CHAPTER I.
“Good morrow, coz.
Good morrow, sweet Hero.”
SHAKSPEARE.
When Mr. Effingham determined to
return home, he sent orders to his agent to prepare his town-house
in New-York for his reception, intending to pass a month or two in
it, then to repair to Washington for a few weeks, at the close of
its season, and to visit his country residence when the spring
should fairly open. Accordingly, Eve now found herself at the head
of one of the largest establishments, in the largest American town,
within an hour after she had landed from the ship. Fortunately for
her, however, her father was too just to consider a wife, or a
daughter, a mere upper servant, and he rightly judged that a
liberal portion of his income should be assigned to the procuring
of that higher quality of domestic service, which can alone relieve
the mistress of a household from a burthen so heavy to be borne.
Unlike so many of those around him, who would spend on a single
pretending and comfortless entertainment, in which the ostentatious
folly of one contended with the ostentatious folly of another a sum
that, properly directed, would introduce order and system into a
family for a twelvemonth, by commanding the time and knowledge of
those whose study they had been, and who would be willing to devote
themselves to such objects, and then permit their wives and
daughters to return to the drudgery to which the sex seems doomed
in this country, he first bethought him of the wants of social life
before he aspired to its parade. A man of the world, Mr. Effingham
possessed the requisite knowledge, and a man of justice, the
requisite fairness, to permit those who depended on him so much for
their happiness, to share equitably in the good things that
Providence had so liberally bestowed on himself. In other words, he
made two people comfortable, by paying a generous price for a
housekeeper; his daughter, in the first place, by releasing her
from cares that, necessarily, formed no more a part of her duties
than it would be a part of her duty to sweep the pavement before
the door; and, in the next place, a very respectable woman who was
glad to obtain so good a home on so easy terms. To this simple and
just expedient, Eve was indebted for being at the head of one of
the quietest, most truly elegant, and best, ordered establishments
in America, with no other demands on her time than that which was
necessary to issue a few orders in the morning, and to examine a
few accounts once a week.
One of the first and the most
acceptable of the visits that Eve received, was from her cousin,
Grace Van Cortlandt, who was in the country at the moment of her
arrival, but who hurried back to town to meet her old school-fellow
and kinswoman, the instant she heard of her having landed. Eve
Effingham and Grace Van Cortlandt were sisters’ children, and had
been born within a month of each other. As the latter was without
father or mother, most of their time had been passed together,
until the former was taken abroad, when a separation unavoidably
ensued. Mr. Effingham ardently desired, and had actually
designed, to take his niece with
him to Europe, but her paternal grandfather, who was still living,
objected his years and affection, and the scheme was reluctantly
abandoned. This grandfather was now dead, and Grace had been left
with a very ample fortune, almost entirely the mistress of her own
movements.
The moment of the meeting between
these two warm-hearted and sincerely attached young women, was one
of great interest and anxiety to both. They retained for each other
the tenderest love, though the years that had separated them had
given rise to so many new impressions and habits that they did not
prepare themselves for the interview without apprehension. This
interview took place about a week after Eve was established in
Hudson Square, and at an hour earlier than was usual for the
reception of visits. Hearing a carriage stop before the door, and
the bell ring, our heroine stole a glance from behind a curtain and
recognized her cousin as she alighted.
“Qu’avez-vous, ma chere?”
demanded Mademoiselle Viefville, observing that her élève
trembled and grew pale.
“It is my cousin, Miss Van
Cortlandt—she whom I loved as a sister—we now meet for the first
time in so many years!”
“Bien—c’est une très jolie jeune
personne!” returned the governess, taking a glance from the spot
Eve had just quitted. “Sur le rapport de la personne, ma chere,
vous devriez être contente, au moins.”
“If you will excuse me,
Mademoiselle, I will go down alone—I think I should prefer to meet
Grace without witnesses in the first interview.”
“Très volontiers. Elle est
parente, et c’est bien naturel.”
Eve, on this expressed
approbation, met her maid at the door, as she came to announce that
Mademoiselle de Cortlandt was in the library, and descended slowly
to meet her. The library was lighted from above by means of a small
dome, and Grace had unconsciously placed herself in the very
position that a painter would have chosen, had she been about to
sit for her portrait. A strong, full, rich light fell obliquely on
her as Eve entered, displaying her fine person and beautiful
features to the very best advantage, and they were features and a
person that are not seen every day even in a country where female
beauty is so common. She was in a carriage dress, and her toilette
was rather more elaborate than Eve had been accustomed to see, at
that hour, but still Eve thought she had seldom seen a more lovely
young creature. Some such thoughts, also, passed through the mind
of Grace herself, who, though struck, with a woman’s readiness in
such matters, with the severe simplicity of Eve’s attire, as well
as with its entire elegance, was more struck with the charms of her
countenance and figure. There was, in truth, a strong resemblance
between them, though each was distinguished by an expression suited
to her character, and to the habits of her mind.
“Miss Effingham!” said Grace,
advancing a step to meet the lady who entered, while her voice was
scarcely audible and her limbs trembled.
“Miss Van Cortlandt!” said Eve,
in the same low, smothered tone.
This formality caused a chill in
both, and each unconsciously stopped and curtsied. Eve had been so
much struck with the coldness of the American manner, during the
week she
had been at home, and Grace was
so sensitive on the subject of the opinion of one who had seen so
much of Europe, that there was great danger, at that critical
moment, the meeting would terminate unpropitiously.
Thus far, however, all had been
rigidly decorous, though the strong feelings that were glowing in
the bosoms of both, had been so completely suppressed. But the
smile, cold and embarrassed as it was, that each gave as she
curtsied, had the sweet character of her childhood in it, and
recalled to both the girlish and affectionate intercourse of their
younger days.
“Grace!” said Eve, eagerly,
advancing a step or two impetuously, and blushing like the
dawn.
“Eve!”
Each opened her arms, and in a
moment they were locked in a long and fervent embrace. This was the
commencement of their former intimacy, and before night Grace was
domesticated in her uncle’s house. It is true that Miss Effingham
perceived certain peculiarities about Miss Van Cortlandt, that she
had rather were absent; and Miss Van Cortlandt would have felt more
at her ease, had Miss Effingham a little less reserve of manner, on
certain subjects that the latter had been taught to think
interdicted.
Notwithstanding these slight
separating shades in character, however, the natural affection was
warm and sincere; and if Eve, according to Grace’s notions, was a
little stately and formal, she was polished and courteous, and if
Grace, according to Eve’s notions, was a little too easy and
unreserved, she was feminine and delicate.
We pass over the three or four
days that succeeded, during which Eve had got to understand
something of her new position, and we will come at once to a
conversation between the cousins, that will serve to let the reader
more intimately into the opinions, habits and feelings of both, as
well as to open the real subject of our narrative. This
conversation took place in that very library which had witnessed
their first interview, soon after breakfast, and while the young
ladies were still alone.
