Transcriber’s Note: Italic text is enclosed in _underscores_.
Additional notes will be found near the end of this ebook.




          _Of this book there have been printed three hundred
              copies from type and original wood blocks on
                French hand-made paper, and three copies
                  on Roman parchment, by order of the
                    Committee on Publications of The
                      Grolier Club of the City of
                          New York, November,
                            Nineteen Hundred
                              and Twelve_


[Illustration]




                              THE WRITERS
                            OF KNICKERBOCKER
                                NEW YORK




                              THE WRITERS
                            OF KNICKERBOCKER
                                NEW YORK


                                   BY
                         HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE


                       ILLUSTRATIONS ENGRAVED BY
                            WALWORTH STILSON

                             [Illustration]

                            THE GROLIER CLUB
                        OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
                                  1912




                          _Copyright, 1912, by
                        The Grolier Club of the
                           City of New York_




LIST OF WOODCUTS


   DEVICE OF THE GROLIER CLUB                                 Title-page

                                                                    PAGE
   TAIL-PIECE                                                       viii

       “From Bowling Green to Trinity Church.”

   1 HEAD-BAND                                                         3

       “New York has grown by the process of
       destruction, and has become metropolitan
       through successive stages of self-effacement.”


   2 TAIL-PIECE                                                       28

       “And there was a bridge on the Boston Post
       Road ... which bore the suggestive name
       of the Kissing-bridge.”


   3 HEAD-BAND                                                        29

       “The old Government House.”


   4 TAIL-PIECE                                                       51

       “The old-fashioned gentleman who was last
       seen on the Albany Post Road.”


   5 HEAD-BAND                                                        52

       “Celebrated in the ‘Salmagundi’ papers as
       Cockloft Hall.”


   6 TAIL-PIECE                                                       67

       “Sitting ... overlooking the river ... the
       old man delighted to recall the golden
       Knickerbocker age.”


   7 HEAD-BAND                                                        68

       “Whose distinction was invariably expressed
       in a green or common, a Congregational spire,
       an academy, and rows of graceful elms.”


   8 TAIL-PIECE                                                       88

       “Let it be taken from the top of Weehawk
       Hill, overlooking New York.”


   9 HEAD-BAND                                                        89

       “In the back room of Wiley’s shop ... Dana
       met Cooper, Halleck, Brevoort.”


  10 TAIL-PIECE                                                      121

       “Lines to a water-fowl.”


[Illustration]




                              THE WRITERS
                            OF KNICKERBOCKER
                                NEW YORK




[Illustration]


                             KNICKERBOCKER
                               NEW YORK


In these days, when New York has become a metropolitan city with
a population of four million souls, and the old city has shrunk
politically into the Borough of Manhattan, it is not easy to recall the
obliterated outlines of the Town which was satirized by the vivacious
young men who wrote the “Salmagundi” papers. Unlike Rome, which has
been rebuilt half a dozen times on its early site and largely out of
its old materials, so that the city of to-day is a kind of palimpsest
in stone, brick, and mortar, New York has grown by the process of
destruction, and has become metropolitan through successive stages
of self-effacement. Here and there one comes upon a building which
has survived from the late colonial period, but no structure now
standing bears witness to the taste or lack of taste of the Dutch
settlers, and the streets preserve no traces of the old lanes and
highways save an occasional name as misleading descriptively as the
Bowery. Canal Street is as stolid a reminiscence of a water-channel
as is the heavy warehouse frontage of Grub Street of the humorous or
tragic traditions of literary Bohemia in the days of Mr. Pope and Dr.
Johnson. New York has changed its form almost as often as, according
to the physiologists, men change their bodies. It has kept certain
characteristics which marked its youth and predicted the traits of
its maturity; but its growth has been so great that the divergencies
between the latest and the earliest city seem to be differences in kind
rather than in degree.

The New York in which Washington Irving was born in April, 1783, was
still in the possession of British troops, who withdrew six months
later, leaving a half-ruined city behind them. The population had been
reduced from twenty thousand to ten thousand; shipping had deserted the
captive town, and the wharves were rotting from disuse; streets which
had been opened before the war to afford room for growth were desolate
and forlorn, with that overgrowth of straggling weeds which is the
final evidence of neglect. Many public and private buildings which had
been used for military purposes were falling in ruins. The great fire
of September, 1776, had left a large part of the western side of the
little city a mass of ruins; and Broadway from Bowling Green to Trinity
Church was a dreary waste of blackened walls and heaps of rubbish.
There was no money in the city treasury, and the once growing town was
apparently blighted. Other cities had been more active in the struggle
for independence; none had suffered more severely from the devastation
of war.

“In June, 1787,” wrote Samuel Breck, “on my return from a residence of
a few years in France, I arrived at that city [New York] and found it a
neglected place, built chiefly of wood, and in a state of prostration
and decay. A dozen vessels in port; Broadway, from Trinity Church,
inclusive, down to the Battery, in ruins, owing to a fire that had
occurred when the city was occupied by the enemy during the later part
of the war--the ruined walls of the houses standing on both sides of
the way testifying to the poverty of the place five years after the
conflagration; for although the war had ceased during that period,
and the enemy had departed, no attempt had been made to rebuild them.
In short, there was silence and inactivity everywhere.” Mr. Breck
was mistaken about the date of the fire, but his description of the
desolate city was accurate.

In these depressing conditions, New York did not give itself up to
gloomy misgivings; it had always been a cheerful, social community,
and it was not long in recovering its prosperity and high spirits.
Six years after the close of the war it was the Capital of the United
States, the population had more than doubled, ships were in the harbor,
grass no longer gave the streets a rustic aspect, and the tide of
activity had reached the highest point in its history. There were
nearly twenty-four thousand people living south of Reade Street on the
west, and of Pike Street on the east; a swamp arrested the growth of
the town along the East River. There were about twenty-four hundred
slaves. The houses were mainly of English architecture, though peaked
roofs and gable-ends to the streets recalled the good old days of
Dutch dominion, when a canal ran through Broad Street and broad-sterned
Dutch vessels lay at anchor in the centre of the town.

Politics ran high, and during elections language was used with far less
restraint than at present. The first man sent to Congress from New York
under the recently adopted national Constitution was Mr. John Lawrence,
and a letter published in the “Daily Advertiser” in March, 1789,
contains the following frank statement: “Of all the men who framed
that monarchical, aristocratical, oligarchical, tyrannical, diabolical
system of slavery, the New Constitution, _One Half_ were lawyers. Of
the men who represented, or rather misrepresented, this city and county
in the late convention of this State, to whose wicked arts we may
safely attribute the adoption of that diabolical system, _seven_ out
of the _nine_ were lawyers.... And what crowns the wickedness of these
wicked lawyers is, that a great majority of them throughout the State
are violently opposed to our GOOD and GREAT HEAD and never-failing
friend of the city and city interests, the present GOVERNOR.

“Beware, beware, beware of Lawyers!”

Very pleasant things were said about the New York of 1789 when, at
the end of a three months’ session of the United States Congress, it
was announced that only one member had been ill. After commenting on
its nearness to the ocean and the sweetening of its air by abundant
verdure, a charming picture is evoked by the statement that the
residents on the west side of Broadway are “saluted by fragrant odors
from the apple orchards and buckwheat fields in blossom on the pleasant
banks of the Jersey shore.”

The little city was already charged with extravagance and frivolity,
and the details of these offences are not lacking. One reads of
blue satin gowns with white satin petticoats, large Italian gauze
handkerchiefs with satin border stripes worn about the neck, completed
by a head-dress of “pouf of gauze in the form of a globe, the headpiece
of which was made of white satin having a double wing, in large plaits,
and trimmed with a large wreath of artificial roses.” There were shoes
of blue satin adorned by rose-colored rosettes, and muffs of wolfskin
with knots of scarlet ribbon. The gentlemen of the period were arrayed
with equal splendor: bottle-green, pearl, scarlet, purple, mulberry,
and garnet were among the colors of cloths advertised by a local tailor
on Hanover Square; while waistcoats fairly glowed with brilliant hues
and brocaded and spangled buttons. Beaver and castor hats were in
vogue, and superior boots were made by Mr. Thomas Garner, of Pearl
Street, whose proud claim to the patronage of the fashionable was that
he had worked for the first nobility in England. It cost approximately
seventy-five dollars to dress a lady’s hair every day in the year; and
there were dentists who pulled the teeth of the poor _gratis_ between
the hours of six and nine on the mornings of Monday and Thursday. The
sociability and hospitality of the city made a deep impression on Noah
Webster, who was also struck by the absence of affectation and of
social snobbery.

Lectures appear to have been few in number and serious in theme; the
city, which took its pleasures comfortably, took its opportunities of
enlightenment sparingly and in a heroic temper. There appears to have
been but one candidate on the lecture platform for public approval in
this field during the winter of 1789, and he is described as “a man
more than thirty years an Atheist.” The lecture was delivered at Aaron
Aorson’s tavern, and tickets were to be had from the Aldermen!

The play enjoyed greater popular favor, but the John Street Theatre
was without competition until 1798, when the Old Park Theatre was
opened. During the season of 1789, William Dunlap put several home-made
American dramas on the stage. He was the prolific author of forty-nine
plays, which stand to the credit of his industry if not of his genius.
These dramas were the premature births of the Genius of the American
stage, and none of them survives. They were very faint prophecies of
the interesting dramatic movement now in progress; but one of them,
“Darby’s Return,” achieved the rare distinction of evoking a laugh from
Washington--an occurrence so unusual that it stimulated a writer in
the “Daily Advertiser” to report it in the most stately English: “Our
Adored Ruler seemed to unbend and for the moment give himself to the
pleasures arising from the gratifications of the two most noble organs
of sense, the Eye and the Ear!”

