“In flower of youth and beauty’s
pride.”
DRYDEN
A crowded New York street, Fifth
Avenue at the height of the afternoon; a gallant and
brilliant throng. Looking over the glittering
array, the purple and fine linen, the sweeping robes,
the exquisite équipages, the stately houses;
the faces, delicate and refined, proud, self-satisfied,
that gazed out from their windows on the street, or
that glanced from the street to the windows, or at
one another, looking over all this, being
a part of it, one might well say, “This is existence,
and beside it there is none other. Let us dress,
dine, and be merry! Life is good, and love is
sweet, and both shall endure! Let us forget that
hunger and sin, sorrow and self-sacrifice, want, struggle,
and pain, have place in the world.” Yet,
even with the words, “poverty, frost-nipped in
a summer suit,” here and there hurried by; and
once and again through the restless tide the sorrowful
procession of the tomb made way.
More than one eye was lifted, and many a pleasant greeting
passed between these selected few who filled the street and a young man who
lounged by one of the overlooking windows; and many a comment was uttered upon
him when the greeting was made:
“A most eligible parti!”
“Handsome as a god!”
“O, immensely rich, I assure you!”
“Isn’t he a beauty!”
“Pity he wasn’t born poor!”
“Why?”
“O, because they say he carried
off all the honors at college and law-school, and
is altogether overstocked with brains for a man who
has no need to use them.”
“Will he practise?”
“Doubtful. Why should he?”
“Ambition, power, gratify one, gain
the other.”
“Nonsense! He’ll
probably go abroad and travel for a while, come back,
marry, and enjoy life.”
“He does that now, I fancy.”
“Looks so.”
And indeed he did. There was
not only vigor and manly beauty, splendid in its present,
but the “possibility of more to be in the full
process of his ripening days,” a
form alert and elegant, which had not yet all of a
man’s muscle and strength; a face delicate, yet
strong, refined, yet full of latent power;
a mass of rippling hair like burnished gold, flung
back on the one side, sweeping low across brow and
cheek on the other; eyes
Of a deep, soft, lucent hue,
Eyes too expressive to be blue,
Too lovely to be gray.”
People involuntarily thought of the
pink and flower of chivalry as they looked at him,
or imagined, in some indistinct fashion, that they
heard the old songs of Percy and Douglas, or the later
lays of the cavaliers, as they heard his voice, a voice that was just now
humming one of these same lays:
“Then mounte! then mounte, brave
gallants, all,
And don your helmes
amaine;
Death’s couriers, Fame and Honor,
call
Us to the field
againe.”
“Stuff!” he cried impatiently,
looking wistfully at the men’s faces going by, “stuff!
We look like gallants to ride a tilt at the
world, and die for Honor and Fame, we!”
“I thank God, Willie, you are
not called upon for any such sacrifice.”
“Ah, little mother, well you
may!” he answered, smiling, and taking her hand, “well
you may, for I am afraid I should fall dreadfully short
when the time came; and then how ashamed you’d
be of your big boy, who took his ease at home, with
the great drums beating and the trumpets blowing outside.
And yet I should like to be tried!”
“See, mother!” he broke
out again, “see what a life it is,
getting and spending, living handsomely and doing
the proper thing towards society, and all that, rubbing
through the world in the old hereditary way; though
I needn’t growl at it, for I enjoy it enough,
and find it a pleasant enough way, Heaven knows.
Lazy idler! enjoying the sunshine with the rest.
Heigh-ho!”
“You have your profession, Willie.
There’s work there, and opportunity sufficient
to help others and do for yourself.”
“Ay, and I’ll do
it! But there is so much that is poor and mean,
and base and tricky, in it all, so much
to disgust and tire one, all the time,
day after day, for years. Now if it were only
a huge giant that stands in your way, you could out
rapier and have at him at once, and there an end, laid
out or triumphant. That’s worth while!”
“O youth, eager and beautiful,”
thought the mother who listened, “that in this
phase is so alike the world over, so impatient
to do, so ready to brave encounters, so willing to
dare and die! May the doing be faithful, and
the encounters be patiently as well as bravely fought,
and the fancy of heroic death be a reality of noble
and earnest life. God grant it! Amen.”
“Meanwhile,” said the
gay voice, “meanwhile it’s a
pleasant world; let us enjoy it! and as to do this
is within the compass of a man’s wit, therefore
will I attempt the doing.”
While he was talking he had once more
come to the window, and, looking out, fastened his
eyes unconsciously but intently upon the face of a
young girl who was slowly passing by, unconsciously,
yet so intently that, as if suddenly magnetized, a
flicker of feeling went over it; the mouth, set with
a steady sweetness, quivered a little; the eyes dark,
beautiful eyes were lifted to his an instant,
that was all. The mother beside him did not see;
but she heard a long breath, almost a sigh, break
from him as he started, then flashed out of the room,
snatching his hat in the hall, and so on to the street,
and away.
