I live in the suburbs. My residence,
to quote the pleasing fiction of the advertisement,
“is within fifteen minutes’ walk of the
City Hall.” Why the City Hall should be
considered as an eligible terminus of anybody’s
walk, under any circumstances, I have not been able
to determine. Never having walked from my residence
to that place, I am unable to verify the assertion,
though I may state as a purely abstract and separate
proposition, that it takes me the better part of an
hour to reach Montgomery Street.
My selection of locality was a compromise
between my wife’s desire to go into the country,
and my own predilections for civic habitation.
Like most compromises, it ended in retaining the objectionable
features of both propositions; I procured the inconveniences
of the country without losing the discomforts of the
city. I increased my distance from the butcher
and green-grocer, without approximating to herds and
kitchen-gardens. But I anticipate.
Fresh air was to be the principal
thing sought for. That there might be too much
of this did not enter into my calculations. The
first day I entered my residence, it blew; the second
day was windy; the third, fresh, with a strong breeze
stirring; on the fourth, it blew; on the fifth, there
was a gale, which has continued to the present writing.
That the air is fresh, the above statement
sufficiently establishes. That it is bracing,
I argue from the fact that I find it impossible to
open the shutters on the windward side of the house.
That it is healthy, I am also convinced, believing
that there is no other force in Nature that could
so buffet and ill-use a person without serious injury
to him. Let me offer an instance. The path
to my door crosses a slight eminence. The unconscious
visitor, a little exhausted by the ascent and the
general effects of the gentle gales which he has faced
in approaching my hospitable mansion, relaxes his
efforts, smooths his brow, and approaches with a fascinating
smile. Rash and too confident man! The wind
delivers a succession of rapid blows, and he is thrown
back. He staggers up again, in the language of
the P. R., “smiling and confident.”
The wind now makes for a vulnerable point, and gets
his hat in chancery. All ceremony is now thrown
away; the luckless wretch seizes his hat with both
hands, and charges madly at the front door. Inch
by inch, the wind contests the ground; another struggle,
and he stands upon the veranda. On such occasions
I make it a point to open the door myself, with a
calmness and serenity that shall offer a marked contrast
to his feverish and excited air, and shall throw suspicion
of inebriety upon him. If he be inclined to timidity
and bashfulness, during the best of the evening he
is all too conscious of the disarrangement of his
hair and cravat. If he is less sensitive, the
result is often more distressing. A valued elderly
friend once called upon me after undergoing a twofold
struggle with the wind and a large Newfoundland dog
(which I keep for reasons hereinafter stated), and
not only his hat, but his wig, had suffered.
He spent the evening with me, totally unconscious
of the fact that his hair presented the singular spectacle
of having been parted diagonally from the right temple
to the left ear. When ladies called, my wife
preferred to receive them. They were generally
hysterical, and often in tears. I remember, one
Sunday, to have been startled by what appeared to
be the balloon from Hayes Valley drifting rapidly
past my conservatory, closely followed by the Newfoundland
dog. I rushed to the front door, but was anticipated
by my wife. A strange lady appeared at lunch,
but the phenomenon remained otherwise unaccounted
for. Egress from my residence is much more easy.
My guests seldom “stand upon the order of their
going, but go at once”; the Newfoundland dog
playfully harassing their rear. I was standing
one day, with my hand on the open hall door, in serious
conversation with the minister of the parish, when
the back door was cautiously opened. The watchful
breeze seized the opportunity, and charged through
the defenceless passage. The front door closed
violently in the middle of a sentence, precipitating
the reverend gentleman into the garden. The Newfoundland
dog, with that sagacity for which his race is so distinguished,
at once concluded that a personal collision had taken
place between myself and visitor, and flew to my defence.
The reverend gentleman never called again.
The Newfoundland dog above alluded
to was part of a system of protection which my suburban
home once required. Robberies were frequent in
the neighborhood, and my only fowl fell a victim to
the spoiler’s art. One night I awoke, and
found a man in my room. With singular delicacy
and respect for the feelings of others, he had been
careful not to awaken any of the sleepers, and retired
upon my rising, without waiting for any suggestion.