The Musical Society gave an occasional recital, and there were
subscription concerts under the management of local music-teachers.
The young gentlemen at Columbia College were delivering Commencement
orations “On the Progress and Causes of Civilization” and “On the
Rising Glory of America.” There were nine publishers and booksellers
in the city, and in the year of Irving’s birth one of them announced
“The First American Novel” under the portentous title, “The Power of
Sympathy; or, the Triumph of Nature.” The Society Library, disrupted
by the war, was re-established, and a circulating library organized.
William Dunlap, the playwright, painted portraits and, later, became
one of the founders of the National Academy of Design. Mr. Edward
Savage and Mr. Joseph Wright followed the same profession, and
Washington sat for all three. The city was kept informed of events
by five newspapers; a magazine had been born prematurely and expired
after a brief and unimportant life. The journalistic style of the day
was of an eloquence that is happily illustrated by a description of one
of the barges which escorted Washington on his voyage across the bay
to New York to attend his inauguration: “The voices of the ladies were
as much superior to the flutes that played with the stroke of the oars
in Cleopatra’s silken-corded barge, as the very superior and glorious
water scene of New York bay exceeds the Cydnus in all its pride.”

The two-story house in which Irving was born, at No. 131 William
Street, about half-way between Fulton and John Streets, was pulled down
ten years before his death, and the house directly across the street,
in which he spent his childhood, has shared its fate. The latter was
larger and afforded greater facilities for boyish gymnastics. There
were front and rear buildings with a narrow structure between which was
hardly more than a passage, and it was from the sloping roof at the
rear that Irving made his perilous descents when he set out to enjoy
the forbidden pleasures of the John Street Theatre. George William
Curtis tells a delightful story of a boy in Philadelphia, whose father,
like the elder Irving, was of a very serious turn of mind, and who, by
way of youthful reaction, secretly frequented the forbidden playhouse.
“John,” said the father, “is this dreadful thing true that I hear
of thee? Hast thou been to see the play-actress Frances Kemble?”
“Yes, father.” “I hope thee has not been more than once, John.” “Yes,
father,” was the honest if somewhat discouraging answer; “more than
thirty times.”

The easy-going temper of the metropolis to which Irving was to give
a lasting expression is still further indicated by the story that in
order to escape the rigid requirements of his father’s Presbyterian
faith the boy had himself confirmed in Trinity Church. His temper was
genial and kindly, and the mingled sentiment and humor which were to
give his books a quality American writing had so far lacked, made
him a loiterer and an observer rather than an arduous and methodical
student. New York was the gateway to the beautiful country of Dutch
settlement and tradition on the banks of the Hudson, and the gun and
fishing-rod were the instruments of exploration with which the boy who
was to write “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” and “Rip Van Winkle” carried
his discoveries into the heart of a region in which it was always
afternoon. He had read “Orlando Furioso” and had played the knight
with great fire and gallantry in the back yard on John Street; he had
surreptitiously saved candle-ends and read the moving adventures of
Sindbad and Robinson Crusoe in forbidden places and at improper hours,
and the thirst for travel was on him. He wandered about the pier-heads
when he should have been poring over textbooks, and watched lessening
sails with eager desire to fare with them to the ends of the earth. He
was, in a word, taking that course in romance, adventure, and dreaming
which boys of his temperament and genius have elected from the
beginning of time, to the sore but fortunate disappointment of their
elders. His brothers went through Columbia College, but he went up the
Hudson and discovered to the imagination the river which Hudson had
discovered to the eye. Diedrich Knickerbocker was last seen, it will be
remembered, by the passengers in the stage for Albany!

The literary temperament in Irving was not without the confirmation of
the literary impulse, and while he was still in his teens he began to
try his hand at social satire, a form of literature which is practised
only by men of city breeding and interest. In the “Morning Chronicle,”
of which his brother Peter was editor and proprietor, he published, in
1802, a series of short papers dealing with the fashions and foibles
of the town after the manner of the “Spectator” and “Tatler,” and
especially with the manners of the actors and their auditors. They
were boyish performances, but they showed sensibility and humor, and
a chivalrous attitude toward women. Irving’s health, which had been
uncertain, was established by a residence of two years in Europe,
where he saw countries and peoples with infinite zest not only in the
picturesque Old World but in the range and variety of character, the
broad contrasts, the mingled tragedy and comedy of life in a more
highly organized society. “I am a young man and in Paris,” he wrote
to a friend at home, and he was happy in a wholesome appetite for a
more picturesque and vivid life than he had enjoyed in the little
provincial city at the mouth of the Hudson. When he returned in 1806
it was to find a group of companions whose knowledge of the great world
was less than his, but who were equally ready for work or for mischief
in a little provincial city which had developed what may be called a
town-consciousness.

It was still bounded on the north by Anthony and Hester Streets;
Greenwich Village, a pleasant suburban village through which
Christopher Street now passes, was a place of refuge from the plague
for families fleeing from the city; the State prison was there, and
there were faint streets budding in the adjacent farms. Broome Street
had been laid out; Astor Place and Greenwich Street, Mr. Jarvis tells
us, were lanes; the latter had attained the dignity of a fashionable
drive, and opulent citizens drove out to Greenwich Village on pleasant
afternoons, as to-day they motor to West Point or Peekskill! The seats
of fashion were to be found on the Battery, which would have remained
the most delightful locality for residence in New York if the people
of the metropolis had not conceived a repugnance to living in near
proximity to business quarters. Lower Broadway, Upper Pearl and Nassau
Streets were of high respectability; and Broadway had been paved as far
as the City Hall. Beyond lay charming country roads, occasional country
houses to which the leading families retreated from the summer heat,
and thrifty farms whose owners were happily ignorant of the enormous
future values of their fields.

The American imagination, which has since built so many cities over
night in the newer sections of the country, did not slumber, however,
even in a city in which Dutch reluctance to move faster than the fact
was so large a factor, and a map made by Mangin in 1803 carries the
Boston Road far north through a network of supposititious streets
that lay across the broad fields owned by Mr. Bayard, Mr. Rutgers,
Mr. Lispenard, Mr. De Peyster, and other well-known citizens, and
obliterates as by magic the Swamp; the Collect, or fresh-water pond;
and the salt meadows of the earlier maps.

The Collect was not, however, so easily dealt with. It was a marsh
lying across the island from Roosevelt Slip to the Hudson at what is
now the foot of Canal Street. The focal point of this marsh was a pond
which found an outlet through the Swamp where leather has had its
shrine these many years, and whence the first Brooklyn Bridge takes its
flight over the East River. The Swamp had been drained and the water
from the pond flowed along the course of the present Canal Street;
but the pond was still to be disposed of. It was very deep and it was
proposed at one time to connect it with the two rivers by canals, which
would have made New Amsterdam reminiscent of old Amsterdam; but it was
finally filled in by leveling the high ground, and adventurous youths
and maidens who had been accustomed, on pleasant afternoons, to venture
into the country beyond the City Hall lost a convenient excuse for
Sabbath-day excursions.

It is amusing to find a pleasure-garden bearing the Old World name of
Ranelagh on the older maps; and Old Vauxhall, which stood originally
at the corner of Warren and Greenwich Streets in a house built by Sir
Peter Warren, was also a public garden, patterned after its famous
original in London and kept by Sam Fraunces, at one time a steward in
the employ of Washington, and whose connection with the old tavern
which still stands ensures his name a local immortality. Later this
pleasure-ground covered the section between Broadway and the Bowery
of which the Astor Library was the centre. The chief cattle-market
was on the Bowery somewhat south of the garden. There were various
road-houses along the East River where oysters and turtles were cooked
with great skill. Fishing and water parties in summer and sleighing
parties in winter found the best of fare in these houses, with their
pleasant grounds. It was the day of the old-fashioned chaise, and
there was a bridge on the Boston Post Road at about Third Avenue
and Seventy-seventh Street which bore the suggestive name of the
Kissing-bridge. The exaction of this kind of toll appears to have been
widely practised; not only bridges but gates and stiles were penalized
for women. The Rev. Mr. Burnaby sagely observed that this custom was
“curious, yet not displeasing.” New York had spread out since Irving’s
birth, but it was still a neighborly little city, of a social turn and
disposed to make easy terms with life.

In 1809 Thomas Paine had just died in Greenwich Village, at what is
now No. 293 Bleecker Street, where he was often to be seen at the open
window reading, with his book in close proximity to a decanter of what
appeared to be brandy or rum. It is reported that two clergymen who
visited him with the hope of changing his attitude toward Christianity
were abruptly dismissed and the housekeeper received orders to bar the
door against such visitors. “If God does not change his mind, I’m sure
no human can,” was her sage comment, and the author of “The Age of
Reason” was troubled no more.

