What
ever to say be toke in his entente,
his
langage was so fayer & pertynante,
yt
semeth unto manys herying not only the worde,
but
veryly the thyng.
Caxton’s
Book of Curtesye.
In the party of which our travelers
found themselves members, was Duff Brown, the great
railroad contractor, and subsequently a well-known
member of Congress; a bluff, jovial Bost’n man,
thick-set, close shaven, with a heavy jaw and a low
forehead a very pleasant man if you were
not in his way. He had government contracts
also, custom houses and dry docks, from Portland to
New Orleans, and managed to get out of congress, in
appropriations, about weight for weight of gold for
the stone furnished.
Associated with him, and also of this
party, was Rodney Schaick, a sleek New York broker,
a man as prominent in the church as in the stock exchange,
dainty in his dress, smooth of speech, the necessary
complement of Duff Brown in any enterprise that needed
assurance and adroitness.
It would be difficult to find a pleasanter
traveling party one that shook off more readily the
artificial restraints of Puritanic strictness, and
took the world with good-natured allowance. Money
was plenty for every attainable luxury, and there
seemed to be no doubt that its supply would continue,
and that fortunes were about to be made without a great
deal of toil. Even Philip soon caught the prevailing
spirit; Barry did not need any inoculation, he always
talked in six figures. It was as natural for
the dear boy to be rich as it is for most people to
be poor.
The elders of the party were not long
in discovering the fact, which almost all travelers
to the west soon find out; that the water was poor.
It must have been by a lucky premonition of this that
they all had brandy flasks with which to qualify the
water of the country; and it was no doubt from an
uneasy feeling of the danger of being poisoned that
they kept experimenting, mixing a little of the dangerous
and changing fluid, as they passed along, with the
contents of the flasks, thus saving their lives hour
by hour. Philip learned afterwards that temperance
and the strict observance of Sunday and a certain
gravity of deportment are geographical habits, which
people do not usually carry with them away from home.
Our travelers stopped in Chicago long
enough to see that they could make their fortunes
there in two week’s tine, but it did not seem
worth while; the west was more attractive; the further
one went the wider the opportunities opened.
They took railroad to Alton and the
steamboat from there to St. Louis, for the change
and to have a glimpse of the river.
“Isn’t this jolly?”
cried Henry, dancing out of the barber’s room,
and coming down the deck with a one, two, three step,
shaven, curled and perfumed after his usual exquisite
fashion.
“What’s jolly?”
asked Philip, looking out upon the dreary and monotonous
waste through which the shaking steamboat was coughing
its way.
“Why, the whole thing; it’s
immense I can tell you. I wouldn’t give
that to be guaranteed a hundred thousand cold cash
in a year’s time.”
“Where’s Mr. Brown?”
“He is in the saloon, playing
poker with Schaick and that long haired party with
the striped trousers, who scrambled aboard when the
stage plank was half hauled in, and the big Delegate
to Congress from out west.”
“That’s a fine looking
fellow, that delegate, with his glossy, black whiskers;
looks like a Washington man; I shouldn’t think
he’d be at poker.”
“Oh, its only five cent ante,
just to make it interesting, the Delegate said.”
“But I shouldn’t think
a representative in Congress would play poker any
way in a public steamboat.”
“Nonsense, you’ve got
to pass the time. I tried a hand myself, but
those old fellows are too many for me. The Delegate
knows all the points. I’d bet a hundred
dollars he will ante his way right into the United
States Senate when his territory comes in. He’s
got the cheek for it.”
“He has the grave and thoughtful
manner of expectoration of a public man, for one thing,”
added Philip.
“Harry,” said Philip,
after a pause, “what have you got on those big
boots for; do you expect to wade ashore?”
“I’m breaking ’em in.”
The fact was Harry had got himself
up in what he thought a proper costume for a new country,
and was in appearance a sort of compromise between
a dandy of Broadway and a backwoodsman. Harry,
with blue eyes, fresh complexion, silken whiskers
and curly chestnut hair, was as handsome as a fashion
plate. He wore this morning a soft hat, a short
cutaway coat, an open vest displaying immaculate linen,
a leathern belt round his waist, and top-boots of
soft leather, well polished, that came above his knees
and required a string attached to his belt to keep
them up. The light hearted fellow gloried in
these shining encasements of his well shaped legs,
and told Philip that they were a perfect protection
against prairie rattle-snakes, which never strike
above the knee.
The landscape still wore an almost
wintry appearance when our travelers left Chicago.
It was a genial spring day when they landed at St.
Louis; the birds were singing, the blossoms of peach
trees in city garden plots, made the air sweet, and
in the roar and tumult on the long river levee they
found an excitement that accorded with their own hopeful
anticipations.
