登陆注册
5395000000102

第102章

New York is built upon an island, which is I believe about ten miles long, counting from the southern point at the Battery up to Carmansville, to which place the city is presumed to extend northward. This island is called Manhattan, a name which I have always thought would have been more graceful for the city than that of New York. It is formed by the Sound or East River, which divides the continent from Long Island by the Hudson River, which runs into the Sound, or rather joins it at the city foot, and by a small stream called the Harlem River, which runs out of the Hudson and meanders away into the Sound at the north of the city, thus cutting the city off from the main-land. The breadth of the island does not much exceed two miles, and therefore the city is long, and not capable of extension in point of breadth. In its old days it clustered itself round about the Point, and stretched itself up from there along the quays of the two waters. The streets down in this part of the town are devious enough, twisting themselves about with delightful irregularity; but as the city grew there came the taste for parallelograms, and the upper streets are rectangular and numbered. Broadway, the street of New York with which the world is generally best acquainted, begins at the southern point of the town and goes northward through it. For some two miles and a half it walks away in a straight line, and then it turns to the left toward the Hudson. From that time Broadway never again takes a straight course, but crosses the various avenues in an oblique direction till it becomes the Bloomingdale Road, and under that name takes itself out of town. There are eleven so-called avenues, which descend in absolutely straight lines from the northern, and at present unsettled, extremity of the new town, making their way southward till they lose themselves among the old streets. These are called First Avenue, Second Avenue, and so on. The town had already progressed two miles up northward from the Battery before it had caught the parallelogramic fever from Philadelphia, for at about that distance we find "First Street". First Street runs across the avenues from water to water, and then Second Street. Iwill not name them all, seeing that they go up to 154th Street!

They do so at least on the map and I believe on the lamp-posts.

But the houses are not yet built in order beyond 50th or 60th Street. The other hundred streets, each of two miles long, with the avenues, which are mostly unoccupied for four or five miles, is the ground over which the young New Yorkers are to spread themselves. I do not in the least doubt that they will occupy it all, and that 154th Street will find itself too narrow a boundary for the population.

I have said that there was some good architectural effect in New York, and I alluded chiefly to that of the Fifth Avenue. The Fifth Avenue is the Belgrave Square, the Park Lane, and the Pall Mall of New York. It is certainly a very fine street. The houses in it are magnificent--not having that aristocratic look which some of our detached London residences enjoy, or the palatial appearance of an old-fashioned hotel in Paris, but an air of comfortable luxury and commercial wealth which is not excelled by the best houses of any other town that I know. They are houses, not hotels or palaces; but they are very roomy houses, with every luxury that complete finish can give them. Many of them cover large spaces of the ground, and their rent will sometimes go up as high as 800pounds and 1000 pounds a year. Generally the best of these houses are owned by those who live in them, and rent is not, therefore, paid. But this is not always the case, and the sums named above may be taken as expressing their value. In England a man should have a very large income indeed who could afford to pay 1000 pounds a year for his house in London. Such a one would as a matter of course have an establishment in the country, and be an earl, or a duke, or a millionaire. But it is different in New York. The resident there shows his wealth chiefly by his house; and though he may probably have a villa at Newport or a box somewhere up the Hudson, he has no second establishment. Such a house, therefore, will not represent a total expenditure of above 4000 pounds a year.

There are churches on each side of Fifth Avenue--perhaps five or six within sight at one time--which add much to the beauty of the street. They are well built, and in fairly good taste. These, added to the general well-being and splendid comfort of the place, give it an effect better than the architecture of the individual houses would seem to warrant. I own that I have enjoyed the vista as I have walked up and down Fifth Avenue, and have felt that the city had a right to be proud of its wealth. But the greatness and beauty and glory of wealth have on such occasions been all in all with me. I know no great man, no celebrated statesman, no philanthropist of peculiar note who has lived in Fifth Avenue.

That gentleman on the right made a million of dollars by inventing a shirt collar; this one on the left electrified the world by a lotion; as to the gentleman at the corner there, there are rumors about him and the Cuban slave trade but my informant by no means knows that they are true. Such are the aristocracy of Fifth Avenue, I can only say that, if I could make a million dollars by a lotion, I should certainly be right to live in such a house as one of those.

同类推荐
  • 荣进集

    荣进集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 往生礼赞偈

    往生礼赞偈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 十往生阿弥陀佛国经附十往生经真伪决疑

    十往生阿弥陀佛国经附十往生经真伪决疑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • TWICE-TOLD TALES

    TWICE-TOLD TALES

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 运气门

    运气门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 大威怒乌刍涩么仪轨经

    大威怒乌刍涩么仪轨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 别再为小事生气,小事永远只是小事

    别再为小事生气,小事永远只是小事

    学会看开、学会看淡、学会看远、学会看透、学会看准!运用你的智慧,以一种超脱的心境将万事看开。运用本书所提供的50个“智慧锦囊”,你会找到原本属于你的快乐,原本属于你的成功!
  • 太墟风华录

