登陆注册
15702600000006

第6章

A STROLL ABOUT TOWN

AS you leave the river front behind you, and pass "up town," the streets grow wider, and the architecture becomes more ambitious--streets fringed with beautiful old trees and lined with commodious private dwellings, mostly square white houses, with spacious halls running through the centre. Previous to the Revolution, white paint was seldom used on houses, and the diamond-shaped window pane was almost universal. Many of the residences stand back from the brick or flagstone sidewalk, and have pretty gardens at the side or in the rear, made bright with dahlias and sweet with cinnamon roses. If you chance to live in a town where the authorities cannot rest until they have destroyed every precious tree within their blighting reach, you will be especially charmed by the beauty of the streets of Portsmouth.

In some parts of the town, when the chestnuts are in blossom, you would fancy yourself in a garden in fairyland. In spring, summer, and autumn the foliage is the glory of the fair town--her luxuriant green and golden treeses! Nothing could seem more like the work of enchantment than the spectacle which certain streets in Portsmouth present in the midwinter after a heavy snowstorm.

You may walk for miles under wonderful silvery arches formed by the overhanging and interlaced boughs of the trees, festooned with a drapery even more graceful and dazzling than springtime gives them. The numerous elms and maples which shade the principal thoroughfares are not the result of chance, but the ample reward of the loving care that is taken to preserve the trees. There is a society in Portsmouth devoted to arboriculture. It is not unusual there for persons to leave legacies to be expended in setting out shade and ornamental trees along some favorite walk. Richards Avenue, a long, unbuilt thoroughfare leading from Middle Street to the South Burying-Ground, perpetuates the name of a citizen who gave the labor of his own hands to the beautifying of that windswept and barren road the cemetery. This fondness and care for trees seems to be a matter of heredity. So far back as 1660 the selectmen instituted a fine of five shillings for the cutting of timber or any other wood from off the town common, excepting under special conditions.

In the business section of the town trees are few. The chief business streets are Congress and Market. Market Street is the stronghold of the dry-goods shops. There are seasons, I suppose, when these shops are crowded, but I have never happened to be in Portsmouth at the time. I seldom pass through the narrow cobble-paved street without wondering where the customers are that must keep all these flourishing little establishments going.

Congress Street--a more elegant thoroughfare than Market--is the Nevski Prospekt of Portsmouth. Among the prominent buildings is the Athenaeum, containing a reading-room and library. From the high roof of this building the stroller will do well to take a glance at the surrounding country. He will naturally turn seaward for the more picturesque aspects. If the day is clear, he will see the famous Isle of Shoals, lying nine miles away--Appledore, Smutty-Nose, Star Island, White Island, etc.;there are nine of them in all. On Appledore is Laighton's Hotel, and near it the summer cottage of Celia Thaxter, the poet of the Isles. On the northern end of Star Island is the quaint town of Gosport, with a tiny stone church perched like a sea-gull on its highest rock. A mile southwest form Star Island lies White Island, on which is a lighthouse. Mrs. Thaxter calls this the most picturesque of the group. Perilous neighbors, O mariner! in any but the serenest weather, these wrinkled, scarred, are storm-smitten rocks, flanked by wicked sunken ledges that grow white at the lip with rage when the great winds blow!

How peaceful it all looks off there, on the smooth emerald sea!

and how softly the waves seem to break on yonder point where the unfinished fort is! That is the ancient town of Newcastle, to reach which from Portsmouth you have to cross three bridges with the most enchanting scenery in New Hampshire lying on either hand. At Newcastle the poet Stedman has built for his summerings an enviable little stone chateau--a seashell into which I fancy the sirens creep to warm themselves during the winter months. So it is never without its singer.

Opposite Newcastle is Kittery Point, a romantic spot, where Sir William Pepperell, the first American baronet, once lived, and where his tomb now is, in his orchard across the road, a few hundred yards from the "goodly mansion" he built. The knight's tomb and the old Pepperell House, which has been somewhat curtailed of it fair proportions, are the objects of frequent pilgrimages to Kittery Point.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 太阴真解

    太阴真解

    兵者,诡道也。诡者,阴道也。命运对陆子敬开了一个玩笑,给了他六十年后的记忆。那是六十年挣扎于乱世之中惨淡旅程,一个曾经冠盖天下的绝代军师的记忆。于是乎,陆子敬决定回报命运一个玩笑……他愿以六十年诸佛龙象,换来一曲十二重楼天外音。神魂修行层次:观息、种火、幽精、内景、神游、还真、丹劫、步虚、纯阳、化道剑道修行层次:守拙、运神、坐照、入微、通幽、剑师、宗匠、宗师、剑仙、剑圣
  • 道修巅峰

    道修巅峰

    大道之极,便是巅峰,武之极限,神通自成。契丹无法衍化的叶啸没有任何修炼的机会,机缘巧合之下却是罕见神武之体,一步步踏上实力巅峰,叱咤风云,众美归心,成为天地之间的大主宰,各种力量掌控一身,不管你是妖或是兽,也不管你是仙或是神,顺者昌逆者亡,叶啸用疯狂的血腥屠戮,创造了一个独属他的热血盛世。
  • 王源可惜没如果

    王源可惜没如果

    TFBOS中的王源是和莫安晓是一对恋人,可是徐佳雅的哥哥也喜欢莫安晓,徐佳雅的哥哥许帆威胁莫安晓和王源离开,不然就杀了王源。……五年后。莫安晓回来了,可是王源却在五年前出车祸失忆了,莫安晓该怎么办呢?
  • 梦幻仙魔游记

    梦幻仙魔游记

    一块神秘的黑白双鱼玉佩,一段似梦非梦的经历,半部有关前世记忆的小说,一个是被放逐的魔界战神,一个是被放逐的月亮女神,当双鱼玉佩变成诡异的鱼形面具,当鱼形面具重新开启了放逐之门,神魔游记开始了......
  • 不经意的遇见

    不经意的遇见

    这世上有一见钟情吗?或许有吧?直到我遇见她,原来思念是这个样子的
  • 超级双能卫

    超级双能卫

    不高,不壮,不妨碍我成为篮坛霸主。更快,更强,中国篮球要你好看!
  • 玄天四灵

    玄天四灵

    上古万物神石本是九重天玄石,女娲补天之时不慎坠落洪莽之地。数万年后,地分四洲有四灵分别是青龙白虎朱雀玄武。中天山太虚宫太玄真人为了重建九重天,为了苍生道法一统。下山寻访四灵,降妖杀魔
  • 寻找爱情的阳娃娃

    寻找爱情的阳娃娃

    肖阳同学,再一次偶然的机遇中,碰到了自己心怡的女生叶嘉,他正是他的同学,也是班主任的侄女,于是“”哄哄咧咧“”的追爱之路,开始了。
  • 魔掌沉天

    魔掌沉天

    武道无极,他于国术顶峰,打破桎梏,碧血化龙。钢筋铁骨,血如熔岩,历千万劫,他冲破人间武圣巅峰,他是人形太空战舰,虚空行者。他以力之极破碎,汲取次元能量,只手遮天。
  • 异界火之子

    异界火之子

    二十六岁的他,一次意外,来到了这个以修为为尊的大陆--玄冥大陆!来到这个世界以后,他又会发生什么样的故事呢?异世界之旅,从十六岁开始!“我的一生,唯有我自己,方能主宰。谁若挡我,我便把他踩下去!”“你的笑容,由我来守护!”------龙濠