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I WILL say at the outset, as
I believe some one else has said on a like occasion, that in this
narrative I
shall probably describe myself more than the objects I look upon. The
facts and
particulars of the case have already been set down in the guidebooks
and in
innumerable books of travel. I shall only attempt to give an account of
the
pleasure and satisfaction I had in coming face to face with things in
the
mother country, seeing them as I did with kindred and sympathizing
eyes.
The ocean was a dread
fascination to me, — a world whose dominion I had never
entered; but I proved
to be such a wretched sailor that I am obliged to confess, Hibernian
fashion,
that the happiest moment I spent upon the sea was when I set my foot
upon the
land.
It is a wide and fearful
gulf that separates the two worlds. The landsman can know little of the
wildness, savageness, and mercilessness of nature till he has been upon
the
sea. It is as if he had taken a leap off into the interstellar spaces.
In
voyaging to Mars or Jupiter, he might cross such a desert, —
might confront
such awful purity and coldness. An astronomic solitariness and
remoteness
encompass the sea. The earth and all remembrance of it is blotted out;
there is
no hint of it anywhere. This is not water, this cold, blue-black,
vitreous
liquid. It suggests, not life, but death. Indeed, the regions of
everlasting
ice and snow are not more cold and inhuman than is the sea.
Almost the only thing about
my first sea voyage that I remember with pleasure is the circumstance
of the
little birds that, during the first few days out, took refuge on the
steamer.
The first afternoon, just as we were losing sight of land, a delicate
little
wood-bird, the black and white creeping warbler, — having
lost its reckoning in
making perhaps its first southern voyage, — came aboard. It
was much fatigued,
and had a disheartened, demoralized look. After an hour or two it
disappeared,
having, I fear, a hard pull to reach the land in the face of the wind
that was
blowing, if indeed it reached it at all.
The next day, just at night,
I observed a small hawk sailing about conveniently near the vessel, but
with a
very lofty, independent mien, as if he had just happened that way on
his
travels, and was only lingering to take a good view of us. It was
amusing to
observe his coolness and haughty unconcern in that sad plight he was
in; by
nothing in his manner betraying that he was several hundred miles at
sea, and
did not know how he was going to get back to land. But presently I
noticed he
found it not inconsistent with his dignity to alight on the rigging
under
friendly cover of the tops'l, where I saw his feathers rudely ruffled
by the
wind, till darkness set in. If the sailors did not disturb him during
the
night, he certainly needed all his fortitude in the morning to put a
cheerful
face on his situation.
The third day, when we were
perhaps off Nova Scotia or Newfoundland, the American pipit or titlark,
from
the far north, a brown bird about the size of a sparrow, dropped upon
the deck
of the ship, so nearly exhausted that one of the sailors was on the
point of
covering it with his hat. It stayed about the vessel nearly all day,
flitting
from point to point, or hopping along a few feet in front of the
promenaders,
and prying into every crack and crevice for food. Time after time I saw
it
start off with a reassuring chirp, as if determined to seek the land;
but
before it had got many rods from the ship its heart would seem to fail
it, and,
after circling about for a few moments, back it would come, more
discouraged
than ever.
These little waifs from the
shore! I gazed upon them with a strange, sad interest. They were
friends in
distress; but the sea-birds, skimming along indifferent to us, or
darting in
and out among those watery hills, I seemed to look upon as my natural
enemies.
They were the nurslings and favorites of the sea, and I had no sympathy
with
them.
No doubt the number of our
land-birds that actually perish in the sea during their autumn
migration, being
carried far out of their course by the prevailing westerly winds of
this
season, is very great. Occasionally one makes the passage to Great
Britain by
following the ships, and finding them at convenient distances along the
route;
and I have been told that over fifty different species of our more
common
birds, such as robins, starlings, grosbeaks, thrushes, etc., have been
found in
Ireland, having, of course, crossed in this way. What numbers of these
little
navigators of the air are misled and wrecked, during those dark and
stormy
nights, on the lighthouses alone that line the Atlantic coast! Is it
Celia
Thaxter who tells of having picked up her apron full of sparrows,
warblers,
flycatchers, etc., at the foot of the lighthouse on the Isles of
Shoals, one
morning after a storm, the ground being still strewn with birds of all
kinds
that had dashed themselves against the beacon, bewildered and
fascinated by its
tremendous light?
If a land-bird perishes at
sea, a sea-bird is equally cast away upon the land; and I have known
the sooty
tern, with its almost omnipotent wing, to fall down, utterly famished
and
exhausted, two hundred miles from salt water.
But my interest in these
things did not last beyond the third day. About this time we entered
what the
sailors call the "devil's hole," and a very respectably sized hole it
is, extending from the banks of Newfoundland to Ireland, and in all
seasons and
weathers it seems to be well stirred up.
Amidst the tossing and rolling, the groaning of penitent travelers, and the laboring of the vessel as she climbed those dark unstable mountains, my mind reverted feebly to Huxley's statement, that the bottom of this sea, for over a thousand miles, presents to the eye of science a vast chalk plain, over which one might drive as over a floor, and I tried to solace myself by dwelling upon the spectacle of a solitary traveler whipping up his steed across it. The imaginary rattle of his wagon was like the sound of lutes and harps, and I would rather have clung to his axletree than have been rocked in the best berth in the ship.
On the tenth day, about four
o'clock in the afternoon, we sighted Ireland. The ship came up from
behind the
horizon, where for so many days she had been buffeting with the winds
and the
waves, but had never lost the clew, bearing straight as an arrow for
the mark.
I think, if she had been aimed at a fair-sized artillery target, she
would have
crossed the ocean and struck the bull's-eye.
In Ireland, instead of an
emerald isle rising out of the sea, I beheld a succession of cold,
purplish
mountains, stretching along the northeastern horizon, but I am bound to
say
that no tints of bloom or verdure were ever half so welcome to me as
were those
dark, heather-clad ranges. It is a feeling which a man can have but
once in his
life, when he first sets eyes upon a foreign land; and in my case, to
this
feeling was added the delightful thought that the "devil's hole"
would soon be cleared and my long fast over.