[Illustration]

       *       *       *       *       *

[Illustration]

After a stormy passage of sixty-four days, not lacking in serious
perils, Irving landed in New York in the wake of a heavy snowstorm in
February, 1806, in high spirits and ready for such pleasures as the
little town afforded. One of his biographers has described it as a
“handy” city; it was large enough to furnish ample variety of character
studies and many opportunities for good-fellowship of an intimate,
easy-going sort; there was an air of conviviality about the place,
but there was little serious dissipation. It was a very pleasant
moment in the growth of the metropolis which had become, in a quiet,
provincial way, a town in the special sense in which that word connotes
a group of people numerous enough to constitute a society, fond of
the same pleasures, interested in local incidents and amusements,
sufficiently intimate to have formed a code of social standards and
manners. In a word, in the New York of Irving’s early maturity, as in
the London of the time of Steele and Addison, there was an organized
society, open to clever portraiture and brisk satire; supplying at
the same time the material and the audience for local wit and humor.
It was easy to know everybody in the society of the town, and easy
to get about the place. The tone was not intellectual, though the
city never lacked men and women of distinguished ability and social
cultivation. It was a well-bred and hospitable society, with a keen
relish for pleasure. There were numberless dinners and suppers, much
less costly and elaborate than those of to-day, and more informal and
merry. The country was convivial in all sections outside New England,
and the social use of wine was over-generous. In America, as in
England, getting under the table was an indiscretion, not a fault. One
of Irving’s friends reported that, after a festive occasion, he had
fallen through an open grating on his homeward way and was disposed to
feel very much depressed by the darkness and solitude; but, one after
another, several fellow-guests joined him in the same manner, and the
hilarity was prolonged until dawn.

Like many other young men whose ultimate good or evil fortune it was
to write books, Irving was admitted to the bar at about the same time
that the sign, “William Cullen Bryant, attorney and counsellor at Law,”
appeared in the little village of Cummington in western Massachusetts.
In after years his estimate of his legal acquirements was indicated by
his quoting the comments of two well-known lawyers who were examining
students for admission to practise law. “Martin,” said one of these
examiners, referring to an aspirant who had acquitted himself very
lamely--“Martin, I think he knows a _little_ law.” “Make it stronger,”
was the reply; “damned little.” Irving had loitered and dreamed on
the water-front as a boy when he ought to have been at his books; and
now, at the gateway of his career, the literary temperament turned
him toward congenial fellowship rather than arduous study. There was
plenty of material for comradeship in the town, and young men of spirit
instinctively gathered about him. It was a very kindly and wholesome
Bohemia in which they disported themselves in the halcyon days of a
fleeting youth. They regarded themselves as “men about town” of the
deepest dye, but it was a very innocent town in which they amused
themselves, and they all bore honorable names in later and more serious
years.

Henry Ogden, Henry Brevoort, James K. Paulding, John and Gouverneur
Kemble, Peter and Washington Irving, the leaders of this vivacious
company, were members of families who had long been foremost in the
social life of the city, and they were far from being the “roistering
blades” they fondly thought themselves to be. They were young men of
spirit, generous tastes, and no little cultivation. They combined
with great success devotion to literature and social activity. Irving
speaks of himself as “a champion at the tea-parties,” and the “nine
worthies,” or “lads of Kilkenny,” as he called them, shone in the
society of what was then known as “the gentler sex” no less than on
the festive occasions when they celebrated their youth in private
revels. The old country house built by Nicholas Gouverneur, from whom
it had descended to Gouverneur Kemble, was the favorite out-of-town
haunt of these lively youths. It had a pleasant site on the banks of
the Passaic not far from Newark, and is celebrated in the “Salmagundi”
papers as Cockloft Hall. An old-time air hung about the place, with
its antique furniture and generous endowment of family portraits. It
was cared for by two old servants of long standing in the family, and
a negro boy, and it afforded a well-set stage for the lively comedy
which these vivacious youths made of life in the golden hour of coming
into the heritage of youth and pleasure and Letters. “Who would have
thought,” wrote Irving in his sixty-seventh year to the owner of the
old Hall, “that we should ever have lived to be two such respectable
old gentlemen?”, and many years after the curtain had fallen on the
gaiety and fun of those hilarious days, Peter Irving often recalled the
Saturdays at the Hall, when “we sported on the lawn until fatigued, and
sometimes fell sociably into a general nap in the drawing-room in the
dusk of the evening.” In town the “lads of Kilkenny” often assembled at
Dyde’s, a tavern of good standing in Park Row; a convenient place for
after-theatre suppers.

    To riot at Dyde’s on imperial champagne,
    And then scour our city--the peace to maintain,

was an occupation which these gentlemen pursued with great success.
When the financial resources of the revelers ran low they reduced the
scale of expenditure by resorting to an unpretentious porter-house at
the corner of Nassau and John Streets, not far from the theatre, where
they indulged in what they depreciatingly called “Blackguard Suppers.”
The modern misogynist habit of living in clubs and associating with
one sex only had not come into vogue in those sociable and informal
days, and the young men who formed the Knickerbocker group were on
good terms with the belles of the day, and appear to have been much in
evidence at social functions. Irving asked Henry Ogden, who had sailed
for China, to “pick up two or three queer little pretty things that
would cost nothing and be acceptable to the girls,” and there are hints
of a Chinese supper later.

The first number of “Salmagundi,” the initial work of the so-called
Knickerbocker School, was published on January 24, 1807, preceded
by some clever and mystifying announcements in the “Evening Post.”
It appeared fortnightly through the year, and came to an untimely
end in January, 1808, not because its popularity was waning, but
because its publisher was disposed to deal in an arbitrary fashion
with its high-spirited editors. The idea of a periodical which would
deal freely and frankly, in a satiric or humorous spirit, with the
fashions and foibles of the town originated with Irving, who secured
his brother William and his friend James K. Paulding as associates in
what turned out to be a more extended and elaborate frolic than they
had hitherto planned. They proposed to amuse themselves with the town,
and they succeeded for a year in keeping the little city on tip-toe
expectation, not unmixed with apprehension; for “Salmagundi,” while
entirely free from personalities and scandal, was keen in its comments
on manners and local social standards. It was written in the manner of
the “Spectator”; but New York did not furnish the varied and brilliant
material which London offered Steele and Addison, and the Irvings and
Paulding lacked the sophisticated charm, the intimate and adroit skill
of their predecessors. They were, moreover, very young apprentices,
and must not be judged by the standards set by the masters of the
art, whose comments on passing fashions have become contributions to
literature. The banter was somewhat heavy-handed and the humor gave
little promise of the lightness of Irving’s later manner, or of the
clear-cut and nimble wit of Lowell and Holmes. It bore the stamp of a
provincial society and was rollicking and hilarious rather than keen
and pungent.

Irving had no illusions about its quality. The “North American Review,”
however, described “Salmagundi” as a production of extraordinary merit.
Eleven years after the last number appeared, Irving wrote to Brevoort
that, while it was pardonable as a youthful production, it was full
of errors, puerilities, and imperfections; and in a letter to Irving,
Paulding said: “I know you consider old Sal. a sort of saucy, flippant
trollope belonging to nobody and not worth fathering.” “Salmagundi” had
the crudity of youth, but it also had its high spirits, its gaiety, and
its audacious confidence in its own opinions. It was frolicsome and
joyous and not devoid of literary grace and skill, and will remain the
happiest contemporary record of old New York.

The old Government House, which had been built for the President of
the United States, faced Bowling Green when “Salmagundi” published the
chapter entitled “A Tour in Broadway.” This building passed through
a period of great distinction as the residence of Governor George
Clinton and of Chief Justice Jay, and then lost prestige as the
local post-office. In its cellar were stored the statues of gods and
goddesses belonging to the homeless Academy of Arts. The lead statue
of George the Third, which formerly stood on Bowling Green, had been
pulled down and run into bullets to be aimed at his Majesty’s troops,
and the Green had been put to bucolic uses as a pasturage for cows.
Cortlandt Street corner was a famous vantage-ground from which to see
the belles go by in pleasant weather, on shopping bent. The City Hall,
according to “Salmagundi,” was a resort for young lawyers, not because
they had business there, but because they had no business anywhere else.

There was an advanced wing of society which practised the latest arts
of pleasure imported from the Old World. The great god Style already
had its votaries, and then, as now, many were the sacrifices of good
taste and refined manners offered at its painted paste-board shrine.
“Salmagundi” found a rich yield of satire in the imitative instinct
which shaped many of the customs and social habits of the hour. It
informs us that

    Style, that with pride each empty bosom swells,
    Puffs boys to manhood, little girls to belles.

The waltz was a novelty in those days, and “Salmagundi” “views with
alarm” its introduction into the social life of the town:

    Scarce from the nursery freed, our gentle fair
    Are yielded to the dancing-master’s care;
    And, ere the head one mite of sense can gain,
    Are introduced ’mid folly’s frippery train.
    A stranger’s grasp no longer gives alarms,
    Our fair surrender to their very arms,
    And in the insidious waltz will swim and twine,
    And whirl and languish tenderly divine!
    O, how I hate this loving, hugging dance;
    This imp of Germany brought up in France!

           *       *       *       *       *

    Let France its whim, its sparkling wit supply,
    The easy grace that captivates the eye;
    But curse their waltz,--their loose, lascivious arts
    That smooth our manners to corrupt our hearts!

In the novel and play of the time “Salmagundi” found still more
alarming evidences of a decline in morals and manners:

    Where now those books, from which in days of yore
    Our mothers gained their literary store?
    Alas! stiff-skirted Grandison gives place
    To novels of a new and rakish race;
    And honest Bunyan’s pious, dreaming lore,
    To the lascivious rhapsodies of Moore.
    And, last of all, behold the mimic stage
    Its morals lend to polish off the age,
    With flimsy farce, a comedy miscall’d,
    Garnished with vulgar cant, and proverbs bald,
    With puns most puny, and a plenteous store
    Of smutty jokes, to catch a gallery roar.
    Or see, more fatal, graced with every art
    To charm and captivate the female heart,
    The false, “the gallant, gay Lothario” smiles,
    And loudly boasts his base seductive wiles--
    In glowing colors paints Calista’s wrongs,
    And with voluptuous scenes the tale prolongs.

