The Publication Committee of The Caxton Club certifies that this copy of Derby's PhcEnix- iana, two volumes, is one of an edition consisting of one hundred and sixty-five copies on American hand- made paper and three copies on Japanese vellum, printed from type, and completed in the month of April, eighteen hundred and ninety-seven. PHCENIXIANA VOLUME I \Y"^ X>,.Av// -'' PHOENIXIANA Capt. George Horatio Derby ("John Phcenix") ' EDITED BY JOHN VANCE CHENEY VOL. I &S. m CHICAGO THE CAXTON CLUB MDCCCXCVII n 1^^ t orvKKiin, Hv I). Ami ION s. co.. IvI(;MIIIN IIIINI>RII> AND FiMY-nvi:. torYHi«;iri , \\\ iiii: iaxion ii.uii, i;i<;irn IN iiiiNinn i> AND nini iy :.i:\ i:n. I'MK CAxroN tnui Ai'KNOW!.i;i)(.i\S irs OHLUJAIIONS lO Mi:sSRS. 1). AI'I'IJnION ^ CO. J'OR J'KR MISSION TO ISSUK THIS IIMIION OK I'lm nixiana. TO I)K. CIIARI.I'.S M. III'ICIK'OCK, l)\' hAN I KAN( l.'U (), MY I.AKI.II M , KINI)i;;ir, ANI) MO.'ll ( ONIJI ANI' I'RIKNI), IHKJIH SKK'K MIfl AKI All! CTIONATI I.Y DIDK A IIJ) II Y THK AiniroK. "/;? the name of the Prophet — figs Contents of Volume I. PAGE Editor's Preface .... xiii Introduction: Preface of Author . . . xxxi A Word to the Reader . . . xxxiii Phoenixiana: Official Report of Professor John Phoe- nix, xA^.M I A New System of EngHsh Grammar . 23 **Ingomar" and **The Plains" . 35 The Death of Squibob . . . '45 Street Introductions .... 50 The Flight of the Collector . . -55 The Return of the Collector . . 66 The San Francisco Antiquarian Society and California Academy of Arts and Sciences . . . . . -74 The Ladies' Relief Society . . 83 Benicia 88 The Lost Stove-pipe . . . 100 Unfortunate Oliver . . . .105 xii Contents. A Walk with Sappho . . . io8 Washington Ladies' Depository . .no Farewell to San Francisco . . . 112 At Sea 119 Illustration: Author's Portrait. By W. H. W. Bicknell. Frontispiece Editor's Preface. Whether or not we have an American lit- erature, we have humor distinctly our own ; a portion of it literature, the remainder some- thing else, but certainly humor. The accent of sportive fancy, the turn and trick of drollery, were native to Franklin, foremost among our philosophers and statesmen, to Lincoln, our greatest President since Washington, and to Henry Ward Beecher, the commanding genius among our preachers. A complete bibliography of American humor would be a broad mark indeed, for the critics of the motherland, where humor rests on a few resplendent names, shining here and there on the long stretch from Dan Chaucer to Tom Hood. Among those with whom we of to-day are familiar, "John Phoenix" is admittedly the pioneer. " The first of the great modern humorists" — so "Mark Twain " styles him in " The Library of Humor." It was on the Pacific Coast, and at that furiously xiv Editor's Preface. fecund period known as " The Fall of '49 and the Spring of '50," that his writings first attracted general attention. The young soldier, then in his twenty-seventh year, established the practice, retained through life, of writing for the local press. We have become accustomed, by use and abuse, to the incongruities of speech and sit- uation, to the exaggeration and distortion, to all the capricious substance of surprise, discover- able in the pages to follow; but it is not with us now as it was fifty years ago. Take, for example, a sentence from the review of " The Plains" : "The symphonic opens upon the wide and boundless plains, in longitude 115° W., lati- tude 35° 21' 03" N., and about sixty miles from the west bank of Pitt River." Such a mixture of the realistic and the imaginative was, five decades back, a fresh venture in interpretative criticism. The grotesque pleasantry with which the youthful officer whiled away his leisure hours has a certain order of strength and vitality. To this there is the best of testimony ; for the princes among our merrymakers have drawn freely from " Phoenixiana," and the mob of grin- ning gentlemen have filched from it without measure or mercy. Editor's Preface. Captain Derby's claims as a caricaturist and farceur do not rest solely on priority in point of time ; his was the meed of exceptional gifts. His original sayings when he was as yet a beard- less boy were caught up and retailed by his mates with prophetic persistency. He was a wag from the womb, a born jester, in the old pro- fessional sense of the word ; and if the fun bubbled out of "Artemus Ward" as it has out of no other American, he could have found among his fellow-craftsmen no more congenial comrade than " John Phoenix." To this it should be added that, the men of letters ex- cepted, — such writers as Dr. Holmes, Curtis, Lowell, — our famous humorists fall below him in scholarship and general culture. Though a desultory and somewhat capricious