Presently, after the
darkness had set in, signal rockets were let off from the stern of the
vessel,
writing their burning messages upon the night; and when answering
rockets rose
slowly up far ahead, I suppose we all felt that the voyage was
essentially
done, and no doubt a message flashed back under the ocean that the
Scotia had
arrived.
The sight of the land had
been such medicine to me that I could now hold up my head and walk
about, and
so went down for the first time and took a look at the engines,
— those twin
monsters that had not stopped once, or apparently varied their stroke
at all,
since leaving Sandy Hook; I felt like patting their enormous cranks and
shafts
with my hand, — then at the coal bunks, vast cavernous
recesses in the belly of
the ship, like the chambers of the original mine in the mountains, and
saw the
men and firemen at work in a sort of purgatory of heat and dust. When
it is
remembered that one of these ocean steamers consumes about one hundred
tons of
coal per day, it is easy to imagine what a burden the coal for a voyage
alone
must be, and one is not at all disposed to laugh at Dr. Lardner, who
proved so
convincingly that no steamship could ever cross the ocean, because it
could not
carry coal enough to enable it to make the passage.
On the morrow, a calm, lustrous day, we steamed at our leisure up the Channel and across the Irish Sea, the coast of Wales, and her groups of lofty mountains, in full view nearly all day. The mountains were in profile like the Catskills viewed from the Hudson below, only it was evident there were no trees or shrubbery upon them, and their summits, on this last day of September, were white with snow.
The first day or half day
ashore is, of course, the most novel and exciting; but who, as Mr.
Higginson
says, can describe his sensations and emotions this first half day? It
is a
page of travel that has not yet been written. Paradoxical as it may
seem, one
generally comes out of pickle much fresher than he went in. The sea has
given
him an enormous appetite for the land. Every one of his senses is like
a hungry
wolf clamorous to be fed. For my part, I had suddenly emerged from a
condition
bordering on that of the hibernating animals — a condition in
which I had
neither eaten, nor slept, nor thought, nor moved, when I could help it
— into
not only a full, but a keen and joyous, possession of my health and
faculties.
It was almost a metamorphosis. I was no longer the clod I had been, but
a bird
exulting in the earth and air, and in the liberty of motion. Then to
remember
it was a new earth and a new sky that I was beholding, — that
it was England,
the old mother at last, no longer a faith or a fable, but an actual
fact there
before my eyes and under my feet, — why should I not exult?
Go to! I will be
indulged. Those trees, those fields, that bird darting along the
hedge-rows,
those men and boys picking blackberries in October, those English
flowers by
the roadside (stop the carriage while I leap out and pluck them), the
homely,
domestic looks of things, those houses, those queer vehicles, those
thick-coated horses, those big-footed, coarsely clad, clear-skinned men
and
women, this massive, homely, compact architecture, — let me
have a good look,
for this is my first hour in England, and I am drunk with the joy of
seeing!
This house-fly even, let me inspect it 1; and that swallow
skimming
along so familiarly, — is he the same I saw trying to cling
to the sails of the
vessel the third day out? or is the swallow the swallow the world over?
This
grass I certainly have seen before, and this red and white clover, but
this
daisy and dandelion are not the same; and I have come three thousand
miles to
see the mullein cultivated in a garden, and christened the velvet
plant.
As we sped through the land,
the heart of England, toward London, I thought my eyes would never get
their
fill of the landscape, and that I would lose them out of my head by
their
eagerness to catch every object as we rushed along! How they reveled,
how they
followed the birds and the game, how they glanced ahead on the track
— that
marvelous track! — or shot off over the fields and downs,
finding their delight
in the streams, the roads, the bridges, the splendid breeds of cattle
and sheep
in the fields, the superb husbandry, the rich mellow soil, the
drainage, the
hedges, — in the inconspicuousness of any given feature, and
the mellow tone
and homely sincerity of all; now dwelling fondly upon the groups of
neatly
modeled stacks, then upon the field occupations, the gathering of
turnips and
cabbages, or the digging of potatoes, — how I longed to turn
up the historic
soil, into which had passed the sweat and virtue of so many
generations, with
my own spade, — then upon the quaint, old, thatched houses,
or the cluster of
tiled roofs, then catching at a church spire across a meadow (and it is
all
meadow), or at the remains of tower or wall overrun with ivy.
Here, something almost human
looks out at you from the landscape; Nature here has been so long under
the dominion
of man, has been taken up and laid down by him so many times, worked
over and
over with his hands, fed and fattened by his toil and industry, and, on
the
whole, has proved herself so willing and tractable, that she has taken
on
something of his image, and seems to radiate his presence. She is
completely
domesticated, and no doubt loves the titillation of the harrow and
plow. The
fields look half conscious; and if ever the cattle have "great and
tranquil thoughts," as Emerson suggests they do, it must be when lying
upon these lawns and meadows. I noticed that the trees, the oaks and
elms,
looked like fruit trees, or as if they had felt the humanizing
influences of so
many generations of men, and were betaking themselves from the woods to
the
orchard. The game is more than half tame, and one could easily
understand that
it had a keeper.
But the look of those fields and parks went straight to my heart. It is not merely that they were so smooth and cultivated, but that they were so benign and maternal, so redolent of cattle and sheep and of patient, homely farm labor. One gets only here and there a glimpse of such in this country. I see occasionally about our farms a patch of an acre or half acre upon which has settled this atmosphere of ripe and loving husbandry; a choice bit of meadow about the barn or orchard, or near the house, which has had some special fattening, perhaps been the site of some former garden, or barn, or homestead, or which has had the wash of some building, where the feet of children have played for generations, and the flocks and herds have been fed in winter, and where they love to lie and ruminate at night, — a piece of sward thick and smooth, and full of warmth and nutriment, where the grass is greenest and freshest in spring, and the hay finest and thickest in summer.
