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The
Magificent Ambersons
Booth
Tarkington
TO SUSANAH
CHAPTER
I
MAJOR AMBERSON had "made a fortune" in 1878, when other people
were losing fortunes, and the magnificence of the Ambersons began then. Magnificence,
like the size of a fortune, is always comparative, as even Magnificent Lorenzo
may now perceive, if he has happened to haunt New York in 1916; and the
Ambersons were magnificent in their day and place. Their splendour lasted
throughout all the years that saw their Midland town spread and darken into a
city, but reached its topmost during the period when every prosperous family
with children kept a Newfoundland dog.
In that town, in those days, all the women who wore silk or velvet knew all
the other women who wore silk or velvet, and when there was a new purchase of
sealskin, sick people were got to windows to see it go by. Trotters were out,
in the winter afternoons, racing light sleighs on National Avenue and Tennessee
Street; everybody recognized both the trotters and the drivers; and again knew
them as well on summer evenings, when slim buggies whizzed by in renewals of
the snow-time rivalry. For that matter, everybody knew everybody else's family
horse-and-carriage, could identify such a silhouette half a mile down the
street, and thereby was sure who was going to market, or to a reception, or
coming home from office or store to noon dinner or evening supper.
During the earlier years of this period, elegance of personal appearance was
believed to rest more upon the texture of garments than upon their shaping. A
silk dress needed no remodelling when it was a year or so old; it remained
distinguished by merely remaining silk. Old men and governors wore broadcloth;
"full dress" was broadcloth with "doeskin" trousers; and
there were seen men of all ages to whom a hat meant only that rigid, tall silk
thing known to impudence as a "stove-pipe." In town and country these
men would wear no other hat, and, without self-consciousness, they went rowing
in such hats.
Shifting fashions of shape replaced aristocracy of texture: dressmakers,
shoemakers, hatmakers, and tailors, increasing in cunning and in power, found
means to make new clothes old. The long contagion of the "Derby" hat
arrived: one season the crown of this hat would be a bucket; the next it would
be a spoon. Every house still kept its bootjack, but high-topped boots gave way
to shoes and "congress gaiters"; and these were played through
fashions that shaped them now with toes like box-ends and now with toes like
the prows of racing shells.
Trousers with a crease were considered plebeian; the crease proved that the
garment had lain upon a shelf, and hence was "ready-made"; these
betraying trousers were called "hand-me-downs," in allusion to the
shelf. In the early 'eighties, while bangs and bustles were having their way
with women, that variation of dandy known as the "dude" was invented:
he wore trousers as tight as stockings, dagger-pointed shoes, a spoon
"Derby," a single-breasted coat called a "Chesterfield,"
with short flaring skirts, a torturing cylindrical collar, laundered to a
polish and three inches high, while his other neckgear might be a heavy, puffed
cravat or a tiny bow fit for a doll's braids. With evening dress he wore a tan
overcoat so short that his black coat-tails hung visible, five inches below the
overcoat; but after a season or two he lengthened his overcoat till it touched
his heels, and he passed out of his tight trousers into trousers like great
bags. Then, presently, he was seen no more, though the word that had been
coined for him remained in the vocabularies of the impertinent.
It was a hairier day than this. Beards were to the wearers' fancy, and
things as strange as the Kaiserliche boar-tusk moustache were commonplace.
"Side-burns" found nourishment upon childlike profiles; great
Dundreary whiskers blew like tippets over young shoulders; moustaches were
trained as lambrequins over forgotten mouths; and it was possible for a Senator
of the United States to wear a mist of white whisker upon his throat only, not
a newspaper in the land finding the ornament distinguished enough to warrant a
lampoon. Surely no more is needed to prove that so short a time ago we were
living in another age!
. . . At the beginning of the Ambersons' great period most of the houses of
the Midland town were of a pleasant architecture. They lacked style, but also
lacked pretentiousness, and whatever does not pretend at all has style enough.
They stood in commodious yards, well shaded by leftover forest trees, elm and
walnut and beech, with here and there a line of tall sycamores where the land
had been made by filling bayous from the creek. The house of a "prominent
resident," facing Military Square, or National Avenue, or Tennessee
Street, was built of brick upon a stone foundation, or of wood upon a brick
foundation. Usually it had a "front porch" and a "back
porch"; often a "side porch," too. There was a "front
hall"; there was a "side hall"; and sometimes a "back
hall." From the "front hall" opened three rooms, the
"parlour," the "sitting room," and the "library";
and the library could show warrant to its title--for some reason these people
bought books. Commonly, the family sat more in the library than in the "sitting
room," while callers, when they came formally, were kept to the
"parlour," a place of formidable polish and discomfort. The
upholstery of the library furniture was a little shabby; but the hostile chairs
and sofa of the "parlour" always looked new. For all the wear and
tear they got they should have lasted a thousand years.