student, he found his way over the wide range from the fields of science and history to the fairer expanse of art and imaginative literature. A stanch sol- dier, a well-trained mathematician and civil en- gineer, a ready draughtsman in and out of his profession, he was, besides, after his own peculiar fashion, a critical observer of man and nature. So far as he built, it was on the foundation com- mon to his class ; their motto was his, — " Much xvi Editor*s Preface. ado about nothing." With him, as with the masters of his order, the triviality, the vanity, of life stands out sharply on all sides ; so sharply that pity wearies and laughter comes to its relief. This controlling emotion of the humorist is evidenced throughout the present publication. " The earth, or as the Latins call it, Tellus (from which originated the expression, ' do tell us '), is the third planet in the solar system, and the one on which we subsist, with all our important joys and sorrows. The San Diego Herald is published weekly on this planet, for five dollars per annum, payable invariably in ad- vance." Here is the keynote ; under the tinkle of the fool-cap bells is heard the old pathetic sermonizing : " Thus we play the fools with the time, and the spirits of the wise sit in the clouds and mock us." Socrates and Plato long since traced comedy and tragedy to one and the same fountain-head. At the touch of the humorist, the sober colors blend with the gay, or at least underlie them, laid on so strongly that they show through. The chosen yoke-fellow of humor is pathos ; the bewildering experiences of life, the ambi- tions and failures, the hopes and disappoint- Editor's Preface. xvii ments, are now sad, now laughable, as the mood impels. Jean Paul defines humor as the sublime reversed; it may be defined equally- well as despondency seen from the other side. Possibly the humorists are at bottom a doleful brotherhood. " Josh Billings " once told the present writer that he had been spending a few days with two distinguished humorists, and was never before so glad to get home. It was more like a funeral than a merry-making. Of one of his companions, the one whose name is oftenest heard to-day, "Josh " said, " He actually does not know how to laugh." But whether or not humorists can be jolly together, it is known that one of them could laugh over his own jokes in the silence and isolation of the productive moment ; "Artemus Ward " was wont to rouse the occupants of adjoining rooms with his shouts over a happy stroke not yet dry on the paper. "John Phoenix" went further; so little of the agelast was there in him that he seemed to accept in earnest Hamlet's mocking question, "What should a man do but be merry?" To see him as the central spirit of a group of raconteurs was to see him in his native element and at his best. xviii Editor's Preface. The happiest passages from his pen lack the fascination of the attractive personal presence, — the commanding figure, the handsome face, mobile in every feature, the irresistible lift and turn of the grave, thoughtful eyes, suddenly responsive to the impulses of " infinite jest." As one reads the mild satire aimed at certain methods and conclusions of the author's favorite study, science, one cannot help thinking how huge a joke he would have found the fact that the gift of humor has been a most stubborn phenomenon to reduce to the theory of the evolutionists. These wise gentlemen, quite successful elsewhere, have not yet succeeded in finding just how the sense of humor has helped in that tedious and fearful struggle wherein " the fittest " win the well-earned privilege of con- tinuance. Science finds it no easy task to dis- pose of the jokers. The origin, the develop- ment, — the mystery, of wit and humor remains about where it is left in the generalizations of men hardly of a scientific turn. " Wit," says Emerson, meaning humor as well, " makes its own welcome, and levels all distinctions. * * * It is like ice, on which no beauty of form, no majesty of carriage, can plead any immunity, Editor's Preface. xix — they must walk gingerly, according to the laws of ice, or down they must go, dignity and all." There has been little progress beyond this and Dr. Isaac Barrow's definitional tour de force : — " It is indeed a thing so versatile and multi- form, appearing in so many shapes, so many postures, so many garbs, so variously appre- hended by several eyes and judgments, that it seemeth no less hard to settle a clear and certain notion thereof, than to make a portrait of Pro- teus, or to define the figure of the fleeting air. Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a known story, or in seasonable application of a trivial saying, or in forging an apposite tale : some- times it playeth in words and phrases, taking advantage from the ambiguity of their sense, or the affinity of their sound : sometimes it is wrapped in a dress of humorous expression : sometimes it lurketh under an odd similitude : sometimes it is lodged in a sly question, in a smart answer, in a quirkish reason, in a shrewd intimation, in cunningly diverting, or cleverly retorting an objection : sometimes it is couched in a bold scheme of speech, in a tart irony, in a lusty hyperbole, in a startling metaphor, in a plausible reconciling of contradictions, or in acute nonsense : sometimes a scenical repre- sentation of persons or things, a counterfeit speech, a mimical look or gesture passeth for it : XX Editor's Preface. sometimes an affected simplicity, sometimes a presumptuous bluntness giveth it being : some- times it riseth from a lucky hitting upon what is strange ; sometimes from a crafty wresting ob- vious matter to the purpose : often it consisteth in one knows not what, and springeth up one can hardly tell how. Its ways are unaccount- able and inexplicable, being answerable to the numberless rovings of fancy and windings of language." The pulpit has made a brave start ; let the laboratory take courage. Indisputably, the rib- ticklers are not accidental, mere brittle offshoots of the hour ; they have come on, step by step, with the founders of kingdoms, of philosophies, and of religions. Many a weary stage must have been passed through before that pun of Homer's, which seems to us so far away. The " No-man " joke on blind Cyclops bears out the notion, formulated and fathered by Hobbes, that laughter is no more than a chuckle over other folk's misfortune or infirmity. There is no mis- taking the smack of the malign in that crude spe- cies of humor, the practical joke ; but humor rose long since from the savage, practical-joke period. Whatever may have been the value of it in the earlier stages of development, it is now a pow- Editor's Preface. xxI erful ally of persuasion, a safeguard against the ever-threatening attack of sham and fanaticism, and, best of all, an effective remedy against atra hilis. However it be compounded, humor is medicinal ; and, since the potion is pleasant to the taste, the world will be long in giving over the prescription, " Get the rest and refreshment of the shaking of the sides." " John Phoenix " stands before us distinctly as a believer in humor for humor's sake. It is enough for him if he effect, to paraphrase Kant, the " abrupt tumble of tense expectation into nothing " ; anything to flush the face suddenly " red with mirth." This happy magic was prac- ticed for the moment ; there was no thought for the future. Had there been, the author would have revised these fugitive papers and collected them for publication in book form himself, in- stead of leaving them to the not always tender mercies of admiring friends. It was, to quote his own words, through the pressure of " cir- cumstances entirely beyond his control " that he permitted the publication of " Phoenixiana " ; and then with the understanding that he should not be called upon for the smallest service in connection with it. We are not surprised, xxii Editor's Preface. therefore, to find the accomplishment of the grotesque genius informing these pages falling far short of its possibilities. Our author real- ized this. The papers were not intended for issue in permanent form j moreover, he deemed them unworthy of the pains that would have to be taken to fit them for this purpose. Captain George Horatio Derby, born in Dedham, Massachusetts, April 3, 1823, sprang from a line of distinguished ancestry. From the first emigrant of the name to this country (Roger Derby, who came in 167 1) down to the subject of the present sketch, the Derbys were superior men ; some among them being adventurous sea- farers ; others, conspicuous figures in business and public affairs ; others still, lovers and pro- moters of the arts and polite literature. The best-known of the family is our author's great- grandfather, Elias Hasket Derby, the " mer- chant prince" of Salem, Massachusetts. John Barton Derby, Captain Derby's father, was a graduate of Bowdoin, a lawyer and an author. Undoubtedly our militant humorist inherited certain eccentricities of character and tempera- ment from his father ; his literary gift coming rather from his mother, Mary (Townsend) Editor's Preface. xxiii Derby, a woman of singular readiness in the peculiar vein that her son made it his pleasure to develop. Young Derby was making comic drawings, with ludicrous inscriptions under them, when a cadet at West Point. There, too, he played many a madcap prank, evincing the high- spirited, fearless disposition