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THE BURDEN WHEREOF, IS HAIL COLUMBIA! 2 page

Martin told him.

“How old are you, sir?”

Martin told him.

“What is your profession, sir?”

Martin told him that also.

“What is your destination, sir?” inquired the gentleman.

“Really,” said Martin laughing, “I can't satisfy you in that particular, for I don't know it myself.”

“Yes?” said the gentleman.

“No,” said Martin.

The gentleman adjusted his cane under his left arm, and took a more deliberate and complete survey of Martin than he had yet had leisure to make. When he had completed his inspection, he put out his right hand, shook Martin's hand, and said:

“My name is Colonel Diver, sir. I am the Editor of the New York Rowdy Journal.”

Martin received the communication with that degree of respect which an announcement so distinguished appeared to demand.

“The New York Rowdy Journal, sir,” resumed the colonel, “is, as I expect you know, the organ of our aristocracy in this city.”

“Oh! there IS an aristocracy here, then?” said Martin. “Of what is it composed?”

“Of intelligence, sir,” replied the colonel; “of intelligence and virtue. And of their necessary consequence in this republic— dollars, sir.”

Martin was very glad to hear this, feeling well assured that if intelligence and virtue led, as a matter of course, to the acquisition of dollars, he would speedily become a great capitalist. He was about to express the gratification such news afforded him, when he was interrupted by the captain of the ship, who came up at the moment to shake hands with the colonel; and who, seeing a well-dressed stranger on the deck (for Martin had thrown aside his cloak), shook hands with him also. This was an unspeakable relief to Martin, who, in spite of the acknowledged supremacy of Intelligence and virtue in that happy country, would have been deeply mortified to appear before Colonel Diver in the poor character of a steerage passenger.

“Well cap'en!” said the colonel.

“Well colonel,” cried the captain. “You're looking most uncommon bright, sir. I can hardly realise its being you, and that's a fact.”

“A good passage, cap'en?” inquired the colonel, taking him aside,

“Well now! It was a pretty spanking run, sir,” said, or rather sung, the captain, who was a genuine New Englander; “con-siderin” the weather.”

“Yes?” said the colonel.

“Well! It was, sir,” said the captain. “I've just now sent a boy up to your office with the passenger-list, colonel.”

“You haven't got another boy to spare, p'raps, cap'en?” said the colonel, in a tone almost amounting to severity.

“I guess there air a dozen if you want “em, colonel,” said the captain.

“One moderate big “un could convey a dozen champagne, perhaps,” observed the colonel, musing, “to my office. You said a spanking run, I think?”

“Well, so I did,” was the reply.

“It's very nigh, you know,” observed the colonel. “I'm glad it was a spanking run, cap'en. Don't mind about quarts if you're short of “em. The boy can as well bring four-and-twenty pints, and travel twice as once. —A first-rate spanker, cap'en, was it? Yes?”



“A most e—tarnal spanker,” said the skipper.

“I admire at your good fortun, cap'en. You might loan me a corkscrew at the same time, and half-a-dozen glasses if you liked. However bad the elements combine against my country's noble packet-ship, the Screw, sir,” said the colonel, turning to Martin, and drawing a flourish on the surface of the deck with his cane, “her passage either way is almost certain to eventuate a spanker!”

The captain, who had the Sewer below at that moment, lunching expensively in one cabin, while the amiable Stabber was drinking himself into a state of blind madness in another, took a cordial leave of his friend the colonel, and hurried away to dispatch the champagne; well knowing (as it afterwards appeared) that if he failed to conciliate the editor of the Rowdy Journal, that potentate would denounce him and his ship in large capitals before he was a day older; and would probably assault the memory of his mother also, who had not been dead more than twenty years. The colonel being again left alone with Martin, checked him as he was moving away, and offered in consideration of his being an Englishman, to show him the town and to introduce him, if such were his desire, to a genteel boarding-house. But before they entered on these proceedings (he said), he would beseech the honour of his company at the office of the Rowdy Journal, to partake of a bottle of champagne of his own importation.

