■K - ■^ V* I - 'V '« *>. y $%, ,0o. .A -, % A* « : .00. ■^ ^ ^ - . ^'% -C2. V> ^ s*. $ "*« .0 o. iV ' '<3 N ?% >> ,.%*^ - % =*•- ^ '- ^ ^ v*0> >- ,.s ■<*. 4 -> ,^% V ' ' '>r "^. ^ • V jiN <8a .v w <*> #* "4 f . •-y- » c ^ ■%. ', ^c> - Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress / http://www.archive.org/details/greatstreetsofwoOOdavi THE GREAT STREETS OF THE WORLD y BROADWAY-THE TWENTY-THIRD STREET CROSS1SU. THE GREAT STREETS OF THE WORLD RICHARD HARDING DAVIS W. W. STORY ANDREW LANG HENRY JAMES FRANCISQUE SARCEY PAUL LINDAU ISABEL F. HAPGOOD ILLUSTRATED BY A. B. FROST ETTORE TITO W. DOUGLAS ALMOND ALEXANDER ZEZZOS G. JEANNIOT F. STAHL ILYA EFIMOVITCH REPIN • cOPYR/s^ OCT 28 1892 NEW YORK , Bai o> CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1892 1^2 Copyright, 1S92, by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS TROW DIRECTORY PRINTING AMD BOOKBINDING COMPANY NEW YORK CONTENTS PAGE BROADWAY. By RICHARD HARDING DAVIS, . . i Illustrated by A. B. FROST. PICCADILLY. By ANDREW LANG 37 Illustrated by IV. DOUGLAS ALMOND. BOULEVARDS OF PARIS. By FRANCISQUE SARCEY, . 69 Illustrated by G. JEANNIOT. THE CORSO OF ROME. By IV. IV. STORY. . . . 109 Illustrated by ETTORE TITO. THE GRAND CANAL. By HENRY JAMES. . . .141 Illustrated by ALEXANDER ZEZZOS. UNTER DEN LINDEN. By PAUL LINDAU. . . . 173 Illustrated by T. STAHL. THE NEVSKY PROSPEKT. By ISABEL F. HAP GOOD, .211 III 11 J rated by ILYA EFIMOVITCH REPIN. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Broadway — The Twenty-third Street Crossing, Frontispiece .Near the Post Office — Early Morning, ..... 2 The Sandwich Man, ......... 4 Hot Roasted Chestnuts, .5 Below Trinity Church — p.^5 a.m., ...... 7 Broadway at the Bowling Green, . . . . . .10 '"Fire!" 15 Recreation, . . . . . . . . . .18 Looking Up Broadway — near Grace Church, . . . 19 The Pleasures of Shopping, ....... 20 In the Retail District — Broadway, between Seventeenth and Twenty-third Streets, . . . . . . .21 " The Rialto " — Broadway and Fourteenth Street, . . .22 "Evening Papers" ......... 27 " }'i siting States/lieu" — /;/ Front of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, during a Political Convention, . . . . 29 The Metropolitan Opera House at Night, Broadway and Thirty- ninth Street, . . 31 x List of Illustrations PAGE " Something the Matter"— Near the Lincoln Statue, Union Square, 34 Coachmen, ....■••■•■• 3° A Chat in Piccadilly, 3 8 Statue of the Duke of Wellington— Hyde Park, . . . 4 1 A Morning Walk— Piccadilly, . 44 "Sandwich men in their prison of wood," 46 " The Piccadilly Goat" 4§ Leaving St. James's Hall — Afternoon, 5 l A Gatezaay of the Royal Academy, Burlington House, . -53 The Burlington Arcade, Piccadilly — Afternoon, . . -57 " The Horse Guards Trampling by," . . . . .61 " Small Boys, Screaming Out ' Winner .'"' . . . .63 "At night, in the season, it is a sight to see the long line of carriages, orderly arrayed, waiting" . . . .64 " The country visitors arc gaping at the shops," . . . 67 A Boulevardicr — English Type, ...... 70 Boulevard des Lt aliens — A Thorough Parisienne, . . -73 Tzvo Types, .......... 75 The Boulevard at the Bastille, . . . . . . -77 The Boulevard at 6 a.m., ........ 79 Boulevard Bcaumarchais — An Actress, . . . . .81 A Type of Journalist, . 83 Boidevard St. Martin, 85 Neiusboys on the Boulevard des Capucines, . . . -87 List of Illustrations XI Le Carrcfour des Ecrdse's, Sunday, on the Boulevard du Temple, Before the Cafe Riche, .... In Front of the Theatre des Varietc's — between The Flower-sellers, ..... The Busiest Part of the Corso, . Entrance of the Palazzo Sciarra, The Little Flower-girl, .... Tramontana — The Cold Wind of Rome, . The King's Guardsman, .... the acts, del Popolo. A Book-stall on the Corso, State Carriage of the Queen of Italy, A Procession of Seminarists, . Morning on the Corso, Piazza del Popolo, at the Entrance to the Corso, Loungers on the Steps of the Church of Sta. Maria Piazza Colonna, along the Corso, A Boy Flower-seller, The Grand Canal from a Terrace, Entrance of the Grand Canal, . A Girl of the People, . Ganzer — A Retired Boatman who Assists Gondolas at Land- ing-places, An Old Venetian Boat Richly Decked with Silhs and Satins, and Roivcd by Gondoliers Dressed in the Ancient Fashion, 89 92 94 101 1 10 "3 114 117 119 121 125 126 129 130 132 134 136 140 142 145 146 1 48 Xll List of Illustrations Regatta Day on the Grand Canal, . Dinner-time — Type of Gondolier, Traghetto — A Passagczvay of the Grand Canal, A Temporary Bridge Across the Canal of the Rcdt dentorc), ...... Fishmongers, ....... The Bridge of the Rial to, ..... Vapor etto — Small Passenger Steamer on the Grand A Moonlight Serenade — At the Rial to Bridge, A Messenger, H " Unter den Linden" The Kaiser, Unter den Linden, . Swans in an A rm of the Spree, A Pillar for Advertisements, . The Toy-shop Window — A Sunday Afternoon At the Entrance of the Passage, The Latest News, On the Bourse, . Nurses from the Spreewald, Hot Sausages ! . Mounted Policeman, . A Vendor, .... Teamsters on the Quay, A Fish-shop, The Corner of the Central Hall in the Gostinny Dvor, Canal, Scene. (Re 155 157 '59 162 165 166 169 •J' 174 ^77 180 185 187 188 192 I9S 200 204 209 210 212 219 220 224 List of Illustrations Xlll Buying C/iristinas-trccs, . Arklidngel Fishermen at the Market The Restaurant Dominique, Belozo Zero — A Fire in the Snow, The A'e'vsky Prospe'kt in Winter, The Katherine Canal, Sledge-road on the Frozen Nevd, The Emperor of Russia Blessing the }} Epiphany, .... aters of the Nl I'd at 227 229 232 236 239 242 247 249 BROADWAY By Richard Harding Davis THE ILLUSTRATIONS BY A. B. FROST -■>•- NEAR THE POST-OFFIOB-EAELT MOKNING. BROADWAY i ROADWAY means so many different things to so rnany different people. The business man has his own idea of it, and it suggests something cpvite the contrary to his wife, and still another point of view to his son; in this it differs from almost every other great thor- oughfare of the world. When one reads of the Appian Way, one thinks only of magnificent distances and marble. The Rue St. Antoine brings up a picture of barricades and gutters splashecl with blood ; and the Boulevards are reminiscent of kiosks and round marble-top tables under striped awnings. But all Broadway is divided into three parts, and which is the greatest of these, it would be difficult to say. There is the busi- ness portion of Broadway, and the shopping district, and still farther uptown the Broadway where Xew Yorkers and their coun- try cousins once used to walk to look at the passers-by, and where now only those walk who wish to be looked at. And yet Broad- way has, from the Battery to 159th Street, where the cobble-stones break up into a dust}- country road, its own dear individuality. It may take on the color of its surroundings from jDoint to point, just as the same column of mercury passes through zero and freezing-point to fever heat ; the clerks who board the surface cars Broadway at the Equitable Building make room for the shoppers at Union Square, and they, in turn, empty the car to give place to those who live still farther uptown; but it is the same familiar yellow ear which carries each of them, and which runs on all the way. The business man knows Broadway as a street blocked with moving drays and wag- ons, with pavements which move with unbroken lines of men, and that are shut in on either side by the tallest of tall buildings. It is a place where no one strolls, and where a man can as easily swing his cane as a woman could wear a train. Pedes- trians do not walk steadily forward here, or in a straight line, but dodge in and out like run- ners on a foot-ball field. They all seem to be trying to reach the bank to have a check cashed before three o'clock. The man who stops to speak to a friend, or to gaze into a shop window, is jostled and pushed and shouldered to one side ; everyone seems to be tiying to catch up to the man just in front of him ; and everyone has something to do, and something on his mind to think of, too, if his face tells anything. So intent are they on their errands that they would not recog- nize their own wives if they passed them by. This is the spot on Broadway where the thermometer marks fever heat. It is the great fighting-ground of the city, where the battle of business goes on from eight o'clock in the morning until three in the afternoon, at which time the work flags a little and grows less and less hurried THE SANDWICH MAN. Broadway until five, when the armies declare an armistice for the day and march off uptown to plan a fresh campaign for the morrow. The armies begin to arrive before eight, and gather from every point of the compass. The ferry-boats land them by thousands, and hurry back across the river for thousands more ; the elevated roads mar- shal them from far uptown, gathering them by companies at each station, where they are unloaded and scattered over the business districts in regiments. They come over the Brooklyn Bridge by tens of thousands, in one long, endless procession, and cross the City Hall Park at a quick step. It is one of the most impressive sights the city has to offer. The gathering of the clans was less impressive and less momentous. They do not all meet on Broad- way at once, but before the business day is over they will have passed up or down it, and will have contributed at one time to the hurrying crowds on its two pavements. Where they all find work is a wonder to the dilettante from upper Broadway, where mon- ey is spent, not made. But he will understand when he no- tices that every building along the street is divided and sub- divided like a beehive, and every room holds its own president and board of trus- tees. It would take an idle man half an hour to read the signs on the front of one block of lower Broadway, and the face of each building is a small directory. There was a great trade parade in the city two years ago, and it gave New Yorkers a pleasing idea of their prosjDerity ; but its HOT ROASTED CHESTNUT3. 6 Broadway theatrical display and bauds of music were but a pageant to the grim reality of the great trade parade which forces its way up and dowu Broadway every morning in the year. There is a narrow turn in Cheapside, of which Londoners boast that the traffic is so great as to block the street for half an hour at a time ; but on Broadway, for a mile, there are over four long lines of drays and wagons, with the tongue of the one behind touching the back-board of the one in front. That is the trade parade with which New Yorkers are too familiar to fully appreciate. It represents, in its loads and burdens, every industry and product of the world. Carts loaded with boxes of unmade clothing lock wheels with drays carry- ing unmade food, and the express wagons, with their precious loads of silver bullion, are crowded by drays canying great haunches of raw meat to the transatlantic steamers lying off the Battery. These are the ammunition trains of the great army of workers. The business men of lower Broadway go down town every morn- ing, and walk back every afternoon in good weather and in bad weather, in sickness and in health, until they grow rich. Then they employ other men to work for them, but they still go down town through force of habit, perhaps, or because they have accumu- lated everything excejjt the knowledge of how to rest, and how to spend a holiday. For eight hours of every day they are impris- oned in the business district, chained before roller-top desks, or bound down in the arms of swivel-chairs, or over ledgers which are always marked " to be continued," and which have no finis. At six o'clock, after they have given the best part of their day's strength and brain and energy to business, they are set at liberty and are allowed to run up town overnight, on their promise to return again, and are given three hours in which to become acquainted with their children. And some of them keep this up until they are gray-haired, feeble old men. They begin when they are quite young ; when they are of the age to think that it is something im- portant and desirable to work down town, and as office-boys earn- BELOW TRINITY CHURCH— 9.45 A.M. Broadway 9 ing three dollars a week in their father's office, look down upon their elder brother at college, and patronize the family at dinner, and talk of " our firm," and what " we " intend to do if wheat should drop much further. As clerks, their horizon is bounded by future raise in salary, and then- life is filled with hopes that the man just above them will die, and allow them to step into his place ; as partners in the firm they speak, after hours, of every other subject but that of business, and declare bitterly that, what- ever pursuit their sons may enter into, it shall not be the same as theirs, of that they are cpiite certain. And at last, when they grow rich enough to retire, they do nothing of the sort, but still haunt their place of business, and delight in telling struggling young men how they once used to sweep out the office of which they are now the owners. That is the atmosphere of lower Broadway. A place where half the men do what they are told to do, like accomplished machines, for so much a week, and ever with the conviction that so much is not enough ; and where the other half are for so many hours a day heads with superfluous bodies, with brains working one against the other, anil with the same effect in the end as when cog- wheels of a watch work one against the other, they make the watch go. Broadway proper begins at Bowling Green. This is the open breathing-place where the street rests before it narrows down and meets the fierce turmoil of the business portion just above. It is a very cosmopolitan Broadway at this point, and every house facing it seems to welcome and bid for the arriving immigrants. The offices of the foreign consuls are here, and the immigrants' board- ing-houses, with their signs in almost every strange language, and the shops where shillings and francs and guelders can be changed into dollars. Men in sabots and spangled with silver buttons, and women with Neapolitan head-dresses, are too common about Bow- ling Green for anyone to look twice at them, and sailors, and ship- stewards on shore for fresh provisions, and petty officers with a few hours' leave in which to get rid of their money, give this end of 10 Broadway ^am®£> BROADWAY AT THE BOWLING GREEN. Broadway a distinctly salty and foreign air. This is where you are stopped at every second step by too familiar young men of Hebraic features, who act as runners for the great transatlantic lines, who Broadway n aggrieve your amour propre by offering you a steerage passage to the old country for twenty dollars, and who are as persistent as those who have rendered the ready-made clothing stores of Baxter Street notorious. The lodging-house " shark " and the bunco-steerer lie in wait about here for the immigrant, and the more daring rogue who, dressed like an immigrant, tells you how he has been robbed on his arrival, and who wishes to sell you his watch, an old family heirloom made in Munich ; and who is not the least abashed when you pry open the case and read "Toledo, O.," on the back. These are the weeds and parasites that grow in Castle Garden. It is only a few steps farther up town from this, and you are in the rush of the business district, and are dodging past men who are talking per cents and discounts on their way to luncheon. The cross-streets are traps and pitfalls here, and you have to watch your chances to cross, and to measure your distances as carefully and as quickly as a rider does a water-jump. This part of Broadway is a valley of great buildings, and from a boat on the North River one can trace the march of the street by these mountains of brick and iron and plate-glass. They rise up above the rest of the city like shot-towers, and you see nothing uptown to equal them, save the white points of the Cathedral, and the slim, graceful spire of Grace Church half-way between. The rush is greatest about the base of one of the tallest of these — the Equitable Building, that great gray pile which every good stranger must visit on his first day hi New York, and from the dome of which the signal flags flutter out their proclamation of cold, clear weather, in haughty defiance of the fact that the bunting itself is heavy with moist, unending rain. Just below this, only a block to the south, is one of those strange contrasts which seem as if they could not have been acci- dental. This is where old Trinity Church, with its graveyard, blocks the way of Wall Street. There is no stronger contrast than 12 Broadway this ill the whole city of New York. 