which so many Italians live
+ that one might think to find it under a softer sky and in a gentler air,
+ and which I had always figured in a wide unlikeness to all other streets
+ in Boston,&mdash;with houses stuccoed outside, and with gratings at their
+ ground-floor windows; with mouldering archways between the buildings, and
+ at the corners feeble lamps glimmering before pictures of the Madonna;
+ with weather-beaten shutters flapping overhead, and many balconies from
+ which hung the linen swathings of young infants, and love-making maidens
+ furtively lured the velvet-jacketed, leisurely youth below: a place
+ haunted by windy voices of blessing and cursing, with the perpetual clack
+ of wooden-heeled shoes upon the stones, and what perfume from the blossom
+ of vines and almond-trees, mingling with less delicate smells, the
+ travelled reader pleases to imagine. I do not say that I found Ferry
+ Street actually different from this vision in most respects; but as for
+ the vines and almond-trees, they were not in bloom at the moment of my
+ encounter with the little tambourine-boy. As we stood and talked, the snow
+ fell as heavily and thickly around us as elsewhere in Boston. With a vague
+ pain,&mdash;the envy of a race toward another born to a happier clime,&mdash;I
+ heard from him that his whole family was going back to Italy in a month.
+ The father had at last got together money enough, and the mother, who had
+ long been an invalid, must be taken home; and, so far as I know, the
+ population of Ferry Street exists but in the hope of a return, soon or
+ late, to the native or the ancestral land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More than one of my doorstep acquaintance, in fact, seemed to have no
+ other stock in trade than this fond desire, and to thrive with it in our
+ sympathetic community. It is scarcely possible but the reader has met the
+ widow of Giovanni Cascamatto, a Vesuvian lunatic who has long set fire to
+ their home on the slopes of the volcano, and perished in the flames. She
+ was our first Italian acquaintance in Charlesbridge, presenting herself
+ with a little subscription-book which she sent in for inspection, with a
+ printed certificate to the facts of her history signed with the somewhat
+ conventionally Saxon names of William Tompkins and John Johnson. These
+ gentlemen set forth, in terms vaguer than can be reproduced, that her
+ object in coming to America was to get money to go back to Italy; and the
+ whole document had so fictitious an air that it made us doubt even the
+ nationality of the bearer; but we were put to shame by the decent joy she
+ manifested in an Italian salutation. There was no longer a question of
+ imposture in anybody's mind; we gladly paid tribute to her poetic
+ fiction, and she thanked us with a tranquil courtesy that placed the
+ obligation where it belonged. As she turned to go with many good wishes,
+ we pressed her to have some dinner, but she answered with a compliment
+ insurpassably flattering, she had just dined&mdash;in another palace. The
+ truth is, there is not a single palace on Benicia Street, and our little
+ box of pine and paper would hardly have passed for a palace on the stage,
+ where these things are often contrived with great simplicity; but as we
+ had made a little Italy together, she touched it with the exquisite
+ politeness of her race, and it became for the instant a lordly mansion,
+ standing on the Chiaja, or the Via Nuovissima, or the Canalazzo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say this woman seemed glad to be greeted in Italian, but not, so far as
+ I could see, surprised; and altogether the most amazing thing about my
+ doorstep acquaintance of her nation is, that they are never surprised to
+ be spoken to in their own tongue, or, if they are, never show it. A
+ chestnut-roaster, who has sold me twice the chestnuts the same money would
+ have bought of him in English, has not otherwise recognized the fact that
+ Tuscan is not the dialect of Charlesbridge, and the mortifying nonchalance
+ with which my advances have always been received has long since persuaded
+ me that to the grinder at the gate it is not remarkable that a man should
+ open the door of his wooden house on Benicia Street, and welcome him in
+ his native language. After the first shock of this indifference is past,
+ it is not to be questioned but it flatters with an illusion, which a stare
+ of amazement would forbid, reducing the encounter to a vulgar reality at
+ once, and I could almost believe it in those wily and amiable folk to
+ intend the sweeter effect of their unconcern, which tacitly implies that
+ there is no other tongue in the world but Italian, and which makes all the
+ earth and air Italian for the time. Nothing else could have been the
+ purpose of that image-dealer whom I saw on a summer's day lying at
+ the foot of one of our meeting-houses, and doing his best to make it a
+ cathedral, and really giving a sentiment of medieval art to the noble
+ sculptures of the facade which the carpenters had just nailed up, freshly
+ painted and newly repaired. This poet was stretched upon his back, eating,
+ in that convenient posture, his dinner out of an earthen pot, plucking the
+ viand from it, whatever it was, with his thumb and fore-finger, and
+ dropping it piecemeal into his mouth. When the passer asked him &ldquo;Where
+ are you from?&rdquo; he held a morsel in air long enough to answer &ldquo;Da
+ Lucca, signore,&rdquo; and then let it fall into his throat, and sank
+ deeper into a reverie in which that crude accent even must have sounded
+ like a gossip's or a kinsman's voice, but never otherwise
+ moved muscle, nor looked to see who passed or lingered. There could have
+ been little else in his circumstances to remind him of home, and if he was
+ really in the sort of day-dream attributed to him, he was wise not to look
+ about him. I have not myself been in Lucca, but I conceive that its piazza
+ is not like our square, with a pump and horse-trough in the midst; but
+ that it has probably a fountain and statuary, though not possibly so
+ magnificent an elm towering above the bronze or marble groups as spreads
+ its boughs of benison over our pump and the horse-car switchman, loitering
+ near it to set the switch for the arriving cars, or lift the brimming
+ buckets to the smoking nostrils of the horses, while out from the stable
+ comes clanging and banging with a fresh team that famous African who has
+ turned white, or, if he is off duty, one of his brethren who has not yet
+ begun to turn. Figure, besides, an expressman watering his horse at the
+ trough, a provision-cart backed up against the curb in front of one of the
+ stores, various people looking from the car-office windows, and a
+ conductor appearing at the door long enough to call out, &ldquo;Ready for
+ Boston!&rdquo;&mdash;and you have a scene of such gayety as Lucca could
+ never have witnessed in her piazza at high noon on a summer's day.
+ Even our Campo Santo, if the Lucchese had cared to look round the corner
+ of the meeting-house at its moss-grown head stones, could have had little
+ to remind him of home, though it has antiquity and a proper quaintness.
+ But not for him, not for them of his clime and faith, is the pathos of
+ those simple memorial slates with their winged skulls, changing upon many
+ later stones, as if by the softening of creeds and customs, to cherub's
+ heads,&mdash;not for him is the pang I feel because of those who died, in
+ our country's youth exiles or exiles' children, heirs of the
+ wilderness and toil and hardship. Could they rise from their restful beds,
+ and look on this wandering Italian with his plaster statuettes of Apollo,
+ and Canovan dancers and deities, they would hold his wares little better
+ than Romish saints and idolatries, and would scarcely have the sentimental
+ interest in him felt by the modern citizen of Charlesbridge; but I think
+ that even they must have respected that Lombard scissors-grinder who used
+ to come to us, and put an edge to all the cutlery in the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has since gone back to Milan, whence he came eighteen years ago, and
+ whither he has returned,&mdash;as he told me one acute day in the fall,
+ when all the winter hinted itself, and the painted leaves shuddered
+ earthward in the grove across the way,&mdash;to enjoy a little climate
+ before he died (<i>per goder un po' di dima prima di morire</i>).
+ Our climate was the only thing he had against us; in every other respect
+ he was a New-Englander, even to the early stages of consumption. He told
+ me the story of his whole life, and of how in his adventurous youth he had
+ left Milan and sojourned some years in Naples, vainly seeking his fortune
+ there. Afterwards he went to Greece, and set up his ancestral business of
+ greengrocer in Athens, faring there no better, but rather worse than in
+ Naples, because of the deeper wickedness of the Athenians, who cheated him
+ right and left, and whose laws gave him no redress. The Neapolitans were
+ bad enough, he said, making a wry face, but the Greeks!&mdash;and he spat
+ the Greeks out in the grass. At last, after much misfortune in Europe, he
+ bethought him of coming to America, and he had never regretted it, but for
+ the climate. You spent a good deal here,&mdash;nearly all you earned,&mdash;but
+ then a poor man was a man, and the people were honest. It was wonderful to
+ him that they all knew how to read and write, and he viewed with
+ inexpressible scorn those Irish who came to this country, and were so
+ little sensible of the benefits it conferred upon them. Boston he believed
+ the best city in America, and &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is
+ there such a thing anywhere else in the world as that Public Library?&rdquo;
+ He, a poor man, and almost unknown, had taken books from it to his own
+ room, and was master to do so whenever he liked. He had thus been enabled
+ to read Botta's history of the United States, an enormous compliment
+ both to the country and the work which I doubt ever to have been paid
+ before; and he knew more about Washington than I did, and desired to know
+ more than I could tell him of the financial question among us. So we came
+ to national politics, and then to European affairs. &ldquo;It appears that
+ Garibaldi will not go to Rome this year,&rdquo; remarks my
+ scissors-grinder, who is very red in his sympathies. &ldquo;The Emperor
+ forbids! Well, patience! And that blessed Pope, what does he want, that
+ Pope? He will be king find priest both, he will wear two pairs of shoes at
+ once!&rdquo; I must confess that no other of my door-step acquaintance had
+ so clear an idea as this one of the difference between things here and at
+ home. To the minds of most we seemed divided here as there into rich and
+ poor,&mdash;<i>signori, persone eivili</i>, and <i>povera gente</i>,&mdash;and
+ their thoughts about us did not go beyond a speculation as to our
+ individual willingness or ability to pay for organ-grinding. But this
+ Lombard was worthy of his adopted country, and I forgive him the frank
+ expression of a doubt that one day occurred to him, when offered a glass
+ of Italian wine. He held it daintily between him and the sun for a smiling
+ moment, and then said, as if our wine must needs be as ungenuine as our
+ Italian,&mdash;was perhaps some expression from the surrounding
+ currant-bushes, harsh as that from the Northern tongues which could never
+ give his language the true life and tonic charm,&mdash;&ldquo;But I
+ suppose this wine is not made of grapes, signor?&rdquo; Yet he was a very
+ courteous old man, elaborate in greeting and leave-taking, and with a
+ quicker sense than usual. It was accounted delicacy in him, that, when he
+ had bidden us a final adieu, he should never come near us again, though
+ the date of his departure was postponed some weeks, and we heard him
+ tinkling down the street, and stopping at the neighbors' houses. He
+ was a keen-faced, thoughtful-looking man; and he wore a blouse of blue
+ cotton, from the pocket of which always dangled the leaves of some wild
+ salad culled from our wasteful vacant lots or prodigal waysides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/1000.jpg" alt="1000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/1000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Altogether different in character was that Triestine, who came one evening
+ to be helped home at the close of a very disastrous career in Mexico. He
+ Was a person of innumerable bows, and fluttered his bright-colored
+ compliments about, till it appeared that never before had such amiable
+ people been asked charity by such a worthy and generous sufferer. In
+ Trieste he had been a journalist, and it was evident enough from his
+ speech that he was of a good education. He was vain of his Italian accent,
+ which was peculiarly good for his heterogeneously peopled native city; and
+ he made a show of that marvelous facility of the Triestines in languages,
+ by taking me down French books, Spanish books, German books, and reading
+ from them all with the properest accent. Yet with this boyish pride and
+ self-satisfaction there was mixed a tone of bitter and worldly cynicism, a
+ belief in fortune as the sole providence. As nearly as I could make out,
+ he was a Johnson man in American politics; upon the Mexican question he
+ was independent, disdaining French and Mexicans alike. He was with the
+ former from the first, and had continued in the service of Maximilian
+ after their withdrawal, till the execution of that prince made Mexico no
+ place for adventurous merit. He was now going back to his native country,
+ an ungrateful land enough, which had ill treated him long ago, but to
+ which he nevertheless returned in a perfect gayety of temper. What a
+ light-hearted rogue he was,&mdash;with such merry eyes, and such a
+ pleasant smile shaping his neatly trimmed beard and mustache! After he had
+ supped, and he Stood with us at the door taking leave, something happened
+ to be said of Italian songs, whereupon this blithe exile, whom the
+ compassion of strangers was enabling to go home after many years of
+ unprofitable toil and danger to a country that had loved him not, fell to
+ caroling a Venetian barcarole, and went sweetly away in its cadence. I
+ bore him company as far as the gate of another Italian-speaking signor,
+ and was there bidden adieu with great effusion, so that I forgot till he
+ had left me to charge him not to be in fear of the house-dog, which barked
+ but did not bite. In calling this after him, I had the misfortune to
+ blunder in my verb. A man of another nation&mdash;perhaps another man of
+ his own nation&mdash;would have cared rather for what I said than how I
+ said it; but he, as if too zealous for the honor of his beautiful language
+ to endure a hurt to it even in that moment of grief, lifting his hat, and
+ bowing for the last time, responded with a &ldquo;Morde, non morsica,
+ signore!&rdquo; and passed in under the pines, and next day to Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a little old Genoese lady comes to sell us pins, needles, thread,
+ tape, and the like <i>roba</i>, whom I regard as leading quite an ideal
+ life in some respects. Her traffic is limited to a certain number of
+ families who speak more or less Italian; and her days, so far as they are
+ concerned, must be passed in an atmosphere of sympathy and kindliness. The
+ truth is, we Northern and New World folk cannot help but cast a little
+ romance about whoever comes to us from Italy, whether we have actually
+ known the beauty and charm of that land or not. Then this old lady is in
+ herself a very gentle and lovable kind of person, with a tender
+ mother-face, which is also the face of a child. A smile plays always upon
+ her wrinkled visage, and her quick and restless eyes are full of
+ friendliness. There is never much stuff in her basket, however, and it is
+ something of a mystery how she manages to live from it. None but an
+ Italian could, I am sure; and her experience must test the full virtue of
+ the national genius for cheap salads and much-extenuated soup-meat. I do
+ not know whether it is native in her, or whether it is a grace acquired
+ from long dealing with those kindly-hearted customers of hers in
+ Charlesbridge, but she is of a most munificent spirit, and returns every
+ smallest benefit with some present from her basket. She makes me ashamed
+ of things I have written about the sordidness of her race, but I shall
+ vainly seek to atone for them by open-handedness to her. She will give
+ favor for favor; she will not even count the money she receives; our
+ bargaining is a contest of the courtliest civilities, ending in many an
+ &ldquo;Adieu!&rdquo; &ldquo;To meet again!&rdquo; &ldquo;Remain well!&rdquo;
+ and &ldquo;Finally!&rdquo; not surpassed if rivaled in any Italian street.
+ In her ineffectual way, she brings us news of her different customers,
+ breaking up their stout Saxon names into tinkling polysyllables which
+ suggest them only to the practiced sense, and is perfectly patient and
+ contented if we mistake one for another. She loves them all, but she
+ pities them as living in a terrible climate; and doubtless in her heart
+ she purposes one day to go back to Italy, there to die. In the mean time
+ she is very cheerful; she, too, has had her troubles,&mdash;what troubles
+ I do not remember, but those that come by sickness and by death, and that
+ really seem no sorrows until they come to us,&mdash;yet she never
+ complains. It is hard to make a living, and the house-rent alone is six
+ dollars a month; but still one lives, and does not fare so ill either. As
+ it does not seem to be in her to dislike any one, it must be out of a
+ harmless guile, felt to be comforting to servant-ridden householders, that
+ she always speaks of &ldquo;those Irish,&rdquo; her neighbors, with a
+ bated breath, a shaken head, a hand lifted to the cheek, and an averted
+ countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swarthiest of the organ-grinding tribe is he who peers up at my window out
+ of infinitesimal black eyes, perceives me, louts low, and for form's
+ sake grinds me out a tune before he begins to talk. As we parley together,
+ say it is eleven o'clock in the forenoon, and a sober tranquillity
+ reigns upon the dust and nodding weeds of Benicia Street. At that hour the
+ organ-grinder and I are the only persons of our sex in the whole suburban
+ population; all other husbands and fathers having eaten their breakfasts
+ at seven o'clock, and stood up in the early horse-cars to Boston,
+ whence they will return, with aching backs and quivering calves,
+ half-pendant by leathern straps from the roofs of the same luxurious
+ conveyances, in the evening. The Italian might go and grind his organ upon
+ the front stoop of any one of a hundred French-roof houses around, and
+ there would be no arm within strong enough to thrust him thence; but he is
+ a gentleman in his way, and, as he prettily explains, he never stops to
+ play except where the window smiles on him: a frowning lattice he will
+ pass in silence. I behold in him a disappointed man,&mdash;a man broken in
+ health, and of a liver baked by long sojourn in a tropical clime. In large
+ and dim outline, made all the dimmer by his dialect, he sketches me the
+ story of his life; how in his youth he ran away from the Milanese for love
+ of a girl in France, who, dying, left him with so little purpose in the
+ world that, after working at his trade of plasterer for some years in
+ Lyons, he listened to a certain gentleman going out upon government
+ service to a French colony in South America. This gentleman wanted a
+ man-servant, and he said to my organ-grinder, &ldquo;Go with me and I make
+ your fortune.&rdquo; So he, who cared not whither he went, went, and found
+ himself in the tropics. It was a hard life he led there; and of the wages
+ that had seemed so great in France, he paid nearly half to his laundress
+ alone, being forced to be neat in his master's house. The service
+ was not so irksome in-doors, but it was the hunting beasts in the forest
+ all day that broke his patience at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beasts in the forest?&rdquo; I ask, forgetful of the familiar sense
+ of <i>bestie</i>, and figuring cougars at least by the word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, those little beasts for the naturalists,&mdash;flies, bugs,
+ beetles,&mdash;Heaven knows what.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this brought you money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It brought my master money, but me aches and pains as many as you
+ will, and at last the fever. When that was burnt out, I made up my mind to
+ ask for more pay, and, not getting it, to quit that service. I think the
+ signor would have given it,&mdash;but the signora! So I left, empty as I
+ came, and was cook on a vessel to New York.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the black and white of the man's story. I lose the color
+ and atmosphere which his manner as well as his words bestowed upon it. He
+ told it in a cheerful, impersonal kind of way as the romance of a poor
+ devil which had interested him, and might possibly amuse me, leaving out
+ no touch of character in his portrait of the fat, selfish master,&mdash;yielding
+ enough, however, but for his grasping wife, who, with all her avarice and
+ greed, he yet confessed to be very handsome. By the wave of a hand he
+ housed them in a tropic residence, dim, cool, close shut, kept by servants
+ in white linen moving with mute slippered feet over stone floors; and by
+ another gesture he indicated the fierce thorny growths of the forest in
+ which he hunted those vivid insects,&mdash;the luxuriant savannas, the
+ gigantic ferns and palms, the hush and shining desolation, the presence of
+ the invisible fever and death. There was a touch, too, of inexpressible
+ sadness in his half-ignorant mention of the exiles at Cayenne, who were
+ forbidden the wide ocean of escape about them by those swift gunboats
+ keeping their coasts and swooping down upon every craft that left the
+ shore. He himself had seen one such capture, and he made me see it, and
+ the mortal despair of the fugitives, standing upright in their boat with
+ the idle oars in their unconscious hands, while the corvette swept toward
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all his misfortunes, he was not cast down. He had that lightness of
+ temper which seems proper to most northern Italians, whereas those from
+ the south are usually dark-mooded, sad-faced men. Nothing surpasses for
+ unstudied misanthropy of expression the visages of different Neapolitan
+ harpers who have visited us; but they have some right to their dejected
+ countenances as being of a yet half-civilized stock, and as real artists
+ and men of genius. Nearly all wandering violinists, as well as harpers,
+ are of their race, and they are of every age, from that of mere children
+ to men in their prime. They are very rarely old, as many of the
+ organ-grinders are; they are not so handsome as the Italians of the north,
+ though they have invariably fine eyes. They arrive in twos and threes; the
+ violinist briefly tunes his fiddle, and the harper unslings his
+ instrument, and, with faces of profound gloom, they go through their
+ repertory,&mdash;pieces from the great composers, airs from the opera, not
+ unmingled with such efforts of Anglo-Saxon genius as Champagne Charley and
+ Captain Jenks of the Horse Marines, which, like the language of
+ Shakespeare and Milton, hold us and our English cousins in tender bonds of
+ mutual affection. Beyond the fact that they come &ldquo;dal Basilicat',&rdquo;
+ or &ldquo;dal Principat',&rdquo; one gets very little out of these
+ Neapolitans, though I dare say they are not so surly at heart as they
+ look. Money does not brighten them to the eye, but yet it touches them,
+ and they are good in playing or leaving off to him that pays. Long time
+ two of them stood between the gateway firs on a pleasant summer's
+ afternoon and twanged and scraped their harmonious strings, till all the
+ idle boys of the neighborhood gathered about them, listening with a grave
+ and still delight. It was a most serious company: the Neapolitans, with
+ their cloudy brows, rapt in their music; and the Yankee children, with
+ their impassive faces, warily guarding against the faintest expression of
+ enjoyment; and when at last the minstrels played a brisk measure, and the
+ music began to work in the blood of the boys, and one of them shuffling
+ his reluctant feet upon the gravel, broke into a sudden and resistless
+ dance, the spectacle became too sad for contemplation. The boy danced only
+ from the hips down; no expression of his face gave the levity sanction,
+ nor did any of his comrades: they beheld him with a silent fascination,
+ but none was infected by the solemn indecorum; and when the legs and music
+ ceased their play together, no comment was made, and the dancer turned
+ unheated away. A chance passer asked for what he called the Gearybaldeye
+ Hymn, but the Neapolitans apparently did not know what this was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My doorstep acquaintance were not all of one race; now and then an alien
+ to the common Italian tribe appeared,&mdash;an Irish soldier, on his way
+ to Salem, and willing to show me more of his mutilation than I cared to
+ buy the sight of for twenty-five cents; and more rarely yet an American,
+ also formerly of the army, but with something besides his wretchedness to
+ sell. On the hottest day of last summer such a one rang the bell, and was
+ discovered on the threshold wiping with his poor sole hand the sweat that
+ stood upon his forehead. There was still enough of the independent citizen
+ in his maimed and emaciated person to inspire him with deliberation and a
+ show of that indifference with which we Americans like to encounter each
+ other; but his voice was rather faint when he asked if I supposed we
+ wanted any starch to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, certainly,&rdquo; answered what heart there was within, taking
+ note willfully, but I hope not wantonly, what an absurdly limp figure he
+ was for a peddler of starch,&mdash;&ldquo;certainly from you, brave
+ fellow;&rdquo; and the package being taken from his basket, the man turned
+ to go away, so very wearily, that a cheap philanthropy protested: &ldquo;For
+ shame! ask him to sit down in-doors and drink a glass of water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered the poor fellow, when this indignant voice had
+ been obeyed, and he had been taken at a disadvantage, and as it were
+ surprised into the confession, &ldquo;my family hadn't any breakfast
+ this morning, and I've got to hurry back to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haven't <i>you</i> had any breakfast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I wa'n't rightly hungry when I left the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, now,&rdquo; popped in the virtue before named, &ldquo;is an
+ opportunity to discharge the debt we all owe to the brave fellows who gave
+ us back our country. Make it beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was made beer and bread and cold meat, and, after a little pressing,
+ the honest soul consented to the refreshment. He sat down in a cool
+ doorway and began to eat and to tell of the fight before Vicksburg. And if
+ you have never seen a one-armed soldier making a meal, I can assure you
+ the sight is a pathetic one, and is rendered none the cheerfuller by his
+ memories of the fights that mutilated him. This man had no very
+ susceptible audience, but before he was carried off the field, shot
+ through the body, and in the arm and foot, he had sold every package of
+ starch in his basket. I am ashamed to say this now, for I suspect that a
+ man with one arm, who indulged himself in going about under that broiling
+ sun of July, peddling starch, was very probably an impostor. He computed a
+ good day's profits of seventy-five cents, and when asked if that was
+ not very little for the support of a sick wife and three children, he
+ answered with a quaint effort at impressiveness, and with a trick, as I
+ imagined, from the manner of the regimental chaplain, &ldquo;You've
+ done your duty, my friend, and more'n your duty. If every one did
+ their duty like that, we should get along.&rdquo; So he took leave, and
+ shambled out into the furnace-heat, the sun beating upon his pale face,
+ and his linen coat hugging him close, but with his basket lighter, and I
+ hope his heart also. At any rate, this was the sentiment which cheap
+ philanthropy offered in self-gratulation, as he passed out of sight:
+ &ldquo;There! you are quits with those maimed soldiers at last, and you
+ have a country which you have paid for with cold victuals as they with
+ blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have been a good deal visited by one disbanded volunteer, not to the
+ naked eye maimed, nor apparently suffering from any lingering illness, yet
+ who bears, as he tells me, a secret disabling wound in his side from a
+ spent shell, and who is certainly a prey to the most acute form of
+ shiftlessness. I do not recall with exactness the date of our
+ acquaintance, but it was one of those pleasant August afternoons when a
+ dinner eaten in peace fills the digester with a millennial tenderness for
+ the race too rarely felt in the nineteenth century. At such a moment it is
+ a more natural action to loosen than to tighten the purse-strings, and
+ when a very neatly dressed young man presented himself at the gate, and,
+ in a note of indescribable plaintiveness, asked if I had any little job
+ for him to do that he might pay for a night's lodging, I looked
+ about the small domain with a vague longing to find some part of it in
+ disrepair, and experienced a moment's absurd relief when he hinted
+ that he would be willing to accept fifty cents in pledge of future
+ service. Yet this was not the right principle: some work, real or
+ apparent, must be done for the money, and the veteran was told that he
+ might weed the strawberry bed, though, as matters then stood, it was clean
+ enough for a strawberry bed that never bore anything. The veteran was
+ neatly dressed, as I have said: his coat, which was good, was buttoned to
+ the throat for reasons that shall be sacred against curiosity, and he had
+ on a perfectly clean paper collar; he was a handsome young fellow, with
+ regular features, and a solicitously kept imperial and mustache; his hair,
+ when he lifted his hat, appeared elegantly oiled and brushed. I did not
+ hope from this figure that the work done would be worth the money paid,
+ and, as nearly as I can compute, the weeds he took from that bed cost me a
+ cent apiece, to say nothing of a cup of tea given him in grace at the end
+ of his labors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My acquaintance was, as the reader will be glad to learn, a native
+ American, though it is to be regretted, for the sake of facts which his
+ case went far to establish, that he was not a New-Englander by birth. The
+ most that could be claimed was, that he came to Boston from Delaware when
+ very young, and that there on that brine-washed granite he had grown as
+ perfect a flower of helplessness and indolence, as fine a fruit of
+ maturing civilization, as ever expanded or ripened in Latin lands. He
+ lived, not only a protest in flesh and blood against the tendency of
+ democracy to exclude mere beauty from our system, but a refutation of
+ those Old World observers, who deny to our vulgar and bustling communities
+ the refining and elevating grace of Repose. There was something very
+ curious and original in his character, from which the sentiment of shame
+ was absent, but which was not lacking in the fine instincts of personal
+ cleanliness, of dress, of style. There was nothing of the rowdy in him; he
+ was gentle as an Italian noble in his manners: what other traits they may
+ have had in common, I do not know; perhaps an amiable habit of illusion.
+ He was always going to bring me his discharge papers, but he never did,
+ though he came often and had many a pleasant night's sleep at my
+ cost. If sometimes he did a little work, he spent great part of the time
+ contracted to me in the kitchen, where it was understood, quite upon his
+ own agency, that his wages included board. At other times, he called for
+ money too late in the evening to work it out that day, and it has happened
+ that a new second girl, deceived by his genteel appearance in the
+ uncertain light, has shown him into the parlor, where I have found him to
+ his and my own great amusement, as the gentleman who wanted to see me.
+ Nothing else seemed to raise his ordinarily dejected spirits so much. We
+ all know how pleasant it is to laugh at people behind their backs; but
+ this veteran afforded me at a very low rate the luxury of a fellow-being
+ whom one might laugh at to his face as much as one liked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet with all his shamelessness, his pensiveness, his elegance, I felt that
+ somehow our national triumph was not complete in him,&mdash;that there
+ were yet more finished forms of self-abasement in the Old World, till one
+ day I looked out of the window and saw at a little distance my veteran
+ digging a cellar for an Irishman. I own that the spectacle gave me a shock
+ of pleasure, and that I ran down to have a nearer view of what human eyes
+ have seldom, if ever, beheld,&mdash;an American, pure blood, handling the
+ pick, the shovel, and the wheelbarrow, while an Irishman directed his
+ labors. Upon inspection, it appeared that none of the trees grew with
+ their roots in the air, in recognition of this great reversal of the
+ natural law; all the French-roof houses stood right side up. The
+ phenomenon may become more common in future, unless the American race
+ accomplishes its destiny of dying out before the more populatory
+ foreigner, but as yet it graced the veteran with an exquisite and signal
+ distinction. He, however, seemed to feel unpleasantly the anomaly of his
+ case, and opened the conversation by saying that he should not work at
+ that job to-morrow, it hurt his side; and went on to complain of the
+ inhumanity of Americans to Americans. &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;they'd
+ rather give out their jobs to a nigger than to one of their own kind. I
+ was beatin' carpets for a gentleman on the Avenue, and the first
+ thing I know he give most of 'em to a nigger. I beat seven of
+ 'em in one day, and got two dollars; and the nigger beat 'em
+ by the piece, and he got a dollar an' a half apiece. My luck!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Irishman glanced at his hireling, and the rueful veteran hastened
+ to pile up another wheelbarrow with earth. If ever we come to reverse
+ positions generally with our Irish brethren, there is no doubt but they
+ will get more work out of us than we do from them at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shortly after this that the veteran offered to do second girl's
+ work in my house if I would take him. The place was not vacant; and as the
+ summer was now drawing to a close, and I feared to be left with him on my
+ hands for the winter, it seemed well to speak to him upon the subject of
+ economy. The next time he called, I had not about me the exact sum for a
+ night's lodging,&mdash;fifty cents, namely&mdash;and asked him if he
+ thought a dollar would do He smiled sadly, as if he did not like jesting
+ upon such a very serious subject, but said he allowed to work it out, and
+ took it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, I hope you won't think I am interfering with your
+ affairs,&rdquo; said his benefactor, &ldquo;but I really think you are a
+ very poor financier. According to your own account, you have been going on
+ from year to year for a long time, trusting to luck for a night's
+ lodging. Sometimes I suppose you have to sleep out-of-doors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, never!&rdquo; answered the veteran, with something like scorn.
+ &ldquo;I never sleep out-doors. I wouldn't do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, at any rate, some one has to pay for your lodging. Don't
+ you think you'd come cheaper to your friends, if, instead of going
+ to a hotel every night, you'd take a room somewhere, and pay for it
+ by the month?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've thought of that. If I could get a good bed, I'd
+ try it awhile anyhow. You see the hotels have raised. I used to get a
+ lodgin' and a nice breakfast for a half a dollar, but now it is as
+ much as you can do to get a lodgin' for the money, and it's
+ just as dear in the Port as it is in the city. I've tried hotels
+ pretty much everywhere, and one's about as bad as another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he had been a travelled Englishman writing a book, he could not have
+ spoken of hotels with greater disdain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, the trouble with me is, I ain't got any relations
+ around here. Now,&rdquo; he added, with the life and eagerness of an
+ inspiration, &ldquo;if I had a mother and sister livin' down at the
+ Port, say, I wouldn't go hunting about for these mean little jobs
+ everywheres. I'd just lay round home, and wait till something come
+ up big. What I want is a home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the instigation of a malignant spirit I asked the homeless orphan,
+ &ldquo;Why don't you get married, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave me another smile, sadder, fainter, sweeter than before, and said:
+ &ldquo;When would you like to see me again, so I could work out this
+ dollar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden and unreasonable disgust for the character which had given me so
+ much entertainment succeeded to my past delight. I felt, moreover, that I
+ had bought the right to use some frankness with the veteran, and I said to
+ him: &ldquo;Do you know now, I shouldn't care if I <i>never</i> saw
+ you again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can only conjecture that he took the confidence in good part, for he did
+ not appear again after that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A PEDESTRIAN TOUR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Walking for walking's sake I do not like. The diversion appears to
+ me one of the most factitious of modern enjoyments; and I cannot help
+ looking upon those who pace their five miles in the teeth of a north wind,
+ and profess to come home all the livelier and better for it, as guilty of
+ a venial hypocrisy. It is in nature that after such an exercise the bones
+ should ache and the flesh tremble; and I suspect that these harmless
+ pretenders are all the while paying a secret penalty for their bravado.
