Vignettes of Manhattan; Outlines in Local Color Part 11
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"I saw only this morning," he began again, "the report of some remarks made by a Senator from Nevada, in which New York was called a 'city of kites and crows.' There are Congressmen who cannot open their mouths without disseminating miscellaneous misinformation; and the only appropriate retort would be with the plain-spoken bowie of the mining-camp or with the unambiguous derringer of Nevada. No adequate answer is possible in the sterilized vocabulary permitted to us by the conventions of modern society. And yet it is well that once in a while New York should a.s.sert herself--that she should celebrate herself--that she should rest from her mighty labors, if only for a moment, to contemplate her own great work. We are fortunate in having with us here to-night a man who can do justice to this imposing theme, a man who loves New York as we all love her, who is proud of New York as we are all proud of her--a man whom there is no need for me to introduce to an a.s.sembly of New-Yorkers. Works of supererogation are discountenanced, and who is there here who does not know Horace Chauncy?"
As the chairman ceased the gentleman who had been sitting at his right rose, and immediately there was great applause from all parts of the hall. Men clapped their hands and rapped upon the table with the handles of their fruit-knives. Even the ladies in the boxes waved their handkerchiefs.
Then, as the chairman, having done his duty, took his seat, there was the customary hum of antic.i.p.ated enjoyment, dying away swiftly as Mr.
Chauncy prepared to speak.
The left-hand neighbor of the young man down at the far end of the long table turned to him again, and said, "Now you keep your eyes open. I shouldn't wonder if this was the speech of the evening."
The young man looked at the new speaker and liked his face, at once masterful and intelligent. Mr. Chauncy's att.i.tude was one of conscious strength and of perfect ease. He was a man of fifty, perhaps, with gray hair and a curling gray mustache.
"Upon a mellow October night like this," the speaker began, and his voice was rich and firm, while his delivery was as clear as a line engraving--"upon a mellow October night like this, possible in no other city in this country or in Europe, I think, and ill.u.s.trative of the fact that here in New York we have really a climate, while most of the other great towns of the world have only weather--upon a night like this, and under this graceful tower, uplifting its loveliness into the azure air and topped by a Diana fairer than that of the Ephesians smiling down upon gardens more beautiful than any ever hanging in Babylon, there is no need for me to present any defence of the Empire City, or to proffer any apology for her. If you seek for proof of her superiority, look about you here to-night, and remember that nowhere else in the United States could any such company as this be gathered together; nowhere else in the United States is there a banquet-hall so beautiful; nowhere else in the United States would a feast like this be graced by the presence of so many lovely women. Yet I feel that I should be derelict to my duty--that I should let slip a precious occasion--if I did not dwell for a while upon a few of the many things in the history of this city which give her proud pre-eminence; which make her what she is--the mighty and magnificent metropolis of a great people."
Again the applause broke forth. After a pause the speaker continued, having the attention of every man and woman in the hall. Even as he warmed to his subject he preserved the perfection of his delivery, and he poured forth facts, figures, ill.u.s.trations, one after the other, with never a broken accent or a blurred syllable.
"I will not detain you by detailing the many natural advantages of New York--the n.o.ble river which sweeps by on one side and the arm of the ocean which embraces the other, and the s.p.a.cious and beautiful bay, with its harborage ample for all the fleets of all the nations of the earth.
It is not my purpose to-night to linger long over the works of art which make this island of ours distinguished as the works of nature have made possible her prosperity; and therefore I shall say nothing of the Statue of Liberty, of the Brooklyn Bridge, of the Riverside Drive, of the libraries and the museums and the colleges and the churches; I shall even say nothing of Central Park, truly the finest single work of art yet produced by any American, and, simply as a work of art, unequalled by any pleasure-ground of Europe."
There was another burst of applause, but the speaker scarcely waited for it to die down before he began again.
"Pa.s.sing by these works of G.o.d and man, ever present before our eyes, I am going to call your attention to things less material--to things which do not cling to our remembrance as they ought. Secure in our material prosperity, we New-Yorkers do not always recall those incidents in the history of the city which deserve to be forever memorable. We are not often accused of modesty--but we are over-modest, are we not?--when we allow our children to be taught that the first bloodshed of the Revolution was in the Boston Ma.s.sacre, forgetting that the Liberty Pole fight took place in New York six weeks earlier. It was here in New York that the Stamp Act Congress met, the forerunner of the federation of the American colonies which cast off the British yoke. And in the long and weary war of the Revolution only one of the thirteen colonies furnished its full quota of men, money, and supplies--and that colony was the colony of New York!"
Once more was the speaker interrupted by a tumult of approval; and once more he went on again as soon as he could make himself heard.