The party went to the Southern Hotel,
where the great Duff Brown was very well known, and
indeed was a man of so much importance that even the
office clerk was respectful to him. He might
have respected in him also a certain vulgar swagger
and insolence of money, which the clerk greatly admired.
The young fellows liked the house
and liked the city; it seemed to them a mighty free
and hospitable town. Coming from the East they
were struck with many peculiarities. Everybody
smoked in the streets, for one thing, they noticed;
everybody “took a drink” in an open manner
whenever he wished to do so or was asked, as if the
habit needed no concealment or apology. In the
evening when they walked about they found people sitting
on the door-steps of their dwellings, in a manner not
usual in a northern city; in front of some of the
hotels and saloons the side walks were filled with
chairs and benches Paris fashion, said Harry upon
which people lounged in these warm spring evenings,
smoking, always smoking; and the clink of glasses
and of billiard balls was in the air. It was
delightful.
Harry at once found on landing that
his back-woods custom would not be needed in St. Louis,
and that, in fact, he had need of all the resources
of his wardrobe to keep even with the young swells
of the town. But this did not much matter, for
Harry was always superior to his clothes. As
they were likely to be detained some time in the city,
Harry told Philip that he was going to improve his
time. And he did. It was an encouragement
to any industrious man to see this young fellow rise,
carefully dress himself, eat his breakfast deliberately,
smoke his cigar tranquilly, and then repair to his
room, to what he called his work, with a grave and
occupied manner, but with perfect cheerfulness.
Harry would take off his coat, remove
his cravat, roll up his shirt-sleeves, give his curly
hair the right touch before the glass, get out his
book on engineering, his boxes of instruments, his
drawing paper, his profile paper, open the book of
logarithms, mix his India ink, sharpen his pencils,
light a cigar, and sit down at the table to “lay
out a line,” with the most grave notion that
he was mastering the details of engineering.
He would spend half a day in these preparations without
ever working out a problem or having the faintest conception
of the use of lines or logarithms. And when
he had finished, he had the most cheerful confidence
that he had done a good day’s work.
It made no difference, however, whether
Harry was in his room in a hotel or in a tent, Philip
soon found, he was just the same. In camp he
would get himself, up in the most elaborate toilet
at his command, polish his long boots to the top,
lay out his work before him, and spend an hour or
longer, if anybody was looking at him, humming airs,
knitting his brows, and “working” at engineering;
and if a crowd of gaping rustics were looking on all
the while it was perfectly satisfactory to him.
“You see,” he says to
Philip one morning at the hotel when he was thus engaged,
“I want to get the theory of this thing, so that
I can have a check on the engineers.”
“I thought you were going to
be an engineer yourself,” queried Philip.
“Not many times, if the court
knows herself. There’s better game.
Brown and Schaick have, or will have, the control
for the whole line of the Salt Lick Pacific Extension,
forty thousand dollars a mile over the prairie, with
extra for hard-pan and it’ll be pretty
much all hardpan I can tell you; besides every alternate
section of land on this line. There’s millions
in the job. I’m to have the sub-contract
for the first fifty miles, and you can bet it’s
a soft thing.”
“I’ll tell you what you
do, Philip,” continued Larry, in a burst of
generosity, “if I don’t get you into my
contract, you’ll be with the engineers, and
you jest stick a stake at the first ground marked for
a depot, buy the land of the farmer before he knows
where the depot will be, and we’ll turn a hundred
or so on that. I’ll advance the money for
the payments, and you can sell the lots. Schaick
is going to let me have ten thousand just for a flyer
in such operations.”
“But that’s a good deal of money.”
“Wait till you are used to handling
money. I didn’t come out here for a bagatelle.
My uncle wanted me to stay East and go in on the Mobile
custom house, work up the Washington end of it; he
said there was a fortune in it for a smart young fellow,
but I preferred to take the chances out here.
Did I tell you I had an offer from Bobbett and Fanshaw
to go into their office as confidential clerk on a
salary of ten thousand?”
“Why didn’t you take it
?” asked Philip, to whom a salary of two thousand
would have seemed wealth, before he started on this
journey.
“Take it? I’d rather
operate on my own hook;” said Harry, in his most
airy manner.
A few evenings after their arrival
at the Southern, Philip and Harry made the acquaintance
of a very agreeable gentleman, whom they had frequently
seen before about the hotel corridors, and passed a
casual word with. He had the air of a man of
business, and was evidently a person of importance.
The precipitating of this casual intercourse
into the more substantial form of an acquaintanceship
was the work of the gentleman himself, and occurred
in this wise. Meeting the two friends in the
lobby one evening, he asked them to give him the time,
and added:
“Excuse me, gentlemen strangers
in St. Louis? Ah, yes-yes. From the East,
perhaps? Ah; just so, just so. Eastern
born myself Virginia. Sellers is my
name Beriah Sellers.