+ With a pleasant end in view, or with cheerful companionship, walking is
+ far from being the worst thing in life; though doubtless a truly candid
+ person must confess that he would rather ride under the same
+ circumstances. Yet it is certain that some sort of recreation is necessary
+ after a day spent within doors; and one is really obliged nowadays to take
+ a little walk instead of medicine; for one's doctor is sure to have
+ a mania on the subject, and there is no more getting pills or powders out
+ of him for a slight indigestion than if they had all been shot away at the
+ rebels during the war. For this reason I sometimes go upon a pedestrian
+ tour, which is of no great extent in itself, and which I moreover modify
+ by keeping always within sound of the horse-car bells, or easy reach of
+ some steam-car station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I fear that I should find these rambles dull, but that their utter lack of
+ interest amuses me. I will be honest with the reader, though, and any
+ Master Pliable is free to forsake me at this point; for I cannot promise
+ to be really livelier than my walk. There is a Slough of Despond in full
+ view, and not a Delectable Mountain to be seen, unless you choose so to
+ call the high lands about Waltham, which we shall behold dark blue against
+ the western sky presently. As I sally forth upon Benicia Street, the whole
+ suburb of Charlesbridge stretches about me,&mdash;a vast space upon which
+ I can embroider any fancy I like as I saunter along. I have no
+ associations with it, or memories of it, and, at some seasons, I might
+ wander for days in the most frequented parts of it, and meet hardly any
+ one I know. It is not, however, to these parts that I commonly turn, but
+ northward, up a street upon which a flight of French-roof houses suddenly
+ settled a year or two since, with families in them, and many outward signs
+ of permanence, though their precipitate arrival might cast some doubt upon
+ this. I have to admire their uniform neatness and prettiness, and I look
+ at their dormer-windows with the envy of one to whose weak sentimentality
+ dormer-windows long appeared the supreme architectural happiness. But, for
+ all my admiration of the houses, I find a variety that is pleasanter in
+ the landscape, when I reach, beyond them, a little bridge which appears to
+ span a small stream. It unites banks lined with a growth of trees and
+ briers nodding their heads above the neighboring levels, and suggesting a
+ quiet water-course, though in fact it is the Fitchburg Railroad that purls
+ between them, with rippling freight and passenger trains and ever-gurgling
+ locomotives. The banks take the earliest green of spring upon their
+ southward slope, and on a Sunday morning of May, when the bells are
+ lamenting the Sabbaths of the past, I find their sunny tranquillity
+ sufficient to give me a slight heart-ache for I know not what. If I
+ descend them and follow the railroad westward half a mile, I come to vast
+ brick-yards, which are not in themselves exciting to the imagination, and
+ which yet, from an irresistible association of ideas, remind me of Egypt,
+ and are forever newly forsaken of those who made bricks without straw; so
+ that I have no trouble in erecting temples and dynastic tombs out of the
+ kilns; while the mills for grinding the clay serve me very well for those
+ sad-voiced <i>sakias</i> or wheel-pumps which the Howadji Curtis heard
+ wailing at their work of drawing water from the Nile. A little farther on
+ I come to the boarding-house built at the railroad side for the French
+ Canadians who have by this time succeeded the Hebrews in the toil of the
+ brick-yards, and who, as they loiter in windy-voiced, good-humored groups
+ about the doors of their lodgings, insist upon bringing before me the town
+ of St. Michel at the mouth of the great Mont Cenis tunnel, where so many
+ peasant folk like them are always amiably quarreling before the <i>cabarets</i>
+ when the diligence comes and goes. Somewhere, there must be a gendarme
+ with a cocked hat and a sword on, standing with folded arms to represent
+ the Empire and Peace among that rural population; if I looked in-doors, I
+ am sure I should see the neatest of landladies and landladies'
+ daughters and nieces in high black silk caps, bearing hither and thither
+ smoking bowls of <i>bouillon</i> and <i>café-au-lait</i>. Well, it takes
+ as little to make one happy as miserable, thank Heaven! and I derive a
+ cheerfulness from this scene which quite atones to me for the fleeting
+ desolation suffered from the sunny verdure on the railroad bank. With
+ repaired spirits I take my way up through the brick-yards towards the
+ Irish settlement on the north, passing under the long sheds that shelter
+ the kilns. The ashes lie cold about the mouths of most, and the bricks are
+ burnt to the proper complexion; in others these are freshly arranged over
+ flues in which the fire has not been kindled; but in whatever state I see
+ them, I am reminded of brick-kilns of boyhood. They were then such palaces
+ of enchantment as any architect should now vainly attempt to rival with
+ bricks upon the most desirable corner lot of the Back Bay, and were the
+ homes of men truly to be envied: men privileged to stay up all night; to
+ sleep, as it were, out of doors; to hear the wild geese as they flew over
+ in the darkness; to be waking in time to shoot the early ducks that
+ visited the neighboring ponds; to roast corn upon the ends of sticks; to
+ tell and to listen to stories that never ended, save in some sudden
+ impulse to rise and dance a happy hoe-down in the ruddy light of the
+ kiln-fires. If by day they were seen to have the redness of eyes of men
+ that looked upon the whiskey when it was yellow and gave its color in the
+ flask; if now and then the fragments of a broken bottle strewed the scene
+ of their vigils, and a head broken to match appeared among those good
+ comrades, the boyish imagination was not shocked by these things, but
+ accepted them merely as the symbols of a free virile life. Some such life
+ no doubt is still to be found in the Dublin to which I am come by the time
+ my repertory of associations with brick-kilns is exhausted, but, oddly
+ enough, I no longer care to encounter it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perhaps in a pious recognition of our mortality that Dublin is built
+ around the Irish grave-yard. Most of its windows look out upon the
+ sepulchral monuments and the pretty constant arrival of the funeral trains
+ with their long lines of carriages bringing to the celebration of the sad
+ ultimate rites those gay companies of Irish mourners. I suppose that the
+ spectacle of such obsequies is not at all depressing to the inhabitants of
+ Dublin; but that, on the contrary, it must beget in them a feeling which,
+ if not resignation to death, is, at least, a sort of sub-acute
+ cheerfulness in his presence. None but a Dubliner, however, would have
+ been greatly animated by a scene which I witnessed during a stroll through
+ this cemetery one afternoon of early spring. The fact that a marble slab
+ or shaft more or less sculptured, and inscribed with words more or less
+ helpless, is the utmost that we can give to one whom once we could caress
+ with every tenderness of speech and touch, and that, after all, the
+ memorial we raise is rather to our own grief, and is a decency, a mere
+ conventionality,&mdash;this is a dreadful fact on which the heart breaks
+ itself with such a pang, that it always seems a desolation never
+ recognized, an anguish never felt before. Whilst I stood revolving this
+ thought in my mind, and reading the Irish names upon the stones and the
+ black head-boards,&mdash;the latter adorned with pictures of angels, once
+ gilt, but now weather-worn down to the yellow paint,&mdash;a wail of
+ intolerable pathos filled the air: &ldquo;O my darling, O my darling! O&mdash;O&mdash;O!&rdquo;
+ with sobs and groans and sighs; and, looking about, I saw two women, one
+ standing upright beside another that had cast herself upon a grave, and
+ lay clasping it with her comfortless arms, uttering these cries. The grave
+ was a year old at least, but the grief seemed of yesterday or of that
+ morning. At times the friend that stood beside the prostrate woman stooped
+ and spoke a soothing word to her, while she wailed out her woe; and in the
+ midst some little ribald Irish boys came scuffling and quarreling up the
+ pathway, singing snatches of an obscene song; and when both the wailing
+ and the singing had died away, an old woman, decently clad, and with her
+ many-wrinkled face softened by the old-fashioned frill running round the
+ inside of her cap, dropped down upon her knees beside a very old grave,
+ and clasped her hands in a silent prayer above it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/2000.jpg" alt="2000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/2000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ If I had beheld all this in some village <i>campo santo</i> in Italy, I
+ should have been much more vividly impressed by it, as an aesthetical
+ observer; whereas I was now merely touched as a human being, and had
+ little desire to turn the scene to literary account. I could not help
+ feeling that it wanted the atmosphere of sentimental association, the
+ whole background was a blank or worse than a blank. Yet I have not been
+ able to hide from myself so much as I would like certain points of
+ resemblance between our Irish and the poorer classes of Italians. The
+ likeness is one of the first things that strikes an American in Italy, and
+ I am always reminded of it in Dublin. So much of the local life appears
+ upon the street; there is so much gossip from house to house, and the talk
+ is always such a resonant clamoring; the women, bareheaded, or with a
+ shawl folded over the head and caught beneath the chin with the hand, have
+ such a contented down-at-heel aspect, shuffling from door to door, or
+ lounging, arms akimbo, among the cats and poultry at their own thresholds,
+ that one beholding it all might well fancy himself upon some Italian <i>calle</i>
+ or <i>vicolo</i>. Of course the illusion does not hold good on a Sunday,
+ when the Dubliners are coming home from church in their best,&mdash;their
+ extraordinary best bonnets and their prodigious silk hats. It does not
+ hold good in any way or at any time, except upon the surface, for there is
+ beneath all this resemblance the difference that must exist between a race
+ immemorially civilized and one which has lately emerged from barbarism
+ &ldquo;after six centuries of oppression.&rdquo; You are likely to find a
+ polite pagan under the mask of the modern Italian you feel pretty sure
+ that any of his race would with a little washing and skillful
+ manipulation, <i>restore</i>, like a neglected painting, into something
+ genuinely graceful and pleasing; but if one of these Yankeefied Celts were
+ scraped, it is but too possible that you might find a kern, a Whiteboy, or
+ a Pikeman. The chance of discovering a scholar or a saint of the period
+ when Ireland was the centre of learning, and the favorite seat of the
+ Church, is scarcely one in three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the houses fronting on the main street of Dublin, every other one&mdash;I
+ speak in all moderation&mdash;is a grocery, if I may judge by a tin case
+ of corn-balls, a jar of candy, and a card of shirt-buttons, with an under
+ layer of primers and ballads, in the windows. You descend from the street
+ by several steps into these haunts, which are contrived to secure the
+ greatest possible dampness and darkness; and if you have made an errand
+ inside, you doubtless find a lady before the counter in the act of putting
+ down a guilty-looking tumbler with one hand, while she neatly wipes her
+ mouth on the back of the other. She has that effect, observable in all
+ tippling women of low degree, of having no upper garment on but a shawl,
+ which hangs about her in statuesque folds and lines. She slinks out
+ directly, but the lady behind the counter gives you good evening with
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The affectation of a bright-eyed ease,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ intended to deceive if you chance to be a State constable in disguise, and
+ to propitiate if you are a veritable customer: &ldquo;Who was that woman,
+ lamenting so, over in the grave-yard?&rdquo; &ldquo;O, I don't know,
+ sir,&rdquo; answered the lady, making change for the price of a ballad.
+ &ldquo;Some Irish folks. They ginerally cries that way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In yet earlier spring walks through Dublin, I found a depth of mud
+ appalling even to one who had lived three years in Charlesbridge. The
+ streets were passable only to pedestrians skilled in shifting themselves
+ along the sides of fences and alert to take advantage of every projecting
+ doorstep. There were no dry places, except in front of the groceries,
+ where the ground was beaten hard by the broad feet of loafing geese and
+ the coming and going of admirably small children making purchases there.
+ The number of the little ones was quite as remarkable as their size, and
+ ought to have been even more interesting, if, as sometimes appears
+ probable, such increase shall&mdash;together with the well-known ambition
+ of Dubliners to rule the land&mdash;one day make an end of us poor Yankees
+ as a dominant plurality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town was somewhat tainted with our architectural respectability,
+ unless the newness of some of the buildings gave illusion of this; and,
+ though the streets of Dublin were not at all cared for, and though every
+ house on the main thoroughfare stood upon the brink of a slough, without
+ yard, or any attempt at garden or shrubbery, there were many cottages in
+ the less aristocratic quarters inclosed in palings, and embowered in the
+ usual suburban pear-trees and currant-bushes. These, indeed, were
+ dwellings of an elder sort, and had clearly been inherited from a
+ population now as extinct in that region as the Pequots, and they were not
+ always carefully cherished. On the border of the hamlet is to be seen an
+ old farm-house of the poorer sort, built about the beginning of this
+ century, and now thickly peopled by Dubliners. Its gate is thrown down,
+ and the great wild-grown lilac hedge, no longer protected by a fence,
+ shows skirts bedabbled by the familiarity of lawless poultry, as little
+ like the steady-habited poultry of other times, as the people of the house
+ are like the former inmates, long since dead or gone West. I offer the
+ poor place a sentiment of regret as I pass, thinking of its better days. I
+ think of its decorous, hard-working, cleanly, school-going,
+ church-attending life, which was full of the pleasure of duty done, and
+ was not without its own quaint beauty and grace. What long Sabbaths were
+ kept in that old house, what scanty holidays! Yet from this and such as
+ this came the dominion of the whole wild continent, the freedom of a race,
+ the greatness of the greatest people. It may be that I regretted a little
+ too exultantly, and that out of this particular house came only peddling
+ of innumerable clocks and multitudinous tin-ware. But as yet, it is pretty
+ certain that the general character of the population has not gained by the
+ change. What is in the future, let the prophets say; any one can see that
+ something not quite agreeable is in the present; something that takes the
+ wrong side, as by instinct, in politics; something that mainly helps to
+ prop up tottering priestcraft among us; something that one thinks of with
+ dismay as destined to control so largely the civil and religious interests
+ of the country. This, however, is only the aggregate aspect. Mrs.
+ Clannahan's kitchen, as it may be seen by the desperate philosopher
+ when he goes to engage her for the spring house-cleaning, is a strong
+ argument against his fears. If Mrs. Clannahan, lately of an Irish cabin,
+ can show a kitchen so capably appointed and so neatly kept as that, the
+ country may yet be an inch or two from the brink of ruin, and the race
+ which we trust as little as we love may turn out no more spendthrift than
+ most heirs. It is encouraging, moreover, when any people can flatter
+ themselves upon a superior prosperity and virtue, and we may take heart
+ from the fact that the French Canadians, many of whom have lodgings in
+ Dublin, are not well seen by the higher classes of the citizens there.
+ Mrs. Clannahan, whose house stands over against the main gate of the
+ grave-yard, and who may, therefore, be considered as moving in the best
+ Dublin society, hints, that though good Catholics, the French are not
+ thought perfectly honest,&mdash;&ldquo;things have been missed&rdquo;
+ since they came to blight with their crimes and vices the once happy seat
+ of integrity. It is amusing to find Dublin fearful of the encroachment of
+ the French, as we, in our turn, dread the advance of the Irish. We must
+ make a jest of our own alarms, and even smile&mdash;since we cannot help
+ ourselves&mdash;at the spiritual desolation occasioned by the settlement
+ of an Irish family in one of our suburban neighborhoods. The householders
+ view with fear and jealousy the erection of any dwelling of less than a
+ stated cost, as portending a possible advent of Irish; and when the
+ calamitous race actually appears, a mortal pang strikes to the bottom of
+ every pocket. Values tremble throughout that neighborhood, to which the
+ new-comers communicate a species of moral dry-rot. None but the Irish will
+ build near the Irish; and the infection of fear spreads to the elder
+ Yankee homes about, and the owners prepare to abandon them,&mdash;not
+ always, however, let us hope, without turning, at the expense of the
+ invaders, a Parthian penny in their flight. In my walk from Dublin to
+ North Charlesbridge, I saw more than one token of the encroachment of the
+ Celtic army, which had here and there invested a Yankee house with
+ besieging shanties on every side, and thus given to its essential and
+ otherwise quite hopeless ugliness a touch of the poetry that attends
+ failing fortunes, and hallows decayed gentility of however poor a sort
+ originally. The fortunes of such a house are, of course, not to be
+ retrieved. Where the Celt sets his foot, there the Yankee (and it is
+ perhaps wholesome if not agreeable to know that the Irish citizen whom we
+ do not always honor as our equal in civilization loves to speak of us
+ scornfully as Yankees) rarely, if ever, returns. The place remains to the
+ intruder and his heirs forever. We gracefully retire before him even in
+ politics, as the metropolis&mdash;if it is the metropolis&mdash;can
+ witness; and we wait with an anxious curiosity the encounter of the Irish
+ and the Chinese, now rapidly approaching each other from opposite shores
+ of the continent. Shall we be crushed in the collision of these superior
+ races? Every intelligence-office will soon be ringing with the cries of
+ combat, and all our kitchens strewn with pig-tails and bark chignons. As
+ yet we have gay hopes of our Buddhistic brethren; but how will it be when
+ they begin to quarter the Dragon upon the Stars and Stripes, and buy up
+ all the best sites for temples, and burn their joss-sticks, as it were,
+ under our very noses? Our grasp upon the great problem grows a little lax,
+ perhaps? Is it true that, when we look so anxiously for help from others,
+ the virtue has gone out of ourselves? I should hope not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I leave Dublin, the houses grow larger and handsomer; and as I draw
+ near the Avenue, the Mansard-roofs look down upon me with their
+ dormer-windows, and welcome me back to the American community. There are
+ fences about all the houses, inclosing ampler and ampler dooryards; the
+ children, which had swarmed in the thriftless and unenlightened purlieus
+ of Dublin, diminish in number and finally disappear; the chickens have
+ vanished; and I hear&mdash;I hear the pensive music of the horse-car
+ bells, which in some alien land, I am sure, would be as pathetic to me as
+ the Ranz des Vaches to the Swiss or the bagpipes to the Highlander: in the
+ desert, where the traveller seems to hear the familiar bells of his
+ far-off church, this tinkle would haunt the absolute silence, and recall
+ the exile's fancy to Charlesbridge; and perhaps in the mocking
+ mirage he would behold an airy horse-car track, and a phantasmagoric
+ horse-car moving slowly along the edge of the horizon, with spectral
+ passengers closely packed inside and overflowing either platform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before I reach the Avenue, Dublin calls to me yet again, in the figure
+ of an old, old man, wearing the clothes of other times, and a sort of
+ ancestral round hat. In the act of striking a match he asks me the time of
+ day, and, applying the fire to his pipe, he returns me his thanks in a
+ volume of words and smoke. What a wrinkled and unshorn old man! Can age
+ and neglect do so much for any of us? This ruinous person was associated
+ with a hand-cart as decrepit as himself, but not nearly so cheerful; for
+ though he spoke up briskly with a spirit uttered from far within the
+ wrinkles and the stubble, the cart had preceded him with a very lugubrious
+ creak. It groaned, in fact, under a load of tin cans, and I was to learn
+ from the old man that there was, and had been, in his person, for thirteen
+ years, such a thing in the world as a peddler of buttermilk, and that
+ these cans were now filled with that pleasant drink. They did not invite
+ me to prove their contents, being cans that apparently passed their vacant
+ moments in stables and even manure-heaps, and that looked somehow emulous
+ of that old man's stubble and wrinkles. I bought nothing, but I left
+ the old peddler well content, seated upon a thill of his cart, smoking
+ tranquilly, and filling the keen spring evening air with fumes which it
+ dispersed abroad, and made to itself a pleasant incense of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left him a whole epoch behind, as I entered the Avenue and lounged
+ homeward along the stately street. Above the station it is far more
+ picturesque than it is below, and the magnificent elms that shadow it
+ might well have looked, in their saplinghood, upon the British straggling
+ down the country road from the Concord fight; and there are some ancient
+ houses yet standing that must have been filled with exultation at the same
+ spectacle. Poor old revolutionaries! they would never have believed that
+ their descendants would come to love the English as we do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The season has advanced rapidly during my progress from Dublin to the
+ Avenue; and by the time I reach the famous old tavern, not far from the
+ station, it is a Sunday morning of early summer, and the yellow sunlight
+ falls upon a body of good comrades who are grooming a marvelous number of
+ piebald steeds about the stable-doors. By token of these beasts&mdash;which
+ always look so much more like works of art than of nature&mdash;I know
+ that there is to be a circus somewhere very soon; and the gay bills pasted
+ all over the stable-front tell me that there are to be two performances at
+ the Port on the morrow. The grooms talk nothing and joke nothing but horse
+ at their labor; and their life seems such a low, ignorant, happy life,
+ that the secret nomad lurking in every respectable and stationary
+ personality stirs within me and struggles to strike hands of fellowship
+ with them. They lead a sort of pastoral existence in our age of railroads;
+ they wander over the continent with their great caravan, and everywhere
+ pursue the summer from South to North and from North to South again; in
+ the mild forenoons they groom their herds, and in the afternoons they doze
+ under their wagons, indifferent to the tumult of the crowd within and
+ without the mighty canvas near them,&mdash;doze face downwards on the
+ bruised, sweet-smelling grass; and in the starry midnight rise and strike
+ their tents, and set forth again over the still country roads, to take the
+ next village on the morrow with the blaze and splendor of their &ldquo;Grand
+ Entree.&rdquo; The triumphal chariot in which the musicians are borne at
+ the head of the procession is composed, as I perceive by the bills, of
+ four colossal gilt swans, set tail to tail, with lifted wings and curving
+ necks; but the chariot, as I behold it beside the stable, is mysteriously
+ draped in white canvas, through which its gilding glitters only here and
+ there. And does it move thus shrouded in the company's wanderings
+ from place to place, and is the precious spottiness of the piebalds then
+ hidden under envious drapery? O happy grooms,&mdash;not clean as to
+ shirts, nor especially neat in your conversation, but displaying a Wealth
+ of art in India-ink upon your manly chests and the swelling muscles of
+ your arms, and speaking in every movement your freedom from all
+ conventional gyves and shackles, <i>&ldquo;seid umschlungen!&rdquo;</i>&mdash;in
+ spirit; for the rest, you are rather too damp, and seem to have applied
+ your sudsy sponges too impartially to your own trousers and the horses'
+ legs to receive an actual embrace from a <i>dilettante</i> vagabond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old tavern is old only comparatively; but in our new and changeful
+ life it is already quaint. It is very long, and low-studded in either
+ story, with a row of windows in the roof, and a great porch, furnished
+ with benches, running the whole length of the ground-floor. Perhaps
+ because they take the dust of the street too freely, or because the guests
+ find it more social and comfortable to gather in-doors in the wide,
+ low-ceiled office, the benches are not worn, nor particularly whittled.
+ The room has the desolate air characteristic of offices which have once
+ been bar-rooms; but no doubt, on a winter's night, there is talk
+ worth listening to there, of flocks, and herds and horse-trades, from the
+ drovers and cattle-market men who patronize the tavern; and the artistic
+ temperament, at least, could feel no regret if that sepulchrally penitent
+ bar-room then developed a secret capacity for the wickedness that once
+ boldly glittered behind the counter in rows of decanters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house was formerly renowned for its suppers, of which all that was
+ learned or gifted in the old college town of Charlesbridge used to
+ partake; and I have heard lips which breathe the loftiest song and the
+ sweetest humor&mdash;let alone being &ldquo;dewy with the Greek of Plato&rdquo;&mdash;smacked
+ regretfully over the memory of those suppers' roast and broiled. No
+ such suppers, they say, are cooked in the world any more; and I am somehow
+ made to feel that their passing away is connected with the decay of good
+ literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hope it may be very long before the predestined French-roof villa
+ occupies the tavern's site, and turns into lawns and gardens its
+ wide-spreading cattle-pens, and removes the great barn that now shows its
+ broad, low gable to the street. This is yet older and quainter-looking
+ than the tavern itself; it is mighty capacious, and gives a still
+ profounder impression of vastness with its shed, of which the roof slopes
+ southward down almost to a man's height from the ground, and
+ shelters a row of mangers, running back half the length of the stable, and
+ serving in former times for the baiting of such beasts as could not be
+ provided for within. But the halcyon days of the cattle-market are past
+ (though you may still see the white horns tossing above the fences of the
+ pens, when a newly arrived herd lands from the train to be driven afoot to
+ Brighton), and the place looks now so empty and forsaken, spite of the
+ circus baggage-wagons, that it were hard to believe these mangers could
+ ever have been in request, but for the fact that they are all gnawed, down
+ to the quick as it were, by generations of horses&mdash;vanished forever
+ on the deserted highways of the past&mdash;impatient for their oats or
+ hungering for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day must come, of course, when the mangers will all be taken from the
+ stable-shed, and exposed for sale at that wonderful second-hand shop which
+ stands over against the tavern. I am no more surprised than one in a
+ dream, to find it a week-day afternoon by the time I have crossed thither
+ from the circus-men grooming their piebalds. It is an enchanted place to
+ me, and I am a frequent and unprofitable customer there, buying only just
+ enough to make good my footing with the custodian of its marvels, who is,
+ of course, too true an American to show any desire to sell. Without, on
+ either side of the doorway, I am pretty sure to find, among other articles
+ of furniture, a mahogany and hair-cloth sofa, a family portrait, a
+ landscape painting, a bath-tub, and a flower-stand, with now and then the
+ variety of a boat and a dog-house; while under an adjoining shed is heaped
+ a mass of miscellaneous movables, of a heavier sort, and fearlessly left
+ there night and day, being on all accounts undesirable to steal. The door
+ of the shop rings a bell in opening, and ushers the customer into a room
+ which Chaos herself might have planned in one of her happier moments.
+ Carpets, blankets, shawls, pictures, mirrors, rocking-chairs, and blue
+ overalls hang from the ceiling, and devious pathways wind amidst piles of
+ ready-made clothing, show-cases filled with every sort of knick-knack and
+ half hidden under heaps of hats and boots and shoes, bookcases,
+ secretaries, chests of drawers, mattresses, lounges, and bedsteads, to the
+ stairway of a loft similarly appointed, and to a back room overflowing
+ with glassware and crockery. These things are not all second-hand, but
+ they are all old and equally pathetic. The melancholy of ruinous auction
+ sales, of changing tastes or changing fashions, clings to them, whether
+ they are things that have never had a home and have been on sale ever
+ since they were made, or things that have been associated with every phase
+ of human life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other objects, certain large glass vases, ornamented by the polite
+ art of potichomanie, have long appealed to my fancy, wherein they
+ capriciously allied themselves to the history of aging single women in
+ lonely New England village houses,&mdash;pathetic sisters lingering upon
+ the neutral ground between the faded hopes of marriage and the yet unrisen
+ prospects of consumption. The work implies an imperfect yet real love of
+ beauty, the leisure for it a degree of pecuniary ease: the thoughts of the
+ sisters rise above the pickling and preserving that occupied their
+ heartier and happier mother; they are in fact in that aesthetic, social,
+ and intellectual mean, in which single women are thought soonest to wither
+ and decline. With a little more power, and in our later era, they would be
+ writing stories full of ambitious, unintelligible, self-devoted and sudden
+ collapsing young girls and amazing doctors; but as they are, and in their
+ time, they must do what they can. A sentimentalist may discern on these
+ vases not only the gay designs with which they ornamented them, but their
+ own dim faces looking wan from the windows of some huge old homestead, a
+ world too wide for the shrunken family. All April long the door-yard trees
+ crouch and shudder in the sour east, all June they rain canker-worms upon
+ the roof, and then in autumn choke the eaves with a fall of tattered and
+ hectic foliage. From the window the fading sisters gaze upon the unnatural
+ liveliness of the summer streets through which the summer boarders are
+ driving, or upon the death-white drifts of the intolerable winter. Their
+ father, the captain, is dead; he died with the Calcutta trade, having
+ survived their mother, and left them a hopeless competency and yonder
+ bamboo chairs; their only brother is in California; one, though she loved,
+ had never a lover; her sister's betrothed married West, whither he
+ went to make a home for her,&mdash;and ah! is it vases for the desolate
+ parlor mantel they decorate, or funeral urns? And when in time, they being
+ gone, the Californian brother sends to sell out at auction the old place
+ with the household and kitchen furniture, is it withered rose-leaves or
+ ashes that the purchaser finds in these jars?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are empty now; and I wonder how came they here? How came the
+ show-case of Dr. Merrifield, Surgeon-Chiropodist here? How came here yon
+ Italian painting?&mdash;a poor, silly, little affected Madonna, simpering
+ at me from her dingy gilt frame till I buy her, a great bargain, at a
+ dollar. From what country church or family oratory, in what revolution, or
+ stress of private fortunes,&mdash;then from what various cabinets of
+ antiquities, in what dear Vicenza, or Ferrara, or Mantua, earnest thou, O
+ Madonna? Whose likeness are you, poor girl, with your everyday prettiness
+ of brows and chin, and your Raphaelesque crick in the neck? I think I know
+ a part of your story. You were once the property of that ruined advocate,
+ whose sensibilities would sometimes consent that a <i>valet de place</i>
+ of uncommon delicacy should bring to his ancestral palace some singularly
+ meritorious foreigner desirous of purchasing from his rare collection,&mdash;a
+ collection of rubbish scarcely to be equaled elsewhere in Italy. You hung
+ in that family-room, reached after passage through stately vestibules and
+ grand stairways; and O, I would be cheated to the bone, if only I might
+ look out again from some such windows as were there, upon some such damp,
+ mouldy, broken-statued, ruinous, enchanted garden as lay below! In that
+ room sat the advocate's mother and hunchback sister, with their
+ smoky <i>scaldini</i> and their snuffy priest; and there the wife of the
+ foreigner, self-elected the taste of his party, inflicted the pang courted
+ by the advocate, and asked if you were for sale. And then the ruined
+ advocate clasped his hands, rubbed them, set his head heart-brokenly on
+ one side, took you down, heaved a sigh, shrugged his shoulders, and sold
+ you&mdash;you! a family heirloom! Well, at least you are old, and you
+ represent to me acres of dim, religious canvas in that beloved land; and
+ here is the dollar now asked for you: I could not have bought you for so
+ little at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Madonna is neighbored by several paintings, if the kind called Grecian
+ for a reason never revealed by the inventor of an art as old as
+ potichomanie itself. It was an art by which ordinary lithographs were
+ given a ghastly transparency, and a tone as disagreeable as chromos; and I
+ doubt if it could have been known to the Greeks in their best age. But I
+ remember very well when it passed over whole neighborhoods in some parts
+ of this country, wasting the time of many young women, and disfiguring
+ parlor walls with the fruit of their accomplishment. It was always taught
+ by Professors, a class of learned young men who acquired their title by
+ abandoning the plough and anvil, and, in a suit of ready-made clothing,
+ travelling about the country with portfolios under their arms. It was an
+ experience to make loafers for life of them: and I fancy the girls who
+ learnt their art never afterwards made so good butter and cheese.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Non-ragioniam di lor, ma guarda e passa.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Grecian paintings there are some mezzotints; full length
+ pictures of presidents and statesmen, chiefly General Jackson, Henry Clay,
+ and Daniel Webster, which have hung their day in the offices or parlors of
+ country politicians. They are all statesmanlike and presidential in
+ attitude; and I know that if the mighty Webster's lips had language,
+ he would take his hand out of his waistcoat front, and say to his fellow
+ mezzotints: &ldquo;Venerable men! you have come down to us from a former
+ generation, bringing your household furniture and miscellaneous trumpery
+ of all kinds with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some old-fashioned entry lanterns divide my interest with certain old
+ willow chairs of an hour-glass pattern, which never stood upright,
+ probably, and have now all a confirmed droop to one side, as from having
+ been fallen heavily asleep in, upon breezy porches, of hot summer
+ afternoons. In the windows are small vases of alabaster, fly-specked
+ Parian and plaster figures, and dolls with stiff wooden limbs and
+ papier-maché heads, a sort of dolls no longer to be bought in these days
+ of modish, blue-eyed blondes of biscuit and sturdy india-rubber brunettes.
+ The show-case is full of an incredible variety, as photograph albums,
+ fishing-hooks, socks, suspenders, steel pens, cutlery of all sorts, and
+ curious old colored prints of Adelaide, and Kate, and Ellen. A
+ rocking-horse is stabled near amid pendent lengths of second-hand
+ carpeting, hat-racks, and mirrors; and standing cheek-by-jowl with painted
+ washstands and bureaus are some plaster statues, aptly colored and
+ varnished to represent bronze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing here but has a marked character of its own, some distinct
+ yet intangible trait acquired from former circumstances; and doubtless all
+ these things have that lurking likeness to former owners which clothes and
+ furniture are apt to take on from long association, and which we should
+ instantly recognize could they be confronted with their late proprietors.
+ It seems, in very imaginative moments, as if the strange assemblage of
+ incongruities must have a consciousness of these latent resemblances,
+ which the individual pieces betray when their present keeper turns the key
+ upon them, and abandons them to themselves at night; and I have sometimes
+ fancied such an effect in the late twilight, when I have wandered into
+ their resting-place, and have beheld them in the unnatural glare of a
+ kerosene lamp burning before a brightly polished reflector, and casting
+ every manner of grotesque shadow upon the floor and walls. But this may
+ have been an illusion; at any rate I am satisfied that the bargain-driving
+ capacity of the storekeeper is not in the least affected by a weird
+ quality in his wares; though they have not failed to impart to him
+ something of their own desultory character. He sometimes leaves a neighbor
+ in charge when he goes to meals, and then, if I enter, I am watchfully
+ followed about from corner to corner, and from room to room, lest I pocket
+ a mattress or slip a book-case under my coat. The storekeeper himself
+ never watches me; perhaps he knows that it is a purely professional
+ interest I take in the collection; that I am in the trade and have a
+ secondhand shop of my own, full of poetical rubbish, and every sort of
+ literary odds and ends, picked up at random, and all cast
+ higgledy-piggledy into the same chaotic receptacle. His customers are as
+ little like ordinary shoppers as he is like common tradesmen. They are in
+ part the Canadians who work in the brickyards, and it is surprising to
+ find how much business can be transacted, and how many sharp bargains
+ struck without the help of a common language. I am in the belief, which
+ may be erroneous, that nobody is wronged in these trades. The taciturn
+ storekeeper, who regards his customers with a stare of solemn amusement as
+ Critturs born by some extraordinary vicissitude of nature to the use of a
+ language that practically amounts to deafness and dumbness, never suffers
+ his philosophical interest in them to affect his commercial efficiency; he
+ drops them now and then a curt English phrase, or expressive Yankee idiom;
+ he knows very well when they mean to buy and when they do not; and they
+ equally wary and equally silent, unswayed by the glib allurements of a
+ salesman, judge of price and quality for themselves, make their solitary
+ offer, and stand or fall by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am seldom able to conclude a pedestrian tour without a glance at the
+ wonderful interior of this cheap store, and I know all its contents
+ familiarly. I recognize wares that have now been on sale there for years;
+ I miss at first glance such accustomed objects as have been parted with
+ between my frequent visits, and hail with pleasure the additions to that
+ extraordinary variety. I can hardly, I suppose, expect the reader to
+ sympathize with the joy I felt the other night, in discovering among the
+ latter an adventurous and universally applicable sign-board advertising
+ This House and Lot for Sale, and, intertwined with the cast-off suspenders
+ which long garlanded a coffee-mill pendent from the roof, a newly added
+ second-hand india-rubber ear-trumpet. Here and there, however, I hope a
+ finer soul will relish, as I do, the poetry of thus buying and offering
+ for sale the very most recondite, as well as the commonest articles of
+ commerce, in the faith that one day the predestined purchaser will appear
+ and carry off the article appointed him from the beginning of time. This
+ faith is all the more touching, because the collector cannot expect to
+ live until the whole stock is disposed of, and because, in the order of
+ nature, much must at last fall to rein unbought, unless the reporter's
+ Devouring Element appears and gives a sudden tragical turn to the poem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the whistle of a train drawing up at the neighboring station that
+ calls me away from the second-hand store; for I never find myself able to
+ resist the hackneyed prodigy of such an arrival. It cannot cease to be
+ impressive. I stand beside the track while the familiar monster writhes up
+ to the station and disgorges its passengers,&mdash;suburbanly packaged,
+ and bundled, and bagged, and even when empty-handed somehow proclaiming
+ the jaded character of men that hurry their work all day to catch the
+ evening train out, and their dreams all night to catch the morning train
+ in,&mdash;and then I climb the station-stairs, and &ldquo;hang with grooms
+ and porters on the bridge,&rdquo; that I may not lose my ever-repeated
+ sensation of having the train pass under my feet, and of seeing it rush
+ away westward to the pretty blue hills beyond,&mdash;hills not too big for
+ a man born in a plain-country to love. Twisting and trembling along the
+ track, it dwindles rapidly in the perspective, and is presently out of
+ sight. It has left the city and the suburbs behind, and has sought the
+ woods and meadows; but Nature never in the least accepts it, and rarely
+ makes its path a part of her landscape's loveliness. The train
+ passes alien through all her moods and aspects; the wounds made in her
+ face by the road's sharp cuts and excavations are slowest of all
+ wounds to heal, and the iron rails remain to the last as shackles upon
+ her. Yet when the rails are removed, as has happened with a non-paying
+ track in Charlesbridge, the road inspires a real tenderness in her. Then
+ she bids it take or the grace that belongs to all ruin; the grass creeps
+ stealthily over the scarified sides of the embankments; the golden-rod,
+ and the purple-topped iron-weed, and the lady's-slipper, spring up
+ in the hollows on either side, and&mdash;I am still thinking of that
+ deserted railroad which runs through Charlesbridge&mdash;hide with their
+ leafage the empty tomato-cans and broken bottles and old boots on the
+ ash-heaps dumped there; Nature sets her velvety willows a waving near, and
+ lower than their airy tops plans a vista of trees arching above the track,
+ which is as wild and pretty and illusive a vista as the sunset ever cared
+ to look through and gild a board fence beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of our people come from Boston on the horse-cars, and it is only the
+ dwellers on the Avenue and the neighboring streets whom hurrying homeward
+ I follow away from the steam-car station. The Avenue is our handsomest
+ street; and if it were in the cosmopolitan citizen of Charlesbridge to
+ feel any local interest, I should be proud of it. As matters are, I
+ perceive its beauty, and I often reflect, with a pardonable satisfaction,
+ that it is not only handsome, but probably the very dullest street in the
+ world. It is magnificently long and broad, and is flanked nearly the whole
+ way from the station to the colleges by pine palaces rising from spacious
+ lawns, or from the green of trees or the brightness of gardens. The
+ splendor is all very new, but newness is not a fault that much affects
+ architectural beauty, while it is the only one that time is certain to
+ repair: and I find an honest and unceasing pleasure in the graceful lines
+ of those palaces, which is not surpassed even by my appreciation of the
+ vast quiet and monotony of the street itself. Commonly, when I emerge upon
+ it from the grassy-bordered, succory-blossomed walks of Benicia Street, I
+ behold, looking northward, a monumental horse-car standing&mdash;it
+ appears for ages, if I wish to take it for Boston&mdash;at the head of
+ Pliny Street; and looking southward I see that other emblem of suburban
+ life, an express-wagon, fading rapidly in the distance. Haply the top of a
+ buggy nods round the bend under the elms near the station; and, if fortune
+ is so lavish, a lady appears from a side street, and, while tarrying for
+ the car, thrusts the point of her sun-umbrella into the sandy sidewalk.