This is the character of the
whole of England that I saw. I had been told I should see a garden, but
I did
not know before to what an extent the earth could become a living
repository of
the virtues of so many generations of gardeners. The tendency to run to
weeds
and wild growths seems to have been utterly eradicated from the soil;
and if
anything were to spring up spontaneously, I think it would be cabbage
and
turnips, or grass and grain.
And yet, to American eyes,
the country seems quite uninhabited, there are so few dwellings and so,
few
people. Such a landscape at home would be dotted all over with thrifty
farmhouses, each with its group of painted outbuildings, and along
every road
and highway would be seen the well-to-do turnouts of the independent
freeholders. But in England the dwellings of the people, the farmers,
are so
humble and inconspicuous and are really so far apart, and the halls and
the
country-seats of the aristocracy are so hidden in the midst of vast
estates,
that the landscape seems almost deserted, and it is not till you see
the towns
and great cities that you can understand where so vast a population
keeps
itself.
Another thing that would be
quite sure to strike my eye on this my first ride across British soil,
and on
all subsequent rides, was the enormous number of birds and fowls of
various
kinds that swarmed in the air or covered the ground. It was truly
amazing It
seemed as if the feathered life of a whole continent must have been
concentrated
on this island. Indeed, I doubt if a sweeping together of all the birds
of the
United States into any two of the largest States would people the earth
and air
more fully. There appeared to be a plover, a crow, a rook, a blackbird,
and a
sparrow to every square yard of ground. They know the value of birds in
Britain, — that they are the friends, not the enemies, of the
farmer. It must
be the paradise of crows and rooks. It did me good to see them so much
at home
about the fields and even in the towns. I was glad also to see that the
British
crow was not a stranger to me, and that he differed from his brother on
the
American side of the Atlantic only in being less alert and cautious,
having
less use for these qualities.
Now and then the train would
start up some more tempting game. A brace or two of partridges or a
covey of
quails would settle down in the stubble, or a cock pheasant drop head
and tail
and slide into the copse. Rabbits also would scamper back from the
borders of
the fields into the thickets or peep slyly out, making my sportsman's
fingers
tingle.
I have no doubt I should be
a notorious poacher in England. How could an American see so much game
and not
wish to exterminate it entirely as he does at home? But sporting is an
expensive luxury here. In the first place a man pays a heavy tax on his
gun,
nearly or quite half its value; then he has to have a license to hunt,
for
which he pays smartly; then permission from the owner of the land upon
which he
wishes to hunt; so that the game is hedged about by a triple safeguard.
An American, also, will be
at once struck with the look of greater substantiality and completeness
in
everything he sees here. No temporizing, no makeshifts, no evidence of
hurry,
or failure, or contract work; no wood and little paint, but plenty of
iron and
brick and stone. This people have taken plenty of time, and have built
broad
and deep, and placed the cap-stone on. All this I had been told, but it
pleased
me so in the seeing that I must tell it again. It is worth a voyage
across the
Atlantic to see the bridges alone. I believe I had seen little other
than
wooden bridges before, and in England I saw not one such, but
everywhere solid
arches of masonry, that were refreshing and reassuring to behold. Even
the
lanes and byways about the farm, I noticed, crossed the little creeks
with a
span upon which an elephant would not hesitate to tread, or artillery
trains to
pass. There is no form so pleasing to look upon as the arch, or that
affords so
much food and suggestion to the mind. It seems to stimulate the
volition, the
will-power, and for my part I cannot look upon a noble span without a
feeling
of envy, for I know the hearts of heroes are thus keyed and fortified.
The arch
is the symbol of strength and activity, and of rectitude.
In Europe I took a new lease of this feeling, this partiality for the span, and had daily opportunities to indulge and confirm it. In London I had immense satisfaction in observing the bridges there, and in walking over them, firm as the geological strata and as enduring. London Bridge, Waterloo Bridge, Blackfriars, clearing the river in a few gigantic leaps, like things of life and motion, — to pass over one of these bridges, or to sail under it, awakens the emotion of the sublime. I think the moral value of such a bridge as the Waterloo must be inestimable. It seems to me the British Empire itself is stronger for such a bridge, and that all public and private virtues are stronger. In Paris, too, those superb monuments over the Seine, — I think they alone ought to inspire the citizens with a love of permanence, and help hold them to stricter notions of law and dependence. No doubt kings and tyrants know the value of these things, and as yet they certainly have the monopoly of them.
I am too good a countryman
to feel much at home in cities, and usually value them only as
conveniences,
but for London I conceived quite an affection; perhaps because it is so
much
like a natural formation itself, and strikes less loudly, or perhaps
sharply,
upon the senses than our great cities do. It is a forest of brick and
stone of
the most stupendous dimensions, and one traverses it in the same
adventurous
kind of way that he does woods and mountains. The maze and tangle of
streets is
something fearful, and any generalization of them a step not to be
hastily
taken. My experience heretofore had been that cities generally were
fractions
that could be greatly reduced, but London I found I could not simplify,
and
every morning for weeks, when I came out of my hotel, it was a question
whether
my course lay in this, or in exactly the opposite direction. It has no
unit of
structure, but is a vast aggregation of streets and houses, or in fact
of towns
and cities, which have to be mastered in detail. I tried the third or
fourth
day to get a bird's-eye view from the top of St. Paul's, but saw
through the
rifts in the smoke only a waste, — literally a waste of red
tiles and chimney
pots. The confusion and desolation were complete.
But I finally mastered the
city, in a measure, by the aid of a shilling map, which I carried with
me
wherever I went, and upon which, when I was lost, I would hunt myself
up, thus
making in the end a very suggestive and entertaining map. Indeed, every
inch of
this piece of colored paper is alive to me. If I did not make the map
itself, I
at least verified it, which is nearly as good, and the verification, on
street
corner by day and under lamp or by shop window at night, was often a
matter of
so much concern that I doubt if the original surveyor himself put more
heart
into certain parts of his work than I did in the proof of them.
London has less metropolitan
splendor than New York, and less of the full-blown pride of the
shopman. Its
stores are not nearly so big, and it has no signboards that contain
over one
thousand feet of lumber; neither did I see any names painted on the
gable ends
of the buildings that the man in the moon could read without his
opera-glass. I
went out one day to look up one of the great, publishing houses, and
passed it
and repassed it several times trying to find the sign. Finally, having
made
sure of the building, I found the name of the firm cut into the door
jamb.
