<h2><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<p class="letter">
Journey to New York—Delaware River—Stagecoach—City of New
York—Collegiate Institute for Young Ladies—Theatres—Public
Garden—Churches—Morris Canal—Fashions—Carriages</p>
<p>At length, in spite of the lingering pace necessarily attending consultations,
and arrangements across the Atlantic, our plans were finally settled; the
coming spring was to show us New York, and Niagara, and the early summer was to
convey us home.</p>
<p>No sooner did the letter arrive which decided this, than we began our
preparations for departure. We took our last voyage on the Potomac, we bade a
last farewell to Virginia, and gave a last day to some of our kind friends near
Washington.</p>
<p>The spring, though slow and backward, was sufficiently advanced to render the
journey pleasant; and though the road from Washington to Baltimore was less
brilliant in foliage than when I had seen it before, it still had much of
beauty. The azalias were in full bloom, and the delicate yellow blossom of the
sassafras almost rivalled its fruit in beauty.</p>
<p>At Baltimore we again embarked on a gigantic steam-boat, and reached
Philadelphia in the middle of the night. Here we changed our boat and found
time, before starting in the morning, to take a last look at the Doric and
Corinthian porticos of the two celebrated temples dedicated to Mammon.</p>
<p>The Delaware river, above Philadelphia, still flows through a landscape too
level for beauty, but it is rendered interesting by a succession of
gentlemen’s seats, which, if less elaborately finished in architecture,
and garden grounds, than the lovely villas on the Thames, are still beautiful
objects to gaze upon as you float rapidly past on the broad silvery stream that
washes their lawns They present a picture of wealth and enjoyment that accords
well with the noble city to which they are an appendage. One mansion arrested
our attention, not only from its being more than usually large and splendid,
but from its having the monument which marked the family resting-place, rearing
itself in all the gloomy grandeur of black and white marble, exactly opposite
the door of entrance.</p>
<p>In Virginia and Maryland we had remarked that almost every family mansion had
its little grave yard, sheltered by locust and cypress trees; but this
decorated dwelling of the dead seemed rather a melancholy ornament in the
grounds.</p>
<p>We had, for a considerable distance, a view of the dwelling of Joseph
Bonaparte, which is situated on the New Jersey shore, in the midst of an
extensive tract of land, of which he is the proprietor.</p>
<p>Here the ex-monarch has built several houses, which are occupied by French
tenants. The country is very flat, but a terrace of two sides has been raised,
commanding a fine reach of the Delaware River; at the point where this terrace
forms a right angle, a lofty chapel has been erected, which looks very much
like an observatory; I admired the ingenuity with which the Catholic prince has
united his religion and his love of a fine terrestrial prospect. The highest
part of the building presents, in every direction, the appearance of an immense
cross; the transept, if I may so express it, being formed by the projection of
an ample balcony, which surrounds a tower. A Quaker gentleman, from
Philadelphia, exclaimed, as he gazed on the mansion, “There we see a
monument of fallen royalty! Strange! that dethroned kings should seek and find
their best strong-hold in a Republic.”</p>
<p>There was more of philosophy than of scorn in his accent, and his countenance
was the symbol of gentleness and benevolence; but I overheard many unquakerlike
jokes from others, as to the comfortable assurance a would-be king must feel of
a faithful alliance between his head and shoulders.</p>
<p>At Trenton, the capital of New Jersey, we left our smoothly-gliding comfortable
boat for the most detestable stage-coach that ever Christian built to dislocate
the joints of his fellow men. Ten of these torturing machines were crammed full
of the passengers who left the boat with us. The change in our movement was not
more remarkable than that which took place in the tempers and countenances of
our fellow-travellers. Gentlemen who had lounged on sofas, and balanced
themselves in chairs, all the way from Philadelphia, with all the conscious
fascinations of stiff stays and neck-cloths, which, while doing to death the
rash beauties who ventured to gaze, seemed but a whalebone panoply to guard the
wearer, these pretty youths so guarded from without, so sweetly at peace
within, now crushed beneath their armour, looked more like victims on the
wheel, than dandies armed for conquest; their whalebones seemed to enter into
their souls, and every face grew grim and scowling. The pretty ladies too, with
their expansive bonnets, any one of which might handsomely have filled the
space allotted to three,—how sad the change! I almost fancied they must
have been of the race of Undine, and that it was only when they heard the
splashing of water that they could smile. As I looked into the altered eyes of
my companions, I was tempted to ask, “Look I as cross as you?”