'Whether you look up Wall Street's short length to the church, or from the church steps down Wall Street to where the pillars of the Custom-House seem to shut off its other eud, the effect is the same. There is something so sol- emnly incongruous in the mournful peace of the graveyard, with the roar of the street in front of it, in the cherubs' heads and the gaunt skull and cross-bones of the monuments, in the implements of war and of naval battles that date from the seventeen hundreds up to the days of Captain Paid Jones. The tower of the church throws its shadow directly into Wall Street, the street that seems to rim with gold, and every hour its chimes ring out above the noise of the tickers, and every minute of the day its doors are open, as if to leave no ex- cuse for those who do not snatch a moment to step beyond them " Every square foot of that graveyard," philosophized a young broker, so tradition says, " could be sold for more than half the men on the street are worth, and yet the tenants are not getting any use of their money. It doesn't seem right, does it '? " But it does seem right to the old-fashioned nobody who sees something- more than accident in this waste of valuable building ground ; who fancies that this quiet acre of land is meant to teach a lesson which those who run after the great dollar might read, if they only have the time ; but they haven't the time — banking hours are so few. I never pass Wall Street but I am filled with wonder that it should be such a narrow, insignificant street. One would think it would need more room for all that goes on there, and it is almost a sur- prise that there is no visible sign of the f oi'tunes rising and fall- ing, and of the great manoeuvres and attacks which emanate in that two hundred yards, and which are felt from Turkey to Oregon. But it seems just like any other street, except for the wires which almost roof it over, and that the men one meets in it are different in mien and manner from those one meets in upper Broadway ; they wear a sharp, nervous look, and they stoop, as if they had grown so from bending so often and so intently over the momentous Broadway is strips of paper tape. It is rather interesting to think that the man who brushed past you may have been but a few years back one of the uniformed boys who run with cable despatches to the floor of the Exchange, and that he may in a few weeks' time be looking- for a clerkship in one of the banks which he did not succeed in breaking. The broad statue of "Washington, with its shining knees and dusty coat, always seems to be in the most incongruous position here. "Unless it is that he is guarding the Sub-Treasury behind him, and that his uplifted hand is meant to say to the bulls and bears: so far can you go, and no farther. It is a most suggestive place, is Wall Street, and one feels more easy when one gets out of it into Broadway again, where mobs of men have not swept up and down howling and with white faces, and where Black Fridays make no visible sign. And after you get out of Wall Street, it is worth while to step across into Trinity Church and note how far away the street seems, and how calndy grand the chvu'ch is, with its high pil- lars meeting the great arches, and with the sun- stealing through the gorgeous window at the west. It is almost like the cathedral of some sunny, sleepy, English town, and you are not brought home again until another sight-seer like yourself opens the screen doors, and you can hear the shrill whistle of the car-driver just outside, and his ejaculations on the head of the gentleman on the box-seat of the ice-cart, who will not give him the track. The business man comes in here occasionally to show the interior to his customer from out of town. He wears the preoccupied and slightly bored air of the amateur guide who has seen it before, and as he is going out again immediately, he does not throw away his cigar, but keeps it decorously hidden inside his hat. From Trinity Church he will go to the Equitable Building, to show off the marbles and elevators, and from there to all the other show-places of the city, from Cleopatra's Needle in the afternoon, to the Spanish dancer at night. Trinity Church has a mob of its own about it once a year, but it is a somewhat different mob from the feverish gatherings of u Broadway Wall Street. This is on the last night of the old year, when the citi- zens gather, as they have gathered since the days of Aaron Burr, t< > hear the chimes welcome the coming, and toll for the king who is dead, and sound a " Long live the king ! " to his successor. Broadway widens in front of the Astor House, and gives the cars from all over the city a little room in which to turn before they start off uptown again. The Post-Office shuts it off at one side, and receives half the pedestrians from the street through its swinging doors, to shoot them out once more after it has swallowed up the contributions they have made to one of its hungry maws. It is not an impressive-looking building, in spite of its great, clumsy, barn- like bulk, and it looks still more utilitarian from the other side, where the City Hall faces it over the trees of the Park. The City Hall is perhaps as correct, or one of the most correct, pieces of architecture in the city of New York ; it is simple, direct, and grace- ful, with the quiet dignity, in the balance of its two wings, of a Colonial mansion. Every known, and hitherto unknown, order of architecture surrounds it on the border of the Park, and not one of these many specimens robs it of its place in the centre of the stage, which it has held since those days when its southern extension was backed with brown stone because no one, so it was expected, would ever live south of it, and it would never be seen. The City Hall Park makes a pleasant break in Broadway. It opens it up on one side and lets in a breath of fresh air where it breaks one of the long, high barriers of business houses. The peo- ple who haunt and who inhabit the Park have nothing in common with the wage -earners and money-makers who rush throiigh it and about its four sides. They are the real leisure class of New York, and their only duty and pastime is to sit under the trees on the cir- cle of benches and read three-days'-old newspapers, which were once wrapped round the luncheons of the despised wage-earner. You will see the same men on the same benches day after day, and month after month. Their garments grow more dirty and their Broadway 15 chins more dark, until one day they disappear altogether — the police court and the coroner only can tell where. They are tramps, with the mud of country roads still heavy on their boots ; strangers stranded in the streets, without money and with- out hope, and young toughs from the cheap 1< »dging - houses on t h e Bowery, waiting to pick up a new tool in some recent arrival from the farms of New Jersey and Connecti- cut. They will rind him a trifle dazed by the rush and noise, resting here be- cause there are trees about, before he' starts in on that disheartening occupation "FIRE!" known as looking for work." He sits with his valise tightly squeezed between his knees, and with one hand touching the small roll of money sewed up in the pocket of his waistcoat. In a few days he will make his first entrance into a pawnshop on the Bowery, and the home-made clothes will go, and his silver watch, and finally the empty valise itself, and he will leave the shop for the last time with a hopelessly lost feeling, and no impediments but the clothes he stands in. Then, when he returns to the City Hall Park, he is ripe to listen to the hints of the hard-looking young man on the bench next him, and before evening he will be one of a crowd which "hold up" a drunken sailor for his money, and an officer will have his hand on his shoulder, while his friends of the morning scamper off, dodging the light of the lamp-posts, until they disappear finally in the dark- ness of the side-streets. ^*Ht. 16 Broadway The Park is the rendezvous for many of the "Andies" and " Barneys " of local politics, with the inevitable cigar and the habit of emphasizing their remarks with the end of the right finger, and the interrogative "see." They are waiting to buttonhole this or that employee in one of the city departments who has a " pull ; " and there are numerous Italian wedding parties who find it more distinguished and much more cheap to be married by the Mayor, and who are gay in purple and green ribbons, and are happily un- conscious of how evident is the purpose of then- visit. But it is at night that the Park is at its best. When the win- dows of the Post-Office are blazing with light, and the mail wagons rattle up over the empty streets with a great to do and unload their freight of trouble and good news where it may be scattered broad- cast over the world. On warm nights the marble steps of the City Hall are black with people from the slums, and every bench holds four drowsy figures ; there is hardly room for the compositors and pressmen who have run across from Newspaper Bow for a breath < if air between shifts, and the Park policeman is kept constantly busy rapping the feet of the sleepers in the city's free lodging-place. Newspaper Bow bounds the eastern side of the scpiare with the workshops of the great dailies. They rise, one above the other, in the humorous hope that the public will believe the length of their subscription-lists is in proportion to the height of their towers. They are aggressively active and wide-awake in the sdence of the night about them. The lights from the hundreds of windows glow like furnaces, and the quick and impatient beating of the groaning presses sounds like the roar of the sea. " There she is — the great engine — she never sleeps. She has her ambassadors in every quar- ter of the world, her couriers on every road. Her officers march along with armies, and her envoys enter into the statesmen's cabi- net." But the ambassadors she sends to the courts to-day are a very different sort of ambassadors from those of whom Mr. War- rington spoke, and they are probably not quite so useful. Broadway 17 From the City Hall on up Broadway to Tenth Street the com- plexion of the street is utterly changed, and there is nothing but wholesale business houses, almost all with strange foreign names. This is where Broadway nods a little. There is none of the rush of lower Broadway, and none of its earnestness. The big houses deal only with firms, and not with individuals. Their windows show straw bonnets when the retail stores up town are tilled with Christ- mas presents, and in summer their stock in trade points out what the fall overcoat will be like, and how furs will be fashioned. The proprietors stand in the doorways, or gaze nut of the windows, with their customers from the country at their elbows, watching the pass- ing crowd. Three sales a day is good business in one of these houses, and means thousands of dollars. Broadway takes a dip, geographically, from the City Hall to Canal Street, where those tire- some individuals who knew New York when Union Square was a forest, fished in the stream that gave the street its name, or saythey^ did. It rises again until it reaches Tenth Street, where it turns sharply west. From the City Hall one can see the tops of all tlie horse-cars as they go down ami rise again, and the street itself looks as though it stopped altogether at Tenth Street, blocked by Grace Church. There were, no doubt, excellent reasons for placing Grace Church just where it is; but if it had been placed at the joint of Broadway for no other than the architectural effect, there would have been reason enough. There is no place where it could have been seen so well. It seems to join the two angles of the street and prit a punctuation mark to the business quarter. From its cor- ner in the angle of the L it is conspicuous from either approach, and it silently educates and teaches everyone who passes, some- thing of what is best in architecture. The shopping district begins about Tenth Street, and is bounded on the north by the latitude of Twenty-third, where the promenade begins, and continues on up indefinitely to Forty-second Street. One is as likely to see a man here as at an afternoon tea, and if one is Broadway should dare to venture in, it is only for one of two reasons : either he is the husband or brother of some wife or sister in the suburbs, who lias asked him to run uptown at luncheon-time and match some- thing for her, or he is there because the women are there, and he has come to look at them. In the first place he is entitled to your pity, and in the second place as well, for his occupation, though in- dividually satisfactory, is not profitable. The business dis- trict is very grim and very real, the shopping district is all color and movement and variety. It is not the individual woman k » ^ ! rf'Jed one sees here, but woman in the plural. You may have a glance of a beautiful face, or of a brilliant or an outrageously inappropriate gown, but it is only a glimpse, and the face is lost in a composite photograph of faces, the expression of which seems to be one of decided anxiety. For it is apparently a very serious business, this shopping. The shoppers do not seem to be altogether happy, for they have heard, perhaps, of a place where you can get that same lace flounce for two cents a yard less than at the other place, where yon got the last lot, and they are pressing on before it is all gone. They are as keen over their bargains in trimmings and gloves as their husbands down town are over the rise and fall in oil, and they certainly do not look as if they were on pleasure bent. On the contrary, they seem to have much upon their minds. On a sunny, bright morning, when it is possible for them to wear their best bravery without fear of rain, Broadway holds, apparently, every woman of means in the city. Who stays at home to take care of the baby, and who looks after the flat ? is a question. I use the word flat advisedly, because all the KBCKEATIOK. m 7 LOOKING IT BROADWAT— NEAR GHACE CHURCH. 20 Broadway women who shop below Union Square and along Fourteenth Street live in flats. Above Union Square they occupy apartments. It is a very fine distinction. The ladies who live in flats generally come down town in the " elevated,'' and dress a great deal ; they make an event of it, and take their luncheons, which consist of a meringue and an ice, down town. They think nothing of walking three hours at a time over hard floors, or remaining on their feet before long coun- ters, but it would weary them, you would find, to walk the children to the Park and back again — be- sides, that would be so un- profitable. There is an ob- ject in going down town to shop ; the object sometimes costs as much as fifty cents, and 3-ou get a fan with it, or a balloon, or a little pasteboard box to cany it in. It is a remarkably dressed procession, and noticeable in the youthfulness of the attire of those who are somewhat too elderly to stand artificial violets in their bon- nets, and those who are much too young to wear their hair up. There is much jewelry, and doubtful jewelry at that, below Union Square, and a tendency to many silver bangles, and shoulder-capes, and jingling chatelaines. Union Square makes a second break in Broadway, and is a very different lounging-place indeed from City Hall Park. It is much more popular, as one can see by the multitude of nurse-maids and children, and in the number and cared-for beauty of the plants and THE PLEASURES OF SHOPPING. IN THE EETAIL DISTRICT. Broadway, between Seventeenth and Twenty-third Streets. 