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the ways of men-第10章

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  following the usual New York method; it reverts to a design  suggestive of a county jail (the Palace and the Prison); with  here and there a balcony hung out; emblematical; doubtless; of  the inmates' wash and bedding。  At the ninth floor the  repentant architect adds two more stories in memory of the  Doge's residence。  Have you ever seen an accordion  (concertina; I believe; is the correct name) hanging in a shop  window?  The Twenty…fifth Street Doge's Palace reminds me of  that humble instrument。  The wooden part; where the keys and  round holes are; stands on the sidewalk。  Then come an  indefinite number of pleats; and finally the other wooden end  well up among the clouds。  So striking is this resemblance  that at times one expects to hear the long…drawn moans  peculiar to the concertina issuing from those portals。  Alas!  even the most original designs have their drawbacks!  After  the proprietor of the Venetian accordion had got his  instrument well drawn out and balanced on its end; he  perceived that it dwarfed the adjacent buildings; so cast  about in his mind for a scheme to add height and dignity to  the rest of the block。  One day the astonished neighborhood  saw what appeared to be a 〃roomy suburban villa〃 of iron  rising on the roof of the old Hoffman House。  The results  suggests a small man who; being obliged to walk with a giant;  had put on a hat several times too large in order to equalize  their heights!

How astonished Pericles and his circle of architects and  sculptors would be could they stand on the corner of Broadway  and Twenty…eighth Street and see the miniature Parthenon that  graces the roof of a pile innocent of other Greek ornament?   They would also recognize their old friends; the ladies of the  Erechtheum; doing duty on the Reveillon Building across the  way; pretending to hold up a cornice; which; being in  proportion to the building; is several hundred times too big  for them to carry。  They can't be seen from the sidewalk; …  the street is too narrow for that; … but such trifles don't  deter builders from decorating when the fit is on them。   Perhaps this one got his caryatides at a bargain; and had to  work them in somewhere; so it is not fair to be hard on him。

If ever we take to ballooning; all these elaborate tops may  add materially to our pleasure。  At the present moment the  birds; and angels; it is to be hoped; appreciate the effort。   I; perhaps; of all the inhabitants of the city; have seen  those ladies face to face; when I have gone on a semi…monthly  visit to my roof to look for leaks!

〃It's all very well to carp and cavil;〃 many readers will say;  〃but ‘Idler' forgets that our modern architects have had to  contend with difficulties that the designers of other ages  never faced; demands for space and light forcing the  nineteenth…century builders to produce structures which they  know are neither graceful nor in proportion!〃

If my readers will give themselves the trouble to glance at  several office buildings in the city; they will realize that  the problem is not without a solution。  In almost every case  where the architect has refrained from useless decoration and  stuck to simple lines; the result; if not beautiful; has at  least been inoffensive。  It is where inappropriate elaboration  is added that taste is offended。  Such structures as the  Singer building; corner of Liberty Street and Broadway; and  the home of LIFE; in Thirty…first Street; prove that beauty  and grace of facade can be adapted to modern business wants。

Feeling as many New Yorkers do about this defacing of what  might have been the most beautiful of modern cities; it is  galling to be called upon to admire where it is already an  effort to tolerate。

A sprightly gentleman; writing recently in a scientific  weekly; goes into ecstasies of admiration over the advantages  and beauty of a steel mastodon on Park Row; a building that  has the proportions of a carpenter's plane stood on end;  decorated here and there with balconies and a colonnade  perched on brackets up toward its fifteenth story。  He  complacently gives us its weight and height as compared with  the pyramids; and numerous other details as to floor space and  ventilation; and hints in conclusion that only old fogies and  dullards; unable to keep pace with the times; fail to  appreciate the charm of such structures in a city。  One of the  〃points〃 this writer makes is the quality of air enjoyed by  tenants; amusingly oblivious of the fact that at least three  facades of each tall building will see the day only so long as  the proprietors of adjacent land are too poor or too busy to  construct similar colossi!

When all the buildings in a block are the same height; seven  eighths of the rooms in each will be without light or  ventilation。  It's rather poor taste to brag of advantages  that are enjoyed only through the generosity of one's  neighbors。

Business demands may force us to bow before the necessity of  these horrors; but it certainly is 〃rubbing it in〃 to ask our  applause。  When the Eiffel Tower was in course of  construction; the artists and literary lights of Paris raised  a tempest of protest。  One wonders why so little of the kind  has been done here。  It is perhaps rather late in the day to  suggest reform; yet if more New Yorkers would interest  themselves in the work; much might still be done to modify and  improve our metropolis。

One hears with satisfaction that a group of architects have  lately met and discussed plans for the embellishment of our  neglected city。  There is a certain poetical justice in the  proposition coming from those who have worked so much of the  harm。  Remorse has before now been known to produce good  results。  The United States treasury yearly receives large  sums of 〃conscience money。〃




Chapter 7 … Worldly Color…Blindness


MYRIADS of people have no ear for music and derive but little  pleasure from sweet sounds。  Strange as it may appear; many  gifted and sensitive mortals have been unable to distinguish  one note from another; Apollo's harmonious art remaining for  them; as for the elder Dumas; only an 〃expensive noise。〃

Another large class find it impossible to discriminate between  colors。  Men afflicted in this way have even become painters  of reputation。  I knew one of the latter; who; when a friend  complimented him on having caught the exact shade of a pink  toilet in one of his portraits; answered; 〃Does that dress  look pink to you?  I thought it was green!〃 and yet he had  copied what he saw correctly。

Both these classes are to be pitied; but are not the cause of  much suffering to others。  It is annoying; I grant you; to be  torn asunder in a collision; because red and green lights on  the switches combined into a pleasing harmony before the  brakeman's eyes。  The tone…deaf gentleman who insists on  whistling a popular melody is almost as trying as the lady  suffering from the same weakness; who shouts; 〃Ninon; Ninon;  que fais…tu de la vie!〃 until you feel impelled to cry; 〃Que  faites…vous; madame; with the key?〃

Examinations now keep daltonic gentlemen out of locomotives;  and ladies who have lost their 〃keys〃 are apt to find their  friends
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