Indeed, I believe that, if possible, I looked crosser still, for the roads and
the vehicle together were quite too much for my philosophy.</p>
<p>At length, however, we found ourselves alive on board the boat which was to
convey us down the Raraton River to New York.</p>
<p>We fully intended to have gone to bed, to heal our bones, on entering the
steam-boat, but the sight of a table neatly spread determined us to go to
dinner instead. Sin and shame would it have been, indeed, to have closed our
eyes upon the scene which soon opened before us. I have never seen the bay of
Naples, I can therefore make no comparison, but my imagination is incapable of
conceiving any thing of the kind more beautiful than the harbour of New York.
Various and lovely are the objects which meet the eye on every side, but the
naming them would only be to give a list of words, without conveying the
faintest idea of the scene. I doubt if ever the pencil of Turner could do it
justice, bright and glorious as it rose upon us. We seemed to enter the harbour
of New York upon waves of liquid gold, and as we darted past the green isles
which rise from its bosom, like guardian centinels of the fair city, the
setting sun stretched his horizontal beams farther and farther at each moment,
as if to point out to us some new glory in the landscape.</p>
<p>New York, indeed, appeared to us, even when we saw it by a soberer light, a
lovely and a noble city. To us who had been so long travelling through
half-cleared forests, and sojourning among an
“I’m-as-good-as-you” population, it seemed, perhaps, more
beautiful, more splendid, and more refined than it might have done, had we
arrived there directly from London; but making every allowance for this, I must
still declare that I think New York one of the finest cities I ever saw, and as
much superior to every other in the Union (Philadelphia not excepted), as
London to Liverpool, or Paris to Rouen. Its advantages of position are,
perhaps, unequalled any where. Situated on an island, which I think it will one
day cover, it rises, like Venice, from the sea, and like that fairest of cities
in the days of her glory, receives into its lap tribute of all the riches of
the earth.</p>
<p>The southern point of Manhatten Island divides the waters of the harbour into
the north and east rivers; on this point stands the city of New York, extending
from river to river, and running northward to the extent of three or four
miles. I think it covers nearly as much ground as Paris, but is much less
thickly peopled. The extreme point is fortified towards the sea by a battery,
and forms an admirable point of defence; I should suppose, no city could boast.