The stage of social development at which the town had arrived is
indicated by the words “female heart.” Its old-fashioned virtue,
assailed by “Lalla Rookh” and “The Penitents,” had, fortunately, no
premonitions that its infancy in the dramatization of vice was to pass
into the full and voluptuous maturity of these later days of the play
of passion without a shred to its back.

“Salmagundi” had made the town smile, but “A History of New York” was
so broad in its mock-heroic treatment of the local forefathers that
it gave grievous offence to those members of the early Dutch families
who lacked the sense of humor. An old gentleman who died twenty years
ago once said to the writer of these lines, with perfect gravity, that
Mr. Irving once confessed to him that the history was not entirely
accurate! It appeared just before Christmas in 1809, preceded by
cunningly devised hints and intimations in the form of letters, asking
for information about a certain old gentleman who bore the name of
Knickerbocker, who was last seen resting himself near Kingsbridge by
the passengers in the Albany stage. He had a small bundle tied in a
red bandana handkerchief in his hands, and appeared to be very much
fatigued. Ten days passed without news of the whereabouts of this weary
old gentleman, when it was announced that a book in his handwriting
had been discovered in his room and would be disposed of to pay the
arrears of his board and lodging!

The town became immensely interested, and when the History appeared it
was eagerly read, laughed over, and denounced. Never was a book more
cleverly announced even in this day, when advertising has become an art
based on a deep study of the psychology of the crowd and the effect
on the human mind of rhythmical recurrence, at short intervals, of
skilfully phrased testimonials from eminent persons to the superiority
of certain articles without which it is impossible to live. There
were eighty thousand people in New York, and the society folk who
constituted the “town” in the technical sense of the word were a
comparatively small and homogeneous group, many of whom were of Dutch
descent and bore names long honored in the city and now inscribed
on the signs on the corners of the streets. The History, originally
projected as a satire on a solemn and heavy-handed “Picture of New
York” which had recently appeared, had widened its scope, and, like
“The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews,” which started out
to be a travesty on Richardson’s “Pamela,” took on the dimensions of
an original contribution to literature. The dedication “To the New
York Historical Society” struck the key-note of its burlesque gravity
of manner and its audacious and rollicking fun. Its appearance was the
signal for a blaze of wrath accompanied by a peal of laughter from
New York to Albany. Mrs. Hoffman wrote to Irving, referring to one of
his friends who was a social leader: “Your good friend, the old lady,
came home in a great stew this evening. Such a scandalous story had got
about town--a book had come out called a ‘History of New York’; nothing
but a satire and ridicule of the old Dutch people--and they said you
was the author; but from this foul slander, I’ll venture to say, she
has defended you. She was quite in a heat about it.”

Ten years later, when its obvious burlesque intention ought to have
filtered into the most solemn-minded, it was described by an eminent
citizen of Dutch descent as “a coarse caricature.” Its humor was not
lost, however, by a host of people in the town and elsewhere. “If it is
true, as Sterne says,” wrote a correspondent in a Baltimore newspaper,
“that a man draws a nail out of his coffin every time he laughs, after
reading Irving’s book your coffin will fall to pieces.” Walter Scott
wrote to Irving’s friend Henry Brevoort: “Looking at the simple and
obvious meaning only, I have never read anything so closely resembling
the style of Dean Swift as the annals of Diedrich Knickerbocker. I have
employed these few evenings in reading them aloud to Mrs. S. and two
ladies who are our guests, and our sides have been absolutely sore with
laughing.”

This audacious burlesque of the early history of the city and of its
men of local fame and Dutch descent was the initial volume in American
literature, the first book of what used to be called _belles-lettres_
published in this country, the first piece of American writing of
literary quality which caught the attention of Europe. It also created
the Knickerbocker Legend, and gave the earliest group of writers in
New York a descriptive name. Diedrich Knickerbocker has long been the
impersonation of old New York, and, with Rip Van Winkle and Brom Bones,
forms the central group in our New World mythology; and “The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow,” “Rip Van Winkle,” and the old-fashioned gentleman who
was last seen on the Albany Post Road constitute our chief group of
legendary characters and are all the creations of Irving’s imagination.
While descriptions of the scenery and peoples of the New World had been
written south of Manhattan Island and theological treatises abounded
in New England, it was significant of the metropolitan spirit of New
York that its earliest writers, who were also the earliest writers
of literary spirit and purpose in the country, were men of humor and
urbanity, and on easy terms with life.

[Illustration]

       *       *       *       *       *

[Illustration]

Two years after the publication of “A History of New York,” Irving was
living at No. 16 Broadway, near Bowling Green, with his friend Henry
Brevoort. He had made various journeys to Albany and Washington by the
tedious methods of travel in use at the time, and his letters showed
conditions in political life which differed from those prevailing
to-day chiefly in being more sordid and unscrupulous. The coterie who
were to become known as the Knickerbocker group had become a little
less boisterous in their convivialities, but not less persuaded that
literature and jovial good-fellowship throve well together. They were
often at the Hall on the Passaic or at the home of Captain Phillips in
the Highlands of the Hudson, where spacious mansions and large estates
had multiplied; and there were houses in town, like Mrs. Renwick’s,
where these gay young men were at ease.

On the 25th of May, 1815, Irving sailed for Liverpool, and did not
set foot on Manhattan Island again until 1832. He had given New York
the Knickerbocker tradition, made the first important contribution to
_belles-lettres_ in this country, and conferred on the metropolis the
distinction of being the birthplace of American literature.

Between the publication of “Salmagundi” in 1807 and Irving’s return
from Europe in 1832, the group of young men who belonged to his
coterie and who formed the Knickerbocker group had their golden age
of easy conditions so far as absence of competition was concerned.
Long afterward Irving said to George William Curtis: “You young
literary fellows to-day have a harder time than we old fellows had.
You trip over each other’s heels; there are so many of you. We had it
all our own way. But the account is square, for you can make as much
by a lecture as we made by a book.” The “town” lasted well on into
the Thirties, but it was no longer the undisturbed provincial city.
Cooper, Bryant, Willis, and Poe had become residents, and there was a
further progression toward cosmopolitanism. Moreover, the city was
fast outgrowing its old-time metes and bounds, and complaints about
the distances between sections and lamentations for the passing of
“the good old times” began to be heard. While Irving was industriously
transcribing the half-forgotten background of ripe landscape and
ancient custom in the Old World and winning a reputation of the most
enviable kind, the rollicking friends who had been young together were
passing into maturity and making the most of the morning hours of
reputation and position.

No more interesting face was seen in the streets of New York in the
days of Irving’s long expatriation than that of James Kirke Paulding.
The regular and clear-cut features, the smiling but penetrating eyes,
the compact, well-poised head with its mass of hair worn with the
picturesque carelessness of nature, gave him a look of distinction.
He was a very companionable man, and there was no suggestion of the
precision and preoccupation of the man of affairs about Paulding; his
convictions were deep-set and never kept in the background if there was
occasion for their expression; but, like all companionable men, he knew
how to find common ground with a friend ample enough for the freest
interchange of jest and idea. He was of colonial stock, as were all
the men of his craft in New York. For many years before the Revolution
the Pauldings had lived in Tarrytown, which is intimately associated
with the Knickerbocker tradition; but that lovely shore of the Hudson
was open to the ravages of both armies during the war, and the family
removed to Dutchess County. This county lies north of Westchester, and
both have fed New York with men of distinction. Dutchess claims to
have been the mother of beautiful women as well, one of them of such
surpassing loveliness that the Czar of Russia of that day pronounced
her the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. The poet’s father was
active in the American cause, and his cousin John was one of the
captors of Major André. His boyhood was so ravaged by the uncertainties
and hardships of war that he said later that he never wished to be
young again.

He was in his nineteenth year when he came to New York, and, through
his acquaintance with William Irving, met the group of young men who
were making a business of pleasure and a recreation of literature.
He and Washington Irving were soon fast friends, and the first number
of “Salmagundi” was their joint production. Paulding, like Cooper,
became involved later in controversies which gave sharp point to his
pen, but in “Salmagundi” he shared with Irving the gaiety of spirit
and urbanity of manner which made the keen satire of that quick-witted
journal entertaining even to its victims. Duyckinck was of opinion
that the papers in Oriental guise were from Paulding’s hand, and that
he wrote many of the best descriptive passages; and characterized his
style as stamped by feeling, observation, friendly truth, and genial
sympathy. He was one of the first to state forcibly the American case
in the long and at times acrimonious interchange of criticism between
this country and England, and “The Diverting History of John Bull
and Brother Jonathan” was so keen a piece of satire, but so free from
malice, that it was reprinted in England. A later satire in the form of
a parody on the “Lay of the Last Minstrel” made such stinging comment
on the British raids on Chesapeake Bay as to be thought worthy of the
attention of the “Quarterly Review,” an adept in the heavy-handed
castigation in vogue at that time. A retort to the strictures of the
“Quarterly Review” soon followed in pamphlet form, and raided English
morals and manners with such effectiveness that it caught the attention
of President Madison.

In 1816 Paulding traveled in Virginia and wrote one of the earliest of
those local studies which record the interstate commerce of observation
and criticism for which this country supplies such abundant
material. The spirited and frank retorts to the somewhat oppressive
“condescension of foreigners” had made Paulding known to the country
at large, but when “The Backwoodsman” appeared in 1818 its elaborate
and very formal heroics, descriptive of the fortunes of an emigrant who
made the perilous change from the Hudson to the frontier, found the
same scanty measure of favor now generally extended to narrative poems.
The poem enjoyed a distinction, however, at that time very rare: it was
translated into French. Paulding’s friend and contemporary has left a
somewhat enigmatic comment on this original American production:

    Homer was well enough; but would he ever
    Have written, think you, “The Backwoodsman”?
        Never!