22 Broadway flowers, and in the general air of easy geniality of the park police- men, who wear white cotton gloves. They have to get along without gloves about the City Hall. Horace Greeley and Benjamin Frank- lin are the appropriate guardians of that busy lower park, while the graceful Lafaj'ette and the stately equestrian figure of Washington are the presiding figures of this gayer and more metropolitan " THE KIAI.TO. Broadway and Fourteenth Street. pleasure-ground. Union Square is bounded on the south by that famous strip of pavement known to New Yorkers who read the papers as the Eialto. This is the promenade of actors, but a very different class indeed from the polished gentlemen who brighten upper Broadway. They are just as aggressively conspicuous, but less beautiful, and they are engaged in waiting for something to turn up. They have just returned from a tour which opened and closed at Yonkers, and they cannot tell why. They have come back "to reorganize," as they express it, and to start afresh next Broadway 23 week with another manager, and greater hopes. They live chiefly on hope. It is said it is possible to cast, in one morning, any one of Shakespeare's plays, to equip any number of farce companies, and to "organize" three Uncle Tom's Cabin combinations, with even more than the usual number of Marks the lawyer, from this melancholy market of talent that ranges about the theatrical agencies and costumers' shops and bar-rooms of lower Union Square. The Broadway side of Union Square is its richest and most picturesque. The great jewelry and silver-shops begin here, and private carriages line the curb in quadruple lines, and the pavement is impressively studded with white-breeched grooms. Long-haired violinists and bespectacled young women in louse gowns, with rolls of music in their hands, become conspicuous just above this — the music-shops are responsible for them. And from this on up Broadway from Union Square the richer and more fash- ionable element shows itself, and predominates altogether. These shoppers come in carriages, and hold long lists between gloved ringers, and spend less time at the bargain counters. The crowd is not so great, and the dressing is much richer, and as well worth looking it as that of any city in the world. These shoppers are not so hurried either, they walk more leisurely, and stop at every candy store ; and windows tilled with photographs of American duchesses and English burlesque actresses are like barriers in their path. They are able to observe in passing how- every other woman is dressed, and at the same time to approve their own perfection in any plate-glass window with a sufficiently dark background to throw a reflection. This is the part of Broadway where one should walk just before the Christmas holidays, if one wants to see it at its very best ; when the windows otter richer and costlier bids to those of better taste than at any other season ; and when the women whom one passes have a thoroughbred air of comfort and home about them, and do 24 Broadway not look as though they were altogether dependent on the street and shops for their entertainment. Those you meet farther up look as though they regarded Broadway not as a straight line between two points, not as a thoroughfare, hut as a promenade. But iu the lower part there are groups of distinguished-looking women and beautiful girls with buuehes of flowers at their waists, and a certain affectation of mamiishness in their dress that only makes their faces more feminine by contrast. "They carry themselves well," would be the first criticism of a stranger, and they have a frank look of in- terest in what is going on about them which could even be mis- taken for boldness, but which really tends to show how certain of themselves they are. At Twenty-third Street the more business-like Broadway takes on the leisurely air of the avenue, which it crosses, and in which it is merged for a block or two. The rush is greatest here, and han- soms and democratic street-cars and lumbering busses with their roof-gardens of pretty girls, and victorias, in which the owners look down upon the pedestrians as if a bit conscious of their high estate, are forced into each other's company as closely as are the carts and drays farther down town. This is where quiet home-bodies of the lower half of the avenue, and the other daughters of the few hun- dred from above, make a dash across the forbidden ground of Broad- way and pass on to the more secure footing of the avenue, as calmly unconscious of the Broadway habitue who begins to prowl just here, as though he were one of the hotel pillars against which he poses. This is the most interesting spot in the city to the stranger within our gates, and it is, after all, the Broadway that we all know and like the best. It is so cosmopolitan, so alive, and so rich in color and movement, and so generous in its array of celebrities. One could wear a turban here, or a pith helmet, or a sealskin ulster down to his heels, and his passing would cause no comment. For everyone who visits New York, whether he be a Japanese prince, or a' political exile from Erin, or the latest imported Lou- Broadway 25 don pickpocket, finds his way sooner or later to this promenade of the tenderloin district of Broadway. Here you will meet face to face in their proper persons the young women whose photographs smile upon them in somewhat erratic attire from the shop-windows, which one would think might prove embarrassing ; and the leading- juveniles of the stock companies, well gloved and groomed, and with a conscious effort to look unconscious ; and the staid British tourist, with the determined air of one who wishes it understood that though he is in the parade he is not of it ; and richly dressed, well-fed sporting men, with cheeks tanned by the wind and sim of the race- tracks ; and white-faced gamblers, with expressionless eyes, which tell of late hours and gas-light and close air, and which seem to blink in the sun, as if it hurt them. There are soubrettes, with sin at curly hair, given to loud and unexpected explosions of mirth. Very handsome young women, with a showy fair-weather look about them, which makes one think they would certainly have postponed their walk if it had rained, and who carry long silver-handled para- sols which were never meant tn be unrolled. Local politicians, ce- lebrities whose faces the comic papers have helped to make familiar, and play-writers, and book-makers of both sorts, and many other men and women too, to whom this promenade is part of their daily advertisement. They are there to look and be looked at ; and to ha vi' the passing stranger nudge his companion and whisper, " That is So-and-so, who is playing at Such-and-such a theatre," is, as Mr. Vincent Crummies declared it to be, fame, and like breath to their nostrils. They have their reward. There are some who will tell yon that Broadway at this point should be as a howling wilderness to respectable men and women ; but the}' are those who know the true character of the pedestrians more thoroughly than is altogether profitable, illustrating that too much knowledge is a dangerous thing. It is not essential that you should know that the smooth- faced, white-haired man who touched your shoulder as he brushed past, keeps a gambling-house at Saratoga during the summer 26 Broadway months, or that the woman at his side is not his wife. They do yon no harm, and yon are not on Broadway to enlarge your visiting list, but only to enjoy the procession, of which, for the time being, you are a part. You need not take it from the point of view of the young man on the corner, with his hat knowingly slanted and his cane in his side-pocket, nor of the gaping visitor in the hotel-window, with the soles of his shoes showing against the pane ; but if you are a student of yoiu 1 fellow-men you will find enough bright faces in the crowd to send you home an optimist, and so many wrecks and fail- ures and fallen favorites of fortune, as to make you wish you had selected to walk on the avenue instead. It is even more gayly alive at night, when all the shop-fronts are lighted, and the entrances to the theatres blaze out on the sidewalk like open fireplaces, and when every street-car goes jumping past loaded down to the railings with well-dressed theatre-goers, and when the transient strangers stand in the doorways of the big hotels, or venture out on little sor- ties to the corner and back again. It is at this hour that the clerk appears, dressed in his other suit, the one which he keeps for the evening, and the girl bachelor, who is either a saleslady or a work- ing-girl, as she better chooses to call herself, and who can and does walk alone in New York at night unmolested, if she so wishes it, which is something she could not do in any other city in the world. She has found her hall bedroom cold and lonely after the long work- ing-day behind a counter or at a loom, and the loneliness tends to homesickness and to make one think, which, as everybody knows, is a very dangerous occupation ; so she puts on her hat and slips down a side - street and loses herself in the unending procession on Broadway, where, though she knows no one, and no one wants to know her, there is light and color, and she is at least not alone. Of course it is a dangerous place for her, as other young women who call themselves non-workers appreciate for her, and for her institute reading-rooms and working-girls' clubs and associations, of which one hears so little and which accomplish such great and immeasur- Broadway 27 able good. But she may read how great her danger is in the face of the young woman who jjasses her with alert, insolent eyes, and who a year before was what she is now, and who sees nothing in the lighted shop window before which she stops but the reflection of " EVENING PAPERS. The delivery wagon near Madison Square. the man who has dropped out of step with the procession and is hovering at her side. There is a diagonal street crossing over Broadway just below Twenty-sixth Street, which leads pleasantly to that great institution of upper Broadway, which never changes, whether it be under the 2S Broadway regime of the first or the third generation. The broad white window- shades and the trojjical plants in the iron urns in front of the great restaurant, which some one called the largest club of the world, never seem to need renewing, and there is always a glimpse from Broadway of an array of high-top hats, and curling rings of smoke, and moving waiters. You may go continent-trotting all over Eu- rope, you may lose yourself fighting tigers in the jungles of India, or in carrying a transit over the alkali plain of Montana, or on a cattle-ranch in Texas, and }'ou may return to find snow and winter where you left dust and summer, and to find strangers where you bade farewell to friends, but the big club of Broadway will be just as you left it, with as many beautifully dressed women in the dining- room, and the same solemn-looking youths in the cafe, and the same waiter, who never grows old, to pull out your chair for you at your old place at the window which looks out upon Broad- way. The promenade is best worth looking at around Madison Square, either in the summer, when the twilight lasts until late and the trees are heavy with leaves, and the gas-jets look like monster fire-flies ; or in winter, when the Square is covered with snow, like frosting on a great wedding-cake, when it has settled even on Ad- miral Farragut's epaulets, and the electric lights shine blue and clear through the black, bare branches, and the lamps of the many broughams dance past continually to opera or ball, and give a glimpse through the frosty pane of a woman's figure muffled in furs and swan's-down. There is something exhilarating about this cor- ner of Broadway, where the theatres at every turn are bright with colored illuminations telling of runs of one hundred nights, and where the restaurants and hotels are brilliantly aglow and desper- ately busy. It is at this corner that on the nights of the presi- dential election the people gather most closely, trampling down the grass in the Square, and blocking the street-cars and omnibuses with barricades of flesh and blood at fever heat. One man tells Broadway 29 '• VISITING STATESMEN." In front of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, daring a political convention. how, on such a night, he spent one hour in forcing his way from Twenty- third Street to the Hoffman House, when the crowd of patient watchers was so great that men could not raise their hands 30 Broadway to applaud the messages from all over the continent, but had to content themselves with shouting their disgust or pleasure at the sky. These are the nights when Broadway cannot hold the crowd, and it is forced into the avenue and cross-streets until the stere- opticon throws the last fatal writing on the billowing wall of canvas, and the people learn that a government has changed and that they have put a new president into office, and the mob melts noisily away, and in the morning there is nothing left of the struggle that has brought so great a change over a whole country but the down- trodden grass in the Square and a few r bixrnt-out Roman candles in the middle of the street. In the summer, when everybody is out of town, Madison Square draws many of Broadway's pedestrians over to itself, and finds seats for them under the trees in the changing glare of the electric lamps, which turn the grass and leaves into such a theatrical and unwholesomely greenish tint. This is the people's roof-garden, it is their summer watering-place, their seashore and mountains, and when supper is over they come to the Square to forget the cares of the working day and the heat of the third-floor back, and the rou- tine that must begin again on the morrow. Old men creep out here from the close, hot streets of the East Side, and mumble together on the benches ; mothers from the same tenement gossip about the rent, and the boy who is doing so w r ell down town, or the girl who has gone wrong and who is " away " on the Island. And you will see lovers everywhere. You will see a young girl and a young man come hurrying toward each other down different paths, and you will notice that they begin to smile while they are still many yards apart, and that they clasp hands when they meet as though they never intended to let go. And then they will pick out a bench by itself in the shadow and laugh and whisper together as though they were afraid the birds would tell all the foolishly fond things they overhear them say. It is not as aristocratic an occu- pation as " rocking," it lacks the picturesque surroundings which Broadway 81 enhance and excuse that institution at Bar Harbor and Narragan- sett, there is no sea and no moon, only an electric lamp that hisses and sputters and goes out at frequent intervals, but the spirit of '.! r ■| V <1 J w* * Pr «r % m ■ ■-.''