them which filled the good man’s heart, as he
prayed and sung under the shelter of the old English
mansion-house. Next to the mansion-houses, came
the two-story trim, white-painted, “genteel”
houses, which, being more gossipy and less nicely
bred, crowded close up to the street, instead of standing
back from it with arms akimbo, like the mansion-houses.
Their little front-yards were very commonly full of
lilac and syringa and other bushes, which were allowed
to smother the lower story almost to the exclusion
of light and airy so that, what with small windows
and small windowpanes, and the darkness made by these
choking growths of shrubbery, the front parlors of
some of these houses were the most tomb-like, melancholy
places that could be found anywhere among the abodes
of the living. Their garnishing was apt to assist
this impression. Large-patterned carpets, which
always look discontented in little rooms, haircloth
furniture, black and shiny as beetles’ wing
cases, and centre-tables, with a sullen oil-lamp of
the kind called astral by our imaginative ancestors,
in the centre,—these things were inevitable.
In set piles round the lamp was ranged the current
literature of the day, in the form of Temperance Documents,
unbound numbers of one of the Unknown Public’s
Magazines with worn-out steel engravings and high-colored
fashion-plates, the Poems of a distinguished British
author whom it is unnecessary to mention, a volume
of sermons, or a novel or two, or both, according
to the tastes of the family, and the Good Book, which
is always Itself in the cheapest and commonest company.
The father of the family with his hand in the breast
of his coat, the mother of the same in a wide-bordered
cap, sometimes a print of the Last Supper, by no means
Morghen’s, or the Father of his Country, or the
old General, or the Defender of the Constitution,
or an unknown clergyman with an open book before him,—these
were the usual ornaments of the walls, the first two
a matter of rigor, the others according to politics
and other tendencies.
This intermediate class of houses, wherever one finds
them in New England towns, are very apt to be cheerless
and unsatisfactory. They have neither the luxury
of the mansion-house nor the comfort of the farm-house.
They are rarely kept at an agreeable temperature.
The mansion-house has large fireplaces and generous
chimneys, and is open to the sunshine. The farm-house
makes no pretensions, but it has a good warm kitchen,
at any rate, and one can be comfortable there with
the rest of the family, without fear and without reproach.
These lesser country-houses of genteel aspirations
are much given to patent subterfuges of one kind and
another to get heat without combustion. The chilly
parlor and the slippery hair-cloth seat take the life
out of the warmest welcome. If one would make
these places wholesome, happy, and cheerful, the first
precept would be,—The dearest fuel, plenty
of it, and let half the heat go up the chimney.
If you can’t afford this, don’t try to
live in a “genteel” fashion, but stick
to the ways of the honest farm-house.