There is, of course, almost a world’s
difference between England and the Continent anywhere;
but I do not recall just now any transition between
Continental countries which involves a more distinct
change in the superficial aspect of things than the
passage from the Middle States into New England.
It is all American, but American of diverse ideals;
and you are hardly over the border before you are
sensible of diverse effects, which are the more apparent
to you the more American you are. If you want
the contrast at its sharpest you had better leave New
York on a Sound boat; for then you sleep out of the
Middle State civilization and wake into the civilization
of New England, which seems to give its stamp to nature
herself. As to man, he takes it whether native
or alien; and if he is foreign-born it marks him another
Irishman, Italian, Canadian, Jew, or negro from his
brother in any other part of the United States.
CHAPTER I
When you have a theory of any kind,
proofs of it are apt to seek you out, and I, who am
rather fond of my faith in New England’s influence
of this sort, had as pretty an instance of it the
day after my arrival as I could wish. A colored
brother of Massachusetts birth, as black as a man can
well be, and of a merely anthropoidal profile, was
driving me along shore in search of a sea-side hotel
when we came upon a weak-minded young chicken in the
road. The natural expectation is that any chicken
in these circumstances will wait for your vehicle,
and then fly up before it with a loud screech; but
this chicken may have been overcome by the heat (it
was a land breeze and it drew like the breath of a
furnace over the hay-cocks and the clover), or it
may have mistimed the wheel, which passed over its
head and left it to flop a moment in the dust and then
fall still. The poor little tragedy was sufficiently
distressful to me, but I bore it well, compared with
my driver. He could hardly stop lamenting it;
and when presently we met a young farmer, he pulled
up. “You goin’ past Jim Marden’s?”
“Yes.” “Well, I wish you’d
tell him I just run over a chicken of his, and I killed
it, I guess. I guess it was a pretty big one.”
“Oh no,” I put in, “it was only a
broiler. What do you think it was worth?”
I took out some money, and the farmer noted the largest
coin in my hand; “About half a dollar, I guess.”
On this I put it all back in my pocket, and then he
said, “Well, if a chicken don’t know enough
to get out of the road, I guess you ain’t to
blame.” I expressed that this was my own
view of the case, and we drove on. When we parted
I gave the half-dollar to my driver, and begged him
not to let the owner of the chicken come on me for
damages; and though he chuckled his pleasure in the
joke, I could see that he was still unhappy, and I
have no doubt that he has that pullet on his conscience
yet, unless he has paid for it. He was of a race
which elsewhere has so immemorially plundered hen-roosts
that chickens are as free to it as the air it breathes,
without any conceivable taint of private ownership.
But the spirit of New England had so deeply entered
into him that the imbecile broiler of another, slain
by pure accident and by its own contributory negligence,
was saddening him, while I was off in my train without
a pang for the owner and with only an agreeable pathos
for the pullet.
CHAPTER II
The instance is perhaps extreme; and,
at any rate, it has carried me in a psychological
direction away from the simpler differences which I
meant to note in New England. They were evident
as soon as our train began to run from the steamboat
landing into the country, and they have intensified,
if they have not multiplied, themselves as I have penetrated
deeper and deeper into the beautiful region. The
land is poorer than the land to the southward one
sees that at once; the soil is thin, and often so
thickly burdened with granite bowlders that it could
never have borne any other crop since the first Puritans,
or Pilgrims, cut away the primeval woods and betrayed
its hopeless sterility to the light. But wherever
you come to a farm-house, whether standing alone or
in one of the village groups that New England farm-houses
have always liked to gather themselves into, it is
of a neatness that brings despair, and of a repair
that ought to bring shame to the beholder from more
easy-going conditions. Everything is kept up
with a strenuous virtue that imparts an air of self-respect
to the landscape, which the bleaching and blackening
stone walls, wandering over the hill-slopes, divide
into wood lots of white birch and pine, stony pastures,
and little patches of potatoes and corn. The
mowing-lands alone are rich; and if the New England
year is in the glory of the latest June, the breath
of the clover blows honey sweet into the
car windows, and the fragrance of the new-cut hay
rises hot from the heavy swaths that seem to smoke
in the sun.