“I suppose, Eve, you will have to
visit the Green’s.—They are Hajjis, and were much in society last
winter.”
“Hajjis!—You surely do not mean,
Grace, that they have been to Mecca?” “Not at all: only to Paris,
my dear; that makes a Hajji in New-York.”
“And does it entitle the pilgrim
to wear the green turban?” asked Eve, laughing.
“To wear any thing, Miss
Effingham; green, blue, or yellow, and to cause it to pass for
elegance.”
“And which is the favourite
colour with the family you have mentioned?”
“It ought to be the first, in
compliment to the name, but, if truth must be said, I think they
betray an affection for all, with not a few of the half-tints in
addition.”
“I am afraid they are too
prononcées for us, by this description. I am no great admirer,
Grace, of walking rainbows.”
“Too Green, you would have said,
had you dared; but you are a Hajji too, and even the
Greens know that a Hajji never
puns, unless, indeed, it might be one from Philadelphia. But you
will visit these people?”
“Certainly, if they are in
society and render it necessary by their own civilities.”
“They are in society, in virtue
of their rights as Hajjis; but, as they passed three months at
Paris, you probably know something of them.”
“They may not have been there at
the same time with ourselves,” returned Eve, quietly, “and Paris is
a very large town. Hundreds of people come and go, that one never
hears of. I do not remember those you have mentioned.”
“I wish you may escape them, for,
in my untravelled judgment, they are anything but agreeable,
notwithstanding all they have seen, or pretend to have seen.”
“It is very possible to have been
all over christendom, and to remain exceedingly disagreeable;
besides one may see a great deal, and yet see very little of a good
quality.”
A pause of two or three minutes
followed, during which Eve read a note, and her cousin played with
the leaves of a book.
“I wish I knew your real opinion
of us, Eve,” the last suddenly exclaimed. “Why not be frank with so
near a relative; tell me honestly, now—are you reconciled to your
country?”
“You are the eleventh person who
has asked me this question, which I find very extraordinary, as I
have never quarrelled with my country.”
“Nay, I do not mean exactly that.
I wish to hear how our society has struck one who has been educated
abroad.”
“You wish, then, for opinions
that can have no great value, since my experience at home, extends
only to a fortnight. But you have many books on the country, and
some written by very clever persons; why not consult them?”
“Oh! you mean the travellers.
None of them are worth a second thought, and we hold them, one and
all, in great contempt.”
“Of that I can have no manner of
doubt, as one and all, you are constantly protesting it, in the
highways and bye-ways. There is no more certain sign of contempt,
than to be incessantly dwelling on its intensity!”
Grace had great quickness, as
well as her cousin, and though provoked at Eve’s quiet hit, she had
the good sense and the good nature to laugh.
“Perhaps we do protest and
disdain a little too strenuously for good taste, if not to gain
believers; but surely, Eve, you do not support these travellers in
all that they have written of us?”
“Not in half, I can assure you.
My father and cousin Jack have discussed them too often in my
presence to leave me in ignorance of the very many political
blunders they have made in particular.”
“Political blunders!—I know
nothing of them, and had rather thought them right, in most of what
they said about our politics. But, surely, neither your father nor
Mr. John Effingham corroborates what they say of our
society!”
“I cannot answer for either, on
that point.”
“Speak then for yourself. Do you
think them right?”
“You should remember, Grace, that
I have not yet seen any society in New-York.”
“No society, dear!—Why you were
at the Henderson’s, and the Morgan’s, and the Drewett’s; three of
the greatest réunions that we have had in two winters!”’
“I did not know that you meant
those unpleasant crowds, by society.” “Unpleasant crowds! Why,
child, that is society, is it not?’
“Not what I have been taught to
consider such; I rather think it would be better to call it
company.”
“And is not this what is called
society in Paris?”
“As far from it as possible; it
may be an excrescence of society; one of its forms; but, by no
means, society itself. It would be as true to call cards, which are
sometimes introduced in the world, society, as to call a ball given
in two small and crowded rooms, society. They are merely two of the
modes in which idlers endeavour to vary their amusements.”
“But we have little else than
these balls, the morning visits, and an occasional evening, in
which there is no dancing.”
“I am sorry to hear it; for, in
that case, you can have no society.” “And is it different at
Paris—or Florence, or Rome?”
“Very. In Paris there are many
houses open every evening to which one can go, with little
ceremony. Our sex appears in them, dressed according to what a
gentleman I overheard conversing at Mrs. Henderson’s would call
their ‘ulterior intentions,’ for the night; some attired in the
simplest manner, others dressed for concerts, for the opera, for
court even; some on the way from a dinner, and others going to a
late ball. All this matter of course variety, adds to the case and
grace of the company, and coupled with perfect good manners, a
certain knowledge of passing events, pretty modes of expression, an
accurate and even utterance, the women usually find the means of
making themselves agreeable.
Their sentiment is sometimes a
little heroic, but this one must overlook, and it is a taste,
moreover, that is falling into disuse, as people read better
books.”
“And you prefer this
heartlessness, Eve, to the nature of your own country!”
“I do not know that quiet,
retenue, and a good tone, are a whit more heartless than flirting,
giggling and childishness. There may be more nature in the latter,
certainly, but it is scarcely as agreeable, after one has fairly
got rid of the nursery.”
Grace looked vexed, but she loved
her cousin too sincerely to be angry, A secret suspicion that Eve
was right, too, came in aid of her affection, and while her little
foot moved, she maintained her good-nature, a task not always
attainable for those who believe that their own “superlatives”
scarcely reach to other people’s “positives.” At this critical
moment, when there was so much danger of a jar in the feelings of
these two young females, the library door opened and Pierre, Mr.
Effingham’s own man, announced—
“Monsieur Bragg.”
“Monsieur who?” asked Eve, in
surprise.
“Monsieur Bragg,” returned
Pierre, in French, “desires to see Mademoiselle.” “You mean my
father,—I know no such person.”
“He inquired first for Monsieur,
but understanding Monsieur was out, he next asked to have the
honour of seeing Mademoiselle.”
“Is it what they call a person in
England, Pierre?” Old Pierre smiled, as he answered—
“He has the air, Mademoiselle,
though he esteems himself a personnage, if I might take the liberty
of judging.”
“Ask him for his card,—there must
be a mistake, I think.”
While this short conversation
took place, Grace Van Cortlandt was sketching a cottage with a pen,
without attending to a word that was said. But, when Eve received
the card from Pierre and read aloud, with the tone of surprise that
the name would be apt to excite in a novice in the art of American
nomenclature, the words “Aristabulus Bragg,” her cousin began to
laugh.
“Who can this possibly be,
Grace?—Did you ever hear of such a person, and what right can he
have to wish to see me?”