■ W *0* "• ^JP "# :i ■*&**$■ P 'H rr- y THE METROPOLITAN UPERA HOUSE AT XIGHT. Broadway and Thirry-nmth Street. the thing seems to be very much the same. And there are young- married people with a baby carriage trimmed with richer lace than the mother herself can afford to wear, and which the young father pushes proudly before him, while the woman runs ahead and looks 32 Broadway back to see if the baby is gaining a little sleep before its return to the stifling, stuffy air of the flat. And sometimes — how very often, only a brief line in the daily paper tells — you will see the young man who sits by himself away from the crowd on a bench, and who is trying to work out a prob- lem on the asphalt with the point of his cane. It is a very old problem, and some one once crystallized it by asking in a book if life is worth the living. The young man never read the book, but he is trying to answer the question by and for himself, and he has stepped from the street and has come out here into the Square to think it over for the hundredth time. He has placed a great many ambitions against very few accomplished facts, and nothing mat- ters, nothing is of any consequence, not even success, and what is still worse, not even failure. And the girl in the case is honestly not worth all this pother — if he could only get to see it ; but he can- not see it, and starts restlessly and rubs oirt the markings on the asphalt with the sole of his shoe. He is terribly in earnest, is this young man, and he will not pose when he has decided and the time has come to act ; he will read over the letters in his pocket for the last time very steadily, the letters from home and the letters from her, and tear them up in small pieces and throw them away with the cards that bear his name, with every other scrap of paper that might tell the world, which cares so very little after all, who he was. When it gets darker and the electric lights throw long, black shadows on the empty sidewalks, and the old gentlemen get up stiffly and hobble away to bed, and leave only the lovers on the benches, the young man will bite a hole in his handkerchief where his name was written in by one of his people at home, and will step back into the shadow of the tree behind the bench and answer the problem in the negative. And the selfish lovers on the bench a hundred yards away will jump to their feet when they hear the report, startled and frightened, but still holding each other's hands. And the park policeman will rap for the officer on Broadway 33 Broadway, who will ring for the ambulance, and the crowd of loungers who have no homes to go to, and waiters from the res- taurants just getting away from work, and cab-drivers from the stand on Broadway will cross over and form a circle, while the boy ambulance surgeon kneels in the wet grass and runs his fingers over the young man's chest. And he will rise and shake his head and say, " This is no case for me," for the young man will have settled the question, as far as he is individually concerned, forever. Broadway, for so great a thoroughfare, gets its people to bed at night at a very proper season. It allows them a scant hour in which to eat their late suppers after the theatre, and then it grows rapidly and decorously quiet. The night watchmen timi out the lights in the big shops ami leave only as many burning as will serve to show the eases covered with linen, and the safe, defiantly conspicuous, in the rear; the ears begin to jog along more easily and at less frequent intervals, prowling nighthawks take the place of the smarter hansoms of the day, anil the street-cleaners make drowsy attacks on the dirt and mud. There are no all-night res- taurants to disturb the unbroken row of business fronts, and the footsteps of the patrolman and the rattle of the locks as he tries the outer fastenings of the shops echo sharply, and the voices of belated citizens bidding each other good-night, as they separate at the street corners, have a strangely loud and hollow sound. By midnight the street is as quiet and desolate-looking as a summer resort in midwinter, when the hotel and cottage 'windows are barred up and the band-stand is covered an inch deep with snow. It is almost as deserted as Broadway is on any Sunday morning, when the boys who sell the morning papers are apparently the only New Yorkers awake. It deserves a little rest and refmbisking after having been ground down all day by the weight of so many thou- sand passing feet and heavy wheels, but it gets very little of either, for as soon as the watering-cart and the broom of the street-cleaners disappear into the darker night of the side-streets, milk-carts and 34 Broadway '■£ f 1 4-**-$$ ?•• ' SOMETHING THE MATTER." Near the Lincoln Statue, Union Square. truck gardeners' wagons begin to roll and rumble from the femes to the early market, piled high with fresh-smelling vegetables, and with the farmer's boy sleeping on top of the load of cabbages while Broadway 35 the father dozes on the driver's seat ; and then mad-carts and heavy tracks and drays begin to brunp noisily over the cobbles, and lights to glow in the basements of the hotels, and those who are con- demned to open and sweep out the offices down town turn out into the darkness, still half-awake, and with heavy half-closed eyes, and, then comes the bluish-gray light and the first fresh breath of the morning, and the policemen shiver slightly and yawn and shrug their shoulders, and the gas-lights grow old and tawdry-looking, as down each cross-street comes the warm red rays of the sun, rising grandly out of the East River, and Broadway, rested and swept and garnished, takes up the burden of another day. PICCA D I LLY By Andrew Lang THE ILLUSTRATIONS BY W. DOUGLAS ALMOND A CHAT IN PICCADILLY. PICCADILLY IT may be unjust to say that among the uncounted streets of London not one is beautiful. But it is plain,' on a moment's reflection, that a beautiful street is less the likely to exist in monotonous expanses of London than iu most other cities. There are few towns but have somewhere an outlook on nature, on the world beyond the walls. But London is so vast, and lies so low, that she lias hardly a single glance at nature. From the National Gallery, gazing over Trafalgar Square toward the towers of West- minster, and catching beyond a vague glimpse of the Surrey hills, you are faintly reminded that the whole earth is not yet covered over by brick houses. On Cheyne Walk, too, the river, with its mists, its little gravelly beach, its boats, flows from the distant heights, through the meadows, under the poplars, far away, and murmurs an echo of the remote country. From the top of the Pavilion at Lord's, too, whence the eye beholds merely a soft va- porous distance, broken here and there by a spire or a clump of trees, it is not impossible to fancy that London has a kind of charm. But she has no great street whence, as from Princes Street in Edinburgh, there are conspicuous the rocks of an acropo- lis, the high-piled ridge of the old town, and the remoter beauty of the Lothian hills. The fresh air of Venice blowing in from the sea is as alien to London as are the noiseless wet ways of Venice. 40 Piccadilly Nature, in short, except as far as trees are concerned, is out of view and out of the question. Then, as to architectural beauty, London is as inferior to Venice or Florence in grace and stateliuess of structures and monuments, palaces and towers, and flower-markets, as in her eternal absence of natural loveliness. Here is no Arno, no quaint, venerable bridges, no statues like the Perseus of Cellini, or the David of Michael Angelo. Here is no St. Mark's, no Bar- gello, for London, in spite of the antiquity of the city, is a very new town in most of her western quarters, and was built hastily and inconsiderately by people among whom architecture was at the lowest ebb. Thus, to take even an example in England, London has not a public way to compare with the High Street at Oxford. The new age and new buildings have done then worst for " the High," but they have not wholly ruined those curves, like the windings of a stream, that unrivalled mixture of old academic with old domestic architecture, those ancient gables of all heights and shapes, those latticed windows edged with flowers, those solemn and hospitable college gateways, and those glimpses through them into " deep, Avet walks of gray old gardens ; " while the whole bend and curve of the street ends in the glorious tower of Magdalen and the bridge over the Cherwell. All this, degraded as it has been by an unsightly tramway and spoiled by the eccentric new buildings on which the colleges have wasted their money, is yet incomparably more beautiful than anything in London. " The High " survives from the leisurely age when men could build. Now, if we take Piccadilly as the representative beautiful street of London, we cannot deny that it has some advantages. Stalling from Regent Street in the east, it runs westward, at first narrow enough and commonplace, with a plain church on the left, with Burlington House and its picture-gallery, a large, commodious, modern edifice, on the right, for the rest lined with ordinary shops displaying waterproofs, boots, books (Mr. Quariteh's shop and vast collection is here), and similar articles of commerce. Where St. Piccadilly 43 James's Street descends abruptly to the left there is a view of St. James's Palace, a lugubrious royal residence, uninhabited by roy- alty, which " excites the wonder of foreigners on account of its mean appearance." Then comes Arlington Street' with the palazzo of Lord Salisbury, and after that break, the best part of Piccadilly begins. All along the left side are the trees and verdure of the Green Park. The right hand foot-path flows, so to speak, beneath houses of which Mr. Loftie says in his " History of London," that, " though built with very little regard to cost, not one of them pre- sents any architectural features worth notice, or, indeed, worthy of the situation." So the wide thoroughfare takes its western way : on one side is grass, chestnut-trees, nurses, children, hawthorns ; on the other side are tall houses, not "worthy of the situation." Clubs, palaces of the rich or noble, a shop here and there, line the right-hand side, and finally, after the road ascends again, we have the Duke of Wellington's arch and statue on the left, iu a space now much widened and improved, and, on the right, is Apsley House, where the old duke lived and died, and Hyde Park Comer, the park gates, the naked statue of Achilles, and an effigy of Lord Byron with his dog BoatsAvain, Avhich art owes to the contested genius of Mr. Belt, or, as others declared, of Mr. Belt and an " artist's ghost." Down and up the hill and dale of Piccadilly carnages glide, carts rattle, hansoms hurry, men and women walk to the park, or westward to Kensington and Brompton, or, in the eastward direc- tion, to the clubs, to Pall Mall, the Strand, the City. It is, on the whole, not a very worried or eager crowd, not like the throng of the Strand or Cheapside. Most of the pedestrians are sufficiently well-to-do ; beggars do not much beset Piccadilly ; in the early evening the steppers westward are the greater number, going either for a walk in the parks, or homeward, to dinner. About eight the world is streaming out to its engagements, gleaming expanses of «-:-._; ;;,:;> --*i|fp A MORNING WALK— PICCADILLY. "On one side is grass, chestnut-trees, nurses, children, hawthorns." Piccadilly 45 white shirts shine out of the cabs, the carriages are full of ladies in their evening array. Dinnerward or theatreward goes all the throng of politicians, dandies, lawyers, idlers, stock -brokers. The wooden pavements prevent the incessant passage of vehicles from being inordinately noisy, and a native of stony Edinbiugh justly remarked that, when he first visited London, he was more struck by the quiet of the streets than by anything else. In all the hastening or leisurely multitudes one may marvel how many ask themselves if this is a beautiful street, if it deserves to be one of the most famous thoroughfares in the greatest of modern cities. Many, if they were asked, would say that Piccadilly is cheerful, and is satisfactory. This is, indeed, the happiest way of criticising Pic- cadilly. Thanks to the Green Park on its left side, the street has verdure, at least, and is airy. The ups and downs of it have a pict- uresqueness of their own. The wealthy houses, if they are not digni- fied, if they have not the stately proportions of Florentine palaces, are, at all events, clean and large, and so far imposing. There are two times and seasons when Piccadilly looks its best. One of these is in mid- May, when all the flowering trees are hi blossom, when the chestnut hangs out its fragrant tapers in the green shade of its fans, when the hawthorn perfumes even the London air, when the laburnums are " drooping wells of fire," when on all the boughs is the tender green, the first fiush of spring. London is very well supplied with trees, and, for a few days early in the season, the town has almost a Chaucerian aspect of prettiness and innocence. That jaded old Piccadilly in her spring dress looks as fresh as a young lacty in her first season. The women have not grown weary of their unrelenting social activities ; there are radiant faces newly come from the country, there are tall young men of rosy aspect, beautifully attired, with high stiff col- lars, and gloves irreproachable, and lustrous boots. This is the moment to see Piccadilly — bright, gay, crowded, and yet not sophis- ticated and worldly to look upon. The next best aspect, or perhaps the best aspect, of Piccadilly is 46 Piccadilly in the evening in mid-October, when the lingering light flushes the houses, the sunset struggling through the opals of the London smoke, red and azures blending in the distance, while all down through " the gradual dusk}' veil " of evening the serpentine lines of lamps begin to burn. London, when there is not a fog, has sunsets of peculiar beauty, thanks perhaps to the smoky air ; whatever the reason, they are very soft, rich, and strange. Many a time, walking- eastward through the early dusk in Piccadilly, I have turned back, and stood watching these beautiful ef- fects, which Mr. Marshall, by the bye, often renders admirably in water col- ors. Unless civilization quite shuts out the sky she cannot absolutely improve beauty off the face of the town. And in Piccadilly there are " lots of sky," as the little street boy said when, for the first time, he was taken into the country. Above the crowd, the smoke, the struggle, beyond the yells of them who vend the disastrous evening papers, far remote from "SANDWICH MEN IN THEIK PRISON OF WOOD." Piccadilly 47 the cries of murder and sedition, the serene sky looks down on you, and the sunset brings its harmonies even into Piccadilly. The artist cannot represent these things in his black and white ; these beauties must be seen, and into many a spirit that is tired of towns they bring their own tranquillity, and speak si- lently of how the solemn and charmed horn is passing in her royal robes over mountains and pale sea-straits, over long river pools, over reedy lochs where our hearts are, and where we fain would be, though we " pad the weary hoof " in Piccadilly. London is a hard place for those who in their cradles " were breathed on by the rural Pan," but even in London Nature has her moments, and does not al •solutely and always veil her face. Such are the pleasanter aspects of Piccadilly, a street more or less of pleasure, though in this respect far unlike the Boulevard in Paris. There is no street life, so to speak, in the wealthier thoroughfares of London. There is nothing at all resembling the gayety of the Boulevard, with the cafes, the crowds of people contemplating existence over a glass of beer or a cup of coffee from the comfortable haven of cafe awnings and cafe chairs. Here are none of the bright Idosques, none of the posts cov- ered with many-colored and alluring bills of the play. The shops are few, only that of Mr. Giuliano, who makes the pretty copies of ancient jewelry and Renaissance enamels, is very attractive to stare into, whereas on the Boulevard the shop-windows are a perpetual delight. Nor are there theatres here, with their bustle. The theatres are far off in the Strand, and have no external attractions. The onlv open-air street life is that of the cabmen on the stand opposite, or of the depressing rows of " sandwich men," dismal little processions with their advertisements of soaps, plays, and pictures. To be sure, we boast what Paris knows not, the Piccadilly goat, who lives in, or often at, the door of a large comer house. Why this goat is kept here out of doors is a mystery, probably not connected with the wor- ship of Dionysus. There is another goat, a much seedier, dingier goat, who browses such grasses as grow outside the Nonconformist Piccadilly office, in the purlieus of old Alsatia, where Nigel Oliphant met with his adventures. No account of Piccadilly is complete which leaves the goat out of the picture, an unexpect- ed rural figure in the foreground. Piccadilly is not a place where the for- eigner or the stranger from the country TOE PICCADILLY GOAT. need expect to see famous contemporaries much, or to meet states- men