"When the critical period in the history of this country came--that is, when the need of a new const.i.tution was felt by all--no men had a larger share in the making of that const.i.tution than two New-Yorkers, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, while the nervous English of that great instrument was due to a third New-Yorker, Gouverneur Morris. It was in New York that the foundations of American literature were laid, by the publication of _Knickerbocker's History_, the earliest book to be printed in America which keeps its popularity to-day--and more than fourscore years have not yet tarnished its humor. To the author of this immortal book, to Was.h.i.+ngton Irving, was due the first work of American authors.h.i.+p which won acceptance outside of the boundaries of the United States. And as it was the _Sketch-Book_ of Was.h.i.+ngton Irving which was the first American book to win its way in England, so it was the _Spy_ of another citizen of New York, Fenimore Cooper, which was the first American book to achieve fame outside of the English language. It was here in New York that our American literature was first fostered, as it is here in New York that our American authors are most abundant, most highly honored, and most richly rewarded."
The speaker paused again, but only for a moment.
"As in letters, so in the arts. Here in New York the National Academy of Design was founded, and later the Society of American Artists; and to two painters of New York, to Robert Fulton and to Samuel F. B. Morse, we owe the steamboat and the telegraph. Here in New York was founded the Children's Aid Society--than which no city in the world has a n.o.bler charity--the first of the kind and the most successful. Here in New York, also, Peter Cooper established the first inst.i.tution intended to provide instruction to all ambitious youth--an inst.i.tution that has been imitated in almost every city of the Union, although no city of the Union has ever had a citizen more esteemed or better beloved than was Peter Cooper here in New York. It is not in 'a city of kites and crows'
that men of Peter Cooper's character choose to dwell; it is not in 'a city of kites and crows' that men of Peter Cooper's character are cherished and revered."
Here the speech was again broken into by prolonged applause. Men rose to their feet and cheered, waving their napkins over their heads.
When there was quiet once more the speaker went on:
"After years of peace and of prosperity, the people of the United States suddenly found themselves face to face with armed rebellion, and war loomed before us inevitable. New York was ready then as always. The first regiment to reach the capital of the country--to secure it against traitors--was a regiment of New York City militia. Nor was there ever after any lack of men here in this city who despised the snares of death and defied the pains of h.e.l.l, and who went into battle bravely, and gayly, and glad that--in the words of one of them--glad that 'there is lots of good fighting along the whole line.' I have been told--I confess I have not been able to verify the figures--but I have been told, that the number of men who enlisted into the army and the navy of the United States from this city of ours during those four long years of doubt and anxiety exceeded the number of the male inhabitants of fighting age in the year when the rebellion broke out. And not content with furnis.h.i.+ng men to fight, the city of New York saw to it that the wounded were duly attended to and their anguish lightened as far as might be--for it was here that the United States Sanitary Commission was organized."
There were cheers once more and yet again, and it was not for a full minute that the speaker was enabled to continue.
"Your applause tells me that I need say no more," he began. "A successful city is the spoiled child of fortune, and perhaps, like other spoiled children, it is all the better for a sound thras.h.i.+ng now and then. But what has New York done amiss now, that she should be scourged with scorpions? In the welter of politics it may be considered adroit to suggest that your opponent is either a wolf in sheep's clothing or an a.s.s in a lion's skin; but it is more adroit still, it seems to me, to avoid personality altogether. The louder the report of the gun, the more violent the kick is. When a New-Yorker hears his beloved town called 'a city of kites and crows' his first impulse is to laugh; his second is to inquire as to the man who said it; and his third is to laugh again and louder when he discovers that the author of this a.s.sertion is from Nevada, a state where even Santa Claus on Christmas Eve does not dare go his rounds for fear of being held up by road-agents!"
This time a burst of hearty laughter mingled with the abundant applause as the speaker sat down.
"That's a very good speech," the young man who seemed to be a stranger said to his left-hand neighbor.
"Good speech?" echoed the other enthusiastically; "I should think so.
It's the speech of the evening, sure! There's not one of them can beat that."
"I've been in j.a.pan for the past five years, and I seem to have lost track of people here in the city," said the young man. "What is the name of the gentleman who made the speech?"
"Horace Chauncy," was the answer. "I thought everybody knew him. His father was United States Senator from West Virginia, and his mother was a famous Kentucky belle in her day. He himself used to be the leader of the California bar before he moved here a few years ago. He caught on at once in New York; he's one of the most popular speakers we have now; some fellows call him 'Our Horace.' Haven't you ever heard about him, really?"
"Well," the young man retorted, "you mustn't expect me to know all these people. You see, I was born in New York."
(1894.)
A THANKSGIVING-DAY DINNER
Thanksgiving Day had dawned clear and cold, an ideal day for the foot-ball game. Soon after breakfast the side-streets had been made hideous by small bands of boys, strangely disguised as girls some of them, or as Indians and as negroes, with improvised costumes and with staring masks; they blew fish-horns, and besought coppers. A little later in the day groups of fantasticals paraded on horseback or in carriages; and straggling target companies--some of them in the uniforms worn during the political campaign which had culminated in the election three weeks earlier--marched irregularly up the avenues under the elevated railroads, preceded by thin lines of pioneers, and by slim bands of music that played spasmodically before the many adjacent saloons, at the doors of which the companies came to a halt willingly.