“Admit him, by all means; it is
your father’s land agent, and he may wish to leave some message for
my uncle. You will be obliged to make his acquaintance, sooner or
later, and it may as well be done now as at another time.”
“You have shown this gentleman
into the front drawing-room, Pierre?” “Oui, Mademoiselle.”
“I will ring when you are
wanted.”
Pierre withdrew, and Eve opened
her secretary, out of which she took a small manuscript book, over
the leaves of which she passed her fingers rapidly.
“Here it is,” she said, smiling,
“Mr. Aristabulus Bragg, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, and the
agent of the Templeton estate.” This precious little work, you must
understand, Grace, contains sketches of the characters of such
persons as I shall be the most likely to see, by John Effingham,
A.M. It is a sealed volume, of course, but there can be no harm in
reading the part that treats of our present visiter, and, with your
permission, we will have it in common.—‘Mr. Aristabulus Bragg was
born in one of the western counties of Massachusetts, and emigrated
to New-York, after receiving his education, at the mature age of
nineteen; at twenty-one he was admitted to the bar, and for the
last seven years he has been a successful practitioner in all the
courts of Otsego, from the justice’s to the circuit. His talents
are undeniable, as he commenced his education at fourteen and
terminated it at twenty-one, the law-course included. This man is
an epitome of all that is good and all that is bad, in a very large
class of his fellow citizens. He is quick-witted, prompt in action,
enterprising in all things in which he has nothing to lose, but
wary and cautious in all things in which he has a real stake, and
ready to turn not only his hand, but his heart and his principles
to any thing that offers an advantage. With him, literally,
“nothing is too high to be
aspired to, nothing too low to be done.” He will run for Governor,
or for town-clerk, just as opportunities occur, is expert in all
the practices of his profession, has had a quarter’s dancing, with
three years in the classics, and turned his attention towards
medicine and divinity, before he finally settled down into the law.
Such a compound of shrewdness, impudence, common-sense, pretension,
humility, cleverness, vulgarity, kind-heartedness, duplicity,
selfishness, law-honesty, moral fraud and mother wit, mixed up with
a smattering of learning and much penetration in practical things,
can hardly be described, as any one of his prominent qualities is
certain to be met by another quite as obvious that is almost its
converse. Mr. Bragg, in short, is purely a creature of
circumstances, his qualities pointing him out for either a member
of congress or a deputy sheriff, offices that he is equally ready
to fill. I have employed him to watch over the estate of your
father, in the absence of the latter, on the principle that one
practised in tricks is the best qualified to detect and expose
them, and with the certainty that no man will trespass with
impunity, so long as the courts continue to tax bills of costs with
their present liberality.’ You appear to know the gentleman, Grace;
is this character of him faithful?”
“I know nothing of bills of costs
and deputy sheriffs, but I do know that Mr. Aristabulus Bragg is an
amusing mixture of strut, humility, roguery and cleverness. He is
waiting all this time in the drawing-room, and you had better see
him, as he may, now, be almost considered part of the family. You
know he has been living in the house at Templeton, ever since he
was installed by Mr. John Effingham. It was there I had the honour
first to meet him,”
“First!—Surely you have never
seen him any where else!”
“Your pardon, my dear. He never
comes to town without honouring me with a call. This is the price I
pay for having had the honour of being an inmate of the same house
with him for a week.”
Eve rang the bell, and Pierre
made his appearance. “Desire Mr. Bragg to walk into the
library.”
Grace looked demure while Pierre
was gone to usher in their visiter, and Eve was thinking of the
medley of qualities John Effingham had assembled in his
description, as the door opened, and the subject of her
contemplation entered.
“Monsieur Aristabule” said
Pierre, eyeing the card, but sticking at the first name.
Mr. Aristabulus Bragg was
advancing with an easy assurance to make his bow to the ladies,
when the more finished air and quiet dignity of Miss Effingham, who
was standing, so far disconcerted him, as completely to upset his
self-possession. As Grace had expressed it, in consequence of
having lived three years in the old residence at Templeton, he had
begun to consider himself a part of the family, and at home he
never spoke of the young lady without calling her “Eve,” or “Eve
Effingham.” But he found it a very different thing to affect
familiarity among his associates, and to practise it in the very
face of its subject; and, although seldom at a loss for words of
some sort or another, he was now actually dumb-founded. Eve
relieved his awkwardness by directing Pierre, with her eye, to hand
a chair, and first speaking.
“I regret that my father is not
in,” she said, by way of turning the visit from herself; “but he is
to be expected every moment. Are you lately from Templeton?”
Aristabulus drew his breath, and
recovered enough of his ordinary tone of manner to reply with a
decent regard to his character for self-command. The intimacy that
he had intended to establish on the spot, was temporarily defeated,
it is true, and without his exactly knowing how it had been
effected; for it was merely the steadiness of the young lady,
blended as it was with a polished reserve, that had thrown him to a
distance he could not explain. He felt immediately, and with taste
that did his sagacity credit, that his footing in this quarter was
only to be obtained by unusually slow and cautious means. Still,
Mr.
Bragg was a man of great
decision, and, in his way, of very far-sighted views; and, singular
as it may seem, at that unpropitious moment, he mentally determined
that, at no very distant day, he would make Miss Eve Effingham his
wife.
“I hope Mr. Effingham enjoys good
health,” he said, with some such caution as a rebuked school-girl
enters on the recitation of her task—“he enjoyed bad health I hear,
(Mr.
Aristabulus Bragg, though so
shrewd, was far from critical in his modes of speech) when he went
to Europe, and after travelling so far in such bad company, it
would be no more than fair that he should have a little respite as
he approaches home and old age.”
Had Eve been told that the man
who uttered this nice sentiment, and that too in accents as uncouth
and provincial as the thought was finished and lucid, actually
presumed to think of her as his bosom companion, it is not easy to
say which would have predominated in her mind, mirth or resentment.
But Mr. Bragg was not in the habit of letting his secrets escape
him prematurely, and certainly this was one that none but a wizard
could have discovered without the aid of a direct oral or written
communication.
“Are you lately from Templeton?”
repeated Eve a little surprised that the gentleman did not see fit
to answer the question, which was the only one that, as it seemed
to her, could have a common interest with them both.
“I left home the day before
yesterday,” Aristabulus now deigned to reply.
“It is so long since I saw our
beautiful mountains and I was then so young, that I feel a great
impatience to revisit them, though the pleasure must be deferred
until spring.”
“I conclude they are the
handsomest mountains in the known world, Miss Effingham!”
“That is much more than I shall
venture to claim for them; but, according to my imperfect
recollection, and, what I esteem of far more importance, according
to the united testimony of Mr. John Effingham and my father, I
think they must be very beautiful.”
Aristabulus looked up, as if he
had a facetious thing to say, and he even ventured on a smile,
while he made his answer.
“I hope Mr. John Effingham has
prepared you for a great change in the house?”