+ This is the mid-afternoon effect of the Avenue; but later in the day, and
+ well into the dusk, it remembers its former gayety as a trotting-course,&mdash;with
+ here and there a spider-wagon, a twinkling-footed mare, and a guttural
+ driver. On market-days its superb breadth is taken up by flocks of
+ bleating sheep, and a pastoral tone is thus given to its tranquillity;
+ anon a herd of beef-cattle appears under the elms; or a drove of pigs,
+ many pausing, inquisitive of the gutters, and quarrelsome as if they were
+ the heirs of prosperity instead of doom, is slowly urged on toward the
+ shambles. In the spring or the autumn, the Avenue is exceptionally
+ enlivened by the progress of a brace or so of students who, in training
+ for one of the University Courses of base-ball or boating, trot slowly and
+ earnestly along the sidewalk, fists up, elbows down, mouths shut, and a
+ sense of immense responsibility visible in their faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The summer is waning with the day as I turn from the Avenue into Benicia
+ Street. This is the hour when the fly cedes to the mosquito, as the Tuscan
+ poet says, and, as one may add, the frying grasshopper yields to the
+ shrilly cricket in noisiness. The embrowning air rings with the sad music
+ made by these innumerable little violinists, hid in all the gardens round,
+ and the pedestrian feels a sinking of the spirits not to be accounted for
+ upon the theory that the street is duller than the Avenue, for it really
+ is not so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quick now, the cheerful lamps of kerosene!&mdash;without their light, the
+ cry of those crickets, dominated for an instant, but not stilled, by the
+ bellowing of a near-passing locomotive, and the baying of a distant dog,
+ were too much. If it were the last autumn that ever was to be, it could
+ not be heralded with notes of dismaller effect. This is in fact the hour
+ of supreme trial everywhere, and doubtless no one but a newly-accepted
+ lover can be happy at twilight. In the city, even, it is oppressive; in
+ the country it is desolate; in the suburbs it is a miracle that it is ever
+ lived through. The night-winds have not risen yet to stir the languid
+ foliage of the sidewalk maples; the lamps are not yet lighted, to take
+ away the gloom from the blank, staring windows of the houses near; it is
+ too late for letters, too early for a book. In town your fancy would turn
+ to the theatres; in the country you would occupy yourself with cares of
+ poultry or of stock: in the suburbs you can but sit upon your threshold,
+ and fight the predatory mosquito.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BY HORSE-CAR TO BOSTON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At a former period the writer of this had the fortune to serve his country
+ in an Italian city whose great claim upon the world's sentimental
+ interest is the fact that&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The sea is in her broad, her narrow streets
+ Ebbing and flowing,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ and that she has no ways whatever for hoofs or wheels. In his quality of
+ United States official, he was naturally called upon for information
+ concerning the estates of Italians believed to have emigrated early in the
+ century to Buenos Ayres, and was commissioned to learn why certain persons
+ in Mexico and Brazil, and the parts of Peru, had not, if they were still
+ living, written home to their friends. On the other hand, he was intrusted
+ with business nearly as pertinent and hopeful by some of his own
+ countrymen, and it was not quite with surprise that he one day received a
+ neatly lithographed circular with his name and address written in it,
+ signed by a famous projector of such enterprises, asking him to cooperate
+ for the introduction of horse-railroads in Venice. The obstacles to the
+ scheme were of such a nature that it seemed hardly worth while even to
+ reply to the circular; but the proposal was one of those bold flights of
+ imagination which forever lift objects out of vulgar association. It has
+ cast an enduring, poetic charm even about the horse-car in my mind, and I
+ naturally look for many unprosaic aspects of humanity there. I have an
+ acquaintance who insists that it is the place above all others suited to
+ see life in every striking phase. He pretends to have witnessed there the
+ reunion of friends who had not met in many years, the embrace, figurative
+ of course, of long lost brothers, the reconciliation of lovers; I do not
+ know but also some scenes of love-making, and acceptance or rejection. But
+ my friend is an imaginative man, and may make himself romances. I myself
+ profess to have beheld for the most part only mysteries; and I think it
+ not the least of these that, riding on the same cars day after day, one
+ finds so many strange faces with so little variety. Whether or not that
+ dull, jarring motion shakes inward and settles about the centres of mental
+ life the sprightliness that should inform the visage, I do not know; but
+ it is certain that the emptiness of the average passenger's
+ countenance is something wonderful, considered with reference to Nature's
+ abhorrence of a vacuum, and the intellectual repute which Boston enjoys
+ among envious New-Yorkers. It is seldom that a journey out of our cold
+ metropolis is enlivened by a mystery so positive in character as the young
+ lady in black, who alighted at a most ordinary little street in Old
+ Charlesbridge, and heightened her effect by going into a French-roof house
+ there that had no more right than a dry goods box to receive a mystery.
+ She was tall, and her lovely arms showed through the black gauze of her
+ dress with an exquisite roundness and <i>morbidezza</i>. Upon her
+ beautiful wrists she had heavy bracelets of dead gold, fashioned after
+ some Etruscan device; and from her dainty ears hung great hoops of the
+ same metal and design, which had the singular privilege of touching, now
+ and then, her white columnar neck. A massive chain or necklace, also
+ Etruscan, and also gold, rose and fell at her throat, and on one little
+ ungloved hand glittered a multitude of rings. This hand was very
+ expressive, and took a principal part in the talk which the lady held with
+ her companion, and was as alert and quick as if trained in the
+ gesticulation of Southern or Latin life somewhere. Her features, on the
+ contrary, were rather insipid, being too small and fine; but they were
+ redeemed by the liquid splendor of her beautiful eyes, and the mortal
+ pallor of her complexion. She was altogether so startling an apparition,
+ that all of us jaded, commonplace spectres turned and fastened our weary,
+ lack-lustre eyes upon her looks, with an utter inability to remove them.
+ There was one fat, unctuous person seated opposite, to whom his interest
+ was a torture, for he would have gone to sleep except for her remarkable
+ presence: as it was, his heavy eyelids fell half-way shut, and drooped
+ there at an agonizing angle, while his eyes remained immovably fixed upon
+ that strange, death-white face. How it could have come of that
+ colorlessness,&mdash;whether through long sickness or long residence in a
+ tropical climate,&mdash;was a question that perplexed another of the
+ passengers, who would have expected to hear the lady speak any language in
+ the world rather than English; and to whom her companion or attendant was
+ hardly less than herself a mystery,&mdash;being a dragon-like, elderish
+ female, clearly a Yankee by birth, but apparently of many years'
+ absence from home. The propriety of extracting these people from the
+ horse-cars and transferring them bodily to the first chapter of a romance
+ was a thing about which there could be no manner of doubt, and nothing
+ prevented the abduction but the unexpected voluntary exit of the pale
+ lady. As she passed out everybody else awoke as from a dream, or as if
+ freed from a potent fascination. It is part of the mystery that this lady
+ should never have reappeared in that theatre of life, the horse-car; but I
+ cannot regret having never seen her more; she was so inestimably precious
+ to wonder that it would have been a kind of loss to learn anything about
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/3000.jpg" alt="3009 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/3000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, I should be glad if two young men who once presented
+ themselves as mysteries upon the same stage could be so distinctly and
+ sharply identified that all mankind should recognize them at the day of
+ judgment. They were not so remarkable in the nature as in the degree of
+ their offense; for the mystery that any man should keep his seat in a
+ horse-car and let a woman stand is but too sadly common. They say that
+ this, public unkindness to the sex has come about through the ingratitude
+ of women, who have failed to return thanks for places offered them, and
+ that it is a just and noble revenge we take upon them. There might be
+ something advanced in favor of the idea that we law-making men, who do not
+ oblige the companies to provide seats for every one, deserve no thanks
+ from voteless, helpless women when we offer them places; nay, that we
+ ought to be glad if they do not reproach us for making that a personal
+ favor which ought to be a common right. I would prefer, on the whole, to
+ believe that this selfishness is not a concerted act on our part, but a
+ flower of advanced civilization; it is a ripe fruit in European countries,
+ and it is more noticeable in Boston than anywhere else in America. It is,
+ in fact, one of the points of our high polish which people from the
+ interior say first strikes them on coming among us; for they declare&mdash;no
+ doubt too modestly&mdash;that in their Boeotian wilds our Athenian habit
+ is almost unknown. Yet it would not be fair to credit our whole population
+ with it. I have seen a laborer or artisan rise from his place, and offer
+ it to a lady, while a dozen well-dressed men kept theirs; and I know
+ several conservative young gentlemen, who are still so old-fashioned as
+ always to respect the weakness and weariness of women. One of them, I
+ hear, has settled it in his own mind that if the family cook appears in a
+ car where he is seated, he must rise and give her his place. This,
+ perhaps, is a trifle idealistic; but it is magnificent, it is princely.
+ From his difficult height, we decline&mdash;through ranks that sacrifice
+ themselves for women with bundles or children in arms, for old ladies, or
+ for very young and pretty ones&mdash;to the men who give no odds to the
+ most helpless creature alive. These are the men who do not act upon the
+ promptings of human nature like the laborer, and who do not refine upon
+ their duty like my young gentlemen, and make it their privilege to
+ befriend the idea of womanhood; they are men who have paid for their seats
+ and are going to keep them. They have been at work, very probably, all
+ day, and no doubt they are tired; they look so, and try hard not to look
+ ashamed of publicly considering themselves before a sex which is born
+ tired, and from which our climate and customs have drained so much health
+ that society sometimes seems little better than a hospital for invalid
+ woman, where every courtesy is likely to be a mercy done to a sufferer.
+ Yet the two young men of whom I began to speak were not apparently of this
+ class, and let us hope they were foreigners,&mdash;say Englishmen, since
+ we hate Englishmen the most. They were the only men seated, in a car full
+ of people; and when four or five ladies came in and occupied the aisle
+ before them, they might have been puzzled which to offer their places to,
+ if one of the ladies had not plainly been infirm. They settled the
+ question&mdash;if there was any in their minds&mdash;by remaining seated,
+ while the lady in front of them swung uneasily to and fro with the car,
+ and appeared ready to sink at their feet. In another moment she had
+ actually done so; and, too weary to rise, she continued to crouch upon the
+ floor of the car for the course of a mile, the young men resolutely
+ keeping their places, and not rising till they were ready to leave the
+ car. It was a horrible scene, and incredible,&mdash;that well-dressed
+ woman sitting on the floor, and those two well-dressed men keeping their
+ places; it was as much out of keeping with our smug respectabilities as a
+ hanging, and was a spectacle so paralyzing that public opinion took no
+ action concerning it. A shabby person, standing upon the platform outside,
+ swore about it, between expectorations: even the conductor's heart
+ was touched; and he said he had seen a good many hard things aboard
+ horse-cars, but that was a little the hardest; he had never expected to
+ come to that. These were simple people enough, and could not interest me a
+ great deal, but I should have liked to have a glimpse of the complex minds
+ of those young men, and I should still like to know something of the
+ previous life that could have made their behavior possible to them. They
+ ought to make public the philosophic methods by which they reached that
+ pass of unshamable selfishness. The information would be useful to a race
+ which knows the sweetness of self-indulgence, and would fain know the art
+ of so drugging or besotting the sensibilities that it shall no feel
+ disgraced by any sort of meanness. They might really have much to say for
+ themselves; as, that the lady, being conscious she could no longer keep
+ her feet, had no right to crouch at theirs, and put them to so severe a
+ test; or that, having suffered her to sink there, they fell no further in
+ the ignorant public opinion by suffering her to continue there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I doubt if that other young man could say anything for himself, who,
+ when a pale, trembling woman was about to drop into the vacant place at
+ his side, stretched his arm across it with, &ldquo;This seat's
+ engaged,&rdquo; till a robust young fellow, his friend, appeared, and took
+ it and kept it all the way out from Boston. The commission of such a
+ tragical wrong, involving a violation of common usage as well as the
+ infliction of a positive cruelty, would embitter the life of an ordinary
+ man, if any ordinary man were capable of it; but let us trust that nature
+ has provided fortitude of every kind for the offender, and that he is not
+ wrung by keener remorse than most would feel for a petty larceny. I dare
+ say he would be eager at the first opportunity to rebuke the ingratitude
+ of women who do not thank their benefactors for giving them seats. It
+ seems a little odd, by the way, and perhaps it is through the peculiar
+ blessing of Providence, that, since men have determined by a savage
+ egotism to teach the offending sex manners, their own comfort should be in
+ the infliction of the penalty, and that it should be as much a pleasure as
+ a duty to keep one's place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps when the ladies come to vote, they will abate, with other
+ nuisances, the whole business of overloaded public conveyances. In the
+ mean time the kindness of women to each other is a notable feature of all
+ horse-car journeys. It is touching to see the smiling eagerness with which
+ the poor things gather close their volumed skirts and make room for a
+ weary sister, the tender looks of compassion which they bend upon the
+ sufferers obliged to stand, the sweetness with which they rise, if they
+ are young and strong, to offer their place to any infirm or heavily
+ burdened person of their sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a journey to Boston is not entirely an experience of bitterness. On
+ the contrary, there are many things besides the mutual amiability of these
+ beautiful martyrs which relieve its tedium and horrors. A whole car-full
+ of people, brought into the closest contact with one another, yet in the
+ absence of introductions never exchanging a word, each being so sufficient
+ to himself as to need no social stimulus whatever, is certainly an
+ impressive and stately spectacle. It is a beautiful day, say; but far be
+ it from me to intimate as much to my neighbor, who plainly would rather
+ die than thus commit himself with me, and who, in fact, would well-nigh
+ strike me speechless with surprise if he did so. If there is any necessity
+ for communication, as with the conductor, we essay first to express
+ ourselves by gesture, and then utter our desires with a certain hollow and
+ remote effect, which is not otherwise to be described. I have sometimes
+ tried to speak above my breath, when, being about to leave the car, I have
+ made a virtue of offering my place to the prettiest young woman standing,
+ but I have found it impossible; the <i>genius loci</i>, whatever it was,
+ suppressed me, and I have gasped out my sham politeness as in a courteous
+ nightmare. The silencing influence is quite successfully resisted by none
+ but the tipsy people who occasionally ride out with us, and call up a
+ smile, sad as a gleam of winter sunshine, to our faces by their artless
+ prattle. I remember one eventful afternoon that we were all but moved to
+ laughter by the gayeties of such a one, who, even after he had ceased to
+ talk, continued to amuse us by falling asleep, and reposing himself
+ against the shoulder of the lady next him. Perhaps it is in acknowledgment
+ of the agreeable variety they contribute to horse-car life, that the
+ conductor treats his inebriate passengers with such unfailing tenderness
+ and forbearance. I have never seen them molested, though I have noticed
+ them in the indulgence of many eccentricities, and happened once even to
+ see one of them sit down in a lady's lap. But that was on the night
+ of Saint Patrick's day. Generally all avoidable indecorums are rare
+ in the horse-cars, though during the late forenoon and early afternoon, in
+ the period of lighter travel, I have found curious figures there:&mdash;among
+ others, two old women, in the old-clothes business, one of whom was
+ dressed, not very fortunately, in a gown with short sleeves, and
+ inferentially a low neck; a mender of umbrellas, with many unwholesome
+ whity-brown wrecks of umbrellas about him; a peddler of soap, who offered
+ cakes of it to his fellow-passengers at a discount, apparently for
+ friendship's sake; and a certain gentleman with a pock-marked face,
+ and a beard dyed an unscrupulous purple, who sang himself a hymn all the
+ way to Boston, and who gave me no sufficient reason for thinking him a
+ sea-captain. Not far from the end of the Long Bridge, there is apt to be a
+ number of colored ladies waiting to get into the car, or to get out of it,&mdash;usually
+ one solemn mother in Ethiopia, and two or three mirthful daughters, who
+ find it hard to suppress a sense of adventure, and to keep in the laughter
+ that struggles out through their glittering teeth and eyes, and who place
+ each other at a disadvantage by divers accidental and intentional bumps
+ and blows. If they are to get out, the old lady is not certain of the
+ place where, and, after making the car stop, and parleying with the
+ conductor, returns to her seat, and is mutely held up to public scorn by
+ one taciturn wink of the conductor's eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among horse-car types, I am almost ashamed to note one so common and
+ observable as that middle-aged lady who gets aboard and will not see the
+ one vacant seat left, but stands tottering at the door, blind and deaf to
+ all the modest beckonings and benevolent gasps of her fellow-passengers.
+ An air as of better days clings about her; she seems a person who has
+ known sickness and sorrow; but so far from pitying her, you view her with
+ inexpressible rancor, for it is plain that she ought to sit down, and that
+ she will not. But for a point of honor the conductor would show her the
+ vacant place; this forbidding, however, how can he? There she stands and
+ sniffs drearily when you glance at her, as you must from time to time, and
+ no wild turkey caught in a trap was ever more incapable of looking down
+ than this middle-aged (shall I say also unmarried?) lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course every one knows the ladies and gentlemen who sit cater-cornered,
+ and who will not move up; and equally familiar is that large and ponderous
+ person, who, feigning to sit down beside you, practically sits down upon
+ you, and is not incommoded by having your knee under him. He implies by
+ this brutal conduct that you are taking up more space than belongs to you,
+ and that you are justly made an example of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had the pleasure one day to meet on the horse-car an advocate of one of
+ the great reforms of the day. He held a green bag upon his knees, and
+ without any notice passed from a question of crops to a discussion of
+ suffrage for the negro, and so to womanhood suffrage. &ldquo;Let the women
+ vote,&rdquo; said he,&mdash;&ldquo;let 'em vote if they want to. <i>I</i>
+ don't care. Fact is, I should like to see 'em do it the first
+ time. They're excitable, you know; they're excitable;&rdquo;
+ and he enforced his analysis of female character by thrusting his elbow
+ sharply into my side. &ldquo;Now, there's my wife; I'd like to
+ see her vote. Be fun, I tell you. And the girls,&mdash;Lord, the girls!
+ Circus wouldn't be anywhere.&rdquo; Enchanted with the picture which
+ he appeared to have conjured up for himself, he laughed with the utmost
+ relish, and then patting the green bag in his lap, which plainly contained
+ a violin, &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;I go out playing for
+ dancing-parties. Work all day at my trade,&mdash;I'm a carpenter,&mdash;and
+ play in the evening. Take my little old ten dollars a night. And <i>I</i>
+ notice the women a good deal; and <i>I</i> tell you they're <i>all</i>
+ excitable, and <i>I sh'd</i> like to see 'em vote. Vote right
+ and vote often,&mdash;that's the ticket, eh?&rdquo; This friend of
+ womanhood suffrage&mdash;whose attitude of curiosity and expectation
+ seemed to me representative of that of a great many thinkers on the
+ subject&mdash;no doubt was otherwise a reformer, and held that the coming
+ man would not drink wine&mdash;if he could find whiskey. At least I should
+ have said so, guessing from the odors he breathed along with his liberal
+ sentiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something of the character of a college-town is observable nearly always
+ in the presence of the students, who confound certain traditional ideas of
+ students by their quietude of costume and manner, and whom Padua or
+ Heidelberg would hardly know, but who nevertheless betray that they are
+ banded to&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Scorn delights and live laborious days,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ by a uniformity in the cut of their trousers, or a clannishness of cane or
+ scarf, or a talk of boats and base-ball held among themselves. One cannot
+ see them without pleasure and kindness; and it is no wonder that their
+ young-lady acquaintances brighten so to recognize them on the horse-cars.
+ There is much good fortune in the world, but none better than being an
+ undergraduate twenty years old, hale, handsome, fashionably dressed, with
+ the whole promise of life before: it's a state of things to disarm
+ even envy. With so much youth forever in her heart, it must be hard for
+ our Charlesbridge to grow old: the generations arise and pass away but in
+ her veins is still this tide of warm blood, century in and century out, so
+ much the same from one age to another that it would be hardy to say it was
+ not still one youthfulness. There is a print of the village as it was a
+ cycle since, showing the oldest of the college buildings and upon the
+ street in front a scholar in his scholar's-cap and gown, giving his
+ arm to a very stylish girl of that period, who is dressed wonderfully like
+ the girl of ours, so that but for the student's antique formality of
+ costume, one might believe that he was handing her out to take the
+ horse-car. There is no horse-car in the picture,&mdash;that is the only
+ real difference between then and now in our Charlesbridge, perennially
+ young and gay. Have there not ever been here the same grand ambitions, the
+ same high hopes,&mdash;and is not the unbroken succession of youth in
+ these?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for other life on the horse-car, it shows to little or no effect, as I
+ have said. You can, of course, detect certain classes; as, in the morning
+ the business-men going in, to their counters or their desks, and in the
+ afternoon the shoppers coming out, laden with paper parcels. But I think
+ no one can truly claim to know the regular from the occasional passengers
+ by any greater cheerfulness in the faces of the latter. The horse-car will
+ suffer no such inequality as this, but reduces us all to the same level of
+ melancholy. It would be but a very unworthy kind of art which should seek
+ to describe people by such merely external traits as a habit of carrying
+ baskets or large travelling-bags in the car; and the present muse scorns
+ it, but is not above speaking of the frequent presence of those lovely
+ young girls in which Boston and the suburban towns abound, and who,
+ whether they appear with rolls of music in their hands, or books from the
+ circulating-libraries, or pretty parcels or hand-bags, would brighten even
+ the horse-car if fresh young looks and gay and brilliant costumes could do
+ so much. But they only add perplexity to the anomaly, which was already
+ sufficiently trying with its contrasts of splendor and shabbiness, and
+ such intimate association of velvets and patches as you see in the
+ churches of Catholic countries, but nowhere else in the world except in
+ our &ldquo;coaches of the sovereign people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In winter, the journey to or from Boston cannot appear otherwise than very
+ dreary to the fondest imagination. Coming out, nothing can look more
+ arctic and forlorn than the river, double-shrouded in ice and snow, or
+ sadder than the contrast offered to the same prospect in summer. Then all
+ is laughing, and it is a joy in every nerve to ride out over the Long
+ Bridge at high tide, and, looking southward, to see the wide crinkle and
+ glitter of that beautiful expanse of water, which laps on one hand the
+ granite quays of the city, and on the other washes among the reeds and
+ wild grasses of the salt-meadows. A ship coming slowly up the channel, or
+ a dingy tug violently darting athwart it, gives an additional pleasure to
+ the eye, and adds something dreamy or vivid to the beauty of the scene. It
+ is hard to say at what hour of the summer's-day the prospect is
+ loveliest; and I am certainly not going to speak of the sunset as the
+ least of its delights. When this exquisite spectacle is presented, the
+ horse-car passenger, happy to cling with one foot to the rear
+ platform-steps, looks out over the shoulder next him into fairy-land.
+ Crimson and purple the bay stretches westward till its waves darken into
+ the grassy levels, where, here and there, a hay-rick shows perfectly black
+ against the light. Afar off, southeastward and westward, the uplands wear
+ a tinge of tenderest blue; and in the nearer distance, on the low shores
+ of the river, hover the white plumes of arriving and departing trains. The
+ windows of the stately houses that overlook the water take the sunset from
+ it evanescently, and begin to chill and darken before the crimson burns
+ out of the sky. The windows are, in fact, best after nightfall, when they
+ are brilliantly lighted from within; and when, if it is a dark, warm
+ night, and the briny fragrance comes up strong from the falling tide, the
+ lights reflected far down in the still water, bring a dream, as I have
+ heard travelled Bostonians say, of Venice and her magical effects in the
+ same kind. But for me the beauty of the scene needs the help of no such
+ association; I am content with it for what it is. I enjoy also the hints
+ of spring which one gets in riding over the Long Bridge at low tide in the
+ first open days. Then there is not only a vernal beating of carpets on the
+ piers of the drawbridge, but the piles and walls left bare by the receding
+ water show green patches of sea-weeds and mosses, and flatter the willing
+ eye with a dim hint of summer. This reeking and saturated herbage&mdash;which
+ always seems to me, in contrast with dry land growths, what the
+ water-logged life of seafaring folk is to that which we happier men lead
+ on shore,&mdash;taking so kindly the deceitful warmth and brightness of
+ the sun, has then a charm which it loses when summer really comes; nor
+ does one, later, have so keen an interest in the men wading about in the
+ shallows below the bridge, who, as in the distance they stoop over to
+ gather whatever shell-fish they seek, make a very fair show of being some
+ ungainlier sort of storks, and are as near as we can hope to come to the
+ spring-prophesying storks of song and story. A sentiment of the drowsiness
+ that goes before the awakening of the year, and is so different from the
+ drowsiness that precedes the great autumnal slumber, is in the air, but is
+ gone when we leave the river behind, and strike into the straggling
+ village beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I maintain that Boston, as one approaches it and passingly takes in the
+ line of Bunker Hill Monument, soaring preëminent among the emulous
+ foundry-chimneys of the sister city, is fine enough to need no comparison
+ with other fine sights. Thanks to the mansard curves and dormer-windows of
+ the newer houses, there is a singularly picturesque variety among the
+ roofs that stretch along the bay, and rise one above another on the city's
+ three hills, grouping themselves about the State House, and surmounted by
+ its India-rubber dome. But, after all, does human weakness crave some
+ legendary charm, some grace of uncertain antiquity, in the picturesqueness
+ it sees? I own that the future, to which we are often referred for the
+ &ldquo;stuff that dreams are made of,&rdquo; is more difficult for the
+ fancy than the past, that the airy amplitude of its possibilities is
+ somewhat chilly, and that we naturally long for the snug quarters of old,
+ made warm by many generations of life. Besides, Europe spoils us ingenuous
+ Americans, and flatters our sentimentality into ruinous extravagances.
+ Looking at her many-storied former times, we forget our own past, neat,
+ compact, and convenient for the poorest memory to dwell in. Yet an
+ American not infected with the discontent of travel could hardly approach
+ this superb city without feeling something of the coveted pleasure in her,
+ without a reverie of her Puritan and Revolutionary times, and the great
+ names and deeds of her heroic annals. I think, however, we were well to be
+ rid of this yearning for a native American antiquity; for in its
+ indulgence one cannot but regard himself and his contemporaries as
+ cumberers of the ground, delaying the consummation of that hoary past
+ which will be so fascinating to a semi-Chinese posterity, and will be,
+ ages hence, the inspiration of Pigeon-English poetry and romance. Let us
+ make much of our two hundred and fifty years, and cherish the present as
+ our golden age. We healthy-minded people in the horse-cars are loath to
+ lose a moment of it, and are aggrieved that the draw of the bridge should
+ be up, naturally looking on what is constantly liable to happen as an
+ especial malice of the fates. All the drivers of the vehicles that clog
+ the draw on either side have a like sense of personal injury; and
+ apparently it would go hard with the captain of that leisurely vessel
+ below if he were delivered into our hands. But this impatience and anger
+ are entirely illusive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are really the most patient people in the world, especially as regards
+ any incorporated, non-political oppressions. A lively Gaul, who travelled
+ among us some thirty years ago, found that, in the absence of political
+ control, we gratified the human instinct of obedience by submitting to
+ small tyrannies unknown abroad, and were subject to the steamboat-captain,
+ the hotel-clerk, the stage-driver, and the waiter, who all bullied us
+ fearlessly; but though some vestiges of this bondage remain, it is
+ probably passing away. The abusive Frenchman's assertion would not
+ at least hold good concerning the horse-car conductors, who, in spite of a
+ lingering preference for touching or punching passengers for their fare
+ instead of asking for it, are commonly mild-mannered and good-tempered,
+ and disposed to molest us as little as possible. I have even received from
+ one of them a mark of such kindly familiarity as the offer of a check
+ which he held between his lips, and thrust out his face to give me, both
+ his hands being otherwise occupied; and their lives are in nowise such
+ luxurious careers as we should expect in public despots. The oppression of
+ the horse-car passenger is not from them, and the passenger himself is
+ finally to blame for it. When the draw closes at last, and we rumble
+ forward into the city street, a certain stir of expectation is felt among
+ us. The long and eventful journey is nearly ended, and now we who are to
+ get out of the cars can philosophically amuse ourselves with the passions
+ and sufferings of those who are to return in our places. You must choose
+ the time between five and six o'clock in the afternoon, if you would
+ make this grand study of the national character in its perfection. Then
+ the spectacle offered in any arriving horse-car will serve your purpose.
+ At nearly every corner of the street up which it climbs stands an
+ experienced suburban, who darts out upon the car, and seizes a vacant
+ place in it. Presently all the places are taken, and before we reach
+ Temple Street, where helpless groups of women are gathered to avail
+ themselves of the first seats vacated, an alert citizen is stationed
+ before each passenger who is to retire at the summons, &ldquo;Please pass
+ out forrad.&rdquo; When this is heard in Bowdoin Square, we rise and push
+ forward, knuckling one another's backs in our eagerness, and perhaps
+ glancing behind us at the tumult within. Not only are all our places
+ occupied, but the aisle is left full of passengers precariously supporting
+ themselves by the straps in the roof. The rear platform is stormed and
+ carried by a party with bundles; the driver is instantly surrounded by
+ another detachment; and as the car moves away from the office, the
+ platform steps are filled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it possible,&rdquo; I asked myself, when I had written as far as
+ this in the present noble history, &ldquo;that I am not exaggerating? It
+ can't be that this and the other enormities I have been describing
+ are of daily occurrence in Boston. Let me go verify, at least, my picture
+ of the evening horse-car.&rdquo; So I take my way to Bowdoin Square, and
+ in the conscientious spirit of modern inquiry, I get aboard the first car
+ that comes up. Like every other car, it is meant to seat twenty
+ passengers. It does this, and besides it carries in the aisle and on the
+ platform forty passengers standing. The air is what you may imagine, if
+ you know that not only is the place so indecently crowded, but that in the
+ centre of the car are two adopted citizens, far gone in drink, who have
+ the aspect and the smell of having passed the day in an ash-heap. These
+ citizens being quite helpless themselves, are supported by the public, and
+ repose in singular comfort upon all the passengers near them; I, myself,
+ contribute an aching back to the common charity, and a genteelly dressed
+ young lady takes one of them from time to time on her knee. But they are
+ comparatively an ornament to society till the conductor objects to the
+ amount they offer him for fare; for after that they wish to fight him
+ during the journey, and invite him at short intervals to step out and be
+ shown what manner of men they are. The conductor passes it off for a joke,
+ and so it is, and a very good one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that unhappy mass it would be an audacious spirit who should say of any
+ particular arm or leg, &ldquo;It is mine,&rdquo; and all the breath is in
+ common. Nothing, it would seem, could add to our misery; but we discover
+ our error when the conductor squeezes a tortuous path through us, and
+ collects the money for our transportation. I never can tell, during the
+ performance of this feat, whether he or the passengers are more to be
+ pitied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people who are thus indecorously huddled and jammed together, without
+ regard to age or sex, otherwise lead lives of at least comfort, and a good
+ half of them cherish themselves in every physical way with unparalleled
+ zeal. They are handsomely clothed; they are delicately neat in linen; they
+ eat well, or, if not well, as well as their cooks will let them, and at
+ all events expensively; they house in dwellings appointed in a manner
+ undreamt of elsewhere in the world,&mdash;dwellings wherein furnaces make
+ a summer-heat, where fountains of hot and cold water flow at a touch,
+ where light is created or quenched by the turning of a key, where all is
+ luxurious upholstery, and magical ministry to real or fancied needs. They
+ carry the same tastes with them to their places of business; and when they
+ &ldquo;attend divine service,&rdquo; it is with the understanding that God
+ is to receive them in a richly carpeted house, deliciously warmed and
+ perfectly ventilated, where they may adore Him at their ease upon
+ cushioned seats,&mdash;secured seats. Yet these spoiled children of
+ comfort, when they ride to or from business or church, fail to assert
+ rights that the benighted Cockney, who never heard of our plumbing and
+ registers, or even the oppressed Parisian, who is believed not to change
+ his linen from one revolution to another, having paid for, enjoys. When
+ they enter the &ldquo;full&rdquo; horse-car, they find themselves in a
+ place inexorable as the grave to their greenbacks, where not only is their
+ adventitious consequence stripped from them, but the courtesies of life
+ are impossible, the inherent dignity of the person is denied, and they are
+ reduced below the level of the most uncomfortable nations of the Old
+ World. The philosopher accustomed to draw consolation from the sufferings
+ of his richer fellow-men, and to infer an overruling Providence from their
+ disgraces, might well bless Heaven for the spectacle of such degradation,
+ if his thanksgiving were not prevented by his knowledge that this is quite
+ voluntary. And now consider that on every car leaving the city at this
+ time the scene is much the same; reflect that the horror is enacting, not
+ only in Boston, but in New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, St. Louis,
+ Chicago, Cincinnati,&mdash;wherever the horse-car, that tinkles well-nigh
+ round the Continent, is known; remember that the same victims are thus
+ daily sacrificed, without an effort to right themselves: and then you will
+ begin to realize&mdash;dimly and imperfectly, of course&mdash;the
+ unfathomable meekness of the American character. The &ldquo;full&rdquo;
+ horse-car is a prodigy whose likeness is absolutely unknown elsewhere,
+ since the Neapolitan gig went out; and I suppose it will be incredible to
+ the future in our own country. When I see such a horse-car as I have
+ sketched move away from its station, I feel that it is something not only
+ emblematic and interpretative, but monumental; and I know that when art
+ becomes truly national, the overloaded horse-car will be celebrated in
+ painting and sculpture. And in after ages, when the oblique-eyed, swarthy
+ American of that time, pausing before some commemorative bronze or
+ historical picture of our epoch, contemplates this stupendous spectacle of
+ human endurance, I hope he will be able to philosophize more
+ satisfactorily than we can now, concerning the mystery of our strength as
+ a nation and our weakness as a public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A DAY'S PLEASURE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.&mdash;THE MORNING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ They were not a large family, and their pursuits and habits were very
+ simple; yet the summer was lapsing toward the first pathos of autumn
+ before they found themselves all in such case as to be able to take the
+ day's pleasure they had planned so long. They had agreed often and
+ often that nothing could be more charming than an excursion down the
+ Harbor, either to Gloucester, or to Nahant, or to Nantasket Beach, or to
+ Hull and Hingham, or to any point within the fatal bound beyond which is
+ seasickness. They had studied the steamboat advertisements, day after day,
+ for a long time, without making up their minds which of these charming
+ excursions would be the most delightful; and when they had at last fixed
+ upon one and chosen some day for it, that day was sure to be heralded by a
+ long train of obstacles, or it dawned upon weather that was simply
+ impossible. Besides, in the suburbs, you are apt to sleep late, unless the
+ solitary ice-wagon of the neighborhood makes a very uncommon rumbling in
+ going by; and I believe that the excursion was several times postponed by
+ the tardy return of the pleasurers from dreamland, which, after all, is
+ not the worst resort, or the least interesting&mdash;or profitable, for
+ the matter of that. But at last the great day came,&mdash;a blameless
+ Thursday alike removed from the cares of washing and ironing days, and
+ from the fatigues with which every week closes. One of the family chose
+ deliberately to stay at home; but the severest scrutiny could not detect a
+ hindrance in the health or circumstances of any of the rest, and the
+ weather was delicious. Everything, in fact, was so fair and so full of
+ promise, that they could almost fancy a calamity of some sort hanging over
+ its perfection, and possibly bred of it; for I suppose that we never have
+ anything made perfectly easy for us without a certain reluctance and
+ foreboding. That morning they all got up so early that they had time to
+ waste over breakfast before taking the 7.30 train for Boston; and they
+ naturally wasted so much of it that they reached the station only in
+ season for the 8.00. But there is a difference between reaching the
+ station and quietly taking the cars, especially if one of your company has
+ been left at home, hoping to cut across and take the cars at a station
+ which they reach some minutes later, and you, the head of the party, are
+ obliged, at a loss of breath and personal comfort and dignity, to run down
+ to that station and see that the belated member has arrived there, and
+ then hurry back to your own, and embody the rest, with their accompanying
+ hand-bags and wraps and sun-umbrellas, into some compact shape for removal
+ into the cars, during the very scant minute that the train stops at
+ Charlesbridge. Then when you are all aboard, and the tardy member has been
+ duly taken up at the next station, and you would be glad to spend the time
+ in looking about on the familiar variety of life which every car presents
+ in every train on every road in this vast American world, you are
+ oppressed and distracted by the cares which must attend the
+ pleasure-seeker, and which the more thickly beset him the more deeply he
+ plunges into enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can learn very little from the note-book of the friend whose adventures
+ I am relating in regard to the scenery of Somerville, and the region
+ generally through which the railroad passes between Charlesbridge and
+ Boston; but so much knowledge of it may be safely assumed on the part of
+ the reader as to relieve me of the grave responsibility of describing it.
+ Still, I may say that it is not unpicturesque, and that I have a pleasure,
+ which I hope the reader shares, in anything like salt meadows and all
+ spaces subject to the tide, whether flooded by it or left bare with their
+ saturated grasses by its going down. I think, also, there is something
+ fine in the many-roofed, many-chimneyed highlands of Chelsea (if it is
+ Chelsea), as you draw near the railroad bridge, and there is a pretty
+ stone church on a hill-side there which has the good fortune, so rare with
+ modern architecture and so common with the old, of seeming a natural
+ outgrowth of the spot where it stands, and which is as purely an object of
+ aesthetic interest to me, who know nothing of its sect or doctrine, as any
+ church in a picture could be; and there is, also, the Marine Hospital on
+ the heights (if it is the Marine Hospital), from which I hope the inmates
+ can behold the ocean, and exult in whatever misery keeps them ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let me not so hasten over this part of my friend's journey as to
+ omit all mention of the amphibious Irish houses which stand about on the
+ low lands along the railroad-sides, and which you half expect to see
+ plunge into the tidal mud of the neighborhood, with a series of hoarse
+ croaks, as the train approaches. Perhaps twenty-four trains pass those
+ houses every twenty-four hours, and it is a wonder that the inhabitants
+ keep their interest in them, or have leisure to bestow upon any of them.