From hence commences the splendid Broadway, as the fine avenue is called, which
runs through the whole city. This noble street may vie with any I ever saw, for
its length and breadth, its handsome shops, neat awnings, excellent
<i>trottoir</i>, and well-dressed pedestrians. It has not the crowded glitter
of Bond Street equipages, nor the gorgeous fronted palaces of Regent Street;
but it is magnificent in its extent, and ornamented by several handsome
buildings, some of them surrounded by grass and trees. The Park, in which
stands the noble city-hall, is a very fine area, I never found that the most
graphic description of a city could give me any feeling of being there; and
even if others have the power, I am very sure I have not, of setting churches
and squares, and long drawn streets, before the mind’s eye. I will not,
therefore, attempt a detailed description of this great metropolis of the new
world, but will only say that during the seven weeks we stayed there, we always
found something new to see and to admire; and were it not so very far from all
the old-world things which cling about the heart of an European, I should say
that I never saw a city more desirable as a residence.</p>
<p>The dwelling houses of the higher classes are extremely handsome, and very
richly furnished. Silk or satin furniture is as often, or oftener, seen than
chintz; the mirrors are as handsome as in London; the cheffoniers, slabs, and
marble tables as elegant; and in addition, they have all the pretty tasteful
decoration of French porcelaine, and or-molu in much greater abundance, because
at a much cheaper rate. Every part of their houses is well carpeted, and the
exterior finishing, such as steps, railings, and door-frames, are very
superior. Almost every house has handsome green blinds on the outside;
balconies are not very general, nor do the houses display, externally, so many
flowers as those of Paris and London; but I saw many rooms decorated within,
exactly like those of an European <i>petite maitresse</i>. Little tables,
looking and smelling like flower beds, portfolios, nick-nacks, bronzes, busts,
cameos, and alabaster vases, illustrated copies of ladylike rhymes bound in
silk, and, in short, all the pretty coxcomalities of the drawing-room scattered
about with the same profuse and studied negligence as with us.</p>
<p>Hudson Square and its neighbourhood is, I believe, the most fashionable part of
the town; the square is beautiful, excellently well planted with a great
variety of trees, and only wanting our frequent and careful mowing to make it
equal to any square in London. The iron railing which surrounds this enclosure
is as high and as handsome as that of the Tuilleries, and it will give some
idea of the care bestowed on its decoration, to know that the gravel for the
walks was conveyed by barges from Boston, not as ballast, but as freight.</p>
<p>The great defect in the houses is their extreme uniformity when you have seen
one, you have seen all. Neither do I quite like the arrangement of the rooms.
In nearly all the houses the dining and drawing rooms are on the same floor,
with ample folding doors between them; when thrown together they certainly make
a very noble apartment; but no doors can be barrier sufficient between dining
and drawing-rooms. Mixed dinner parties of ladies and gentlemen, however, are
very rare, which is a great defect in the society; not only as depriving them
of the most social and hospitable manner of meeting, but as leading to frequent
dinner parties of gentlemen without ladies, which certainly does not conduce to
refinement.</p>
<p>The evening parties, excepting such as are expressly for young people, are
chiefly conversational; we were too late in the season for large parties, but
we saw enough to convince us that there is society to be met with in New York,
which would be deemed delightful any where. Cards are very seldom used; and
music, from their having very little professional aid at their parties is
seldom, I believe, as good as what is heard at private concerts in London.</p>
<p>The Americans have certainly not the same <i>besoin</i> of being amused, as
other people; they may be the wiser for this, perhaps, but it makes them less
agreeable to a looker-on.</p>
<p>There are three theatres at New York, all of which we visited. The Park Theatre
is the only one licensed by fashion, but the Bowery is infinitely superior in
beauty; it is indeed as pretty a theatre as I ever entered, perfect as to size
and proportion, elegantly decorated, and the scenery and machinery equal to any
in London, but it is not the fashion. The Chatham is so utterly condemned by