The sun shone out and warmed one side of the street as people came from church; and the wind blew gently down the avenues, and fluttered the petals of the yellow chrysanthemums which expanded themselves in many b.u.t.ton-holes. Little groups of young people pa.s.sed, the girls with knots of blue at their throats or with m.u.f.flers of orange and black, the young men with college-b.u.t.tons or with protruding handkerchiefs of the college colors. The fas.h.i.+onable dealers in men's goods had arranged their windows with impartial regard for future custom--one with blue flannels and scarfs, s.h.i.+rts and socks, and the other all orange and black. Coaches began to go by, draped with one set of colors or the other, and filled with young men who split the air with explosive cheers, while waving blue pennants with white letters, or yellow pennants with black. The sun shone brightly, and the brisk breeze s.h.i.+vered the bare branches of the trees. It rippled the flags which projected from the vehicles gathering at Madison Square and streaming up the avenue in thick succession--coaches, private carriages, omnibuses, road-wagons of one kind or another.
Towards nightfall the tide turned and the coaches began to come back, the young men hoa.r.s.e with incessant shouting of their staccato college cries. Some of them, wild with joy at the victory of their own team, had voice still for exulting yells. Others were saddened into silence by the defeat of their side. Most of those who had gone out to see the game belonged neither to the college of the blue nor to the college of the black and orange, but they were all stimulated by the struggle they had just seen--a struggle of strength and of skill, of gumption and of grit.
The sun had gone down at last, and the bracing breeze of noon had now a touch of dampness which chilled the flesh. But the hearty young fellows paid no heed to it; they cheered and they sang and they cried aloud one to the other as though the season were spring, and they were alone on the sea-sh.o.r.e.
Robert White caught the fever like the rest, and as he walked down the avenue to the College Club he was conscious of an excitement he had not felt for years. He was alone in the city for a week, as it happened, his wife having taken the children into the country for a long-promised visit; and he had been spending his evenings at the College Club. So it was that he had joined in chartering a coach, and for the first time in a dozen years he had seen the foot-ball game. He had been made happy by the success of his own college, and by meeting cla.s.smates whom he had not laid eyes on since their Commencement in the heat of the Centennial summer. One of them was now the young governor of a new Western State, and another was likely to be a member of the new President's cabinet.
On the way out to the game White had sat beside a third cla.s.smate, now a professor in the old college, and they had talked over their four years and their fellow-students. They recalled the young men of promise who had failed to sustain the hopes of the cla.s.s; the steady, hard-working fellows, who were steady and hard-working still; the quiet, shy man who had known little Latin and less Greek, but was fond of science, and who was now developing into one of the foremost novelists of the country; the best base-ball player of the cla.s.s, now the pastor of one of the leading churches of Chicago; and others who had done well for themselves in the different walks of life. They talked over the black sheep of the cla.s.s--some dead, some worse than dead, some dropped out of sight.
"What has become of Johnny Carroll?" asked the professor.
"I have not seen him since cla.s.s-day. There was some wretched scandal before Commencement, you know, and I doubt if Johnny ever got his degree," White answered.
"I know he didn't," the professor returned. "He never dared to apply for it."
"They managed to keep the trouble very quiet, whatever it was," White went on. "I never knew just what the facts were."
"I didn't know then," responded the professor; "I have been told since.
But there is no need to go into that now. The girl is dead long ago, and Johnny too, for all I have heard."
"Poor Johnny Carroll," White said; "I can remember how handsome he looked that last night, the night of cla.s.s-day. But he was always handsome and always well dressed. He was not very clever or very anything, was he? Yet we all liked him."
[Ill.u.s.tration: COMING FROM CHURCH]
"I remember that he tried to get on the Freshman crew," the professor remarked, after a pause, "but the temptations of high living were too much for him. He wouldn't train."
"Training was just what he needed most," White added; "moral and mental as well as physical. Fact is, he always had more money than was good for him. His father was in Wall Street then, and making money hand over fist."
"It wasn't till the year after we were graduated that old Carroll committed suicide, was it?" the professor inquired. "Blew out his brains in the bath-tub, didn't he?"
"And didn't leave enough money to pay for his funeral," White answered.
"Johnny was in hard luck always: he had too much money at first, and none at all when he needed it most."
"His great misfortune," said the professor, "was that his father was 'one of the boys.'"
"Yes," White agreed, "that is pretty rough on a fellow. I wonder where Johnny is, if he is alive? Out West, perhaps, prospecting on a grub stake, or else stoker on an ocean steamer, or perhaps he's a member of the Broadway squad, earning a living by elbowing ladies over the crossing."
Vignettes of Manhattan; Outlines in Local Color Part 11
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