conspicuous through- out his career. " John Phoenix " is best known to the public through the work of his pen ; but his intimate associates knew him better, perhaps, through the expressions of his antic pencil, which he des- patched to them broadcast when the pictoric fit was on him. A few of his drawings are to be found in the posthumous volume, " The Squibob Papers " ; so poorly reproduced, however, as to give little idea of the originals. Captain Derby married Miss Mary Ann Coons of St. Louis, a lady eminently fitted to be the wife of her gifted husband. Mrs. Derby is still living, her home at present being in New York City. Three children were born to them, two daughters and a son. Neither of the daughters is now living ; the son, George McClellan Derby, is a captain in the regular army. While on duty in Florida, Captain Derby suffered a xxiv Editor's Preface. sunstroke, which was the beginning of a series of ailments that made the last year or more of his life a blank, and finally led to his death. Captain Derby's military record, taken from The Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, N. Y., 1868, vol. II, p. 145, is as follows : "GEORGE H. DERBY. 1278 (Born Mas.) (Ap'd Mas.). .7. Military History. — Cadet at the U. S. Military Academy from July i, 1842, to July i, 1846, when he was graduated and promoted in the Army to Bvt. Second Lieut., Ordnance, July i, 1846. Transferred to Top. Engineers, Aug. 12, 1846. Served: as Asst. Top. Engineer on Survey of New Bedford harbor, Mas., 1846; in the War with Mexico, 1 846—47, being engaged in the Siege of Vera Cruz, Mar. 9—29, 1 847, — and Battle of Cerro Gordo, Apr. 17-18, 1847, where (Bvt. First Lieut., Apr. 18, 1847, for Gallant and Meritorious Conduct in the Battle of Cerro Gordo, Mex.) he was severely wounded ; on sick leave of absence, disabled by wound, Apr. 18 to Oct., 1847; as Assist- ant in the Topographical Bureau at Washington, D. C, 1847—48; on Explorations in Minnesota Ter- ritory, 1848—49, — in the Department of the Pacific, Editor's Preface. xxv 1849-52, — and in the Department of Texas, 1852; in charge of (Second Lieut., Top. Engineers, Aug. 4, 1851) the Survey and Improvement of San Diego harbor, 1853-54; °^ ^^^ Staff of the Commanding General of the Department of the Pacific, 1854-55; ^^ charge (First Lieut., Top. Engineers, Oct. 2, 1855) of Military Roads in the Department of the Pacific, 1855-56; on Coast Survey, Apr. 30 to June 9, 1856; as Light-house Engineer, May 15, 1857, to (Captain, Top. Engineers, July i, i860, for 14 Years' Continuous Service) Nov. 2, 1859; and on sick leave of absence, Dec. 20, 1859, to May 15, 1861. Civil History. — Author, under the nom de plume of John Phoenix, of ** Phoenixiana; or. Sketches and Burlesques,'* 1 856, — and of **Squibob Papers," i860. Died, May 15, i 861, at New York City: Aged 38." It remains to be said that the best of Captain Derby's skits are included in the present volume. Dashed off nearly a half-century ago, wanting now the poignancy of local allusion, which is of the very gist of them, they hardly more than indicate the fullness of the gift inspiring them. To appreciate the opening article, for example, one must know what San Francisco was at the time ; must know that Kearny street was little more than a trail ; must know, moreover, that xxvi Editor's Preface. the whole report is a satire on the wasteful, impotent performance of a company of engineers equipped at a large expense, and sent by Secre- tary Davis to the Pacific Coast to make a topo- graphical survey. Captain Derby was constitutionally incapable of holding Jefferson Davis in high estimation. Accordingly, when the Department announced that it was "not averse to receiving suggestions from army officers" regarding improvements in the uniform of the United States soldiery, he shut himself up for a day or two at Fort Yuma, making drawings, which he duly forwarded, with explanatory text, in a huge tin tube ten feet long. A thorough search in the official files at Washington naturally fails to reveal this unique document. A portion of a lithographic print of it, however, has been obtained from private sources for theadornment of the present volume. Captain Derby's drawings should be collected, and to them should be added a liberal exhibit of his oral expressions in private and at gatherings of various kinds, where his inimitable entertain- ment made the occasion memorable. A much fuller showing must be made before the public Editor's Preface. can know either the man or the humorist as he was. Public interest centres, of course, in the humor; but it should not be forgotten that be- hind the humor was a man of exceptional char- acter and ability, a faithful, efficient officer, and a