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CHAPTER III
BOSTON PREFERRED ATURALLY enough, next to Boston Common comes
Boston Preferred!
For the term can very well be used in referring to Beacon Hill, which
edges and
over looks the Common and is still the
finest residence section of the city. And this Boston Preferred, this
Beacon
Hill, still stands for the exclusiveness, the permanence, the fixity,
of Boston
society; it stands for the social cohesion of the city.
Beacon Hill is still
of very
considerable altitude, even though it was long ago lowered, by vigorous
cutting-down, from the triple-peaked height that it was originally when
it gave
Boston its first and grandiose name of Tri-Mountain. The triple-peak
disappeared and. a single rounded top remained. The State House stands
on the
present summit of the hill, and the top of its great gold dome is at
the same
height as was the top of the hill itself originally. The hill is still
so steep
that in places there are lengths of iron handrails set into and against
the
buildings for the aid of pedestrians in icy weather, and there are
notices at
the foot of some of the hills to warn vehicles not to attempt them when
the
slopes are icy but to take some roundabout course instead – with
Bostonian
attention to detail, the particular course being suggested. And at teas
or
receptions the waiting motor-cars are likely to be standing with their
wheels
turned rakishly against the curb for safety. And on the most slippery
days the
motors and carriages that have dared to venture upon the actual slopes
go
dangerously, for the horses slip in nervous helplessness, and now and
then some
motor skids and slides and whirls and either dashes against the curb or
slides
swift and uncontrolled to the foot of the hill. And as to the name of
the
hill, no one need think that beacons are but a picturesque figure of
speech in
regard to long-past American days, for beacons were a very real and at
the same
time an extremely romantic feature of early life in this country.
Baroness
Riedesel, the wife of the Brunswick general captured with Burgoyne,
tells that
when she was with her captive husband in Cambridge there was an alarm
which
caused a rising of the entire countryside, that barrels of pitch blazed
on the
hilltops, and that for some days armed Americans came hurrying in, some
of them
even without shoes and stockings, but all eager and ready to fight.
Historians
have so ignored the romantic in America that they have almost succeeded
in
giving Americans themselves the idea that the romantic never existed
here. Beacon Hill is the
part of
Boston that is still full of fine old homes. They are not the earliest
houses
of the city, they are not even pre-Revolutionary, but they are of the
fine
period following shortly after the Revolution. They are generous,
comfortable,
well proportioned, dignified houses, with their soft-toned brick and
their
typical bowed fronts and their general air of spaciousness and
geniality – the
bows in the fronts being gentle outward swells of the walls from top to
bottom
of the house, with two windows in each bow, one on each side and none
in the
middle; something entirely different from most modern bay-windows, of
Boston
and elsewhere, which are excrescences with three windows. Quite
English,
old-fashioned English, are the Beacon Hill bow-fronts; very much the
kind of
fronts that Barrie somewhere describes as bringing to a stop the people
driving
through a little village. That this part of
Boston is
really on a hill is recognized as you climb it; and if, on some of the
streets,
you sit inside of one of the bowed windows and a man is walking down
the hill,
you are likely to see him from the waist up as he passes the upper
window, and
to see only the top of his hat when he passes the lower! But an even
better way
to realize just how much of a hill this still is, is to look back at it
from
one of the bridges over the Charles for, from such a viewpoint, this
part of
the city rises prominent and steep, with its congregated mass of
buildings
etched dim and dark against the sky, like an old-time engraving
darkened and at
the same time beautified with age. This Beacon Hill is so charming a
part of
the city as to be supreme among American perched places for
delightfulness of
homes and city living. Mount Vernon Street
is the
finest bit of this fine district. One of the old residents of the
street said
to me, with more than a touch of pride, that Henry James termed it the
only,
respectable street in America. Well, Henry James liked Mount Vernon
Street very
much indeed, although he did not write precisely what was quoted to me
as being
his. What he wrote was that this was the happiest street scene our
country
could show (perhaps I should remark that the context shows him to use
"happy" in the general sense of felicitous), "and as pleasant,
on those respectable lines, in a degree not surpassed even among
outward
pomps." After all, looking at his words again, there need be small
wonder
that he was misquoted, for who, except a devoted disciple of James,
could be
expected to understand precisely what this phrasing means! But the
general
impression is clear, and that is that Henry James, critically
conversant as he
was with the most beautiful streets of Europe, and idolizing Europe,
still had
high admiration for beautiful Mount Vernon Street. The street is one of
serenity,
and there is a certain benignancy of dignity which seems to make an
atmosphere
of its own; there is a constant beauty of restraint, and of even a sort
of
retiring seclusion, even though the houses are built close together. It
is
indeed a felicitous street, and the more felicitous from a certain
crookedness,
or at least out-of-straightness, in its street lines, that comes from
quite a
number of unexpected and unexplainable little bends, so slight as not
at first
to be noticed, but which add materially to effectiveness. But it must not be
thought
that Mount Vernon Street is the only part of Beacon Hill that is full
