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the ways of men-第32章

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be taken to  represent a social condition; a phase; as it were; in our  development。  In a certain obscure way; it was an epoch… marking structure。  Its building closed the era of primitive  Newport; its decline corresponded with the end of the pre… palatial period … an era extending from 1845 to 1885。

During forty years Newport had a unique existence; unknown to  the rest of America; and destined to have a lasting influence  on her ways; an existence now as completely forgotten as the  earlier boarding…house MATINEE DANSANTE time。 *  The sixties;  seventies; and eighties in Newport were pleasant years that  many of us regret in spite of modern progress。  Simple;  inexpensive days; when people dined at three (looking on the  newly introduced six o'clock dinners as an English innovation  and modern 〃frill〃); and 〃high…teaed〃 together dyspeptically  off 〃sally lunns〃 and 〃preserves;〃 washed down by coffee and  chocolate; which it was the toilsome duty of a hostess to  dispense from a silver…laden tray; days when 〃rockaways〃 drawn  by lean; long…tailed horses and driven by mustached darkies  were; if not the rule; far from being an exception。

* 〃Newport of the Past;〃 WORLDLY WAYS AND BY…WAYS。

〃Dutch treat〃 picnics; another archaic amusement; flourished  then; directed by a famous organizer at his farm; each guest  being told what share of the eatables it was his duty to  provide; an edict from which there was no appeal。

Sport was little known then; young men passing their  afternoons tooling solemnly up and down Bellevue Avenue in  top…hats and black frock…coats under the burning August sun。

This was the epoch when the Town and Country Club was young  and full of vigor。  We met at each other's houses or at  historic sites to hear papers read on serious subjects。  One  particular afternoon is vivid in my memory。  We had all driven  out to a point on the shore beyond the Third Beach; where the  Norsemen were supposed to have landed during their apocryphal  visit to this continent。  It had been a hot drive; but when we  stopped; a keen wind was blowing in from the sea。  During a  pause in the prolix address that followed; a coachman's voice  was heard to mutter; 〃If he jaws much longer all the horses  will be foundered;〃 which brought the learned address to an  ignominious and hasty termination。

Newport during the pre…palatial era affected culture; and a  whiff of Boston pervaded the air; much of which was tiresome;  yet with an under…current of charm and refinement。  Those who  had the privilege of knowing Mrs。 Julia Ward Howe; will  remember the pleasant 〃teas〃 and sparkling conversation she  offered her guests in the unpretending cottage where the  beauty of the daughter was as brilliant as the mother's wit。

Two estates on Bellevue Avenue are now without the hostesses  who; in those days; showed the world what great ladies America  could produce。  It was the foreign…born husband of one of  these women who gave Newport its first lessons in luxurious  living。  Until then Americans had travelled abroad and seen  elaborately served meals and properly appointed stables  without the ambition of copying such things at home。  Colonial  and revolutionary state had died out; and modern extravagance  had not yet appeared。  In the interregnum much was neglected  that might have added to the convenience and grace of life。

In France; under Louis Philippe; and in England; during  Victoria's youth; taste reached an ebb tide; in neither of  those countries; however; did the general standard fall so low  as here。  It was owing to the SAVOIR FAIRE of one man that  Newporters and New York first saw at home what they had  admired abroad; … liveried servants in sufficient numbers;  dinners served A LA RUSSE; and breeched and booted grooms on  English…built traps; innovations quickly followed by his  neighbors; for the most marked characteristic of the American  is his ability to 〃catch on。〃

When; during the war of the secession; our Naval Academy was  removed from Annapolis and installed in the empty Atlantic  House (corner of Bellevue Avenue and Pelham Street); hotel  life had already begun to decline; but the Ocean House; which  was considered a vast enterprise at that time; inherited from  the older hotels the custom of giving Saturday evening 〃hops;〃  the cottagers arriving at these informal entertainments toward  nine o'clock and promenading up and down the corridors or  dancing in the parlor; to the admiration of a public collected  to enjoy the spectacle。  At eleven the doors of the dining… room opened; and a line of well…drilled darkies passed ices  and lemonade。  By half…past eleven (the hour at which we now  arrive at a dance) every one was at home and abed。

