like beasts; and listening to the jargon of their
unintelligible dialect, he had occasion for pensive
question within himself as to what notion these poor
animals formed of a free republic from their experience
of life under its conditions; and whether they found
them practically very different from those of the
immemorial brigandage and enforced complicity with
rapine under which they had been born. But, after
all, this was an infrequent effect, however massive,
of travel on the West Side, whereas the East offered
him continual entertainment in like sort. The
sort was never quite so squalid. For short distances
the lowest poverty, the hardest pressed labor, must
walk; but March never entered a car without encountering
some interesting shape of shabby adversity, which was
almost always adversity of foreign birth. New
York is still popularly supposed to be in the control
of the Irish, but March noticed in these East Side
travels of his what must strike every observer returning
to the city after a prolonged absence: the numerical
subordination of the dominant race. If they do
not outvote them, the people of Germanic, of Slavonic,
of Pelasgic, of Mongolian stock outnumber the prepotent
Celts; and March seldom found his speculation centred
upon one of these. The small eyes, the high cheeks,
the broad noses, the puff lips, the bare, cue-filleted
skulls, of Russians, Poles, Czechs, Chinese; the furtive
glitter of Italians; the blonde dulness of Germans;
the cold quiet of Scandinavians—fire under
ice—were aspects that he identified, and
that gave him abundant suggestion for the personal
histories he constructed, and for the more public-spirited
reveries in which he dealt with the future economy
of our heterogeneous commonwealth. It must be
owned that he did not take much trouble about this;
what these poor people were thinking, hoping, fearing,
enjoying, suffering; just where and how they lived;
who and what they individually were—these
were the matters of his waking dreams as he stared
hard at them, while the train raced farther into the
gay ugliness—the shapeless, graceful, reckless
picturesqueness of the Bowery.
There were certain signs, certain facades, certain
audacities of the prevailing hideousness that always
amused him in that uproar to the eye which the strident
forms and colors made. He was interested in the
insolence with which the railway had drawn its erasing
line across the Corinthian front of an old theatre,
almost grazing its fluted pillars, and flouting its
dishonored pediment. The colossal effigies of
the fat women and the tuft-headed Circassian girls
of cheap museums; the vistas of shabby cross streets;
the survival of an old hip-roofed house here and there
at their angles; the Swiss chalet, histrionic decorativeness
of the stations in prospect or retrospect; the vagaries
of the lines that narrowed together or stretched apart
according to the width of the avenue, but always in
wanton disregard of the life that dwelt, and bought