“We know that it has been
repaired and altered under his directions. That was done at my
father’s request.”
“We consider it denationalized,
Miss Effingham, there being nothing like it, west of Albany at
least.”
“I should be sorry to find that
my cousin has subjected us to this imputation,” said Eve
smiling—perhaps a little equivocally; “the architecture of America
being generally so simple and pure. Mr. Effingham laughs at his own
improvements, however, in which, he says, he has only carried out
the plans of the original artiste, who worked very much in what was
called the composite order.
“You allude to Mr. Hiram
Doolittle, a gentleman I never saw; though I hear he has left
behind him many traces of his progress in the newer states. Ex pede
Herculem, as we say, in the classics, Miss Effingham I believe it
is the general sentiment that Mr. Doolittle’s designs have been
improved on, though most people think that the Grecian or Roman
architecture, which is so much in use in America, would be more
republican. But every body knows that Mr. John Effingham is not
much of a republican.”
Eve did not choose to discuss her
kinsman’s opinions with Mr. Aristabulus Bragg, and she quietly
remarked that she “did not know that the imitations of the ancient
architecture, of which there are so many in the country, were owing
to attachment to republicanism.”
“To what else can it be owing,
Miss Eve?”
“Sure enough,” said Grace Van
Cortlandt; “it is unsuited to the materials, the climate, and the
uses; and some very powerful motive, like that mentioned by Mr.
Bragg, could alone overcome these obstacles.”
Aristabulus started from his
seat, and making sundry apologies, declared his previous
unconsciousness that Miss Van Cortlandt was present; all of which
was true enough, as he had been so much occupied mentally, with her
cousin, as not to have observed her, seated as she was partly
behind a screen. Grace received the excuses favourably, and the
conversation was resumed.
“I am sorry that my cousin should
offend the taste of the country,” said Eve, “but as we are to live
in the house, the punishment will fall heaviest on the
offenders.”
“Do not mistake me, Miss Eve,”
returned Aristabulus, in a little alarm, for he too well understood
the influence and wealth of John Effingham, not to wish to be on
good terms with him; “do not mistake me, I admire the house, and
know it to be a perfect specimen of a pure architecture in its way,
but then public opinion is not yet quite up to it. I see all its
beauties, I would wish you to know, but then there are many, a
majority perhaps, who do not, and these persons think they ought to
be consulted about such matters.”
“I believe Mr. John Effingham
thinks less of his own work than you seem to think of it yourself,
sir, for I have frequently heard him laugh at it, as a mere
enlargement of the merits of the composite order. He calls it a
caprice, rather than a taste: nor do I see what concern a majority,
as you term them, can have with a house that does not belong to
them.”
Aristabulus was surprised that
any one could disregard a majority; for, in this respect, he a good
deal resembled Mr. Dodge, though running a different career; and
the look of surprise he gave was natural and open.
“I do not mean that the public
has a legal right to control the tastes of the citizen,” he said,
“but in a republican government, you undoubtedly understand, Miss
Eve, it will rule in all things.”
“I can understand that one would
wish to see his neighbour use good taste, as it helps to embellish
a country; but the man who should consult the whole neighbourhood
before he built, would be very apt to cause a complicated house to
be erected, if he paid much respect to the different opinions he
received; or, what is quite as likely, apt to have no house at
all.”
“I think you are mistaken, Miss
Effingham, for the public sentiment, just now, runs almost
exclusively and popularly into the Grecian school. We build little
besides temples for our churches, our banks, our taverns, our
court-houses, and our dwellings. A friend of mine has just built a
brewery on the model of the Temple of the Winds.”
“Had it been a mill, one might
understand the conceit,” said Eve, who now began to perceive that
her visiter had some latent humour, though he produced it in a
manner to induce one to think him any thing but a droll. “The
mountains must be doubly beautiful, if they are decorated in the
way you mention. I sincerely hope, Grace, that I shall find the
hills as pleasant as they now exist in my recollection!”
“Should they not prove to be
quite as lovely as you imagine, Miss Effingham,” returned
Aristabulus, who saw no impropriety in answering a remark made to
Miss Van Cortlandt, or any one else, “I hope you will have the
kindness to conceal the fact from the world.”
“I am afraid that would exceed my
power, the disappointment would be so strong. May I ask why you
show so much interest in my keeping so cruel a mortification to
myself?”
“Why, Miss Eve,” said
Aristabulus, looking grave, “I am afraid that our people would
hardly bear the expression of such an opinion from you”
“From me!—and why not from me, in
particular?”
“Perhaps it is because they think
you have travelled, and have seen other countries.”
“And is it only those who have
not travelled, and who have no means of knowing the value of what
they say, that are privileged to criticise?”
“I cannot exactly explain my own
meaning, perhaps, but I think Miss Grace will understand me. Do you
not agree with me, Miss Van Cortlandt, in thinking it would be
safer for one who never saw any other mountains to complain of the
tameness and monotony of our own, than for one who had passed a
whole life among the Andes and the Alps?”
Eve smiled, for she saw that Mr.
Bragg was capable of detecting and laughing at provincial pride,
even while he was so much under its influence; and Grace coloured,
for she had the consciousness of having already betrayed some of
this very silly sensitiveness, in her intercourse with her cousin,
in connexion with other subjects. A reply was unnecessary, however,
as the door just then opened, and John Effingham made his
appearance. The meeting between the two gentlemen, for we suppose
Aristabulus must be included in the category by courtesy, if not of
right, was more cordial than Eve had expected to witness, for each
really entertained a respect for the other, in reference to a merit
of a particular sort; Mr. Bragg esteeming Mr. John Effingham as a
wealthy and caustic cynic, and Mr. John Effingham regarding Mr.
Bragg much as the owner of a dwelling regards a valuable house-dog.
After a few moments of conversation, the two withdrew together, and
just as the ladies were about to descend to the drawing-room,
previously to dinner, Pierre
announced that a plate had been ordered for the land agent.
CHAPTER II.
“I know that Deformed; he has
been a vile thief this seven year he goes up and down like a
gentleman.”
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING.
Eve, and her cousin, found Sir
George Templemore and Captain Truck in the drawing- room, the
former having lingered in New-York, with a desire to be near his
friends, and the latter being on the point of sailing for Europe,
in his regular turn. To these must be added Mr. Bragg and the
ordinary inmates of the house, when the reader will get a view of
the whole party.
Aristabulus had never before sat
down to as brilliant a table, and for the first time in his life,
he saw candles lighted at a dinner; but he was not a man to be
disconcerted at a novelty. Had he been a European of the same
origin and habits, awkwardness would have betrayed him fifty times,
before the dessert made its appearance; but, being the man he was,
one who overlooked a certain prurient politeness that rather
illustrated his deportment, might very well have permitted him to
pass among the oi polloi of the world, were it not for a peculiar
management in the way of providing for himself. It is true, he
asked every one near him to eat of every thing he could himself
reach, and that he used his knife as a coal-heaver uses a shovel;
but the company he was in, though fastidious in its own deportment,
was altogether above the silver-forkisms, and this portion of his
demeanour, if it did not escape undetected, passed away unnoticed.