of charm,
for there are other charming streets as well, notably Chestnut Street,
rich in
old-time atmosphere, and Beacon Street, fronting bravely out over the
Common,
and that charming Louisburg Square about which all of Beacon Hill may
be said
to cluster: and it may be mentioned that the Beacon Hillers like to
pronounce
Louisburg with the "s" sounded. Louisburg Square is
like
Gramercy Park in New York, in that the people who own the abutting
properties
possess certain ownership in it – the central portion being oval and
not
square, and the entire square being oblong. It is amusing that when the
trees
in the center are trimmed and lopped the wood is divided into bundles
and
parcels and evenly distributed for fireplace burning among all of the
adjoining
property, holders. In any city, even in
Europe,
Louisburg Square would at once attract attention as a charming little
bit. Its
central oval is green, tree shaded, with grass within an iron fence,
and all
about it are fine old houses of old Boston type. It is really a bit of
old
London, and that this is no mere fancy is shown by the fact that when a
country-wide search was made by a moving picture concern which was
preparing
for an elaborate presentation of Vanity Fair, the search resulted in
fixing
upon this little Louisburg Square, with its shading trees and
old-fashioned
house-fronts, to represent the Russell Square of London and of
Thackeray. A house
was chosen – any one of a number might have been chosen – for the
Osborne home,
and the street sign of "Louisburg Square" was taken down. and
"Russell Square" was substituted, but no other alteration was needed.
I went to see the picture given, and had I not positively known that it
was
Louisburg Square I should never have doubted that it was really the
familiar
Russell Square at which I was looking. That the house chosen was Number
20 adds
a point of interest, for it is the house in which the wonderful singer,
Jenny
Lind, was married to her accompanist, Otto Goldschmidt, in the course
of that
remarkable American tour in which she was given $175,000 and all of her
expenses, while her manager, P. T. Barnum, received as his share
$500,000. There are two little
statues, modestly pedestaled, within the oval of green, one at either
end, and
each of them is a little smaller than life size. They are so quietly
sedate,
these smallish marble men, that they seem as if made with particular
thought of
the sedateness of this smallish square. One of the figures, so one
recognizes,
is of Columbus, but the other is so unfamiliar, with a face so
different from
that of any well-known American, that one wonders in vain who it can
possibly
be – and then it is learned that it is Aristides! One helplessly
wonders why
Aristides the Just stands here! And the matter seems
still
stranger when one learns that, so the residents tell you, these two
marble
monuments were the very first of all the Boston public monuments to
individuals. Something approaching a century ago, so it appears, a Greek merchant settled in Boston and made his home here on Louisburg Square, and he so loved the environment that he had these monuments sent over from Greece and presented them to the city to stand forever here; choosing Columbus as his idea of the man most representative of all America, and Aristides because he personally loved the good old Greek, his own countryman. A story like that does add so much to the charm of a charming place. Beautiful
Mount Vernon Street
This old part of the
city,
and particularly Louisburg Square, is a gathering place for cats; not
homeless
cats that furtively creep away, but sleek, sedate, well-fed, lovable
and
likable cats; cats come here to meet each other or to hunt birds or
just to
take a stroll. They are of all races, sizes, and colors, from the big,
glorious
yellow to the shiny-coated jet black. Sometimes only one or two are in
sight;
at other times there may be several; then, when. these wander off,
others will
wander incidentally in, perhaps only one or two again or perhaps a
group. When
tired of walking or of hunting or of exchanging compliments with one
another
they are not unlikely to rest comfortably on the bases of the
monuments,
generally choosing, for some obscure catlike reason, Columbus in
preference to
Aristides; indeed, a cat on Columbus is a familiar neighborhood sight. Here on Beacon Hill
some of
the houses have panes of purple glass in their windows, and one learns
that
this empurpling effect makes the house owners very proud indeed. It
seems that
quite a quantity of window glass was made which contained some
unexpected
material, just when some of the best houses hereabouts were building,
and that
it was used in these houses, and that in course of time and the action
of the
sunlight, the glass containing the unexpected substance turned purple
and that
purple it has ever since remained. Just why it should be a matter of
special
pride to have too much foreign substance in one's window glass it is
hard for
even the Bostonians to explain, for they realize that the houses are
just as
old, and would look just as old, without the purple panes; but none the
less,
to them it represents vitreous connection with a proud and precious
past. As a
matter of fact, a similar pride used to be felt by the owners of some
old-time
houses on Clinton Place and Irving Place in New York City, which also
possessed
purple panes. One wonders if there is some subtle and subconscious
connection
between the ideas of purple glass and blue blood; at any rate, the
owners have
all the sense of living in the purple. Boston goes to sleep
early,
and Beacon Hill goes even earlier than does the rest of the city. And,
the
people once in bed, it takes a good deal to rouse them. At a few
minutes before
eleven one night I was walking down Mount Vernon Street, with the
houses all
blank and black, when I saw an automobile fire-engine and
hook-and-ladder start
climbing up the hill. Never have I heard so terrific a street noise.