All this was so extremely kind and hospitable, that Martin, though it was quite early in the morning, readily acquiesced. So, instructing Mark, who was deeply engaged with his friend and her three children, that when he had done assisting them, and had cleared the baggage, he was to wait for further orders at the Rowdy Journal Office, Martin accompanied his new friend on shore.

They made their way as they best could through the melancholy crowd of emigrants upon the wharf, who, grouped about their beds and boxes, with the bare ground below them and the bare sky above, might have fallen from another planet, for anything they knew of the country; and walked for some short distance along a busy street, bounded on one side by the quays and shipping; and on the other by a long row of staring red-brick storehouses and offices, ornamented with more black boards and white letters, and more white boards and black letters, than Martin had ever seen before, in fifty times the space. Presently they turned up a narrow street, and presently into other narrow streets, until at last they stopped before a house whereon was painted in great characters, “ROWDY JOURNAL.”

The colonel, who had walked the whole way with one hand in his breast, his head occasionally wagging from side to side, and his hat thrown back upon his ears, like a man who was oppressed to inconvenience by a sense of his own greatness, led the way up a dark and dirty flight of stairs into a room of similar character, all littered and bestrewn with odds and ends of newspapers and other crumpled fragments, both in proof and manuscript. Behind a mangy old writing-table in this apartment sat a figure with a stump of a pen in its mouth and a great pair of scissors in its right hand, clipping and slicing at a file of Rowdy Journals; and it was such a laughable figure that Martin had some difficulty in preserving his gravity, though conscious of the close observation of Colonel Diver.

The individual who sat clipping and slicing as aforesaid at the Rowdy Journals, was a small young gentleman of very juvenile appearance, and unwholesomely pale in the face; partly, perhaps, from intense thought, but partly, there is no doubt, from the excessive use of tobacco, which he was at that moment chewing vigorously. He wore his shirt-collar turned down over a black ribbon; and his lank hair, a fragile crop, was not only smoothed and parted back from his brow, that none of the Poetry of his aspect might be lost, but had, here and there, been grubbed up by the roots; which accounted for his loftiest developments being somewhat pimply. He had that order of nose on which the envy of mankind has bestowed the appellation “snub,” and it was very much turned up at the end, as with a lofty scorn. Upon the upper lip of this young gentleman were tokens of a sandy down; so very, very smooth and scant, that, though encouraged to the utmost, it looked more like a recent trace of gingerbread than the fair promise of a moustache; and this conjecture, his apparently tender age went far to strengthen. He was intent upon his work. Every time he snapped the great pair of scissors, he made a corresponding motion with his jaws, which gave him a very terrible appearance.

Martin was not long in determining within himself that this must be Colonel Diver's son; the hope of the family, and future mainspring of the Rowdy Journal. Indeed he had begun to say that he presumed this was the colonel's little boy, and that it was very pleasant to see him playing at Editor in all the guilelessness of childhood, when the colonel proudly interposed and said:

“My War Correspondent, sir—Mr Jefferson Brick!”

Martin could not help starting at this unexpected announcement, and the consciousness of the irretrievable mistake he had nearly made.

Mr Brick seemed pleased with the sensation he produced upon the stranger, and shook hands with him, with an air of patronage designed to reassure him, and to let him blow that there was no occasion to be frightened, for he (Brick) wouldn't hurt him.

“You have heard of Jefferson Brick, I see, sir,” quoth the colonel, with a smile. “ England has heard of Jefferson Brick. Europe has heard of Jefferson Brick. Let me see. When did you leave England, sir?”

“Five weeks ago,” said Martin.

“Five weeks ago,” repeated the colonel, thoughtfully; as he took his seat upon the table, and swung his legs. “Now let me ask you, sir which of Mr Brick's articles had become at that time the most obnoxious to the British Parliament and the Court of Saint James's?”

“Upon my word,” said Martin, “I—”

“I have reason to know, sir,” interrupted the colonel, “that the aristocratic circles of your country quail before the name of Jefferson Brick. I should like to be informed, sir, from your lips, which of his sentiments has struck the deadliest blow—”

“At the hundred heads of the Hydra of Corruption now grovelling in the dust beneath the lance of Reason, and spouting up to the universal arch above us, its sanguinary gore,” said Mr Brick, putting on a little blue cloth cap with a glazed front, and quoting his last article.