If these lines had fallen under the eye of Matthew Arnold we should
have had another light-handed international amenity to contribute to
the joy of both nations.

When Paulding tried to recall the atmosphere and tone of “Salmagundi”
in 1819, it was soon evident that the “town” of the early Knickerbocker
had merged into a larger community, and much of the wit went wide
of the mark. Paulding, meanwhile, had entered public service and
was living in Washington. In 1823 he published his first novel,
“Koningsmarke,” a study of life among the Swedish settlers on the banks
of the Delaware. But the satirical impulse was strong in him, and the
title of his next book, “John Bull in America; or, the New Münchausen,”
is sufficiently descriptive to make further comment unnecessary; while
“The Merry Tales of the Three Wise Men of Gotham,” which appeared a
year later, touched somewhat caustically the new social doctrine of
Robert Dale Owen, the rising science of phrenology, and other matters
of interest at the moment. His aptness for satire was braced in
Paulding by a lively dislike for the heavy contemptuousness of manner
of some Englishmen of the time, and the abundant material furnished by
some of these candid friends led him again to enter the field with one
of the keenest of his satires, “The Mirror for Travelers,” a burlesque
guide-book and record of travel in this country, in a cleverly imitated
British manner.

In this satiric view Paulding was a true child of the Knickerbocker
spirit, and his next books, “Tales of the Good Woman” and “Chronicles
of the City of Gotham,” purported to be translations of legends of
early New York. A Mrs. Grant, who had written pleasantly of the old
Dutch settlers, furnished material for “The Dutchman’s Fireside”;
a story which so greatly pleased the readers of the day that it
went promptly through six editions and was republished in England,
France, and Holland. In Washington, as in New York, Paulding was a
thoroughgoing Knickerbocker; but he had an eye for manners and great
zest for the pleasures of hospitality, and his account of Virginia
was followed, the year after the appearance of the Dutch novel,
by “Westward Ho!”, a story that, moving with the southern flow of
emigration, began in Virginia and was worked out in Kentucky. Paulding
was charmed by the plantation life, the generous hospitality, and the
winning Southern temperament, and in 1836, when the tide of feeling in
the country was rising, wrote an uncompromising defence of slavery, an
institution with which he was not unfamiliar in his own State, where it
was not abolished until 1799. In 1837 Paulding entered the cabinet of a
Knickerbocker President, Van Buren, as Secretary of the Navy.

On retiring from office, Paulding found a delightful home overlooking
the Hudson, not far from Poughkeepsie, within sight of many of the
localities endeared by early associations and ancient Dutch traditions.
There he practised the arts of agriculture and of writing with growing
content. He was as busy within doors as without, and his pen was
driven as regularly as his plough. A story of the Revolutionary period,
and, later, a novel laid partly in this country and partly in England,
and an American comedy, “The Bucktails; or, The Americans in England,”
were fruits of this well-ordered leisure. Five years later he gave this
very comfortable picture of his manner of life:

“I smoke a little, read a little, write a little, ruminate a little,
grumble a little, and sleep a great deal. I was once great at pulling
up weeds, to which I have a mortal antipathy, especially bull’s-eyes,
wild carrots, and toad-flax, _alias_ butter-and-eggs. But my working
days are almost over. I find that carrying seventy-five years on my
shoulders is pretty nearly equal to the same number of pounds; and
instead of labouring myself, I sit in the shade watching the labours
of others, which I find quite sufficient exercise.”

Sitting pipe in mouth on his veranda overlooking the river, watching
the harvesters and the haze on the Catskills on those autumn afternoons
when Rip Van Winkle’s slumbers were deepest, the old man delighted
to recall the golden Knickerbocker age before the “town” had been
lost in the metropolis, to tell the brave story of the youth of the
Knickerbocker group, to draw the portraits of the great men he had
seen in Washington, to castigate John Bull with passionate eloquence
whenever occasion arose, and to chant the elegy of age on the good old
times of the patriots and demigods. A sturdy man, of deep convictions
and passionate feelings, Paulding shared Irving’s sense of humor, high
spirits, and gift for satire; but, while Irving saw the Old World with
sympathetic eyes and reknit the severed ties between the young and the
old country, Paulding remained a provincial in experience and feeling;
loyal, prejudiced, partisan; a man of a city, but not a man of the
world.

[Illustration]

       *       *       *       *       *

[Illustration]

The last stages of the Knickerbocker age began when Fitz-Greene Halleck
appeared on the scene. He was not to the manner born; he came from
Guilford, Connecticut; but he felt the Knickerbocker spirit and shared
its achievements. Born in one of the loveliest of the old New England
villages, whose distinction was invariably expressed in a green or
common, a Congregational spire, an academy, and rows of graceful elms,
Halleck brought to New York, in 1811, a good school training and skill
in bookkeeping gained in that forerunner of the modern department
store, the country store. The laughter which greeted the appearance of
the “Salmagundi” papers was a thing of the past, and the anger which
met Diedrich Knickerbocker’s story of his ancestors had lost its heat;
the merry youths who gathered at Cockloft Hall had blown the foam off
the wine of life, though they had not lost their zest in the mere act
of living; Irving was boarding on lower Broadway with Brevoort as a
roommate, and there was plenty of good talk but very little work done.

Halleck made a very quiet entrance into the city which was later to
honor him with one of the few statues commemorative of its Men of
Letters. He was a born accountant, and during his long residence in
New York he served two men in this capacity--Mr. Jacob Barker and Mr.
John Jacob Astor. Mr. Astor, at his death in 1848, left him an annuity
large enough in those days of moderate prices to enable him to retire
to his native town and enjoy ease of condition and industrious leisure
in a fine old colonial house which had some associations with Shelley’s
adventurous grandfather.

Halleck did not find his way into the Knickerbocker group at the
start, but he early made acquaintance with Joseph Rodman Drake and
the two became ardent friends. Drake was a young man of captivating
personality; variously gifted and brilliant; a thoroughbred in his
sense of honor and a certain gallant rectitude and courage; a man of
charming fancy, who, at the age of five, was writing clever verse. By
descent he was an American of the Americans, if we accept the dictum
of Richard Grant White that to be an American one must have come of
ancestors who arrived in this country before the War of the Revolution.
Drake had an ancestor in the Plymouth Company, and his father held a
colonelcy in Washington’s army. His mother was equally well-born in the
true sense of the word. His childhood was overshadowed by the death of
both his parents and the bitterness of poverty; but the boy was of a
chivalrous spirit and faced hard conditions with a resolution which was
an assurance of success. His active fancy opened a door of escape from
these conditions, and he played many romantic parts in the drama of his
bleak boyhood. He was an omnivorous reader, his memory let nothing
escape, and despite his lack of opportunity he became exceptionally
well informed. His facility in verse-writing, so early developed, grew
with his years; and his endeavor to make a man of business of himself
failed utterly.

Drake was eighteen and Halleck twenty-three when, on a sailing party
in the bay, they met James De Kay, a young medical student. The day
was genial, youth was at the prow and also at the helm, and Halleck
remarked that “it would be heaven to lounge upon the rainbow and read
Tom Campbell.” It requires some effort of the imagination to recall
Campbell’s popularity at that time and to revive the state of mind
which could see in him a possible relation with the rainbow; but in
youth and fair weather all things tremble on the verge of poetry.
Literature was still in the future for the ardent youths, but life was
within easy reach, and especially the pleasant social life of a small
city. In this same year Irving was beginning to look upon the quiet
pleasures of New York with the jaundiced eye of a veteran man of the
world upon whom the weight of twenty-nine years bore heavily. Writing
of a certain vivacious young woman who played “the sparkler,” he
said: “God defend me from such vivacity as hers in future--such smart
speeches without meaning; such bubble-and-squeak nonsense. I’d as lieve
stand by a frying-pan for an hour and listen to the cooking of apple
fritters”; and he reports that when he was out of the house he did not
stop running for a mile. He speaks irreverently of the “divinities and
blossoms” of the hour, of “rascally little tea parties,” and protests
that he is weary of the “tedious commonplaces of fashionable society.”

The two young poets, hidden in an obscurity which they found
very pleasant, were probably in great awe of the brilliant young
Knickerbocker who had dared to ridicule the town, and who, in the glory
of his local fame, was eager for fresh fields and a wider horizon. They
found very excellent company and much pleasant talk in the city, and
they hunted the joys of youth together. Halleck described Drake at this
time as “perhaps the handsomest man in New York--a face like an angel,
a form like an Apollo.” Music was one of the accomplishments of Drake,
and he played the flute at a time when that instrument and the harp
were the symbols of social cultivation. One of their hostesses was
Mrs. Peter Stuyvesant, whose spacious house, not far from the square
which bears her name, with its gardens and lawn stretching to the
East River, was a centre of social activity. The city ended at Canal
Street, and a visit in the vicinity of old St. Mark’s was like going
to Tarrytown or Trenton in these swift-footed days. Mrs. Stuyvesant
declared, when First Avenue was laid out and this earliest intrusion
into the privacy of a great colonial estate made, that her heart was
broken. A pear-tree which stood long at the corner of Third Avenue and
Thirteenth Street was for many decades the only surviving relic of this
hospitable home.

The country house of Mr. Henry Eckford was a kind of second home to the
young poets, though its distance from the city was a test of their
enjoyment of its hospitality. It stood in a pine grove on Love Lane
where Twenty-first Street crosses Sixth Avenue! New York was surrounded
by spacious country places, not only on the upper part of the island,
but across the three rivers. Among these sylvan homes was that of the
well-known Hunt family, on the Long Island shore almost opposite West
Farms, to which Halleck and Drake made their way by stage and small
boat, and where they often found delightful companionship over Sunday.
On these occasions Halleck gave himself up to the pleasures of “female
society,” but Drake went a-fishing in his old clothes. In the evening
the two friends appeared in different rôles: Halleck told stories and
recited verse, and Drake sang.