genial comrade who won the lasting respect and affection of his associates and friends. The Caxton "Phoenixiana " is not a strict re- print of the " Phoenixiana" published by D. Appleton and Company in December, 1855, and now in its thirty-fifth edition. The papers are presented in a new order, and in some instances there has been a change of headings. A few pages have been omitted. Further changes consist of the correction of typograph- ical errors and slips of the pen; of the revision of the punctuation and capitalization, and the occasional reconstruction of a phrase or a sen- tence. The alterations affect the form only j whenever there was doubt as to the intent, copy has been strictly followed. It is hardly necessary to say that such cases are of frequent occurrence. "John Phoenix" is just the author to lead the painstaking editor into unsuspected perplexities. For instance, ^ercus albus^ vol. I, p. 14, what is it, a misprint or a gentle dig in the xxviii Editor's Preface. ribs of that industrious, but not always inspiring, personage, the phytographer? The writer was a fair scholar, but he was also an indomitable joker; and it were hazardous to decide in which role he appears. The case of the original " Phoenixiana " is exceptional. The author had nothing to do with the publication ; what is more, the volume was issued against his judgment and his wishes. With this fact in mind, and the further fact that the volume is a bundle of carelessly written newspaper-clippings, tumbled together with barely perceptible deference to the proprieties of publication in book form, it would be a strained, if not unpardonable, nicety on the part of a book-club to issue a strict reprint. While it is not to be hoped that the Caxton " Phoenixiana " is what the author would have wished to see it, the editor believes it to make a considerably closer approach to that ideal than was made by the original volume ; in other words, that it is more faithful to the gifts and to the specific intent of the author. The illustrations in the " Report on the Central Route " and in " Phoenix's Pictorial " are from the original blocks. The portrait of Editor's Preface. xxix " Squibob," frontispiece to volume II (drawn by Derby over his own photograph as the groundwork), is from the original cut used in the Appleton edition of " Phoenixiana." The etching (volume I), by Mr. W. H. W. Bick- nell, is from a photograph of a portrait painted by Mr. F. B. Carpenter. This is the likeness preferred by the family. " Phoenixiana " ends with "A Legend of the Tehama." The article " Disbursing-officers, U. S. A.," and the reproductions of water-colors and pen-and-ink sketches are additional matter, now published for the first time, being, with one exception, from originals in a scrap-book be- longing to Mrs. Derby, entitled " Squibob, Phoenix & Co." The exception, " The Irish Emigrant's Lament," is from a drawing made by Derby, when a cadet, in an album belonging to the wife of General Q. A. Gillmore. The drawing is now in the possession of Mr. Sam- uel N. Holliday of St. Louis. The editor would tender special thanks for the generous assistance rendered him by Mrs. George Horatio Derby, Miss C. A. Hayward, Captain George McClellan Derby, Mr. Charles Clarence Poole, and Mr. A. J. Rudolph, First XXX Editor's Preface. Assistant Librarian of The Newberry Library; and would make grateful mention of the kindly offices of many others who have responded promptly and graciously to various demands upon their time and patience. John Vance Cheney. The Caxton Club, April, 1897. Prefa ce. This book is merely a collection of sundry sketches recently published in the newspapers and magazines of California. They were received with approval, sepa- rately, and it is to be hoped they may meet with it on their appearance in a collected form. When first published, the Author supposed he had seen and heard the last of them, but circumstances entirely be- yond his control have led to their repub- lication. The Author does not flatter himself that he has made any very great addition to the literature of the age by this per- formance; but if his book turns out to be a very bad one, he will be consoled by the reflection that it is by no means the first, and probably will not be the last, of that kind that has been given to the public. xxxli Preface. Meanwhile, this is by the blessing of divine Providence and through the exer- tions of the immortal Washington, a free country; and no man can be compelled to read anything against his inclination. With unbounded respect for everybody. The Author remains, John Phcenix. San Francisco, July 15, 1855. A Word to the Reader. It is proper to state, that while the following pages are collected with