Not so, however, with the peculiarity already mentioned as an
exception. This touch of deportment, (or management, perhaps, is
the better word,) being characteristic of the man, it deserves to
be mentioned a little in detail.
The service at Mr. Effingham’s
table was made in the quiet, but thorough manner that distinguishes
a French dinner. Every dish was removed, carved by the domestics,
and handed in turn to each guest. But there were a delay and a
finish in this arrangement that suited neither Aristabulus’s
go-a-head-ism, nor his organ of acquisitiveness. Instead of
waiting, therefore, for the more graduated movements of the
domestics, he began to take care of himself, an office that he
performed with a certain dexterity that he had acquired by
frequenting ordinaries—a school, by the way, in which he had
obtained most of his notions of the proprieties of the table. One
or two slices were obtained in the usual manner, or by means of the
regular service; and, then, like one who had laid the foundation of
a fortune, by some lucky windfall in the commencement of his
career, he began to make accessions, right and left, as opportunity
offered. Sundry entremets, or light dishes that had a peculiarly
tempting appearance, came first under his grasp. Of these he soon
accumulated all within his reach, by taxing his neighbours, when he
ventured to send his plate, here and there, or wherever he saw a
dish that promised to reward his trouble.
By such means, which were
resorted to, however, with a quiet and unobtrusive assiduity
that escaped much observation,
Mr. Bragg contrived to make his own plate a sample epitome of the
first course. It contained in the centre, fish, beef, and ham; and
around these staple articles, he had arranged croquettes, rognons,
râgouts, vegetables, and other light things, until not only was the
plate completely covered, but it was actually covered in double and
triple layers; mustard, cold butter, salt, and even pepper,
garnishing its edges.
These different accumulations
were the work of time and address, and most of the company had
repeatedly changed their plates before Aristabulus had eaten a
mouthful, the soup excepted. The happy moment when his ingenuity
was to be rewarded, had now arrived, and the land agent was about
to commence the process of mastication, or of deglutition rather,
for he troubled himself very little with the first operation, when
the report of a cork drew his attention towards the chaimpaigne. To
Aristabulus this wine never came amiss, for, relishing its
piquancy, he had never gone far enough into the science of the
table to learn which were the proper moments for using it. As
respected all the others at table, this moment had in truth
arrived, though, as respected himself, he was no nearer to it,
according to a regulated taste, than when he first took his seat.
Perceiving that Pierre was serving it, however, he offered his own
glass, and enjoyed a delicious instant, as he swallowed a beverage
that much surpassed any thing he had ever known to issue out of the
waxed and leaded nozles that, pointed like so many enemies’
batteries, loaded with headaches and disordered stomachs, garnished
sundry village bars of his acquaintance.
Aristabulus finished his glass at
a draught, and when he took breath, he fairly smacked his lips.
That was an unlucky instant, his plate, burthened with all its
treasures, being removed, at this unguarded moment; the man who
performed the unkind office, fancying that a dislike to the dishes
could alone have given rise to such an omnium-gatherum.
It was necessary to commence de
novo, but this could no longer be done with the first course, which
was removed, and Aristabulus set-to, with zeal, forthwith, on the
game. Necessity compelled him to eat, as the different dishes were
offered; and, such was his ordinary assiduity with the knife and
fork, that, at the end of the second remove, he had actually
disposed of more food than any other person at table. He now began
to converse, and we shall open the conversation at the precise
point in the dinner, when it was in the power of Aristabulus to
make one of the interlocutors.
Unlike Mr. Dodge, he had betrayed
no peculiar interest in the baronet, being a man too shrewd and
worldly to set his heart on trifles of any sort; and Mr. Bragg no
more hesitated about replying to Sir George Templemore, or Mr.
Effingham, than he would have hesitated about answering one of his
own nearest associates. With him age and experience formed no
particular claims to be heard, and, as to rank, it is true he had
some vague ideas about there being such a thing in the militia, but
as it was unsalaried rank, he attached no great importance to it.
Sir George Templemore was inquiring concerning the recording of
deeds, a regulation that had recently attracted attention in
England; and one of Mr. Effingham’s replies contained some
immaterial inaccuracy, which Aristabulus took occasion to correct,
as his first appearance in the general discourse.
“I ask pardon, sir,” he concluded
his explanations by saying, “but I ought to know these little
niceties, having served a short part of a term as a county clerk,
to fill a vacancy occasioned by a death.”
“You mean, Mr. Bragg, that you
were employed to write in a county clerk’s office,” observed John
Effingham, who so much disliked untruth, that he did not hesitate
much about refuting it; or what he now fancied to be an
untruth.
“As county clerk, sir. Major
Pippin died a year before his time was out, and I got the
appointment. As regular a county clerk, sir, as there is in the
fifty-six counties of New- York.”
“When I had the honour to engage
you as Mr. Effingham’s agent, sir,” returned the other, a little
sternly, for he felt his own character for veracity involved in
that of the subject of his selection, “I believe, indeed, that you
were writing in the office, but I did not understand it was as the
clerk.”
“Very true, Mr. John,” returned
Aristabulus, without discovering the least concern, “I was then
engaged by my successor as a clerk; but a few months earlier, I
filled the office myself.”
“Had you gone on, in the regular
line of promotion, my dear sir,” pithily inquired Captain Truck,
“to what preferment would you have risen by this time?”
“I believe I understand you,
gentlemen,” returned the unmoved Aristabulus, who perceived a
general smile. “I know that some people are particular about
keeping pretty much on the same level, as to office: but I hold to
no such doctrine. If one good thing cannot be had, I do not see
that it is a reason for rejecting another. I ran that year for
sheriff, and finding I was not strong enough to carry the county, I
accepted my successor’s offer to write in the office, until
something better might turn up.”
“You practised all this time, I
believe, Mr. Bragg,” observed John Effingham.
“I did a little in that way, too,
sir; or as much as I could. Law is flat with us, of late, and many
of the attorneys are turning their attention to other
callings.”
“And pray, sir,” asked Sir
George, “what is the favourite pursuit with most of them, just
now?”
“Some our way have gone into the
horse-line; but much the greater portion are, just now, dealing in
western cities.
“In western cities!” exclaimed
the baronet, looking as if he distrusted a mystification. “In such
articles, and in mill-seats, and rail-road lines, and other
expectations.”
“Mr. Bragg means that they are
buying and selling lands on which it is hoped all these
conveniences may exist, a century hence,” explained John
Effingham.