Drake had studied medicine and embarked in the business of selling
drugs at one of the corners of Park Row, and there is a tradition
that in this building, which was both a dwelling and a shop, the
second series of satirical papers on the town, “The Croakers,” was
conceived and brought forth. These lively satires, which took the
town by storm, were in verse of varying degrees of wit and melody.
They were clever skits on men and manners, many of them burlesques,
and appeared first in the columns of the “Evening Post,” over the
signature “Croakers,” adapted from “The Good-Natured Man.” This was in
March, 1819, and thenceforth “Croakers” appeared at short intervals
and speedily became the topic of the town. The poets and Coleman, the
editor of the “Evening Post,” adroitly concealed the authorship of
the poems, and great was the speculation on that subject. So great was
the wincing and shrinking at “The Croakers,” that every person was on
tenterhooks; “neither knavery nor folly has slept quietly since our
first commencement,” wrote one of the two poets in a mood of pardonable
elation. Poor Coleman was almost submerged by the flood of imitations
called out by the brilliant success of the series. Conceived in the
spirit of mischief, these facile and fetching rhymes have preserved the
humors of the hour, and, with “Salmagundi,” are entertaining chapters
in the history of the decade between 1819 and 1829.

General Wilson recalls a remark of Drake’s which explains the lightness
and fun of these satirical and burlesque pieces. The young poet had
just corrected the proof of some lines he had recently written, when
he turned a glowing face to his collaborator and cried out: “Oh,
Halleck, isn’t this happiness!” Halleck may be pardoned for writing to
his sister: “We have tasted all the pleasures and many of the pains of
literary fame and notoriety under the assumed name of ‘The Croakers’;
we have had the consolation of seeing and hearing ourselves praised,
puffed, eulogized, execrated, and threatened as much, I believe I can
say with truth, as any writers since the days of Junius. The whole town
has talked of nothing else for three weeks past, and every newspaper
has done us the honour to mention us in some way, either of praise or
censure, but all uniting in owning our talents and genius.”

The poets, meanwhile, were working individually as well as
collectively. In 1819, while the town was still talking about “The
Croakers,” “The Culprit Fay,” written in August, 1816, was gaining a
wide reputation for Drake, and there were many who hailed him as the
coming poet. It was a charming flight of fancy, delicately poised in
mid-air, and kept aloft with that ease which is born of native gift
and skill in versification. The story runs that Cooper and Halleck,
in a warm discussion of the romantic associations of the Scotch lakes
and streams and their rich contributions to poetry, declared that
American rivers offered no such material to the poet. Drake not only
ardently espoused the cause of the American rivers, but in three days’
time re-enforced his argument by writing “The Culprit Fay,” with the
Highlands of the Hudson as a background, but bringing in impressions
received on the shore of Long Island Sound; frankly confessing his
departure from poetic realism in an ingeniously worded note: “The
reader will find some of the inhabitants of salt water a little further
up the Hudson than they usually travel, but not too far for the
purposes of poetry.”

In May, 1819, Drake wrote his popular song, “The American Flag,” which
appeared first in the columns of the “Evening Post,” with very warm
commendation from the editor: “Sir Philip Sidney said, as Addison tells
us, that he could never read the old ballad of ‘Chevy Chase’ without
feeling his heart beat within him as at the sound of a trumpet. The
following lines, which are to be ranked among the highest inspirations
of the Muse, will suggest similar associations in the breast of the
gallant American officer.” The praise was a little too ardent, but
what the song lacked in poetic quality it made up in the ardor of its
patriotism, and it has passed, through the school-books, into the minds
of many generations of American boys, and has been proudly declaimed
on many platforms. It ought to be remembered that Halleck wrote the
closing lines:

    Forever float that standard sheet!
      Where breathes the foe but falls before us,
    With Freedom’s soil beneath our feet,
      And Freedom’s banner streaming o’er us.

One of the prominent preachers of the town at that time was the Rev.
Dr. Samuel H. Cox, a Presbyterian of unadulterated Calvinistic views
and the author of the well-known hymn beginning:

    We are living, we are dwelling
      In a grand and awful time,
    In an age on ages telling,
      To be living is sublime.

The free poetic temperament of the two poets revolted at the rigid
doctrines powerfully and dogmatically expounded by Dr. Cox, and they
amused themselves by delivering sermons of a very different theology to
a very small but highly appreciative audience of two intimate friends.
Unfortunately, these productions, which would have made a highly
original contribution to sermonic literature, have not been preserved.

The friendship of Halleck and Drake, compounded of love and laughter,
of work and wit, was severed by the death of Drake in September, 1820.
There is no more winning and unworldly chapter in the story of New York
than the generous and loyal comradeship of these two young men, who,
like Irving and Paulding, conspired against the dullness of the town
and made it smile at its own follies. Neither poet had genius, but both
had talent; and Drake, like Hamilton, belongs to the group of men of
brilliancy and personal charm whose presence has given distinction to
New York in every decade since it was founded.

Halleck had written “Fanny” in 1819, a satirical poem which dealt
with contemporary manners and men with a freedom that stopped
short of impertinence, but afforded much amusement to all save the
solemn-minded. The poem passed through several editions and carried
Halleck’s reputation to distant parts of the country. A visit in
Europe gave the young poet themes like “Burns” and “Alnwick Castle”
and “Marco Bozzaris,” which he treated with spirit and metrical
effectiveness. Few boys have grown up in America since 1827 who have
not heard of the Turk who dreamed in his guarded tent of the hour
when Greece, “her knee in suppliance bent, should tremble at his
power.” Perhaps no song written in this country has had wider currency
than this spirited lyric, born at a time when the Greek struggle for
independence appealed to the imagination of the world. In 1848, when
his service in the office of John Jacob Astor was terminated by the
death of that adventurous capitalist, with whom Irving had also had
very pleasant relations, Halleck went back to Guilford and spent
nineteen peaceful years in a house which bore the impress of colonial
taste in its dignity and spaciousness. He had comfortable means
and the leisure so dear to a man of literary taste and habit; but
he never lost his love for the city which had given him such wealth
of friendship. “I shall never cease to ‘hail,’ as the sailors say,
from your good city of New York, of which a residence of more than
fifty years made me a citizen,” he wrote to an admirer who wished to
reproduce a view of his home in Guilford. “There I always considered
myself at home, and elsewhere but a visitor. If, therefore, you wish
to embellish my poem (‘Fanny’) with a view of my country-seat (it was
literally mine every Sunday for years), let it be taken from the top of
Weehawk Hill, overlooking New York, to whose scenes and associations
the poem is almost exclusively devoted.”

Halleck died at Guilford, November 19, 1867, and has been commemorated
by substantial memorials both there and in New York. A granite pillar
was dedicated to his memory in his native town, in the presence of a
great multitude, Bayard Taylor delivering the address and Dr. Holmes
contributing one of his happy occasional poems. In May, 1877, a bronze
statue of Halleck was unveiled in Central Park by the President of the
United States. Bryant, the head of the guild of American poets, and
William Allen Butler, the accomplished and versatile author of “Nothing
to Wear,” delivered addresses, and a poem by Whittier was read.

Poets of far greater genius than Halleck have been far less adequately
honored than he; for he was the poet of a half-century and of a city,
not of an age and a nation. But he lived in a fortunate time; he
was singularly happy in his associations; and he was a delightful
companion, genial and witty, scornful and satirical only in dealing
with impostors and pretenders.

[Illustration]

       *       *       *       *       *

[Illustration]

That light-handed, urbane, and successful editor and poet, Nathaniel
Parker Willis, long an active and entertaining figure in the New York
of the Thirties and Forties, barely touches the Knickerbocker town of
the Twenties. In the spring of 1829 he started the “American Monthly
Magazine” in Boston--a periodical described at a later day by that
well-known wit, “Tom” Appleton, as “a slim monthly, written chiefly
by himself, but with the true magazine flavor.” Willis had been less
than two years out of college and was without means or experience,
and his enterprise had a fine air of audacity. Events showed that as
a venture it was magnificent, but it was not war! At the end of two
years the magazine was moved to New York and merged in “The Mirror,”
a journal founded in 1823 by George P. Morris and Samuel Woodworth;
was published every Saturday; and had a long and vigorous life under
a succession of names. Woodworth, who wrote a song which was sung at
supper-tables many years afterward--“The Old Oaken Bucket”--inspired,
it is said, by a eulogy on spring water pronounced at a wine party
at Mallory’s, a popular hotel of the time,--had withdrawn from “The
Mirror” before Willis joined its editorial staff; but Willis and Morris
remained partners and devoted friends to the end. They both became
immensely popular--Willis through his versatility and sentiment,
Morris through a series of songs which went to the hearts of a host of
people: “Woodman, Spare that Tree,” “Near the Lake where droops the
Lily,” and “My Mother’s Bible.” He was one of the earliest collators of
literature for general reading, and his “Song Writers of America” and
“The Prose and Poetry of America”--the latter edited in collaboration
with Willis--were eminently useful compilations. He had the rare good
luck to write a successful play founded on Revolutionary events, and a
libretto for an opera; but his talent and fortune lay in his skill in
giving popular sentiment expression in songs. General Wilson records,
as the most impressive evidence of his popularity, that he could at any
time exchange an unread song for a check for fifty dollars. Genial in
manner and with an agreeable address, Morris was also a shrewd man of
affairs.

