It was during my visit at my friend’s
house that I first witnessed the peculiar manner in
which the markets in Mizora are conducted. Everything,
as usual, was fastidiously neat and clean. The
fruit and vegetables were fresh and perfect.
I examined quantities of them to satisfy myself, and
not a blemish or imperfection could be found on any.
None but buyers were attending market. Baskets
of fruit, bunches of vegetables and, in fact, everything
exhibited for sale, had the quality and the price
labeled upon it. Small wicker baskets were near
to receive the change. When a buyer had selected
what suited her, she dropped the label and the change
in the basket. I saw one basket filled with gold
and silver coin, yet not one would be missing when
the owner came to count up the sales. Sometimes
a purchaser was obliged to change a large piece of
money, but it was always done accurately.
There was one singular trait these
people possessed that, in conjunction with their other
characteristics, may seem unnatural: they would
give and exact the last centime (a quarter of a cent)
in a trade. I noticed this peculiarity so frequently
that I inquired the reason for it, and when I had
studied it over I decided that, like all the other
rules that these admirable people had established,
it was wise. Said my friend:
“We set a just value on everything
we prepare for sale. Anything above or below
that, would be unjust to buyer or seller.”
The varieties of apples, pears, peaches
and other fruits had their names attached, with the
quality, sweet, sour, or slightly acid. In no
instance was it found to be incorrectly stated.
I came to one stall that contained nothing but glass
jars of butter and cream. The butter was a rich
buff color, like very fine qualities I had seen in
my own country. The cream, an article I am fond
of drinking, looked so tempting I longed to purchase
a glass for that purpose. The lady whom I accompanied
(my hostess’ cook) informed me that it was artificially
prepared. The butter and cheese were chemical
productions. Different laboratories produced
articles of varying flavor, according to the chemist’s
skill. Although their construction was no secret,
yet some laboratories enjoyed special reputation for
their butter and cheese owing to the accuracy with
which their elements were combined.
She gave me quite a history about
artificial food, also how they kept fruits and vegetables
in their natural state for years without decaying
or losing their flavor, so that when eaten they were
nearly as fine as when freshly gathered. After
hearing that the cream was manufactured, I resolved
to taste it. Dropping my coin into the basket,
I took up a glass and drank it. A look of disgust
crossed the countenance of my companion.
“Do you not drink this?”
I asked in surprise, as I set down the empty vessel.
“It is truly delicious.”
“At regular meal times we all
use it, and sometimes drink it in preference to other
beverages but never in public. You
will never see a citizen of Mizora eating in public.
Look all over this market and you will not discover
one person, either adult or child, eating or drinking,
unless it be water.”
I could not; and I felt keenly mortified
at my mistake. Yet in my own country and others
that, according to our standard, are highly civilized,
a beverage is made from the juice of the corn that
is not only drank in public places, but its effects,
which are always unbecoming, are exhibited also, and
frequently without reproof. However, I said nothing
to my companion about this beverage. It bears
no comparison in color or taste to that made in Mizora.
I could not have distinguished the latter from the
finest dairy cream.
The next place of interest that I
visited were their mercantile bazars or
stores. Here I found things looking quite familiar.
The goods were piled upon shelves behind counters,
and numerous clerks were in attendance. It was
the regular day for shopping among the Mizora ladies,
and the merchants had made a display of their prettiest
and richest goods. I noticed the ladies were
as elegantly dressed as if for a reception, and learned
that it was the custom. They would meet a great
many friends and acquaintances, and dressed to honor
the occasion.
It was my first shopping experience
in Mizora, and I quite mortified myself by removing
my glove and rubbing and examining closely the goods
I thought of purchasing. I entirely ignored the
sweet voice of the clerk that was gently informing
me that it was “pure linen” or “pure
wool,” so habituated had I become in my own country
to being my own judge of the quality of the goods
I was purchasing, regardless always of the seller’s
recommendation of it. I found it difficult, especially
in such circumstances, to always remember their strict
adherence to honesty and fair dealing. I felt
rebuked when I looked around and saw the actions of
the other ladies in buying.
In manufactured goods, as in all other
things, not the slightest cheatery is to be found.
Woolen and cotton mixtures were never sold for pure
wool. Nobody seemed to have heard of the art of
glossing muslin cuffs and collars and selling them
for pure linen.