“The libation of freedom, Brick'—hinted the colonel.

“—Must sometimes be quaffed in blood, colonel,” cried Brick. And when he said “blood,” he gave the great pair of scissors a sharp snap, as if THEY said blood too, and were quite of his opinion.

This done, they both looked at Martin, pausing for a reply.

“Upon my life,” said Martin, who had by this time quite recovered his usual coolness, “I can't give you any satisfactory information about it; for the truth is that I—”

“Stop!” cried the colonel, glancing sternly at his war correspondent and giving his head one shake after every sentence. “That you never heard of Jefferson Brick, sir. That you never read Jefferson Brick, sir. That you never saw the Rowdy Journal, sir. That you never knew, sir, of its mighty influence upon the cabinets of Europe. Yes?”

“That's what I was about to observe, certainly,” said Martin.

“Keep cool, Jefferson,” said the colonel gravely. “Don't bust! oh you Europeans! After that, let's have a glass of wine!” So saying, he got down from the table, and produced, from a basket outside the door, a bottle of champagne, and three glasses.

“Mr Jefferson Brick, sir,” said the colonel, filling Martin's glass and his own, and pushing the bottle to that gentleman, “will give us a sentiment.”

“Well, sir!” cried the war correspondent, “Since you have concluded to call upon me, I will respond. I will give you, sir, The Rowdy Journal and its brethren; the well of Truth, whose waters are black from being composed of printers” ink, but are quite clear enough for my country to behold the shadow of her Destiny reflected in.”

“Hear, hear!” cried the colonel, with great complacency. “There are flowery components, sir, in the language of my friend?”

“Very much so, indeed,” said Martin.

“There is to-day's Rowdy, sir,” observed the colonel, handing him a paper. “You'll find Jefferson Brick at his usual post in the van of human civilization and moral purity.”

The colonel was by this time seated on the table again. Mr Brick also took up a position on that same piece of furniture; and they fell to drinking pretty hard. They often looked at Martin as he read the paper, and then at each other. When he laid it down, which was not until they had finished a second bottle, the colonel asked him what he thought of it.

“Why, it's horribly personal,” said Martin.

The colonel seemed much flattered by this remark; and said he hoped it was.

“We are independent here, sir,” said Mr Jefferson Brick. “We do as we like.”

“If I may judge from this specimen,” returned Martin, “there must be a few thousands here, rather the reverse of independent, who do as they don't like.”

“Well! They yield to the popular mind of the Popular Instructor, sir,” said the colonel. “They rile up, sometimes; but in general we have a hold upon our citizens, both in public and in private life, which is as much one of the ennobling institutions of our happy country as—”

“As nigger slavery itself,” suggested Mr Brick.

“En—tirely so,” remarked the colonel.

“Pray,” said Martin, after some hesitation, “may I venture to ask, with reference to a case I observe in this paper of yours, whether the Popular Instructor often deals in—I am at a loss to express it without giving you offence—in forgery? In forged letters, for instance,” he pursued, for the colonel was perfectly calm and quite at his ease, “solemnly purporting to have been written at recent periods by living men?”

“Well, sir!” replied the colonel. “It does, now and then.”

“And the popular instructed—what do they do?” asked Martin.

“Buy “em:” said the colonel.

Mr Jefferson Brick expectorated and laughed; the former copiously, the latter approvingly.

“Buy “em by hundreds of thousands,” resumed the colonel. “We are a smart people here, and can appreciate smartness.”

“Is smartness American for forgery?” asked Martin.

“Well!” said the colonel, “I expect it's American for a good many things that you call by other names. But you can't help yourself in Europe. We can.”

“And do, sometimes,” thought Martin. “You help yourselves with very little ceremony, too!”

“At all events, whatever name we choose to employ,” said the colonel, stooping down to roll the third empty bottle into a corner after the other two, “I suppose the art of forgery was not invented here sir?”

“I suppose not,” replied Martin.

“Nor any other kind of smartness I reckon?”

“Invented! No, I presume not.”

“Well!” said the colonel; “then we got it all from the old country, and the old country's to blame for it, and not the new “un. There's an end of THAT. Now, if Mr Jefferson Brick and you will be so good as to clear, I'll come out last, and lock the door.”