A vigorous, burly man, often met on the streets in the second decade,
was on his way to become one of the most widely known Americans, whose
name is now familiar throughout Europe. “The Spy” appeared in 1821, and
a few months later passed into a second edition and was dramatized.
In the following year it was published in England, and the English
newspapers began to speak of its author as a “distinguished American
novelist.” The story speedily became the foundation for a world-wide
literary reputation which has suffered little at the hands of time;
the boys in small German towns still organize themselves into tribes
of “Cooper Indians” and perform heroic feats after the manner of the
“Leather-Stocking Tales,” which confirmed and broadened the fame
established by “The Spy.”

James Fenimore Cooper was not born in New York and did not share the
Knickerbocker tradition, but between 1822, when he became a resident of
the metropolis, and 1826, when he went to Europe for a stay of seven
years, he wrote three of the most notable of his novels. “The Pioneers”
was published in 1823, “The Pilot” in 1824, “The Last of the Mohicans”
in 1826. “Lionel Lincoln,” which saw the light in 1825, is negligible,
from the point of view of literature. In 1823 Cooper was living in
Beach Street; after his return from Europe in 1833, he spent a few
winters in the city, but his home was in Cooperstown.

Cooper’s reputation, vigorous intellect, and courage of speech made for
him warm friends as well as bitter enemies, though the latter were of
the period after his return from Europe, when his sharp criticism of
American manners and his impatience with provincial standards involved
him in long-continued and unhappy controversy. “The Bread and Cheese
Club,” of which he was the founder, included in its membership men of
more than local reputation: Kent, Bryant, Morse, Halleck.

A few days before he sailed for Europe in 1826, the Club gave Cooper
a dinner at the City Hotel, at which Chancellor Kent presided, and
speeches were made by Governor Clinton, General Scott, and other
well-known men, who spoke in enthusiastic terms of the distinction he
had brought to the country and the city. Chancellor Kent hailed his
“genius, which has rendered our native soil classic ground, and given
to our early history the enchantment of fiction.”

The high regard in which Cooper was held by the men of Letters in
New York, and the relative positions of the American poets of the
day in the order of merit, are reflected in Halleck’s remark to
General Wilson: “Cooper is colonel of the literary regiment; Irving,
lieutenant-colonel; Bryant, the major; while Longfellow, Whittier,
Holmes, Dana, and myself may be considered captains.” In popular
reputation the place assigned to Cooper was not too high, although
Halleck put himself too complacently in the rank of Holmes and
Whittier. After his return from Europe in 1833, Cooper spent only a few
winters in New York; but the city in which his reputation was born, so
to speak, and in which his literary friendships were formed was the
scene of the most impressive commemoration of his life and fame. A few
months after his death a memorial meeting brought together probably
the most distinguished group of men who had appeared at one time in
the history of the city. Webster presided with his accustomed dignity,
but spoke without his occasional inspiration; while Bryant rose easily
to the highest reach of his theme in an address of great beauty and
feeling.

William Cullen Bryant came to the city in 1825 still thinking of
himself as a lawyer with a strong bent toward literature, but not
yet fully committed to a change of profession. A year earlier he had
made a flying visit to the city and been warmly welcomed by Cooper,
Halleck, the Sedgwicks, and other well-known people. The appearance
of “Thanatopsis” in 1817, and of the memorable “Lines to a Waterfowl”
a year later, had put his reputation as a poet on a basis so solid
that, while it was greatly broadened as time went on, it did not
need to be strengthened. In June, 1825, his name appeared as editor
on the title-page of the “New York Review and Athenæum Magazine.”
Later in the year he read four lectures before the Athenæum Society;
and two years later, under the auspices of the recently established
National Academy of Design, he talked so well about certain phases of
Mythology that he was asked to repeat the course several successive
years. In 1826 he became the New York editor of a periodical which
bore the portentous name of “The New York Literary Gazette or American
Athenæum,” at a salary of five hundred dollars a year. His financial
position was precarious and had become desperate when he was invited
to join the editorial staff of the “New York Evening Post,” a journal
always intimately connected with the literary history of the city. As
a by-product of his industry, Bryant contributed editorial suggestion
and writing to the “Talisman,” one of those old-fashioned annuals
which grew like mushrooms during the decade which ended in 1830. In
the closing year of that decade, having acquired an interest in the
“Evening Post,” he wrote to R. H. Dana that he had made sure of a
comfortable livelihood: “I do not like politics any better than you do;
but they get only my mornings, and you know politics and a bellyful are
better than poetry and starvation.” Long after the Knickerbocker era
had become a tradition, Bryant was reaping the double reward of the
poet and journalist, and enjoying well-earned prosperity of hand and
heart.

Among the men who found a convenient meeting-place in the shop of
Charles Wiley, a well-known publisher of the Knickerbocker period, at
the corner of Wall and New Streets, was Richard Henry Dana, whose “Two
Years Before the Mast” has been thumbed by many generations of American
boys. A Cambridge man, with a Harvard education, Dana breathed another
air than that of the metropolis; but for many years his was a familiar
figure in the places where men of literary habit gathered in New York.
In the back room of Wiley’s shop, familiarly known as the “Den,” Dana
met Cooper, Halleck, Brevoort, and a genial company who found pleasure
in Cooper’s somewhat pessimistic talk. It was on Broadway, General
Wilson tells us, that the modest author of “The Idle Man” was almost
assaulted by an enthusiastic admirer who cried, “Are you the immortal
Dana?” lifted the astonished man in his arms, rushed across the street
with him, and placed him triumphantly on his own threshold; the author
meantime calling out, “Release me from this maniac!” Such lively
demonstrations of admiration for men of Letters are no longer seen on
Broadway!

Local self-consciousness was already pronounced in the foremost
towns of the country in the third decade of the Nineteenth Century.
Boston, New York, Philadelphia, were in the race for the intellectual
primacy of the New World, and Richmond and Charleston were not
unmindful of their claims upon the homage of the nation. Nearly every
State cherished the belief that it contained within its borders a
modern Athens which could bravely invite comparison with the ancient
capital of Attica. In 1824 Boston was spoken of as “The Literary
Emporium,” a description which had, unhappily, a suggestion of trade
associations. Three years later, Philadelphia, according to a magazine
prospectus, had “within herself a larger fund of talent, erudition,
and science--larger perhaps than any other city can boast.” New York
was not lacking in the audacity which is born of self-confidence.
In 1820 an attempt was made to establish in the Knickerbocker town
an “American Academy of Languages and Belles-Lettres,” which boldly
set out to protect the language from “local and foreign corruptions,”
and to establish a “standard of writing and pronunciation, correct,
fixed, and uniform, throughout our extensive territory.” To allay the
apprehensions of the Old World, it was announced that no effort would
be made “to form an American language.” It is painful to record the
fact that this modest effort to guard the mother tongue aroused local
jealousy and perished at birth. Boston derided it!

But if New York failed to make itself the seat of an academy, it did
not fail to foster the infant industry of journalism. Professor Cairns
enumerates no less than thirty periodicals of various kinds established
in the city between 1816 and 1833. These were all modest enterprises,
and of brief and varied careers. The scale of expenditure must fill the
editors of magazines to-day with bitter regret for the conditions of
the good old times. In 1822 the publishers of the “Atlantic Magazine,”
issued in New York, paid its editor five hundred dollars a year, and
authorized an expenditure of the same amount for the conduct of the
magazine!

There were many lesser writers and men of cultivated taste in
literature and art in the closing years of the Knickerbocker period,
who formed a congenial society in the growing city, and, in some cases,
made important contributions to the scholarship of their time and
secured local reputation and influence.

Gulian Crommelin Verplanck was a fine type of the old-time gentleman
of colonial descent. After his graduation from Columbia College he
studied law, made the “grand tour,” which was not only a part of a
liberal education in those days but an enterprise of an adventurous
character, returned to become a dignified professor in what is now
the General Theological Seminary, spent eight years in Congress, and
for nearly fifty years was Vice-Chancellor of the State University.
He had a happy faculty of dignified address on public occasions, was
a contributor to the “Talisman” with Bryant, edited an illustrated
edition of Shakespeare, and appears to have been regarded by the gay
spirits of Cockloft Hall as a person not quite of their kind. Older
men, however, held him in great esteem, Bryant reports, as “an example
of steady, studious, and spotless youth.” His protest against Irving’s
presentation of the founders of Manhattan would seem to indicate that
his sense of humor was not always keen.

Frederick S. Cozzens, whose “Sparrowgrass Papers” later achieved
a brilliant local reputation, has left a characterization of Dr.
John Wakefield Francis, a physician of considerable professional
distinction, strong literary interests, and much given to hospitality,
which stands in no need of amplification: “The Doctor is one of our old
Knickerbockers. His big, bushy head is as familiar as the City Hall. He
belongs to the ‘God bless you, my dear young friend’ school. He is as
full of knowledge as an egg is full of meat. He knows more about China
than the Emperor of the Celestial Empire.”