Upstairs were the bedrooms; "mother-and-father's room" the
largest; a smaller room for one or two sons, another for one or two daughters;
each of these rooms containing a double bed, a "washstand," a
"bureau," a wardrobe, a little table, a rocking-chair, and often a
chair or two that had been slightly damaged downstairs, but not enough to
justify either the expense of repair or decisive abandonment in the attic. And
there was always a "spare-room," for visitors (where the
sewing-machine usually was kept), and during the 'seventies there developed an
appreciation of the necessity for a bathroom. Therefore the architects placed
bathrooms in the new houses, and the older houses tore out a cupboard or two,
set up a boiler beside the kitchen stove, and sought a new godliness, each with
its own bathroom. The great American plumber joke, that many-branched
evergreen, was planted at this time.
At the rear of the house, upstairs, was a bleak little chamber, called
"the girl's room," and in the stable there was another bedroom,
adjoining the hayloft, and called "the hired man's room." House and
stable cost seven or eight thousand dollars to build, and people with that much
money to invest in such comforts were classified as the Rich. They paid the
inhabitant of "the girl's room" two dollars a week, and, in the
latter part of this period, two dollars and a half, and finally three dollars a
week. She was Irish, ordinarily, or German, or it might be Scandinavian, but
never native to the land unless she happened to be a person of colour. The man
or youth who lived in the stable had like wages, and sometimes he, too, was
lately a steerage voyager, but much oftener he was coloured.
After sunrise, on pleasant mornings, the alleys behind the stables were gay;
laughter and shouting went up and down their dusty lengths, with a lively
accompaniment of curry-combs knocking against back fences and stable walls, for
the darkies loved to curry their horses in the alley. Darkies always prefer to
gossip in shouts instead of whispers; and they feel that profanity, unless it
be vociferous, is almost worthless. Horrible phrases were caught by early
rising children and carried to older people for definition, sometimes at
inopportune moments; while less investigative children would often merely
repeat the phrases in some subsequent flurry of agitation, and yet bring about
consequences so emphatic as to be recalled with ease in middle life.
. . . They have passed, those darky hired-men of the Midland town; and the
introspective horses they curried and brushed and whacked and amiably
cursed--those good old horses switch their tails at flies no more. For all
their seeming permanence they might as well have been buffaloes--or the buffalo
laprobes that grew bald in patches and used to slide from the careless drivers'
knees and hang unconcerned, half way to the ground. The stables have been
transformed into other likenesses, or swept away, like the woodsheds where were
kept the stovewood and kindling that the "girl" and the
"hired-man" always quarrelled over: who should fetch it. Horse and
stable and woodshed, and the whole tribe of the "hired-man," all are
gone. They went quickly, yet so silently that we whom they served have not yet
really noticed that they are vanished.
So with other vanishings. There were the little bunty street-cars on the
long, single track that went its troubled way among the cobblestones. At the
rear door of the car there was no platform, but a step where passengers clung
in wet clumps when the weather was bad and the car crowded. The patrons--if not
too absent-minded--put their fares into a slot; and no conductor paced the
heaving floor, but the driver would rap remindingly with his elbow upon the
glass of the door to his little open platform if the nickels and the passengers
did not appear to coincide in number. A lone mule drew the car, and sometimes
drew it off the track, when the passengers would get out and push it on again.
They really owed it courtesies like this, for the car was genially
accommodating: a lady could whistle to it from an upstairs window, and the car
would halt at once and wait for her while she shut the window, put on her hat
and cloak, went downstairs, found an umbrella, told the "girl" what
to have for dinner, and came forth from the house.
The previous passengers made little objection to such gallantry on the part
of the car: they were wont to expect as much for themselves on like occasion.
In good weather the mule pulled the car a mile in a little less than twenty
minutes, unless the stops were too long; but when the trolley-car came, doing
its mile in five minutes and better, it would wait for nobody. Nor could its
passengers have endured such a thing, because the faster they were carried the
less time they had to spare! In the days before deathly contrivances hustled
them through their lives, and when they had no telephones--another ancient
vacancy profoundly responsible for leisure--they had time for everything: time
to think, to talk, time to read, time to wait for a lady!
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