Away after her, through block after
block, across the crowded avenue to Broadway.
“Who is she? where did she come from? I
never saw her before. I wonder if Mrs. Russell
knows her, or Clara, or anybody! I will know
where she lives, or where she is going at least, that
will be some clew! There! she is stopping that
stage. I’ll help her in! no, I won’t, she
will think I am chasing her. Nonsense! do you
suppose she saw you at the window? Of course!
No, she didn’t; don’t be a fool!
There! I’ll get into the next stage.
Now I’ll keep watch of that, and she’ll
not know. So all right! Go ahead,
driver.” And happy with some new happiness,
eager, bright, the handsome young fellow sat watching
that other stage, and the stylish little lace bonnet
that was all he could see of his magnet, through the
interminable journey down Broadway.
How clear the air seemed! and the
sun, how splendidly it shone! and what a glad look
was upon all the people’s faces! He felt
like breaking out into gay little snatches of song,
and moved his foot to the waltz measure that beat
time in his brain till the irate old gentleman opposite,
whom nature had made of a sour complexion and art assisted
to corns, broke out with an angry exclamation.
That drew his attention for a moment. A slackening
of speed, a halt, and the stage was wedged in one
of the inextricable “jams” on Broadway.
Vain the search for her stage then; looking
over the backs of the poor, tired horses, or from the
sidewalk, here, there, at this one and that
one, all for naught! Stage and passenger,
eyes, little lace bonnet, and all, had vanished away,
as William Surrey confessed, and confessed with reluctance
and discontent.
“No matter!” he said presently, “no
matter! I shall see her again. I know it!
I feel it! It is written in the book of the Fates!
So now I shall content me with something” that
looks like her he did not say definitely, but felt
it none the less, as, going over to the flower-basket
near by, he picked out a little nosegay of mignonette
and geranium, with a tea-rosebud in its centre, and
pinned it at his button-hole. “Delicate
and fine!” he thought, “delicate
and fine!” and with the repetition he looked
from it down the long street after the interminable
line of stages; and somehow the faint, sweet perfume,
and the fair flower, and the dainty lace bonnet, were
mingled in wild and charming confusion in his brain,
till he shook himself, and laughed at himself, and
quoted Shakespeare to excuse himself, “A
mad world, my masters!” seeing this
poor old earth of ours, as people always do, through
their own eyes.
“God bless ye! and long life
to yer honor! and may the blessed Virgin give ye the
desire of yer heart!” called the Irishwoman after
him, as he put back the change in her hand and went
gayly up the street. “Sure, he’s
somebody’s darlint, the beauty! the saints preserve
him!” she said, as she looked from the gold
piece in her palm to the fair, sunny head, watching
it till it was lost in the crowd from her grateful
eyes.
Evidently this young man was a favorite,
for, as he passed along, many a face, worn by business
and care, brightened as he smiled and spoke; many
a countenance stamped with the trade-mark, preoccupied
and hard, relaxed in a kindly recognition as he bowed
and went by; and more than one found time, even in
that busy whirl, to glance for a moment after him,
or to remember him with a pleasant feeling, at least
till the pavement had been crossed on which they met, a
long space at that hour of the day, and with so much
more important matters Bull and Bear, rise
and fall, stock and account claiming their
attention.
Evidently a favorite, for, turning
off into one of the side streets, coming into his
father’s huge foundry, faces heated and dusty,
tired, stained, and smoke-begrimed, glanced up from
their work, from forge and fire and engine, with an
expression that invited a look or word, and
look and word were both ready.
“The boss is out, sir,”
said one of the foremen, “and if you please,
and have got the time to spare, I’d like to have
a word with you before he comes in.”
“All right, Jim! say your say.”
“Well, sir, you’ll likely
think I’m sticking my nose into what doesn’t
concern me. ’Tain’t a very nice thing
I’ve got to say, but if I don’t say it
I don’t know who in thunder will; and, as it’s
my private opinion that somebody ought to, I’ll
just pitch in.”
“Very good; pitch in.”
“Very good it is then.
Only it ain’t. Very bad, more like.
It’s a nasty mess, and no mistake! and there’s
the cause of it!” pointing his brawny hand towards
the door, upon which was marked, “Office.
Private,” and sniffing as though he smelt something
bad in the air.
“You don’t mean my father!”
flame shooting from the clear eyes.
“Be damned if I do. Beg
pardon. Of course I don’t. I mean the
fellow as is perched up on a high stool in that there
office, this very minute, poking into his books.”
“Franklin?”
“You’ve hit it. Franklin, Abe
Franklin, that’s the ticket.”