+ Yet, as you dash along so bravely, you can see that you arrest the
+ occupations of all these villagers as by a kind of enchantment; the
+ children pause and turn their heads toward you from their mud-pies (to the
+ production of which there is literally no limit in that region); the
+ matron rests one parboiled hand on her hip, letting the other still linger
+ listlessly upon the wash-board, while she lifts her eyes from the suds to
+ look at you; the boys, who all summer long are forever just going into the
+ water or just coming out of it, cease their buttoning or unbuttoning; the
+ baby, which has been run after and caught and suitably posed, turns its
+ anguished eyes upon you, where also falls the mother's gaze, while
+ her descending palm is arrested in mid air. I forbear to comment upon the
+ surprising populousness of these villages, where, in obedience to all the
+ laws of health, the inhabitants ought to be wasting miserably away, but
+ where they flourish in spite of them. Even Accident here seems to be
+ robbed of half her malevolence; and that baby (who will presently be
+ chastised with terrific uproar) passes an infancy of intrepid enjoyment
+ amidst the local perils, and is no more affected by the engines and the
+ cars than by so many fretful hens with their attendant broods of chickens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/4000.jpg" alt="4000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/4000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ When sometimes I long for the excitement and variety of travel, which, for
+ no merit of mine, I knew in other days, I reproach myself, and silence all
+ my repinings with some such question as, Where could you find more variety
+ or greater excitement than abounds in and near the Fitchburg Depot when a
+ train arrives? And to tell the truth, there is something very inspiring in
+ the fine eagerness with which all the passengers rise as soon as the
+ locomotive begins to slow, and huddle forward to the door, in their
+ impatience to get out; while the suppressed vehemence of the hackmen is
+ also thrilling in its way, not to mention the instant clamor of the
+ baggage-men as they read and repeat the numbers of the checks in strident
+ tones. It would be ever so interesting to depict all these people, but it
+ would require volumes for the work, and I reluctantly let them all pass
+ out without a word,&mdash;all but that sweet young blonde who arrives by
+ most trains, and who, putting up her eye-glass with a ravishing air,
+ bewitchingly peers round among the bearded faces, with little tender looks
+ of hope and trepidation, for the face which she wants, and which presently
+ bursts through the circle of strange visages. The owner of the face then
+ hurries forward to meet that sweet blonde, who gives him a little drooping
+ hand as if it were a delicate flower she laid in his; there is a brief
+ mutual hesitation long enough merely for an electrical thrill to run from
+ heart to heart through the clasping hands, and then he stoops toward her,
+ and distractingly kisses her. And I say that there is no law of conscience
+ or propriety worthy the name of law&mdash;barbarity, absurdity, call it
+ rather&mdash;to prevent any one from availing himself of that providential
+ near-sightedness, and beatifying himself upon those lips,&mdash;nothing to
+ prevent it but that young fellow, whom one might not, of course, care to
+ provoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the people who now rush forward and heap themselves into the two
+ horse-cars and one omnibus, placed before the depot by a wise forethought
+ for the public comfort to accommodate the train-load of two hundred
+ passengers, I always note a type that is both pleasing and interesting to
+ me. It is a lady just passing middle life; from her kindly eyes the
+ envious crow, whose footprints are just traceable at their corners, has
+ not yet drunk the brightness, but she looks just a thought sadly, if very
+ serenely, from them. I know nothing in the world of her; I may have seen
+ her twice or a hundred times, but I must always be making bits of romances
+ about her. That is she in faultless gray, with the neat leather bag in her
+ lap, and a bouquet of the first autumnal blooms perched in her shapely
+ hands which are prettily yet substantially gloved in some sort of
+ gauntlets. She can be easy and dignified, my dear middle-aged heroine,
+ even in one of our horse-cars, where people are for the most part packed
+ like cattle in a pen. She shows no trace of dust or fatigue from the
+ thirty or forty miles which I choose to fancy she has ridden from the
+ handsome elm-shaded New England town of five or ten thousand people, where
+ I choose to think she lives. From a vague horticultural association with
+ those gauntlets, as well as from the autumnal blooms, I take it she loves
+ flowers, and gardens a good deal with her own hands, and keeps
+ house-plants in the winter, and of course a canary. Her dress, neither
+ rich nor vulgar, makes me believe her fortunes modest and not recent; her
+ gentle face has just so much intellectual character as it is good to see
+ in a woman's face; I suspect that she reads pretty regularly the new
+ poems and histories, and I know that she is the life and soul of the local
+ book-club. Is she married, or widowed, or one of the superfluous forty
+ thousand? That is what I never can tell. But I think that most probably
+ she is married, and that her husband is very much in business, and does
+ not share so much as he respects her tastes. I have no particular reason
+ for thinking that she has no children now, and that the sorrow for the one
+ she lost so long ago has become only a pensive silence, which, however, a
+ long summer twilight can yet deepen to tears.... Upon my word! Am I then
+ one to give way to this sort of thing? Madam, I ask pardon. I have no
+ right to be sentimentalizing you. Yet your face is one to make people
+ dream kind things of you, and I cannot keep my reveries away from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the mean time I neglect the momentous history which I have proposed
+ to write, and leave my day's pleasurers to fade into the background
+ of a fantastic portrait. The truth is, I cannot look without pain upon the
+ discomforts which they suffer at this stage of their joyous enterprise. At
+ the best, the portables of such a party are apt to be grievous
+ embarrassments: a package of shawls and parasols and umbrellas and
+ India-rubbers, however neatly made up at first, quickly degenerates into a
+ shapeless mass, which has finally to be carried with as great tenderness
+ as an ailing child; and the lunch is pretty sure to overflow the hand-bags
+ and to eddy about you in paper parcels; while the bottle of claret, that
+ bulges the side of one of the bags, and
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;That will show itself without,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ defying your attempts to look as it were cold tea, gives a crushing touch
+ of disreputability to the whole affair. Add to this the fact that but half
+ the party have seats, and that the others have to sway and totter about
+ the car in that sudden contact with all varieties of fellow-men, to which
+ we are accustomed in the cars, and you must allow that these poor
+ merrymakers have reasons enough to rejoice when this part of their day's
+ pleasure is over. They are so plainly bent upon a sail down the Harbor,
+ that before they leave the car they become objects of public interest, and
+ are at last made to give some account of themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Going for a sail, I presume?&rdquo; says a person hitherto in
+ conversation with the conductor. &ldquo;Well, I wouldn't mind a sail
+ myself to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answers the head of the party, &ldquo;going to
+ Gloucester.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guess not,&rdquo; says, very coldly and decidedly, one of the
+ passengers, who is reading that morning's &ldquo;Advertiser;&rdquo;
+ and when the subject of this surmise looks at him for explanations, he
+ adds, &ldquo;The City Council has chartered the boat for to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this the excursionists fall into great dismay and bitterness, and
+ upbraid the City Council, and wonder why last night's &ldquo;Transcript&rdquo;
+ said nothing about its oppressive action, and generally bewail their fate.
+ But at last they resolve to go somewhere, and, being set down, they make
+ up their warring minds upon Nahant, for the Nahant boat leaves the wharf
+ nearest them; and so they hurry away to India Wharf, amidst barrels and
+ bales and boxes and hacks and trucks, with interminable string-teams
+ passing before them at every crossing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At any rate,&rdquo; says the leader of the expedition, &ldquo;we
+ shall see the Gardens of Maolis,&mdash;those enchanted gardens which have
+ fairly been advertised into my dreams, and where I've been told,&rdquo;
+ he continues, with an effort to make the prospect an attractive one, yet
+ not without a sense of the meagreness of the materials, &ldquo;they have a
+ grotto and a wooden bull.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, there is no reason in nature why a wooden bull should be more
+ pleasing than a flesh-and-blood bull, but it seems to encourage the
+ company, and they set off again with renewed speed, and at last reach
+ India Wharf in time to see the Nahant steamer packed full of
+ excursionists, with a crowd of people still waiting to go aboard. It does
+ not look inviting, and they hesitate. In a minute or two their spirits
+ sink so low, that if they should see the wooden bull step out of a grotto
+ on the deck of the steamer the spectacle could not revive them. At that
+ instant they think, with a surprising singleness, of Nantasket Beach, and
+ the bright colors in which the Gardens of Maolis but now appeared fade
+ away, and they seem to see themselves sauntering along the beautiful
+ shore, while the white-crested breakers crash upon the sand, and run up
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In tender-curving lines of creamy spray,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ quite to the feet of that lotus-eating party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nahant is all rocks,&rdquo; says the leader to Aunt Melissa, who
+ hears him with a sweet and tranquil patience, and who would enjoy or
+ suffer anything with the same expression; &ldquo;and as you've never
+ yet seen the open sea, it's fortunate that we go to Nantasket, for,
+ of course, a beach is more characteristic. But now the object is to get
+ there. The boat will be starting in a few moments, and I doubt whether we
+ can walk it. How far is it,&rdquo; he asks, turning toward a
+ respectable-looking man, &ldquo;to Liverpool Wharf?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it's consid'able ways,&rdquo; says the man,
+ smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we must take a hack,&rdquo; says the pleasurer to his party.
+ &ldquo;Come on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've got a hack,&rdquo; observes the man, in a casual way, as
+ if the fact might possibly interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, you have, have you? Well, then, put us into it, and drive to
+ Liverpool Wharf; and hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Either the distance was less than the hackman fancied, or else he drove
+ thither with unheard-of speed, for two minutes later he set them down on
+ Liverpool Wharf. But swiftly as they had come the steamer had been even
+ more prompt, and she now turned toward them a beautiful wake, as she
+ pushed farther and farther out into the harbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hackman took his two dollars for his four passengers, and was rapidly
+ mounting his box,&mdash;probably to avoid idle reproaches. &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo;
+ said the chief pleasurer. Then, &ldquo;When does the next boat leave?&rdquo;
+ he asked of the agent, who had emerged with a compassionate face from the
+ waiting-rooms on the wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At half past two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it's now five minutes past nine,&rdquo; moaned the
+ merrymakers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I'll tell you what you can do,&rdquo; said the agent;
+ &ldquo;you can go to Hingham by the Old Colony cars, and so come back by
+ the Hull and Hingham boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's it!&rdquo; chorused his listeners, &ldquo;we'll
+ go;&rdquo; and &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said their spokesman to the driver,
+ &ldquo;I dare say you didn't know that Liverpool Wharf was so near;
+ but I don't think you've earned your money, and you ought to
+ take us on to the Old Colony Depot for half-fares at the most.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The driver looked pained, as if some small tatters and shreds of
+ conscience were flapping uncomfortably about his otherwise dismantled
+ spirit. Then he seemed to think of his wife and family, for he put on the
+ air of a man who had already made great sacrifices, and &ldquo;I couldn't,
+ really, I couldn't afford it,&rdquo; said he; and as the victims
+ turned from him in disgust, he chirruped to his horses and drove off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the pleasurers, &ldquo;we won't give it up.
+ We will have our day's pleasure after all. But what <i>can</i> we do
+ to kill five hours and a half? It's miles away from everything, and,
+ besides, there's nothing even if we were there.&rdquo; At this image
+ of their remoteness and the inherent desolation of Boston they could not
+ suppress some sighs, and in the mean time Aunt Melissa stepped into the
+ waiting-room, which opened on the farther side upon the water, and sat
+ contentedly down on one of the benches; the rest, from sheer vacuity and
+ irresolution, followed, and thus, without debate, it was settled that they
+ should wait there till the boat left. The agent, who was a kind man, did
+ what he could to alleviate the situation: he gave them each the
+ advertisement of his line of boats, neatly printed upon a card, and then
+ he went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this prospect of waiting would do well enough for the ladies of the
+ party, but there is an impatience in the masculine fibre which does not
+ brook the notion of such prolonged repose; and the leader of the excursion
+ presently pretended an important errand up town,&mdash;nothing less, in
+ fact, than to buy a tumbler out of which to drink their claret on the
+ beach. A holiday is never like any other day to the man who takes it, and
+ a festive halo seemed to enwrap the excursionist as he pushed on through
+ the busy streets in the cool shadow of the vast granite palaces wherein
+ the genius of business loves to house itself in this money-making land,
+ and inhaled the odors of great heaps of leather and spices and dry goods
+ as he passed the open doorways,&mdash;odors that mixed pleasantly with the
+ smell of the freshly watered streets. When he stepped into a crockery
+ store to make his purchase a sense of pleasure-taking did not fail him,
+ and he fell naturally into talk with the clerk about the weather and such
+ pastoral topics. Even when he reached the establishment where his own
+ business days were passed some glamour seemed to be cast upon familiar
+ objects. To the disenchanted eye all things were as they were on all other
+ dullish days of summer, even to the accustomed bore leaning up against his
+ favorite desk and transfixing his habitual victim with his usual theme.
+ Yet to the gaze of this pleasure-taker all was subtly changed, and he
+ shook hands right and left as he entered, to the marked surprise of the
+ objects of his effusion. He had merely come to get some newspapers to help
+ pass away the long moments on the wharf, and when he had found these, he
+ hurried back thither to hear what had happened during his absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed that there had hardly ever been such an eventful period in the
+ lives of the family before, and he listened to a minute account of it from
+ Cousin Lucy. &ldquo;You know, Frank,&rdquo; says she, &ldquo;that Sallie's
+ one idea in life is to keep the baby from getting the whooping-cough, and
+ I declare that these premises have done nothing but reëcho with the most
+ dolorous whoops ever since you've been gone, so that at times, in my
+ fear that Sallie would think I'd been careless about the boy, I've
+ been ready to throw myself into the water, and nothing's prevented
+ me but the doubt whether it wouldn't be better to throw in the
+ whoopers instead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a pale little girl, with a face wan and sad through all its
+ dirt, came and stood in the doorway nearest the baby, and in another
+ instant she had burst into a whoop so terrific that, if she had meant to
+ have his scalp next it could not have been more dreadful. Then she
+ subsided into a deep and pathetic quiet, with that air peculiar to the
+ victims of her disorder of having done nothing noticeable. But her
+ outburst had set at work the mysterious machinery of half a dozen other
+ whooping-coughers lurking about the building, and all unseen they wound
+ themselves up with appalling rapidity, and in the utter silence which
+ followed left one to think they had died at the climax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it's a perfect whooping-cough factory, this place,&rdquo;
+ cries Cousin Lucy in a desperation. &ldquo;Go away, do, please, from the
+ baby, you poor little dreadful object you,&rdquo; she continues, turning
+ upon the only visible operative in the establishment. &ldquo;Here, take
+ this,&rdquo; and she bribes her with a bit of sponge-cake, on which the
+ child runs lightly off along the edge of the wharf. &ldquo;That's
+ been another of their projects for driving me wild,&rdquo; says Cousin
+ Lucy,&mdash;&ldquo;trying to take their own lives in a hundred ways before
+ my face and eyes. Why <i>will</i> their mothers let them come here to
+ play?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Really, they were very melancholy little figures, and might have gone near
+ to make one sad, even if they had not been constantly imperilling their
+ lives. Thanks to its being summer-time, it did not much matter about the
+ scantiness of their clothing, but their squalor was depressing, it seemed,
+ even to themselves, for they were a mournful-looking set of children, and
+ in their dangerous sports trifled silently and almost gloomily with death.
+ There were none of them above eight or nine years of age, and most of them
+ had the care of smaller brothers, or even babes in arms, whom they were
+ thus early inuring to the perils of the situation. The boys were dressed
+ in pantaloons and shirts which no excess of rolling up in the legs and
+ arms could make small enough, and the incorrigible too-bigness of which
+ rendered the favorite amusements still more hazardous from their liability
+ to trip and entangle the wearers. The little girls had on each a solitary
+ garment, which hung about her gaunt person with antique severity of
+ outline; while the babies were multitudinously swathed in whatever
+ fragments of dress could be tied or pinned or plastered on. Their faces
+ were strikingly and almost ingeniously dirty, and their distractions among
+ the coal-heaps and cord-wood constantly added to the variety and advantage
+ of these effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do their mothers let them come here?&rdquo; muses Frank aloud.
+ &ldquo;Why, because it's so safe, Cousin Lucy. At home, you know,
+ they'd have to be playing upon the sills of fourth-floor windows,
+ and here they're out of the way and can't hurt themselves.
+ Why, Cousin Lucy, this is their park,&mdash;their Public Garden, their
+ Bois de Boulogne, their Cascine. And look at their gloomy little faces!
+ Aren't they taking their pleasure in the spirit of the very highest
+ fashion? I was at Newport last summer, and saw the famous driving on the
+ Avenue in those pony phaetons, dog-carts, and tubs, and three-story
+ carriages with a pair of footmen perching like storks upon each gable, and
+ I assure you that all those ornate and costly phantasms (it seems to me
+ now like a sad, sweet vision) had just the expression of these poor
+ children. We're taking a day's pleasure ourselves, cousin, but
+ nobody would know it from our looks. And has nothing but whooping-cough
+ happened since I've been gone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, we seem to be so cut off from every-day associations that I've
+ imagined myself a sort of tourist, and I've been to that Catholic
+ church over yonder, in hopes of seeing the Murillos and Raphaels&mdash;but
+ I found it locked up, and so I trudged back without a sight of the
+ masterpieces. But what's the reason that all the shops hereabouts
+ have nothing but luxuries for sale? The windows are perfect tropics of
+ oranges, and lemons, and belated bananas, and tobacco, and peanuts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, the poor really seem to use more of those luxuries than
+ anybody else. I don't blame them. I shouldn't care for the
+ necessaries of life myself, if I found them so hard to get.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I came back here,&rdquo; says Cousin Lucy, without heeding
+ these flippant and heartless words, &ldquo;I found an old gentleman who
+ has something to do with the boats, and he sat down, as if it were a part
+ of his business, and told me nearly the whole history of his life. Isn't
+ it nice of them, keeping an Autobiographer? It makes the time pass so
+ swiftly when you're waiting. This old gentleman was born&mdash;who'd
+ ever think it?&mdash;up there in Pearl Street, where those pitiless big
+ granite stores are now; and, I don't know why, but the idea of any
+ human baby being born in Pearl Street seemed to me one of the saddest
+ things I'd ever heard of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Cousin Lucy went to the rescue of the nurse and the baby, who had got
+ into one of their periodical difficulties, and her interlocutor turned to
+ Aunt Melissa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, Franklin,&rdquo; says Aunt Melissa, &ldquo;that it was
+ wrong to let that nurse come and bring the baby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know, Aunty, you have those old-established ideas, and they're
+ very right,&rdquo; answers her nephew; &ldquo;but just consider how much
+ she enjoys it, and how vastly the baby adds to the pleasure of this
+ charming excursion!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Melissa made no reply, but sat thoughtfully out upon the bay. &ldquo;I
+ presume you think the excursion is a failure,&rdquo; she said, after a
+ while; &ldquo;but I've been enjoying every minute of the time here.
+ Of course, I've never seen the open sea, and I don't know
+ about it, but I feel here just as if I were spending a day at the seaside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said her nephew, &ldquo;I shouldn't call this
+ exactly a watering-place. It lacks the splendor and gayety of Newport, in
+ a certain degree, and it hasn't the illustrious seclusion of Nahant.
+ The surf isn't very fine, nor the beach particularly adapted to
+ bathing; and yet, I must confess, the outlook from here is as lovely as
+ anything one need have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to tell the truth, it was very pretty and interesting. The landward
+ environment was as commonplace and mean as it could be: a yardful of
+ dismal sheds for coal and lumber, and shanties for offices, with each
+ office its safe and its desk, its whittled arm-chair and its spittoon, its
+ fly that shooed not, but buzzed desperately against the grimy pane, which,
+ if it had really had that boasted microscopic eye, it never would have
+ mistaken for the unblemished daylight. Outside of this yard was the usual
+ wharfish neighborhood, with its turmoil of trucks and carts and fleet
+ express-wagons, its building up and pulling down, its discomfort and
+ clamor of every sort, and its shops for the sale, not only of those
+ luxuries which Lucy had mentioned, but of such domestic refreshments as
+ lemon-pie and hulled-corn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, however, you turned your thoughts and eyes away from this aspect of
+ it, and looked out upon the water, the neighborhood gloriously retrieved
+ itself. There its poverty and vulgarity ceased; there its beauty and grace
+ abounded. A light breeze ruffled the face of the bay, and the innumerable
+ little sail-boats that dotted it took the sun and wind upon their wings,
+ which they dipped almost into the sparkle of the water, and flew lightly
+ hither and thither like gulls that loved the brine too well to rise wholly
+ from it; larger ships, farther or nearer, puffed or shrank their sails as
+ they came and went on the errands of commerce, but always moved as if bent
+ upon some dreamy affair of pleasure; the steamboats that shot vehemently
+ across their tranquil courses seemed only gayer and vivider visions, but
+ not more substantial; yonder, a black sea-going steamer passed out between
+ the far-off islands, and at last left in the sky above those reveries of
+ fortification, a whiff of sombre smoke, dark and unreal as a memory of
+ battle; to the right, on some line of railroad, long-plumed trains arrived
+ and departed like pictures passed through the slide of a magic-lantern;
+ even a pile-driver, at work in the same direction, seemed to have no
+ malice in the blows which, after a loud clucking, it dealt the pile, and
+ one understood that it was mere conventional violence like that of a Punch
+ to his baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what a lotus-eating life this is!&rdquo; said Frank, at last.
+ &ldquo;Aunt Melissa, I don't wonder you think it's like the
+ seaside. It's a great deal better than the seaside. And now, just as
+ we've entered into the spirit of it, the time's up for the
+ 'Rose Standish' to come and bear us from its delights. When
+ will the boat be in?&rdquo; he asked of the Autobiographer, whom Lucy had
+ pointed out to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she's <i>ben</i> in half an hour, now. There she lays,
+ just outside the 'John Romer.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, to be sure, she lay, and those pleasure-takers had been so lost in
+ the rapture of waiting and the beauty of the scene as never to have
+ noticed her arrival.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ II&mdash;THE AFTERNOON
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is noticeable how many people there are in the world that seem bent
+ always upon the same purpose of amusement or business as one's self.
+ If you keep quietly about your accustomed affairs, there are all your
+ neighbors and acquaintance hard at it too; if you go on a journey, choose
+ what train you will, the cars are filled with travellers in your
+ direction. You take a day's pleasure, and everybody abandons his
+ usual occupation to crowd upon your boat, whether it is to Gloucester, or
+ Nahant, or to Nantasket Beach you go. It is very hard to believe that,
+ from whatever channel of life you abstract yourself, still the great sum
+ of it presses forward as before: that business is carried on though you
+ are idle, that men amuse themselves though you toil, that every train is
+ as crowded as that you travel on, that the theatre or the church fills its
+ boxes or pews without you perfectly well. I suppose it would not be quite
+ agreeable to believe all this; the opposite illusion is far more
+ flattering; for if each one of us did not take the world with him now at
+ every turn, should he not have to leave it behind him when he died? And
+ that, it must be owned, would not be agreeable, nor is the fact quite
+ conceivable, though ever so many myriads in so many million years have
+ proved it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When our friends first went aboard the &ldquo;Rose Standish&rdquo; that
+ day they were almost the sole passengers, and they had a feeling of
+ ownership and privacy which was pleasant enough in its way, but which they
+ lost afterwards; though to lose it was also pleasant, for enjoyment no
+ more likes to be solitary than sin does, which is notoriously gregarious,
+ and I dare say would hardly exist if it could not be committed in company.
+ The preacher, indeed, little knows the comfortable sensation we have in
+ being called fellow-sinners, and what an effective shield for his guilt
+ each makes of his neighbor's hard-heartedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Frank never felt how strange was a lonely transgression till that
+ day, when in the silence of the little cabin he took the bottle of claret
+ from the handbag, and prepared to moisten the family lunch with it.
+ &ldquo;I think, Aunt Melissa,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we had better lunch
+ now, for it's a quarter past two, and we shall not get to the beach
+ before four. Let's improvise a beach of these chairs, and that
+ water-urn yonder can stand for the breakers. Now, this is truly like
+ Newport and Nahant,&rdquo; he added, after the little arrangement was
+ complete; and he was about to strip away the bottle's jacket of
+ brown paper, when a lady much wrapped up came in, and, reclining upon one
+ of the opposite seats, began to take them all in with a severe serenity of
+ gaze that made them feel for a moment like a party of low foreigners,&mdash;like
+ a set of German atheists, say. Frank kept on the bottle's paper
+ jacket, and as the single tumbler of the party circled from mouth to
+ mouth, each of them tried to give the honest drink the false air of a
+ medicinal potion of some sort; and to see Aunt Melissa sipping it, no one
+ could have put his hand on his heart and sworn it was not elderberry wine,
+ at the worst. In spite of these efforts, they all knew that they had
+ suffered a hopeless loss of repute; yet after the loss was confessed, I am
+ not sure that they were not the gayer and happier through this &ldquo;freedom
+ of a broken law.&rdquo; At any rate, the lunch passed off very merrily,
+ and when they had put back the fragments of the feast into the bags, they
+ went forward to the bow of the boat, to get good places for seeing the
+ various people as they came aboard, and for an outlook upon the bay when
+ the boat should start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suppose that these were not very remarkable people, and that nothing but
+ the indomitable interest our friends took in the human race could have
+ enabled them to feel any concern in their companions. It was, no doubt,
+ just such a company as goes down to Nantasket Beach every pleasant day in
+ summer. Certain ones among them were distinguishable as sojourners at the
+ beach, by an air of familiarity with the business of getting there, an
+ indifference to the prospect, and an indefinable touch of superiority.
+ These read their newspapers in quiet corners, or, if they were not of the
+ newspaper sex, made themselves comfortable in the cabins, and looked about
+ them at the other passengers with looks of lazy surprise, and just a hint
+ of scorn for their interest in the boat's departure. Our day's
+ pleasurers took it that the lady whose steady gaze had reduced them, when
+ at lunch, to such a low ebb of shabbiness, was a regular boarder, at the
+ least, in one of the beach hotels. A few other passengers were, like
+ themselves, mere idlers for a day, and were eager to see all that the boat
+ or the voyage offered of novelty. There were clerks and men who had
+ book-keeping written in a neat mercantile hand upon their faces, and who
+ had evidently been given that afternoon for a breathing-time; and there
+ were strangers who were going down to the beach for the sake of the
+ charming view of the harbor which the trip afforded. Here and there were
+ people who were not to be classed with any certainty,&mdash;as a pale
+ young man, handsome in his undesirable way, who looked like a steamboat
+ pantry boy not yet risen to be bar-tender, but rapidly rising, and who sat
+ carefully balanced upon the railing of the boat, chatting with two young
+ girls, who heard his broad sallies with continual snickers, and
+ interchanged saucy comments with that prompt up-and-coming manner which is
+ so large a part of non-humorous humor, as Mr. Lowell calls it, and now and
+ then pulled and pushed each other. It was a scene worth study, for in no
+ other country could anything so bad have been without being vastly worse;
+ but here it was evident that there was nothing worse than you saw; and,
+ indeed, these persons formed a sort of relief to the other passengers, who
+ were nearly all monotonously well-behaved. Amongst a few there seemed to
+ be acquaintance, but the far greater part were unknown to one another, and
+ there were no words wasted by any one. I believe the English traveller who
+ has taxed our nation with inquisitiveness for half a century is at last
+ beginning to find out that we do not ask questions because we have the
+ still more vicious custom of not opening our mouths at all when with
+ strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a good hour after our friends got aboard before the boat left her
+ moorings, and then it was not without some secret dreads of sea-sickness
+ that Aunt Melissa saw the seething brine widen between her and the
+ familiar wharf-house, where she now seemed to have spent so large a part
+ of her life. But the multitude of really charming and interesting objects
+ that presently fell under her eye soon distracted her from those gloomy
+ thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is always a shabbiness about the wharves of seaports; but I must own
+ that as soon as you get a reasonable distance from them in Boston, they
+ turn wholly beautiful. They no longer present that imposing array of
+ mighty ships which they could show in the days of Consul Plancus, when the
+ commerce of the world sought chiefly our port, yet the docks are still
+ filled with the modester kinds of shipping, and if there is not that
+ wilderness of spars and rigging which you see at New York, let us believe
+ that there is an aspect of selection and refinement in the scene, so that
+ one should describe it, not as a forest, but, less conventionally, as a
+ gentleman's park of masts. The steamships of many coastwise freight
+ lines gloom, with their black, capacious hulks, among the lighter
+ sailing-craft, and among the white, green-shuttered passenger-boats; and
+ behind them those desperate and grimy sheds assume a picturesqueness,
+ their sagging roofs and crooked gables harmonizing agreeably with the
+ shipping; and then growing up from all, rises the mellow-tinted
+ brick-built city, roof, and spire, and dome,&mdash;a fair and noble sight,
+ indeed, and one not surpassed for a certain quiet and cleanly beauty by
+ any that I know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our friends lingered long upon this pretty prospect, and, as inland people
+ of light heart and easy fancy will, the ladies made imagined voyages in
+ each of the more notable vessels they passed,&mdash;all cheap and safe
+ trips, occupying half a second apiece. Then they came forward to the bow,
+ that they might not lose any part of the harbor's beauty and
+ variety, and informed themselves of the names of each of the fortressed
+ islands as they passed, and forgot them, being passed, so that to this day
+ Aunt Melissa has the Fort Warren rebel prisoners languishing in Fort
+ Independence. But they made sure of the air of soft repose that hung about
+ each, of that exquisite military neatness which distinguishes them, and
+ which went to Aunt Melissa's housekeeping heart, of the green, thick
+ turf covering the escarpments, of the great guns loafing on the crests of
+ the ramparts and looking out over the water sleepily, of the sentries
+ pacing slowly up and down with their gleaming muskets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never see one of those fellows,&rdquo; says Cousin Frank, &ldquo;without
+ setting him to the music of that saddest and subtlest of Heine's
+ poems. You know it, Lucy;&rdquo; and he repeats:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Mein Herz, mein Herz is traurig,
+ Doch lustig leuchtet der Mai;
+ Ich stehe gelehnt an der Linde,
+ Hoch auf der alten Bastei.
+
+</pre>
+ <hr />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Am alten grauen Thurme
+ Ein Schilderhäuschen steht;
+ Ein rothgeröckter Bursche
+ Dort auf und nieder geht.
+
+ &ldquo;Er spielt mit seiner Flinte,
+ Sie funkelt im Sonnenroth,
+ Er präsentirt, und schultert,&mdash;
+ Ich wollt', er schösse mich todt.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; says Cousin Lucy, either because the poignant melancholy
+ of the sentiment has suddenly pierced her, or because she does not quite
+ understand the German,&mdash;you never can tell about women. While Frank
+ smiles down upon her in this amiable doubt, their party is approached by
+ the tipsy man who has been making the excursion so merry for the other
+ passengers, in spite of the fact that there is very much to make one sad
+ in him. He is an old man, sweltering in rusty black, a two days'
+ gray beard, and a narrow-brimmed, livid silk hat, set well back upon the
+ nape of his neck. He explains to our friends, as he does to every one
+ whose acquaintance he makes, that he was in former days a seafaring man,
+ and that he has brought his two little grandsons here to show them
+ something about a ship; and the poor old soul helplessly saturates his
+ phrase with the rankest profanity. The boys are somewhat amused by their
+ grandsire's state, being no doubt familiar with it, but a very
+ grim-looking old lady who sits against the pilot-house, and keeps a sharp
+ eye upon all three, and who is also doubtless familiar with the unhappy
+ spectacle, seems not to find it a joke. Her stout matronly umbrella
+ trembles in her hand when her husband draws near, and her eye flashes; but
+ he gives her as wide a berth as he can, returning her glare with a
+ propitiatory drunken smile and a wink to the passengers to let them into
+ the fun. In fact, he is full of humor in his tipsy way, and one after
+ another falls the prey of his free sarcasm, which does not spare the boat
+ or any feature of the excursion. He holds for a long time, by swiftly
+ successive stories of his seafaring days, a very quiet gentleman, who
+ dares neither laugh too loudly nor show indifference for fear of rousing
+ that terrible wit at his expense, and finds his account in looking down at
+ his boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; says the deplorable old sinner, &ldquo;we was
+ forty days out from Liverpool, with a cargo of salt and iron, and we got
+ caught on the Banks in a calm. 'Cap'n,' says I,&mdash;I
+ 'us sec'n' mate,&mdash;''s they any man
+ aboard this ship knows how to pray?' 'No,' says the cap'n;
+ 'blast yer prayers!' 'Well,' says I, 'cap'n,
+ I'm no hand at all to pray, but I'm goin' to see if
+ prayin' won't git us out 'n this.' And I down on
+ my knees, and I made a first-class prayer; and a breeze sprung up in a
+ minute and carried us smack into Boston.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this bit of truculent burlesque the quiet man made a bold push, and
+ walked away with a somewhat sickened face, and as no one now intervened
+ between them, the inebriate laid a familiar hand upon Cousin Frank's
+ collar, and said with a wink at his late listener: &ldquo;Looks like a
+ lerigious man, don't he? I guess I give him a good dose, if he <i>does</i>
+ think himself the head-deacon of this boat.&rdquo; And he went on to state
+ his ideas of religion, from which it seemed that he was a person of the
+ most advanced thinking, and believed in nothing worth mentioning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perhaps no worse for an Infidel to be drunk than a Christian, but my
+ friend found this tipsy blasphemer's case so revolting, that he went
+ to the hand-bag, took out the empty claret-bottle, and seeking a solitary
+ corner of the boat, cast the bottle into the water, and felt a thrill of
+ uncommon self-approval as this scapegoat of all the wine at his grocer's
+ bobbed off upon the little waves. &ldquo;Besides, it saves carrying the
+ bottle home,&rdquo; he thought, not without a half-conscious reserve, that
+ if his penitence were ever too much for him, he could easily abandon it.
+ And without the reflection that the gate is always open behind him, who
+ could consent to enter upon any course of perfect behavior? If good
+ resolutions could not be broken, who would ever have the courage to form
+ them? Would it not be intolerable to be made as good as we ought to be?
+ Then, admirable reader, thank Heaven even for your lapses, since it is so
+ wholesome and saving to be well ashamed of yourself, from time to time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What an outrage,&rdquo; said Cousin Frank, in the glow of virtue,
+ as he rejoined the ladies, &ldquo;that that tipsy rascal should be allowed
+ to go on with his ribaldry. He seems to pervade the whole boat, and to
+ subject everybody to his sway. He's a perfect despot to us helpless
+ sober people,&mdash;I wouldn't openly disagree with him on any
+ account. We ought to send a Round Robin to the captain, and ask him to put
+ that religious liberal in irons during the rest of the voyage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mean time, however, the object of his indignation had used up all
+ the conversible material in that part of the boat, and had deviously
+ started for the other end. The elderly woman with the umbrella rose and
+ followed him, somewhat wearily, and with a sadness that appeared more in
+ her movement than in her face; and as the two went down the cabin, did the
+ comical affair look, after all, something like tragedy? My reader, who
+ expects a little novelty in tragedy, and not these stale and common
+ effects, will never think so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll not pretend, Frank,&rdquo; says Lucy, &ldquo;that in
+ such an intellectual place as Boston a crowd as large as this can be got
+ together, and no distinguished literary people in it. I know there are
+ some notables aboard: do point them out to me. Pretty near everybody has a
+ literary look.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, that's what we call our Boston look, Cousin Lucy. You
+ needn't have written anything to have it,&mdash;it's as
+ general as tubercular consumption, and is the effect of our universal
+ culture and habits of reading. I heard a New-Yorker say once that if you
+ went into a corner grocery in Boston to buy a codfish, the man would ask
+ you how you liked 'Lucille,' whilst he was tying it up. No,
+ no; you mustn't be taken in by that literary look; I'm afraid
+ the real literary men don't always have it. But I <i>do</i> see a
+ literary man aboard yonder,&rdquo; he added, craning his neck to one side,
+ and then furtively pointing,&mdash;&ldquo;the most literary man I ever
+ knew, one of the most literary men that ever lived. His whole existence is
+ really bound up in books; he never talks of anything else, and never
+ thinks of anything else, I believe. Look at him,&mdash;what kind and
+ pleasant eyes he's got! There, he sees me!&rdquo; cries Cousin
+ Frank, with a pleasurable excitement. &ldquo;How d'ye do?&rdquo; he
+ calls out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Cousin Frank, introduce us,&rdquo; sighs Lucy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I! He wouldn't thank me. He doesn't care for pretty
+ girls outside of books; he'd be afraid of 'em; he's the
+ bashfullest man alive, and all his heroines are fifty years old, at the
+ least. But before I go any further, tell me solemnly, Lucy, you're
+ not interviewing me? You're not going to write it to a New York
+ newspaper? No? Well, I think it's best to ask, always. Our friend
+ there&mdash;he's everybody's friend, if you mean nobody's
+ enemy, by that, not even his own&mdash;is really what I say,&mdash;the
+ most literary man I ever knew. He loves all epochs and phases of
+ literature, but his passion is the Charles Lamb period and all Lamb's
+ friends. He loves them as if they were living men; and Lamb would have
+ loved him if he could have known him. He speaks rapidly, and rather
+ indistinctly, and when you meet him and say Good day, and you suppose he
+ answers with something about the weather, ten to one he's asking you
+ what you think of Hazlitt's essays on Shakespeare, or Leigh Hunt's
+ Italian Poets, or Lamb's roast pig, or Barry Cornwall's songs.