<i>bon ton</i>, that it requires some courage to decide upon going there; nor
do I think my curiosity would have penetrated so far, had I not seen Miss
Mitford’s Rienzi advertised there. It was the first opportunity I had had
of seeing it played, and spite of very indifferent acting, I was delighted. The
interest must have been great, for till the curtain fell, I saw not one quarter
of the queer things around me: then I observed in the front row of a dress-box
a lady performing the most maternal office possible; several gentlemen without
their coats, and a general air of contempt for the decencies of life, certainly
more than usually revolting.</p>
<p>At the Park Theatre I again saw the American Roscius, Mr. Forrest. He played
the part of Damon, and roared, I thought, very unlike a nightingale. I cannot
admire this celebrated performer.</p>
<p>Another night we saw Cinderella there; Mrs. Austin was the prima donna, and
much admired. The piece was extremely well got up, and on this occasion we saw
the Park Theatre to advantage, for it was filled with well-dressed company; but
still we saw many “yet unrazored lips” polluted with the grim tinge
of the hateful tobacco, and heard, without ceasing, the spitting, which of
course is its consequence. If their theatres had the orchestra of the Feydeau,
and a choir of angels to boot, I could find but little pleasure, so long as
they were followed by this running accompaniment of <i>thorough base</i>.</p>
<p>Whilst at New York, the prospectus of a fashionable boarding-school was
presented to me. I made some extracts from it, as a specimen of the enlarged
scale of instruction proposed for young females.</p>
<p class="center">
Brooklyn Collegiate Institute<br/>
for Young Ladies,<br/>
Brooklyn Heights, opposite the City of<br/>
New York.</p>
<p class="center">
JUNIOR DEPARTMENT</p>
<p class="center">
Sixth Class</p>
<p>Latin Grammar, Liber Primus; Jacob’s Latin Reader, (first part); Modern
Geography; Intellectual and Practical Arithmetic finished; Dr. Barber’s
Grammar of Elocution; Writing, Spelling, Composition, and Vocal Music.</p>
<p class="center">
Fifth Class</p>
<p>Jacob’s Latin Reader, (second part); Roman Antiquities, Sallust;
Clark’s Introduction to the Making of Latin; Ancient and Sacred
Geography; Studies of Poetry; Short Treatise on Rhetoric; Map Drawing,
Composition, Spelling, and Vocal Music.</p>
<p class="center">
Fourth Class</p>
<p>Caesar’s Commentaries; first five books of Virgil’s Aeneid;
Mythology; Watts on the Mind; Political Geography, (Woodbridge’s large
work); Natural History; Treatise on the Globes; Ancient History; Studies of
Poetry concluded; English Grammar, Composition, Spelling, and Vocal Music.</p>
<p class="center">
SENIOR DEPARTMENT</p>
<p class="center">
Third Class</p>
<p>Virgil, (finished); Cicero’s Select Orations; Modern History; Plane
Geometry; Moral Philosophy; Critical Reading of Young’s Poems;
Perspective Drawing; Rhetoric; Logic, Composition, and Vocal Music.</p>
<p class="center">
Second Class</p>
<p>Livy; Horace, (Odes); Natural Theology; small Compend of Ecclesiastical
History; Female Biography; Algebra; Natural Philosophy, (Mechanics,
Hydrostatics, Pneumatics, and Acoustics); Intellectual Philosophy; Evidences of
Christianity; Composition, and Vocal Music.</p>
<p class="center">
First Class</p>
<p>Horace, (finished); Tacitus; Natural Philosophy, (Electricity, Optics,
Magnetism, Galvanism); Astronomy, Chemistry, Mineralogy, and Geology; Compend
of Political Economy; Composition, and Vocal Music.</p>
<p>The French, Spanish, Italian, or Greek languages may be attended to, if
required, at any time.</p>
<p>The Exchange is very handsome, and ranks about midway between the heavy gloom
that hangs over our London merchants, and the light and lofty elegance which
decorates the Bourse at Paris. The churches are plain, but very neat, and kept
in perfect repair within and without; but I saw none which had the least
pretension to splendour; the Catholic Cathedral at Baltimore is the only church
in America which has.</p>
<p>At New York, as every where else, they show within, during the time of service,
like beds of tulips, so gay, so bright, so beautiful, are the long rows of
French bonnets and pretty faces; rows but rarely broken by the unribboned heads
of the male population; the proportion is about the same as I have remarked
elsewhere. Excepting at New York, I never saw the other side of the picture,
but there I did. On the opposite side of the North River, about three miles
higher up, is a place called Hoboken. A gentleman who possessed a handsome
mansion and grounds there, also possessed the right of ferry, and to render
this productive, he has restricted his pleasure grounds to a few beautiful