“Ah! by the way New
York, did you say? That reminds me; just met
some gentlemen from your State, a week or two ago very
prominent gentlemen in public life they
are; you must know them, without doubt. Let me
see let me see. Curious those names
have escaped me. I know they were from your
State, because I remember afterward my old friend Governor
Shackleby said to me fine man, is the Governor one
of the finest men our country has produced said
he, ’Colonel, how did you like those New York
gentlemen? not many such men in the world, Colonel
Sellers,’ said the Governor yes,
it was New York he said I remember it distinctly.
I can’t recall those names, somehow. But
no matter. Stopping here, gentlemen stopping
at the Southern?”
In shaping their reply in their minds,
the title “Mr.” had a place in it; but
when their turn had arrived to speak, the title “Colonel”
came from their lips instead.
They said yes, they were abiding at
the Southern, and thought it a very good house.
“Yes, yes, the Southern is fair.
I myself go to the Planter’s, old, aristocratic
house. We Southern gentlemen don’t change
our ways, you know. I always make it my home
there when I run down from Hawkeye my plantation
is in Hawkeye, a little up in the country. You
should know the Planter’s.”
Philip and Harry both said they should
like to see a hotel that had been so famous in its
day a cheerful hostelrie, Philip said it
must have been where duels were fought there across
the dining-room table.
“You may believe it, sir, an
uncommonly pleasant lodging. Shall we walk?”
And the three strolled along the streets,
the Colonel talking all the way in the most liberal
and friendly manner, and with a frank open-heartedness
that inspired confidence.
“Yes, born East myself, raised
all along, know the West a great country,
gentlemen. The place for a young fellow of spirit
to pick up a fortune, simply pick it up, it’s
lying round loose here. Not a day that I don’t
put aside an opportunity; too busy to look into it.
Management of my own property takes my time.
First visit? Looking for an opening?”
“Yes, looking around,” replied Harry.
“Ah, here we are. You’d
rather sit here in front than go to my apartments?
So had I. An opening eh?”
The Colonel’s eyes twinkled.
“Ah, just so. The country is opening up,
all we want is capital to develop it. Slap down
the rails and bring the land into market. The
richest land on God Almighty’s footstool is lying
right out there. If I had my capital free I could
plant it for millions.”
“I suppose your capital is largely
in your plantation?” asked Philip.
“Well, partly, sir, partly.
I’m down here now with reference to a little
operation a little side thing merely.
By the way gentlemen, excuse the liberty, but it’s
about my usual time”
The Colonel paused, but as no movement
of his acquaintances followed this plain remark, he
added, in an explanatory manner,
“I’m rather particular
about the exact time have to be in this
climate.”
Even this open declaration of his
hospitable intention not being understood the Colonel
politely said,
“Gentlemen, will you take something?”
Col. Sellers led the way to a
saloon on Fourth street under the hotel, and the young
gentlemen fell into the custom of the country.
“Not that,” said the Colonel
to the bar-keeper, who shoved along the counter a
bottle of apparently corn-whiskey, as if he had done
it before on the same order; “not that,”
with a wave of the hand. “That Otard if
you please. Yes. Never take an inferior
liquor, gentlemen, not in the evening, in this climate.
There. That’s the stuff. My respects!”
The hospitable gentleman, having disposed
of his liquor, remarking that it was not quite the
thing “when a man has his own cellar
to go to, he is apt to get a little fastidious about
his liquors” called for cigars.
But the brand offered did not suit him; he motioned
the box away, and asked for some particular Havana’s,
those in separate wrappers.
“I always smoke this sort, gentlemen;
they are a little more expensive, but you’ll
learn, in this climate, that you’d better not
economize on poor cigars”
Having imparted this valuable piece
of information, the Colonel lighted the fragrant cigar
with satisfaction, and then carelessly put his fingers
into his right vest pocket. That movement being
without result, with a shade of disappointment on
his face, he felt in his left vest pocket. Not
finding anything there, he looked up with a serious
and annoyed air, anxiously slapped his right pantaloon’s
pocket, and then his left, and exclaimed,
“By George, that’s annoying.
By George, that’s mortifying. Never had
anything of that kind happen to me before. I’ve
left my pocket-book. Hold! Here’s
a bill, after all. No, thunder, it’s a
receipt.”
“Allow me,” said Philip,
seeing how seriously the Colonel was annoyed, and
taking out his purse.
The Colonel protested he couldn’t
think of it, and muttered something to the barkeeper
about “hanging it up,” but the vender of
exhilaration made no sign, and Philip had the privilege
of paying the costly shot; Col. Sellers profusely
apologizing and claiming the right “next time,
next time.”
As soon as Beriah Sellers had bade
his friends good night and seen them depart, he did
not retire apartments in the Planter’s, but took
his way to his lodgings with a friend in a distant
part of the city.