Rightly interpreting this as the signal for their departure, Martin walked downstairs after the war correspondent, who preceded him with great majesty. The colonel following, they left the Rowdy Journal Office and walked forth into the streets; Martin feeling doubtful whether he ought to kick the colonel for having presumed to speak to him, or whether it came within the bounds of possibility that he and his establishment could be among the boasted usages of that regenerated land.

It was clear that Colonel Diver, in the security of his strong position, and in his perfect understanding of the public sentiment, cared very little what Martin or anybody else thought about him. His high-spiced wares were made to sell, and they sold; and his thousands of readers could as rationally charge their delight in filth upon him, as a glutton can shift upon his cook the responsibility of his beastly excess. Nothing would have delighted the colonel more than to be told that no such man as he could walk in high success the streets of any other country in the world; for that would only have been a logical assurance to him of the correct adaptation of his labours to the prevailing taste, and of his being strictly and peculiarly a national feature of America.

They walked a mile or more along a handsome street which the colonel said was called Broadway, and which Mr Jefferson Brick said “whipped the universe.”Turning, at length, into one of the numerous streets which branched from this main thoroughfare, they stopped before a rather mean-looking house with jalousie blinds to every window; a flight of steps before the green street-door; a shining white ornament on the rails on either side like a petrified pineapple, polished; a little oblong plate of the same material over the knocker whereon the name of “Pawkins” was engraved; and four accidental pigs looking down the area.

The colonel knocked at this house with the air of a man who lived there; and an Irish girl popped her head out of one of the top windows to see who it was. Pending her journey downstairs, the pigs were joined by two or three friends from the next street, in company with whom they lay down sociably in the gutter.

“Is the major indoors?” inquired the colonel, as he entered.

“Is it the master, sir?” returned the girl, with a hesitation which seemed to imply that they were rather flush of majors in that establishment.

“The master!” said Colonel Diver, stopping short and looking round at his war correspondent.

“Oh! The depressing institutions of that British empire, colonel!” said Jefferson Brick. “Master!”

“What's the matter with the word?” asked Martin.

“I should hope it was never heard in our country, sir; that's all,” said Jefferson Brick; “except when it is used by some degraded Help, as new to the blessings of our form of government, as this Help is. There are no masters here.”

“All “owners,” are they?” said Martin.

Mr Jefferson Brick followed in the Rowdy Journal's footsteps without returning any answer. Martin took the same course, thinking as he went, that perhaps the free and independent citizens, who in their moral elevation, owned the colonel for their master, might render better homage to the goddess, Liberty, in nightly dreams upon the oven of a Russian Serf.

The colonel led the way into a room at the back of the house upon the ground-floor, light, and of fair dimensions, but exquisitely uncomfortable; having nothing in it but the four cold white walls and ceiling, a mean carpet, a dreary waste of dining-table reaching from end to end, and a bewildering collection of cane-bottomed chairs. In the further region of this banqueting-hall was a stove, garnished on either side with a great brass spittoon, and shaped in itself like three little iron barrels set up on end in a fender, and joined together on the principle of the Siamese Twins. Before it, swinging himself in a rocking-chair, lounged a large gentleman with his hat on, who amused himself by spitting alternately into the spittoon on the right hand of the stove, and the spittoon on the left, and then working his way back again in the same order. A negro lad in a soiled white jacket was busily engaged in placing on the table two long rows of knives and forks, relieved at intervals by jugs of water; and as he travelled down one side of this festive board, he straightened with his dirty hands the dirtier cloth, which was all askew, and had not been removed since breakfast. The atmosphere of this room was rendered intensely hot and stifling by the stove; but being further flavoured by a sickly gush of soup from the kitchen, and by such remote suggestions of tobacco as lingered within the brazen receptacles already mentioned, it became, to a stranger's senses, almost insupportable.

The gentleman in the rocking-chair having his back towards them, and being much engaged in his intellectual pastime, was not aware of their approach until the colonel, walking up to the stove, contributed his mite towards the support of the left-hand spittoon, just as the major—for it was the major—bore down upon it. Major Pawkins then reserved his fire, and looking upward, said, with a peculiar air of quiet weariness, like a man who had been up all night—an air which Martin had already observed both in the colonel and Mr Jefferson Brick—

“Well, colonel!”