For the
heavy motors were on low gear, and each moment they were almost
stalling, and
they were grating, grinding and shrieking as they slowly fought their
way, with
noises that shattered the very air. One would have thought that every
individual on the hill would be aroused. But no! If any house on Beacon
Hill must
burn, it must be before eleven at night or else neighbors refuse to be
interested. Two servants opened a dormer window and looked out – and
that was
all! Beacon Hill, the
height of
exclusiveness, the citadel of aristocracy, all this it has long been,
as if its
being a hill aided in giving it literal unapproachableness. It still
retains
its prideful poise, in its outward and visible signs of perfectly
cared-for
houses and correctness of dress and manners and equipage. But the
gradual
approach of changes is shown by shy little signs, frightened at their
own
temerity, that here and there on Beacon Street modestly print the names
of this
or that publisher, and by other little signs on Pinckney Street which
set forth
the single word "Rooms." Some years ago there
was
something of a migration from this region to the Back Bay, and many
wealthy
folk of Boston now live over there, but the better families have always
looked
on the Back Bay as not to be compared with Beacon Hill. From the first a
poorer and,
from the standpoint of Beacon Hill, an undesirable, population has
swarmed up
against the barriers from the north side, the side farthest away from
the
Common, but for generation after generation the barriers have held firm
against
them, and now there are even signs of redeeming a little of this
adjoining
district. Just off one of these poorer streets, I noticed a courtyard,
Bellingham Court (the old governor's name has an aristocratic sound!),
running
back for some two hundred feet to a high wall that once was blank, and
not only
is that wall now thick-covered with ivy, but on either side of the
brick-paved
courtyard the few modest little houses are flower-bedecked, and green
with
vines, and brass-knockered. The courtyard is not for vehicles, and down
its
center are arranged neatly painted boxes of flowers, with brilliant
geraniums
the most prominent, as a strong note is needed. It is a little
sheltered nook
where the commonplace has been transformed into loveliness. Not all of the old
houses
have old Bostonians living in them, for some new Bostonians are here
also, and
one of these naïvely said to me that on first moving in she was so
disturbed by
seeing people stop and look up at her windows that she nervously went
from room
to room to see if the curtains were wrong, only to find later that her
house
was attracting attention because it was one of the houses in which
Louisa M.
Alcott had lived. The residents of this
region, though ultra-particular in some respects, are not afraid to do
the
unusual. Two dear old ladies of eminently correct family, living in n
eminently correct house, keep a dishpan chained to their front doorstep
to
offer water to dogs and cats! It would take
a lifetime to learn just how the people of this city differentiate the
things
that in themselves simply must not be done, and the things which, no
matter how
unusual or exceptional or odd, may be done with impunity. That Beacon Hill,
with its
long-maintained social prestige, is but a few minutes' walk from the
stir and
crowds and bustle of the busiest business streets, and that on its
crest is the
very center of the political activities of Massachusetts, the State
House,
makes its continued possession of these serried ranks of capable,
comfortable,
handsome homes the more surprising in these days of constant American
change,
and that it is so much of a hill as always to have been impracticable
for
street cars seems to be the great single reason for its being so long
left
practically unaltered. The absence of street cars also adds very much
to the general
effect of serenity and peacefulness. Most of the houses
are of
brick, unpainted and soft red, agreeably mellowed and toned by the
weathering
of years. Indeed, the effect of the entire hill is an effect of brick,
for not
only are the houses brick but the typical ones are, in general,
narrowly
corniced with dentiled brick, and the brick walls drop down to the
universal
brick sidewalks of the district. Yet there is no wearisome likeness of
design:
continually there is the relief of the variant. The accessories of
the hill
charmingly befit the homes, and chief among these accessories is the
greenery.