the permission of the Author, and thus presented in a book-form, he has yet himself not been consulted in any manner in relation to the order of arrangement of its contents; and it is quite probable that his severer taste and better judgment might have operated to exclude some things which are here embraced. The editor can only say, that preparing the volume hastily for the press, he has done the best he could in the premises; and only begs that the sin of omission or of com- mission that may be observable in these pages, should not be visited upon the head of the Author. J. J. A. San Diego, California, October, 1855. PHCENIXIANA Phoenixiana Official Report of Professor John Phcenix, A. M. Of a Military Survey and Reconnoissance of the route from San Francisco to the Mission of Dolores, made with a view to ascertain the practicability of connecting those points by a railroad,* Mission of Dolores, Feb. 15, 1855. IT having been definitely determined that the great Railroad connecting the City of San Francisco with the head of navi- gation on Mission Creek should be con- structed without unnecessary delay, a large appropriation (;^ 120,000) was granted for the purpose of causing thorough military exam- inations to be made of the proposed routes. The routes which had principally attracted the attention of the public were, the Northern, following the line of Brannan street, the Cen- tral, through Folsom street, and the extreme Southern, passing over the Old Plank Road to the Mission. Each of these proposed routes ■'^'The Mission Dolores is only i^^ miles from the City Hall of San Francisco, and a favorite suburban locality, lying within the limits of the city survey. This fact noted for the benefit of dis- tant readers of these sketches. 2 Report on the Central Route. has many enthusiastic advocates ; but the Central is, undoubtedly, the favorite of the public, it being more extensively used by emi- grants from San Francisco to the Mission, and therefore more w^idely and favorably known than the others. It was to the examination of this route that the committee, feeling confidence (eminently justified by the result of my labors) in my experience, judgment and skill as a mili- tary engineer, appointed me on the first instant. Having notified that honorable body of my acceptance of the important trust confided to me in a letter wherein I also took occasion to congratulate them on the good judgment they had evinced, I drew from the treasurer the amount (;^40,ooo) appropriated for my peculiar route, and, having invested it securely in loans at three per cent a month (made, to avoid acci- dent, in my own name), I proceeded to organize my party for the expedition. In a few days my arrangements were com- pleted, and my scientific corps organized, as follows : — „ A »» f Principal Engineer and John Phoenix, A. M. . . . | Chief Astronomer. {Apocryphal Engineer. First Assistant As- tronomer. {Hypercritical Engineer. Second Assistant As- tronomer. Dr. Abraham Dunshunner , Geologist. Dr. Targee Heavysterne . . Naturalist. Herr Von Der Weegates . Botanist. Report on the Central Route. 3 Dr. Fogy L. Bigguns . . . Ethnologist. Dr. Tushmaker . . . Dentist. Enry Halfred Tinkins, R. a. . 1 t-» r . „ J ' >- Draftsmen. Adolphe Kraut ... j Hi Fun ..... Interpreter. James Phcenix, (my elder brother) Treasurer. Joseph Phcenix, ditto, . Quarter-master. William Phcenix, (younger brother) Commissary. Peter Phcenix, ditto, . Clerk. Paul Phcenix, (my cousin) . Sutler. Reuben Phcenix, ditto . . Wagon-master. Richard Phcenix, (second cousin) Assistant ditto. These gentlemen, with one hundred and eighty-four laborers employed as teamsters, chainmen, rodmen, etc., made up the party. For instruments, we had i large Transit-in- strument (8 inch achromatic lens), i Mural Cir- cle, I Altitude and Azimuth Instrument (these instruments were permanently set up in a mule- cart, which was backed into the plane of the true meridian when required for use), 13 large Theodolites, 13 small ditto, 8 Transit Com- passes, 17 Sextants, 34 Artificial Horizons, i Sidereal Clock, and 184 Solar Compasses. Each employee was furnished with a gold chronome- ter watch, and, by a singular mistake, a diamond pin and gold chain ; for, directions having been given that they should be furnished with " chains and pins " — meaning of course such articles as are used in surveying, — Lieut. Root, whose zeal somewhat overran his discretion, incon- tinently procured for each man the above-named articles of jewelry by mistake. They were purchased at Tucker's (where, it is needless to 4 Report on the Central Route. remark, " you can buy a diamond pin or ring"), and afterwards proved extremely useful in our intercourse with the natives of