“Here is a gentleman from England, major,” the colonel replied, “who has concluded to locate himself here if the amount of compensation suits him.”

“I am glad to see you, sir,” observed the major, shaking hands with Martin, and not moving a muscle of his face. “You are pretty bright, I hope?”

“Never better,” said Martin.

“You are never likely to be,” returned the major. “You will see the sun shine HERE.”

“I think I remember to have seen it shine at home sometimes,” said Martin, smiling.

“I think not,” replied the major. He said so with a stoical indifference certainly, but still in a tone of firmness which admitted of no further dispute on that point. When he had thus settled the question, he put his hat a little on one side for the greater convenience of scratching his head, and saluted Mr Jefferson Brick with a lazy nod.

Major Pawkins (a gentleman of Pennsylvanian origin) was distinguished by a very large skull, and a great mass of yellow forehead; in deference to which commodities it was currently held in bar-rooms and other such places of resort that the major was a man of huge sagacity. He was further to be known by a heavy eye and a dull slow manner; and for being a man of that kind who—mentally speaking—requires a deal of room to turn himself in. But, in trading on his stock of wisdom, he invariably proceeded on the principle of putting all the goods he had (and more) into his window; and that went a great way with his constituency of admirers. It went a great way, perhaps, with Mr Jefferson Brick, who took occasion to whisper in Martin's ear:

“One of the most remarkable men in our country, sir!”

It must not be supposed, however, that the perpetual exhibition in the market-place of all his stock-in-trade for sale or hire, was the major's sole claim to a very large share of sympathy and support. He was a great politician; and the one article of his creed, in reference to all public obligations involving the good faith and integrity of his country, was, “run a moist pen slick through everything, and start fresh.”This made him a patriot. In commercial affairs he was a bold speculator. In plainer words he had a most distinguished genius for swindling, and could start a bank, or negotiate a loan, or form a land-jobbing company (entailing ruin, pestilence, and death, on hundreds of families), with any gifted creature in the Union. This made him an admirable man of business. He could hang about a bar-room, discussing the affairs of the nation, for twelve hours together; and in that time could hold forth with more intolerable dulness, chew more tobacco, smoke more tobacco, drink more rum-toddy, mint-julep, gin-sling, and cocktail, than any private gentleman of his acquaintance. This made him an orator and a man of the people. In a word, the major was a rising character, and a popular character, and was in a fair way to be sent by the popular party to the State House of New York, if not in the end to Washington itself. But as a man's private prosperity does not always keep pace with his patriotic devotion to public affairs; and as fraudulent transactions have their downs as well as ups, the major was occasionally under a cloud. Hence, just now Mrs Pawkins kept a boarding-house, and Major Pawkins rather “loafed” his time away than otherwise.

“You have come to visit our country, sir, at a season of great commercial depression,” said the major.

“At an alarming crisis,” said the colonel.

“At a period of unprecedented stagnation,” said Mr Jefferson Brick.

“I am sorry to hear that,” returned Martin. “It's not likely to last, I hope?”

Martin knew nothing about America, or he would have known perfectly well that if its individual citizens, to a man, are to be believed, it always IS depressed, and always IS stagnated, and always IS at an alarming crisis, and never was otherwise; though as a body they are ready to make oath upon the Evangelists at any hour of the day or night, that it is the most thriving and prosperous of all countries on the habitable globe.

“It's not likely to last, I hope?” said Martin.

“Well!” returned the major, “I expect we shall get along somehow, and come right in the end.”

“We are an elastic country,” said the Rowdy Journal.

“We are a young lion,” said Mr Jefferson Brick.

“We have revivifying and vigorous principles within ourselves,” observed the major. “Shall we drink a bitter afore dinner, colonel?”

The colonel assenting to this proposal with great alacrity, Major Pawkins proposed an adjournment to a neighbouring bar-room, which, as he observed, was “only in the next block.”He then referred Martin to Mrs Pawkins for all particulars connected with the rate of board and lodging, and informed him that he would have the pleasure of seeing that lady at dinner, which would soon be ready, as the dinner hour was two o'clock, and it only wanted a quarter now. This reminded him that if the bitter were to be taken at all, there was no time to lose; so he walked off without more ado, and left them to follow if they thought proper.