One remembers with a shudder the military manoeuvres that  attended hotel meals in those days; the marching and  countermarching; your dinner cooling while the head waiter  reviewed his men。  That idiotic custom has been abandoned;  like many better and worse。  Next to the American ability to  catch on comes the facility with which he can drop a fad。

In this peculiarity the history of Newport has been an epitome  of the country; every form of amusement being in turn taken  up; run into the ground; and then abandoned。  At one time it  was the fashion to drive to Fort Adams of an afternoon and  circle round and round the little green to the sounds of a  military band; then; for no visible reason; people took to  driving on the Third Beach; an inaccessible and lonely point  which for two or three summers was considered the only correct  promenade。

I blush to recall it; but at that time most of the turnouts  were hired hacks。  Next; Graves Point; on the Ocean Drive;  became the popular meeting…place。  Then society took to  attending polo of an afternoon; a sport just introduced from  India。  This era corresponded with the opening of the Casino  (the old reading…room dating from 1854)。  For several years  every one crowded during hot August mornings onto the airless  lawns and piazzas of the new establishment。  It seems on  looking back as if we must have been more fond of seeing each  other in those days than we are now。  To ride up and down a  beach and bow filled our souls with joy; and the 〃cake walk〃  was an essential part of every ball; the guests parading in  pairs round and round the room between the dances instead of  sitting quietly 〃out。〃  The opening promenade at the New York  Charity Ball is a survival of this inane custom。

The disappearance of the Ocean House 〃hops〃 marked the last  stage in hotel life。  Since then better…class watering places  all over the country have slowly but surely followed Newport's  lead。  The closed caravansaries of Bar Harbor and elsewhere  bear silent testimony to the fact that refined Americans are  at last awakening to the charms of home life during their  holidays; and are discarding; as fast as finances will permit;  the pernicious herding system。  In consequence the hotel has  ceased to be; what it undoubtedly was twenty years ago; the  focus of our summer life。

Only a few charred rafters remain of the Ocean House。  A few  talkative old duffers like myself alone survive the day it  represents。  Changing social conditions have gradually placed  both on the retired list。  A new and palatial Newport has  replaced the simpler city。  Let us not waste too much time  regretting the past; or be too sure that it was better than  the present。  It is quite possible; if the old times we are  writing so fondly about should return; we might discover that  the same thing was true of them as a ragged urchin asserted  the other afternoon of the burning building:

〃Say; Tom; did ye know there was the biggest room in the world  in that hotel?〃

〃No; what room?〃

〃Room for improvement; ya!〃




Chapter 27 … SARDOU at Marly…le…Roy


NEAR the centre of that verdant triangle formed by Saint  Cloud; Versailles; and Saint Germain lies the village of  Marly…le…Roy; high up on a slope above the lazy Seine … an  entrancing corner of the earth; much affected formerly by  French crowned heads; and by the 〃Sun King〃 in particular; who  in his old age grew tired of Versailles and built here one of  his many villas (the rival in its day of the Trianons); and  proceeded to amuse himself therein with the same solemnity  which had already made vice at Versailles more boresome than  virtue elsewhere。

Two centuries and four revolutions have swept away all trace  of this kingly caprice and the art treasures it contained。   Alone; the marble horses of Coustou; transported later to the  Champs Elysees; remain to attest the splendor of the past。

The quaint village of Marly; clustered around its church;  stands; however … with the faculty that insignificant things  have of remaining unchanged … as it did when the most polished  court of Europe rode through it to and from the hunt。  On the  outskirts of this village are now two forged and gilded  gateways through which the passer…by can catch a glimpse of  trim avenues; fountains; and well…kept lawns。

There seems a certain poetical justice in the fact that  Alexandre Dumas FILS and Victorien Sardou; the two giants of  modern drama; should have divided between them the inheritance  of Lou
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