+ He couldn't get by a bookstall without stopping&mdash;for half an
+ hour, at any rate. He knows just when all the new books in town are to be
+ published, and when each bookseller is to get his invoice of old English
+ books. He has no particular address, but if you leave your card for him at
+ any bookstore in Boston, he's sure to get it within two days; and in
+ the summer-time you're apt to meet him on these excursions. Of
+ course, he writes about books, and very tastefully and modestly; there's
+ hardly any of the brand-new immortal English poets, who die off so
+ rapidly, but has had a good word from him; but his heart is with the older
+ fellows, from Chaucer down; and, after the Charles Lamb epoch, I don't
+ know whether he loves better the Elizabethan age or that of Queen Anne.
+ Think of him making me stop the other day at a bookstall, and read through
+ an essay out of the &ldquo;Spectator!&rdquo; I did it all for love of him,
+ though money couldn't have persuaded me that I had time; and I'm
+ always telling him lies, and pretending to be as well acquainted as he is
+ with authors I hardly know by name,&mdash;he seems so fondly to expect it.
+ He's really almost a disembodied spirit as concerns most mundane
+ interests&mdash;his soul is in literature, as a lover's in his
+ mistress's beauty; and in the next world, where, as the
+ Swedenborgians believe, spirits seen at a distance appear like the things
+ they most resemble in disposition, as doves, hawks, goats, lambs, swine,
+ and so on, I'm sure that I shall see his true and kindly soul in the
+ guise of a noble old Folio, quaintly lettered across his back in old
+ English text, <i>Tom. I.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While our friends talked and looked about them, a sudden change had come
+ over the brightness and warmth of the day; the blue heaven had turned a
+ chilly gray, and the water looked harsh and cold. Now, too, they noted
+ that they were drawing near a wooden pier built into the water, and that
+ they had been winding about in a crooked channel between muddy shallows,
+ and that their course was overrun with long, disheveled sea-weed. The
+ shawls had been unstrapped, and the ladies made comfortable in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho for the beach!&rdquo; cried Cousin Frank, with a vehement show
+ of enthusiasm. &ldquo;Now, then, Aunt Melissa, prepare for the great
+ enjoyment of the day. In a few moments we shall be of the elves
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'That on the sand with printless foot
+ Do chase the ebbing Neptune, and do fly him
+ When he comes back.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Come! we shall have three hours on the beach, and that will bring us well
+ into the cool of the evening, and we can return by the last boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As to the cool of the evening,&rdquo; said Aunt Melissa, &ldquo;I
+ don't know. It's quite cool enough for comfort at present, and
+ I'm sure that anything more wouldn't be wholesome. What's
+ become of our beautiful weather?&rdquo; she asked, deeply plotting to gain
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's one of our Boston peculiarities, not to say merits,&rdquo;
+ answered Frank, &ldquo;which you must have noticed already, that we can
+ get rid of a fine day sooner than any other region. While you're
+ saying how lovely it is, a subtle change is wrought, and under skies still
+ blue and a sun still warm the keen spirit of the east wind pierces every
+ nerve, and all the fine weather within you is chilled and extinguished.
+ The gray atmosphere follows, but the day first languishes in yourself. But
+ for this, life in Boston would be insupportably perfect, if this is indeed
+ a drawback. You'd find Bostonians to defend it, I dare say. But this
+ isn't a regular east wind to-day; it's merely our nearness to
+ the sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, Franklin,&rdquo; said Aunt Melissa, &ldquo;that we won't
+ go down to the beach this afternoon,&rdquo; as if she had been there
+ yesterday, and would go to-morrow. &ldquo;It's too late in the day;
+ and it wouldn't be good for the child, I'm sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, aunty, it was you determined us to wait for the boat, and it's
+ your right to say whether we shall leave it or not. I'm very willing
+ not to go ashore. I always find that, after working up to an object with
+ great effort, it's surpassingly sweet to leave it unaccomplished at
+ last. Then it remains forever in the region of the ideal, amongst the
+ songs that never were sung, the pictures that never were painted. Why, in
+ fact, should we force this pleasure? We've eaten our lunch, we've
+ lost the warm heart of the day; why should we poorly drag over to that
+ damp and sullen beach, where we should find three hours very long, when by
+ going back now we can keep intact that glorious image of a day by the sea
+ which we've been cherishing all summer? You're right, Aunt
+ Melissa; we won't go ashore; we will stay here, and respect our
+ illusions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At heart, perhaps, Lucy did not quite like this retreat; it was not in
+ harmony with the youthful spirit of her sex, but she reflected that she
+ could come again,&mdash;O beneficent cheat of Another Time, how much thou
+ sparest us in our over-worked, over-enjoyed world!&mdash;she was very
+ comfortable where she was, in a seat commanding a perfect view for the
+ return trip; and she submitted without a murmur. Besides, now that the
+ boat had drawn up to the pier, and discharged part of her passengers, and
+ was waiting to take on others, Lucy was interested in a mass of fluttering
+ dresses and wide-rimmed straw hats that drew down toward the &ldquo;Rose
+ Standish,&rdquo; and gracefully thronged the pier, and prettily hesitated
+ about, and finally came aboard with laughter and little false cries of
+ terror, attended through all by the New England disproportion of that sex
+ which is so foolish when it is silly. It was a large picnic party which
+ had been spending the day upon the beach, as each of the ladies showed in
+ her face, where, if the roses upon her cheeks were somewhat obscured by
+ the imbrowning seaside sun, a bright pink had been compensatingly bestowed
+ upon the point of her nose. A mysterious quiet fell upon them all when
+ they were got aboard and had taken conspicuous places, which was accounted
+ for presently when a loud shout was heard from the shore, and a man beside
+ an ambulant photographic machine was seen wildly waving his hat. It is
+ impossible to resist a temptation of this kind, and our party all yielded,
+ and posed themselves in striking and characteristic attitudes,&mdash;even
+ Aunt Melissa sharing the ambition to appear in a picture which she should
+ never see, and the nurse coming out strong from the abeyance in which she
+ had been held, and lifting the baby high into the air for a good likeness.
+ The frantic gesticulator on the shore gave an impressive wave with both
+ hands, took the cap from the instrument, turned his back, as photographers
+ always do, with that air of hiding their tears, for the brief space that
+ seems so long, and then clapped on the cap again, while a great sigh of
+ relief went up from the whole boat-load of passengers. They were taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the interval had been a luckless one for the &ldquo;Rose Standish,&rdquo;
+ and when she stirred her wheels, clouds of mud rose to the top of the
+ water, and there was no responsive movement of the boat. She was aground
+ in the falling tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There seems a pretty fair prospect of our spending some time here,
+ after all,&rdquo; said Frank, while the ladies, who had reluctantly given
+ up the idea of staying, were now in a quiver of impatience to be off. The
+ picnic was shifted from side to side; the engine groaned and tugged,
+ Captain Miles Standish and his crew bestirred themselves vigorously, and
+ at last the boat swung loose, and strode down the sea-weedy channels;
+ while our friends, who had already done the great sights of the harbor,
+ now settled themselves to the enjoyment of its minor traits and beauties.
+ Here and there they passed small parties on the shore, which, with their
+ yachts anchored near, or their boats drawn up from the water, were cooking
+ an out-door meal by a fire that burned bright red upon the sands in the
+ late afternoon air. In such cases, people willingly indulge themselves in
+ saluting whatever craft goes by, and the ladies of these small picnics, as
+ they sat round the fires, kept up a great waving of handkerchiefs, and
+ sometimes cheered the &ldquo;Rose Standish,&rdquo; though I believe the
+ Bostonians are ordinarily not a demonstrative race. Of course the large
+ picnic on board fluttered multitudinous handkerchiefs in response, both to
+ these people ashore and to those who hailed them from vessels which they
+ met. They did not refuse the politeness even to the passengers on a rival
+ boat when she passed them, though at heart they must have felt some
+ natural pangs at being passed. The water was peopled everywhere by all
+ sorts of sail lagging slowly homeward in the light evening breeze; and on
+ some of the larger vessels there were family groups to be seen, and a
+ graceful smoke, suggestive of supper, curled from the cook's galley.
+ I suppose these ships were chiefly coasting craft, of one kind or another,
+ come from the Provinces at farthest; but to the ignorance and the fancy of
+ our friends, they arrived from all remote and romantic parts of the world,&mdash;from
+ India, from China, and from the South Seas, with cargoes of spices and
+ gums and tropical fruits; and I see no reason why one should ever deny
+ himself the easy pleasure they felt in painting the unknown in such lively
+ hues. The truth is, a strange ship, if you will let her, always brings you
+ precious freight, always arrives from Wonderland under the command of
+ Captain Sinbad. How like a beautiful sprite she looks afar off, as if she
+ came from some finer and fairer world than ours! Nay, we will not go out
+ to meet her; we will not go on board; Captain Sinbad shall bring us the
+ invoice of gold-dust, slaves, and rocs' eggs to-night, and we will
+ have some of the eggs for breakfast; or if he never comes, are we not just
+ as rich? But I think these friends of ours got a yet keener pleasure out
+ of the spectacle of a large and stately ship, that with all sails spread
+ moved silently and steadily out toward the open sea. It is yet grander and
+ sweeter to sail toward the unknown than to come from it; and every vessel
+ that leaves port has this destination, and will bear you thither if you
+ will.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;It may be that the gulf shall wash us down;
+ It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
+ And see the great Achilles, whom we knew,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ absently murmured Lucy, looking on this beautiful apparition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I can't help thinking of Ulysses' cabin-boy,
+ yonder,&rdquo; said Cousin Frank, after a pause; &ldquo;can you, Aunt
+ Melissa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand what you're talking about Franklin,&rdquo;
+ answered Aunt Melissa, somewhat severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I mean that there is a poor wretch of a boy on board there,
+ who's run away, and whose heart must be aching just now at the
+ thought of the home he has left. I hope Ulysses will be good to him, and
+ not swear at him for a day or two, or knock him about with a belaying-pin.
+ Just about this time his mother, up in the country, is getting ready his
+ supper, and wondering what's become of him, and torturing herself
+ with hopes that break one by one; and to-night when she goes up to his
+ empty room, having tried to persuade herself that the truant's come
+ back and climbed in at the window&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Why, Franklin, this
+ isn't true, is it?&rdquo; asks Aunt Melissa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no, let's pray Heaven it isn't, in this case. It's
+ been true often enough to be false for once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a great, ugly, black object a ship is!&rdquo; said Cousin
+ Lucy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly the city rose up against the distance, sharpening all its outlines,
+ and filling in all its familiar details,&mdash;like a fact which one
+ dreams is a dream, and which, as the mists of sleep break away, shows
+ itself for reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The air grows closer and warmer,&mdash;it is the breath of the hot and
+ toil-worn land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat makes her way up through the shipping, seeks her landing, and
+ presently rubs herself affectionately against the wharf. The passengers
+ quickly disperse themselves upon shore, dismissed each with an appropriate
+ sarcasm by the tipsy man, who has had the means of keeping himself drunk
+ throughout, and who now looks to the discharge of the boat's cargo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As our friends leave the wharf-house behind them, and straggle uneasily,
+ and very conscious of sunburn, up the now silent length of Pearl Street to
+ seek the nearest horse-cars, they are aware of a curious fidgeting of the
+ nurse, who flies from one side of the pavement to the other and violently
+ shifts the baby from one arm to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; asks Frank; but before the nurse
+ can answer, &ldquo;Thim little divils,&rdquo; he perceives that the
+ whooping-coughers of the morning have taken the occasion to renew a
+ pleasant acquaintance, and are surrounding the baby and nurse with an
+ atmosphere of whooping-cough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say, friends! we can't stand this, you know,&rdquo; says
+ the anxious father. &ldquo;We must part some time, and this is a favorable
+ moment. Now I'll give you all this, if you don't come another
+ step!&rdquo; and he empties out to them, from the hand-bags he carries,
+ the fragments of lunch which the frugal mind of Aunt Melissa had caused
+ her to store there. Upon these the whooping-coughers hurl themselves in a
+ body, and are soon left round the corner. Yet they would have been no
+ disgrace to our party, whose appearance was now most disreputable: Frank
+ and Lucy stalked ahead, with shawls dragging from their arms, the former
+ loaded down with hand-bags and the latter with India-rubbers; Aunt Melissa
+ came next under a burden of bloated umbrellas; the nurse last, with her
+ hat awry, and the baby a caricature of its morning trimness, in her
+ embrace. A day's pleasure is so demoralizing, that no party can
+ stand it, and come out neat and orderly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/5000.jpg" alt="5000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/5000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Frank,&rdquo; asked Lucy, awfully, &ldquo;what if we should
+ meet the Mayflowers now?&rdquo;&mdash;the Mayflowers being a very ancient
+ and noble Boston family whose acquaintance was the great pride and terror
+ of our friends' lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should cut them dead,&rdquo; said Frank, and scarcely spoke again
+ till his party dragged slowly up the steps of their minute suburban villa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door his wife met them with a troubled and anxious face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Calamities?&rdquo; asked Frank, desperately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, calamities upon calamities! We've got a lost child in the
+ kitchen,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Sallie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O good heavens!&rdquo; cried her husband. &ldquo;Adieu, my dreams
+ of repose, so desirable after the quantity of active enjoyment I've
+ had! Well, where is the lost child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ III.&mdash;THE EVENING
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the lost child?&rdquo; repeats Frank, desperately. &ldquo;Where
+ have you got him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the kitchen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why in the kitchen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How's baby?&rdquo; demands Mrs. Sallie, with the incoherent
+ suddenness of her sex, and running halfway down the steps to meet the
+ nurse. &ldquo;Um, um, um-m-m-m,&rdquo; sounds, which may stand for
+ smothered kisses of rapture and thanksgiving that baby is not a lost
+ child. &ldquo;Has he been good, Lucy? Take him off and give him some
+ cocoa, Mrs. O'Gonegal,&rdquo; she adds in her business-like way, and
+ with a little push to the combined nurse and baby, while Lucy answers,
+ &ldquo;O beautiful!&rdquo; and from that moment, being warned through all
+ her being by something in the other's tone, casts aside the matronly
+ manner which she has worn during the day, and lapses into the comfortable
+ irresponsibility of young-ladyhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What kind of a time did you have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Splendid!&rdquo; answers Lucy. &ldquo;Delightful, <i>I</i> think,&rdquo;
+ she adds, as if she thought others might not think so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose you found Gloucester a quaint old place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O,&rdquo; says Frank, &ldquo;we didn't go to Gloucester; we
+ found that the City Fathers had chartered the boat for the day, so we
+ thought we'd go to Nahant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you've seen your favorite Gardens of Maolis! What in the
+ world <i>are</i> they like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; we didn't see the Gardens of Maolis; the Nahant boat
+ was so crowded that we couldn't think of going on her, and so we
+ decided we'd drive over to the Liverpool Wharf and go down to
+ Nantasket Beach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was nice. I'm so glad on Aunt Melissa's account.
+ It's much better to see the ocean from a long beach than from those
+ Nahant rocks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's what <i>I</i> said. But, you know, when we got to the
+ wharf the boat had just left.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You <i>don't</i> mean it! Well, then, what under the canopy
+ <i>did</i> you do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, we sat down in the wharf-house, and waited from nine o'clock
+ till half-past two for the next boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'm glad you didn't back out, at any rate. You
+ did show pluck, you poor things! I hope you enjoyed the beach after you <i>did</i>
+ get there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; says Frank, looking down, &ldquo;we never got there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never got there!&rdquo; gasps Mrs. Sallie. &ldquo;Didn't you
+ go down on the afternoon boat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why didn't you get to the beach, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We didn't go ashore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that's <i>like</i> you, Frank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a great deal more like Aunt Melissa,&rdquo; answers
+ Frank. &ldquo;The air felt so raw and chilly by the time we reached the
+ pier, that she declared the baby would perish if it was taken to the
+ beach. Besides, nothing would persuade her that Nantasket Beach was at all
+ different from Liverpool Wharf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, never mind!&rdquo; says Mrs. Sallie. &ldquo;I don't
+ wish to hear anything more. That's your idea of a day's
+ pleasure, is it? I call it a day's disgrace, a day's miserable
+ giving-up. There, go in, go in; I'm ashamed of you all. Don't
+ let the neighbors see you, for pity's sake.&mdash;We keep him in the
+ kitchen,&rdquo; she continues, recurring to Frank's long-unanswered
+ question concerning the lost child, &ldquo;because he prefers it as being
+ the room nearest to the closet where the cookies are. He's taken
+ advantage of our sympathies to refuse everything but cookies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose that's one of the rights of lost childhood,&rdquo;
+ comments Frank, languidly; &ldquo;there's no law that can compel him
+ to touch even cracker.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you'd better go down and see what <i>you</i> can make
+ of him. He's driven <i>us</i> all wild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Frank descends to the region now redolent of the preparing tea, and
+ finds upon a chair, in the middle of the kitchen floor, a very forlorn
+ little figure of a boy, mutely munching a sweet-cake, while now and then a
+ tear steals down his cheeks and moistens the grimy traces of former tears.
+ He and baby are, in the mean time regarding each other with a steadfast
+ glare, the cook and the nurse supporting baby in this rite of hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my little man,&rdquo; says his host, &ldquo;how did you get
+ here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little man, perhaps because he is heartily sick of the question, is
+ somewhat slow to answer that there was a fire; and that he ran after the
+ steamer; and a girl found him and brought him up here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that's all the blessed thing you can get out of him,&rdquo;
+ says cook; and the lost boy looks as if he felt cook to be perfectly
+ right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the well-meant endeavors of the household to wash him and
+ brush him, he is still a dreadfully travel-stained little boy, and he is
+ powdered in every secret crease and wrinkle by that dust of old
+ Charlesbridge, of which we always speak with an air of affected disgust,
+ and a feeling of ill-concealed pride in an abomination so strikingly and
+ peculiarly our own. He looks very much as if he had been following
+ fire-engines about the streets of our learned and pulverous suburb ever
+ since he could walk, and he certainly seems to feel himself in trouble to
+ a certain degree; but there is easily imaginable in his bearing a
+ conviction that after all the chief care is with others, and that, though
+ unhappy, he is not responsible. The principal victim of his sorrows is
+ also penetrated by this opinion, and after gazing forlornly upon him for a
+ while, asks mechanically, &ldquo;What's your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy,&rdquo; is the laconic answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy&mdash;?&rdquo; trying with an artful inflection to lead him
+ on to his surname.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy,&rdquo; decidedly and conclusively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, bless me! What's the name of the street your papa lives
+ on?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This problem is far too deep for Freddy, and he takes a bite of sweet-cake
+ in sign that he does not think of solving it. Frank looks at him gloomily
+ for a moment, and then determines that he can grapple with the difficulty
+ more successfully after he has had tea. &ldquo;Send up the supper,
+ Bridget. I think, my dear,&rdquo; he says, after they have sat down,
+ &ldquo;we'd better all question our lost child when we've
+ finished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, when they have finished, they have him up in the sitting-room, and the
+ inquisition begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Freddy,&rdquo; his host says, with a cheerful air of lifelong
+ friendship and confidence, &ldquo;you know that everybody has got two
+ names. Of course your first name is Freddy, and it's a very pretty
+ name. Well, I want you to think real hard, and then tell me what your
+ other name is, so I can take you back to your mamma.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this allusion the child looks round on the circle of eager and
+ compassionate faces, and begins to shed tears and to wring all hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's your name?&rdquo; asks Frank, cheerfully,&mdash;&ldquo;your
+ <i>other</i> name, you know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freddy,&rdquo; sobbed the forlorn creature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O good heaven! this'll never do,&rdquo; groaned the chief
+ inquisitor. &ldquo;Now, Freddy, try not to cry. What is your papa's
+ name,&mdash;Mr.&mdash;?&rdquo; with the leading inflection as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa,&rdquo; says Freddy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/6000.jpg" alt="6000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/6000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, that'll never do! Not Mr. Papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; persists Freddy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Freddy,&rdquo; interposes Mrs. Sallie, as her husband falls
+ back baffled, &ldquo;when ladies come to see your mamma, what do they call
+ her? Mrs.&mdash;?&rdquo; adopting Frank's alluring inflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Mamma,&rdquo; answers Freddy, confirmed in his error by this
+ course; and a secret dismay possesses his questioners. They skirmish about
+ him with every sort of query; they try to entrap him into some kind of
+ revelation by apparently irrelevant remarks; they plan ambuscades and
+ surprises; but Freddy looks vigilantly round upon them, and guards his
+ personal history from every approach, and seems in every way so to have
+ the best of it, that it is almost exasperating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kindness has proved futile,&rdquo; observes Frank, &ldquo;and I
+ think we ought as a last resort, before yielding ourselves to despair, to
+ use intimidation. Now, Fred,&rdquo; he says, with sudden and terrible
+ severity, &ldquo;what's your father's name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hapless little soul is really moved to an effort of memory by this,
+ and blubbers out something that proves in the end to resemble the family
+ name, though for the present it is merely a puzzle of unintelligible
+ sounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blackman?&rdquo; cries Aunt Melissa, catching desperately at these
+ sounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this, all the man and brother is roused in Freddy's bosom, and he
+ roars fiercely, &ldquo;No! he ain't a black man! He's white!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I give it up,&rdquo; says Frank, who has been looking for his hat.
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid we can't make anything out of him; and I'll
+ have to go and report the case to the police. But, put him to bed, do,
+ Sallie; he's dropping with sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he went out, of course supported morally by a sense of duty, but I am
+ afraid also by a sense of adventure in some degree. It is not every day
+ that, in so quiet a place as Charlesbridge, you can have a lost child cast
+ upon your sympathies; and I believe that when an appeal is not really
+ agonizing, we like so well to have our sympathies touched, we favorites of
+ the prosperous commonplace, that most of us would enter eagerly into a
+ pathetic case of this kind, even after a day's pleasure. Such was
+ certainly the mood of my friend, and he unconsciously prepared himself for
+ an equal interest on the part of the police; but this was an error. The
+ police heard his statement with all proper attention, and wrote it in full
+ upon the station-slate, but they showed no feeling whatever, and behaved
+ as if they valued a lost child no more than a child snug at home in his
+ own crib. They said that no doubt his parents would be asking at the
+ police-stations for him during the night, and, as if my friend would
+ otherwise have thought of putting him into the street, they suggested that
+ he should just keep the lost child till he was sent for. Modestly enough
+ Frank proposed that they should make some inquiry for his parents, and was
+ answered by the question whether they could take a man off his beat for
+ that purpose; and remembering that beats in Charlesbridge were of such
+ vastness that during his whole residence there he had never yet seen a
+ policeman on his street, he was obliged to own to himself that his
+ proposal was absurd. He felt the need of reinstating himself by something
+ more sensible, and so he said he thought he would go down to the Port and
+ leave word at the station there; and the police tacitly assenting to this
+ he went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I who have sometimes hinted that the Square is not a centre of gayety, or
+ a scene of the greatest activity by day, feel it right to say that it has
+ some modest charms of its own on a summer's night, about the hour
+ when Frank passed through it, when the post-office has just been shut, and
+ when the different groups that haunt the place in front of the closing
+ shops have dwindled to the loungers fit though few who will keep it well
+ into the night, and may there be found, by the passenger on the last
+ horse-car out from Boston, wrapt in a kind of social silence, and
+ honorably attended by the policeman whose favored beat is in that
+ neighborhood. They seem a feature of the bygone village life of
+ Charlesbridge, and accord pleasantly with the town-pump and the public
+ horse-trough, and the noble elm that by night droops its boughs so
+ pensively, and probably dreams of its happy younger days when there were
+ no canker-worms in the world. Sometimes this choice company sits on the
+ curbing that goes round the terrace at the elm-tree's foot, and then
+ I envy every soul in it,&mdash;so tranquil it seems, so cool, so careless,
+ so morrowless. I cannot see the faces of that luxurious society, but there
+ I imagine is the local albino, and a certain blind man, who resorts
+ thither much by day, and makes a strange kind of jest of his own, with a
+ flicker of humor upon his sightless face, and a faith that others less
+ unkindly treated by nature will be able to see the point apparently not
+ always discernible to himself. Late at night I have a fancy that the
+ darkness puts him on an equality with other wits, and that he enjoys his
+ own brilliancy as well as any one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Port station Frank was pleased and soothed by the tranquil air of
+ the policeman, who sat in his shirt-sleeves outside the door, and seemed
+ to announce, by his attitude of final disoccupation, that crimes and
+ misdemeanors were no more. This officer at once showed a desirable
+ interest in the case. He put on his blue coat that he might listen to the
+ whole story in a proper figure, and then he took down the main points on
+ the slate, and said that they would send word round to the other stations
+ in the city, and the boy's parents could hardly help hearing of him
+ that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returned home, Frank gave his news, and then he and Mrs. Sallie went up to
+ look at the lost child as he slept. The sumptuous diet to which he had
+ confined himself from the first seemed to agree with him perfectly, for he
+ slept unbrokenly, and apparently without a consciousness of his woes. On a
+ chair lay his clothes, in a dusty little pathetic heap; they were
+ well-kept clothes, except for the wrong his wanderings had done them, and
+ they showed a motherly care here and there, which it was not easy to look
+ at with composure. The spectators of his sleep both thought of the curious
+ chance that had thrown this little one into their charge, and considered
+ that he was almost as completely a gift of the Unknown as if he had been
+ following a steamer in another planet, and had thence dropped into their
+ yard. His helplessness in accounting for himself was as affecting as that
+ of the sublimest metaphysician; and no learned man, no superior intellect,
+ no subtle inquirer among us lost children of the divine, forgotten home,
+ could have been less able to say how or whence he came to be just where he
+ found himself. We wander away and away; the dust of the road-side gathers
+ upon us; and when some strange shelter receives us, we lie down to our
+ sleep, inarticulate, and haunted with dreams of memory, or the memory of
+ dreams, knowing scarcely more of the past than of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a strange world!&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Sallie; and then, as this
+ was a mood far too speculative for her, she recalled herself to practical
+ life suddenly. &ldquo;If we should have to adopt this child, Frank&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Why,
+ bless my soul, we're not obliged to adopt him! Even a lost child can't
+ demand that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall adopt him, if they don't come for him. And now, I
+ want to know&rdquo; (Mrs. Sallie spoke as if the adoption had been
+ effected) &ldquo;whether we shall give him our name, or some other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don't know. It's the first child I've
+ ever adopted,&rdquo; said Frank &ldquo;and upon my word, I can't say
+ whether you have to give him a new name or not. In fact, if I'd
+ thought of this affair of a name, I'd never have adopted him. It's
+ the greatest part of the burden, and if his father will only come for him,
+ I'll give him up without a murmur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the interval that followed the proposal of this alarming difficulty,
+ and while he sat and waited vaguely for whatever should be going to happen
+ next, Frank was not able to repress a sense of personal resentment towards
+ the little vagrant sleeping so carelessly there, though at the bottom of
+ his heart there was all imaginable tenderness for him. In the fantastic
+ character which, to his weariness, the day's pleasure took on, it
+ seemed an extraordinary unkindness of fate that this lost child should
+ have been kept in reserve for him after all the rest; and he had so small
+ consciousness of bestowing shelter and charity, and so profound a feeling
+ of having himself been turned out of house and home by some surprising and
+ potent agency, that if the lost child had been a regiment of Fenians
+ billeted upon him, it could not have oppressed him more. While he remained
+ perplexed in this perverse sentiment of invasion and dispossession,
+ &ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; said Mrs. Sallie, &ldquo;what's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a noise of dragging and shuffling on the walk in front of the
+ house, and a low, hoarse whispering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Frank, &ldquo;but from the kind of
+ pleasure I've got out of it so far, I should say that this holiday
+ was capable of an earthquake before midnight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They listened, as they must, and heard the outer darkness rehearse a
+ raucous dialogue between an unseen Bill and Jim, who were the more
+ terrible to the imagination from being so realistically named, and who
+ seemed to have in charge some nameless third person, a mute actor in the
+ invisible scene. There was doubt, which he uttered, in the mind of Jim,
+ whether they could get this silent comrade along much farther without
+ carrying him; and there was a growling assent from Bill that he <i>was</i>
+ pretty far gone, that was a fact, and that maybe Jim <i>had</i> better go
+ for the wagon; then there were quick, retreating steps; and then there was
+ a profound silence, in which the audience of this strange drama sat
+ thrilled and speechless. The effect was not less dreadful when there rose
+ a dull sound, as of a helpless body rubbing against the fence, and at last
+ lowered heavily to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Sallie. &ldquo;Do go out and help. He's
+ dying!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even as she spoke the noise of wheels was heard. A wagon stopped
+ before the door; there came a tugging and lifting, with a sound as of
+ crunching gravel, and then a &ldquo;There!&rdquo; of great relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frank!&rdquo; said Mrs. Sallie very solemnly, &ldquo;if you don't
+ go out and help those men, I'll never forgive you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Really, the drama had grown very impressive; it was a mystery, to say the
+ least; and so it must remain forever, for when Frank, infected at last by
+ Mrs. Sallie's faith in tragedy, opened the door and offered his
+ tardy services, the wagon was driven rapidly away without reply. They
+ never learned what it had all been; and I think that if one actually
+ honors mysteries, it is best not to look into them. How much finer, after
+ all, if you have such a thing as this happen before your door at midnight,
+ not to throw any light upon it! Then your probable tipsy man cannot be
+ proved other than a tragical presence, which you can match with any
+ inscrutable creation of fiction; and if you should ever come to write a
+ romance, as one is very liable to do in this age, there is your unknown, a
+ figure of strange and fearful interest, made to your hand, and capable of
+ being used, in or out of the body, with a very gloomy effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While our friends yet trembled with this sensation, quick steps ascended
+ to their door, and then followed a sharp, anxious tug at the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Frank, prophetically, &ldquo;here's the
+ father of our adopted son;&rdquo; and he opened the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman who appeared there could scarcely frame the question to
+ which Frank replied so cheerfully: &ldquo;O yes; he's here, and snug
+ in bed, and fast asleep. Come up-stairs and look at him. Better let him be
+ till morning, and then come after him,&rdquo; he added, as they looked
+ down a moment on the little sleeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O no, I couldn't,&rdquo; said the father, <i>con expressione</i>;
+ and then he told how he had heard of this child's whereabouts at the
+ Port station, and had hurried to get him, and how his mother did not know
+ he was found yet, and was almost wild about him. They had no idea how he
+ had got lost, and his own blind story was the only tale of his adventure
+ that ever became known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time his father had got the child partly awake, and the two men
+ were dressing him in men's clumsy fashion; and finally they gave it
+ up, and rolled him in a shawl. The father lifted the slight burden, and
+ two small arms fell about his neck. The weary child slept again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How has he behaved?&rdquo; asked the father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like a little hero,&rdquo; said Frank, &ldquo;but he's been a
+ cormorant for cookies. I think it right to tell you, in case he shouldn't
+ be very brilliant to-morrow, that he wouldn't eat a bit of anything
+ else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father said he was the life of their house; and Frank said he knew how
+ that was,&mdash;that he had a life of the house of his own; and then the
+ father thanked him very simply and touchingly, and with the decent New
+ England self-restraint, which is doubtless so much better than any sort of
+ effusion. &ldquo;Say good-night to the gentleman, Freddy,&rdquo; he said
+ at the door; and Freddy with closed eyes murmured a good-night from far
+ within the land of dreams, and then was borne away to the house out of
+ which the life had wandered with his little feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know, Sallie,&rdquo; said Frank, when he had given
+ all the eagerly demanded particulars about the child's father,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ don't know whether I should want many such holidays as this, in the
+ course of the summer. On the whole, I think I'd better overwork
+ myself and not take any relaxation, if I mean to live long. And yet I'm
+ not sure that the day's been altogether a failure, though all our
+ purposes of enjoyment have miscarried. I didn't plan to find a lost
+ child here, when I got home, and I'm afraid I haven't had
+ always the most Christian feeling towards him; but he's really the
+ saving grace of the affair; and if this were a little comedy I had been
+ playing, I should turn him to account with the jaded audience, and
+ advancing to the foot-lights, should say, with my hand on my waistcoat,
+ and a neat bow, that although every hope of the day had been disappointed,
+ and nothing I had meant to do had been done, yet the man who had ended at
+ midnight by restoring a lost child to the arms of its father, must own
+ that, in spite of adverse fortune, he had enjoyed A Day's Pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/7000.jpg" alt="7000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/7000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was long past the twilight hour, which has been already mentioned as so
+ oppressive in suburban places, and it was even too late for visitors, when
+ a resident, whom I shall briefly describe as a Contributor to the
+ magazines, was startled by a ring at his door. As any thoughtful person
+ would have done upon the like occasion, he ran over his acquaintance in
+ his mind, speculating whether it were such or such a one, and dismissing
+ the whole list of improbabilities, before he laid down the book he was
+ reading, and answered the bell. When at last he did this, he was rewarded
+ by the apparition of an utter stranger on his threshold,&mdash;a gaunt
+ figure of forlorn and curious smartness towering far above him, that
+ jerked him a nod of the head, and asked if Mr. Hapford lived there. The
+ face which the lamp-light revealed was remarkable for a harsh two days'
+ growth of beard, and a single bloodshot eye; yet it was not otherwise a
+ sinister countenance, and there was something in the strange presence that
+ appealed and touched. The contributor, revolving the facts vaguely in his
+ mind, was not sure, after all, that it was not the man's clothes
+ rather than his expression that softened him toward the rugged visage:
+ they were so tragically cheap, and the misery of helpless needlewomen, and
+ the poverty and ignorance of the purchaser, were so apparent in their
+ shabby newness, of which they appeared still conscious enough to have led
+ the way to the very window, in the Semitic quarter of the city, where they
+ had lain ticketed, &ldquo;This nobby suit for $15.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the stranger's manner put both his face and his clothes out of
+ mind, and claimed a deeper interest when, being answered that the person
+ for whom he asked did not live there, he set his bristling lips hard
+ together, and sighed heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They told me,&rdquo; he said, in a hopeless way, &ldquo;that he
+ lived on this street, and I've been to every other house. I'm
+ very anxious to find him, Cap'n,&rdquo;&mdash;the contributor, of
+ course, had no claim to the title with which he was thus decorated,&mdash;&ldquo;for
+ I've a daughter living with him, and I want to see her; I've
+ just got home from a two years' voyage, and&rdquo;&mdash;there was a
+ struggle of the Adam's-apple in the man's gaunt throat&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ find she's about all there is left of my family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How complex is every human motive! This contributor had been lately
+ thinking, whenever he turned the pages of some foolish traveller,&mdash;some
+ empty prattler of Southern or Eastern lands, where all sensation was long
+ ago exhausted, and the oxygen has perished from every sentiment, so has it
+ been breathed and breathed again,&mdash;that nowadays the wise adventurer
+ sat down beside his own register and waited for incidents to seek him out.