London seems to have been
built and peopled by countrymen, who have preserved all the rural
reminiscences
possible. All its great streets or avenues are called roads, as King's
Road,
City Road, Edgware Road, Tottenham Court Road, with innumerable lesser
roads.
Then there are lanes and walks, and such rural names among the streets
as Long
Acre, Snowhill, Poultry, Bush-lane, Hill-road, Houndsditch, and not one
grand
street or imperial avenue.
My visit fell at a most
favorable juncture as to weather, there being but few rainy days and
but little
fog. I had imagined that they had barely enough fair weather in London,
at any
season, to keep alive the tradition of sunshine and of blue sky, but
the
October days I spent there were not so very far behind what we have at
home at
this season. London often puts on a nightcap of smoke and fog, which it
pulls
down over its ears pretty close at times; and the sun has a habit of
lying abed
very late in the morning, which all the people imitate; but I remember
some
very pleasant weather there, and some bright moonlight nights.
I saw but one full-blown
characteristic London fog. I was in the National Gallery one day,
trying to
make up my mind about Turner, when this chimney-pot meteor came down.
It was
like a great yellow dog taking possession of the world. The light faded
from
the room, the pictures ran together in confused masses of shadow on the
walls,
and in the street only a dim yellowish twilight prevailed, through
which
faintly twinkled the lights in the shop windows. Vehicles came slowly
out of
the dirty obscurity on one side and plunged into it on the other.
Waterloo
Bridge gave one or two leaps and disappeared, and the Nelson Column in
Trafalgar Square was obliterated for half its length. Travel was
impeded, boats
stopped on the river, trains stood still on the track, and for an hour
and a
half London lay buried beneath this sickening eruption. I say eruption,
because
a London fog is only a London smoke tempered by a moist atmosphere. It
is
called "fog" by courtesy, but lampblack is its chief ingredient. It
is not wet like our fogs, but quite dry, and makes the eyes smart and
the nose
tingle. Whenever the sun can be seen through it, his face is red and
dirty;
seen through a bona fide
fog, his face is clean and white. English coal
— or "coals," as they say here — in burning gives
out an enormous
quantity of thick, yellowish smoke, which is at no time absorbed or
dissipated
as it would be in our hard, dry atmosphere, and which at certain times
is not
absorbed at all, but falls down swollen and augmented by the prevailing
moisture. The atmosphere of the whole island is more or less
impregnated with
smoke, even on the fairest days, and it becomes more and more dense as
you
approach the great towns. Yet this compound of smut, fog, and common
air is an
elixir of youth; and this is one of the surprises of London, to see
amid so
much soot and dinginess such fresh, blooming complexions, and in
general such a
fine physical tone and full-bloodedness among the people, —
such as one has
come to associate only with the best air and the purest, wholesomest
country
influences. What the secret of it may be, I am at a loss to know,
unless it is
that the moist atmosphere does not dry up the blood as our air does,
and that
the carbon and creosote have some rare antiseptic and preservative
qualities,
as doubtless they have, that are efficacious in the human physiology.
It is no
doubt true, also, that the people do not tan in this climate, as in
ours, and
that the delicate flesh tints show more on that account.
I speak thus of these things
with reference to our standards at home, because I found that these
standards
were ever present in my mind, and that I was unconsciously applying
them to
whatever I saw and wherever I went, and often, as I shall have occasion
to
show, to their discredit.
Climate is a great matter,
and no doubt many of the differences between the English stock at home
and its
offshoot in our country are traceable to this source. Our climate is
more heady
and less stomachic than the English; sharpens the wit, but dries up the
fluids
and viscera; favors an irregular, nervous energy, but exhausts the
animal
spirits. It is, perhaps, on this account that I have felt since my
return how
much easier it is to be a dyspeptic here than in Great Britain. One's
appetite
is keener and more ravenous, and the temptation to bolt one's food
greater. The
American is not so hearty an eater as the Englishman, but the forces of
his
body are constantly leaving his stomach in the lurch, and running off
into his
hands and feet and head. His eyes are bigger than his belly, but an
Englishman's belly is a deal bigger than his eyes, and the number of
plum
puddings and the amount of Welsh rarebit he devours annually would send
the
best of us to his grave in half that time. We have not enough
constitutional
inertia and stolidity; our climate gives us no rest, but goads us day
and
night; and the consequent wear and tear of life is no doubt greater in
this
country than in any other on the globe. We are playing the game more
rapidly,
and I fear less thoroughly and sincerely, than the mother country.
The more uniform good health
of English women is thought to be a matter of exercise in the open air,
as
walking, riding, driving, but the prime reason is mainly a climatic
one,
uniform habits of exercise being more easily kept up in that climate
than in
this, and being less exhaustive, one day with another. You can walk
there every
day in the year without much discomfort, and the stimulus is about the
same.
Here it is too hot in summer and too cold in winter, or else it keys
you up too
tight one day and unstrings you the next; all fire and motion in the
morning,
and all listlessness and ennui in the afternoon; a spur one hour and a
sedative
the next.
A watch will not keep as
steady time here as in Britain, and the human clock-work is more liable
to get
out of repair for the same reason. Our women, especially, break down
prematurely, and the decay of maternity in this country is no doubt
greater
than in any of the oldest civilized communities. One reason, doubtless,
is that
our women are the greatest slaves of fashion in the whole world, and,
in
following the whims of that famous courtesan, have the most fickle and
destructive climate to contend with.
English women all have
good-sized feet, and Englishmen, too, and wear large, comfortable
shoes. This
was a noticeable feature at once: coarse, loose-fitting clothes of both
sexes,
and large boots and shoes with low heels. They evidently knew the use
of their
feet, and had none of the French, or American, or Chinese
fastidiousness about
this part of their anatomy. I notice that, when a family begins to run
out, it
turns out its toes, drops off at the heel, shortens its jaw, and dotes
on small
feet and hands.
