NOTHING TO DO:
A TILT AT OUR BEST SOCIETY.
ILLUSTRATED. To
do nothing is to be a great part of your title.
SHAKSPEARE.
BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY JAMES FRENCH & CO.
1857 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1857, by
JAMES FRENCH & CO.,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.
STEREOTYPED BY
HOBART & ROBBINS,
New England Type and Stereotype Foundery,
BOSTON.
To
WILLIAM A. BUTLER, ESQ.,
AUTHOR OF
"NOTHING TO WEAR,"
This Poem
IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED.
AUGUSTUS FITZ-HERBERT,
as all are aware,
Having crossed the
Atlantic, and got a moustache on,
Likewise being son of a
known millionaire,
Stands
of course on the very top round of the fashion.
Being taught to
consider himself, from his birth,
As one of the
privileged ones of the earth,
He cherishes deep and
befitting disdain
For those who don't
live in the Fifth Avenue,
As entirely unworthy
the notice or thought
Of
the heir of two millions and nothing to do.
He calls them canaille,
which I'm credibly told
Is the only French word
which he caught when away;
And though, in my case,
if I might be so bold,
I should say it scarce
paid one for half a year's stay,
The heir of two
millions and nothing to do,
Who lives in a palace
in Fifth Avenue,
As a matter of course,
is no-fitting comparison
For the heir of an inkstand
and something to do,
Who lodges up stairs,
in the house of Miss Harrison.
In this model republic,
this land of the free--
So our orators call it,
and why should not we?--
'Tis
refreshing to know that without pedigree
A man may still climb
to the top of the tree;
That questions of
family, rank, and high birth,
All bow to the query, How much is he worth?
That John Smith,
plebeian, who forty years since
Walked Broadway
barefooted, now rides as a prince;
Having managed, though
not overburdened with wit,
But rather by chance
and a fortunate hit,
To take a high place of
Society's rounds;
His
claim, being based on pence, shillings, and pounds.
I admit there's a
certain republican merit
In making the fortune
which others inherit;
But why should John
Smith so completely ignore
The bridge which has
brought him triumphantly o'er,
And turn with disgust
from the opposite shore?
And why when Miranda,
whose heart is not proof
Against Cupid's sharp
arrows, some day leaves his roof,
And, sundering her
family ties at a jerk,
Returns in the evening
- the wife of his clerk!
Thus at Love's
trumpet-call bidding Duty defiance,
Should he strive to
break up the clandestine alliance?
For, though men have
made money, and will do again,
There as never a case
known here money made men
And if Jones be a man
in what constitutes manhood,
He's a far better match
than young Frederic Stanwood,
Though the one be a
clerk, and the other the heir
Of
the house, next M'Flimsey's, on Madison-square.
If the one is deficient
in wealth, we may find
The other quite
bankrupt in morals and mind.
Excuse this digression,
which yet is germain
To the subject in band,
as will be very plain
When I say that Fitz-Herbert's respected progenitor
Did business years
since, as I'm told, in a den eight or
Ten feet each way,
where he daily had calls
From all sorts of
people with all sorts of things,
From coats and
umbrellas to bracelets and rings,
To be left, until
claimed, at the Three Golden Balls.
But now, long emerged
from his chrysalis state,
Should his former
acquaintances call at his gate,
They would doubtless
receive speedy notice to leave--
Not the articles
brought, but the dwelling instanter,
With their pace perhaps
changed to a very quick canter.
So changes the world,
and the men that are in it,
That those whom we hail
as our equals, one minute,
We pass by the next
with a very cold stare,
And gruffly inquire who
the d-ickens they are.
From the past to the
present--to close our review--
From the pawnbroker's
shop to the Fifth Avenue,
To the parlors so full of objects de vertu,
And furniture most
undeniably new,
Where on tapestry
carpets the foot softly falls,
And family portraits
look down from the walls,
Of martial old
grandsires and stately old dames;
Which, bought cheap at
auction, and set in new frames,
And dubbed with
high-sounding and fanciful names,
At peace after many of
Fortune's mutations,
Look impressively down
on their new-found relations.
There's Sir Arthur Fitz-Herbert an old English knight,
Who won his gold spurs
in a hardly-fought field,
Where be rescued the
life of the gallant Black Prince
By receiving a blow
meant for him--on his shield;
Of which glorious
action, so well worth attention,
Not a single historian
makes any mention;
Though by family
documents amply attested,
In possession of those
who are most interested.
Then there's Lady Fitz-Herbert--a Queen's maid of honor,
Who spent her chief
time in attendance upon her;
And when the Queen left
on a visit to Calais,
Remained
in sole charge of--the plate and the palace.
All which, the Fitz-Herberts may justly lay claim,
Invests
with proud honor the family name.
There is something that
puzzles me, let me confess--
Why these old antiques
wear so modern a dress!
Unless, like the comet
which now reappears,
For the first time, I
think, within hundreds of years,
So fashions in dress
run through regular courses,
And strictly obey the
mechanical forces.
Let me hereby suggest
that some almanac-maker,
In his very next issue
but one, undertake a
Brief record of
Fashions that may reappear
In
the course of the next or the following year.
With what eager eyes
would our wives read, be sure,
About--this--time--expect--a--new--style--of--coiffure,
A black lace Fichu under dark satin loops;
Or, more ominous still,
a recurrence of hoops!
Attended, perhaps, by
the brief intimation,
Based upon strict and exact
calculation,
That the first would
enjoy but a limited reign, as
It was looked for next
year in far-distant Uranus;
While the last had
intended to visit us sooner,
But
tarried a while with the ladies of Luna.
Apropos of the
portraits--I've heard of a queer
Contretemps which
befell the most famous last year;
I mean of Sir Arthur,
who saved the Black Prince,--
Excuse my not knowing
how many years since.
It seems a young
lady--Miss Blanche Delarue--
One day on a visit to
Fifth Avenue,
While carelessly
chatting and sipping some sherbet,
Was shown the fine
portrait of Arthur Fitz-Herbert,
Which, Augustus assured
her, as an heirloom
Was more valued than
anything else in the room,
And proceeded to speak
of the well-deserved fame
Of Sir Arthur Fitz-Herbert, the first of his name,
With a few of those
actions of gallant emprise,
Which have made him so
great in Posterity's eyes;
Or, at least, that
small part which, like Miss Delarue,
Are
on visiting terms in the Fifth Avenue.
In the midst of his
story conceive hi amaze,
When his visitor, after
a long earnest gaze
At the portrait before
her, approaching, let fall
On the tapestry carpet
plate, sherbet, and all,
Which, scattered with
fragments of fine porcelain,
Must have suffered, I
fear, an indelible stain.
While standing aghast
at a breach of propriety
Which
rarely occurs in the best of society,
He was startled still
more, as I cannot but own,
When the lady
exclaimed, in a deeply-moved tone,
In reply to his
feebly-expressed "Never mind it,'
'That's my
grandfather's portrait! 0, where did you find it?"
Which
indeed was the case, being sold at vendue,
Some years since, when
the father of Blanche Delarue
Had lost for the time
both his wealth and high station,
By
indulging too largely in land speculation.
The unlucky portrait, I
scarcely need say,
Was at once taken down,
but soon after replaced
By another as stately,
though somewhat defaced,--
A clear mark of age,
and which, by the way,
On Fitz-Herbert's
assurance I'm glad to be able
To say was a knight of
the Famous Round Table.
If my memory fails not,
'tis three months to-day
Since Augustus Fitz-Herbert appeared in Broadway,
Having passed the last
year in a tour beyond seas,
Where his travels
extended from Russia to Spain,
And towards the
North-West from the famed Hebrides
To
the beautiful isles in the fair Grecian main.
He has wandered through
climes of which even the names
Thrill the heart with
emotion, or summon a tear,
When we think how
completely has time swept away
The traces of all that
we fain would revere.
He has stood, it may be, on the very same spot
Where Homer recited his
deathless heroics,
Or paused at the
portico, knowing it not,
Where
Zeno addressed his disciples, the Stoics.
Perchance when the
gazed from the brow of the hill
On the once famous harbor--the Attic Piraeus,--
Proud trophy of valor reverse could not chill!--
His foot pressed the
turf on the breast of Musaeus.
He has seen the proud
city whose arts and whose arms
In the mouth of
tradition for ages have rung;
0, there is not a foot
of that soil but has charms,
Where
Tully once fulmined, where Virgil once sung.
In the streets of
Byzantium he's smoked a chibouk
With the bearded and
turbaned devout Mameluke;
Has seen the
Cathedral--the glory of Munich--
And deciphered
inscriptions, perhaps, from the Runic;
Floated dreamily down
the thrice beautiful Rhine,
Through lands that are
teeming with olives and wine;
Passed a night in the
capital city of Berne,
And crossed in a
steamer the Lake of Lucerne;
Has strolled through
the fortified town of Brussels,
And heard in old Bruges
the sweet Minster bells;
Has stopped in the
siege-renowned city of Prague,
And supped with Mynheer in his town of the Hague;
At length reaching
France, in a steamboat crossed over
The troublesome straits
linking Calais with Dover;
Which gained, up to
London be travelled post-haste,
With the prominent
thought, there was no time to waste.
With the help of
post-horses and frequent relays,
He "did" the
whole island in eight or ten days,
During which he no
doubt made a thorough survey
Of all objects of
interest passed on the way.
He next made a very
brief visit to Cork
(The city and people he
couldn't endure),
And returning took
passage at once to New York,
With the comforting
thought--he had made the grand tour.
From his journal I
venture below to record
A single impression
received while abroad:
"June 7th, we
reached Athens--a sizable place,
Some three or four
miles from the Gulf of Ægina;
it
contains a cathedral not equal to Grace
Church in New York,
which I think is much finer.
Went up to the top of
the famous Acropolis,
Which
is visited daily by hundreds of people,
But can't say I think
that the view from the top o' this
Is
equal to that from our Trinity steeple.
The houses are mostly
unsightly and small;
In Minerva and Hermes'
street noticed a few
Which
will do very well, but are nothing at all
Compared
with our mansion in Fifth-Avenue.
The piles of old ruins
one sees here and there
I consider a perfect
disgrace to the town;
If they had an
efficient and competent Mayor,
Like our Mayor Wood, he
would soon have them down."
Returned from his tour,
he may daily be seen
Promenading Broadway
with a calm air of su-
Periority,
such as is rightfully worn
By
the Heir of two millions and nothing to do.
Observe how be shrinks, with a languid disdain,
From a shabby
book-keeper with coat worse for wear;
It would scarce be
befitting for fine porcelain
To
come in close contact with common delf-ware.
He inclines, as I
think, in regard to the masses,
In a modified form to
the views of Agassiz:
As that Adam the first
has another for weedin',
And other such jobs, in
the garden of Eden;
While Eve has a
housemaid--the wife of the latter,
Of color
uncertain--perhaps a mulatto,
Who lives in the
kitchen, cooks, washes, and starches,
While Eve in the parlor plays waltzes and marches;
And that those who
perforce bear the burdens of life
Date their origin back
to this man and his wife,
While from Adam the
first are descended the few
Who are blest with long
purses and nothing to do.
An exceedingly simple
and practical way
Of explaining the
present distinction of classes,
Conclusively showing
that much finer clay
Is
required for the rich than the general masses.
Augustus last week at
the Potiphars' party
Met Flora M'Flimsey, of Madison-square,
Who having found out
from her friend Miss Astarte
That he--a great
catch--it was thought would be there,
Although in a state of
extreme destitution
In regard to apparel
befitting to wear,
With her usual promptness
and firm resolution
Represented the case to
her hard-hearted père;
Who firmly resisted her
touching entreaties,
Until she was forced,
in her utter despair,
To remind him she never
could hope to be married,
Unless
he provided her something to wear.
A state of the case so
extremely appalling,
And fraught with such
numberless bills of expense
To be run up hereafter,
that, trouble forestalling,
He yielded at once,
without further defence.
At the same time he
said she was perfectly free
To place herself under
a husband's protection;
And, hard as the
sacrifice doubtless must be,
Provided she made a
befitting parti,
That he, as her father,
would make no objection.
Her pupose
achieved, on the very same day
Miss Flora went out on
a tour of inspection
To all of the principal
shops in Broadway,
Where at length she
succeeded in making election
Of a gossamer fabric of
delicate texture,
Whose merit consisted
in being so rare,
That one, though
attired in it twice or thrice folded,
Might
almost be said to have nothing to wear.
At the party which
followed (I speak with due diffidence),
Of all that were
present not one could compare,
In point of dry goods
and surpassing magnificence,
With
Flora M'Flimsey, of Madison-square.
She came, saw, and
conquered. Her eyes' brilliant lustre--
Or that of her
diamonds--effected the coup
Which
brought to her feet--not the great Filibuster,
But
the heir of two millions and nothing to do.
The marriage, I hear,
is deferred for the present--
The bride requires
three months at least to prepare.
On the first of
November, should weather prove pleasant,
There will be a grand
wedding, at Madison-square.
The alliance I bold to
be every way proper,
Since Flora M'Flimsey, in wedding the heir
Of two millions in
prospect (not bating a copper),
May
hope to have something, in future, to wear.
While Augustus Fitz-Herbert, Sir Arthur's decendant,
In paying her bills for
dry goods and bijoux,
With all the etceteras
thereto attendant,
Will
find quite as much as he wishes to do.
0, ye who in life are
content to be drones,
And stand idly by while
your fellows bear stones
To rear the great
temple which Adam began,
Whereof the All-Father
has given each man
A part in the
building--pray look the world through,
And say, if you can,
you have nothing to do!
Were man sent here
solely to eat, drink, and sleep,
And sow only that which
himself hoped to reap,--
If, provided his toil
served to gain his subsistence,
He had answered in full
the whole end of existence,--
Where then would be
poets, philanthropists, sages,
Who have written their
names high on History's pages?
They stood not aloof
from the battle of Life,
But, placing themselves
in the van of the strife,
Marching manfully
forward with banner unfurled,
Left
their deeds and their names a bequest to the world.
Have you ever (forgive
me the bold impropriety)
Reckoned up your
outstanding account with society,
Or considered how far,
should your life close to-morrow,
You would merit her
real and genuine sorrow?
If, in dying, the world
be no wiser or better
For your having lived
there, then you are her debtor;
And if, as Faith,
Reason, and Scripture, all show,
God rewards us in
heaven for the good done below,
I pray you take heed,
idle worldling, lest you
With that better world
should have nothing to do!