The little stone balcony, which, by
a popular fallacy, is supposed to be a necessary appurtenance
of my window, has long been to me a source of curious
interest. The fact that the asperities of our
summer weather will not permit me to use it but once
or twice in six months does not alter my concern for
this incongruous ornament. It affects me as I
suppose the conscious possession of a linen coat or
a nankeen trousers might affect a sojourner here who
has not entirely outgrown his memory of Eastern summer
heat and its glorious compensations, a luxurious
providence against a possible but by no means probable
contingency. I do no longer wonder at the persistency
with which San Franciscans adhere to this architectural
superfluity in the face of climatical impossibilities.
The balconies in which no one sits, the piazzas on
which no one lounges, are timid advances made to a
climate whose churlishness we are trying to temper
by an ostentation of confidence. Ridiculous as
this spectacle is at all seasons, it is never more
so than in that bleak interval between sunset and
dark, when the shrill scream of the factory whistle
seems to have concentrated all the hard, unsympathetic
quality of the climate into one vocal expression.
Add to this the appearance of one or two pedestrians,
manifestly too late for their dinners, and tasting
in the shrewish air a bitter premonition of the welcome
that awaits them at home, and you have one of those
ordinary views from my balcony which makes the balcony
itself ridiculous.
But as I lean over its balustrade
to-night a night rare in its kindness and
beauty and watch the fiery ashes of my cigar
drop into the abysmal darkness below, I am inclined
to take back the whole of that preceding paragraph,
although it cost me some labor to elaborate its polite
malevolence. I can even recognize some melody
in the music which comes irregularly and fitfully
from the balcony of the Museum on Market Street, although
it may be broadly stated that, as a general thing,
the music of all museums, menageries, and circuses
becomes greatly demoralized, possibly through
associations with the beasts. So soft and courteous
is this atmosphere that I have detected the flutter
of one or two light dresses on the adjacent balconies
and piazzas, and the front parlor windows of a certain
aristocratic mansion in the vicinity, which have always
maintained a studious reserve in regard to the interior,
to-night are suddenly thrown into the attitude of familiar
disclosure. A few young people are strolling
up the street with a lounging step which is quite
a relief to that usual brisk, business-like pace which
the chilly nights impose upon even the most sentimental
lovers. The genial influences of the air are
not restricted to the opening of shutters and front
doors; other and more gentle disclosures are made,
no doubt, beneath this moonlight. The bonnet
and hat which passed beneath my balcony a few moments
ago were suspiciously close together. I argued
from this that my friend the editor will probably receive
any quantity of verses for his next issue, containing
allusions to “Luna,” in which the original
epithet of “silver” will be applied to
this planet, and that a “boon” will be
asked for the evident purpose of rhyming with “moon,”
and for no other. Should neither of the parties
be equal to this expression, the pent-up feelings
of the heart will probably find vent later in the
evening over the piano, in “I Wandered by the
Brookside,” or “When the Moon on the Lake
is Beaming.” But it has been permitted me
to hear the fulfilment of my prophecy even as it was
uttered. From the window of number Twelve Hundred
and Seven gushes upon the slumberous misty air the
maddening ballad, “Ever of Thee,” while
at Twelve Hundred and Eleven the “Star of the
Evening” rises with a chorus. I am inclined
to think that there is something in the utter vacuity
of the refrain in this song which especially commends
itself to the young. The simple statement, “Star
of the evening,” is again and again repeated
with an imbecile relish; while the adjective “beautiful”
recurs with a steady persistency, too exasperating
to dwell upon here. At occasional intervals,
a base voice enunciates “Star-r! Star-r!”
as a solitary and independent effort. Sitting
here in my balcony, I picture the possessor of that
voice as a small, stout young man, standing a little
apart from the other singers, with his hands behind
him, under his coat-tail, and a severe expression
of countenance. He sometimes leans forward, with
a futile attempt to read the music over somebody else’s
shoulder, but always resumes his old severity of attitude
before singing his part. Meanwhile the celestial
subjects of this choral adoration look down upon the
scene with a tranquillity and patience which can only
result from the security with which their immeasurable
remoteness invests them. I would remark that
the stars are not the only topics subject to this
“damnable iteration.” A certain popular
song, which contains the statement, “I will
not forget you, mother,” apparently reposes all
its popularity on the constant and dreary repetition
of this unimportant information, which at least produces
the desired result among the audience. If the
best operatic choruses are not above this weakness,
the unfamiliar language in which they are sung offers
less violation to common sense.