acres, laying out the remainder simply and tastefully as a public walk. It is
hardly possible to imagine one of greater attraction; a broad belt of light
underwood and flowering shrubs, studded at intervals with lofty forest trees,
runs for two miles along a cliff which overhangs the matchless Hudson;
sometimes it feathers the rocks down to its very margin, and at others leaves a
pebbly shore, just rude enough to break the gentle waves, and make a music
which mimics softly the loud chorus of the ocean. Through this beautiful little
wood, a broad well gravelled terrace is led by every point which can exhibit
the scenery to advantage; narrower and wilder paths diverge at intervals, some
into the deeper shadow of the wood, and some shelving gradually to the pretty
coves below.</p>
<p>The price of entrance to this little Eden, is the six cents you pay at the
ferry. We went there on a bright Sunday afternoon, expressly to see the humours
of the place. Many thousand persons were scattered through the grounds; of
these we ascertained, by repeatedly counting, that nineteen-twentieths were
men. The ladies were at church. Often as the subject has pressed upon my mind,
I think I never so strongly felt the conviction that the Sabbath-day, the holy
day, the day on which alone the great majority of the Christian world can spend
their hours as they please, is ill passed (if passed entirely) within brick
walls, listening to an earth-born preacher, charm he never so wisely.</p>
<p class="poem">
“Oh! how can they renounce the boundless store<br/>
Of charms, which Nature to her vot’ries yields!<br/>
The warbling woodland, the resounding shore,<br/>
The pomp of groves, and garniture of fields,<br/>
All that the genial ray of morning gilds,<br/>
And all that echoes to the song of even,<br/>
All that the mountain’s sheltering bosom yields,<br/>
And all the dread magnificence of heaven;<br/>
Oh! how can they renounce, and hope to be forgiven!”</p>
<p>How is it that the men of America, who are reckoned good husbands and good
fathers, while they themselves enjoy sufficient freedom of spirit to permit
their walking forth into the temple of the living God, can leave those they
love best on earth, bound in the iron chains of a most tyrannical fanaticism?
How can they breathe the balmy air, and not think of the tainted atmosphere so
heavily weighing upon breasts still dearer than their own? How can they gaze
upon the blossoms of the spring, and not remember the fairer cheeks of their
young daughters, waxing pale, as they sit for long sultry hours, immured with
hundreds of fellow victims, listening to the roaring vanities of a preacher
canonized by a college of old women? They cannot think it needful to
salvation,or they would not withdraw themselves. Wherefore is it? Do they fear
these self-elected, self-ordained priests, and offer up their wives and
daughters to propitiate them? Or do they deem their hebdomadal freedom more
complete, because their wives and daughters are shut up four or five times in
the day at church or chapel? It is true, that at Hoboken, as every where else,
there are <i>reposoires</i>, which, as you pass them, blast the sense for a
moment, by reeking forth the fumes of whiskey and tobacco, and it may be that
these cannot be entered with a wife or daughter. The proprietor of the grounds,
however, has contrived with great taste to render these abominations not
unpleasing to the eye; there is one in particular, which has quite the air of a
Grecian temple, and did they drink wine instead of whiskey, it might be
inscribed to Bacchus; but in this particular, as in many others, the ancient
and modern Republics differ.</p>
<p>It is impossible not to feel, after passing one Sunday in the churches and
chapels of New York, and the next in the gardens of Hoboken, that the thousands
of well-dressed men you see enjoying themselves at the latter, have made over
the thousands of well-dressed women you saw exhibited at the former, into the
hands of the priests, at least, for the day. The American people arrogate to
themselves a character of superior morality and religion, but this division of
their hours of leisure does not give me a favourable idea of either.</p>
<p>I visited all the exhibitions in New York. The Medici of the Republic must
exert themselves a little more before these can become even respectable. The
worst of the business is, that with the exception of about half a dozen
individuals, the good citizens are more than contented, they are delighted.</p>
<p>The newspaper lungs of the Republic breathe forth praise and triumph, may,
almost pant with extacy in speaking of their native <i>chef