lounging in little groups, chatting about the perplexed fort- unes of the nation. Piccadilly is not at all like a Christmas number of a society journal, thickty studded with caricatures of celebrities and notorieties. They are much more likelj' to be en- countered near the Houses of Parliament, or in Pall Mall you may view generals coming from the War Office ; bishops and scientific Piccadilly 49 characters trudging to the sanctuary of the Athenaeum ; young men of fashion near the Marlborough Club ; princesses driving out of Marlborough House. In the Strand there go great lawyers, and theatrical people, and journalists of all grades pacing to or from Fleet Street. But, as for company, Piccadilly is here a street like any other ; there be diplomatists, to be sure, on the steps of the St. James's Club. At least the spectator may fancy he beholds a di- plomatist, and no doubt a novelist or a poet or two may be watched looking out of the bay window of the Savile, and all sorts and con- ditions of men do eternally walk up or down Piccadilly. But it cannot be called a specially lion-haunted shore. I have never observed, "for why should I deceive you?" Mr. Irving coming along, arm in arm with Mr. Toole, nor Mr. Parnell lounging with Mr. Timothy Healy, nor Mr. Payn (I can swear to this) taking exer- cise with Mr. "William Black, in Piccadilly, nor Mr. Rudyard Kip- ling meditating the military Muse in these purlieus. But this may be due to " a malady of not marking " the men and women who go by. tn a habit of inattention. It is a case of " eyes and no eyes," as in the childish apologue, and, if the artist has eyes, and has been lucky enough to observe princes, pens, poets, painters, politicians, warriors, in Piccadilly, why should he not draw their effigies as he beheld them ? It is certain that, somehow, Pall Majl and St. James's Street are better places wherein to lie in wait for the passing celeb- rity, and see the traits of the men who make, or obstruct, or re- cord history. From Marlborough House to the Athena?um Club is capital hunting ground ; there lions are almost as common as quite ordinary persons. Let me confess that I have not a good eye for a lion, and often do not know the monarch of the forest when I see him. Besides, nobody can see him iu a fog, and the extreme west of Piccadilly is particularly foggy, probably because one of the many " bournes " < ir brooks over which London is built flows under it, and its dankness exhales in clouds of yellow vapor. This reflection, that a river may flow through the middle of 50 Piccadilly Piccadilly, as through Cheapside in "Wordsworth's poem of " Poor Susan," may serve to remind us that Piccadilly was not always a street, that it has first a rural and then a suburban history of its own. I confess that my owu taste resembles that of Horace Walpole rather than of Madame du Deffand, concerning whom he says that she was always interested in the affairs of the moment, and he in the business of a century ago. This is not a modern taste, it is true ; the world prefers to read the " posters " of the evening papers exposed on the pavement at Hyde Park Corner rather than to wonder what Hyde Park Corner and the turnstile there were like one, or two, or three hundred years since. We have been among " actualities," and shall return to them, and persons who are impatient of street history may skip a page that deals with the past. Piccadilly has its history, which, as usual, explains its present condition, and shows how it became what it is. The street is haunted, too, by fair women and brave men long dead, of whom some readers may like to be put in mind as they wander among the living. In the old times, say in Queen Elizabeth's reign, Hyde Park, near which Piccadilly ends, was a forest, with " herbage, pannage, and browze wood for deer." The woods were still thick, and frequented by robbers, many years later. All that was fine aud fashionable in the park was " The Ring," where people rode and drove, and where foot-races were rim, while duels, as late as Field- ing's time, were fought hard by. Here Mohun slew the Duke of Hamilton, here Captain Booth, in Amelia, fought the colonel. We must get rid, in our minds, of the iron railings and the pavement outside, and of Apsley House. We must fancy a country road, with hedge and ditch, running beside the forest, and leading to the still distant town. At the west end of Piccadilly, or near it, the citizens of London threw up their earthworks ; women digging aud carry- ing earth, ladies and all, when the royal army threatened the city, 52 Piccadilly in 1662. There was then no street of Piccadilly, there was merely "the Beading road," the road, or one of the roads, that led into London from the west. But the name Piccadilly, an extraordinary name enough, about which antiquarians have argued much, already existed. The older opinions, contested by Mr. Jesse in his " Liter- ary and Historical Memorials of London," was that " Piccadilly " is derived from a house called "Peccadilla Hall." Here the ruffs for the neck, called Peccadillas, were vended, and it is supposed that the name of the street came from the name of this warehouse. But it seems extremely improbable that a fashionable shop would be out in the country some way from town, as the Reading road then was. Moreover, Mr. Jesse holds that the ruffs did not come into fashion till 1616 or so, whereas we find the word Piccadilly applied to the "place in Gerard's curious old "Herbal" of 1596. Nothing can show better how London has grown than what Gerard has to say about "Piccadilla." On the banks of the dry ditches there, he remarks, grows "the small wild buglosse," or ox-tongue. The botanist would find little to collect in small dry ditches near Picca- dilly now, and the banks of that rural stream, the Tybourne, are deep below the houses. Nearly sixty years passed before there was a street of Piccadilly, and not till Charles Seconds reigii did the houses begin to creep westward toward Hyde Park Corner. These houses were originally palaces of the nobles, with vast gardens and pleasances. For example, where Devonshire House now stands, a large unlovely palace enough, was Berkeley House, where Pepys dined on September 23, 1672. " The gardens are incomparable," says Pepys, " by reason of the inequality of the ground, and a pretty piscina. . The holly hedges on the terrace I advised the planting of." We must suppose Piccadilly, then, to have been like that part of Campden Hill where Argyll Lodge, the Duke of Pnvtland's house, and Holly Lodge, Macaulay's home, and others, stand among their trees and flowers, only much more magnificent and spacious. Lord Berkeley's pleasances extended over Berkeley Square, but in 1684 Piccadilly 53 part of the ground was already being built upon, to the sorrow of John Evelyn. Berkeley House was burned early in the eighteenth century, and the unromantic Devonshire House was erected on its site. Next Berkeley House was the still more splendid Clarendon A GATEWAY OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY. BURLINGTON HOUSE. House, built by the historian of the rebellion. This came into the possession of the second Duke of Albemarle, who sold it ; and Dover Street, Albemarle Street, Old Bond Street, and Grafton Street were built on its site and on its pleasances, while the sylvan Evelyn wailed like a dispossessed Dryad. The gardens of the Earl of Sunderland were covered by the chambers called the Albany, 54 Piccadilly leading into Piccadilly, and all these things are examples of the way in which Piccadilly grew. The melancholy process is being illus- trated on every side round London every day. The old spacious houses and pleasant gardens are pulled down, the old elms fall, and rows of ugly streets are run up where the trees budded and the thrushes sang. Probably this will be the fate of Holland House also ; " the great wen " swiftly and steadily eats its way into the heart of the country. Very little taste is shown by the builders ; the eighteenth century's taste was in favor of good solid brick boxes of no outward beauty, and these be they which now stand fronting Piccadilly. As late as 1745 the west end of the street must still have bordered on the fields. When Fielding's Squire "Western rode up to town, in search of Sophia, he alighted at an inn (next what is now Apsley House), which was called " The Pillars of Hercules." The name must mean that beyond the Pillars was the region of the unex- plored, that this was the town's end. It would be the first inn in London that the worthy squire reached. Near it, but in later times, resided the famous, or infamous, "Old Q.," the Duke of Queens- berry, in his profligate latest years. This nobleman, born. in 1721, lived till 1810. All his life he did exactly as he pleased, and he was pleased to be entirely regardless of opinion and of decency in his unfaltering pursuit of pleasure. He never " unharnessed," as the French say ; he never ceased to patronize the ladies of the opera; but he was good-humored, opendianded, and well-bred. Robert Burns once passed an evening in his company, and though Burns severely censured — in the nobility — the pursuits which mor- alists deplore in his own history, he was quite won over by the wicked Old Q. He sent Old Q. his famous poem of " The Whistle," and says to a correspondent, " Though I am afraid His Grace's character as a Man of Worth is very equivocal, yet he is certainly a nobleman of the first taste, and a gentleman of the finest manners." Deaf of one ear, blind of one eye, this wicked nobleman used to sit Piccadilly 55 in his balcony, watching the world go past, and looking down on Piccadilly. He preferred that Hood of human beings to the view of the Thames at Richmond. " What is there," he asked, " to make so much of in the Thames ? I am quite tired of it ; there it goes, flow, flow, flow, always the same." But of the torrent that went "flow, flow, flow," past his house he never wearied, and it is said that he always had a man and horse ready to pursue any naiad who charmed him from the stream of Piccadilly. A good deal of his money went, at his death, to that other philosopher who lived in Gaunt House, Great Gaunt Street, and is now best known to men as the Marquis of Bteyne, and the patron of Mrs. Eawdon Crawley. It is part of the moralities of Piccadilly to remember that Old Q., sitting on his balcony under his parasol, watching the women with his one wicked old eye, had been the gay young Lord March, who " never knew Mrs. Bernstein but as an old woman ; and if she ever had beauty, hang me if I know how she spent it." This was the Lord March and Buglen whom a young gentleman out of Virginia beat at a long leap : " For the honor of old Virginia, I had the gratafication," says Mr. Henry Warrington, "of beating his Lordship by more than two feet, viz., two feet nine inches," and of assuring him that " Colonel Washington of Mount Vernon could beat me by a good foot." Is it not curious how Harry Warrington's artless prattle lingers in our memories, and we see young Lord March more clearly, perhaps, in "The Virginians" than even in Horace Walpole, or in his own letters to George Selwyn, with his confidences about velvet suits, and bets, and La Bena, and the Zamperini. " I dread every event that is connected with women," says the real Lord March, "they are all so extremely wrong- headed." This was the remark of a noble with great experience. It is worth noting that, despite his repute as a gambler, Lord March did not bet sums which woidd now be considered enormous. After some losses at Newmarket, he was much more than " brought home " by winning about ,£4,000. The modem " plunger " would 56 Piccadilly despise suck a total. The wanderer in Piccadilly, who likes to muse on the changes of human fortune, the turns of that wheel which the Buddha contemplates, may please himself by reflecting that, along this way passed the carriages of the Princesse de Lain- balle and of Madame du Barry. The former dined with the Duke of Queensberry here, before the Revolution which brought her cruel and shameful death. But it was during the Revolution that Madame dir Barry, in company with the Prince of Wales, sat at the ducal table. She, too, returned to France and to her death. In this house, also, Horace Walpole heard a story of Democracy, how at Lyons a young man was roasted alive, and his mother was made to look on, and was beaten to death. He who was Will March, and became old Q., sleeps now under the altar in St. James's Church, and a great many people remem- ber him best by Mr. Locker's verses, " The wise and the silly, Old P. or Old Q., we must leave Piccadilly." The modern houses in Piccadilly are not very much haunted hj ghosts of the fashionable, or literary, or historical past. From Number 20 Sir Francis Burdett was taken to prison, though he had barricaded his house, provoked a riot, and defied the Speaker of the House of Commons, just eighty years ago. Number 94 was Lord Palmerston's dwelling, from 1850 till his death in 1865 ; here he gave political parties, and this was the last fortress of contented Whiggism. In Number 139 Byron parted from Lady Byron, "in the utmost kindness," says Moore. She was going to visit her father, who Avrote to the poet that she would return no more. What mysteries passed in Number 139, part of old Q.'s old house, we shall never really know ; the cause of the separation is said to have been so simple that nobody could ever find it out. Some poets are " gey ill to live wi'," as Mrs. Carlyle said about her son. Some ladies never, never can understand that a man of letters Piccadilly 59 should sometimes be left alone in his den. Byron himself says, that, however much in love he might be at any moment, he always felt, even when with the fair, a hankering to be back in his untidy library. There is a story of Lady Byron's entering the den and asking, "Do I disturb you, Byron?" "Yes, damnably," answered Ckilde Harold, in, shall we say, an intelligible if not a pardonable irritation. Lawyers, doctors, business men are not interrupted by their dear wives when they are at work. The sex understands that their duties are serious. They don't alwa} - s take this view of mere poetry and prose. I have a private theory, an innocent hypothesis, that Lady Byron was jealous of the Muse ; that she left her lord because he said she disturbed liim damnably. Dr. Lushington knew what Lady Byron said at the time ; Mrs. Beecher Stowe told the world what Lady Byron said in later life, but 139 Piccadilly keeps its secret. The skeleton in the closet has " flitted," like the North Country Brownie. Old Q. would have explained the whole mystery by say- ing that " all women are so extremely wrong-headed." That phi- losopher never married, or there might have been another Hegira from 139 Piccadilly. The house is now brave with a uew front, and is occupied by Mr. Algernon Bortkwick, the proprietor of the Morning Post. The house in Piccadilly had this advantage for Byron that it was close to his piiblisher's shop, Mr. Murray's, in Albemarle Street, where that museum of literary antiques still stands, an interesting place of pilgrimage. Apsley House, at Hyde Park Corner, is, of course, historical. The site was originally bought by Lord Bathurst from an old soldier, whom, in reward for his valor at Dettingen, George II. had allowed to squat there with his apple-stall. This proves the slight value of the site under the second George. Here the great duke lived ; here the strange young lady left Bibles at the door instead of cards, here the windows were broken by the populace in the Be- form Bill riots, and the duke had iron shutters put up. Later, 60 Piccadilly when he was in favor again, and when a crowd followed him with cheers, the duke only pointed to his iron shutters. Many windows have been broken in Piccadilly since then. There was a famous riot in February, a very few years ago. The mob had mustered in Trafalgar Square. I met them in Pall Mall, where they were hooting outside the windows of the Carlton Club, and some leader was waving a red flag from the steps. They were not, at that moment, a large mob ; but