    太墟风华录

    姜水青鱼碧波寒,浮柳云烟媚晴滩。太墟问虚衍道德,只将八荒作一揽。
  • 先秦两汉魏晋南北朝文论讲疏

    先秦两汉魏晋南北朝文论讲疏

    先秦两汉魏晋南北朝文论讲疏
  • DIY餐厅

    DIY餐厅

    (扑街) 他离开家乡... 前往各个地方学厨,两年后回来,在明珠开了家餐厅,餐厅背后有一个标志性的建筑,那便是明珠电视台大厦。餐厅里菜单有道招牌菜名为DIY,起步价10000元,还不知道是什么菜呢,就标价10000元!还是起步价!这老板是疯了吗? ps:练笔之作!见谅!
  • 弑神榜

    弑神榜

    当了十几年的废物,少年慕炎,能让人刮目相看吗
  • 一品残妃

    一品残妃

    “一个是耳聋目盲的残废娇女,一个是旁人不能靠近的冰山世子,倒是天生一对。”剜眼断骨,向死而生。谢七终是从前世囚笼中摆脱出来,却重生成为了耳聋目盲的谢家贵女。阴森内宅,诡谲朝堂,风云四国,因为她的出现一步步起了变化。只是,这一次,不管去哪里,她的身上,都带上了世子妃的标签。旁人都冷笑观之,不能让人靠近的冰山和双目不能视物的残废,一纸婚书下要如何相处。殊不知——“娘子,我偷亲你,你为什么能看见?”传说中的冰冷世子抱住了自家世子妃,光明正大地亲了一口。“只要有你在的地方,我就会耳清目明,如沐春风。”世子妃笑的两眼弯弯,看着世子反被调戏的脸。某世子气急,扑倒,压之:“别以为你嘴上赢了就是赢了!”
  • 数星星的夜

    数星星的夜

    陆星辰,他身边的标签总是少不了高恩星的存在。高恩星是陆星辰心中坚定的初恋。从八岁到十八岁,他的身影一直都在高恩星身边打转。他将高恩星视作命定的恋人。友情坚定的他们,在碰到爱情的字眼开始断裂。两人的距离越来越远。正当高恩星想要尝试与陆星辰交往时,意外在下雨天碰见了那个令她一见钟情难忘的男生,边唯枫。高恩星与边唯枫一见钟情,再见倾心。两人机缘巧合下遇见过三次。似乎是命定的相遇。两人很快熟识成为了知心、坦诚相见的朋友。两人之间暧昧的情愫也渐渐展开。可是一切都没有高恩星想象的那么简单。如果一个人有着内心敏感的软肋,那陆星辰的软肋是高恩星,可边唯枫的软肋却是一个叫作唐果的女生。只要唐果呼唤边唯枫,边唯枫必须尽快赶到她的身边。唐果的突然出现,信誓旦旦的拿着证据向高恩星宣誓着主权,而边唯枫也因误会了高恩星与陆星辰的感情关系,两人产生隔阂,误会深深。从朋友再次变回了陌生人。陆星辰选择守护在高恩星身边,一次又一次的劝解,他终于释怀,决定放手。一年后初入大学,高恩星成为了边唯枫的同校师妹。两人在再一次产生交集。误会终究解释,两人冰释前嫌走在了一起,因为高恩星的选择和考虑,开始了漫长的地下恋情。两年后,两人矛盾重重,总是为对方考虑太多,最后二人因为毕业去留问题画上了句点。四年后,两人再次重逢。庆幸的是,他们从未忘记过对方。只是一切,不再是从前了。高恩星:“你想要我都给你,包括离开你。”陆星辰:“我真没喜欢过你,只是直接爱了。”边唯枫:“世界像巨大水晶球,我隔着玻璃,只想得到你。”
  • 现代没女爱上古代侠客

    现代没女爱上古代侠客

    李雨涵一个现代没女,没财没貌没学历,在一次车祸中穿越到古代一个不知名的国家,变成一个四五岁的小女孩。后来她被一个叫许子弘的男孩子所救,改名许紫嫣和他的家人一起生活。数年之后,许紫嫣成人了,两个人相爱了。正当两人情投意合准备成亲的时候,另一个国家的国王为了自己的利益而把公主嫁给了许子弘。公主出于嫉妒陷害许紫嫣掉下悬崖,李雨涵又回到了现代。回到现代之后,李雨涵认识了一个跟子弘长的一模一样的男人,他就是鸿志集团的总经理——赫云鸿。只是他并不认识李雨涵,而且他已经有未婚妻了。面对这一切雨涵应该如何择抉呢?
  • 妈妈如何说,男孩才肯听;妈妈如何教,男孩最优秀(第2版)

    妈妈如何说,男孩才肯听;妈妈如何教,男孩最优秀(第2版)

    这是一本家教书,主要讲述如何培养最棒的男孩。本书从培养孩子好性格、好习惯、学习能力等方面,来讲述如何培养一个最棒的男孩,给妈妈以一些积极的借鉴。