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the ways of men-第9章

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I beg pardon; the sidewalk … according to their  own sweet will。

The resemblance of most new business buildings to flashy books  increases the more one studies them; they have the proportions  of school atlases; and; like them; are adorned only on their  backs (read fronts)。  The modern builder; like the frugal  binder; leaves the sides of his creations unadorned; and  expends his ingenuity in decorating the narrow strip which he  naively imagines will be the only part seen; calmly ignoring  the fact that on glancing up or down a street the sides of  houses are what we see first。  It is almost impossible to get  mathematically opposite a building; yet that is the only point  from which these new constructions are not grotesque。

It seems as though the rudiments of common sense would suggest  that under existing circumstances the less decoration put on a  facade the greater would be the harmony of the whole。  But  trifles like harmony and fitness are splendidly ignored by the  architects of to…day; who; be it remarked in passing; have  slipped into another curious habit for which I should greatly  like to see an explanation offered。  As long as the ground  floors and the tops of their creations are elaborate; the  designer evidently thinks the intervening twelve or fifteen  stories can shift for themselves。  One clumsy mass on the  Bowling Green is an excellent example of this weakness。  Its  ground floor is a playful reproduction of the tombs of Egypt。   About the second story the architect must have become  discouraged … or perhaps the owner's funds gave out … for the  next dozen floors are treated in the severest 〃tenement house〃  manner; then; as his building terminates well up in the sky; a  top floor or two are; for no apparent reason; elaborately  adorned。  Indeed; this desire for a brilliant finish pervades  the neighborhood。  The Johnson Building on Broad Street (to  choose one out of the many) is sober and discreet in design  for a dozen stories; but bursts at its top into a Byzantine  colonnade。  Why? one asks in wonder。

Another new…comer; corner of Wall and Nassau Streets; is a  commonplace structure; with a fairly good cornice; on top of  which … an afterthought; probably … a miniature State Capitol  has been added; with dome and colonnade complete。  The result  recalls dear; absent…minded Miss Matty (in Mrs。 Gaskell's  charming story); when she put her best cap on top of an old  one and sat smiling at her visitors from under the double  headdress!

Nowhere in the world … not even in Moscow; that city of domes  … can one see such a collection of pagodas; cupolas; kiosks;  and turrets as grace the roofs of our office buildings!   Architects evidently look upon such adornments as  compensations!  The more hideous the structure; the finer its  dome!  Having perpetrated a blot upon the city that cries to  heaven in its enormity; the repentant owner adds a pagoda or  two; much in the same spirit; doubtless; as prompts an Italian  peasant to hang a votive heart on some friendly shrine when a  crime lies heavy on his conscience。

What would be thought of a book…collector who took to standing  inkstands or pepperboxes on the tops of his tallest volumes by  way of adornment?  Yet domes on business buildings are every  bit as appropriate。  A choice collection of those  monstrosities graces Park Row; one much…gilded offender  varying the monotony by looking like a yellow stopper in a  high…shouldered bottle!  How modern architects with the  exquisite City Hall before them could have wandered so far  afield in their search for the original must always remain a  mystery。

When a tall; thin building happens to stand on a corner; the  likeness to an atlas is replaced by a grotesque resemblance to  a waffle iron; of which one structure just finished on Rector  Street skilfully reproduces' the lines。  The rows of little  windows were evidently arranged to imitate the indentations on  that humble utensil; and the elevated road at the back seems  in this case to do duty as the handle。  Mrs。 Van Rensselaer  tells us in her delightful GOEDE VROUW OF MANA…HA…TA that  waffle irons used to be a favorite wedding present among the  Dutch settlers of this island; and were adorned with monograms  and other devices; so perhaps it is atavism that makes us so  fond of this form in building!  As; however; no careful  HAUSFRAU would have stood her iron on its edge; architects  should hesitate before placing their buildings in that  position; as the impression of instability is the same in each  case。

After leaving the vicinity of the City Hall; the tall slabs  that like magnified milestones mark the progress of  Architecture up Broadway become a shade less objectionable;  although one meets some strange freaks in so…called decoration  by the way。  Why; for instance; were those Titan columns  grouped around the entrance to the American Surety Company's  building?  They do not support anything (the 〃business〃 of  columns in architecture) except some rather feeble statuary;  and do seriously block the entrance。  Were they added with the  idea of fitness?  That can hardly be; for a portico is as  inappropriate to such a building as it would be to a parlor  car; and almost as inconvenient。

Farther up town our attention is arrested by another misplaced  adornment。  What purpose can that tomb with a railing round it  serve on top of the New York Life Insurance building?  It  looks like a monument in Greenwood; surmounted by a rat…trap;  but no one is interred there; and vermin can hardly be  troublesome at that altitude。

How did this craze for decoration originate?  The inhabitants  of Florence and Athens did not consider it necessary。  There  must; I feel sure; be a reason for its use in this city;  American land…lords rarely spend money without a purpose;  perhaps they find that rococo detail draws business and  inspires confidence!

I should like to ask the architects of New York one question:  Have they not been taught that in their art; as in every  other; pretences are vulgar; that things should be what they  seem?  Then why do they continue to hide steel and fire…brick  cages under a veneer of granite six inches thick; causing them  to pose as solid stone buildings?  If there is a demand for  tall; light structures; why not build them simply (as bridges  are constructed); and not add a poultice of bogus columns and  zinc cornices that serve no purpose and deceive no one?

Union Square possesses blocks out of which the Jackson and  Decker buildings spring with a noble disregard of all rules  and a delicious incongruity that reminds one of Falstaff's  corps of ill…drilled soldiers。  Madison Square; however; is  FACILE PRINCEPS; with its annex to the Hoffman House; a  building which would make the fortune of any dime museum that  could fence it in and show it for a fee!  Long contemplation  of this structure from my study window has printed every comic  detail on my brain。  It starts off at the ground level to be  an imitation of the Doge's Palace (a neat and appropriate idea  in itself for a Broadway shop)。  At the second story;  following the usual New York method; it reverts to a design  suggestive of a county jail (the Pala
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