no police were visible. By some blunder they were stationed in the Mall, behind Pall Mall, not in Pall Mall. I went into my own club, which was eastward of the mob, and heard presently that they had run through the streets, up St. James's, along Piccadilly, through South Audley Street, breaking windows, bursting into shops, throwing gold watches and legs of mutton through the windows of carriages. It was a great field-day for Liberty and the Bights of Man. Next morning the shops had all their shutters up ; the club windows were riddled ; the crowd was in the streets, amused, pleased, but perhaps too startled by its sudden success to begin again at once. It was curious to note how the rioters had always thrown to their left ; on the right hand of St. James's Street the houses had suffered very little, if at all. In Piccadilly the St. James's Club had somehow been spared. The Savile, next door, was in smithereens. Piccadilly has seen plenty of commotion since, and will see plenty more, in the nature of things. It is the highway, or one of the highways, of limitless processions, marching to that Mons Sacer of the park, where we have demonstrations every week. The most famous was that of 1866, when the park gates were closed (legally or illegally) and the crowd, having, half by accident, broken down the iron railings, took possession of the place. We have not yet succeeded in outdoing the Gordon riots of the last century, bat give us time ! The multitude was then unorganized, and did not know Avhat it wanted, or wherefore it had come together. In those re- spects it is greatly advanced, and has all the modern improvements. Piccadilly 61 We know not precisely to what goal it steps, the endless procession of marshalled men with banners that weekly invades Piccadilly. ' THE HORSE GUARDS TRAMPLING BY. But, if the aspiration of the journal of this party, for a time when there " shall be no more Pall Mall," is realized, one may presume that there will also be no Piccadilly. Its mansions may become 62 Piccadilly communistic barracks of the people. Or it may lie in fire-blackened ruins, as part of Paris did twenty years ago. And the trees and grass may grow over the tumbled masonry, and buglosse, or ox- tongue, may flower again in the dry ditches, as it did when Gerard wrote his " Herbal," " the dry ditches about Piccadilly." To this end all cities must inevitably come, even Dean Burgon's ' ' Bose-red city, half as old as time ; " but let lis hope that some centuries will pass before London fol- lows " Memphis and Babylon, and either Thebes, And Priam's towery town with its one beech." What a fascination these lines have, and how many of the people who walk down Piccadilly to-day (members of the Savile Club ex- cluded) can tell the name of their author ? •J" Piccadilly is often the path of empire as well as of revolution. No street was more crowded and blithe, I believe, in the wonderful summer weather of the Jubilee, when feelings of loyal emotion led this chronicler to a part of Galloway which is not thickly populated. There a man and his wife lately came into the village from the country, to settle a strange domestic dispute. The man had done some work on the day before ; the wife reproved him for labor- ing on the Sabbath. He denied that it was the Sabbath, and the couple had to walk to the village to ascertain the truth about the day of the week. In that untrodden wilderness there was not much jubilee, and I cannot say, as an eye-witness, what sort of spec- tacle Piccadilly presented. It was interesting, however, when, after the campaign of Tel el Kebir, our strangely various little force, Indian contingent and all, marched through the cheering street, un- der windows crowded with ladies. The spectacle was curious and stirring, but Tel el Kebir brought in little luck, and soon we had the town in mourning for Khartoum, and saw the pick of our forces depart for futile fighting by the Red Sea. ' Thus the fortunes of Piccadilly 63 empire roll up or down Piccadilly ; now it is an army that passes fresh from battle and victory, now a crowd of angry men eager for a happier and easier life, now a tattered regiment of malcontents with stones in their hands and curses on their lips. 1 ' Then there comes the usual press of life, the fair la- dies driving behind splendid horses, sandwich men in their prison of wood, as if undergoing a Chinese punishment, the Horse Guards tram- pling by in helmet and corselet, the most magnificent example of Eng- lishmen gorgeously arrayed in pomp of war ; girls selling matches, small boys screaming out " Winner," with sheets of damp sporting intelligence in their hands ; the}' run and roar with special speed and energy on the Derby Day. The daudies are walking delicately ; the omnibuses rumbling, the country visitors are gaping at the shops, or at the changes where the Duke's arch used to stand, with the grotesque statue " to show him what people thought he was like." Piccadilly is an epitome of London, in all but its trade, a street never quiet, even when there comes a fog so deep that boys run about with lighted links yelling for patronage. At night, in the season, it is a sight to see the long line of carriages orderly arrayed, waiting for their masters and mistresses, who are attending some great functions in some great house. The street seems untraver sable, wild with horses, shouts, frantic whistles for cabs, lights, and all the mingled bustle of setting down and taking up. But it is traversed somehow ; the London coach- men and cabmen must possess extraordinary nerve and presence of 'SMALL BOYS, SCKEA51IXG OUT 'WINNER!' 64 Piccadilly mind. Occasionally there is a carnage accident, there conies a run- away horse, or a fight arises between two carters of the old school, who do not disdain a bout of fisticuffs. Then a dense circle of spec- tators gathers in a moment ; you may almost make a crowd in Lon- don streets by stooping to tie your boot-lace. The public is greedy of spectacle and emotion ; a prodigious number of persons are ready to stare complacently at even the most ordinary occurrence. A ' AT NIGHT, IN THE SEASON, IT IS A SIGHT TO SEE THE LONG LINE OF CARRIAGES, ORDERLY ARRAYED, ■WAIT- ING." difference of opinion as to distance and fare between a cabman and his client is at once surrounded by a " gallery." Mr. Anstey, in his " Voces Populi," is the admirably observant recorder of what the populace says on such occasions, and very humorous and pointed are its remarks, xevy instructive the fashions in which its unsought verdict veers. But all this is true enough of any London street. Piccadilly is like the rest, except for its large, if not stately, build- ings, its airiness and fringe of green, its picturesque windings and ups and downs. It is by no means the most interesting of our Piccadilly 65 thoroughfares, because of its comparative novelty, its comparative lark of tradition. The High Street of Edinburgh has memories to fill a volume ; memories courtly, chivalrous, ghostly, sanguinary, magical, relig- ious. All moods and passions have breathed in it since •' Startled burghers fled afar, The slogan of the Border war." " Each stone you tread has its history," and so have the stones, could they cry out, of the Higli Street in Oxford, or the lanes of York, or the streets about the Tower. But Piccadilly is yet too fresh and novel, and will scarce yield a few pages while other streets might till a quarto of memories. It is so changed, too, that we can hardly fancy what it was like when George Selwyn walked along it to White's, or Lord March drove by with the Zamperini. In going from Pall Mall to the park, or westward, it is more pleas- ant to avoid Piccadilly, and fare diagonally across the pretty Green Park, where the little boys are playing a kind of cricket, and the little girls are busy at " rounders," a rudimentary sort of baseball, and lovers are telling their tale beneath the hawthorns, and the dingy London sheep are browsing. Someone informs me that he was once stepping westward by this route, when he met Mr. Thack- eray, whom he knew, also making tor Kensington, and shunning the noise and glare of Piccadilly. They walked a little distance together, and then Mr. Thackeray confessed that he was meditating the Muse, and my friend left him. The poem he was trying to beat out was one of his best, the " Lines on a Venice Love Lamp," addressed, I think, to a daughter of Mr. Dickens, "Mrs. Kather- ine's Lantern " is the name of the piece : " Lady, do you know the tune? Ah, we all of us have hummed it ! I've an old guitar has thrummed it ! Under many a changing moon. 66 Piccadilly Shall I try it? Do-Re-Mi, What is this ? Ma foi, the fact is That my hand is out of practice. And my poor old fiddle cracked is, And a man — I let the truth out — Who has almost every tooth out, Cannot sing as once he sung When he was young, as you are young, When he was young, and lutes were strung, And love-lamps in the casement hung.'' One likes to think of Thackeray, coming westward, perhaps, from Hanway Court, " Coming from a gloomy court, Place of Israelite resort," carrying to a girl the little lamp, with " the initials K. and E.," and touchiDg again the old cracked lute, and humming his do, re, mi, within hearing of the roar of Piccadilly. Who knows what thoughts are in the minds of the people we pass, and if one of them is, perhaps, a poet, his head full of fancies and musical num- bers ! The old guitar is a good deal thrummed in Piccadilly, some- times to a golden tune on the flags, where Old Q.'s ghost would find plenty of the ladies he liked to watch. The dancing music behind the wide windows is chiming to the same melody, do, re, nil, in the ears of golden youth. But what have we to do with all that, we whose " poor old fiddle cracked is," except to keep out of the way of the carriages, and, hailing a modest omnibus, get westward, skirting the Park, where, even in London, the limes are fragrant in the soft moonlit air. Enough of racket, enough of the spectacle of men and women, bustling and changing about as vigorously as if they had never heard that " life would be tolerable but for its pleas- rues." Let them keep charging forward, "going on," they say, from one crowded house to another crowded house, whither the people they have just left follow them, and so to a third, and a fourth, and to bed at last when rosy-fingered dawn is creeping up Piccadilly 67 " THE COUNTRY VISITORS ARE GAPING AT THE SHOP9. from the east, dawn that makes even London streets mysteriously fair, and that lavishes her amber and purple splendors on half- empty, jaded Piccadilly. 68 Piccadilly This essay is not precisely a Praise of Piccadilly. The writer is one who, like the good Lord James of Douglas, " would liefer hear the lark sing than the mouse cheep." To a taste not fond of cities no street is very fascinating, not even that Florentine road by the yellow river, within sight of the olives and the airy purple hills. Much less, then, can any thoroughfare in the huge, smoky, choking London appeal to one with any charm, or win any affec- tion. But there is one comfort : no Londoner cares for what is said about London. The place bewitches many women, perhaps most women, and many men, with an inexplicable spell. Like Captain Morris they prefer " the sweet shady side of Pall Mall " to any moor or valley, hill or woodland. What it is that allures them, beyond a kind of instinct of gregarionsness, an attractive force in proportion to the mass of human beings, one cannot conceive. London is full of people, comfortably established people, who have no business there, and why in the world do they come '? It is a mystery, for they are not even in society, using the narrow sense of the word ; they only hear of the feasts and dances next day, and of the scandals the day after to-morrow. AVith the latest rumors of the newest beauties, or the oldest wild dowagers, they make no acquaintance at first hand. They prefer Eegent Street and the shops, or murky Victoria Street and the "stores" to Piccadilly. Neither they, nor anyone else, is offended by the expression of a distaste for the great wen. Even born Londoners have no civic patriotism. You cannot expect a man to be proud of Bloomsbmy, or haughtily to announce that he was born in Bayswater. No poet now would write, like Spenser, " At length they all to merry London came, To merry London, my most kindly nurse, That to me gave this life's first native source." Bather would he think of London in De Quincey's mood, and speak of Piccadilly as a " stony-hearted stepmother." THE BOULEVARDS OF PARIS By Francisque Sarcey THE ILLUSTRATIONS BY G. JEANNIOT A B0ULEVABD1ER— ENGLISH T1TE. THE BOULEVARDS OF PARIS I. THE BOULEVARD— THE BOULEVAKDIERS IN every great capital there is some comer, some spot — a some- thing — a promenade, perhaps, where it gathers and concen- trates itself, as it were ; which is the centre of its moral ac- tivity, and, as we say nowadays, its characteristic. AVith us, that corner, that spot is the boulevard. I do not exactly mean that the boulevard is Paris; but surely, without the boulevard we should not understand Paris. I shall always remember one of the keenest emotions of my youth. I had been obliged, owing to my duties at the time, to banish myself to the provinces, where I had remained almost two years, confined within a small town. The hour came at last for me to return to Paris and once more to enter into its possession. Hardly had I deposited my trunk at the hotel, when I ran to the Madeleine and clambered on top of one of the omnibuses that ply along the line of the boulevards to the Bastille. I had no business at the Bastille, but I was almost crazy with joy at breathing, during the drive, that perfume of Parisian life which arises so strongly from the asphalt of the boulevard and the macadam of its roadway. It was evening, the gas-jets (for electricity was yet unknown) spangled the darkness with yellow lights ; the shops, all opened, shone brilliantly ; the crowd was strolling up and down the wide 72 The Boulevards of Paris sidewalks. It was not one of those eager; breathless crowds that seem carried away in a vortex of business, such as one sees in Lon- don ; it was composed of loungers who seemed to be walking about for their pleasure, who were cheering to the sight, and diffused, as it were, a feeling of happiness in the air. From time to time the om- nibus passed before a theatre, where long lines of people were al- ready waiting for the opening of the box-office ; everybody was en- joying himself and laughing. As we descended toward the Bastille the passers-by became less numerous, the groups less compact, but there still remained the same air of happy animation. I do not know, but it seemed to me that the very atmosphere was lighter, more luminous ; it sparkled with youth and life ; I felt subtile fumes of gayety mounting to my brain, and I remember that I could not refrain from clapping my hands, to the great scandal of my neighbors, who thought that I was a little mad. " Ah ! how beautiful it is — the boulevard ! " I exclaimed, and I breathed deep draughts of that air charged with joyous and spiritual elec- tricity. I do not believe that strangers arriving in Paris are subject to such strong impressions. I have been able, however, to cpiestion some of them, and they have confessed to me that the sight of a population who felt it a happiness to live in their gayety, and who preserved an undefinable aspect of amiable elegance, had strongly affected them. This characteristic aspect of the Parisian boulevard had charmed them from the very first ; it was there that they had felt the heart of the great city beat. The boulevard ! You understand me ? I mean the boulevard that descends from the Madeleine to the Bastille. Under the Empire large streets were opened in Paris, to which, by analogy, the name of boulevards was given. But with us those boidevards do not count. There is but one boulevard, the one that our fathers and grandfathers have known, frequented, and loved. It used to be much more eiitertaiuin"' in their time than in ours. BOULEVARD DES 1TALIENS — A THOROUGH PARI5IENNE. 