+ It seemed to him that the cultivation of a patient and receptive spirit
+ was the sole condition needed to insure the occurrence of all manner of
+ surprising facts within the range of one's own personal knowledge;
+ that not only the Greeks were at our doors, but the fairies and the genii,
+ and all the people of romance, who had but to be hospitably treated in
+ order to develop the deepest interest of fiction, and to become the
+ characters of plots so ingenious that the most cunning invention were poor
+ beside them. I myself am not so confident of this, and would rather trust
+ Mr. Charles Reade, say, for my amusement than any chance combination of
+ events. But I should be afraid to say how much his pride in the character
+ of the stranger's sorrows, as proof of the correctness of his
+ theory, prevailed with the contributor to ask him to come in and sit down;
+ though I hope that some abstract impulse of humanity, some compassionate
+ and unselfish care for the man's misfortunes as misfortunes, was not
+ wholly wanting. Indeed, the helpless simplicity with which he had confided
+ his case might have touched a harder heart. &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said
+ the poor fellow, after a moment's hesitation. &ldquo;I believe I
+ will come in. I've been on foot all day, and after such a long
+ voyage it makes a man dreadfully sore to walk about so much. Perhaps you
+ can think of a Mr. Hapford living somewhere in the neighborhood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down, and, after a pondering silence, in which he had remained with
+ his head fallen upon his breast, &ldquo;My name is Jonathan Tinker,&rdquo;
+ he said, with the unaffected air which had already impressed the
+ contributor, and as if he felt that some form of introduction was
+ necessary, &ldquo;and the girl that I want to find is Julia Tinker.&rdquo;
+ Then he added, resuming the eventful personal history which the listener
+ exulted, while he regretted, to hear: &ldquo;You see, I shipped first to
+ Liverpool, and there I heard from my family; and then I shipped again for
+ Hong-Kong, and after that I never heard a word: I seemed to miss the
+ letters everywhere. This morning, at four o'clock, I left my ship as
+ soon as she had hauled into the dock, and hurried up home. The house was
+ shut, and not a soul in it; and I didn't know what to do, and I sat
+ down on the doorstep to wait till the neighbors woke up, to ask them what
+ had become of my family. And the first one come out he told me my wife had
+ been dead a year and a half, and the baby I'd never seen, with her;
+ and one of my boys was dead; and he didn't know where the rest of
+ the children was, but he'd heard two of the little ones was with a
+ family in the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man mentioned these things with the half-apologetic air observable in
+ a certain kind of Americans when some accident obliges them to confess the
+ infirmity of the natural feelings. They do not ask your sympathy, and you
+ offer it quite at your own risk, with a chance of having it thrown back
+ upon your hands. The contributor assumed the risk so far as to say,
+ &ldquo;Pretty rough!&rdquo; when the stranger caused; and perhaps these
+ homely words were best suited to reach the homely heart. The man's
+ quavering lips closed hard again, a kind of spasm passed over his dark
+ face, and then two very small drops of brine shone upon his weather-worn
+ cheeks. This demonstration, into which he had been surprised, seemed to
+ stand for the passion of tears into which the emotional races fall at such
+ times. He opened his lips with a kind of dry click, and went on:&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ hunted about the whole forenoon in the city, and at last I found the
+ children. I'd been gone so long they didn't know me, and
+ somehow I thought the people they were with weren't over-glad I'd
+ turned up. Finally the oldest child told me that Julia was living with a
+ Mr. Hapford on this street, and I started out here to-night to look her
+ up. If I can find her, I'm all right. I can get the family together,
+ then, and start new.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems rather odd,&rdquo; mused the listener aloud, &ldquo;that
+ the neighbors let them break up so, and that they should all scatter as
+ they did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it ain't so curious as it seems, Cap'n. There was
+ money for them at the owners', all the time; I'd left part of
+ my wages when I sailed; but they didn't know how to get at it, and
+ what could a parcel of children do? Julia's a good girl, and when I
+ find her I'm all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writer could only repeat that there was no Mr. Hapford living on that
+ street, and never had been, so far as he knew. Yet there might be such a
+ person in the neighborhood; and they would go out together, and ask at
+ some of the houses about. But the stranger must first take a glass of
+ wine; for he looked used up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailor awkwardly but civilly enough protested that he did not want to
+ give so much trouble, but took the glass, and, as he put it to his lips,
+ said formally, as if it were a toast or a kind of grace, &ldquo;I hope I
+ may have the opportunity of returning the compliment.&rdquo; The
+ contributor thanked him; though, as he thought of all the circumstances of
+ the case, and considered the cost at which the stranger had come to enjoy
+ his politeness, he felt little eagerness to secure the return of the
+ compliment at the same price, and added, with the consequence of another
+ set phrase, &ldquo;Not at all.&rdquo; But the thought had made him the
+ more anxious to befriend the luckless soul fortune had cast in his way;
+ and so the two sallied out together, and rang door-bells wherever lights
+ were still seen burning in the windows, and asked the astonished people
+ who answered their summons whether any Mr. Hapford were known to live in
+ the neighborhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And although the search for this gentleman proved vain, the contributor
+ could not feel that an expedition which set familiar objects in such novel
+ light? was altogether a failure. He entered so intimately into the cares
+ and anxieties of his <i>protege,</i> that at times he felt himself in some
+ inexplicable sort a shipmate of Jonathan Tinker, and almost personally a
+ partner of his calamities. The estrangement of all things which takes
+ place, within doors and without, about midnight may have helped to cast
+ this doubt upon his identity;&mdash;he seemed to be visiting now for the
+ first time the streets and neighborhoods nearest his own, and his feet
+ stumbled over the accustomed walks. In his quality of houseless wanderer,
+ and&mdash;so far as appeared to others&mdash;possibly worthless vagabond,
+ he also got a new and instructive effect upon the faces which, in his real
+ character, he knew so well by their looks of neighborly greeting; and it
+ is his belief that the first hospitable prompting of the human heart is to
+ shut the door in the eyes of homeless strangers who present themselves
+ after eleven o'clock. By that time the servants are all abed, and
+ the gentleman of the house answers the bell, and looks out with a loath
+ and bewildered face, which gradually changes to one of suspicion, and of
+ wonder as to what those fellows can possibly want of <i>him,</i> till at
+ last the prevailing expression is one of contrite desire to atone for the
+ first reluctance by any sort of service. The contributor professes to have
+ observed these changing phases in the visages of those whom he that night
+ called from their dreams, or arrested in the act of going to bed; and he
+ drew the conclusion&mdash;very proper for his imaginable connection with
+ the garroting and other adventurous brotherhoods&mdash;that the most
+ flattering moment for knocking on the head people who answer a late ring
+ at night is either in their first selfish bewilderment, or their final
+ self-abandonment to their better impulses. It does not seem to have
+ occurred to him that he would himself have been a much more favorable
+ subject for the predatory arts that any of his neighbors, if his shipmate,
+ the unknown companion of his researches for Mr. Hapford, had been at all
+ so minded. But the faith of the gaunt giant upon which he reposed was
+ good, and the contributor continued to wander about with him in perfect
+ safety. Not a soul among those they asked had ever heard of a Mr. Hapford,&mdash;far
+ less of a Julia Tinker living with him. But they all listened to the
+ contributor's explanation with interest and eventual sympathy; and
+ in truth,&mdash;briefly told, with a word now and then thrown in by
+ Jonathan Tinker, who kept at the bottom of the steps, showing like a
+ gloomy spectre in the night, or, in his grotesque length and gauntness,
+ like the other's shadow cast there by the lamplight,&mdash;it was a
+ story which could hardly fail to awaken pity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, after ringing several bells where there were no lights, in the
+ mere wantonness of good-will, and going away before they could be answered
+ (it would be entertaining to know what dreams they caused the sleepers
+ within), there seemed to be nothing for it but to give up the search till
+ morning, and go to the main street and wait for the last horse-car to the
+ city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, seated upon the curbstone, Jonathan Tinker, being plied with a few
+ leading questions, told in hints and scraps the story of his hard life,
+ which was at present that of a second mate, and had been that of a
+ cabin-boy and of a seaman before the mast. The second mate's place
+ he held to be the hardest aboard ship. You got only a few dollars more
+ than the men, and you did not rank with the officers; you took your meals
+ alone, and in every thing you belonged by yourself. The men did not
+ respect you, and sometimes the captain abused you awfully before the
+ passengers. The hardest captain that Jonathan Tinker ever sailed with was
+ Captain Gooding of the Cape. It had got to be so that no man would ship
+ second mate under Captain Gooding; and Jonathan Tinker was with him only
+ one voyage. When he had been home awhile, he saw an advertisement for a
+ second mate, and he went round to the owners'. They had kept it
+ secret who the captain was; but there was Captain Gooding in the owners'
+ office. &ldquo;Why, here's the man, now, that I want for a second
+ mate,&rdquo; said he, when Jonathan Tinker entered; &ldquo;he knows me.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Captain
+ Gooding, I know you 'most too well to want to sail under you,&rdquo;
+ answered Jonathan. &ldquo;I might go if I hadn't been with you one
+ voyage too many already.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then the men!&rdquo; said Jonathan, &ldquo;the men coming
+ aboard drunk, and having to be pounded sober! And the hardest of the fight
+ falls on the second mate! Why, there isn't an inch of me that hasn't
+ been cut over or smashed into a jell. I've had three ribs broken; I've
+ got a scar from a knife on my cheek; and I've been stabbed bad
+ enough, half a dozen times, to lay me up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he gave a sort of desperate laugh, as if the notion of so much misery
+ and such various mutilation were too grotesque not to be amusing. &ldquo;Well,
+ what can you do?&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;If you don't strike, the
+ men think you're afraid of them; and so you have to begin hard and
+ go on hard. I always tell a man, 'Now, my man, I always begin with a
+ man the way I mean to keep on. You do your duty and you're all
+ right. But if you don't'&mdash;Well, the men ain't
+ Americans any more,&mdash;Dutch, Spaniards, Chinese, Portuguee,&mdash;and
+ it ain't like abusing a white man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jonathan Tinker was plainly part of the horrible tyranny which we all know
+ exists on shipboard; and his listener respected him the more that, though
+ he had heart enough to be ashamed of it, he was too honest not to own it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did he still follow the sea? Because he did not know what else to do.
+ When he was younger, he used to love it, but now he hated it. Yet there
+ was not a prettier life in the world if you got to be captain. He used to
+ hope for that once, but not now; though he <i>thought</i> he could
+ navigate a ship. Only let him get his family together again, and he would&mdash;yes,
+ he would&mdash;try to do something ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No car had yet come in sight, and so the contributor suggested that they
+ should walk to the car-office, and look in the &ldquo;Directory,&rdquo;
+ which is kept there, for the name of Hapford, in search of whom it had
+ already been arranged that they should renew their acquaintance on the
+ morrow. Jonathan Tinker, when they had reached the office, heard with
+ constitutional phlegm that the name of the Hapford, for whom he inquired
+ was not in the &ldquo;Directory.&rdquo; &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said the
+ other; &ldquo;come round to my house in the morning. We'll find him
+ yet.&rdquo; So they parted with a shake of the hand, the second mate
+ saying that he believed he should go down to the vessel and sleep aboard,&mdash;if
+ he could sleep,&mdash;and murmuring at the last moment the hope of
+ returning the compliment, while the other walked homeward, weary as to the
+ flesh, but, in spite of his sympathy for Jonathan Tinker, very elate in
+ spirit. The truth is,&mdash;and however disgraceful to human nature, let
+ the truth still be told,&mdash;he had recurred to his primal satisfaction
+ in the man as calamity capable of being used for such and such literary
+ ends, and, while he pitied him, rejoiced in him as an episode of real life
+ quite as striking and complete as anything in fiction. It was literature
+ made to his hand. Nothing could be better, he mused; and once more he
+ passed the details of the story in review, and beheld all those pictures
+ which the poor fellow's artless words had so vividly conjured up: he
+ saw him leaping ashore in the gray summer dawn as soon as the ship hauled
+ into the dock, and making his way, with his vague sea-legs unaccustomed to
+ the pavements, up through the silent and empty city streets; he imagined
+ the tumult of fear and hope which the sight of the man's home must
+ have caused in him, and the benumbing shock of finding it blind and deaf
+ to all his appeals; he saw him sitting down upon what had been his own
+ threshold, and waiting in a sort of bewildered patience till the neighbors
+ should be awake, while the noises of the streets gradually arose, and the
+ wheels began to rattle over the stones, and the milk-man and the ice-man
+ came and went, and the waiting figure began to be stared at, and to
+ challenge the curiosity of the passing policeman; he fancied the opening
+ of the neighbor's door, and the slow, cold understanding of the
+ case; the manner, whatever it was, in which the sailor was told that one
+ year before his wife had died, with her babe, and that his children were
+ scattered, none knew where. As the contributor dwelt pityingly upon these
+ things, but at the same time estimated their aesthetic value one by one,
+ he drew near the head of his street, and found himself a few paces behind
+ a boy slouching onward through the night, to whom he called out,
+ adventurously, and with no real hope of information,&mdash;&ldquo;Do you
+ happen to know anybody on this street by the name of Hapford?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why no, not in this town,&rdquo; said the boy; but he added that
+ there was a street of the same name in a neighboring suburb, and that
+ there was a Hapford living on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Jove!&rdquo; thought the contributor, &ldquo;this is more like
+ literature than ever;&rdquo; and he hardly knew whether to be more
+ provoked at his own stupidity in not thinking of a street of the same name
+ in the next village, or delighted at the element of fatality which the
+ fact introduced into the story; for Tinker, according to his own account,
+ must have landed from the cars a few rods from the very door he was
+ seeking, and so walked farther and farther from it every moment. He
+ thought the case so curious, that he laid it briefly before the boy, who,
+ however he might have been inwardly affected, was sufficiently true to the
+ national traditions not to make the smallest conceivable outward sign of
+ concern in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home, however, the contributor related his adventures and the story of
+ Tinker's life, adding the fact that he had just found out where Mr.
+ Hapford lived. &ldquo;It was the only touch wanting,&rdquo; said he;
+ &ldquo;the whole thing is now perfect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's <i>too</i> perfect,&rdquo; was answered from a sad
+ enthusiasm. &ldquo;Don't speak of it! I can't take it in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the question is,&rdquo; said the contributor, penitently taking
+ himself to task for forgetting the hero of these excellent misfortunes in
+ his delight at their perfection, &ldquo;how am I to sleep to-night,
+ thinking of that poor soul's suspense and uncertainty? Never mind,&mdash;I'll
+ be up early, and run over and make sure that it is Tinker's Hapford,
+ before he gets out here, and have a pleasant surprise for him. Would it
+ not be a justifiable <i>coup de théâtre</i> to fetch his daughter here,
+ and let her answer his ring at the door when he comes in the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plan was discouraged. &ldquo;No, no; let them meet in their own way.
+ Just take him to Hapford's house and leave him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well. But he's too good a character to lose sight of. He's
+ got to come back here and tell us what he intends to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The birds, next morning, not having had the second mate on their minds
+ either as an unhappy man or a most fortunate episode, but having slept
+ long and soundly, were singing in a very sprightly way in the way-side
+ trees; and the sweetness of their notes made the contributor's heart
+ light as he climbed the hill and rang at Mr. Hapford's door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was opened by a young girl of fifteen or sixteen, whom he knew at
+ a glance for the second mate's daughter, but of whom, for form's
+ sake, he asked if there were a girl named Julia Tinker living there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name's Julia Tinker,&rdquo; answered the maid, who had
+ rather a disappointing face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the contributor, &ldquo;your father's got
+ back from his Hong-Kong voyage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hong-Kong voyage?&rdquo; echoed the girl, with a stare of helpless
+ inquiry, but no other visible emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. He had never heard of your mother's death. He came home
+ yesterday morning, and was looking for you all day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julia Tinker remained open-mouthed but mute; and the other was puzzled at
+ the want of feeling shown, which he could not account for even as a
+ national trait. &ldquo;Perhaps there's some mistake,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There must be,&rdquo; answered Julia: &ldquo;my father hasn't
+ been to sea for a good many years. <i>My</i> father,&rdquo; she added,
+ with a diffidence indescribably mingled with a sense of distinction,&mdash;&ldquo;<i>my</i>
+ father's in State's Prison. What kind of looking man was this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contributor mechanically described him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julia Tinker broke into a loud, hoarse laugh. &ldquo;Yes, it's him,
+ sure enough.&rdquo; And then, as if the joke were too good to keep:
+ &ldquo;Miss Hapford, Miss Hapford, father's got out. Do come here!&rdquo;
+ she called into a back room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Mrs. Hapford appeared, Julia fell back, and, having deftly caught a
+ fly on the door-post, occupied herself in plucking it to pieces, while she
+ listened to the conversation of the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's all true enough,&rdquo; said Mrs. Hapford, when the
+ writer had recounted the moving story of Jonathan Tinker, &ldquo;so far as
+ the death of his wife and baby goes. But he hasn't been to sea for a
+ good many years, and he must have just come out of State's Prison,
+ where he was put for bigamy. There's always two sides to a story,
+ you know; but they say it broke his first wife's heart, and she
+ died. His friends don't want him to find his children, and this girl
+ especially.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's found his children in the city,&rdquo; said the
+ contributor, gloomily, being at a loss what to do or say, in view of the
+ wreck of his romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, he's found 'em has he?&rdquo; cried Julia, with
+ heightened amusement. &ldquo;Then he'll have me next, if I don't
+ pack and go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm very, very sorry,&rdquo; said the contributor, secretly
+ resolved never to do another good deed, no matter how temptingly the
+ opportunity presented itself. &ldquo;But you may depend he won't
+ find out from <i>me</i> where you are. Of course I had no earthly reason
+ for supposing his story was not true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said kind-hearted Mrs. Hapford, mingling a drop
+ of honey with the gall in the contributor's soul, &ldquo;you only
+ did your duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed, as he turned away he did not feel altogether without
+ compensation. However Jonathan Tinker had fallen in his esteem as a man,
+ he had even risen as literature. The episode which had appeared so perfect
+ in its pathetic phases did not seem less finished as a farce; and this
+ person, to whom all things of every-day life presented themselves in
+ periods more or less rounded, and capable of use as facts or
+ illustrations, could not but rejoice in these new incidents, as
+ dramatically fashioned as the rest. It occurred to him that, wrought into
+ a story, even better use might be made of the facts now than before, for
+ they had developed questions of character and of human nature which could
+ not fail to interest. The more he pondered upon his acquaintance with
+ Jonathan Tinker, the more fascinating the erring mariner became, in his
+ complex truth and falsehood, his delicately blending shades of artifice
+ and <i>naïveté.</i> He must, it was felt, have believed to a certain point
+ in his own inventions: nay, starting with that groundwork of truth,&mdash;the
+ fact that his wife was really dead, and that he had not seen his family
+ for two years,&mdash;why should he not place implicit faith in all the
+ fictions reared upon it? It was probable that he felt a real sorrow for
+ her loss, and that he found a fantastic consolation in depicting the
+ circumstances of her death so that they should look like his inevitable
+ misfortunes rather than his faults. He might well have repented his
+ offense during those two years of prison; and why should he not now cast
+ their dreariness and shame out of his memory, and replace them with the
+ freedom and adventure of a two years' voyage to China,&mdash;so
+ probable, in all respects, that the fact should appear an impossible
+ nightmare? In the experiences of his life he had abundant material to
+ furnish forth the facts of such a voyage, and in the weariness and
+ lassitude that should follow a day's walking equally after a two
+ years' voyage and two years' imprisonment, he had as much
+ physical proof in favor of one hypothesis as the other. It was doubtless
+ true, also, as he said, that he had gone to his house at dawn, and sat
+ down on the threshold of his ruined home; and perhaps he felt the desire
+ he had expressed to see his daughter, with a purpose of beginning life
+ anew; and it may have cost him a veritable pang when he found that his
+ little ones did not know him. All the sentiments of the situation were
+ such as might persuade a lively fancy of the truth of its own inventions;
+ and as he heard these continually repeated by the contributor in their
+ search for Mr. Hapford, they must have acquired an objective force and
+ repute scarcely to be resisted. At the same time, there were touches of
+ nature throughout Jonathan Tinker's narrative which could not fail
+ to take the faith of another. The contributor, in reviewing it, thought it
+ particularly charming that his mariner had not overdrawn himself, or
+ attempted to paint his character otherwise than as it probably was; that
+ he had shown his ideas and practices of life to be those of a second mate,
+ nor more nor less, without the gloss of regret or the pretenses to
+ refinement that might be pleasing to the supposed philanthropist with whom
+ he had fallen in. Captain Gooding was of course a true portrait; and there
+ was nothing in Jonathan Tinker's statement of the relations of a
+ second mate to his superiors and his inferiors which did not agree
+ perfectly with what the contributor had just read in &ldquo;Two Years
+ before the Mast,&rdquo;&mdash;a book which had possibly cast its glamour
+ upon the adventure. He admired also the just and perfectly characteristic
+ air of grief in the bereaved husband and father,&mdash;those occasional
+ escapes from the sense of loss into a brief hilarity and forgetfulness,
+ and those relapses into the hovering gloom, which every one has observed
+ in this poor, crazy human nature when oppressed by sorrow, and which it
+ would have been hard to simulate. But, above all, he exulted in that
+ supreme stroke of the imagination given by the second mate when, at
+ parting, he said he believed he would go down and sleep on board the
+ vessel. In view of this, the State's Prison theory almost appeared a
+ malign and foolish scandal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet even if this theory were correct, was the second mate wholly
+ answerable for beginning his life again with the imposture he had
+ practiced? The contributor had either so fallen in love with the literary
+ advantages of his forlorn deceiver that he would see no moral obliquity in
+ him, or he had touched a subtler verity at last in pondering the affair.
+ It seemed now no longer a farce, but had a pathos which, though very
+ different from that of its first aspect, was hardly less tragical. Knowing
+ with what coldness, or, at the best, uncandor, he (representing Society in
+ its attitude toward convicted Error) would have met the fact had it been
+ owned to him at first, he had not virtue enough to condemn the illusory
+ stranger, who must have been helpless to make at once evident any
+ repentance he felt or good purpose he cherished. Was it not one of the
+ saddest consequences of the man's past,&mdash;a dark necessity of
+ misdoing,&mdash;that, even with the best will in the world to retrieve
+ himself, his first endeavor must involve a wrong? Might he not, indeed, be
+ considered a martyr, in some sort, to his own admirable impulses? I can
+ see clearly enough where the contributor was astray in this reasoning, but
+ I can also understand how one accustomed to value realities only as they
+ resembled fables should be won with such pensive sophistry; and I can
+ certainly sympathize with his feeling that the mariner's failure to
+ reappear according to appointment added its final and most agreeable charm
+ to the whole affair, and completed the mystery from which the man emerged
+ and which swallowed him up again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SCENE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On that loveliest autumn morning, the swollen tide had spread over all the
+ russet levels, and gleamed in the sunlight a mile away. As the contributor
+ moved onward down the street, luminous on either hand with crimsoning and
+ yellowing maples, he was so filled with the tender serenity of the scene,
+ as not to be troubled by the spectacle of small Irish houses standing
+ miserably about on the flats ankle deep, as it were, in little pools of
+ the tide, or to be aware at first, of a strange stir of people upon the
+ streets: a fluttering to and fro and lively encounter and separation of
+ groups of bareheaded women, a flying of children through the broken fences
+ of the neighborhood, and across the vacant lots on which the insulted
+ sign-boards forbade them to trespass; a sluggish movement of men through
+ all, and a pause of different vehicles along the sidewalks. When a sense
+ of these facts had penetrated his enjoyment, he asked a matron whose snowy
+ arms, freshly taken from the wash-tub, were folded across a mighty chest,
+ &ldquo;What is the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A girl drowned herself, sir-r-r, over there on the flats, last
+ Saturday, and they're looking for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the best thing she could do,&rdquo; said another matron
+ grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this answer that literary soul fell at once to patching himself up a
+ romantic story for the suicide, after the pitiful fashion of this
+ fiction-ridden age, when we must relate everything we see to something we
+ have read. He was the less to blame for it, because he could not help it;
+ but certainly he is not to be praised for his associations with the tragic
+ fact brought to his notice. Nothing could have been more trite or obvious,
+ and he felt his intellectual poverty so keenly that he might almost have
+ believed his discomfort a sympathy for the girl who had drowned herself
+ last Saturday. But of course, this could not be, for he had but lately
+ been thinking what a very tiresome figure to the imagination the Fallen
+ Woman had become. As a fact of Christian civilization, she was a spectacle
+ to wring one's heart, he owned; but he wished she were well out of
+ the romances, and it really seemed a fatality that she should be the
+ principal personage of this little scene. The preparation for it, whatever
+ it was to be, was so deliberate, and the reality had so slight relation to
+ the French roofs and modern improvements of the comfortable Charlesbridge
+ which he knew, that he could not consider himself other than as a
+ spectator awaiting some entertainment, with a faint inclination to be
+ critical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mean time there passed through the motley crowd, not so much a cry
+ as a sensation of &ldquo;They've found her, they've found her!&rdquo;
+ and then the one terrible picturesque fact, &ldquo;She was standing
+ upright!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this there was wilder and wilder clamor among the people, dropping by
+ degrees and almost dying away, before a flight of boys came down the
+ street with the tidings, &ldquo;They are bringing her&mdash;bringing her
+ in a wagon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contributor knew that she whom they were bringing in the wagon, had
+ had the poetry of love to her dismal and otherwise squalid death; but the
+ history was of fancy, not of fact in his mind. Of course, he reflected,
+ her lot must have been obscure and hard; the aspect of those concerned
+ about her death implied that. But of her hopes and her fears, who could
+ tell him anything? To be sure he could imagine the lovers, and how they
+ first met, and where, and who he was that was doomed to work her shame and
+ death; but here his fancy came upon something coarse and common: a man of
+ her own race and grade, handsome after that manner of beauty which is so
+ much more hateful than ugliness is; or, worse still, another kind of man
+ whose deceit must have been subtler and wickeder; but whatever the person,
+ a presence defiant of sympathy or even interest, and simply horrible. Then
+ there were the details of the affair, in great degree common to all love
+ affairs, and not varying so widely in any condition of life; for the
+ passion which is so rich and infinite to those within its charm, is apt to
+ seem a little tedious and monotonous in its character, and poor in
+ resources to the cold looker-on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, finally, there was the crazy purpose and its fulfillment: the
+ headlong plunge from bank or bridge; the eddy, and the bubbles on the
+ current that calmed itself above the suicide; the tide that rose and
+ stretched itself abroad in the sunshine, carrying hither and thither the
+ burden with which it knew not what to do; the arrest, as by some ghastly
+ caprice of fate, of the dead girl, in that upright posture, in which she
+ should meet the quest for her, as it were defiantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now they were bringing her in a wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Involuntarily all stood aside, and waited till the funeral car, which they
+ saw, should come up toward them through the long vista of the maple-shaded
+ street, a noiseless riot stirring the legs and arms of the boys into
+ frantic demonstration, while the women remained quiet with arms folded or
+ akimbo. Before and behind the wagon, driven slowly, went a guard of ragged
+ urchins, while on the raised seat above sat two Americans, unperturbed by
+ anything, and concerned merely with the business of the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vehicle was a grocer's cart which had perhaps been pressed into
+ the service; and inevitably the contributor thought of Zenobia, and of
+ Miles Coverdale's belief that if she could have foreboded all the <i>post-mortem</i>
+ ugliness and grotesqueness of suicide, she never would have drowned
+ herself. This girl, too, had doubtless had her own ideas of the effect
+ that her death was to make, her conviction that it was to wring one heart,
+ at least, and to strike awe and pity to every other; and her woman's
+ soul must have been shocked from death could she have known in what a
+ ghastly comedy the body she put off was to play a part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the bottom of the cart lay something long and straight and terrible,
+ covered with a red shawl that drooped over the end of the wagon; and on
+ this thing were piled the baskets in which the grocers had delivered their
+ orders for sugar and flour, and coffee and tea. As the cart jolted through
+ their lines, the boys could no longer be restrained; they broke out with
+ wild yells, and danced madly about it, while the red shawl hanging from
+ the rigid feet nodded to their frantic mirth; and the sun dropped its
+ light through the maples and shone bright upon the flooded date.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JUBILEE DAYS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I believe I have no good reason for including among these suburban
+ sketches my recollections of the Peace Jubilee, celebrated by a monster
+ musical entertainment at Boston, in June, 1869; and I do not know if it
+ will serve as excuse for their intrusion to say that the exhibition was
+ not urban in character, and that I attended it in a feeling of curiosity
+ and amusement which the Bostonians did not seem to feel, and which I
+ suspect was a strictly suburban if not rural sentiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought, on that Tuesday morning, as our horse-car drew near the Long
+ Bridge, and we saw the Coliseum spectral through the rain, that Boston was
+ going to show people representing other parts of the country her Notion of
+ weather. I looked forward to a forenoon of clammy warmth, and an afternoon
+ of clammy cold and of east wind, with a misty nightfall soaking men to the
+ bones. But the day really turned out well enough; it was showery, but not
+ shrewish, and it smiled pleasantly at sunset, as if content with the
+ opening ceremonies of the Great Peace Jubilee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city, as we entered it, gave due token of excitement, and we felt the
+ celebration even in the air, which had a holiday quality very different
+ from that of ordinary workday air. The crowds filled the decorous streets,
+ and the trim pathways of the Common and the Public Garden, and flowed in
+ an orderly course towards the vast edifice on the Back Bay, presenting the
+ interesting points which always distinguish a crowd come to town from a
+ city crowd. You get so used to the Boston face and the Boston dress, that
+ a coat from New York or a visage from Chicago is at once conspicuous to
+ you; and in these people there was not only this strangeness, but the
+ different oddities that lurk in out-of-way corners of society everywhere
+ had started suddenly into notice. Long-haired men, popularly supposed to
+ have perished with the institution of slavery, appeared before me, and men
+ with various causes and manias looking from their wild eyes confronted
+ each other, let alone such charlatans as had clothed themselves quaintly
+ or grotesquely to add a charm to the virtue of whatever nostrum they
+ peddled. It was, however, for the most part, a remarkably well-dressed
+ crowd; and therein it probably differed more than in any other respect
+ from the crowd which a holiday would have assembled in former times. There
+ was little rusticity to be noted anywhere, and the uncouthness which has
+ already disappeared from the national face seemed to be passing from the
+ national wardrobe. Nearly all the visitors seemed to be Americans, but
+ neither the Yankee type nor the Hoosier was to be found. They were
+ apparently very happy, too; the ancestral solemnity of the race that
+ amuses itself sadly was not to be seen in them, and, if they were not
+ making it a duty to be gay, they were really taking their pleasure in a
+ cheerful spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, in fact, something in the sight of the Coliseum, as we
+ approached it, which was a sufficient cause of elation to whoever is
+ buoyed up by the flutter of bright flags, and the movement in and about
+ holiday booths, as I think we all are apt to be. One may not have the
+ stomach of happier days for the swing or the whirligig; he may not drink
+ soda-water intemperately; pop-corn may not tempt him, nor tropical fruits
+ allure; but he beholds them without gloom,&mdash;nay, a grin inevitably
+ lights up his countenance at the sight of a great show of these amusements
+ and refreshments. And any Bostonian might have felt proud that morning
+ that his city did not hide the light of her mercantile merit under a
+ bushel, but blazoned it about on the booths and walls in every variety of
+ printed and painted advertisement. To the mere aesthetic observer, these
+ vast placards gave the delight of brilliant color, and blended prettily
+ enough in effect with the flags; and at first glance I received quite as
+ much pleasure from the frescoes that advised me where to buy my summer
+ clothing, as from any bunting I saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had the good fortune on the morning of this first Jubilee day to view
+ the interior of the Coliseum when there was scarcely anybody there,&mdash;a
+ trifle of ten thousand singers at one end, and a few thousand other people
+ scattered about over the wide expanses of parquet and galleries. The
+ decorations within, as without, were a pleasure to the eyes that love
+ gayety of color; and the interior was certainly magnificent, with those
+ long lines of white and blue drapery roofing the balconies, the slim,
+ lofty columns festooned with flags and drooping banners, the arms of the
+ States decking the fronts of the galleries, and the arabesques of painted
+ muslin everywhere. I do not know that my taste concerned itself with the
+ decorations, or that I have any taste in such things; but I testify that
+ these tints and draperies gave no small part of the comfort of being where
+ all things conspired for one's pleasure. The airy amplitude of the
+ building, the perfect order and the perfect freedom of movement, the ease
+ of access and exit, the completeness of the arrangements that in the
+ afternoon gave all of us thirty thousand spectators a chance to behold the
+ great spectacle as well as to hear the music, were felt, I am sure, as
+ personal favors by every one. These minor particulars, in fact, served
+ greatly to assist you in identifying yourself, when the vast hive swarmed
+ with humanity, and you became a mere sentient atom of the mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was rumored in the morning that the ceremonies were to begin with
+ prayer by a hundred ministers, but I missed this striking feature of the
+ exhibition, for I did not arrive in the afternoon till the last speech was
+ being made by a gentleman whom I saw gesticulating effectively, and whom I
+ suppose to have been intelligible to a matter of twenty thousand people in
+ his vicinity, but who was to me, of the remote, outlying thirty thousand,
+ a voice merely. One word only I caught, and I report it here that
+ posterity may know as much as we thirty thousand contemporaries did of
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE PRESIDENT'S SPEECH.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ . . . . . . . (<i>sensation</i>.) . . . . . . . . . . (<i>cheers</i>.). .
+ . . refinement . . . . . . . . . . (<i>great applause</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know if I shall be able to give an idea of the immensity of this
+ scene; but if such a reader as has the dimensions of the Coliseum
+ accurately fixed in his mind will, in imagination, densely hide all that
+ interminable array of benching in the parquet and the galleries and the
+ slopes at either end of the edifice with human heads, showing here crowns,
+ there occiputs, and yonder faces, he will perhaps have some notion of the
+ spectacle as we beheld it from the northern hill-side. Some thousands of
+ heads nearest were recognizable as attached by the usual neck to the
+ customary human body, but for the rest, we seemed to have entered a world
+ of cherubim. Especially did the multitudinous singers seated far opposite
+ encourage this illusion; and their fluttering fans and handkerchiefs
+ wonderfully mocked the movement of those cravat-like pinions which the
+ fancy attributed to them. They rose or sank at the wave of the director's
+ baton; and still looked like an innumerable flock of cherubs drifting over
+ some slope of Paradise, or settling upon it,&mdash;if cherubs <i>can</i>
+ settle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/8000.jpg" alt="8000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/8000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ The immensity was quite as striking to the mind as to the eye, and an
+ absolute democracy was appreciable in it. Not only did all artificial
+ distinctions cease, but those of nature were practically obliterated, and
+ you felt for once the full meaning of unanimity. No one was at a
+ disadvantage; one was as wise, as good, as handsome as another. In most
+ public assemblages, the foolish eye roves in search of the vanity of
+ female beauty, and rests upon some lovely visage, or pretty figure; but
+ here it seemed to matter nothing whether ladies were well or ill-looking;
+ and one might have been perfectly ascetic without self-denial. A blue eye
+ or a black,&mdash;what of it? A mass of blonde or chestnut hair, this sort
+ of walking-dress or that,&mdash;you might note the difference casually in
+ a few hundred around you; but a sense of those myriads of other eyes and
+ chignons and walking-dresses absorbed the impression in an instant, and
+ left a dim, strange sense of loss, as if all women had suddenly become
+ Woman. For the time, one would have been preposterously conceited to have
+ felt his littleness in that crowd; you never thought of yourself in an
+ individual capacity at all. It was as if you were a private in an army, or
+ a very ordinary billow of the sea, feeling the battle or the storm, in a
+ collective sort of way, but unable to distinguish your sensations from
+ those of the mass. If a rafter had fallen and crushed you and your
+ unimportant row of people, you could scarcely have regarded it as a
+ personal calamity, but might have found it disagreeable as a shock to that
+ great body of humanity. Recall, then, how astonished you were to be
+ recognized by some one, and to have your hand shaken in your individual
+ character of Smith. &ldquo;Smith? My dear What's-your-name, I am for
+ the present the fifty-thousandth part of an enormous emotion!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was as difficult to distribute the various facts of the whole effect,
+ as to identify one's self. I had only a public and general
+ consciousness of the delight given by the harmony of hues in the parquet
+ below; and concerning the orchestra I had at first no distinct impression
+ save of the three hundred and thirty violin-bows held erect like standing
+ wheat at one motion of the director's wand, and then falling as if
+ with the next he swept them down. Afterwards files of men with horns, and
+ other files of men with drums and cymbals, discovered themselves; while
+ far above all, certain laborious figures pumped or ground with incessant
+ obeisance at the apparatus supplying the organ with wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What helped, more than anything else, to restore you your dispersed and
+ wandering individuality was the singing of Parepa-Rosa, as she triumphed
+ over the harmonious rivalry of the orchestra. There was something in the
+ generous amplitude and robust cheerfulness of this great artist that
+ accorded well with the ideal of the occasion; she was in herself a great
+ musical festival; and one felt, as she floated down the stage with her
+ far-spreading white draperies, and swept the audience a colossal courtesy,
+ that here was the embodied genius of the Jubilee. I do not trust myself to
+ speak particularly of her singing, for I have the natural modesty of
+ people who know nothing about music, and I have not at command the
+ phraseology of those who pretend to understand it; but I say that her
+ voice filled the whole edifice with delicious melody, that it soothed and
+ composed and utterly enchanted, that, though two hundred violins
+ accompanied her, the greater sweetness of her note prevailed over all,
+ like a mighty will commanding many. What a sublime ovation for her when a
+ hundred thousand hands thundered their acclaim! A victorious general, an
+ accepted lover, a successful young author,&mdash;these know a measure of
+ bliss, I dare say; but in one throb, the singer's heart, as it leaps
+ in exultation at the loud delight of her applausive thousands, must
+ out-enjoy them all. Let me lay these poor little artificial flowers of
+ rhetoric at the feet of the divine singer, as a faint token of gratitude
+ and eloquent intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Parepa (or Prepper, as I have heard her name popularly pronounced)
+ had sung, the revived consciousness of an individual life rose in
+ rebellion against the oppression of that dominant vastness. In fact, human
+ nature can stand only so much of any one thing. To a certain degree you
+ accept and conceive of facts truthfully, but beyond this a mere
+ fantasticality rules; and having got enough of grandeur, the senses played
+ themselves false. That array of fluttering and tuning people on the
+ southern slope began to look minute, like the myriad heads assembled in
+ the infinitesimal photograph which you view through one of those little
+ half-inch lorgnettes; and you had the satisfaction of knowing that to any
+ lovely infinitesimality yonder you showed no bigger than a carpet-tack.