Another promoter of health
in England is woolen clothes, which are worn the year round, the summer
driving
people into no such extremities as here. And the good, honest woolen
stuffs of
one kind and another that fill the shops attest the need and the taste
that
prevail. They had a garment when I was in London called the Ulster
overcoat, —
a coarse, shaggy, bungling coat, with a skirt reaching nearly to the
feet, very
ugly, tried by the fashion plates, but very comfortable, and quite the
fashion.
This very sensible garment has since become well known in America.
The Americans in London were
put out with the tailors, and could rarely get suited, on account of
the loose
cutting and the want of "style." But "style" is the hiatus
that threatens to swallow us all one of these days. About the only
monstrosity
I saw in the British man's dress was the stove-pipe hat, which
everybody wears.
At first I feared it might be a police regulation, or a requirement of
the
British Constitution, for I seemed to be about the only man in the
kingdom with
a soft hat on, and I had noticed that before leaving the steamer every
man
brought out from its hiding-place one of these polished
brain-squeezers. Even
the boys wear them, — youths of nine and ten years with
little stovepipe hats
on; and at Eton School I saw black swarms of them: even the boys in the
field
were playing football in stove-pipe bats.
What we call beauty in woman
is so much a matter of youth and health that the average of female
beauty in
London is, I believe, higher than in this country. English women are
comely and
good-looking.
It is an extremely fresh and pleasant face that you see
everywhere, — softer, less clearly and sharply cut than the
typical female face
in this country, — less spirituelle,
less perfect in form, but stronger
and sweeter. There is more blood, and heart, and substance back of it.
The
American race of the present generation is doubtless the most shapely,
both in face and figure, that has yet appeared. American children are
far less
crude, and lumpy, and awkward-looking than the European children. One
generation in this country suffices vastly to improve the looks of the
offspring
of the Irish or German or Norwegian emigrant. There is surely something
in our
climate or conditions that speedily refines and sharpens —
and, shall I add,
hardens? — the human features. The face loses something, but
it comes into
shape; and of such beauty as is the product of this tendency we can
undoubtedly
show more, especially in our women, than the parent stock in Europe;
while
American schoolgirls, I believe, have the most bewitching beauty in the
world.
The English plainness of
speech is observable even in the signs or notices along the streets.
Instead of
"Lodging," "Lodging," as with us, one sees
"Beds," "Beds," which has a very homely sound; and in place
of "gentlemen's" this, that, or the other, about public places, the
word "men's" is used.
I suppose, if it were not for the bond of a written language and perpetual intercourse, the two nations would not be able to understand each other in the course of a hundred years, the inflection and accentuation are so different. I recently heard an English lady say, referring to the American speech, that she could hardly believe her own language could be spoken so strangely.
One sees right away that the
English are a home people, a domestic people; and he does not need to
go into
their houses or homes to find this out. It is in the air and in the
general
aspect of things. Everywhere you see the virtue and quality that we
ascribe to
home-made articles. It seems as if things had been made by hand, and
with care
and affection, as they have been. The land of caste and kings, there is
yet
less glitter and display than in this country, less publicity, and, of
course,
less rivalry and emulation also, for which we pay very dearly. You have
got to
where the word homely
preserves its true signification, and is no longer
a term of disparagement, but expressive of a cardinal virtue.
I liked the English habit of
naming their houses; it shows the importance they attach to their
homes. All
about the suburbs of London and in the outlying villages I noticed
nearly every
house and cottage had some appropriate designation, as Terrace House,
Oaktree
House, Ivy Cottage, or some Villa, usually cut into the stone
gate-post, and
this name is put on the address of the letters. How much better to be
known by
your name than by your number! I believe the same custom prevails in
the
country, and is common to the middle classes as well as to the
aristocracy. It
is a good feature. A house or a farm with an appropriate name, which
everybody
recognizes, must have an added value and importance.
Modern English houses are
less showy than ours, and have more weight and permanence, —
no flat roofs and
no painted outside shutters. Indeed, that pride of American country
people, and
that abomination in the landscape, a white house with green blinds, I
did not
see a specimen of in England. They do not aim to make their houses
conspicuous,
but the contrary. They make a large, yellowish brick that has a
pleasing effect
in the wall. Then a very short space of time in that climate suffices
to take
off the effect of newness, and give a mellow, sober hue to the
building.
Another advantage of the climate is that it permits outside plastering.
Thus
almost any stone may be imitated, and the work endure for ages; while
our
sudden changes, and extremes of heat and cold, of dampness and dryness,
will
cause the best work of this kind to peel off in a few years.
Then this people have better
taste in building than we have, perhaps because they have the noblest
samples
and specimens of architecture constantly before them, — those
old feudal
castles and royal residences, for instance. I was astonished to see how
homely
and good they looked, how little they challenged admiration, and how
much they
emulated rocks and trees. They were surely built in a simpler and more
poetic
age than this. It was like meeting some plain, natural nobleman after
contact
with one of the bedizened, artificial sort. The Tower of London, for
instance,
is as pleasing to the eye, has the same fitness and harmony, as a hut
in the woods;
and I should think an artist might have the same pleasure in copying it
into
his picture as he would in copying a pioneer's log cabin. So with
Windsor
Castle, which has the beauty of a ledge of rocks, and crowns the hill
like a
vast natural formation. The warm, simple interior, too, of these
castles and
palaces, the honest oak without paint or varnish, the rich wood
carvings, the
ripe human tone and atmosphere, — how it all contrasts, for
instance, with the
showy, gilded, cast-iron interior of our commercial or political
palaces, where
everything that smacks of life or nature is studiously excluded under
the
necessity of making the building fire-proof.
I was not less pleased with
the higher ornamental architecture, — the old churches and
cathedrals, — which
appealed to me in a way architecture had never before done. In fact, I
found
that I had never seen architecture before, — a building with
genius and power
in it, and that one could look at with the eye of the imagination. Not
mechanics merely, but poets, had wrought and planned here, and the
granite was
tender with human qualities. The plants and weeds growing in the niches
and
hollows of the walls, the rooks and martins and jackdaws inhabiting the
towers
and breeding about the eaves, are but types of the feelings and
emotions of the
human heart that flit and hover over these old piles, and find
affectionate
lodgment in them.