A fleeting figure in the Knickerbocker town was the author of “Home,
Sweet Home,” a song of such popularity that Foster’s songs are its
only rivals. It was one of the ironies of life that John Howard Payne
should spend his days in exile and die beyond the seas. He was born
at No. 33 Pearl Street in 1791, became a clerk in a counting-room at
fourteen, and a semi-professional editor while in his teens; though
his connection with the “Thespian Mirror,” a local journal devoted
to the drama, was kept secret. He spent two terms in Union College,
but the stage was calling him, and in 1809--a year memorable for the
extraordinary number of men of genius it brought to birth--he played
the once popular part of _Young Norval_ on the boards of the Park
Theatre. Three years later he was playing with moderate success in
English theatres, and a little later adapting and writing plays in
Paris, drawing his material chiefly from French sources. The song which
was to give him a world-wide reputation was written in a room in the
Palais Royal for his play, “Clari; or, The Maid of Milan.” He died at
Tunis in 1852, and thirty years later “Home, Sweet Home” was sung by
a host of people gathered in Washington about the grave in which his
body was reinterred. Payne had talents of an uncommon order; men of
the quality and distinction of Talma, Coleridge, and Lamb were warmly
attached to him; his work was rewarded with generous returns in money;
but he was always in financial straits and seems to have lacked the
happy faculty of making himself at home in the world.

Other men less fugitive than Payne, though of purely local fame,
contributed to the good-fellowship of the later Knickerbocker period.
Charles P. Clinch wrote plays, poems, and criticisms; held public
office; and became the devoted friend of Halleck and Drake. “The Spy,”
“The First of May,” “The Expelled Collegians,” and an address prepared
for the opening of the Park Theatre, testify to his industry, but
failed to give his reputation more than local and passing importance.

The informal fellowship of the early Knickerbockers gave way to the
earliest literary and artistic clubs. Of one of the earliest of these
Robert Charles Sands was a member. The “Sketch Club” included Bryant,
Halleck, Verplanck, Cole, Ingham, Durand, Weir, and other practitioners
of the arts. The “Century Association,” which has been intimately
associated with the literary, artistic, and professional life of New
York, was organized at a meeting of the “Sketch Club” in 1847. Sands
was a poet and journalist, a warm-hearted, kindly humorist. A more
vigorous personality was William Leggett, who began his professional
life in the navy, while still a young man published a volume of poems
in New York, wrote with great ardor for the periodicals of the day,
and finally became one of the editors of the “Evening Post.” He was a
man of the old-time belligerent type, and fought a duel of much local
notoriety at Weehawken, where the most famous and tragic duel ever
fought on American soil had taken place in 1804.

The most popular member of the later Knickerbocker group was Charles
Fenno Hoffman, who had a happy faculty of song and verse writing. The
lasting popularity of “Sparkling and Bright” needs no explanation;
while the verses on the battle of Monterey have a ring of genuine
emotion and a force of spirited action which carry them in spite of
awkward lines:

    We were not many--we who stood
      Before the iron sleet that day;
    Yet many a gallant spirit would
    Give half his years if but he could
      Have been with us at Monterey.

Hoffman was connected editorially with the “New York American” and
was one of the founders of the “Knickerbocker Magazine,” which was
born in the afterglow of the Knickerbocker period and continued the
Knickerbocker tradition, though its scope gave it national importance.
His editorial duties left Hoffman an ample margin of time for lyrical
work, and his short poems of singing quality, “The Myrtle and Steel,”
“Room, Boys, Room,” “’Tis Hard to Share her Smiles with Many,” were
sung, hummed, and whistled in many parts of the country. His “Winter in
the West,” made up of a series of letters, was one of the early reports
of adventure and incident on the frontier.

Albany was, after New York, the chief centre of the Dutch tradition,
and had a very hospitable and delightful society intimately connected
with its kin city at the mouth of the Hudson. From Albany, at short
intervals, came Alfred Billings Street. He was always welcome in New
York, where his somewhat prolific verse was held in great esteem.
He was a devout student of Nature, and had a happy command of the
descriptive phrase, and his contemporaries among the American poets
were generous in their estimates of the excellence of his poetry.
Longfellow gave him the first place as a reporter of forest scenery,
and Bryant was “impressed with the fidelity and vividness of the images
newly drawn from Nature.”

Among the scholarly writers of the later time was Henry Theodore
Tuckerman, whose name has a colonial flavor in the mind of the New
Yorker of to-day. He brought the name here from Boston in the afterglow
of the Knickerbocker age, spent many years in Europe, and became the
most accomplished of the early American writers in the field of art.
He was a man of wide reading, with a charm of manner which won him
an enviable popularity in the social life of New York and Newport,
and with the catholicity of interests and tastes which mark the
cosmopolitan temper. Evert Augustus Duyckinck, on the other hand, was a
son of the soil and an inheritor of the tradition, though he was born
too late to be counted among the Knickerbocker writers. In 1830, when
the Knickerbocker age reached its end and the mid-century writers began
to appear, Duyckinck was preparing for Columbia College, and it was not
until 1840, on his return from an extended visit in Europe, that he
began a long and industrious career as an editor and writer. His chief
claim on the attention of lovers of old New York rests on his service
as a literary historian. His “Cyclopædia of American Literature,” his
text for the “National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Americans,” and his
“Memorial of Fitz-Greene Halleck” are valuable records of the early
men of Letters in this country, with many of whom he was personally
associated.

Edgar Allan Poe came to New York in the later Thirties, and made
and lost friends as in every place where he tried, with pathetic
hopefulness, to find anchorage. His attitude toward the Knickerbocker
group was one of mingled condescension and contempt. In any society he
would have been a detached and lonely figure, and the lasting memorial
of his ill-starred genius and broken career in New York is the cottage
at Fordham in which Virginia Poe died.

These variously gifted men found the remuneration of literary work
far too meagre for “human nature’s daily food,” and took refuge
in business occupations of various kinds. Halleck was an expert
accountant fortunate in his connection with Mr. Astor, while Drake
studied medicine and, after the custom of many old-time physicians,
had an interest in a drug-store. Clinch was in the employment of a
ship-builder, and for nearly two generations was Deputy Collector of
the Port of New York; Payne began his career as a clerk; and Sprague
was a bank cashier. Irving and Cooper were amply rewarded by a public
to which they offered the novelty of original American literature;
Bryant found ease and a comfortable fortune in journalism. In 1822,
Professor Cairns reminds us, he set a price on his shorter poems which
could hardly be regarded as exorbitant--two dollars each. George P.
Morris was more fortunate so far as income was concerned, and reached
such an altitude of popularity that he could sell a song unread for
fifty dollars, while a very unimportant drama from his hand brought
him thirty-five hundred dollars. Then, as now, journalism was a refuge
from the inadequate rewards of literature; though it must be frankly
conceded that, while much of the work of the lesser Knickerbocker
writing had a pleasant humor, a delightful gaiety of mood or lightness
of style, it was neither vital nor original, and its appeal was limited
to a small group of readers.

In the later years of his life, Irving was in the habit of speaking
of “Salmagundi” as light and trivial; an overflow of youthful fun and
audacity. Mr. Barrett Wendell is of opinion that the “literature of
Brockden Brown, of Irving, of Cooper, and of Poe is only a literature
of pleasure, possessing, so far as it has excellence at all, only
the excellence of conscientious refinement”; and that nothing in
it “touched seriously on either God’s eternities, or the practical
conduct of life in the United States.” This is an incidentally happy
characterization of the Knickerbocker literature: it was a literature
of pleasure, and it was delightfully free from the didactic and
sermonic note at a time when, Lowell declared, all New England was
a pulpit. Its touch on morals and manners was light, satiric, and
amusing; in its way it had the tone of the world of society rather than
of theology or reform. Its preaching, like that of Addison and Steele,
was lightly winged and phrased in the language of an easy, cordial
society; tolerant in opinion, hospitable to differences of religion
and political habit, concerned chiefly to make itself agreeable and
the time of its sojourn in the vale of tears pleasantly profitable.
New York was not indifferent to the religious side of life, but its
preaching was reserved for churches; its literature, though somewhat
provincial in time and manner, was kept well within the ancient
province of art.

In 1858 the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of “The
Knickerbocker Magazine” was commemorated by the publication of “The
Knickerbocker Gallery,” a volume of portentous size and effusive
elegance, made up of articles written by contributors to the magazine.
Fifty-four men are represented in the collection, of whom only four
belonged to the early and characteristic Knickerbocker period. Irving
drew upon a commonplace-book of a date thirty-five years earlier for a
few notes; Bryant and Halleck were among the poets of the collection;
John W. Francis and Alfred B. Street were familiar names to the old New
Yorkers of that day. A new generation was in possession of the stage,
however; and the Old Town, with its Dutch traditions, was slowly losing
its outlines in the neighborly city of the years between 1830 and 1880,
as that in turn is fast being obliterated by the cosmopolitan city of
to-day.

The old places have vanished, and the old faces are remembered to-day
only by the aid of a few portraits. The names of the streets in the
lower section of the modern city recall men and women whose genial
hospitality set a fashion which has never gone out in New York, though
the guests of the city have become so many that hotels of imposing
size and oppressive splendor are taxed to provide them shelter. But
behind the tumult of the great tides of life which flow through the
thoroughfares there is a silent New York, which is unspoiled by the
possession of wealth, and which hears the appeals of the unfortunate
within its borders, and gives time and work and money with tireless
generosity of heart and hand.

There was a charm about the Old Town which depended largely on
neighborliness and the narrower interests which thrive in a small and
homogeneous community; the charm of ease and of leisure and a certain
contentment with life; of the ripeness of temper and of mind which is
the fine flowering of an education based on the humanities; of room
for work and pleasure large enough for fame, but not too large for the
nearer satisfactions of local celebrity. It was the good fortune of the
early Knickerbocker writers, by temperament and taste, instinctively to
adapt their gifts to their time and Town; and it was the good fortune
of the Town to be the birthplace of American literature, and the home
of two writers who were first to give that literature a place in the
interest of the world.

[Illustration]




Transcriber’s Notes


Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
were not changed.

Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation
marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
unbalanced.

This book does not have a Table of Contents, but the “Head-bands”
entries in the List of Woodcuts may serve almost as well.