“The hope is for next year, or
next week, even, Mr. John,” returned Aristabulus, with a sly look,
“though you may be very right as to the reality. Great fortunes
have been made on a capital of hopes, lately, in this
country.”
“And have you been able,
yourself, to resist these temptations?” asked Mr. Effingham. “I
feel doubly indebted to you, sir, that you should have continued to
devote your time to my interests, while so many better things were
offering.”
“It was my duty, sir,” said
Aristabulus, bowing so much the lower, from the consciousness that
he had actually deserted his post for some months, to embark in the
western
speculations that were then so
active in the country, “not to say my pleasure. There are many
profitable occupations in this country, Sir George, that have been
overlooked in the eagerness to embark in the town-trade—”
“Mr. Bragg does not mean trade in
town, but trade in towns,” explained John Effingham.
“Yes, sir, the traffic in cities.
I never come this way, without casting an eye about me, in order to
see if there is any thing to be done that is useful; and I confess
that several available opportunities have offered, if one had
capital. Milk is a good business.”
“Le lait!” exclaimed Mademoiselle
Viefville, involuntarily.
“Yes, ma’am, for ladies as well
as gentlemen. Sweet potatoes I have heard well spoken of, and
peaches are really making some rich men’s fortunes.”
“All of which are honester and
better occupations than the traffic in cities, that you have
mentioned,” quietly observed Mr. Effingham.
Aristabulus looked up in a little
surprise, for with him every thing was eligible that returned a
good profit, and all things honest that the law did not actually
punish.
Perceiving, however, that the
company was disposed to listen, and having, by this time, recovered
the lost ground, in the way of food, he cheerfully resumed his
theme.
“Many families have left Otsego,
this and the last summer, Mr. Effingham, as emigrants for the west.
The fever has spread far and wide.”
“The fever! Is old Otsego,” for
so its inhabitants loved to call a county of half a century’s
existence, it being venerable by comparison, “is old Otsego losing
its well established character for salubrity?”
“I do not allude to an animal
fever, but to the western fever.”
“Ce pays de l’ouest, est-il bien
malsain?” whispered Mademoiselle Viefville. “Apparemment,
Mademoiselle, sur plusieurs rapports.”
“The western fever has seized old
and young, and it has carried off many active families from our
part of the world,” continued Aristabulus, who did not understand
the little aside just mentioned, and who, of course, did not heed
it; “most of the counties adjoining our own have lost a
considerable portion of their population.”
“And they who have gone, do they
belong to the permanent families, or are they merely the floating
inhabitants?” inquired Mr. Effingham.
“Most of them belong to the
regular movers.”
“Movers!” again exclaimed Sir
George—“is there any material part of your population who actually
deserve this name?”
“As much so as the man who shoes
a horse ought to be called a smith, or the man who frames a house a
carpenter,” answered John Effingham.
“To be sure,” continued Mr.
Bragg, “we have a pretty considerable leaven of them in our
political dough, as well as in our active business. I believe, Sir
George, that in England, men are tolerably stationary.”
“We love to continue for
generations on the same spot. We love the tree that our forefathers
planted, the roof that they built, the fire-side by which they sat,
the sods that cover their remains.”
“Very poetical, and I dare say
there are situations in life, in which such feelings come in
without much effort. It must be a great check to business
operations, however, in your part of the world, sir!”
“Business operations!—what is
business, as you term it, sir, to the affections, to the
recollections of ancestry, and to the solemn feelings connected
with history and tradition?”
“Why, sir, in the way of history,
one meets with but few incumbrances in this country, but he may do
very much as interest dictates, so far as that is concerned, at
least. A nation is much to be pitied that is weighed down by the
past, in this manner, since its industry and enterprize are
constantly impeded by obstacles that grow out of its recollections.
America may, indeed, be termed a happy and a free country, Mr. John
Effingham, in this, as well as in all other things!”
Sir George Templemore was too
well-bred to utter all he felt at that moment, as it would
unavoidably wound the feelings of his hosts, but he was rewarded
for his forbearance by intelligent smiles from Eve and Grace, the
latter of whom the young baronet fancied, just at that moment, was
quite as beautiful as her cousin, and if less finished in manners,
she had the most interesting naiveté.
“I have been told that most old
nations have to struggle with difficulties that we escape,”
returned John Effingham, “though I confess this is a superiority on
our part, that never before presented itself to my mind.”
“The political economists, and
even the geographers have overlooked it, but practical men see and
feel its advantages, every hour in the day. I have been told, Sir
George Templemore, that in England, there are difficulties in
running highways and streets through homesteads and dwellings; and
that even a rail-road, or a canal, is obliged to make a curve to
avoid a church-yard or a tomb-stone?”
“I confess to the sin,
sir.”
“Our friend Mr. Bragg,” put in
John Effingham, “considers life as all means and no end.”
“An end cannot be got at without
the means, Mr. John Effingham, as I trust you will, yourself,
admit. I am for the end of the road, at least, and must say that I
rejoice in being a native of a country in which as few impediments
as possible exist to onward impulses.
The man who should resist an
improvement, in our part of the country, on account of his
forefathers, would fare badly among his contemporaries.”
“Will you permit me to ask, Mr.
Bragg, if you feel no local attachments yourself,” enquired the
baronet, throwing as much delicacy into the tones of his voice, as
a question that he felt ought to be an insult to a man’s heart,
would allow—“if one tree is not more pleasant than another; the
house you were born in more beautiful than a house into which you
never entered; or the altar at which you have long worshipped, more
sacred than another at which you never knelt?”
“Nothing gives me greater
satisfaction than to answer the questions of gentlemen that
travel through our country,”
returned Aristabulus, “for I think, in making nations acquainted
with each other, we encourage trade and render business more
secure. To reply to your inquiry, a human being is not a cat, to
love a locality rather than its own interests. I have found some
trees much pleasanter than others, and the pleasantest tree I can
remember was one of my own, out of which the sawyers made a
thousand feet of clear stuff, to say nothing of middlings. The
house I was born in was pulled down, shortly after my birth, as
indeed has been its successor, so I can tell you nothing on that
head; and as for altars, there are none in my persuasion.”
“The church of Mr. Bragg has
stripped itself as naked as he would strip every thing else, if he
could,” said John Effingham. “I much question if he ever knelt
even; much less before an altar.”
“We are of the standing order,
certainly,” returned Aristabulus, glancing towards the ladies to
discover how they took his wit, “and Mr. John Effingham is as near
right as a man need be, in a matter of faith. In the way of houses,
Mr. Effingham, I believe it is the general opinion you might have
done better with your own, than to have repaired it. Had the
materials been disposed of, they would have sold well, and by
running a street through the property, a pretty sum might have been
realized.”
“In which case I should have been
without a home, Mr. Bragg.”
“It would have been no great
matter to get another on cheaper land. The old residence would have
made a good factory, or an inn.”
“Sir, I am a cat, and like the
places I have long frequented.”