“What’s the matter with him? what has
he done?”
“Done? nothing! not as I know
of, anyway, except what’s right and proper.
’Tain’t what he’s done or’s
like to do. It’s what he is.”
“And what may that be?”
“Well, he’s a nigger!
there’s the long and short of it. Nobody
here’d object to his working in this place,
providing he was a runner, or an errand-boy, or anything
that it’s right and proper for a nigger to be;
but to have him sitting in that office, writing letters
for the boss, and going over the books, and superintending
the accounts of the fellows, so that he knows just
what they get on Saturday nights, and being as fine
as a fiddle, is what the boys won’t stand; and
they swear they’ll leave, every man of ’em,
unless he has his walking papers, double-quick
too.”
“Very well; let them. There
are other workmen, good as they, in this city of New
York.”
“Hold on, sir! let me say my
say first. There are seven hundred men working
in this place: the most of ’em have worked
here a long while. Good work, good pay.
There ain’t a man of ’em but likes Mr.
Surrey, and would be sorry to lose the place; so,
if they won’t bear it, there ain’t any
that will. Wait a bit! I ain’t through
yet.”
“Go on,” quietly
enough spoken, but the mouth shook under its silky
fringe, and a fiery spot burned on either cheek.
“All right. Well, sir,
I know all about Franklin. He’s a bright
one, smart enough to stock a lot of us with brains
and have some to spare; he don’t interfere with
us, and does his work well, too, I reckon, though
that’s neither here nor there, nor none of our
business if the boss is satisfied; and he looks like
a gentleman, and acts like one, there’s no denying
that! and as for his skin, well!”
a smile breaking over his good-looking face, “his
skin’s quite as white as mine now, anyway,”
smearing his red-flannel arm over his grimy phiz; “but
then, sir, it won’t rub off. He’s
a nigger, and there’s no getting round it.
“All right, sir! give you your
chance directly. Don’t speak yet, ain’t
through, if you please. Well, sir, it’s
agen nature, you may talk agen it, and
work agen it, and fight agen it till all’s blue,
and what good’ll it do? You can’t
get an Irishman, and, what’s more, a free-born
American citizen, to put himself on a level with a
nigger, not by no manner of means.
No, sir; you can turn out the whole lot, and get another
after it, and another after that, and so on to the
end of the chapter, and you can’t find men among
’em all that’ll stay and have him strutting
through ’em, up to his stool and his books, grand
as a peacock.”
“Would they work with him?”
“At the same engines, and the like, do you mean?”
“Yes.”
“Nary time, so ’tain’t
likely they’ll work under him. Now, sir,
you see I know what I’m saying, and I’m
saying it to you, Mr. Surrey, and not to your
father, because he won’t take a word from me
nor nobody else, and here’s just
the case. Now I ain’t bullying, you understand,
and I say it because somebody else’d say it,
if I didn’t, uglier and rougher. Abe Franklin’ll
have to go out of this shop in precious short order,
or every man here’ll bolt next Saturday night.
There! now I’ve done, sir, and you can fire
away.”
But as he showed no signs of firing away, and stood still,
pondering, Jim broke out again:
“Beg pardon, sir. If I’ve
said anything you don’t like, sorry for it.
It’s because Mr. Surrey is so good an employer,
and, if you’ll let me say so, because I like
you so well,” glancing over him admiringly, “for,
you see, a good engineer takes to a clean-built machine
wherever he sees it, it’s just because
of this I thought it was better to tell you, and get
you to tell the boss, and to save any row; for I’d
hate mortally to have it in this shop where I’ve
worked, man and boy, so many years. Will you
please to speak to him, sir? and I hope you understand.”
“Thank you, Jim. Yes, I
understand; and I’ll speak to him.”
Was it that the sun was going down,
or that some clouds were in the sky, or had the air
of the shop oppressed him? Whatever it was, as
he came out he walked with a slower step from which
some of the spring had gone, and the people’s
faces looked not so happy; and, glancing down at his
rosebud, he saw that its fair petals had been soiled
by the smoke and grime in which he had been standing;
and, while he looked a dead march came solemnly sounding
up the street, and a soldier’s funeral went
by, rare enough, in that autumn of 1860, to draw a curious crowd on either side;
rare enough to make him pause and survey it; and as the line turned into another
street, and the music came softened to his ear, he once more hummed the words of
the song which had been haunting him all the day:
“Then mounte! then mounte, brave
gallants, all,
And don your helmes amaine;
Death’s couriers, Fame and Honor,
call
Us to the field againe,
sang them to himself, but not with
the gay, bright spirit of the morning. Then he
seemed to see the cavaliers, brilliant and brave,
riding out to the encounter. Now, in the same
dim and fanciful way, he beheld them stretched, still
and dead, upon the plain.