We have struck a hot spell, one of
those torrid mood of continental weather which we
have telegraphed us ahead to heighten our suffering
by anticipation. But the farmsteads and village
houses are safe in the shade of their sheltering trees
amid the fluctuation of the grass that grows so tall
about them that the June roses have to strain upward
to get themselves free of it. Behind each dwelling
is a billowy mass of orchard, and before it the Gothic
archway of the elms stretches above the quiet street.
There is no tree in the world so full of sentiment
as the American elm, and it is nowhere so graceful
as in these New England villages, which are themselves,
I think, the prettiest and wholesomest of mortal sojourns.
By a happy instinct, their wooden houses are all painted
white, to a marble effect that suits our meridional
sky, and the contrast of their dark-green shutters
is deliciously refreshing. There was an evil
hour, the terrible moment of the aesthetic revival
now happily past, when white walls and green blinds
were thought in bad taste, and the village houses
were often tinged a dreary ground color, or a doleful
olive, or a gloomy red, but now they have returned
to their earlier love. Not the first love; that
was a pale buff with white trim; but I doubt if it
were good for all kinds of village houses; the eye
rather demands the white. The pale buff does very
well for large colonial mansions, like Lowell’s
or Longfellow’s in Cambridge; but when you come,
say, to see the great square houses built in Portsmouth,
New Hampshire; early in this century, and painted
white, you find that white, after all, is the thing
for our climate, even in the towns.
In such a village as my colored brother
drove me through on the way to the beach it was of
an absolute fitness; and I wish I could convey a due
sense of the exquisite keeping of the place. Each
white house was more or less closely belted in with
a white fence, of panels or pickets; the grassy door-yards
glowed with flowers, and often a climbing rose embowered
the door-way with its bloom. Away backward or
sidewise stretched the woodshed from the dwelling
to the barn, and shut the whole under one cover; the
turf grew to the wheel-tracks of the road-way, over
which the elms rose and drooped; and from one end of
the village to the other you could not, as the saying
is, find a stone to throw at a dog. I know Holland;
I have seen the wives of Scheveningen scrubbing up
for Sunday to the very middle of their brick streets,
but I doubt if Dutch cleanliness goes so far without,
or comes from so deep a scruple within, as the cleanliness
of New England. I felt so keenly the feminine
quality of its motive as I passed through that village,
that I think if I had dropped so much as a piece of
paper in the street I must have knocked at the first
door and begged the lady of the house (who would have
opened it in person after wiping her hands from her
work, taking off her apron, and giving a glance at
herself in the mirror and at me through the window
blind) to report me to the selectmen in the interest
of good morals.
CHAPTER III
I did not know at once quite how to
reconcile the present foulness of the New England
capital with the fairness of the New England country;
and I am still somewhat embarrassed to own that after
New York (even under the relaxing rule of Tammany)
Boston seemed very dirty when we arrived there.
At best I was never more than a naturalized Bostonian;
but it used to give me great pleasure so
penetratingly does the place qualify even the sojourning
Westerner to think of the defect of New
York in the virtue that is next to godliness; and
now I had to hang my head for shame at the mortifying
contrast of the Boston streets to the well-swept asphalt
which I had left frying in the New York sun the afternoon
before. Later, however, when I began to meet
the sort of Boston faces I remembered so well good,
just, pure, but set and severe, with their look of
challenge, of interrogation, almost of reproof they
not only ignored the disgraceful untidiness of the
streets, but they convinced me of a state of transition
which would leave the place swept and garnished behind
it; and comforted me against the litter of the winding
thoroughfares and narrow lanes, where the dust had
blown up against the brick walls, and seemed permanently
to have smutched and discolored them.
In New York you see the American face
as Europe characterizes it; in Boston you see it as
it characterizes Europe; and it is in Boston that
you can best imagine the strenuous grapple of the native
forces which all alien things must yield to till they
take the American cast. It is almost dismaying,
that physiognomy, before it familiarizes itself anew;
and in the brief first moment while it is yet objective,
you ransack your conscience for any sins you may have
committed in your absence from it and make ready to
do penance for them. I felt almost as if I had
brought the dirty streets with me, and were guilty
of having left them lying about, so impossible were
they with reference to the Boston face.