Aristabulus, though not easily
daunted, was awed by Mr. Effingham’s manner, and Eve saw that her
father’s fine face had flushed. This interruption, therefore,
suddenly changed the discourse, which has been recreated at some
length, as likely to give the reader a better insight into a
character that will fill some space in our narrative, than a more
laboured description.
“I trust your owners, Captain
Truck,” said John Effingham, by way of turning the conversation
into another channel, “are fully satisfied with the manner in which
you saved their property from the hands of the Arabs?”
“Men, when money is concerned,
are more disposed to remember how it was lost than how it was
recovered, religion and trade being the two poles, on such a
point,” returned the old seaman, with a serious face. “On the
whole, my dear sir, I have reason to be satisfied, however; and so
long as you, my passengers and my friends, are not inclined to
blame me, I shall feel as if I had done at least a part of my
duty.”
Eve rose from table, went to a
side-board and returned, when she gracefully placed before the
master of the Montauk a rich and beautifully chased punch-bowl, in
silver. Almost at the same moment, Pierre offered a salver that
contained a capital watch, a pair of small silver tongs to hold a
coal, and a deck trumpet, in solid silver.
“These are so many faint
testimonials of our feelings,” said Eve—“and you will do us the
favour to retain them, as evidences of the esteem created by skill,
kindness, and courage.”
“My dear young lady!” cried the
old tar, touched to the soul by the feeling with which Eve
acquitted herself of this little
duty, “my dear young lady—well, God bless you—God bless you all—you
too, Mr. John Effingham, for that matter—and Sir George—that I
should ever have taken that runaway for a gentleman and a
baronet—though I suppose there are some silly baronets, as well as
silly lords—retain them?”—glancing furiously at Mr.
Aristabulus Bragg, “may the Lord
forget me, in the heaviest hurricane, if I ever forget whence these
things came, and why they were given.”
Here the worthy captain was
obliged to swallow some wine, by way of relieving his emotions, and
Aristabulus, profiting by the opportunity, coolly took the bowl,
which, to use a word of his own, he hefted in his hand, with a view
to form some tolerably accurate notion of its intrinsic value.
Captain Truck’s eye caught the action, and he reclaimed his
property quite as unceremoniously as it had been taken away,
nothing but the presence of the ladies preventing an outbreaking
that would have amounted to a declaration of war.
“With your permission, sir,” said
the captain, drily, after he had recovered the bowl, not only
without the other’s consent, but, in some degree, against his will;
“this bowl is as precious in my eyes as if it were made of my
father’s bones.”
“You may indeed think so,”
returned the land-agent, “for its cost could not be less than a
hundred dollars.”
“Cost, sir!—But, my dear young
lady, let us talk of the real value. For what part of these things
am I indebted to you?”
“The bowl is my offering,” Eve
answered, smilingly, though a tear glistened in her eye, as she
witnessed the strong unsophisticated feeling of the old tar. “I
thought it might serve sometimes to bring me to your recollection,
when it was well filled in honour of ‘sweethearts and
wives.’”
“It shall—it shall, by the Lord;
and Mr. Saunders needs look to it, if he do not keep this work as
bright as a cruising frigate’s bottom. To whom do I owe the
coal-tongs?”
“Those are from Mr. John
Effingham, who insists that he will come nearer to your heart than
any of us, though the gift be of so little cost.”
“He does not know me, my dear
young lady—nobody ever got as near my heart as you; no, not even my
own dear pious old mother. But I thank Mr. John Effingham from my
inmost spirit, and shall seldom smoke without thinking of him. The
watch I know is Mr. Effingham’s, and I ascribe the trumpet to Sir
George.”
The bows of the several gentlemen
assured the captain he was right, and he shook each of them
cordially by the hand, protesting, in the fulness of his heart,
that nothing would give him greater pleasure than to be able to go
through the same perilous scenes as those from which they had so
lately escaped, in their good company again.
While this was going on,
Aristabulus, notwithstanding the rebuke he had received, contrived
to get each article, in succession, into his hands, and by dint of
poising it on a finger, or by examining it, to form some
approximative notion of its inherent value. The watch he actually
opened, taking as good a survey of its works as the circumstances
of the case would very well allow.
“I respect these things, sir,
more than you respect your father’s grave,” said Captain
Truck
sternly, as he rescued the last
article from what he thought the impious grasp of Aristabulus
again, “and cat or no cat, they sink or swim with me for the
remainder of the cruise. If there is any virtue in a will, which I
am sorry to say I hear there is not any longer, they shall share my
last bed with me, be it ashore or be it afloat. My dear young lady,
fancy all the rest, but depend on it, punch will be sweeter than
ever taken from this bowl, and ‘sweethearts and wives’ will never
be so honoured again.”
“We are going to a ball this
evening, at the house of one with whom I am sufficiently intimate
to take the liberty of introducing a stranger, and I wish,
gentlemen,” said Mr. Effingham, bowing to Aristabulus and the
captain, by way of changing the conversation, “you would do me the
favour to be of our party.”
Mr. Bragg acquiesced very
cheerfully, and quite as a matter of course; while Captain Truck,
after protesting his unfitness for such scenes, was finally
prevailed on by John Effingham, to comply with the request also.
The ladies remained at table but a few minutes longer, when they
retired, Mr. Effingham having dropped into the old custom of
sitting at the bottle, until summoned to the drawing-room, a usage
that continues to exist in America, for a reason no better than the
fact that it continues to exist in England;—it being almost certain
that it will cease in New-York, the season after it is known to
have ceased in London.
CHAPTER III.
“Thou art as wise as thou art
beautiful!” SHAKSPEARE.
As Captain Truck asked permission
to initiate the new coal-tongs by lighting a cigar, Sir George
Templemore contrived to ask Pierre, in an aside, if the ladies
would allow him to join them. The desired consent having been
obtained, the baronet quietly stole from table, and was soon beyond
the odours of the dining-room.
“You miss the censer and the
frankincense,” said Eve, laughing, as Sir George entered the
drawing-room; “but you will remember we have no church
establishment, and dare not take such liberties with the
ceremonials of the altar.”
“That is a short-lived custom
with us, I fancy, though far from an unpleasant one. But you do me
injustice in supposing I am merely running away from the fumes of
the dinner.”
“No, no; we understand perfectly
well that you have something to do with the fumes of flattery, and
we will at once fancy all has been said that the occasion requires.
Is not our honest old captain a jewel in his way?”
“Upon my word, since you allow me
to speak of your father’s guests, I do not think it possible to
have brought together two men who are so completely the opposites
of each other, as Captain Truck and this Mr Aristabulus Bragg. The
latter is quite the most extraordinary person in his way, it was
ever my good fortune to meet with.”