Time, of course, has done a
great deal for this old architecture. Nature has taken it lovingly to
herself,
has set her seal upon it, and adopted it into her system. Just the foil
which
beauty — especially the crystallic beauty of architecture
— needs has been
given by this hazy, mellowing atmosphere. As the grace and
suggestiveness of
all objects are enhanced by a fall of snow, — forest, fence,
hive, shed, knoll,
rock, tree, all being laid under the same white enchantment,
— so time has
wrought in softening and toning down this old religious architecture,
and
bringing it into harmony with nature.
Our climate has a much
keener edge, both of frost and fire, and touches nothing so gently or
creatively; yet time would, no doubt, do much for our architecture, if
we would
give it a chance, — for that apotheosis of prose, the
National Capitol at
Washington, upon which, I notice, a returned traveler bases our claim
to be
considered "ahead" of the Old World, even in architecture; but the
reigning gods interfere, and each spring or fall give the building a
clean
shirt in the shape of a coat of white paint. In like manner, other
public buildings
never become acclimated, but are. annually scoured with soap and sand,
the
national passion for the brightness of newness interfering to defeat
any
benison which the gods might be disposed to pronounce upon them.
Spotlessness,
I know, is not a characteristic of our politics, though it is said that
whitewashing is, which may account for this ceaseless paint-pot
renovation of
our public buildings. In a world lit only by the moon, our Capitol
would be a
paragon of beauty, and the spring whitewashing could also be endured;
but under
our blazing sun and merciless sky it parches the vision, and makes it
turn with
a feeling of relief to rocks and trees, or to some weather-stained,
dilapidated
shed or hovel.
How winningly and
picturesquely in comparison the old architecture of London addresses
itself to
the eye, — St. Paul's Cathedral, for instance, with its vast
blotches and
stains, as if it had been dipped in some black Lethe of oblivion, and
then left
to be restored by the rains and the elements! This black Lethe is the
London
smoke and fog, which has left a dark deposit over all the building,
except the
upper and more exposed parts, where the original silvery whiteness of
the stone
shows through, the effect of the whole thus being like one of those
graphic Rembrandt
photographs or carbons, the prominences in a strong light, and the rest
in
deepest shadow. I was never tired of looking at this noble building,
and of
going out of my way to walk around it; but I am at a loss to know
whether the
pleasure I had in it arose from my love of nature, or from a
susceptibility to
art for which I had never given myself credit. Perhaps from both, for I
seemed
to behold Art turning toward and reverently acknowledging
Nature,-indeed, in a
manner already become Nature.
I believe the critics of
such things find plenty of fault with St. Paul's; and even I could see
that its
bigness was a little prosy, that it suggested the historic rather than
the
poetic muse; yet, for all that, I could never look at it without a
profound
emotion. Viewed coolly and critically, it might seem like a vast
specimen of
Episcopalianism in architecture. Miltonic in its grandeur and
proportions, and
Miltonic in its prosiness and mongrel classicism also, yet its power
and
effectiveness are unmistakable. The beholder has no vantage-ground from
which
to view it, or to take in its total effect, on account of its being so
closely
beset by such a mob of shops and buildings; yet the glimpses he does
get here
and there through the opening made by some street, when passing in its
vicinity, are very striking and suggestive; the thin veil of smoke,
which is
here as constant and uniform as the atmosphere itself, wrapping it
about with
the enchantment of time and distance.
The interior I found even more impressive than the exterior, perhaps because I was unprepared for it. I had become used to imposing exteriors at home, and did not reflect that in a structure like this I should see an interior also, and that here alone the soul of the building would be fully revealed. It was Miltonic in the best sense; it was like the mightiest organ music put into form. Such depths, such solemn vastness, such gulfs and abysses of architectural space, the rich, mellow light, the haze outside becoming a mysterious, hallowing presence within, quite mastered me, and I sat down upon a seat, feeling my first genuine cathedral intoxication. As it was really an intoxication, a sense of majesty and power quite overwhelming in my then uncloyed condition, I speak of it the more freely. My companions rushed about as if each one had had a search-warrant in his pocket; but I was content to uncover my head and drop into a seat, and busy my mind with some simple object near at hand, while the sublimity that soared about me stole into my soul and possessed it. My sensation was like that imparted by suddenly reaching a great altitude: there was a sort of relaxation of the muscles, followed by a sense of physical weakness; and after half an hour or so I felt compelled to go out into the open air, and leave till another day the final survey of the building. Next day I came back, but there can be only one first time, and I could not again surprise myself with the same feeling of wonder and intoxication. But St. Paul's will bear many visits. I came again and again, and never grew tired of it. Crossing its threshold was entering another world, where the silence and solitude were so profound and overpowering that the noise of the streets outside, or of the stream of visitors, or of the workmen engaged on the statuary, made no impression. They were all belittled, lost, like the humming of flies. Even the afternoon services, the chanting, and the tremendous organ, were no interruption, and left me just as much alone as ever. They only served to set off the silence, to fathom its depth.
The dome of St. Paul's is
the original of our dome at Washington; but externally I think ours is
the more
graceful, though the effect inside is tame and flat in comparison. This
is
owing partly to its lesser size and height, and partly to our hard,
transparent
atmosphere, which lends no charm or illusion, but mainly to the stupid,
unimaginative plan of it. Our dome shuts down like an inverted iron
pot; there
is no vista, no outlook, no relation, and hence no proportion. You open
a door
and are in a circular pen, and can look in only one direction,
— up. If the
iron pot were slashed through here and there, or if it rested on a row
of tall
columns or piers, and were shown to be a legitimate part of the
building, it
would not appear the exhausted receiver it does now.
The dome of St. Paul's is
the culmination of the whole interior of the building. Rising over the
central
area, it seems to gather up the power and majesty of the nave, the
aisles, the
transepts, the choir, and give them expression and expansion in its
lofty
firmament.