74 The Boulevards of Paris Alas ! yes, I am old enough to have witnessed the transformation. Fifty or sixtj 7 years ago, Paris, then confined within the limits of its former walls, was, to tell the truth, only a very big small town. It had more character aud more physiognomy. The boulevard was less imposing, less solemn ; it did not flow uniformly between two rows of five-storied houses ; it met with accidents in its route. Ah ! who will give us again what was formerly known as the Boulevard du Crime ? where, in the neighborhood of the Ambigu-Comique, a collection of theatres formed a vast semicircle about a broad ojien place. What animation ! what gayety ! what jollity at six o'clock in the evening (that was then the hour of the play), when all the petits bourgeois used to pour in crowds from the transverse streets and form around the ten or twelve theatres crowded into a rather re- stricted space, interminable and shifting queues. The venders of liquorice water filled the air with their cries — d lafratcfie ! qui rent boire ? Upon handcarts were piled up pyramids of oranges and of barley-sugar. Street urchins ran along the lines, offering pro- grammes for sale. From every side came banter and laughter, and sometimes even pushes, under the paternal eye of the policeman. All that has disappeared — the ground cost too much ; every lot of it has been utilized by contractors, who have constructed enor- mous houses of six stories, where from top to bottom, from floor to floor, bustles a population which has perhaps lost its former bon- homie, even if it has preserved the same fund of wit and merriment. In those days the heart of the Parisian boulevard was the theatre of the Gymnase ; and, descending toward the Bastille, the Porte Saint-Martin, the Ambigu, the Boulevard du Crime, and beyond that the part which is now all built over, but which, in those days, offered picturesque promenades to the explorer of un- known and desert regions. But it is a constant law, observed in the increase of capitals, that they move with a slow and continuous movement toward the west. The Boulevards of Paris 75 The heart of the boulevard has changed its place little by little ; from the Gymnase to the Boulevard Montmartrs, then to the Boulevard des Ital- iens and the Boule- vard des Capucines. There it is to-day. For the Parisian, the boulevard in general comprises, if you like, the space from the Madeleine to the Bastille ; but that is merely, so to speak, a geograph- ical expression. The real boulevard, what is known in our slang as the boulevard, the bou- levard par excel- lence, is the one that stretches from the Opera to the rue Mont mart re. And even then, the true, the real boulevardier finds great diffi- culty in getting further in the direction of the Madeleine than the rue du Helder. It is this little space, says M. Victor Fournel, of not more than half a square kilometre, where are arrayed Tortoni's, the Cafe Anglais, and the Theatre des Varietes, that con- tains for the boulevardier all his native soil. Beyond is the un- known, the barbaric, " the provinces." The boulevard is the domain of the boulevardier, it is his salon ; TWO TVrES. 76 The Boulevards of Paris he would like to drive away from it the .intruders — those who do not belong to his set. When the boulevardier travels ( he sometimes travels), he takes with him the dust of the boulevards on the soles of his shoes. He wanders about like a lost soul till he meets some- body, man or woman, who reminds him of his dear boulevard. Then he dilates and breathes more freely. At bottom this fluttering creature that bears the name of boule- vardier — a species, I must say, which is becoming rarer every day — is, notwithstanding his air of emancipation and scepticism, the veriest slave of routine. His life is ruled like music-paper. He saunters twice a day through his domain ; the first time before din- ner, from four to six o'clock; the second time from ten o'clock to midnight, or one o'clock in the morning, after the play. For noth- ing in the world would he fail in these habits. Besides, he has other obligations ; it is not permissible for him to miss a first night at the Varietes, the Vaudeville, the Gymnase, or the Ambigu. Finally, the true boulevardier could not dispense, whatever might be the state of his stomach, with a supper at impossible hours at the Cafe Eiche or at the Maison d'Or. Example : my excellent col- league and friend, Aurelien Scholl. He — he is the king of the boulevardiers ; he will probably be the last. After him, the species will doubtless disappear, a sjjecies of which he will have been the most brilliant specimen. Between ourselves, with the exception of him and a few others, the boule- vardier is a rather mediocre type of the esprit parisien. His great fault is that he is imbued with a sense of his intellectual and moral superiority over the rest of humanity. He has a word which is constantly recurring to his lips in conversation, and of which he makes immoderate use when he wishes to judge a man or an object, a book or a play. He says : " So-and-so is Parisian," or " Such and such a play is Parisian ; " or else, " It is very Parisian, what you are telling me ; Not a bit Parisian, so-and-so's novel ! " And ac- cording to the degree of Parisianism of the play, the novel, or the The Boulevards of Paris 77 author, they rise or fall in the consideration of the boulevardier. Nothing equals the esteem of the boulevardier for whatever is Parisian ; nothing equals his disdain for what is not. I write in the Annates Politique* et IAtteraires, a review which is THE BOULEVARD AT THE EASTLLLE. (A relay of horses— news-vender.) modelled somewhat on the plan of your American magazines, and which has obtained a great circulation in France. It has sixty thousand subscribers, an enormous number for our country ; but these subscribers almost all live in the provinces ; the review is not read on the boulevards. Accordingly, when I chance to speak of it to certain friends of mine among the boulevardiers, you shoidd see their disdainful faces. 78 The Boulevards of Paris " Les Annales ? . . . Never heard of it ! " " But, you know, it has a circulation of sixty thousand." " Possibly, but it's not a Parisian journal." And they always hark back to that. To be Parisian or not to be, that is the question ! To their mind there are no good or bad books, absurd pleasantries, or witty sallies. There are Parisian plays, Parisian novels, a Parisian wit, a Parisian elegance. What may be the precise significance of that sempiternal adjec- tive, irritating and alluring, which is always flying about our boule- vards'? What is meant by Parisian ? It is a word that can be understood, but hardly analyzed. Parisian wit is like those theat- rical reviews of the year's events, which amuse the boulevard, and which would cause nobody to laugh outside of our city limits. In order to define Parisian wit, one of my colleagues made use, one day, of an ingenious comparison. He told how there was once made, at the gates of Blois, an ex- quisite cream which, tasted while it was fresh, left on the palate the sensation of a delicious sorbet. King Louis XV., who was given to good cheer, established postal relays from Blois to Versailles, that the cream might be brought quite fresh to his table. But exquisite as was the cream, it had the great fault of being unable to bear transportation. At the end of two hours it lost its aroma — that undefinable something which gave it its value. Now, Parisian charm, Parisian seductiveness, on the stage, in the newspaper, in books, or in conversation, are somewhat like' the cream of King Louis XV. Sipped on the spot, it is exquisite ; transported elsewhere, it gets sour. Modern science, like Louis XV., may invent new means of transportation, the spirit of Paris, the " cream " of Paris, cannot stand the voyage. And that is what lends to Paris itself its particular attraction. People go there to taste its froth, its cream, and its dainties. The trouble is that they bring with them, from all over the world, all sorts of exotic messes, spiced and violent, burning the palate, caviar or kari, red pepper The Boulevards of Paris 79 and pimento, which corrupt and alter our national cuisine. And thus it is that Parisian taste is beginning to go, and that the cream of Paris ac- quires little by little a vague odor of pale ale, of kiim- mel, and of whiskey. With his over - weening pretensions to wit, and espec- ially to Parisian wit, the boulevardier is often 1 tut a fool rubbed with the wit of the Figaro (which has not much left itself). Besides, he is almost invariably quite useless. Allow me to give you a broad sketch of the life of the boulevard ; you may infer from it exactly what may be the life of the boidevard- ier, and of how little value is that individual. Eight o'clock in the morning. — The boulevard is deserted ; a regi- ment of sweepers is making its toilet, cleaning its sidewalks, and putting everything in order for the afternoon. Nine o'clock. — The cafes open their doors ; the waiters, half asleep (for they went to bed at four o'clock in the morning), pile up pyramids of chairs before the doors, and wipe off with arm-strokes TI1E BOULEVARD AT G A.M. Inspector of highways, nnd sweepers. 80 The Boulevards of Paris. the marble tables. The passers-by are rare. A few gentlemen of leisure, in soft felt hats, saunter slowly along while reading their newspaper. Half-past ten.— The boulevard begins to be animated. It is the hour of the aperitif : the cafes are rilled with drinkers sipping pale absinthe and black bitters. The restaurants are preparing the plat du jour : hot whiffs of cooking arise from the basement gratings and provoke the appetite. Midday. — Breakfast time ; the taverns, the breweries, the bouil- lons are crammed with people. The influential stock-brokers eat at the Cafe Anglais, or at Tortoni's. While they swallow their dozen oysters and their Chateaubriand aux poinm.es soufflees, their clerks, full of business, come and inform them of the latest quota- tions and jot down their orders. The men of letters and fashion- able chroniqueurs eat at the Maison d'Or or at the Cafe Riche, and talk the latest gossip. Strangers prefer to go to the Cafe de la Paix or to Paillard's ; finally the small fry of employees, bourgeois of modest means, and retired officers, crowd into the Bouillon Paiisien, into Zimmer's or Pousset's breweries. One o'clock. — You sip your coffee, you smoke your cigar. Two o'clock. — Nobody now, that is to say, no loungers. Every- one is attending to his business. The carriages, in an enormous but constantly interrupted torrent, have great difficulty in moving on the crowded roadway. •Four o'clock. — This is the hour of the newspaper, the most curi- ous, the most characteristic hour of the boulevard. There is then, as it were, a burst of fever, a renewal of activity. On days of im- portant events, one 1 is obliged to force one's way with elbows and even fists in order to obtain a sheet of paper at the kiosks, that are almost taken by storm. Even in the banality of everyday life, the boulevard assumes at the newspaper hour a peculiar aspect. The parcels of newspapers smelling of fresh ink are piled up before the kiosks-; the venders fold and unfold the sheets, the earners run J3lM»ttjf« BOULEVARD BEAU MA Kc 1IAIS— AN ACTRESS. 82 The Boulevards of Paris. along the sidewalks, and the purchasers throw themselves with avidity upon the latest news. Ah ! those newspapers readers ! What a fine chapter might be devoted to them. They can be di- vided into several categories, all equally interesting. There are the hurried ones who glance at the despatches, the Bourse quotations, fold their sheet, and never open it again ; the gourmets, who slip the paper into their pocket without opening it, but with the intention of relishing it quietly, after dinner, with feet in slippers, before the fireplace ; the passionate ones, who always buy the same paper, the one that reflects their opinions ; the sceptics, who buy papers dia- metrically opposed to one another, and give themselves the malign pleasure of comparing them, and noting their contradictions. Six o'clock. — Time for a vermouth ; some play dominoes. This used to be the hour when in certain cafes men of letters and artists were wont to meet and gossip about the topics of the day. Thus were organized small associations, half closed to outsiders, some of which have become famous. Those customs have disappeared. Life nowadays is too busy to allow one to spend all one's time in trifling and conversing. There are no more divans, reunions where one used to meet in the back room of some bier-house or fashion- able cafe, men of wit talking for their own pleasure, or for the amusement of the gallery. The boulevardier is reduced now to drinking his absinthe or his vermouth alone, watching for amuse- ment the ceaseless current of loungers and of original and exotic figures that stroll up and down the boulevard. At seven o'clock or half-past seven, dinner. Paris is, of all cities, the second city where one can, according to whim, eat the dearest or the cheapest. But on the boulevards there is little choice ; the rents are so enormous that they oblige the managers of the restau- rants to maintain very high prices. Foreigners, beware ! You are exploited in Paris just as we are probably pounced upon in New York. Capitals have nothing to learn from one another in that respect. The Boulevards of Paris. 83 Nine o'clock. — You go to the theatre, smoking your cigar, while speculators on the Bourse crowd into the vast hall of the Credit Foncier and cry out with much noise the morrow's operations. It is what is called the petite Bourse du soir. Midnight. — The theatres close. This is the time when the aspect of the boulevards is most varied. All classes of society mingle, el- bowing and pushing one another. Ladies from the Faubourg Saiut- Germain alight from their coupes, and stop for a cup of chocolate at Tortoni's ; on the sidewalk they run against "night beauties," women with painted faces who ogle at belated provincials ; club- men with collars turned up and a cigar between their lips, turn their steps toward the clubs, where they intend to in dulge in a game of bac- carat. The dramatic critics rush to their faf^^oV^ newspapers in or- der to improvise their accounts of the play. And conspicuous above the incongruous throng, a legion of ragged hawkers, whom we call camelols, echo one another's voices on the boulevards, howling ob- scene titles, proffering to the public ignoble papers fidl of nastiness and slanders. This one of the worst offences of Paris, this deluge of filthy publications which are cried out with impunity in our streets A TYPE OF JOURNALIST. 84 The Boulevards of Paris without the police daring to interfere. All reputations are assaulted in them ; the most honorable men are dragged into the mire. — Ask for the scandal about M. Eouvier ! — See the truth about the jobbery of M. Jules Ferry ! — Eead the private life of Leo the Xlllth ! All this you hear cried out at the street crossings. These re- pugnant pamphlets are thrust under your eyes and bawled into your ears. Professional " barkers " of defiled sheets soil with their com- mentaries the ministers of yesterday and those of to-morrow. And the mob hears, listens to, is influenced by such infamous d< 'lations. And any foreigner who were to take literally, from the rue du Helder to the rue Moutmartre, all that is howled there of disgust- ing nonsense, would wonder where France had come to, and what sort of a nation it was that allowed evildoers to distribute placards in which the most respectable of its public men and functionaries were thus freely scoffed at. One o'clock. — People sup, or rather used to sup. For the late supper is tending to disappear from our customs. Under the Em- pire, our gilded youth were wont to assemble in certain " high life " restaurants, toward one o'clock in the morning, with women who were not all of the first order. They would get tipsy on champagne, and it was the thing to break a great deal of crockery. Certain sup- per parties in the "big sixteen " of the Cafe Anglais are legendary. One could sup, however, with less expense and less rumpus in other establishments, where could always be found numerous and gallant company. These establishments seem, since the siege, to have lost their clients, both men and women, either because these have less money to spend, or because they have become more reasonable. Fashionable young men now pass their nights at the club, while others go virtuously to bed ! There are still noctambulists in Paris, but they are becoming rarer and rarer. At three o'clock the boulevard is at rest. It is almost deserted ; no more carriages ; here and there a belated wayfarer regaining his •fe-,«...'X- BOtXEVARD ST. MARTIN. 