For there are lines of trees on the streets, and groups or single trees
in the
square or in some of the gardens behind the homes, and here and there
is a mighty
spreading elm, and here and there is a flowering ailanthus, and in
every
direction, on the fronts or the sides of the houses, one sees wistarias
in
coils or convolutions or sinuous lengths, and some of the vines are of
giant
thickness, and some clamber over the iron balconies, twisting and
crushing and
knotting themselves python-like around the rails; and one sees, too,
the Boston
ivy, the ampelopsis, sweetly massing its rich green against the soft
red of
brick. Innumerable window-boxes give color and fragrance and
English-like
touches of beauty. And on one of these streets I noticed a mighty,
ancient rose
vine, almost a ruin, which has annually spread its flowers there for
decades.
And all of this in the very heart of this old city! And one of the most
prominent
of the large old houses, a mansion in very truth – the old-time rule in
New
England being that a mansion was a house with a servants' stair, but
using the
word here in its usual sense of meaning a large and stately home has
behind it,
terraced above a side street, a high-set and level garden, with a
garden-house
of diamond-paned windows; a garden rather melancholy now but so
romantically
high perched as to have all the effect of what the ancients meant by
"hanging garden." That on all of these
streets
the houses are of varying widths adds immensely to the general
picturesque
effect; in fact, the streets which show the greatest variety in width
of houses
are the most picturesque. None of the streets is what a Western man
would call
broad, and some are really narrow, the narrowest of all being little
Acorn
Street, so slender that you may shake hands across its width. An
attractive
little street, this, with its line of neat little houses and its brave
array of
prettily framed doorways and polished brass knockers; the houses being
on one
side only of the narrow way, facing the high walls, trellised on top
and green
with vines, of the gardens of Mount Vernon Street homes. Several of the
streets of
the hill climb straight and steep from the waters of the Back Bay, and
there
are positively beautiful views looking down. the vistaed narrowness and
out
across the surface of the water. Stand well up on the steepness of
Pinckney
Street, and look down at the water sparkling under a sky of Italian
blue, and
across the sweeping stretch to the white classic temples gleaming in
the sun on
the farther edge of the Charles (and they look like temples, although
in fact
they are new buildings of the School of Technology), and you will see
how
striking and beautiful a city view may be. Or, stand well up on the
steep of
Mount Vernon Street in the late afternoon of an early autumn day, when
the
golden sun transmutes the water of the Charles into gold, and scatters
showers
of gold through the branches of the trees, and flings the gold in
splotches and
streaks and shimmerings on the pavement, and all is a glorious golden
glamour,
and again you will realize how beautiful a view it is possible for a
city to
offer. Beacon Hill is so
delightfully mellow! And this mellowness of aspect comes not only from
the
fineness of the old houses in their age-weathering of brick, but also
from such
things as the old iron balconies that hang in front of the drawing-room
windows
(all this part of old Boston having its drawing-rooms one flight up so
that the
people, following the English tradition, may "go down to dinner"),
and the brass knockers, and the doorknobs of brass or old glass, and
the old
frames of iron, leaded into brick or stone, like those of old Paris
that used
to hold the ancient lanterns that roused the à la lanterne
cry so terrible to the French aristocrats, and the
old iron rails, with little brass urns on their posts, on the tops of
big-stoned walls, and the fat cast-iron pineapples, ancient emblems of
hospitality, and the good old footscrapers, of fine dignity in spite of
their
lowly use; and one cannot pass along any of these old streets without
seeing at
windows, as if turning a cold shoulder to the present day, fascinating
chair-backs of Chippendale or Sheraton, or even of the rare Jacobean. On Beacon Hill one is always anticipating the unusual. And one evening, just as dusk was softly creeping over Louisburg Square, strains of music softly sounded, with a sort of gentle pathos, and there came quiveringly the old-fashioned "When we think of the days that are gone, Maggie." It was played so very, very slowly, so very, very sweetly, by two quite oldish men, both of them American, that window after window softly opened and women looked out, and home-going men paused in mounting their doorsteps, and a tenser silence, except for the quivering notes, fell over the twilight square, and all intently listened, all were moved. The two players, so unexpectedly American instead of German or Italian, seemed strange memories of the past, tremulously playing here their old-fashioned music in front of these old-fashioned houses that were, themselves, softly dimming like memories in the twilight. |