Touched by his delicacy, I forbore giving the alarm
until after he had made good his retreat. I then
wanted to go after a policeman, but my wife remonstrated,
as this would leave the house exposed. Remembering
the gentlemanly conduct of the burglar, I suggested
the plan of following him and requesting him to give
the alarm as he went in town. But this proposition
was received with equal disfavor. The next day
I procured a dog and a revolver. The former went
off, but the latter wouldn’t. I then got
a new dog and chained him, and a duelling pistol,
with a hair-trigger. The result was so far satisfactory
that neither could be approached with safety, and
for some time I left them out, indifferently, during
the night. But the chain one day gave way, and
the dog, evidently having no other attachment to the
house, took the opportunity to leave. His place
was soon filled by the Newfoundland, whose fidelity
and sagacity I have just recorded.
Space is one of the desirable features
of my suburban residence. I do not know the number
of acres the grounds contain except from the inordinate
quantity of hose required for irrigating. I perform
daily, like some gentle shepherd, upon a quarter-inch
pipe without any visible result, and have had serious
thoughts of contracting with some disbanded fire company
for their hose and equipments. It is quite a walk
to the wood-house. Every day some new feature
of the grounds is discovered. My youngest boy
was one day missing for several hours. His head a
peculiarly venerable and striking object was
at last discovered just above the grass at some distance
from the house. On examination he was found comfortably
seated in a disused drain, in company with a silver
spoon and a dead rat. On being removed from this
locality he howled dismally and refused to be comforted.
The view from my suburban residence
is fine. Lone Mountain, with its white obelisks,
is a suggestive if not cheering termination of the
vista in one direction, while the old receiving vault
of Yerba Buena Cemetery limits the view in another.
Most of the funerals which take place pass my house.
My children, with the charming imitativeness that belongs
to youth, have caught the spirit of these passing
corteges, and reproduce in the back yard, with creditable
skill, the salient features of the lugubrious procession.
A doll, from whose features all traces of vitality
and expression have been removed, represents the deceased.
Yet unfortunately I have been obliged to promise them
more active participation in this ceremony at some
future time, and I fear that they look anxiously forward
with the glowing impatience of youth to the speedy
removal of some one of my circle of friends. I
am told that the eldest, with the unsophisticated
frankness that belongs to his age, made a personal
request to that effect to one of my acquaintances.
One singular result of the frequency of these funerals
is the development of a critical and fastidious taste
in such matters on the part of myself and family.
If I may so express myself, without irreverence, we
seldom turn out for anything less than six carriages.
Any number over this is usually breathlessly announced
by Bridget as, “Here’s another, mum, and
a good long one.”
With these slight drawbacks my suburban
residence is charming. To the serious poet, and
writer of elegiac verses, the aspect of Nature, viewed
from my veranda, is suggestive. I myself have
experienced moments when the “sad mechanic exercise”
of verse would have been of infinite relief.
The following stanzas, by a young friend who has been
stopping with me for the benefit of his health, addressed
to a duck that frequented a small pond in the vicinity
of my mansion, may be worthy of perusal. I think
I have met the idea conveyed in the first verse in
some of Hood’s prose, but as my friend assures
me that Hood was too conscientious to appropriate
anything not his own, I conclude I am mistaken.
LINES TO A WATER-FOWL.
(Intra Muros.)
I.
Fowl, that sing’st in yonder
pool, Where the summer winds blow cool, Are there
hydropathic cures For the ills that man endures?
Know’st thou Priessnitz? What? alack Hast
no other word but “Quack?”
II.
Cleopatra’s barge might pale
To the splendors of thy tail, Or the stately caravel
Of some “high-pooped admiral.” Never
yet left such a wake E’en the navigator Drake!
III.
Dux thou art, and leader, too, Heeding
not what’s “falling due,” Knowing
not of debt or dun, Thou dost heed no bill
but one; And, though scarce conceivable, That’s
a bill Receivable, Made that thou thy stars
mightst thank Payable at the next bank.