86 The Boulevards of Paris home, whose steps resound on the asphalt ; or some drunkard who is dozing hidden behind a tree, while the policemen silently stride along the sidewalk. At that hour life begins to awaken at the Halles. We have had a bird's-eye view of the boulevard. Let us now pass to details. Let us take a walk, glancing, as we pass by, at the shops, the monuments, the restaurants, and the cafes. The restaurant is one of the glories of our Paris. II. THE CAFES AND THE RESTAURANTS. We are very proud, we French, of our cooking ; we consider it the best in the world, and this opinion must be founded on fact, since the sovereigns of Europe, as well as the millionaires of America, borrow our cooks and follow our receipts. Therefore let us set forth, starting from the church of the Made- leine, and advance at a leisurely pace, without hurrying, like good bourgeois to whom the doctor has recommended exercise. Here is the Grand Cafe. It is an immense establishment, lux- urious, gilded on all sides, ornamented with paintings, and fur- nished with softly cushioned seats. In the hall that runs along the boulevard stay the peaceful folk who write their correspondence or read the papers while sipping their absinthe. In the rear opens an immense gallery specially appropriated to billiard players ; there every day famous professors come for practice, the illustrious Vignaux, the no less celebrated Slosson, his emulator and his rival ; the one phlegmatic, slow, and methodical ; the other nervous and quick as gunpowder. The interest in billiards with us is beginning to abate ; but a few years ago it used to be a rage, a furor. Whenever a match was going on between two great champions, an enormous crowd would station itself in front of the cafe and greet the victor's name with exclamations or vociferations, according as he belonged to our The Boulevards of Paris J7 country or to another. Bets were exchanged, and sometimes dis- cussions degenerated into fights. One evening, I remember, toward 1886, I was returning from the theatre. I was preparing to cross the boule- vard, when I saw from afar a great gathering, heard loud shouts, and saw hats thrown in t h e a i r . "What is it? Is the Opera house on fire ? Has the President of the Republic been assassinated ? " An individual who was passing by gazed at me with an air of pity. " Don't y o u know the great news? " he said. " Yignaux is a good first ! " And from the glance which he threw me, as he noticed my moderate enthusiasm, I felt that this patriot held me in low esteem. While the Grand Cafe is frequented by the billiard-players, the Cafe de la Paix has as customers the elegant and wealthy young men of Paris, those whom we call in our slang gommeux, pschut- teux, becarre (for every year we coin some new word). Toward five o'clock they arrive, irreproachably gloved, with wide shirt fronts, spick and span, wearing dazzling silk hats, and toying with NEWSBOYS UN THE BOl'LEYARD I)ES CAPL'CINES. 8S The Boulevards of Paris silver-handled sticks. When the temperature is not too cool, they sit out in the open, on the terrace, order a vermouth or a sherry cobbler, and stare motionless, without saying a word, at the Pari- siennes hurrying by. The Cafe de la Paix is one of the most prosperous in Paris ; all those who have managed it have made fortunes and have re- tired, at the end of a few years, with pretty savings. One day, when I was diuing there with a friend (you dine well, but your purse suffers), I noticed a very solemn gentleman who was moving about between the tables, scrutinizing everything with the eye of a master, and reprimanding the waiters. " You see that personage ? " said my friend. " Yes ; undoubtedly he's the patron." " Perfectly. Do you know what the amount of his fortune is ? " " I confess that I don't." " He enjoys an annual income of five hundred thousand francs.-" " That's a very pretty sum ! And doesn't he consider himself rich enough yet ? Does he continue to work ? " " His story is curious, and I'll tell it to you. Five years ago, he wished to retire. He had begun as a scullion in a low eating- house ; when he found himself master of several millions he re- solved to amuse himself and have a good time. He sold the Cafe de la Paix, bought a superb hotel in Paris, a fine chateau in the provinces, surrounded himself with servants, and for a few weeks imagined that he was the happiest man in the world. Before long he changed his mind." " Really ? " " You will see. The good man had pluckily toiled all his life, he had never had time to occupy himself with anything but his kitchen ; he was entirely illiterate, and his wife was hardly better educated than he. They had no taste either for reading, the thea- tre, or the museums ; they had nothing to do ; the days began to seem to them cruelly long — in short, they were soon bored to The Boulevards of Paris 89 death. They tried to make friends, but they were ashamed to seek for them iu their former class, in the class of cooks and scul- lery boys. On the other hand, the real bourgeois found no pleas- ure in associating with vulgar and unpolished upstarts. Our friend and his wife gave exquisite dinners to which nobody came. . m ^ j A-iL -'■■'-■■■' '*r-'~ -ft | LE CARBEFUUR DES ECRASES. (Boulevard Montmartre.) They proffered courtesies which nobody returned. At the end of a few months of this mode of life, the restaurateur and his wife could stand it no longer : ' I have enough of it,' he said to his better half. ' I feel that I am pining away — I am losing my appe- tite — I can no longer sleep — I cannot exist without work. I am going to buy back the Cafe de la Paix.' He bought it back, and 90 The Boulevards of Paris. immediately, with, work, lie recovered his health arid spirits. You . see him from here. What activity ! What animation ! He is now making his eleventh million." " And what will he do with his money ? " " Have no care ; he has a son of fifteen who will soon under- take to squander it with actresses and ladies of easy morals." And while I am speaking of these ladies, I will show you in passing the cafe where they most do gather— the Cafe Peters, next to the Vaudeville — every night at midnight, after the theatre, they ascend to the first floor, where they wait for Fortune to appear to them in the shape of a wealthy foreigner. But enough of that. Let us throw a thankful glance at the Cafe Napolitain, where you get the best water-ices in Paris, at the restaurant Paillard, whose mcutre d'hotel, Joseph, had the honor of serving for a year your richissime Mr. Vanderbilt, and let us come at once to one of our oldest and most celebrated cafes — the Cafe Tortoni. Tortoni ! The name does not suggest much to you, but to us Parisians it is full of reminiscences. I have said that this estab- lishment is one of the oldest in Paris. It was founded in 1798 by two Italians, Valloni and Tortoni. It soon became fashionable ; gentlemen of the long robe and functionaries frequented it. Among the habitues was a lawyer named Spolor, whose skill at billiards was surprising. Prince Talleyrand had such pleasure in seeing Spolor play, he felt such confidence in his game, that he in- vited him one day to his house and presented him to one of his friends, the general receiver for the department of the Vosges, also a great billiard-player, and very proud of his talent. A bet was made, a solemn match was engaged between Spolor and the re- ceiver, who lost in a few hours forty thousand francs. . . . You see that it is sometimes useful to know how to play billiards. One of the most curious types of the Cafe Tortoni was Pievost, one of the waiters, whose spine was as supple as his conscience, and The Boulevards of Paris 91 who never approached you unless bowed to the ground, and asking in his softest tones : " Pardon rne ! A thousand pardons ! Is monsieur good enough to desire anything '? " It was exquisite. What was no less so — to him — was that in giving change he kept the best part of it for himself ; if detected by chance he had but to repeat : " Pardon me ! pardon me ! a thousand pardons ! " Nowadays the Cafe Tortoni is no longer haunted by diplomats like Talleyrand, but by journalists and men of letters. Toward six o'clock are found now and then gathered around its tables a few men of wit : Albert Wolff, Emile Blavet, Henry Fouquier, and finally Aurelien Scholl, the most brilliant talker of Paris. Seholl is the living incarnation of what we call French wit — a wit made of lightness, of fantasy, and also of sarcasm. Seholl's bite is cruel ; it is imprudent to irritate him, for sooner or later he wreaks his revenge, and as he handles the sword with rare skill, he is as dangerous on the field as in the newspaper. If a propos of the boulevard I speak to you of Aurelien Scholl, it is because both are intimately related. The boulevard would not exist without Aurelien Scholl ; Scholl could not live without the boulevard. He passes his whole existence on the boulevard ; he lounges, he smokes his cigar, he converses, he breakfasts, he sups (andsups well, too) on the boulevard. For this Parisian is gifted with a formidable appetite, and wields the best fork I know. Recently I had occasion to make a little trip with him. IVe had gone, with a few brethren of the press, to hear, at Nice, Glinka's " Life for the Tzar," on the invitation of the impresario Gunsbourg. We tarried there eight days, and I can say, without exaggeration, that those eight days were spent in eating. The table was con- stantly set, and what a table ! Twelve dishes at every meal, gener- ous wines, and fine liqueurs. When we departed we were all ill, our stomachs were on fire, 92 The Boulevards of Paris SUNDAY, ON THE BOULEVARD DU TEMPLE. (" Where shall we dine ? ") and. when we got into the cars, after a last breakfast more copious even than the others, we heaved a sigh of relief. At last we were to be allowed to fast for a few hours ! Scholl was with us. as 1 The Boulevards of Paris 93 said, and was lugging an enormous valise. Hardly had the train set forth, than Scholl opened his valise and pulled forth, with the most perfect equanimity, a pile of sandwiches and a bottle of pale ale. We stared at him with stupefaction. " What are you going to do with these provisions ? " I asked of him. " Why, absorb them, with your permission." " We have just risen from breakfast." " Nothing makes me feel so hollow as a railroad journey." It must be that the boulevard makes Aurelien Scholl feel quite as hollow, for he treats himself every night, so I am told, to a won- derful supper at the Cafe Riche or at the Cafe Anglais. The wait- ers in these establishments qiiake before him ( Scholl is very diffi- cult to please and falls into a violent rage if his roast beef a la Chdteaubriand is not cooked to the right point), and relieve him of his cane and hat with all the demonstrations of humility and re- spect. I mentioned a moment ago the Cafe Anglais. This world-re- nowned establishment is situated on the Boulevard des Italiens, next to the former Opera-Comique. It is nowadays somewhat neglected by young and elegant society, and is especially frequented by great financiers, by a set of money-changers and bankers. But in old times, thirty or forty years ago, with what splendor shone the Cafe Anglais ! and how many memories cling to it ! The dining- room of the first floor, the " big sixteen " of which I was telling you a moment ago, has seen all the gentlemen, all the high livers, all the celebrated artists of France and foreign 1 countries pass through it. But let us go on. Here is the Maison d'Or, where our great novelist, Alexandre Dumas the elder, elected for more than a year his residence. Here is Brebant's, which, during the siege of Paris in 1871, found means, notwithstanding the scarcity of provisions, to furnish its clients with varied dishes, and even with white bread. Here is Desire Beaurain's, where you can eat excellent bouilla- The Boulevards of Paris 95 baisse ; here is the Cafe Marguery, the Cafe Prevost, and finally, at the other extremity, toward the Bastille, the famous Cafe Turc, where, for my part, I have never seen a Turk, but only a crescent that is figured above the entrance, and thus justified the name of the cafe. III. THE SHOPS OF THE BOULEVARD. You may well imagine that my intention is not to describe in detail all the shops that line the boulevard. A volume would not suffice; besides I know them very imperfectly, as I enter them as little as possible and prefer to stay at home. But I wish to speak of a few great merchants whose celebrity is European and who participate in the beautifying of our favorite promenade. In the first rank, I should mention the confectioner Boissier. During eleven months of the year his richly painted shop is fairly quiet and almost deserted ; but from the first of December an im- mense crowd invades it, and it is impossible to move and secure at- tention. Two confectioners thus divide fashionable custom : Mar- ojuis for chocolates, Boissier for bonbons. Is it that sweets from them are any better than from the corner grocer's ? I would not dare affirm it ; it is the name' that is sought for. A gentleman could not decently offer a woman of the world a bag of comfits that came from any other place than Boissier's. Fashion and vanity preclude it. You make a present of a box signed Boissier, it proves that you have paid very dear for it, that you have not looked at ex- pense ; your reputation for gallantry is saved. You are not ignorant of the influence that a pretty woman's eyes can exert over a purchaser. How resist the charm of a gra- cious smile ? How put aside the object proffered by a white and dimpled hand ? The manager of the Maison Boissier, who kens the weaknesses of the Iranian heart, is careful to engage, during the holiday season, a whole regiment of pleasing damsels who bewitch the public. These poor girls deserve some credit for preserving 96 The Boulevards of Paris their spirits and gayety, for during two weeks they enjoy but a few hours of rest. All day long they wait on customers ; in the even- ing they make up parcels and place inside the boxes the visiting cards which they have received. This work is of the most delicate kind. A moment of distrac- tion, of thoughtlessness, may occasion catastrophes. Last year one of my friends, married to a very jealous woman, had gone into Boissier's to purchase his Christmas presents. He chose two bon- bonnieres, one for his wife, the other for Mile. Z., a charming ac- tress of the Theatre Francais ; he left in care of the saleswoman two cards, each with a dedicatory inscription. The poor girl was clumsy enough to make so bad a mistake that the next morning the actress received the present intended for the wife, and the wife re- ceived the gift intended for the actress. I need not dwell on the scene that ensued. My friend implored for pardon on both knees, he tore out his hair with despair. The outraged spouse was inflex- ible and sued for divorce. The most comical part of the adventure was that the unfortunate, rebuffed by the rigor of his wife, fled to the actress for consolation, and that the latter closed her door on him, accusing him of having deceived her. What disasters may a box of bonbons cause ! But let us leave Boissier's and pursue our way. Hardly have we taken a few steps before a succulent odor of truffles, an agree- able smell of cooking, rises to our nostrils. We stand before the establishment of Potel