登陆注册
15709400000094

第94章

In New York there are street omnibuses as we have--there are street cars such as last year we declined to have, and there are very excellent public carriages; but none of these give you the accommodation of a cab, nor can all of them combined do so. The omnibuses, though clean and excellent, were to me very unintelligible. They have no conductor to them. To know their different lines and usages a man should have made a scientific study of the city. To those going up and down Broadway I became accustomed, but in them I was never quite at my ease. The money has to be paid through a little hole behind the driver's back, and should, as I learned at last, be paid immediately on entrance. But in getting up to do this I always stumbled about, and it would happen that when with considerable difficulty I had settled my own account, two or three ladies would enter, and would hand me, without a word, some coins with which I had no life-long familiarity, in order that I might go through the same ceremony on their account. The change I would usually drop into the straw, and then there would arise trouble and unhappiness. Before I became aware of that law as to instant payment, bells used to be rung at me, which made me uneasy. I knew I was not behaving as a citizen should behave, but could not compass the exact points of my delinquency. And then, when I desired to escape, the door being strapped up tight, I would halloo vainly at the driver through the little hole; whereas, had I known my duty, I should have rung a bell, or pulled a strap, according to the nature of the omnibus in question. In a month or two all these things may possibly be learned; but the visitor requires his facilities for locomotion at the first moment of his entrance into the city. I heard it asserted by a lecturer in Boston, Mr. Wendell Phillips, whose name is there a household word, that citizens of the United States carried brains in their fingers as well as in their heads; whereas "common people," by which Mr. Phillips intended to designate the remnant of mankind beyond the United States, were blessed with no such extended cerebral development. Having once learned this fact from Mr. Phillips, I understood why it was that a New York omnibus should be so disagreeable to me, and at the same time so suitable to the wants of the New Yorkers.

And then there are street cars--very long omnibuses--which run on rails but are dragged by horses. They are capable of holding forty passengers each, and as far as my experience goes carry an average load of sixty. The fare of the omnibus is six cents, or three pence. That of the street car five cents, or two pence halfpenny.

They run along the different avenues, taking the length of the city. In the upper or new part of the town their course is simple enough, but as they descend to the Bowery, Peck Slip, and Pearl Street, nothing can be conceived more difficult or devious than their courses. The Broadway omnibus, on the other hand, is a straightforward, honest vehicle in the lower part of the town, becoming, however, dangerous and miscellaneous when it ascends to Union Square and the vicinities of fashionable life.

The street cars are manned with conductors, and, therefore, are free from many of the perils of the omnibus; but they have perils of their own. They are always quite full. By that I mean that every seat is crowded, that there is a double row of men and women standing down the center, and that the driver's platform in front is full, and also the conductor's platform behind. That is the normal condition of a street car in the Third Avenue. You, as a stranger in the middle of the car, wish to be put down at, let us say, 89th Street. In the map of New York now before me, the cross streets running from east to west are numbered up northward as far as 154th Street. It is quite useless for you to give the number as you enter. Even an American conductor, with brains all over him, and an anxious desire to accommodate, as is the case with all these men, cannot remember. You are left therefore in misery to calculate the number of the street as you move along, vainly endeavoring through the misty glass to decipher the small numbers which after a day or two you perceive to be written on the lamp posts.

But I soon gave up all attempts at keeping a seat in one of these cars. It became my practice to sit down on the outside iron rail behind, and as the conductor generally sat in my lap I was in a measure protected. As for the inside of these vehicles the women of New York were, I must confess, too much for me. I would no sooner place myself on a seat, than I would be called on by a mute, unexpressive, but still impressive stare into my face, to surrender my place. From cowardice if not from gallantry I would always obey; and as this led to discomfort and an irritated spirit, Ipreferred nursing the conductor on the hard bar in the rear.

And here if I seem to say a word against women in America, I beg that it may be understood that I say that word only against a certain class; and even as to that class I admit that they are respectable, intelligent, and, as I believe, industrious. Their manners, however, are to me more odious than those of any other human beings that I ever met elsewhere. Nor can I go on with that which I have to say without carrying my apology further, lest, perchance, I should be misunderstood by some American women whom Iwould not only exclude from my censure, but would include in the very warmest eulogium which words of mine could express as to those of the female sex whom I love and admire the most. I have known, do know, and mean to continue to know as far as in me may lie, American ladies as bright, as beautiful, as graceful, as sweet, as mortal limits for brightness, beauty, grace, and sweetness will permit. They belong to the aristocracy of the land, by whatever means they may have become aristocrats. In America one does not inquire as to their birth, their training, or their old names. The fact of their aristocratic power comes out in every word and look.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 中国春秋史说

    中国春秋史说

    一部以《左传》、《吴越春秋》为主要内容,描述春秋时期郑、楚、齐、宋、晋、吴、越等主要诸侯国争霸的原始资料历史小说。(感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持)
  • 三点四次元

    三点四次元

    似冥冥之中,自有因果牵引,成就无数历史的霸王传奇。在时间的横流中,无数的传奇又被淹没,我们总是在尝试着追寻和抓住四次元的时间,而那些消逝的却仍是留下了什么,触摸着时间的大门,却不可得。真实的世界,不一样的精彩。大门已缓缓打开!
  • 心轨

    心轨

    也不懂什么未来,至少可以活得下来!少年的征程从迷茫到简单,人生甜到苦是命,苦变甜是运
  • 大夏王侯

    大夏王侯

    七年前,北蒙王庭一位名为凡聆月的女子横空出世,短短七年,统合朝政,千年无敌的大夏皇朝面临着千年来最大的威胁,就在这时,夏宫里走来了一位腼腆的少年郎……
  • 女孩20+

    女孩20+

    本书共分八部分,内容包括:越早成熟越受益、跑步逾越心理断奶期、将经历演变成资历、用心编织一张密密的关系网、做一个八面玲珑的职场达人、学习决定人生的宽度等。
  • 孽龙神传奇

    孽龙神传奇

    孽龙因为是那万古宝地的得主,注定的神王之命,其一成形时便遭到了天庭原始天主的残杀。孽龙大怒之下分洋造海打死水母,却赢得了原始天主的女儿和龙祖的女儿的倾心相爱。而后又奇迹般的征服了当时仙境那两个“刀剑合璧三界无敌的旷世奇魔”。原始天主在无可耐何之下,便用他女儿与孽龙的关系将孽龙招安上天去征剿那几股恶煞割据势力,以将孽龙与那几个割据魔头同时一网打尽。孽龙却在他两个女友的帮助下茁壮的成长起来铲除了那几股恶煞割据势力,一统三界。
  • 16季

    16季

    16季那年花开的太累漫步又是一次新人生懂你述我
  • 尸人世界

    尸人世界

    3030年,病毒开始出现,如今世界还有多少人没有被病毒感染?克星顿驾驶的SA12战机是被什么人打下的?克星顿的恶梦冒险开始了……
  • 野狼沟传奇

    野狼沟传奇

    这部小说由五个故事组成:《黑瞎子沟传奇》、《豹子沟传奇》、《野狼沟传奇》、《兴安野猪王》以及《虎峰山传奇》。描写了抗日战争期间东北抗日联军在白山黑水之间与日本侵略者斗智斗勇的英雄事迹,情节紧凑,引人入胜。
  • Henry VI

    Henry VI

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。