d’oeuvres</i>. I should be hardly believed were I to relate the instances
which fell in my way, of the utter ignorance respecting pictures to be found
among persons of the <i>first standing</i> in society. Often where a liberal
spirit exists, and a wish to patronise the fine arts is expressed, it is joined
to a profundity of ignorance on the subject almost inconceivable. A doubt as to
the excellence of their artists is very nervously received, and one gentleman,
with much civility, told me, that at the present era, all the world were aware
that competition was pretty well at an end between our two nations, and that a
little envy might naturally be expected to mix with the surprise with which the
mother country beheld the distance at which her colonies were leaving her
behind them.</p>
<p>I must, however, do the few artists with whom I became acquainted, the justice
to say, that their own pretensions are much more modest than those of their
patrons for them. I have heard several confess and deplore their ignorance of
drawing, and have repeatedly remarked a sensibility to the merit of European
artists, though perhaps only known by engravings, and a deference to their
authority, which showed a genuine feeling for the art. In fact, I think that
there is a very considerable degree of natural talent for painting in America,
but it has to make its way through darkness and thick night. When an academy is
founded, their first care is to hang the walls of its exhibition room with all
the unutterable trash that is offered to them. No living models are sought for;
no discipline as to the manner of study is enforced. Boys who know no more of
human form, than they do of the eyes, nose, and mouth in the moon, begin
painting portraits. If some of them would only throw away their palettes for a
year, and learn to draw; if they would attend anatomical lectures, and take
notes, not in words, but in forms, of joints and muscles, their exhibitions
would soon cease to be so utterly below criticism.</p>
<p>The most interesting exhibition open when I was there was, decidedly, Colonel
Trumbold’s; and how the patriots of America can permit this truly
national collection to remain a profitless burden on the hands of the artist,
it is difficult to understand. Many of the sketches are masterly; but like his
illustrious countryman, West, his sketches are his <i>chef d’oeuvres</i>.</p>
<p>I can imagine nothing more perfect than the interior of the public institutions
of New York. There is a practical good sense in all their arrangements that
must strike foreigners very forcibly. The Asylum for the Destitute offers a
hint worth taking. It is dedicated to the reformation of youthful offenders of
both sexes, and it is as admirable in the details of its management, as in its
object. Every part of the institution is deeply interesting; but there is a
difference very remarkable between the boys and the girls. The boys are, I
think, the finest set of lads I ever saw brought together; bright looking, gay,
active, and full of intelligence. The girls are exactly in reverse; heavy,
listless, indifferent, and melancholy. In conversing with the gentleman who is
the general superintendant of the establishment, I made the remark to him, and
he told me, that the reality corresponded with the appearance. All of them had
been detected in some act of dishonesty; but the boys, when removed from the
evil influence which had led them so to use their ingenuity, rose like a spring
when a pressure is withdrawn; and feeling themselves once more safe from danger
and from shame, hope and cheerfulness animated every countenance. But the pour
girls, on the contrary, can hardly look up again. They are as different as an
oak and a lily after a storm. The one, when the fresh breeze blows over it,
shakes the raindrops from its crest, and only looks the brighter; the other,
its silken leaves once soiled, shrinks from the eye, and is levelled to the
earth for ever.</p>
<p class="p2">
We spent a delightful day in New Jersey, in visiting, with a most agreeable
party, the inclined planes, which are used instead of locks on the Morris
canal.</p>
<p>This is a very interesting work; it is one among a thousand which prove the
people of America to be the most enterprising in the world. I was informed that
this important canal, which connects the waters of the Hudson and the Delaware,
is a hundred miles long, and in this distance overcomes a variation of level
amounting to sixteen hundred feet. Of this, fourteen hundred are achieved by
inclined planes. The planes average about sixty feet of perpendicular lift
each, and are to support about forty tons. The time consumed in passing them is