+ The whole performance now seemed to be worked by those tireless figures
+ pumping at the organ, in obedience to signals from a very alert figure on
+ the platform below. The choral and orchestral thousands sang and piped and
+ played; and at a given point in the <i>scena</i> from Verdi, a hundred
+ fairies in red shirts marched down through the sombre mass of puppets and
+ beat upon as many invisible anvils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the stroke of anti-climax; and the droll sound of those anvils,
+ so far above all the voices and instruments in its pitch, thoroughly
+ disillusioned you and restored you finally to your proper entity and
+ proportions. It was the great error of the great Jubilee, and where almost
+ everything else was noble and impressive,&mdash;where the direction was
+ faultless, and the singing and instrumentation as perfectly controlled as
+ if they were the result of one volition,&mdash;this anvil-beating was
+ alone ignoble and discordant,&mdash;trivial and huge merely. Not even the
+ artillery accompaniment, in which the cannon were made to pronounce words
+ of two syllables, was so bad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dimensions of this sketch bear so little proportion to those of the
+ Jubilee, that I must perforce leave most of its features unnoticed; but I
+ wish to express the sense of enjoyment which prevailed (whenever the
+ anvils were not beaten) over every other feeling, even over wonder. To the
+ ear as to the eye it was a delight, and it was an assured success in the
+ popular affections from the performance of the first piece. For my own
+ part, if one pleasurable sensation, besides that received from Parepa's
+ singing, distinguished itself from the rest, it was that given by the
+ performance of the exquisite Coronation March from Meyerbeer's
+ &ldquo;Prophet;&rdquo; but I say this under protest of the pleasure taken
+ in the choral rendering of the &ldquo;Star-Spangled Banner.&rdquo; Closely
+ allying themselves to these great raptures were the minor joys of
+ wandering freely about from point to point, of receiving fresh sensations
+ from the varying lights and aspects in which the novel scene presented
+ itself with its strange fascinations, and of noting, half consciously, the
+ incessant movement of the crowd as it revealed itself in changing effects
+ of color. Then the gay tumult of the fifteen minutes of intermission
+ between the parts, when all rose with a <i>susurrus</i> of innumerable
+ silks, and the thousands of pretty singers fluttered about, and gossiped
+ tremulously and delightedly over the glory of the performance, revealing
+ themselves as charming feminine personalities, each with her share in the
+ difficulty and the achievement, each with her pique or pride, and each her
+ something to tell her friend of the conduct, agreeable or displeasing, of
+ some particular him! Even the quick dispersion of the mass at the close
+ was a marvel of orderliness and grace, as the melting and separating
+ parts, falling asunder, radiated from the centre, and flowed and rippled
+ rapidly away, and left the great hall empty and bare at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as you emerged from the building, what bizarre and perverse feeling
+ was that you knew? Something as if all-out-doors were cramped and small,
+ and it were better to return to the freedom and amplitude of the interior?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the second day, much that was wonderful in a first experience of the
+ festival was gone; but though the novelty had passed away, the cause for
+ wonder was even greater. If on the first day the crowd was immense, it was
+ now something which the imperfect state of the language will not permit me
+ to describe; perhaps <i>awful</i> will serve the purpose as well as any
+ other word now in use. As you looked round, from the centre of the
+ building, on that restless, fanning, fluttering multitude, to right and
+ left and north and south, all comparisons and similitudes abandoned you.
+ If you were to write of the scene, you felt that your effort, at the best,
+ must be a meagre sketch, suggesting something to those who had seen the
+ fact, but conveying no intelligible impression of it to any one else. The
+ galleries swarmed, the vast slopes were packed, in the pampa-like parquet
+ even the aisles were half filled with chairs, while a cloud of placeless
+ wanderers moved ceaselessly on the borders of the mass under the
+ balconies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When that common-looking, uncommon little man whom we have called to rule
+ over us entered the house, and walked quietly down to his seat in the
+ centre of it, a wild, inarticulate clamor, like no other noise in the
+ world, swelled from every side, till General Grant rose and showed
+ himself, when it grew louder than ever, and then gradully subsided into
+ silence. Then a voice, which might be uttering some mortal alarm, broke
+ repeatedly across the stillness from one of the balconies, and a thousand
+ glasses were leveled in that direction, while everywhere else the mass
+ hushed itself with a mute sense of peril. The capacity of such an
+ assemblage for self-destruction was, in fact, but too evident. From fire,
+ in an edifice of which the sides could be knocked out in a moment, there
+ could have been little danger; the fabric's strength had been
+ perfectly tested the day before, and its fall was not to be apprehended;
+ but we had ourselves greatly to dread. A panic could have been caused by
+ any mad or wanton person, in which thousands might have been instantly
+ trampled to death; and it seemed long till that foolish voice was stilled,
+ and the house lapsed back into tranquillity, and the enjoyment of the
+ music. In the performance I recall nothing disagreeable, nothing that to
+ my ignorance seemed imperfect, though I leave it to the wise in music to
+ say how far the great concert was a success. I saw a flourish of the
+ director's wand, and I heard the voices or the instruments, or both,
+ respond, and I knew by my programme that I was enjoying an unprecedented
+ quantity of Haydn or Handel or Meyerbeer or Rossini or Mozart, afforded
+ with an unquestionable precision and promptness; but I own that I liked
+ better to stroll about the three-acre house, and that for me the music
+ was, at best, only one of the joys of the festival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was good hearing outside for those that desired to listen to the
+ music, with seats to let in the surrounding tents and booths; and there
+ was unlimited seeing for the mere looker-on. At least fifty thousand
+ people seemed to have come to the Jubilee with no other purpose than to
+ gaze upon the outside of the building. The crowd was incomparably greater
+ than that of the day before; all the main thoroughfares of the city roared
+ with a tide of feet that swept through the side streets, and swelled
+ aimlessly up the places, and eddied there, and poured out again over the
+ pavements. The carriage-ways were packed with every sort of vehicle, with
+ foot-passengers crowded from the sidewalks, and with the fragments of the
+ military parade in honor of the President, with infantry, with straggling
+ cavalrymen, with artillery. All the paths of the Common and the Garden
+ were filled, and near the Coliseum the throngs densified on every side
+ into an almost impenetrable mass, that made the doors of the building
+ difficult to approach and at times inaccessible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd differed from that of the first day chiefly in size. There were
+ more country faces and country garbs to be seen, though it was still, on
+ the whole, a regular-featured and well-dressed crowd, with still very few
+ but American visages. It seemed to be also a very frugal-minded crowd, and
+ to spend little upon the refreshments and amusements provided for it. In
+ these, oddly enough, there was nothing of the march of mind to be
+ observed; they Were the refreshments and amusements of a former
+ generation. I think it would not be extravagant to say that there were
+ tons of pie for sale in a multitude of booths, with lemonade, soda-water,
+ and ice-cream in proportion; but I doubt if there was a ton of pie sold,
+ and towards the last the venerable pastry was quite covered with dust.
+ Neither did people seem to care much for oranges or bananas or peanuts, or
+ even pop-corn,&mdash;five cents a package and a prize in each package.
+ Many booths stood unlet, and in others the pulverous ladies and gentlemen,
+ their proprietors, were in the enjoyment of a leisure which would have
+ been elegant if it had not been forced. There was one shanty, not
+ otherwise distinguished from the rest, in which French soups were declared
+ to be for sale; but these alien pottages seemed to be no more favored than
+ the most poisonous of our national viands. But perhaps they were not
+ French soups, or perhaps the vicinage of the shanty was not such as to
+ impress a belief in their genuineness upon people who like French soups.
+ Let us not be too easily disheartened by the popular neglect of them. If
+ the daring reformer who inscribed French soups upon his sign will reappear
+ ten years hence, we shall all flock to his standard. Slavery is abolished;
+ pie must follow. Doubtless in the year 1900, the managers of a Jubilee
+ would even let the refreshment-rooms within their Coliseum to a cook who
+ would offer the public something not so much worse than the worst that
+ could be found in the vilest shanty restaurant on the ground. At the
+ Jubilee, of which I am writing, the unhappy person who went into the
+ Coliseum rooms to refresh himself was offered for coffee a salty and
+ unctuous wash, in one of those thick cups which are supposed to be proof
+ against the hard usage of &ldquo;guests&rdquo; and scullions in humble
+ eating-houses, and which are always so indescribably nicked and cracked,
+ and had pushed towards him a bowl of veteran sugar, and a tin spoon that
+ had never been cleaned in the world, while a young person stood by, and
+ watched him, asking, &ldquo;Have you paid for that coffee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The side-shows and the other amusements seemed to have addressed
+ themselves to the crowd with the same mistaken notion of its character and
+ requirements; though I confess that I witnessed their neglect with regret,
+ whether from a feeling that they were at least harmless, or an unconscious
+ sympathy with any quite idle and unprofitable thing. Those rotary, legless
+ horses, on which children love to ride in a perpetual sickening circle,&mdash;the
+ type of all our effort,&mdash;were nearly always mounted; but those other
+ whirligigs, or whatever the dreadful circles with their swinging seats are
+ called, were often so empty that they must have been distressing, from
+ their want of balance, to the muscles as well as the spirits of their
+ proprietors. The society of monsters was also generally shunned, and a cow
+ with five legs gave milk from the top of her back to an audience of not
+ more than six persons. The public apathy had visibly wrought upon the
+ temper of the gentleman who lectured upon this gifted animal, and he took
+ inquiries in an ironical manner that contrasted disadvantageously with the
+ philosophical serenity of the person who had a weighing-machine outside,
+ and whom I saw sitting in the chair and weighing himself by the hour, with
+ an expression of profound enjoyment. Perhaps a man of less bulk could not
+ have entered so keenly into that simple pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a large tent on the grounds for dramatical entertainments, with
+ six performances a day, into which I was lured by a profusion of
+ high-colored posters, and some such announcement, as that the beautiful
+ serio-comic danseuse and world-renowned cloggist, Mile. Brown, would
+ appear. About a dozen people were assembled within, and we waited a
+ half-hour beyond the time announced for the curtain to rise, during which
+ the spectacle of a young man in black broadcloth, eating a cocoa-nut with
+ his pen-knife, had a strange and painful fascination. At the end of this
+ half-hour, our number was increased to eighteen, when the orchestra
+ appeared,&mdash;a snare-drummer and two buglers. These took their place at
+ the back of the tent; the buglers, who were Germans, blew seriously and
+ industriously at their horns; but the native-born citizen, who played the
+ drum, beat it very much at random, and in the mean time smoked a cigar,
+ while his humorous friend kept time upon his shoulders by striking him
+ there with a cane. How long this might have lasted, I cannot tell; but,
+ after another delay, I suddenly bethought me whether it were not better
+ not to see Mile. Brown, after all? I rose, and stole softly out behind the
+ rhythmic back of the drummer; and the world-renowned cloggist is to me at
+ this moment only a beautiful dream,&mdash;an airy shape fashioned upon a
+ hint supplied by the engraver of the posters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, then, did the public desire, if it would not smile upon the swings,
+ or monsters, or dramatic amusements that had pleased so long? Was the
+ music, as it floated out from the Coliseum, a sufficient delight? Or did
+ the crowd, averse to the shows provided for it, crave something higher and
+ more intellectual,&mdash;like, for example, a course of the Lowell
+ Lectures? Its general expression had changed: it had no longer that entire
+ gayety of the first day, but had taken on something of the sarcastic
+ pathos with which we Americans bear most oppressive and fatiguing things
+ as a good joke. The dust was blown about in clouds; and here and there,
+ sitting upon the vacant steps that led up and down among the booths, were
+ dejected and motionless men and women, passively gathering dust, and
+ apparently awaiting burial under the accumulating sand,&mdash;the mute,
+ melancholy sphinxes of the Jubilee, with their unsolved riddle, &ldquo;Why
+ did we come?&rdquo; At intervals, the heavens shook out fierce, sudden
+ showers of rain, that scattered the surging masses, and sent them flying
+ impotently hither and thither for shelter where no shelter was, only to
+ gather again, and move aimlessly and comfortlessly to and fro, like a lost
+ child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the multitude roared within and without the Coliseum as I turned
+ homeward; and yet I found it wandering with weary feet through the Garden,
+ and the Common, and all the streets, and it dragged its innumerable aching
+ legs with me to the railroad station, and, entering the train, stood up on
+ them,&mdash;having paid for the tickets with which the companies professed
+ to sell seats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How still and cool and fresh it was at our suburban station, when the
+ train, speeding away with a sardonic yell over the misery of the
+ passengers yet standing up in it, left us to walk across the quiet fields
+ and pleasant lanes to Benicia Street, through groups of little idyllic
+ Irish boys playing base-ball, with milch-goats here and there pastorally
+ cropping the herbage!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this pleasant seclusion I let all Bunker Hill Day thunder by, with its
+ cannons, and processions, and speeches, and patriotic musical uproar,
+ hearing only through my open window the note of the birds singing in a
+ leafy coliseum across the street, and making very fair music without an
+ anvil among them. &ldquo;Ah, signer!&rdquo; said one of my doorstep
+ acquaintance, who came next morning and played me Captain Jenks,&mdash;the
+ new air he has had added to his instrument,&mdash;&ldquo;never in my life,
+ neither at Torino, nor at Milano, nor even at Genoa, never did I see such
+ a crowd or hear such a noise, as at that Colosseo yesterday. The
+ carriages, the horses, the feet! And the dust, O Dio mio! All those
+ millions of people were as white as so many millers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the afternoon of the fourth day the city looked quite like the mill in
+ which these millers had been grinding; and even those unpromisingly
+ elegant streets of the Back Bay showed mansions powdered with dust enough
+ for sentiment to strike root in, and so soften them with its tender green
+ against the time when they shall be ruinous and sentiment shall swallow
+ them up. The crowd had perceptibly diminished, but it was still great, and
+ on the Common it was allured by a greater variety of recreations and
+ bargains than I had yet seen there. There were, of course, all sorts of
+ useful and instructive amusements,&mdash;at least a half-dozen telescopes,
+ and as many galvanic batteries, with numerous patented inventions; and I
+ fancied that most of the peddlers and charlatans addressed themselves to a
+ utilitarian spirit supposed to exist in us. A man that sold whistles
+ capable of reproducing exactly the notes of the mocking-bird and the
+ guinea-pig set forth the durability of the invention. &ldquo;Now, you see
+ this whistle, gentlemen. It is rubber, all rubber; and rubber, you know,
+ enters into the composition of a great many valuable articles. This
+ whistle, then, is entirely of rubber,&mdash;no worthless or flimsy
+ material that drops to pieces the moment you put it to your lips,&rdquo;&mdash;as
+ if it were not utterly desirable that it should. &ldquo;Now, I'll
+ give you the mocking-bird, gentlemen, and then I'll give you the
+ guinea-pig, upon this pure <i>India</i>-rubber whistle.&rdquo; And he did
+ so with a great animation,&mdash;this young man with a perfectly
+ intelligent and very handsome face. &ldquo;Try your strength, and renovate
+ your system!&rdquo; cried the proprietor of a piston padded at one end and
+ working into a cylinder when you struck it a blow with your fist; and the
+ owners of lung-testing machines called upon you from every side to try
+ their consumption cure; while the galvanic-battery men sat still and
+ mutely appealed with inscriptions attached to their cap-visors declaring
+ that electricity taken from their batteries would rid you of every ache
+ and pain known to suffering humanity. Yet they were themselves as a class
+ in a state of sad physical disrepair, and one of them was the visible prey
+ of rheumatism which he might have sent flying from his joints with a
+ single shock. The only person whom I saw improving his health with the
+ battery was a rosy-faced school-boy, who was taking ten cents' worth
+ of electricity; and I hope it did not disagree with his pop-corn and
+ soda-water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther on was a picturesque group of street-musicians,&mdash;violinists
+ and harpers; a brother and four sisters, by their looks,&mdash;who
+ afforded almost the only unpractical amusement to be enjoyed on the
+ Common, though not far from them was a blind old negro, playing upon an
+ accordion, and singing to it in the faintest and thinnest of black voices,
+ who could hardly have profited any listener. No one appeared to mind him,
+ till a jolly Jack-tar with both arms cut off, but dressed in full sailor's
+ togs, lurched heavily towards him. This mariner had got quite a good
+ effect of sea-legs by some means, and looked rather drunker than a man
+ with both arms ought to be; but he was very affectionate, and, putting his
+ face close to the other's, at once entered into talk with the blind
+ man, forming with him a picture curiously pathetic and grotesque. He was
+ the only tipsy person I saw during the Jubilee days,&mdash;if he was
+ tipsy, for after all they may have been real sea-legs he had on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the throng upon the streets was thinner, it was greater in the Coliseum
+ than on the second day; and matters had settled there into regular working
+ order. The limits of individual liberty had been better ascertained; there
+ was no longer any movement in the aisles, but a constant passing to and
+ fro, between the pieces, in the promenades. The house presented, as
+ before, that appearance in which reality forsook it, and it became merely
+ an amazing picture. The audience supported the notion of its unreality by
+ having exactly the character of the former audiences, and impressed you,
+ despite its restlessness and incessant agitation, with the feeling that it
+ had remained there from the first day, and would always continue there;
+ and it was only in wandering upon its borders through the promenades, that
+ you regained possession of facts concerning it. In no other way was its
+ vastness more observable than in the perfect indifference of persons one
+ to another. Each found himself, as it were, in a solitude; and,
+ sequestered in that wilderness of strangers, each was freed of his
+ bashfulness and trepidation. Young people lounged at ease upon the floors,
+ about the windows, on the upper promenades; and in this seclusion I saw
+ such betrayals of tenderness as melt the heart of the traveller on our
+ desolate railway trains,&mdash;Fellows moving to and fro or standing,
+ careless of other eyes, with their arms around the waists of their Girls.
+ These were, of course, people who had only attained a certain grade of
+ civilization, and were not characteristic of the crowd, or, indeed, worthy
+ of notice except as expressions of its unconsciousness. I fancied that I
+ saw a number of their class outside listening to the address of the agent
+ of a patent liniment, proclaimed to be an unfailing specific for neuralgia
+ and headache,&mdash;if used in the right spirit. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; said
+ the orator, &ldquo;we like to cure people who treat us and our medicine
+ with respect. Folks say, 'What is there about that man?&mdash;some
+ magnetism or electricity.' And the other day at New Britain,
+ Connecticut, a young man he come up to the carriage, sneering like, and he
+ tried the cure, and it didn't have the least effect upon him.&rdquo;
+ There seemed reason in this, and it produced a visible sensation in the
+ Fellows and Girls, who grinned sheepishly at each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why will the young man with long hair force himself at this point into a
+ history, which is striving to devote itself to graver interests? There he
+ stood with the other people, gazing up at the gay line of streamers on the
+ summit of the Coliseum, and taking in the Anvil Chorus with the rest,&mdash;a
+ young man well-enough dressed, and of a pretty sensible face, with his
+ long black locks falling from under his cylinder hat, and covering his
+ shoulders. What awful spell was on him, obliging him to make that figure
+ before his fellow-creatures? He had nothing to sell; he was not,
+ apparently, an advertisement of any kind. Was he in the performance of a
+ vow? Was he in his right mind? For shame! a person may wear his hair long
+ if he will. But why not, then, in a top-knot? This young man's long
+ hair was not in keeping with his frock-coat and his cylinder hat, and he
+ had not at all the excuse of the old gentleman who sold salve in the
+ costume of Washington's time; one could not take pleasure in him as
+ in the negro advertiser, who paraded the grounds in a costume compounded
+ of a consular <i>chapeau bras</i> and a fox-hunter's top-boots&mdash;the
+ American diplomatic uniform of the future&mdash;and offered every one a
+ printed billet; he had not even the attraction of the cabalistic herald of
+ Hunkidori. Who was he? what was he? why was he? The mind played forever
+ around these questions in a maze of hopeless conjecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had all those quacks and peddlers been bawling ever since Tuesday to the
+ same listeners? Had all those swings and whirligigs incessantly performed
+ their rounds? The cow that gave milk from the top of her back, had she
+ never changed her small circle of admirers, or ceased her flow? And the
+ gentleman who sat in the chair of his own balance, how much did he weigh
+ by this time? One could scarcely rid one's self of the illusion of
+ perpetuity concerning these things, and I could not believe that, if I
+ went back to the Coliseum grounds at any future time, I should not behold
+ all that vast machinery in motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was curious to see, amid this holiday turmoil men pursuing the ordinary
+ business of their lives, and one was strangely rescued and consoled by the
+ spectacle of the Irish hod-carriers, and the bricklayers at work on a
+ first-class swell-front residence in the very heart of the city of tents
+ and booths. Even the locomotive, being associated with quieter days and
+ scenes, appealed, as it whistled to and fro upon the Providence Railroad,
+ to some soft bucolic sentiment in the listener, and sending its note,
+ ordinarily so discordant, across that human uproar, seemed to &ldquo;babble
+ of green fields.&rdquo; And at last it wooed us away, and the Jubilee was
+ again swallowed up by night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was yet another Jubilee Day, on the morning of which the thousands
+ of public-school children clustered in gauzy pink and white in the place
+ of the mighty chorus, while the Coliseum swarmed once more with people who
+ listened to those shrill, sweet pipes blending in unison; but I leave the
+ reader to imagine what he will about it. A week later, after all was over,
+ I was minded to walk down towards the Coliseum, and behold it in its
+ desertion. The city streets were restored to their wonted summer-afternoon
+ tranquillity; the Public Garden presented its customary phases of two
+ people sitting under a tree and talking intimately together on some theme
+ of common interest,&mdash;&ldquo;Bees, bees, was it your hydromel?&rdquo;&mdash;of
+ the swans sailing in full view upon the little lake of half a dozen idlers
+ hanging upon the bridge to look at them; of children gayly dotting the
+ paths here and there; and, to heighten the peacefulness of the effect, a
+ pretty, pale invalid lady sat, half in shade and half in sun, reading in
+ an easy-chair. Far down the broad avenue a single horse-car tinkled
+ slowly; on the steps of one of the mansions charming little girls stood in
+ a picturesque group full of the bright color which abounds in the lovely
+ dresses of this time. As I drew near the Coliseum, I could perceive the
+ desolation which had fallen upon the festival scene; the white tents were
+ gone; the place where the world-renowned cloggist gave her serio-comic
+ dances was as lonely and silent as the site of Carthage; in the middle
+ distance two men were dismantling a motionless whirligig; the hut for the
+ sale of French soups was closed; farther away, a solitary policeman moved
+ gloomily across the deserted spaces, showing his dark-blue figure against
+ the sky. The vast fabric of the Coliseum reared itself, hushed and
+ deserted within and without; and a boy in his shirt-sleeves pressed his
+ nose against one of the painted window-panes in the vain effort to behold
+ the nothing inside. But sadder than this loneliness surrounding the
+ Coliseum, sadder than the festooned and knotted banners that drooped
+ funereally upon its facade, was the fact that some of those luckless
+ refreshment-saloons were still open, displaying viands as little edible
+ now as carnival <i>confetti</i>. It was as if the proprietors, in an
+ unavailing remorse, had condemned themselves to spend the rest of their
+ days there, and, slowly consuming their own cake and pop-corn, washed down
+ with their own soda-water and lemonade, to perish of dyspepsia and
+ despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SOME LESSONS FROM THE SCHOOL OF MORALS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Any study of suburban life would be very imperfect without some glance at
+ that larger part of it which is spent in the painful pursuit of pleasures
+ such as are offered at the ordinary places of public amusement; and for
+ this reason I excuse myself for rehearsing certain impressions here which
+ are not more directly suburban, to say the least, than those recounted in
+ the foregoing chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It became, shortly after life in Charlesbridge began, a question whether
+ any entertainment that Boston could offer were worth the trouble of going
+ to it, or, still worse, coming from it; for if it was misery to hurry from
+ tea to catch the inward horse-car at the head of the street, what sullen
+ lexicon will afford a name for the experience of getting home again by the
+ last car out from the city? You have watched the clock much more closely
+ than the stage during the last act, and have left your play incomplete by
+ its final marriage or death, and have rushed up to Bowdoin Square, where
+ you achieve a standing place in the car, and, utterly spent as you are
+ with the enjoyment of the evening, you endure for the next hour all that
+ is horrible in riding or walking. At the end of this time you declare that
+ you will never go to the theatre again; and after years of suffering you
+ come at last to keep your word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While yet, however, in the state of formation as regards this resolution,
+ I went frequently to the theatre&mdash;or school of morals, as its friends
+ have humorously called it. I will not say whether any desired amelioration
+ took place or not in my own morals through the agency of the stage; but if
+ not enlightened and refined by everything I saw there, I sometimes was
+ certainly very much surprised. Now that I go no more, or very, very
+ rarely, I avail myself of the resulting leisure to set down, for the
+ instruction of posterity, some account of performances I witnessed in the
+ years 1868-69, which I am persuaded will grow all the more curious, if not
+ incredible, with the lapse of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is this satisfaction in living, namely, that whatever we do will one
+ day wear an air of picturesqueness and romance, and will win the fancy of
+ people coming after us. This stupid and commonplace present shall yet
+ appear the fascinating past; and is it not a pleasure to think how our
+ rogues of descendants&mdash;who are to enjoy us aesthetically&mdash;will
+ be taken in with us, when they read, in the files of old newspapers, of
+ the quantity of entertainment offered us at the theatres during the years
+ mentioned, and judge us by it? I imagine them two hundred years hence
+ looking back at us, and sighing, &ldquo;Ah! there was a touch of the old
+ Greek life in those Athenians! How they loved the drama in the jolly
+ Boston of that day! That was the golden age of the theatre: in the winter
+ of 1868-69, they had dramatic performances in seven places, of every
+ degree of excellence, and the managers coined money.&rdquo; As we always
+ figure our ancestors going to and from church, they will probably figure
+ us thronging the doors of theatres, and no doubt there will be some
+ historical gossiper among them to sketch a Boston audience in 1869, with
+ all our famous poets and politicians grouped together in the orchestra
+ seats, and several now dead introduced with the pleasant inaccuracy and
+ uncertainty of historical gossipers. &ldquo;On this night, when the
+ beautiful Tostée reappeared, the whole house rose to greet her. If Mr.
+ Alcott was on one of his winter visits to Boston, no doubt he stepped in
+ from the Marlborough House,&mdash;it was a famous temperance hotel, then
+ in the height of its repute,&mdash;not only to welcome back the great
+ actress, but to enjoy a chat between the acts with his many friends. Here,
+ doubtless, was seen the broad forehead of Webster; there the courtly
+ Everett, conversing in studied tones with the gifted So-and-so. Did not
+ the lovely Such-a-one grace the evening with her presence? The brilliant
+ and versatile Edmund Kirke was dead; but the humorous Artemas Ward and his
+ friend Nasby may have attracted many eyes, having come hither at the close
+ of their lectures, to testify their love of the beautiful in nature and
+ art; while, perhaps, Mr. Sumner, in the intervals of state cares, relaxed
+ into the enjoyment,&rdquo; etc. &ldquo;Vous voyez bien le tableau!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That far-off posterity, learning that all our theatres are filled every
+ night, will never understand but we were a theatre-going people in the
+ sense that it is the highest fashion to be seen at the play; and yet we
+ are sensible that it is not so, and that the Boston which makes itself
+ known in civilization&mdash;in letters, politics, reform&mdash;goes as
+ little to the theatre as fashionable Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stage is not an Institution with us, I should say; yet it affords
+ recreation to a very large and increasing number of persons, and while it
+ would be easy to over-estimate its influence for good or evil even with
+ these, there is no doubt that the stage, if not the drama, is popular.
+ Fortunately an inquiry like this into a now waning taste in theatricals
+ concerns the fact rather than the effect of the taste otherwise the task
+ might become indefinitely hard alike for writer and for reader. No one can
+ lay his hand on his heart, and declare that he is the worse for having
+ seen &ldquo;La Belle Hélène,&rdquo; for example, or say more than that it
+ is a thing which ought not to be seen by any one else; yet I suppose there
+ is no one ready to deny that &ldquo;La Belle Hélène&rdquo; was the motive
+ of those performances that have most pleased the most people during recent
+ years. There was something fascinating in the circumstances and auspices
+ under which the united Irma and Tostée troupes appeared in Boston&mdash;<i>opéra
+ bouffe</i> led gayly forward by <i>finance bouffe</i>, and suggesting Erie
+ shares by its watered music and morals; but there is no doubt that Tostée's
+ grand reception was owing mainly to the personal favor which she enjoyed
+ here and which we do not vouchsafe to every one. Ristori did not win it;
+ we did our duty by her, following her carefully with the libretto, and in
+ her most intense effects turning the leaves of a thousand pamphlets with a
+ rustle that must have shattered every delicate nerve in her; but we were
+ always cold to her greatness. It was not for Tosteés singing, which was
+ but a little thing in itself; it was not for her beauty, for that was no
+ more than a reminiscence, if it was not always an illusion; was it because
+ she rendered the spirit of M. Offenbach's operas so perfectly, that
+ we liked her so much? &ldquo;Ah, that movement!&rdquo; cried an
+ enthusiast, &ldquo;that swing, that&mdash;that&mdash;wriggle!&rdquo; She
+ was undoubtedly a great actress, full of subtle surprises, and with an
+ audacious appearance of unconsciousness in those exigencies where
+ consciousness would summon the police&mdash;or should; she was so near,
+ yet so far from, the worst that could be intended; in tones, in gestures,
+ in attitudes, she was to the libretto just as the music was, now making it
+ appear insolently and unjustly coarse, now feebly inadequate in its
+ explicit immodesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To see this famous lady in &ldquo;La Grande Duchesse&rdquo; or &ldquo;La
+ Belle Hélène&rdquo; was an experience never to be forgotten, and certainly
+ not to be described. The former opera has undoubtedly its proper and
+ blameless charm. There is something pretty and arch in the notion of the
+ Duchess's falling in love with the impregnably faithful and innocent
+ Fritz; and the extravagance of the whole, with the satire upon the typical
+ little German court, is delightful. But &ldquo;La Belle Helene&rdquo; is a
+ wittier play than &ldquo;La Grande Duchesse,&rdquo; and it is the vividest
+ expression of the spirit of <i>opéra bouffe</i>. It is full of such lively
+ mockeries as that of Helen when she gazes upon the picture of Leda and the
+ Swan: &ldquo;J'aime á me recueiller devant ce tableau de famille!
+ Mon père, ma mère, les voici tous les deux! O mon père, tourne vers ton
+ enfant un bec favorable!&rdquo;&mdash;or of Paris when he represses the
+ zeal of Calchas, who desires to present him at once to Helen: &ldquo;Soit!
+ mais sans lui dire qui je suis;&mdash;je désire garder le plus strict
+ incognito, jusq'au moment où la situation sera favorable á un coup
+ de théâtre.&rdquo; But it must be owned that our audiences seemed not to
+ take much pleasure in these and other witticisms, though they obliged
+ Mademoiselle Tostée to sing &ldquo;Un Mari sage&rdquo; three times, with
+ all those actions and postures which seem incredible the moment they have
+ ceased. They possibly understood this song no better than the strokes of
+ wit, and encored it merely for the music's sake. The effect was,
+ nevertheless, unfortunate, and calculated to give those French ladies but
+ a bad opinion of our morals. How could they comprehend that the taste was,
+ like themselves, imported, and that its indulgence here did not
+ characterize us? It was only in appearance that, while we did not enjoy
+ the wit we delighted in the coarseness. And how coarse this travesty of
+ the old fable mainly is! That priest Calchas, with his unspeakable snicker
+ his avarice, his infidelity, his hypocrisy, is alone infamy enough to
+ provoke the destruction of a city. Then that scene interrupted by
+ Menelaus! It is indisputably witty, and since all those people are so
+ purely creatures of fable, and dwell so entirely in an unmoral atmosphere,
+ it appears as absurd to blame it as the murders in a pantomime. To be sure
+ there is something about murder, some inherent grace or refinement
+ perhaps, that makes its actual representation upon the stage more
+ tolerable than the most diffident suggestion of adultery. Not that &ldquo;La
+ Belle Hélène&rdquo; is open to the reproach of over-delicacy in this
+ scene, or any other, for the matter of that, though there is a strain of
+ real poetry in the conception of this whole episode of Helen's
+ intention to pass all Paris's love-making off upon herself for a
+ dream,&mdash;poetry such as might have been inspired by a muse that had
+ taken too much nectar. There is excellent character, also, as well as
+ caricature in the drama; not only Calchas is admirably done, but
+ Agamemnon, and Achilles, and Helen, and Menelaus, &ldquo;pas un mari
+ ordinaire ... un mari épique,&rdquo;&mdash;and the burlesque is good of
+ its kind. It is artistic, as it seems French dramatic effort must almost
+ necessarily be. It could scarcely be called the fault of the <i>opéra
+ bouffe</i> that the English burlesque should have come of its success; nor
+ could the public blame it for the great favor the burlesque won in those
+ far-off winters, if indeed the public wishes to bestow blame for this. No
+ one, however, could see one of these curious travesties without being
+ reminded, in an awkward way, of the <i>morale</i> of the <i>opéra bouffe</i>,
+ and of the <i>personnel</i>&mdash;as I may say&mdash;of &ldquo;The Black
+ Crook,&rdquo; &ldquo;The White Fawn,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Devil's
+ Auction.&rdquo; There was the same intention of merriment at the cost of
+ what may be called the marital prejudices, though it cannot be claimed
+ that the wit was the same as in &ldquo;La Belle Hélène;&rdquo; there was
+ the same physical unreserve as in the ballets of a former season; while in
+ its dramatic form the burlesque discovered very marked parental traits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This English burlesque, this child of M. Offenbach's genius, and the
+ now somewhat faded spectacular muse, flourished at the time of which I
+ write in three of our seven theatres for months,&mdash;five, from the
+ highest to the lowest being in turn open to it,&mdash;and had begun, in a
+ tentative way, to invade the deserted stage even so long ago as the
+ previous summer; and I have sometimes flattered myself that it was my
+ fortune to witness the first exhibition of its most characteristic feature
+ in a theatre into which I wandered one sultry night because it was the
+ nearest theatre. They were giving a play called &ldquo;The Three Fast Men,&rdquo;
+ which had a moral of such powerful virtue that it ought to have reformed
+ everybody in the neighborhood. Three ladies being in love with the three
+ fast men, and resolved to win them back to regular hours and the paths of
+ sobriety by every device of the female heart, dress themselves in men's
+ clothes,&mdash;such is the subtlety of the female heart in the bosoms of
+ modern young ladies of fashion,&mdash;and follow their lovers about from
+ one haunt of dissipation to another and become themselves exemplarily
+ vicious,&mdash;drunkards, gamblers, and the like. The first lady, who was
+ a star in her lowly orbit, was very great in all her different <i>rôles</i>,
+ appearing now as a sailor with the hornpipe of his calling, now as an
+ organ-grinder, and now as a dissolute young gentleman,&mdash;whatever was
+ the exigency of good morals. The dramatist seemed to have had an eye to
+ her peculiar capabilities, and to have expressly invented edifying
+ characters and situations that her talents might enforce them. The second
+ young lady had also a personal didactic gift, rivaling, and even
+ surpassing in some respects, that of the star; and was very rowdy indeed.