“You call him a person, while
Pierre calls him a personnage; I fancy he considers it very much as
a matter of accident, whether he is to pass his days in the one
character or in the other. Cousin Jack assures me, that, while this
man accepts almost any duty that he chooses to assign him, he would
not deem it at all a violation of the convenances to aim at the
throne in the White House.”
“Certainly with no hopes of ever
attaining it!”
“One cannot answer for that. The
man must undergo many essential changes, and much radical
improvement, before such a climax to his fortunes can ever occur;
but the instant you do away with the claims of hereditary power,
the door is opened to a new chapter of accidents. Alexander of
Russia styled himself un heureux accident; and should it ever be
our fortune to receive Mr. Bragg as President, we shall only have
to term him un malheureux accident. I believe that will contain all
the difference.”
“Your republicanism is
indomitable, Miss Effingham, and I shall abandon the attempt to
convert you to safer principles, more especially as I find you
supported by both the Mr. Effinghams, who, while they condemn so
much at home, seem singularly attached to their own system at the
bottom.”
“They condemn, Sir George
Templemore, because they know that perfection is hopeless, and
because they feel it to be unsafe and unwise to eulogize defects,
and they are attached, because near views of other countries have
convinced them that, comparatively at last, bad as we are, we are
still better than most of our neighbours.”
“I can assure you,” said Grace,
“that many of the opinions of Mr John Effingham, in particular, are
not at all the opinions that are most in vogue here; he rather
censures what we like, and likes what we censure. Even my dear
uncle is thought to be a little heterodox on such subjects.”
“I can readily believe it,”
returned Eve, steadily. “These gentlemen, having become familiar
with better things, in the way of the tastes, and of the purely
agreeable, cannot discredit their own knowledge so much as to extol
that which their own experience tells them is faulty, or condemn
that which their own experience tells them is relatively good. Now,
Grace, if you will reflect a moment, you will perceive that people
necessarily like the best of their own tastes, until they come to a
knowledge of better; and that they as necessarily quarrel with the
unpleasant facts that surround them; although these facts, as
consequences of a political system, may be much less painful than
those of other systems of which they have no knowledge. In the one
case, they like their own best, simply because it is their own
best; and they dislike their own worst, because it is their own
worst. We cherish a taste, in the nature of things, without
entering into any comparisons, for when the means of comparison
offer, and we find improvements, it ceases to be a taste at all;
while to complain of any positive grievance, is the nature of man,
I fear!”
“I think a republic
odious!”
“Le republique est une
horreur!”
Grace thought a republic odious,
without knowing any thing of any other state of society, and
because it contained odious things; and Mademoiselle Viefville
called a republic une horreur, because heads fell and anarchy
prevailed in her own country, during its early struggles for
liberty. Though Eve seldom spoke more sensibly, and never more
temperately, than while delivering the foregoing opinions, Sir
George Templemore doubted whether she had all that exquisite
finesse and delicacy of features, that he had so much admired; and
when Grace burst out in the sudden and senseless exclamation we
have recorded, he turned towards her sweet and animated
countenance, which, for the moment, he fancied the loveliest of the
two.
Eve Effingham had yet to learn
that she had just entered into the most intolerant society, meaning
purely as society, and in connexion with what are usually called
liberal sentiments, in Christendom. We do not mean by this, that it
would be less safe to utter a generous opinion in favour of human
rights in America than in any other country, for the laws and the
institutions become active in this respect, but simply, that the
resistance of the more refined to the encroachments of the
unrefined, has brought about a state of feeling—a feeling that is
seldom just and never philosophical—which has created a silent, but
almost unanimous bias against the effects of the institutions, in
what is called the world. In Europe, one rarely utters a sentiment
of this nature, under circumstances in which it is safe to do so at
all, without finding a very general sympathy in the auditors; but
in the circle into which Eve had now fallen, it was almost
considered a violation of the
proprieties. We do not wish to be
understood as saying more than we mean, however, for we have no
manner of doubt that a large portion of the dissentients even, are
so idly, and without reflection; or for the very natural reasons
already given by our heroine; but we do wish to be understood as
meaning that such is the outward appearance which American society
presents to every stranger, and to every native of the country too,
on his return from a residence among other people. Of its taste,
wisdom and safety we shall not now speak, but content ourselves
with merely saying that the effect of Grace’s exclamation on Eve
was unpleasant, and that, unlike the baronet, she thought her
cousin was never less handsome than while her pretty face was
covered with the pettish frown it had assumed for the
occasion.
Sir George Templemore had tact
enough to perceive there had been a slight jar in the feelings of
these two young women, and he adroitly changed the conversation.
With Eve he had entire confidence on the score of provincialisms,
and, without exactly anticipating the part Grace would be likely to
take in such a discussion, he introduced the subject of general
society in New-York.
“I am desirous to know,” he said,
“if you have your sets, as we have them in London and Paris.
Whether you have your Faubourg St. Germain and your Chaussée
d’Antin; your Piccadilly, Grosvenor and Russel Squares.”
“I must refer you to Miss Van
Cortlandt for an answer to that question,” said Eve.
Grace looked up blushing, for
there were both novelty and excitement in having an intelligent
foreigner question her on such a subject.
“I do not know that I rightly
understand the allusion,” she said, “although I am afraid Sir
George Templemore means to ask if we have distinctions in
society?”
“And why afraid, Miss Van
Cortlandt?”
“Because it strikes me such a
question would imply a doubt of our civilization.”
“There are frequently
distinctions made, when the differences are not obvious,” observed
Eve. “Even London and Paris are not above the imputation of this
folly. Sir George Templemore, if I understand him, wishes to know
if we estimate gentility by streets, and quality by squares.”
“Not exactly that either, Miss
Effingham—but, whether among those, who may very well pass for
gentlemen and ladies, you enter into the minute distinctions that
are elsewhere found. Whether you have your exclusive, and your
élégants and élegantes; or whether you deem all within the pale as
on an equality.”
“Les femmes Americaines sont bien
jolies!” exclaimed Mademoiselle Viefville.
“It is quite impossible that
coteries should not form in a town of three hundred thousand
souls.”
“I do not mean exactly even that.
Is there no distinction between coteries; is not one placed by
opinion, by a silent consent, if not by positive ordinances, above
another?”
“Certainly, that to which Sir
George Templemore alludes, is to be found,” said Grace, who gained
courage to speak, as she found the subject getting to be more
clearly within her
comprehension. “All the old
families, for instance, keep more together than the others; though
it is the subject of regret that they are not more particular than
they are.”
“Old families!” exclaimed Sir
George Templemore, with quite as much stress as a well- bred man
could very well lay on the words, in such circumstances.
“Old families,” repeated Eve,
with all that emphasis which the baronet himself had hesitated
about giving. “As old, at least, as two centuries can make them;
and this, too, with origins beyond that period, like those of the
rest of the world. Indeed, the American has a better gentility than
common, as, besides his own, he may take root in that of
Europe.”