twelve minutes for one hundred feet of perpendicular rise. The expense is less
than a third of what locks would be for surmounting the same rise. If we set
about any more canals, this may be worth attending to.</p>
<p>This Morris canal is certainly an extraordinary work; it not only varies its
level sixteen hundred feet, but at one point runs along the side of a mountain
at thirty feet above the tops of the highest buildings in the town of Paterson,
below; at another it crosses the falls of the Passaic in a stone aqueduct sixty
feet above the water in the river. This noble work, in a great degree, owes its
existence to the patriotic and scientific energy of Mr. Cadwallader Colden.</p>
<p>There is no point in the national character of the Americans which commands so
much respect as the boldness and energy with which public works are undertaken
and carried through. Nothing stops them if a profitable result can be fairly
hoped for. It is this which has made cities spring up amidst the forests with
such inconceivable rapidity; and could they once be thoroughly persuaded that
any point of the ocean had a hoard of dollars beneath it, I have not the
slightest doubt that in about eighteen months we should see a snug covered
rail-road leading direct to the spot.</p>
<p class="p2">
I was told at New York, that in many parts of the state it was usual to pay the
service of the Presbyterian ministers in the following manner. Once a year a
day is fixed, on which some member of every family in a congregation meet at
their minister’s house in the afternoon. They each bring an offering
(according to their means) of articles necessary for housekeeping. The poorer
members leave their contributions in a large basket, placed for the purpose,
close to the door of entrance. Those of more importance, and more calculated to
do honour to the piety of the donors, are carried into the room where the
company is assembled. Sugar, coffee, tea, cheese, barrels of flour, pieces of
Irish linen, sets of china and of glass, were among the articles mentioned to
me as usually making parts of these offerings. After the party is assembled,
and the business of giving and receiving is dispatched, tea, coffee, and cakes
are handed round; but these are not furnished at any expense either of trouble
or money to the minster, for selected ladies of the congregation take the whole
arrangement upon themselves. These meetings are called spinning visits.</p>
<p>Another New York custom, which does not seem to have so reasonable a cause, is
the changing house once a year. On the 1st of May the city of New York has the
appearance of sending off a population flying from the plague, or of a town
which had surrendered on condition of carrying away all their goods and
chattels. Rich furniture and ragged furniture, carts, waggons, and drays,
ropes, canvas, and straw, packers, porters, and draymen, white, yellow, and
black, occupy the streets from east to west, from north to south, on this day.
Every one I spoke to on the subject complained of this custom as most annoying,
but all assured me it was unavoidable, if you inhabit a rented house. More than
one of my New York friends have built or bought houses solely to avoid this
annual inconvenience.</p>
<p>There are a great number of negroes in New York, all free; their emancipation
having been completed in 1827. Not even in Philadelphia, where the anti-slavery
opinions have been the most active and violent, do the blacks appear to wear an
air of so much consequence as they do at New York. They have several chapels,
in which negro ministers officiate; and a theatre in which none but negroes
perform. At this theatre a gallery is appropriated to such whites as choose to
visit it; and here only are they permitted to sit; following in this, with nice
etiquette, and equal justice, the arrangement of the white theatres, in all of
which is a gallery appropriated solely to the use of the blacks. I have often,
particularly on a Sunday, met groups of negroes, elegantly dressed; and have
been sometimes amused by observing the very superior air of gallantry assumed
by the men, when in attendance on their <i>belles</i>, to that of the whites in
similar circumstances. On one occasion we met in Broadway a young negress in
the extreme of the fashion, and accompanied by a black beau, whose toilet was
equally studied; eye-glass, guard-chain, nothing was omitted; he walked beside
his sable goddess uncovered, and with an air of the most tender devotion. At
the window of a handsome house which they were passing, stood a very pretty
white girl, with two gentlemen beside her; but alas! both of them had their
hats on, and one was smoking!</p>