Then those colossal piers,
forty feet broad some of them, and nearly one hundred feet high,
— they easily
eclipsed what I had recently seen in a mine, and which I at the time
imagined
shamed all the architecture of the world, — where the
mountain was upheld over
a vast space by massive piers left by the miners, with a ceiling
unrolled over
your head, and apparently descending upon you, that looked like a
petrified
thunder-cloud.
The view from the upper
gallery, or top of the dome, looking down inside, is most impressive.
The
public are not admitted to this gallery, for fear, the keeper told me,
it would
become the scene of suicides; people unable to withstand the terrible
fascination would leap into the yawning gulf. But, with the privilege
usually
accorded to Americans, I stepped down into the narrow circle, and,
leaning over
the balustrade, coolly looked the horrible temptation in the face.
On the whole, St. Paul's is
so vast and imposing that one wonders what occasion or what ceremony
can rise
to the importance of not being utterly dwarfed within its walls. The
annual
gathering of the charity children, ten or twelve thousand in number,
must make
a ripple or two upon its solitude, or an exhibition like the
thanksgiving of
the Queen, when sixteen or eighteen thousand persons were assembled
beneath its
roof. But one cannot forget that it is, for the most part, a great toy,
— a
mammoth shell, whose bigness bears no proportion to the living (if,
indeed, it
is living), indwelling necessity. It is a tenement so large that the
tenant
looks cold and forlorn, and in danger of being lost within it.
No such objection can be made to Westminster Abbey, which is a mellow, picturesque old place, the interior arrangement and architecture of which affects one like some ancient, dilapidated forest. Even the sunlight streaming through the dim windows, and falling athwart the misty air, was like the sunlight of a long-gone age. The very atmosphere was pensive, and filled the tall spaces like a memory and a dream. I sat down and listened to the choral service and to the organ, which blended perfectly with the spirit and sentiment of the place.
One of my best days in
England was spent amid the singing of skylarks on the South Down Hills,
near an
old town at the mouth of the Little Ouse, where I paused on my way to
France.
The prospect of hearing one or two of the classical birds of the Old
World had
not been the least of the attractions of my visit, though I knew the
chances
were against me so late in the season, and I have to thank my good
genius for
guiding me to the right place at the right time. To get out of London
was
delight enough, and then to find myself quite unexpectedly on these
soft
rolling hills, of a mild October day, in full sight of the sea, with
the larks
pouring out their gladness overhead, was to me good fortune indeed.
The South Downs form a very
remarkable feature of this part of England, and are totally unlike any
other
landscape I ever saw. I believe it is Huxley who applies to them the
epithet of
muttony,
which they certainly deserve, for they are like the backs of
immense sheep, smooth, and round, and fat, — so smooth,
indeed, that the eye
can hardly find a place to take hold of, not a tree, or bush, or fence,
or
house, or rock, or stone, or other object, for miles and miles, save
here and
there a group of straw-capped stacks, or a flock of sheep crawling
slowly over
them, attended by a shepherd and dog, and the only lines visible those
which bound
the squares where different crops had been gathered. The soil was rich
and
mellow, like a garden, — hills of chalk with a pellicle of
black loam.
These hills stretch a great
distance along the coast, and are cut squarely off by the sea,
presenting on
this side a chain of white chalk cliffs suggesting the old Latin name
of this
land, Albion.
Before I had got fifty yards
from the station I began to hear the larks, and being unprepared for
them I was
a little puzzled at first, but was not long discovering what luck I was
in. The
song disappointed me at first, being less sweet and melodious than I
had
expected to hear; indeed, I thought it a little sharp and harsh,
— a little
stubbly, — but in other respects, in strength and gladness
and continuity, it was
wonderful. And the more I heard it the better I liked it, until I would
gladly
have given any of my songsters at home for a bird that could shower
down such
notes, even in autumn. Up, up, went the bird, describing a large easy
spiral
till he attained an altitude of three or four hundred feet, when,
spread out
against the sky for a space of ten or fifteen minutes or more, he
poured out
his delight, filling all the vault with sound. The song is of the
sparrow kind,
and, in its best parts, perpetually suggested the notes of our vesper
sparrow;
but the wonder of it is its copiousness and sustained strength. There
is no
theme, no beginning, middle, or end, like most of our best birdsongs,
but a
perfect swarm of notes pouring out like bees from a hive, and
resembling each
other nearly as closely, and only ceasing as the bird nears the earth
again. We
have many more melodious songsters; the bobolink in the meadows for
instance,
the vesper sparrow in the pastures, the purple finch in the groves, the
winter
wren, or any of the thrushes in the woods, or the wood-wagtail, whose
air song
is of a similar character to that of the skylark, and is even more
rapid and
ringing, and is delivered in nearly the same manner; but our birds all
stop
when the skylark has only just begun. Away he goes on quivering wing,
inflating
his throat fuller and fuller, mounting and mounting, and turning to all
points
of the compass as if to embrace the whole landscape in his song, the
notes
still raining upon you, as distinct as ever, after you have left him
far
behind. You feel that you need be in no hurry to observe the song lest
the bird
finish; you walk along, your mind reverts to other things, you examine
the
grass and weeds, or search for a curious stone, still there goes the
bird; you
sit down and study the landscape, or send your thoughts out toward
France or
Spain, or across the sea to your own land, and yet, when you get them
back,
there is that song above you, almost as unceasing as the light of a
star. This
strain indeed suggests some rare pyrotechnic display, musical sounds
being
substituted for the many-colored sparks and lights. And yet I will add,
what
perhaps the best readers do not need to be told, that neither the
lark-song,
nor any other bird-song in the open air and under the sky, is as
noticeable a
feature as my description of it might imply, or as the poets would have
us
believe; and that most persons, not especially interested in birds or
their
notes, and intent upon the general beauty of the landscape, would
probably pass
it by unremarked.