It may be parenthetically stated here
that the songs alluded to above may be found in sheet
music on the top of the piano of any young lady who
has just come from boarding-school. “The
Old Arm-Chair,” or “Woodman, spare that
Tree,” will be also found in easy juxtaposition.
The latter songs are usually brought into service at
the instance of an uncle or bachelor brother, whose
request is generally prefaced by a remark deprecatory
of the opera, and the gratuitous observation that “we
are retrograding, sir, retrograding,”
and that “there is no music like the old songs.”
He sometimes condescends to accompany “Marie”
in a tremulous barytone, and is particularly forcible
in those passages where the word “repeat”
is written, for reasons stated above. When the
song is over, to the success of which he feels he
has materially contributed, he will inform you that
you may talk of your “arias,” and
your “romanzas,” “but for music,
sir, music ” at which point
he becomes incoherent and unintelligible. It
is this gentleman who suggests “China,”
or “Brattle Street,” as a suitable and
cheerful exercise for the social circle. There
are certain amatory songs, of an arch and coquettish
character, familiar to these localities, which the
young lady, being called upon to sing, declines with
a bashful and tantalizing hesitation. Prominent
among these may be mentioned an erotic effusion entitled
“I’m talking in my Sleep,” which,
when sung by a young person vivaciously and with appropriate
glances, can be made to drive languishing swains to
the verge of madness. Ballads of this quality
afford splendid opportunities for bold young men,
who, by ejaculating “Oh!” and “Ah!”
at the affecting passages, frequently gain a fascinating
reputation for wildness and scepticism.
But the music which called up these
parenthetical reflections has died away, and with
it the slight animosities it inspired. The last
song has been sung, the piano closed, the lights are
withdrawn from the windows, and the white skirts flutter
away from stoops and balconies. The silence is
broken only by the rattle and rumble of carriages coming
from theatre and opera. I fancy that this sound which,
seeming to be more distinct at this hour than at any
other time, might be called one of the civic voices
of the night has certain urbane suggestions,
not unpleasant to those born and bred in large cities.
The moon, round and full, gradually usurps the twinkling
lights of the city, that one by one seem to fade away
and be absorbed in her superior lustre. The distant
Mission hills are outlined against the sky, but through
one gap the outlying fog which has stealthily invested
us seems to have effected a breach, and only waits
the co-operation of the laggard sea-breezes to sweep
down and take the beleaguered city by assault.
An ineffable calm sinks over the landscape. In
the magical moonlight the shot-tower loses its angular
outline and practical relations, and becomes a minaret
from whose balcony an invisible muezzin calls the
Faithful to prayer. “Prayer is better than
sleep.” But what is this? A shuffle
of feet on the pavement, a low hum of voices, a twang
of some diabolical instrument, a preliminary hem and
cough. Heavens! it cannot be! Ah, yes it
is it is SERENADERS!
Anathema Maranatha!
May purgatorial pains seize you, William, Count of
Poitou, Girard de Boreuil, Arnaud de Marveil, Bertrand
de Born, mischievous progenitors of jongleurs, troubadours,
provencals, minnesingers, minstrels, and singers
of cansos and love chants! Confusion overtake
and confound your modern descendants, the “metre
ballad-mongers,” who carry the shamelessness
of the Middle Ages into the nineteenth century, and
awake a sleeping neighborhood to the brazen knowledge
of their loves and wanton fancies! Destruction
and demoralization pursue these pitiable imitators
of a barbarous age, when ladies’ names and charms
were shouted through the land, and modest maiden never
lent presence to tilt or tourney without hearing a
chronicle of her virtues go round the lists, shouted
by wheezy heralds and taken up by roaring swashbucklers!
Perdition overpower such ostentatious wooers!
Marry! shall I shoot the amorous feline who nightly
iterates his love songs on my roof, and yet withhold
my trigger finger from yonder pranksome gallant?
Go to! Here is an orange left of last week’s
repast. Decay hath overtaken it, it
possesseth neither savor nor cleanliness. Ha!
cleverly thrown! A hit a palpable hit!
Peradventure I have still a boot that hath done me
service, and, barring a looseness of the heel, an
ominous yawning at the side, ’tis in good case!
Na’theless, ’twill serve. So! so!
What! dispersed! Nay, then, I too will retire.