Fearing that I had wounded the feelings
of the lady in attendance upon me, I hastened to apologize
by explaining the peculiar methods of trade that were
practiced in my own country. They were immediately
pronounced barbarous.
I noticed that ladies in shopping
examined colors and effects of trimmings or combinations,
but never examined the quality. Whatever the
attendant said about that was received as a
fact.
The reason for the absence of attendants
in the markets and the presence of them in mercantile
houses was apparent at once. The market articles
were brought fresh every day, while goods were stored.
Their business houses and their manner
of shopping were unlike anything I had ever met with
before. The houses were all built in a hollow
square, enclosing a garden with a fountain in the center.
These were invariably roofed over with glass, as was
the entire building. In winter the garden was
as warm as the interior of the store. It was adorned
with flowers and shrubs. I often saw ladies and
children promenading in these pretty inclosures, or
sitting on their rustic sofas conversing, while their
friends were shopping in the store. The arrangement
gave perfect light and comfort to both clerks and
customers, and the display of rich and handsome fabrics
was enhanced by the bit of scenery beyond. In
summer the water for the fountain was artificially
cooled.
Every clerk was provided with a chair
suspended by pulleys from strong iron rods fastened
above. They could be raised or lowered at will;
and when not occupied, could be drawn up out of the
way. After the goods were purchased, they were
placed in a machine that wrapped and tied them ready
for delivery.
A dining-room was always a part of
every store. I desired to be shown this, and
found it as tasteful and elegant in its appointments
as a private one would be. Silver and china and
fine damask made it inviting to the eye, and I had
no doubt the cooking corresponded as well with the
taste.
The streets of Mizora were all paved,
even the roads through the villages were furnished
an artificial cover, durable, smooth and elastic.
For this purpose a variety of materials were used.
Some had artificial stone, in the manufacture of which
Mizora could surpass nature’s production.
Artificial wood they also made and used for pavements,
as well as cement made of fine sand. The latter
was the least durable, but possessed considerable
elasticity and made a very fine driving park.
They were experimenting when I came away on sanded
glass for road beds. The difficulty was to overcome
its susceptibility to attrition. After business
hours every street was swept by a machine. The
streets and sidewalks, in dry weather, were as free
from soil as the floor of a private-house would be.
Animals and domestic fowls had long
been extinct in Mizora. This was one cause of
the weird silence that so impressed me on my first
view of their capital city. Invention had superceded
the usefulness of animals in all departments:
in the field and the chemistry of food. Artificial
power was utilized for all vehicles.
The vehicle most popular with the
Mizora ladies for shopping and culling purposes, was
a very low carriage, sometimes with two seats, sometimes
with one. They were upholstered with the richest
fabrics, were exceedingly light and graceful in shape,
and not above three feet from the ground. They
were strong and durable, though frequently not exceeding
fifty pounds in weight. The wheel was the curious
and ingenious part of the structure, for in its peculiar
construction lay the delight of its motion. The
spokes were flat bands of steel, curved outward to
the tire. The carriage had no spring other than
these spokes, yet it moved like a boat gliding down
stream with the current. I was fortunate enough
to preserve a drawing of this wheel, which I hope some
day to introduce in my own land. The carriages
were propelled by compressed air or electricity; and
sometimes with a mechanism that was simply pressed
with the foot. I liked the compressed air best.
It was most easily managed by me. The Mizora
ladies preferred electricity, of which I was always
afraid. They were experimenting with a new propelling
power during my stay that was to be acted upon by light,
but it had not come into general use, although I saw
some vehicles that were propelled by it. They
moved with incredible speed, so rapid indeed, that
the upper part of the carriage had to be constructed
of glass, and securely closed while in motion, to
protect the occupant. It was destined, I heard
some of their scientists say, to become universal,
as it was the most economical power yet discovered.
They patiently tried to explain it to me, but my faculties
were not receptive to such advanced philosophy, and
I had to abandon the hope of ever introducing it into
my own country.
There was another article manufactured
in Mizora that excited my wonder and admiration.
It was elastic glass. I have frequently mentioned
the unique uses that they made of it, and I must now
explain why. They had discovered a process to
render it as pliable as rubber. It was more useful
than rubber could be, for it was almost indestructible.