I suspect that it is a
little higher flight than the facts will bear out when the writers make
the
birds go out of sight into the sky. I could easily follow them on this
occasion, though, if I took my eye away for a moment, it was very
difficult to
get it back again. I had to search for them as the astronomer searches
for a
star. It may be that in the spring, when the atmosphere is less clear
and the
heart of the bird full of a more mad and reckless love, that the climax
is not
reached until the eye loses sight of the singer.
Several attempts have been
made to introduce the lark into this country, but for some reason or
other the
experiment has never succeeded. The birds have been liberated in
Virginia and
on Long Island, but do not seem ever to have been heard of afterwards.
I see no
reason why they should not thrive anywhere along our Atlantic seaboard,
and I
think the question of introducing them worthy of more thorough and
serious
attention than has yet been given it, for the lark is really an
institution;
and as he sings long after the other birds are silent, — as
if he had perpetual
spring in his heart, — he would be a great acquisition to our
fields and
meadows. It may be that he cannot stand the extremes of our climate,
though the
English sparrow thrives well enough. The Smithsonian Institution has
received
specimens of the skylark from Alaska, where, no doubt, they find a
climate more
like the English.
They have another prominent
singer in England, namely, the robin, — the original robin
redbreast, — a
slight, quick, active bird with an orange front and an olive back, and
a
bright, musical warble that I caught by every garden, lane, and
hedge-row. It
suggests our bluebird, and has similar habits and manners, though it is
a much
better musician.
The European bird that
corresponds to our robin is the blackbird, of which Tennyson sings:
—
"O Blackbird,
sing me
something well; While all the neighbors shoot thee round I keep smooth plats of fruitful ground Where thou may'st warble, eat, and dwell." |
It quite startled me to see
such a resemblance, — to see, indeed, a black robin. In size,
form, flight,
manners, note, call, there is hardly an appreciable difference. The
bird starts
up with the same flirt of the wings, and calls out in the same jocund,
salutatory way, as he hastens off. The nest, of coarse mortar in the
fork of a
tree, or in an outbuilding, or in the side of a wall, is also the same.
The bird I wished most to
hear, namely, the nightingale, had already departed on its southern
journey. I
saw one in the Zoological Gardens in London, and took a good look at
him. He
struck me as bearing a close resemblance to our hermit thrush, with
something
in his manners that suggested the water-thrush also. Carlyle said he
first recognized
its song from the description of it in "Wilhelm Meister," and that it
was a "sudden burst," which is like the song of our water-thrush.
I have little doubt our songsters excel in melody, while the European birds excel in profuseness and volubility. I heard many bright, animated notes and many harsh ones, but few that were melodious. This fact did not harmonize with the general drift of the rest of my observations, for one of the first things that strikes an American in Europe is the mellowness and rich tone of things. The European is softer-voiced than the American and milder-mannered, but the bird voices seem an exception to this rule.
While in London I had much
pleasure in strolling through the great parks, Hyde Park, Regent's
Park, St.
James Park, Victoria Park, and in making Sunday excursions to Richmond
Park,
Hampden Court Parks, and the great parks at Windsor Castle. The
magnitude of
all these parks was something I was entirely unprepared for, and their
freedom
also; one could roam where he pleased. Not once did I see a signboard,
"Keep off the grass," or go here or go there. There was grass enough,
and one could launch out in every direction without fear of trespassing
on
forbidden ground. One gets used, at least I do, to such petty parks at
home,
and walks amid them so cautiously and circumspectly, every shrub and
tree and
grass plat saying "Hands off," that it is a new sensation to enter a
city pleasure ground like Hyde Park, — a vast natural
landscape, nearly two
miles long and a mile wide, with broad, rolling plains, with herds of
sheep
grazing, and forests and lakes, and all as free as the air. He have
some quite
sizable parks and reservations in Washington, and the citizen has the
right of
way over their tortuous gravel walks, but he puts his foot upon the
grass at
the risk of being insolently hailed by the local police. I have even
been
called to order for reclining upon a seat under a tree in the
Smithsonian
grounds. I must sit upright as in church. But in Hyde Park or Regent's
Park I
could not only walk upon the grass, but lie upon it, or roll upon it,
or play
"one catch all" with children, boys, dogs, or sheep upon it; and I
took my revenge for once for being so long confined to gravel walks,
and gave
the grass an opportunity to grow under my foot whenever I entered one
of these
parks.
This free-and-easy rural
character of the London parks is quite in keeping with the tone and
atmosphere
of the great metropolis itself, which in so many respects has a country
homeliness and sincerity, and shows the essentially bucolic taste of
the
people; contrasting in this respect with the parks and gardens of
Paris, which
show as unmistakably the citizen and the taste for art and the beauty
of design
and ornamentation. Hyde Park seems to me the perfection of a city
pleasure
ground of this kind, because it is so free and so thoroughly a piece of
the
country, and so exempt from any petty artistic displays.
In walking over Richmond
Park I found I had quite a day's work before me, as it was like
traversing a
township; while the great park at Windsor Castle, being upwards of
fifty miles
around, might well make the boldest pedestrian hesitate. My first
excursion was
to Hampton Court, an old royal residence, where I spent a delicious
October day
wandering through Bushy Park, and looking with covetous, though
admiring eyes
upon the vast herds of deer that dotted the plains, or gave way before
me as I
entered the woods. There seemed literally to be many thousands of these
beautiful animals in this park, and the loud, hankering sounds of the
bucks, as
they pursued or circled around the does, was a new sound to my ears.
The
rabbits and pheasants also were objects of the liveliest interest to
me, and I
found that after all a good shot at them with the eye, especially when
I could
credit myself with alertness or stealthiness, was satisfaction enough.
I thought it worthy of note that, though these great parks in and about London were so free, and apparently without any police regulations whatever, yet I never saw prowling about them any of those vicious, ruffianly looking characters that generally infest the neighborhood of our great cities, especially of a Sunday. There were troops of boys, but they were astonishingly quiet and innoxious, very unlike American boys, white or black, a band of whom making excursions into the country are always a band of outlaws. Ruffianism with us is no doubt much more brazen and pronounced, not merely because the law is lax, but because such is the genius of the people.