<p>If it were not for the peculiar manner of walking, which distinguishes all
American women, Broadway might be taken for a French street, where it was the
fashion for very smart ladies to promenade. The dress is entirely French; not
an article (except perhaps the cotton stockings) must be English, on pain of
being stigmatized as out of the fashion. Every thing English is decidedly
<i>mauvais ton</i>; English materials, English fashions, English accent,
English manner, are all terms of reproach; and to say that an unfortunate looks
like an English woman, is the cruellest satire which can be uttered.</p>
<p>I remember visiting France almost immediately after we had made the most
offensive invasion of her territory that can well be imagined, yet, despite the
feelings which lengthened years of war must have engendered, it was the fashion
to admire every thing English. I suppose family quarrels are most difficult to
adjust; for fifteen years of peace have not been enough to calm the angry
feelings of brother Jonathan towards the land of his fathers,</p>
<p class="poem">
“The which he hateth passing well.”</p>
<p>It is hardly needful to say the most courteous amenity of manner distinguishes
the reception given to foreigners by the patrician class of Americans.</p>
<p><i>Gentlemen</i>, in the old world sense of the term, are the same every where;
and an American gentleman and his family know how to do the honours of their
country to strangers of every nation, as well as any people on earth. But this
class, though it decidedly exists, is a very small one, and cannot, in justice,
be represented as affording a specimen of the whole.</p>
<p class="p2">
Most of the houses in New York are painted on the outside, but in a manner
carefully to avoid disfiguring the material which it preserves: on the
contrary, nothing can be neater. They are now using a great deal of a beautiful
stone called Jersey freestone; it is of a warm rich brown, and extremely
ornamental to the city wherever it has been employed. They have also a grey
granite of great beauty. The trottoir paving, in most of the streets, is
extremely good, being of large flag stones, very superior to the bricks of
Philadelphia.</p>
<p>At night the shops, which are open till very late, are brilliantly illuminated
with gas, and all the population seem as much alive as in London or Paris. This
makes the solemn stillness of the evening hours in Philadelphia still more
remarkable.</p>
<p>There are a few trees in different parts of the city, and I observed young ones
planted, and guarded with much care; were they more abundant it would be
extremely agreeable, for the reflected light of their fierce summer sheds
intolerable day.</p>
<p>Ice is in profuse abundance; I do not imagine that there is a house in the city
without the luxury of a piece of ice to cool the water, and harden the butter.</p>
<p>The hackney coaches are the best in the world, but abominably dear, and it is
necessary to be on the <i>qui vive</i> in making your bargain with the driver;
if you do not, he has the power of charging immoderately. On my first
experiment I neglected this, and was asked two dollars and a half for an
excursion of twenty minutes. When I referred to the waiter of the hotel, he
asked if I had made a bargain. “No.” “Then I expect”
(with the usual look of triumph) “that the Yankee has been too smart for
you.”</p>
<p>The private carriages of New York are infinitely handsomer and better appointed
than any I saw elsewhere; the want of smart liveries destroys much of the gay
effect, but, on the whole, a New York summer equipage, with the pretty women
and beautiful children it contains, look extremely well in Broadway, and would
not be much amiss anywhere.</p>
<p>The luxury of the New York aristocracy is not confined to the city; hardly an
acre of Manhatten Island but shows some pretty villa or stately mansion. The
most chosen of these are on the north and east rivers, to whose margins their
lawns descend. Among these, perhaps, the loveliest is one situated in the
beautiful village of Bloomingdale; here, within the space of sixteen acres,
almost every variety of garden scenery may be found. To describe all its
diversity of hill and dale, of wood and lawn, of rock and river, would be in
vain; nor can I convey an idea of it by comparison, for I never saw anything
like it. How far the elegant hospitality which reigns there may influence my
impression, I know not; but, assuredly, no spot I have ever seen dwells more
freshly on my memory, nor did I ever find myself in a circle more calculated to
give delight in meeting, and regret at parting, than that of Woodlawn.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />