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American Notes By Charles Dickens
CHAPTER V - WORCESTER. THE CONNECTICUT RIVER. HARTFORD. NEW HAVEN. TO NEW YORK
Charles Dickens
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       CHAPTER V - WORCESTER. THE CONNECTICUT RIVER. HARTFORD. NEW HAVEN. TO NEW YORK
       LEAVING Boston on the afternoon of Saturday the fifth of February,
       we proceeded by another railroad to Worcester: a pretty New
       England town, where we had arranged to remain under the hospitable
       roof of the Governor of the State, until Monday morning.
       These towns and cities of New England (many of which would be
       villages in Old England), are as favourable specimens of rural
       America, as their people are of rural Americans. The well-trimmed
       lawns and green meadows of home are not there; and the grass,
       compared with our ornamental plots and pastures, is rank, and
       rough, and wild: but delicate slopes of land, gently-swelling
       hills, wooded valleys, and slender streams, abound. Every little
       colony of houses has its church and school-house peeping from among
       the white roofs and shady trees; every house is the whitest of the
       white; every Venetian blind the greenest of the green; every fine
       day's sky the bluest of the blue. A sharp dry wind and a slight
       frost had so hardened the roads when we alighted at Worcester, that
       their furrowed tracks were like ridges of granite. There was the
       usual aspect of newness on every object, of course. All the
       buildings looked as if they had been built and painted that
       morning, and could be taken down on Monday with very little
       trouble. In the keen evening air, every sharp outline looked a
       hundred times sharper than ever. The clean cardboard colonnades
       had no more perspective than a Chinese bridge on a tea-cup, and
       appeared equally well calculated for use. The razor-like edges of
       the detached cottages seemed to cut the very wind as it whistled
       against them, and to send it smarting on its way with a shriller
       cry than before. Those slightly-built wooden dwellings behind
       which the sun was setting with a brilliant lustre, could be so
       looked through and through, that the idea of any inhabitant being
       able to hide himself from the public gaze, or to have any secrets
       from the public eye, was not entertainable for a moment. Even
       where a blazing fire shone through the uncurtained windows of some
       distant house, it had the air of being newly lighted, and of
       lacking warmth; and instead of awakening thoughts of a snug
       chamber, bright with faces that first saw the light round that same
       hearth, and ruddy with warm hangings, it came upon one suggestive
       of the smell of new mortar and damp walls.
       So I thought, at least, that evening. Next morning when the sun
       was shining brightly, and the clear church bells were ringing, and
       sedate people in their best clothes enlivened the pathway near at
       hand and dotted the distant thread of road, there was a pleasant
       Sabbath peacefulness on everything, which it was good to feel. It
       would have been the better for an old church; better still for some
       old graves; but as it was, a wholesome repose and tranquillity
       pervaded the scene, which after the restless ocean and the hurried
       city, had a doubly grateful influence on the spirits.
       We went on next morning, still by railroad, to Springfield. From
       that place to Hartford, whither we were bound, is a distance of
       only five-and-twenty miles, but at that time of the year the roads
       were so bad that the journey would probably have occupied ten or
       twelve hours. Fortunately, however, the winter having been
       unusually mild, the Connecticut River was 'open,' or, in other
       words, not frozen. The captain of a small steamboat was going to
       make his first trip for the season that day (the second February
       trip, I believe, within the memory of man), and only waited for us
       to go on board. Accordingly, we went on board, with as little
       delay as might be. He was as good as his word, and started
       directly.
       It certainly was not called a small steamboat without reason. I
       omitted to ask the question, but I should think it must have been
       of about half a pony power. Mr. Paap, the celebrated Dwarf, might
       have lived and died happily in the cabin, which was fitted with
       common sash-windows like an ordinary dwelling-house. These windows
       had bright-red curtains, too, hung on slack strings across the
       lower panes; so that it looked like the parlour of a Lilliputian
       public-house, which had got afloat in a flood or some other water
       accident, and was drifting nobody knew where. But even in this
       chamber there was a rocking-chair. It would be impossible to get
       on anywhere, in America, without a rocking-chair. I am afraid to
       tell how many feet short this vessel was, or how many feet narrow:
       to apply the words length and width to such measurement would be a
       contradiction in terms. But I may state that we all kept the
       middle of the deck, lest the boat should unexpectedly tip over; and
       that the machinery, by some surprising process of condensation,
       worked between it and the keel: the whole forming a warm sandwich,
       about three feet thick.
       It rained all day as I once thought it never did rain anywhere, but
       in the Highlands of Scotland. The river was full of floating
       blocks of ice, which were constantly crunching and cracking under
       us; and the depth of water, in the course we took to avoid the
       larger masses, carried down the middle of the river by the current,
       did not exceed a few inches. Nevertheless, we moved onward,
       dexterously; and being well wrapped up, bade defiance to the
       weather, and enjoyed the journey. The Connecticut River is a fine
       stream; and the banks in summer-time are, I have no doubt,
       beautiful; at all events, I was told so by a young lady in the
       cabin; and she should be a judge of beauty, if the possession of a
       quality include the appreciation of it, for a more beautiful
       creature I never looked upon.
       After two hours and a half of this odd travelling (including a
       stoppage at a small town, where we were saluted by a gun
       considerably bigger than our own chimney), we reached Hartford, and
       straightway repaired to an extremely comfortable hotel: except, as
       usual, in the article of bedrooms, which, in almost every place we
       visited, were very conducive to early rising.
       We tarried here, four days. The town is beautifully situated in a
       basin of green hills; the soil is rich, well-wooded, and carefully
       improved. It is the seat of the local legislature of Connecticut,
       which sage body enacted, in bygone times, the renowned code of
       'Blue Laws,' in virtue whereof, among other enlightened provisions,
       any citizen who could be proved to have kissed his wife on Sunday,
       was punishable, I believe, with the stocks. Too much of the old
       Puritan spirit exists in these parts to the present hour; but its
       influence has not tended, that I know, to make the people less hard
       in their bargains, or more equal in their dealings. As I never
       heard of its working that effect anywhere else, I infer that it
       never will, here. Indeed, I am accustomed, with reference to great
       professions and severe faces, to judge of the goods of the other
       world pretty much as I judge of the goods of this; and whenever I
       see a dealer in such commodities with too great a display of them
       in his window, I doubt the quality of the article within.
       In Hartford stands the famous oak in which the charter of King
       Charles was hidden. It is now inclosed in a gentleman's garden.
       In the State House is the charter itself. I found the courts of
       law here, just the same as at Boston; the public institutions
       almost as good. The Insane Asylum is admirably conducted, and so
       is the Institution for the Deaf and Dumb.
       I very much questioned within myself, as I walked through the
       Insane Asylum, whether I should have known the attendants from the
       patients, but for the few words which passed between the former,
       and the Doctor, in reference to the persons under their charge. Of
       course I limit this remark merely to their looks; for the
       conversation of the mad people was mad enough.
       There was one little, prim old lady, of very smiling and good-
       humoured appearance, who came sidling up to me from the end of a
       long passage, and with a curtsey of inexpressible condescension,
       propounded this unaccountable inquiry:
       'Does Pontefract still flourish, sir, upon the soil of England?'
       'He does, ma'am,' I rejoined.
       'When you last saw him, sir, he was - '
       'Well, ma'am,' said I, 'extremely well. He begged me to present
       his compliments. I never saw him looking better.'
       At this, the old lady was very much delighted. After glancing at
       me for a moment, as if to be quite sure that I was serious in my
       respectful air, she sidled back some paces; sidled forward again;
       made a sudden skip (at which I precipitately retreated a step or
       two); and said:
       'I am an antediluvian, sir.'
       I thought the best thing to say was, that I had suspected as much
       from the first. Therefore I said so.
       'It is an extremely proud and pleasant thing, sir, to be an
       antediluvian,' said the old lady.
       'I should think it was, ma'am,' I rejoined.
       The old lady kissed her hand, gave another skip, smirked and sidled
       down the gallery in a most extraordinary manner, and ambled
       gracefully into her own bed-chamber.
       In another part of the building, there was a male patient in bed;
       very much flushed and heated.
       'Well,' said he, starting up, and pulling off his night-cap: 'It's
       all settled at last. I have arranged it with Queen Victoria.'
       'Arranged what?' asked the Doctor.
       'Why, that business,' passing his hand wearily across his forehead,
       'about the siege of New York.'
       'Oh!' said I, like a man suddenly enlightened. For he looked at me
       for an answer.
       'Yes. Every house without a signal will be fired upon by the
       British troops. No harm will be done to the others. No harm at
       all. Those that want to be safe, must hoist flags. That's all
       they'll have to do. They must hoist flags.'
       Even while he was speaking he seemed, I thought, to have some faint
       idea that his talk was incoherent. Directly he had said these
       words, he lay down again; gave a kind of a groan; and covered his
       hot head with the blankets.
       There was another: a young man, whose madness was love and music.
       After playing on the accordion a march he had composed, he was very
       anxious that I should walk into his chamber, which I immediately
       did.
       By way of being very knowing, and humouring him to the top of his
       bent, I went to the window, which commanded a beautiful prospect,
       and remarked, with an address upon which I greatly plumed myself:
       'What a delicious country you have about these lodgings of yours!'
       'Poh!' said he, moving his fingers carelessly over the notes of his
       instrument: 'WELL ENOUGH FOR SUCH AN INSTITUTION AS THIS!'
       I don't think I was ever so taken aback in all my life.
       'I come here just for a whim,' he said coolly. 'That's all.'
       'Oh! That's all!' said I.
       'Yes. That's all. The Doctor's a smart man. He quite enters into
       it. It's a joke of mine. I like it for a time. You needn't
       mention it, but I think I shall go out next Tuesday!'
       I assured him that I would consider our interview perfectly
       confidential; and rejoined the Doctor. As we were passing through
       a gallery on our way out, a well-dressed lady, of quiet and
       composed manners, came up, and proffering a slip of paper and a
       pen, begged that I would oblige her with an autograph, I complied,
       and we parted.
       'I think I remember having had a few interviews like that, with
       ladies out of doors. I hope SHE is not mad?'
       'Yes.'
       'On what subject? Autographs?'
       'No. She hears voices in the air.'
       'Well!' thought I, 'it would be well if we could shut up a few
       false prophets of these later times, who have professed to do the
       same; and I should like to try the experiment on a Mormonist or two
       to begin with.'
       In this place, there is the best jail for untried offenders in the
       world. There is also a very well-ordered State prison, arranged
       upon the same plan as that at Boston, except that here, there is
       always a sentry on the wall with a loaded gun. It contained at
       that time about two hundred prisoners. A spot was shown me in the
       sleeping ward, where a watchman was murdered some years since in
       the dead of night, in a desperate attempt to escape, made by a
       prisoner who had broken from his cell. A woman, too, was pointed
       out to me, who, for the murder of her husband, had been a close
       prisoner for sixteen years.
       'Do you think,' I asked of my conductor, 'that after so very long
       an imprisonment, she has any thought or hope of ever regaining her
       liberty?'
       'Oh dear yes,' he answered. 'To be sure she has.'
       'She has no chance of obtaining it, I suppose?'
       'Well, I don't know:' which, by-the-bye, is a national answer.
       'Her friends mistrust her.'
       'What have THEY to do with it?' I naturally inquired.
       'Well, they won't petition.'
       'But if they did, they couldn't get her out, I suppose?'
       'Well, not the first time, perhaps, nor yet the second, but tiring
       and wearying for a few years might do it.'
       'Does that ever do it?'
       'Why yes, that'll do it sometimes. Political friends'll do it
       sometimes. It's pretty often done, one way or another.'
       I shall always entertain a very pleasant and grateful recollection
       of Hartford. It is a lovely place, and I had many friends there,
       whom I can never remember with indifference. We left it with no
       little regret on the evening of Friday the 11th, and travelled that
       night by railroad to New Haven. Upon the way, the guard and I were
       formally introduced to each other (as we usually were on such
       occasions), and exchanged a variety of small-talk. We reached New
       Haven at about eight o'clock, after a journey of three hours, and
       put up for the night at the best inn.
       New Haven, known also as the City of Elms, is a fine town. Many of
       its streets (as its ALIAS sufficiently imports) are planted with
       rows of grand old elm-trees; and the same natural ornaments
       surround Yale College, an establishment of considerable eminence
       and reputation. The various departments of this Institution are
       erected in a kind of park or common in the middle of the town,
       where they are dimly visible among the shadowing trees. The effect
       is very like that of an old cathedral yard in England; and when
       their branches are in full leaf, must be extremely picturesque.
       Even in the winter time, these groups of well-grown trees,
       clustering among the busy streets and houses of a thriving city,
       have a very quaint appearance: seeming to bring about a kind of
       compromise between town and country; as if each had met the other
       half-way, and shaken hands upon it; which is at once novel and
       pleasant.
       After a night's rest, we rose early, and in good time went down to
       the wharf, and on board the packet New York FOR New York. This was
       the first American steamboat of any size that I had seen; and
       certainly to an English eye it was infinitely less like a steamboat
       than a huge floating bath. I could hardly persuade myself, indeed,
       but that the bathing establishment off Westminster Bridge, which I
       left a baby, had suddenly grown to an enormous size; run away from
       home; and set up in foreign parts as a steamer. Being in America,
       too, which our vagabonds do so particularly favour, it seemed the
       more probable.
       The great difference in appearance between these packets and ours,
       is, that there is so much of them out of the water: the main-deck
       being enclosed on all sides, and filled with casks and goods, like
       any second or third floor in a stack of warehouses; and the
       promenade or hurricane-deck being a-top of that again. A part of
       the machinery is always above this deck; where the connecting-rod,
       in a strong and lofty frame, is seen working away like an iron top-
       sawyer. There is seldom any mast or tackle: nothing aloft but two
       tall black chimneys. The man at the helm is shut up in a little
       house in the fore part of the boat (the wheel being connected with
       the rudder by iron chains, working the whole length of the deck);
       and the passengers, unless the weather be very fine indeed, usually
       congregate below. Directly you have left the wharf, all the life,
       and stir, and bustle of a packet cease. You wonder for a long time
       how she goes on, for there seems to be nobody in charge of her; and
       when another of these dull machines comes splashing by, you feel
       quite indignant with it, as a sullen cumbrous, ungraceful,
       unshiplike leviathan: quite forgetting that the vessel you are on
       board of, is its very counterpart.
       There is always a clerk's office on the lower deck, where you pay
       your fare; a ladies' cabin; baggage and stowage rooms; engineer's
       room; and in short a great variety of perplexities which render the
       discovery of the gentlemen's cabin, a matter of some difficulty.
       It often occupies the whole length of the boat (as it did in this
       case), and has three or four tiers of berths on each side. When I
       first descended into the cabin of the New York, it looked, in my
       unaccustomed eyes, about as long as the Burlington Arcade.
       The Sound which has to be crossed on this passage, is not always a
       very safe or pleasant navigation, and has been the scene of some
       unfortunate accidents. It was a wet morning, and very misty, and
       we soon lost sight of land. The day was calm, however, and
       brightened towards noon. After exhausting (with good help from a
       friend) the larder, and the stock of bottled beer, I lay down to
       sleep; being very much tired with the fatigues of yesterday. But I
       woke from my nap in time to hurry up, and see Hell Gate, the Hog's
       Back, the Frying Pan, and other notorious localities, attractive to
       all readers of famous Diedrich Knickerbocker's History. We were
       now in a narrow channel, with sloping banks on either side,
       besprinkled with pleasant villas, and made refreshing to the sight
       by turf and trees. Soon we shot in quick succession, past a light-
       house; a madhouse (how the lunatics flung up their caps and roared
       in sympathy with the headlong engine and the driving tide!); a
       jail; and other buildings: and so emerged into a noble bay, whose
       waters sparkled in the now cloudless sunshine like Nature's eyes
       turned up to Heaven.
       Then there lay stretched out before us, to the right, confused
       heaps of buildings, with here and there a spire or steeple, looking
       down upon the herd below; and here and there, again, a cloud of
       lazy smoke; and in the foreground a forest of ships' masts, cheery
       with flapping sails and waving flags. Crossing from among them to
       the opposite shore, were steam ferry-boats laden with people,
       coaches, horses, waggons, baskets, boxes: crossed and recrossed by
       other ferry-boats: all travelling to and fro: and never idle.
       Stately among these restless Insects, were two or three large
       ships, moving with slow majestic pace, as creatures of a prouder
       kind, disdainful of their puny journeys, and making for the broad
       sea. Beyond, were shining heights, and islands in the glancing
       river, and a distance scarcely less blue and bright than the sky it
       seemed to meet. The city's hum and buzz, the clinking of capstans,
       the ringing of bells, the barking of dogs, the clattering of
       wheels, tingled in the listening ear. All of which life and stir,
       coming across the stirring water, caught new life and animation
       from its free companionship; and, sympathising with its buoyant
       spirits, glistened as it seemed in sport upon its surface, and
       hemmed the vessel round, and plashed the water high about her
       sides, and, floating her gallantly into the dock, flew off again to
       welcome other comers, and speed before them to the busy port.
       Content of CHAPTER V - WORCESTER. THE CONNECTICUT RIVER. HARTFORD. NEW HAVEN. TO NEW YORK [Charles Dickens' novel: American Notes]
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