It is a face that expresses care,
even to the point of anxiety, and it looked into the
window of our carriage with the serious eyes of our
elderly hackman to make perfectly sure of our destination
before we drove away from the station. It was
a little rigorous with us, as requiring us to have
a clear mind; but it was not unfriendly, not unkind,
and it was patient from long experience. In New
York there are no elderly hackmen; but in Boston they
abound, and I cannot believe they would be capable
of bad faith with travellers. In fact, I doubt
if this class is anywhere as predatory as it is painted;
but in Boston it appears to have the public honor
in its keeping. I do not mean that it was less
mature, less self-respectful in Portsmouth, where
we were next to arrive; more so it could not be; an
equal sense of safety, of ease, began with it in both
places, and all through New England it is of native
birth, while in New York it is composed of men of
many nations, with a weight in numbers towards the
Celtic strain. The prevalence of the native in
New England helps you sensibly to realize from the
first moment that here you are in America as the first
Americans imagined and meant it; and nowhere in New
England is the original tradition more purely kept
than in the beautiful old seaport of New Hampshire.
In fact, without being quite prepared to defend a
thesis to this effect, I believe that Portsmouth is
preeminently American, and in this it differs from
Newburyport and from Salem, which have suffered from
different causes an equal commercial decline, and,
though among the earliest of the great Puritan towns
after Boston, are now largely made up of aliens in
race and religion; these are actually the majority,
I believe, in Newburyport.
CHAPTER IV
The adversity of Portsmouth began
early in the century, but before that time she had
prospered so greatly that her merchant princes were
able to build themselves wooden palaces with white
walls and green shutters, of a grandeur and beauty
unmatched elsewhere in the country. I do not know
what architect had his way with them, though his name
is richly worth remembrance, but they let him make
them habitations of such graceful proportion and of
such delicate ornament that they have become shrines
of pious pilgrimage with the young architects of our
day who hope to house our well-to-do people fitly
in country or suburbs. The decoration is oftenest
spent on a porch or portal, or a frieze of peculiar
refinement; or perhaps it feels its way to the carven
casements or to the delicate iron-work of the transoms;
the rest is a simplicity and a faultless propriety
of form in the stately mansions which stand under the
arching elms, with their gardens sloping, or dropping
by easy terraces behind them to the river, or to the
borders of other pleasances. They are all of
wood, except for the granite foundations and doorsteps,
but the stout edifices rarely sway out of the true
line given them, and they look as if they might keep
it yet another century.
Between them, in the sun-shotten shade,
lie the quiet streets, whose gravelled stretch is
probably never cleaned because it never needs cleaning.
Even the business streets, and the quaint square which
gives the most American of towns an air so foreign
and Old Worldly, look as if the wind and rain alone
cared for them; but they are not foul, and the narrower
avenues, where the smaller houses of gray, unpainted
wood crowd each other, flush upon the pavements, towards
the water side, are doubtless unvisited
by the hoe or broom, and must be kept clean by a New
England conscience against getting them untidy.
When you get to the river-side there
is one stretch of narrow, high-shouldered warehouses
which recall Holland, especially in a few with their
gables broken in steps, after the Dutch fashion.
These, with their mouldering piers and grass-grown
wharves, have their pathos, and the whole place embodies
in its architecture an interesting record of the past,
from the time when the homesick exiles huddled close
to the water’s edge till the period of post-colonial
prosperity, when proud merchants and opulent captains
set their vast square houses each in its handsome
space of gardened ground.
My adjectives might mislead as to
size, but they could not as to beauty, and I seek
in vain for those that can duly impart the peculiar
charm of the town. Portsmouth still awaits her
novelist; he will find a rich field when he comes;
and I hope he will come of the right sex, for it needs
some minute and subtle feminine skill, like that of
Jane Austen, to express a fit sense of its life in
the past. Of its life in the present I know nothing.
I could only go by those delightful, silent houses,
and sigh my longing soul into their dim interiors.
When now and then a young shape in summer silk, or
a group of young shapes in diaphanous muslin, fluttered
out of them, I was no wiser; and doubtless my elderly
fancy would have been unable to deal with what went
on in them. Some girl of those flitting through
the warm, odorous twilight must become the creative
historian of the place; I can at least imagine a Jane
Austen now growing up in Portsmouth.