+ In due time the devoted conduct of the young ladies has its just effect:
+ the three fast men begin to reflect upon the folly of their wild courses;
+ and at this point the dramatist delivers his great stroke. The first lady
+ gives a <i>soirée dansante et chantante</i>, and the three fast men have
+ invitations. The guests seat themselves, as at a fashionable party, in a
+ semicircle, and the gayety of the evening begins with conundrums and
+ playing upon the banjo; the gentlemen are in their morning-coats, and the
+ ladies in a display of hosiery which is now no longer surprising, and
+ which need not have been mentioned at all except for the fact that, in the
+ case of the first lady, it seemed not to have been freshly put on for that
+ party. In this instance an element comical beyond intention was present,
+ in three young gentlemen, an amateur musical trio, who had kindly
+ consented to sing their favorite song of &ldquo;The Rolling Zuyder Zee,&rdquo;
+ as they now kindly did, with flushed faces, unmanageable hands, and much
+ repetition of
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The ro-o-o-o-
+ The ro-o-o-o-
+ The ro-o-o-o-ll-
+ Ing Zuyder Zee,
+ Zuyder Zee,
+ Zuyder Zee-e-e!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then the turn of the three guardian angels of the fast men being come
+ again they get up and dance each one a breakdown which seems to establish
+ their lovers (now at last in the secret of the generous ruse played upon
+ them) firmly in their resolution to lead a better life. They are in nowise
+ shaken from it by the displeasure which soon shows itself in the manner of
+ the first and second ladies. The former is greatest in the so-called
+ Protean parts of the play, and is obscured somewhat by the dancing of the
+ latter; but she has a daughter who now comes on and sings a song. The
+ pensive occasion, the favorable mood of the audience, the sympathetic
+ attitude of the players, invite her to sing &ldquo;The Maiden's
+ Prayer,&rdquo; and so we have &ldquo;The Maiden's Prayer.&rdquo; We
+ may be a low set, and the song may be affected and insipid enough, but the
+ purity of its intention touches, and the little girl is vehemently
+ applauded. She is such a pretty child with her innocent face, and her
+ artless white dress, and blue ribbons to her waist and hair, that we will
+ have her back again; whereupon she runs out upon the stage, strikes up a
+ rowdy, rowdy air, dances a shocking little dance, and vanishes from the
+ dismayed vision, leaving us a considerably lower set than we were at
+ first, and glad of our lowness. This is the second lady's own
+ ground, however, and now she comes out&mdash;in a way that banishes far
+ from our fickle minds all thoughts of the first lady and her mistaken
+ child&mdash;with a medley of singing and dancing, a bit of breakdown, of
+ cancan, of jig, a bit of &ldquo;Le Sabre de mon Père,&rdquo; and of all
+ memorable slang songs, given with the most grotesque and clownish spirit
+ that ever inspired a woman. Each member of the company follows in his or
+ her <i>pas seul</i>, and then they all dance together to the plain
+ confusion of the amateur trio, whose eyes roll like so many Zuyder Zees,
+ as they sit lonely and motionless in the midst. All stiffness and
+ formality are overcome. The evening party in fact disappears entirely, and
+ we are suffered to see the artists in their moments of social relaxation
+ sitting as it were around the theatrical fireside. They appear to forget
+ us altogether; they exchange winks, and nods, and jests of quite personal
+ application; they call each other by name, by their Christian names, their
+ nicknames. It is not an evening party, it is a family party, and the
+ suggestion of home enjoyment completes the reformation of the three fast
+ men. We see them marry the three fast women before we leave the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion, two suburban friends of the drama beheld a more
+ explicit precursor of the coming burlesque at one of the minor theatres
+ last summer. The great actress whom they had come to see on another scene
+ was ill, and in their disappointment they embraced the hope of
+ entertainment offered them at the smaller playhouse. The drama itself was
+ neither here nor there as to intent, but the public appetite or the
+ manager's conception of it&mdash;for I am by no means sure that this
+ whole business was not a misunderstanding&mdash;had exacted that the
+ actresses should appear in so much stocking, and so little else, that it
+ was a horror to look upon them. There was no such exigency of dialogue,
+ situation, or character as asked the indecorum, and the effect upon the
+ unprepared spectator was all the more stupefying from the fact that most
+ of the ladies were not dancers, and had not countenances that consorted
+ with impropriety. Their faces had merely the conventional Yankee sharpness
+ and wanness of feature, and such difference of air and character as should
+ say for one and another, shop-girl, shoe-binder, seamstress; and it seemed
+ an absurdity and an injustice to refer to them in any way the disclosures
+ of the ruthlessly scant drapery. A grotesque fancy would sport with their
+ identity: &ldquo;Did not this or that one write poetry for her local
+ newspaper?&rdquo; so much she looked the average culture and crudeness,
+ and when such a one, coldly yielding to the manager's ideas of the
+ public taste, stretched herself on a green baize bank with her feet
+ towards us, or did a similar grossness, it was hard to keep from crying
+ aloud in protest, that she need not do it; that nobody really expected or
+ wanted it of her. Nobody? Alas! there were people there&mdash;poor souls
+ who had the appearance of coming every night&mdash;who plainly did expect
+ it, and who were loud in their applauses of the chief actress. This was a
+ young person of a powerful physical expression, quite unlike the rest,&mdash;who
+ were dyspeptic and consumptive in the range of their charms,&mdash;and she
+ triumphed and wantoned through the scenes with a fierce excess of animal
+ vigor. She was all stocking, as one may say, being habited to represent a
+ prince; she had a raucous voice, an insolent twist of the mouth, and a
+ terrible trick of defying her enemies by standing erect, chin up, hand on
+ hip, and right foot advanced, patting the floor. It was impossible, even
+ in the orchestra seats, to look at her in this attitude and not shrink
+ before her; and on the stage she visibly tyrannized over the invalid
+ sisterhood with her full-blown fascinations. These unhappy girls
+ personated, with a pathetic effect not to be described, such arch and
+ fantastic creations of the poet's mind as Bewitchingcreature and
+ Exquisitelittlepet, and the play was a kind of fairy burlesque in rhyme,
+ of the most melancholy stupidity that ever was. Yet there was something
+ very comical in the conditions of its performance, and in the possibility
+ that public and manager were playing at cross-purposes. There we were in
+ the pit, an assemblage of hard-working Yankees of decently moral lives and
+ simple traditions, country-bred many of us and of plebeian stock and
+ training, vulgar enough perhaps, but probably not depraved, and, excepting
+ the first lady's friends, certainly not educated to the critical
+ enjoyment of such spectacles; and there on the stage were those mistaken
+ women, in such sad variety of boniness and flabbiness as I have tried to
+ hint, addressing their pitiable exposure to a supposed vileness in us, and
+ wrenching from all original intent the innocent dullness of the drama,
+ which for the most part could have been as well played in walking-dresses,
+ to say the least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scene was not less amusing, as regarded the audiences, the ensuing
+ winter, when the English burlesque troupes which London sent us, arrived;
+ but it was not quite so pathetic as regarded the performers. Of their
+ beauty and their abandon, the historical gossiper, whom I descry far down
+ the future, waiting to refer to me as &ldquo;A scandalous writer of the
+ period,&rdquo; shall learn very little to his purpose of warming his
+ sketch with a color from mine. But I hope I may describe these ladies as
+ very pretty, very blonde, and very unscrupulously clever, and still
+ disappoint the historical gossiper. They seemed in all cases to be
+ English; no Yankee faces, voices, or accents were to be detected among
+ them. Where they were associated with people of another race, as happened
+ with one troupe, the advantage of beauty was upon the Anglo-Saxon side,
+ while that of some small shreds of propriety was with the Latins. These
+ appeared at times almost modest, perhaps because they were the
+ conventional <i>ballerine</i>, and wore the old-fashioned ballet-skirt
+ with its volumed gauze,&mdash;a coyness which the Englishry had greatly
+ modified, through an exigency of the burlesque,&mdash;perhaps because
+ indecorum seems, like blasphemy and untruth, somehow more graceful and
+ becoming in southern than in northern races.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the burlesques themselves, they were nothing, the performers
+ personally everything. M. Offenbach had opened Lemprière's
+ Dictionary to the authors with &ldquo;La Belle Hélène,&rdquo; and there,
+ was commonly a flimsy raveling of parodied myth, that held together the
+ different dances and songs, though sometimes it was a novel or an opera
+ burlesqued; but there was always a song and always a dance for each lady,
+ song and dance being equally slangy, and depending for their effect mainly
+ upon the natural or simulated personal charms of the performer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was also an indispensable condition of the burlesque's success,
+ that the characters should be reversed in their representation,&mdash;that
+ the men's <i>rôles</i> should be played by women, and that at least
+ one female part should be done by a man. It must be owned that the fun all
+ came from this character, the ladies being too much occupied with the more
+ serious business of bewitching us with their pretty figures to be very
+ amusing; whereas this wholesome man and brother, with his blonde wig, his
+ <i>panier</i>, his dainty feminine simperings and languishings, his
+ falsetto tones, and his general air of extreme fashion, was always
+ exceedingly droll. He was the saving grace of these stupid plays; and I
+ cannot help thinking that the <i>cancan</i>, as danced, in &ldquo;Ivanhoe,&rdquo;
+ by Isaac of York and the masculine Rebecca, was a moral spectacle; it was
+ the <i>cancan</i> made forever absurd and harmless. But otherwise, the
+ burlesques were as little cheerful as profitable. The playwrights who had
+ adapted them to the American stage&mdash;for they were all of English
+ authorship&mdash;had been good enough to throw in some political allusions
+ which were supposed to be effective with us, but which it was sad to see
+ received with apathy. It was conceivable from a certain air with which the
+ actors delivered these, that they were in the habit of stirring London
+ audiences greatly with like strokes of satire; but except where Rebecca
+ offered a bottle of Medford rum to Cedric the Saxon, who appeared in the
+ figure of ex-President Johnson, they had no effect upon us. We were cold,
+ very cold, to suggestions of Mr. Reverdy Johnson's now historical
+ speech-making and dining; General Butler's spoons moved us just a
+ little; at the name of Grant we roared and stamped, of course, though in a
+ perfectly mechanical fashion, and without thought of any meaning offered
+ us; those lovely women might have coupled the hero's name with
+ whatever insult they chose, and still his name would have made us cheer
+ them. We seemed not to care for points that were intended to flatter us
+ nationally. I am not aware that anybody signified consciousness when the
+ burlesque supported our side of the Alabama controversy, or acknowledged
+ the self-devotion with which a threat that England should be made to pay
+ was delivered by these English performers. With an equal impassiveness we
+ greeted allusions to Erie shares and to the late Mr. Fiske.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burlesque chiefly betrayed its descent from the spectacular ballet in
+ its undressing; but that ballet, while it demanded personal exposure, had
+ something very observable in its scenic splendors, and all that marching
+ and processioning in it was rather pretty; while in the burlesque there
+ seemed nothing of innocent intent. No matter what the plot, it led always
+ to a final great scene of breakdown,&mdash;which was doubtless most
+ impressive in that particular burlesque where this scene represented the
+ infernal world, and the ladies gave the dances of the country with a happy
+ conception of the deportment of lost souls. There, after some vague and
+ inconsequent dialogue, the wit springing from a perennial source of humor
+ (not to specify the violation of the seventh commandment), the dancing
+ commenced, each performer beginning with the Walk-round of the negro
+ minstrels, rendering its grotesqueness with a wonderful frankness of
+ movement, and then plunging into the mysteries of her dance with a kind of
+ infuriate grace and a fierce delight very curious to look upon. I am aware
+ of the historical gossiper still on the alert for me, and I dare not say
+ how sketchily these ladies were dressed or indeed, more than that they
+ were dressed to resemble circus-riders of the other sex, but as to their
+ own deceived nobody,&mdash;possibly did not intend deceit. One of them was
+ so good a player that it seemed needless for her to go so far as she did
+ in the dance; but she spared herself nothing, and it remained for her
+ merely stalwart friends to surpass her, if possible. This inspired each
+ who succeeded her to wantoner excesses, to wilder insolences of hose, to
+ fiercer bravadoes of corsage; while those not dancing responded to the
+ sentiment of the music by singing shrill glees in tune with it, clapping
+ their hands, and patting Juba, as the act is called,&mdash;a peculiarly
+ graceful and modest thing in woman. The frenzy grew with every moment,
+ and, as in another Vision of Sin,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Then they started from their places,
+ Moved with violence, changed in hue,
+ Caught each other with wild grimaces,
+ Half-invisible to the view,
+ Wheeling with precipitate paces
+ To the melody, till they flew,
+ Hair, and eyes, and limbs, and faces
+ Twisted hard in fierce embraces,
+ Like to Furies, like to Graces,&rdquo;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ with an occasional exchange of cuffs and kicks perfectly human. The
+ spectator found now himself and now the scene incredible, and indeed they
+ were hardly conceivable in relation to each other. A melancholy sense of
+ the absurdity, of the incongruity, of the whole absorbed at last even a
+ sense of the indecency. The audience was much the same in appearance as
+ other audiences, witnessing like displays at the other theatres, and did
+ not differ greatly from the usual theatrical house. Not so much fashion
+ smiled upon the efforts of these young ladies, as upon the <i>cancan</i>
+ of the Signorina Morlacchi a winter earlier; but there was a most fair
+ appearance of honest-looking, handsomely dressed men and women; and you
+ could pick out, all over the parquet, faces of one descent from the
+ deaconship, which you wondered were not afraid to behold one another
+ there. The truth is, we spectators, like the performers themselves, lacked
+ that tradition of error, of transgression, which casts its romance about
+ the people of a lighter race. We had not yet set off one corner of the
+ Common for a Jardin Mabille; we had not even the concert-cellars of the
+ gay and elegant New Yorker; and nothing, really, had happened in Boston to
+ educate us to this new taste in theatricals, since the fair Quakers felt
+ moved to testify in the streets and churches against our spiritual
+ nakedness. Yet it was to be noted with regret that our innocence, our
+ respectability, had no restraining influence upon the performance; and the
+ fatuity of the hope cherished by some courageous people, that the presence
+ of virtuous persons would reform the stage, was but too painfully evident.
+ The doubt whether they were not nearer right who have denounced the
+ theatre as essentially and incorrigibly bad would force itself upon the
+ mind, though there was a little comfort in the thought that, if virtue had
+ been actually allowed to frown upon these burlesques, the burlesques might
+ have been abashed into propriety. The caressing arm of the law was cast
+ very tenderly about the performers, and in the only case where a spectator
+ presumed to hiss,&mdash;it was at a <i>pas seul</i> of the indescribable,&mdash;a
+ policeman descended upon him, and with the succor of two friends of the
+ free ballet, rent him from his place, and triumphed forth with him. Here
+ was an end of ungenial criticism; we all applauded zealously after that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiar character of the drama to which they devoted themselves had
+ produced, in these ladies, some effects doubtless more interesting than
+ profitable to observe. One of them, whose unhappiness it was to take the
+ part of <i>soubrette</i> in the Laughable Commedietta preceding the
+ burlesque, was so ill at ease in drapery, so full of awkward jerks and
+ twitches, that she seemed quite another being when she came on later as a
+ radiant young gentleman in pink silk hose, and nothing of feminine modesty
+ in her dress excepting the very low corsage. A strange and compassionable
+ satisfaction beamed from her face; it was evident that this sad business
+ was the poor thing's <i>forte</i>. In another company was a lady who
+ had conquered all the easy attitudes of young men of the second or third
+ fashion, and who must have been at something of a loss to identify herself
+ when personating a woman off the stage. But Nature asserted herself in a
+ way that gave a curious and scarcely explicable shock in the case of that
+ dancer whose impudent song required the action of fondling a child, and
+ who rendered the passage with an instinctive tenderness and grace, all the
+ more pathetic for the profaning boldness of her super masculine dress or
+ undress. Commonly, however, the members of these burlesque troupes, though
+ they were not like men, were in most things as unlike women, and seemed
+ creatures of a kind of alien sex, parodying both. It was certainly a
+ shocking thing to look at them with their horrible prettiness, their
+ archness in which was no charm, their grace which put to shame. Yet
+ whoever beheld these burlesque sisters, must have fallen into perplexing
+ question in his own mind as to whose was the wrong involved. It was not
+ the fault of the public&mdash;all of us felt that: was it the fault of the
+ hard-working sisterhood, bred to this as to any other business, and not
+ necessarily conscious of the indecorum which pains my reader,&mdash;obliged
+ to please somehow, and aiming, doubtless, at nothing but applause? &ldquo;La
+ Belle Hélène&rdquo; suggests the only reasonable explanation: <i>&ldquo;C'est
+ la fatalité</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FLITTING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I would not willingly repose upon the friendship of a man whose local
+ attachments are weak. I should not demand of my intimate that he have a
+ yearning for the homes of his ancestors, or even the scenes of his own
+ boyhood; that is not in American nature; on the contrary, he is but a poor
+ creature who does not hate the village where he was born; yet a sentiment
+ for the place where one has lived two or three years, the hotel where one
+ has spent a week, the sleeping car in which one has ridden from Albany to
+ Buffalo,&mdash;so much I should think it well to exact from my friend in
+ proof of that sensibility and constancy without which true friendship does
+ not exist. So much I am ready to yield on my own part to a friend's
+ demand, and I profess to have all the possible regrets for Benicia Street,
+ now I have left it. Over its deficiencies I cast a veil of decent
+ oblivion, and shall always try to look upon its worthy and consoling
+ aspects, which were far the more numerous. It was never otherwise, I
+ imagine, than an ideal region in very great measure; and if the reader
+ whom I have sometimes seemed to direct thither, should seek it out, he
+ would hardly find my Benicia Street by the city sign-board. Yet this is
+ not wholly because it was an ideal locality, but because much of its
+ reality has now become merely historical, a portion of the tragical poetry
+ of the past. Many of the vacant lots abutting upon Benicia and the
+ intersecting streets flourished up, during the four years we knew it, into
+ fresh-painted wooden houses, and the time came to be when one might have
+ looked in vain for the abandoned hoop-skirts which used to decorate the
+ desirable building-sites. The lessening pasturage also reduced the herds
+ which formerly fed in the vicinity, and at last we caught the tinkle of
+ the cow-bells only as the cattle were driven past to remoter meadows. And
+ one autumn afternoon two laborers, hired by the city, came and threw up an
+ earthwork on the opposite side of the street, which they said was a
+ sidewalk, and would add to the value of property in the neighborhood. Not
+ being dressed with coal-ashes, however, during the winter, the sidewalk
+ vanished next summer under a growth of rag-weed, and hid the increased
+ values with it, and it is now an even question whether this monument of
+ municipal grandeur will finally be held by Art or resumed by Nature,&mdash;who
+ indeed has a perpetual motherly longing for her own, and may be seen in
+ all outlying and suburban places, pathetically striving to steal back any
+ neglected bits of ground and conceal them under her skirts of tattered and
+ shabby verdure. But whatever is the event of this contest, and whatever
+ the other changes wrought in the locality, it has not yet been quite
+ stripped of the characteristic charms which first took our hearts, and
+ which have been duly celebrated in these pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the new house was chosen, we made preparations to leave the old one,
+ but preparations so gradual, that, if we had cared much more than we did,
+ we might have suffered greatly by the prolongation of the agony. We
+ proposed to ourselves to escape the miseries of moving by transferring the
+ contents of one room at a time, and if we did not laugh incredulously at
+ people who said we had better have it over at once and be done with it, it
+ was because we respected their feelings, and not because we believed them.
+ We took up one carpet after another; one wall after another we stripped of
+ its pictures; we sent away all the books to begin with; and by this subtle
+ and ingenious process, we reduced ourselves to the discomfort of living in
+ no house at all, as it were, and of being at home in neither one place nor
+ the other. Yet the logic of our scheme remained perfect; and I do not
+ regret its failure in practice, for if we had been ever so loath to quit
+ the old house, its inhospitable barrenness would finally have hurried us
+ forth. In fact, does not life itself in some such fashion dismantle its
+ tenement until it is at last forced out of the uninhabitable place? Are
+ not the poor little comforts and pleasures and ornaments removed one by
+ one, till life, if it would be saved, must go too? We took a lesson from
+ the teachings of mortality, which are so rarely heeded, and we lingered
+ over our moving. We made the process so gradual, indeed, that I do not
+ feel myself all gone yet from the familiar work-room, and for aught I can
+ say, I still write there; and as to the guest-chamber, it is so densely
+ peopled by those it has lodged that it will never quite be emptied of
+ them. Friends also are yet in the habit of calling in the parlor, and
+ talking with us; and will the children never come off the stairs? Does
+ life, our high exemplar, leave so much behind as we did? Is this what
+ fills the world with ghosts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the getting ready to go, nothing hurt half so much as the sight of the
+ little girl packing her doll's things for removal. The trousseaux of
+ all those elegant creatures, the wooden, the waxen, the biscuit, the
+ india-rubber, were carefully assorted, and arranged in various small
+ drawers and boxes; their house was thoughtfully put in order and locked
+ for transportation; their innumerable broken sets of dishes were packed in
+ paper and set out upon the floor, a heart-breaking little basketful.
+ Nothing real in this world is so affecting as some image of reality, and
+ this travesty of our own flitting was almost intolerable. I will not
+ pretend to sentiment about anything else, for everything else had in it
+ the element of self-support belonging to all actual afflictions. When the
+ day of moving finally came, and the furniture wagon, which ought to have
+ been only a shade less dreadful to us than a hearse, drew up at our door,
+ our hearts were of a Neronian hardness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were I Diogenes,&rdquo; says wrathful Charles Lamb in one of his
+ letters, &ldquo;I would not move out of a kilderkin into a hogshead,
+ though the first had nothing but small beer in it, and the second reeked
+ claret.&rdquo; I fancy this loathing of the transitionary state came in
+ great part from the rude and elemental nature of the means of moving in
+ Lamb's day. In our own time, in Charlesbridge at least, everything
+ is so perfectly contrived, that it is in some ways a pleasant excitement
+ to move; though I do not commend the diversion to any but people of entire
+ leisure, for it cannot be denied that it is, at any rate, an interruption
+ to work. But little is broken, little is defaced, nothing is heedlessly
+ outraged or put to shame. Of course there are in every house certain
+ objects of comfort and even ornament which in a state of repose derive a
+ sort of dignity from being cracked, or scratched, or organically
+ debilitated, and give an idea of ancestral possession and of long descent
+ to the actual owner; and you must not hope that this venerable quality
+ will survive their public exposure upon the furniture wagon. There it
+ instantly perishes, like the consequence of some country notable huddled
+ and hustled about in the graceless and ignorant tumult of a great city. To
+ tell the truth, the number of things that turn shabby under the ordeal of
+ moving strikes a pang of unaccustomed poverty to the heart which, loving
+ all manner of makeshifts, is rich even in its dilapidations. For the time
+ you feel degraded by the spectacle of that forlornness, and if you are a
+ man of spirit, you try to sneak out of association with it in the mind of
+ the passer-by; you keep scrupulously in-doors, or if a fancied exigency
+ obliges you to go back and forth between the old house and the new, you
+ seek obscure by-ways remote from the great street down which the wagon
+ flaunts your ruin and decay, and time your arrivals and departures so as
+ to have the air of merely dropping in at either place. This consoles you;
+ but it deceives no one; for the man who is moving is unmistakably stamped
+ with transition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the momentary eclipse of these things is not the worst. It <i>is</i>
+ momentary; for if you will but plant them in kindly corners and favorable
+ exposures of the new house, a mould of respectability will gradually
+ overspread them again, and they will once more account for their presence
+ by the air of having been a long time in the family; but there is danger
+ that in the first moments of mortification you will be tempted to replace
+ them with new and costly articles. Even the best of the old things are
+ nothing to boast of in the hard, unpitying light to which they are
+ exposed, and a difficult and indocile spirit of extravagance is evoked in
+ the least profuse. Because of this fact alone I should not commend the
+ diversion of moving save to people of very ample means as well as perfect
+ leisure; there are more reasons than the misery of flitting why the
+ dweller in the kilderkin should not covet the hogshead reeking of claret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the grosser misery of moving is, as I have hinted, vastly mitigated by
+ modern science, and what remains of it one may use himself to with no
+ tremendous effort. I have found that in the dentist's chair,&mdash;that
+ ironically luxurious seat, cushioned in satirical suggestion of impossible
+ repose,&mdash;after a certain initial period of clawing, filing, scraping,
+ and punching, one's nerves accommodate themselves to the torment,
+ and one takes almost an objective interest in the operation of
+ tooth-filling; and in like manner after two or three wagon-loads of your
+ household stuff have passed down the public street, and all your morbid
+ associations with them have been desecrated, you begin almost to like it.
+ Yet I cannot regard this abandon as a perfectly healthy emotion, and I do
+ not counsel my reader to mount himself upon the wagon and ride to and fro
+ even once, for afterwards the remembrance of such an excess will grieve
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, I meant to imply by this that moving sometimes comes to an end,
+ though it is not easy to believe so while moving. The time really arrives
+ when you sit down in your new house, and amid whatever disorder take your
+ first meal there. This meal is pretty sure to be that gloomy tea, that
+ loathly repast of butter and toast, and some kind of cake, with which the
+ soul of the early-dining American is daily cast down between the hours of
+ six and seven in the evening; and instinctively you compare it with the
+ last meal you took in your old house, seeking in vain to decide whether
+ this is more dispiriting than that. At any rate that was not at all the
+ meal which the last meal in any house which has been a home ought to be in
+ fact, and is in books. It was hurriedly cooked; it was served upon
+ fugitive and irregular crockery; and it was eaten in deplorable disorder,
+ with the professional movers waiting for the table outside the
+ dining-room. It ought to have been an act of serious devotion; it was
+ nothing but an expiation. It should have been a solemn commemoration of
+ all past dinners in the place, an invocation to their pleasant
+ apparitions. But I, for my part, could not recall these at all, though now
+ I think of them with the requisite pathos, and I know they were perfectly
+ worthy of remembrance. I salute mournfully the companies that have sat
+ down at dinner there, for they are sadly scattered now; some beyond seas,
+ some beyond the narrow gulf, so impassably deeper to our longing and
+ tenderness than the seas. But more sadly still I hail the host himself,
+ and desire to know of him if literature was not somehow a gayer science in
+ those days, and if his peculiar kind of drolling had not rather more heart
+ in it then. In an odd, not quite expressible fashion, something of him
+ seems dispersed abroad and perished in the guests he loved. I trust, of
+ course, that all will be restored to him when he turns&mdash;as every man
+ past thirty feels he may when he likes, and has the time&mdash;and resumes
+ his youth. Or if this feeling is only a part of the great tacit promise of
+ eternity, I am all the more certain of his getting back his losses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say that now these apposite reflections occur to me with a sufficient
+ ease, but that upon the true occasion for them they were absent. So, too,
+ at the first meal in the new house, there was none of that desirable sense
+ of setting up a family altar, but a calamitous impression of irretrievable
+ upheaval, in honor of which sackcloth and ashes seemed the only wear. Yet
+ even the next day the Lares and Penates had regained something of their
+ wonted cheerfulness, and life had begun again with the first breakfast. In
+ fact, I found myself already so firmly established that, meeting the
+ furniture cart which had moved me the day before, I had the face to ask
+ the driver whom they were turning out of house and home, as if my own
+ flitting were a memory of the far-off past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that I think the professional mover expects to be addressed in a
+ joking mood. I have a fancy that he cultivates a serious spirit himself,
+ in which he finds it easy to sympathize with any melancholy on the part of
+ the moving family. There is a slight flavor of undertaking in his manner,
+ which is nevertheless full of a subdued firmness very consoling and
+ supporting; though the life that he leads must be a troubled and
+ uncheerful one, trying alike to the muscles and the nerves. How often must
+ he have been charged by anxious and fluttered ladies to be very careful of
+ that basket of china, and those vases! How often must he have been vexed
+ by the ignorant terrors of gentlemen asking if he thinks that the
+ library-table, poised upon the top of his load, will hold! His planning is
+ not infallible, and when he breaks something uncommonly precious, what
+ does a man of his sensibility do? Is the demolition of old homes really
+ distressing to him, or is he inwardly buoyed up by hopes of other and
+ better homes for the people he moves? Can there be any ideal of moving?
+ Does he, perhaps, feel a pride in an artfully constructed load, and has he
+ something like an artist's pang in unloading it? Is there a choice
+ in families to be moved, and are some worse or better than others? Next to
+ the lawyer and the doctor, it appears to me that the professional mover
+ holds the most confidential relations towards his fellow-men. He is let
+ into all manner of little domestic secrets and subterfuges; I dare say he
+ knows where half the people in town keep their skeleton, and what manner
+ of skeleton it is. As for me, when I saw him making towards a certain
+ closet door, I planted myself firmly against it. He smiled intelligence;
+ he knew the skeleton was there, and that it would be carried to the new
+ house after dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I began by saying that I should wish my friend to have some sort of local
+ attachment; but I suppose it must be owned that this sentiment, like pity,
+ and the modern love-passion, is a thing so largely produced by culture
+ that nature seems to have little or nothing to do with it. The first men
+ were homeless wanderers; the patriarchs dwelt in tents, and shifted their
+ place to follow the pasturage, without a sigh; and for children&mdash;the
+ pre-historic, the antique people, of our day&mdash;moving is a rapture.
+ The last dinner in the old house, the first tea in the new, so doleful to
+ their elders, are partaken of by them with joyous riot. Their shrill
+ trebles echo gleefully from the naked walls and floors; they race up and
+ down the carpetless stairs; they menace the dislocated mirrors and
+ crockery; through all the chambers of desolation they frolic with a gayety
+ indomitable save by bodily exhaustion. If the reader is of a moving
+ family,&mdash;and so he is as he is an American,&mdash;he can recall the
+ zest he found during childhood in the moving which had for his elders&mdash;poor
+ victims of a factitious and conventional sentiment!&mdash;only the salt
+ and bitterness of tears. His spirits never fell till the carpets were
+ down; no sorrow touched him till order returned; if Heaven so blessed him
+ that his bed was made upon the floor for one night, the angels visited his
+ dreams. Why, then, is the mature soul, however sincere and humble, not
+ only grieved but mortified by flitting? Why cannot one move without
+ feeling the great public eye fixed in pitying contempt upon him? This
+ sense of abasement seems to be something quite inseparable from the act,
+ which is often laudable, and in every way wise and desirable; and he whom
+ it has afflicted is the first to turn, after his own establishment, and
+ look with scornful compassion upon the overflowing furniture wagon as it
+ passes. But I imagine that Abraham's neighbors, when he struck his
+ tent, and packed his parlor and kitchen furniture upon his camels, and
+ started off with Mrs. Sarah to seek a new camping-ground, did not smile at
+ the procession, or find it worthy of ridicule or lament. Nor did Abraham,
+ once settled, and reposing in the cool of the evening at the door of his
+ tent, gaze sarcastically upon the moving of any of his brother patriarchs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To some such philosophical serenity we shall also return, I suppose, when
+ we have wisely theorized life in our climate, and shall all have become
+ nomads once more, following June and October up and down and across the
+ continent, and not suffering the full malice of the winter and summer
+ anywhere. But as yet, the derision that attaches to moving attends even
+ the goer-out of town, and the man of many trunks and a retinue of
+ linen-suited womankind is a pitiable and despicable object to all the
+ other passengers at the railroad station and on the steamboat wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is but one of many ways in which mere tradition oppresses us. I
+ protest that as moving is now managed in Charlesbridge, there is hardly
+ any reason why the master or mistress of the household should put hand to
+ anything; but it is a tradition that they shall dress themselves in their
+ worst, as for heavy work, and shall go about very shabby for at least a
+ day before and a day after the transition. It is a kind of sacrifice, I
+ suppose, to a venerable ideal; and I would never be the first to omit it.
+ In others I observe that this vacant and ceremonious zeal is in proportion
+ to an incapacity to do anything that happens really to be required; and I
+ believe that the truly sage person would devote moving-day to paying
+ visits of ceremony in his finest clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
+ <img src="images/9000.jpg" alt="9000 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/9000.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ As to the house which one has left, I think it would be preferable to have
+ it occupied as soon as possible after one's flitting. Pilgrimages to
+ the dismantled shrine are certainly to be avoided by the friend of
+ cheerfulness. A day's absence and emptiness wholly change its
+ character, though the familiarity continues, with a ghastly difference, as
+ in the beloved face that the life has left. It is not at all the vacant
+ house it was when you came first to look at it: for then hopes peopled it,
+ and now memories. In that golden prime you had long been boarding, and any
+ place in which you could keep house seemed utterly desirable. How
+ distinctly you recall that wet day, or that fair day, on which you went
+ through it and decided that this should be the guest chamber and that the
+ family room, and what could be done with the little back attic in a pinch!
+ The children could play in the dining-room; and to be sure the parlor was
+ rather small if you wanted to have company; but then, who would ever want
+ to give a party? and besides, the pump in the kitchen was a compensation
+ for anything. How lightly the dumb waiter ran up and down,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Qual piuma al vento!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ you sang, in very glad-heartedness. Then estimates of the number of yards
+ of carpeting; and how you could easily save the cost from the difference
+ between boarding and house-keeping. Adieu, Mrs. Brown! henceforth let your
+ &ldquo;desirable apartments, <i>en suite</i> or single, furnished or
+ unfurnished, to gentlemen only!&rdquo;&mdash;this married pair is about to
+ escape forever from your extortions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, if the years passed without making us sadder, should we be much the
+ wiser for their going? Now you know, little couple, that there are
+ extortions in this wicked world beside Mrs. Brown's; and some other
+ things. But if you go into the empty house that was lately your home, you
+ will not, I believe, be haunted by these sordid disappointments, for the
+ place should evoke other regrets and meditations. Truly, though the great
+ fear has not come upon you here, in this room you may have known moments
+ when it seemed very near, and when the quick, fevered breathings of the
+ little one timed your own heart-beats. To that door, with many other
+ missives of joy and pain, came haply the dispatch which hurried you off to
+ face your greatest sorrow&mdash;came by night, like a voice of God,
+ speaking and warning, and making all your work idle and your aims foolish.
+ These walls have answered, how many times, to your laughter; they have had
+ friendly ears for the trouble that seemed to grow by utterance. You have
+ sat upon the threshold so many summer days; so many winter mornings you
+ have seen the snows drifted high about it; so often your step has been
+ light and heavy upon it. There is the study, where your magnificent
+ performances were planned, and your exceeding small performances were
+ achieved; hither you hurried with the first criticism of your first book,
+ and read it with the rapture that nothing but a love-letter and a
+ favorable review can awaken. Out there is the well-known humble prospect,
+ that was commonly but a vista into dreamland; on the other hand is the
+ pretty grove,&mdash;its leaves now a little painted with the autumn, and
+ faltering to their fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, the place must always be sacred, but painfully sacred; and I say
+ again one should not go near it unless as a penance. If the reader will
+ suffer me the confidence, I will own that there is always a pang in the
+ past which is more than any pleasure it can give, and I believe that he,
+ if he were perfectly honest,&mdash;as Heaven forbid I or any one should
+ be,&mdash;would also confess as much. There is no house to which one would
+ return, having left it, though it were the hogshead out of which one had
+ moved into a kilderkin; for those associations whose perishing leaves us
+ free, and preserves to us what little youth we have, were otherwise
+ perpetuated to our burden and bondage. Let some one else, who has also
+ escaped from his past, have your old house; he will find it new and
+ untroubled by memories, while you, under another roof, enjoy a present
+ that borders only upon the future.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Suburban Sketches, by William Dean Howells
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