It had superceded iron in many ways. All cooking
utensils were made of it. It entered largely
into the construction and decoration of houses.
All cisterns and cellars had an inner lining of it.
All underground pipes were made of it, and many things
that are the necessities and luxuries of life.
They spun it into threads as fine
and delicate as a spider’s gossamer, and wove
it into a network of clear or variegated colors that
dazzled the eye to behold. Innumerable were the
lovely fabrics made of it. The frailest lace,
in the most intricate and aerial patterns, that had
the advantage of never soiling, never tearing, and
never wearing out. Curtains for drawing-room
arches were frequently made of it. Some of them
looked like woven dew drops.
One set of curtains that I greatly
admired, and was a long time ignorant of what they
were made of, were so unique, I must do myself the
pleasure to describe them. They hung across the
arch that led to the glass conservatory attached to
my friend’s handsome dwelling. Three very
thin sheets of glass were woven separately and then
joined at the edges so ingeniously as to defy detection.
The inside curtain was one solid color: crimson.
Over this was a curtain of snow flakes, delicate as
those aerial nothings of the sky, and more durable
than any fabric known. Hung across the arched
entrance to a conservatory, with a great globe of
white fire shining through it, it was lovely as the
blush of Aphrodite when she rose from the sea, veiled
in its fleecy foam.
They also possessed the art of making
glass highly refractive. Their table-ware surpassed
in beauty all that I had ever previously seen.
I saw tea cups as frail looking as soap bubbles, possessing
the delicate iridescence of opals. Many other
exquisite designs were the product of its flexibility
and transparency. The first article that attracted
my attention was the dress of an actress on the stage.
It was lace, made of gossamer threads of amber in
the design of lilies and leaves, and was worn over
black velvet.
The wonderful water scene that I beheld
at the theatre was produced by waves made of glass
and edged with foam, a milky glass spun into tiny
bubbles. They were agitated by machinery that
caused them to roll with a terribly natural look.
The blinding flashes of lightning had been the display
of genuine electricity.
Nothing in the way of artistic effect
could call forth admiration or favorable comment unless
it was so exact an imitation of nature as to not be
distinguished from the real without the closest scrutiny.
In private life no one assumed a part. All the
acting I ever saw in Mizora was done upon the stage.
I could not appreciate their mental
pleasures, any more than a savage could delight in
a nocturne of Chopin. Yet one was the intellectual
ecstasy of a sublime intelligence, and the other the
harmonious rapture of a divinely melodious soul.
I must here mention that the processes of chemical
experiment in Mizora differed materially from those
I had known. I had once seen and tasted a preparation
called artificial cream that had been prepared by
a friend of my fathers, an eminent English chemist.
It was simply a combination of the known properties
of cream united in the presence of gentle heat.
But in Mizora they took certain chemicals and converted
them into milk, and cream, and cheese, and butter,
and every variety of meat, in a vessel that admitted
neither air nor light. They claimed that the
elements of air and light exercised a material influence
upon the chemical production of foods, that they could
not be made successfully by artificial processes when
exposed to those two agents. Their earliest efforts
had been unsuccessful of exact imitation, and a perfect
result had only been obtained by closely counterfeiting
the processes of nature.
The cream prepared artificially that
I had tasted in London, was the same color and consistency
as natural cream, but it lacked its relish. The
cream manufactured in Mizora was a perfect imitation
of the finest dairy product.
It was the same with meats; they combined
the elements, and the article produced possessed no
detrimental flavor. It was a more economical way
of obtaining meat than by fattening animals.
They were equally fortunate in the
manufacture of clothing. Every mountain was a
cultivated forest, from which they obtained every variety
of fabric; silks, satins, velvets, laces, woolen
goods, and the richest articles of beauty and luxury,
in which to array themselves, were put upon the market
at a trifling cost, compared to what they were manufactured
at in my own country. Pallid and haggard women
and children, working incessantly for a pittance that
barely sustained existence, was the ultimatum that
the search after the cause of cheap prices arrived
at in my world, but here it traveled from one bevy
of beautiful workwoman to another until it ended at
the Laboratory where Science sat throned, the grand,
majestic, humane Queen of this thrice happy land.