CHAPTER V
If Miss Jewett were of a little longer
breath than she has yet shown herself in fiction,
I might say the Jane Austen of Portsmouth was already
with us, and had merely not yet begun to deal with
its precious material. One day when we crossed
the Piscataqua from New Hampshire into Maine, and
took the trolley-line for a run along through the lovely
coast country, we suddenly found ourselves in the
midst of her own people, who are a little different
sort of New-Englanders from those of Miss Wilkins.
They began to flock into the car, young maidens and
old, mothers and grandmothers, and nice boys and girls,
with a very, very few farmer youth of marriageable
age, and more rustic and seafaring elders long past
it, all in the Sunday best which they had worn to
the graduation exercises at the High School, where
we took them mostly up. The womenkind were in
a nervous twitter of talk and laughter, and the men
tolerantly gay beyond their wont, “passing the
time of day” with one another, and helping the
more tumultuous sex to get settled in the overcrowded
open car. They courteously made room for one
another, and let the children stand between their
knees, or took them in their laps, with that unfailing
American kindness which I am prouder of than the American
valor in battle, observing in all that American decorum
which is no bad thing either. We had chanced
upon the high and mighty occasion of the neighborhood
year, when people might well have been a little off
their balance, but there was not a boisterous note
in the subdued affair. As we passed the school-house
door, three dear, pretty maids in white gowns and white
slippers stood on the steps and gently smiled upon
our company. One could see that they were inwardly
glowing and thrilling with the excitement of their
graduation, but were controlling their emotions to
a calm worthy of the august event, so that no one
might ever have it to say that they had appeared silly.
The car swept on, and stopped to set
down passengers at their doors or gates, where they
severally left it, with an easy air as of private
ownership, into some sense of which the trolley promptly
flatters people along its obliging lines. One
comfortable matron, in a cinnamon silk, was just such
a figure as that in the Miss Wilkins’s story
where the bridegroom fails to come on the wedding-day;
but, as I say, they made me think more of Miss Jewett’s
people. The shore folk and the Down-Easters are
specifically hers; and these were just such as might
have belonged in ‘The Country of the Pointed
Firs’, or ‘Sister Wisby’s Courtship’,
or ‘Dulham Ladies’, or ‘An Autumn
Ramble’, or twenty other entrancing tales.
Sometimes one of them would try her front door, and
then, with a bridling toss of the head, express that
she had forgotten locking it, and slip round to the
kitchen; but most of the ladies made their way back
at once between the roses and syringas of their grassy
door-yards, which were as neat and prim as their own
persons, or the best chamber in their white-walled,
green-shuttered, story-and-a-half house, and as perfectly
kept as the very kitchen itself.
The trolley-line had been opened only
since the last September, but in an effect of familiar
use it was as if it had always been there, and it
climbed and crooked and clambered about with the easy
freedom of the country road which it followed.
It is a land of low hills, broken by frequent reaches
of the sea, and it is most amusing, most amazing, to
see how frankly the trolley-car takes and overcomes
its difficulties. It scrambles up and down the
little steeps like a cat, and whisks round a sharp
and sudden curve with a feline screech, broadening
into a loud caterwaul as it darts over the estuaries
on its trestles. Its course does not lack excitement,
and I suppose it does not lack danger; but as yet
there have been no accidents, and it is not so disfiguring
as one would think. The landscape has already
accepted it, and is making the best of it; and to
the country people it is an inestimable convenience.
It passes everybody’s front door or back door,
and the farmers can get themselves or their produce
(for it runs an express car) into Portsmouth in an
hour, twice an hour, all day long. In summer the
cars are open, with transverse seats, and stout curtains
that quite shut out a squall of wind or rain.
In winter the cars are closed, and heated by electricity.
The young motorman whom I spoke with, while we waited
on a siding to let a car from the opposite direction
get by, told me that he was caught out in a blizzard
last Winter, and passed the night in a snowdrift.
“But the cah was so wa’m, I neva suff’ed
a mite.”
“Well,” I summarized,
“it must be a great advantage to all the people
along the line.”
“Well, you wouldn’t ‘a’
thought so, from the kick they made.”
“I suppose the cottagers” the
summer colony “didn’t like the
noise.”
“Oh yes; that’s what I
mean. The’s whe’ the kick was.
The natives like it. I guess the summa folks
’ll like it, too.”
He looked round at me with enjoyment
of his joke in his eye, for we both understood that
the summer folks could not help themselves, and must
bow to the will of the majority.