When the major rose from his rocking-chair before the stove, and so disturbed the hot air and balmy whiff of soup which fanned their brows, the odour of stale tobacco became so decidedly prevalent as to leave no doubt of its proceeding mainly from that gentleman's attire. Indeed, as Martin walked behind him to the bar-room, he could not help thinking that the great square major, in his listlessness and langour, looked very much like a stale weed himself; such as might be hoed out of the public garden, with great advantage to the decent growth of that preserve, and tossed on some congenial dunghill.

They encountered more weeds in the bar-room, some of whom (being thirsty souls as well as dirty) were pretty stale in one sense, and pretty fresh in another. Among them was a gentleman who, as Martin gathered from the conversation that took place over the bitter, started that afternoon for the Far West on a six months” business tour, and who, as his outfit and equipment for this journey, had just such another shiny hat and just such another little pale valise as had composed the luggage of the gentleman who came from England in the Screw.

They were walking back very leisurely; Martin arm-in-arm with Mr Jefferson Brick, and the major and the colonel side-by-side before them; when, as they came within a house or two of the major's residence, they heard a bell ringing violently. The instant this sound struck upon their ears, the colonel and the major darted off, dashed up the steps and in at the street-door (which stood ajar) like lunatics; while Mr Jefferson Brick, detaching his arm from Martin's, made a precipitate dive in the same direction, and vanished also.

“Good Heaven!” thought Martin. “The premises are on fire! It was an alarm bell!”

But there was no smoke to be seen, nor any flame, nor was there any smell of fire. As Martin faltered on the pavement, three more gentlemen, with horror and agitation depicted in their faces, came plunging wildly round the street corner; jostled each other on the steps; struggled for an instant; and rushed into the house, a confused heap of arms and legs. Unable to bear it any longer, Martin followed. Even in his rapid progress he was run down, thrust aside, and passed, by two more gentlemen, stark mad, as it appeared, with fierce excitement.

“Where is it?” cried Martin, breathlessly, to a negro whom he encountered in the passage.

“In a eatin room, sa. Kernell, sa, him kep a seat “side himself, sa.”

“A seat!” cried Martin.

“For a dinnar, sa.”

Martin started at him for a moment, and burst into a hearty laugh; to which the negro, out of his natural good humour and desire to please, so heartily responded, that his teeth shone like a gleam of light. “You're the pleasantest fellow I have seen yet,” said Martin clapping him on the back, “and give me a better appetite than bitters.”

With this sentiment he walked into the dining-room and slipped into a chair next the colonel, which that gentleman (by this time nearly through his dinner) had turned down in reserve for him, with its back against the table.

It was a numerous company—eighteen or twenty perhaps. Of these some five or six were ladies, who sat wedged together in a little phalanx by themselves. All the knives and forks were working away at a rate that was quite alarming; very few words were spoken; and everybody seemed to eat his utmost in self-defence, as if a famine were expected to set in before breakfast time to-morrow morning, and it had become high time to assert the first law of nature. The poultry, which may perhaps be considered to have formed the staple of the entertainment—for there was a turkey at the top, a pair of ducks at the bottom, and two fowls in the middle—disappeared as rapidly as if every bird had had the use of its wings, and had flown in desperation down a human throat. The oysters, stewed and pickled, leaped from their capacious reservoirs, and slid by scores into the mouths of the assembly. The sharpest pickles vanished, whole cucumbers at once, like sugar-plums, and no man winked his eye. Great heaps of indigestible matter melted away as ice before the sun. It was a solemn and an awful thing to see. Dyspeptic individuals bolted their food in wedges; feeding, not themselves, but broods of nightmares, who were continually standing at livery within them. Spare men, with lank and rigid cheeks, came out unsatisfied from the destruction of heavy dishes, and glared with watchful eyes upon the pastry. What Mrs Pawkins felt each day at dinner-time is hidden from all human knowledge. But she had one comfort. It was very soon over.


Date: 2016-01-14; view: 546


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