the Mission of Dolores, and indeed, along the route. Every man was suitably armed with four of Colt's revolvers, a Minie rifle, a copy of Col. Benton's speech on the Pacific Railroad, and a mountain howitzer. These last-named heavy articles required each man to be furnished with a wheelbarrow for their transportation, which was accordingly done ; and these vehicles proved of great service on the survey in transporting not only the arms but the baggage of the party, as well as the plunder derived from the natives. A squadron of dragoons, numbering 150 men, under Capt. McSpadden, had been detailed as an escort. They accordingly left about a week before us, and we heard of them occasionally on the march. On consulting with my assistants, I had de- termined to select, as a base for our operations, a line joining the summit of Telegraph Hill with the extremity of the wharf at Oakland. Accord- ingly, two large iron thirty-two pounders were procured, and at great expense imbedded in the earth, one at each extremity of the line, to mark the initial points. On placing compasses over these points to determine the bearing of the base, we were extremely perplexed by the un- accountable local attraction that prevailed ; and were compelled, in consequence, to select a new Report on the Central Route. 5 position. This we finally concluded to adopt between Fort Point and Saucelito ; but, on attempting to measure the base, we were de- terred by the unexpected depth of the water inter- vening, which, to our surprise, was considerably over the chain -bearers' heads. Disliking to abandon our new line, which had been selected with much care and at great expense, I determined to employ in its measurement a reflecting instru- ment used very successfully by the United States Coast Survey. I therefore directed my assistants to procure me a heliotrope; but, after being annoyed by having brought to me successively a sweet-smelling shrub of that name and a box of " Lubin's Extract " to select from, it was finally ascertained that no such instrument could be procured in California. In this extremity, I bethought myself of using as a substitute the flash of gunpowder. Wishing to satisfy myself of its practicability by an experi- ment, I placed Dr. Dunshunner at a distance of forty paces from my theodolite, with a flint- lock musket carefully primed, and directed him to flash in the pan when I should wave my hand. Having covered the Doctor with the theodolite, and by a movement of the tangent screw placed the intersection of the cross lines directly over the muzzle of the musket, I accordingly waved; when I was astounded by a tremendous report, a violent blow in the eye, and the instantaneous disappearance of the instrument. 6 Report on the Central Route. Observing Dr. Dunshunner lying on his back in one direction, and my hat, which had been violently torn from my head, at about the same distance in another, I concluded that the musket had been accidentally loaded. Such proved to be the case ; the marks of three buckshot were found in my hat, and a shower of screws, broken lenses and pieces of brass, which shortly fell around us, told where the ball had struck, and bore fearful testimony to the accuracy of Dr. Dunshunner's practice. Believing these experi- ments more curious than useful, I abandoned the use of the heliotrope and its substitutes, and determined to reverse the usual process, and arrive at the length of the base line by subse- quent triangulation. 1 may as well state, here, that this course was adopted, and resulted to our entire satisfaction ; the distance from Fort Point to Saucelito by the solution of a mean of 1,867,434,926,465 triangles, being determined to be tx2iCX.\y three hundred and twenty-four feet. This result differed very much from our pre- conceived ideas and from the popular opinion, the distance being generally supposed to be some ten miles ; but I will stake my professional reputation on the accuracy of our work, and there can, of course, be no disputing the eluci- dations of science, or facts demonstrated by mathematical process, however incredible they may appear per se. We adopted an entirely new system of tri- Report on the Central Route. 7 angulation, which I am proud to claim (though I hope with becoming modesty) as my own in- vention. It consists simply in placing one leg of a tripod on the initial point, and opening out the other legs as far as possible. The distance between the legs is then measured by a two-foot rule and noted down ; and the tripod moved, so as to form a second triangle connected with the first, and so on, until the country to be triangu- lated has been entirely gone over. By using a large number of tripods, it is easily seen with what rapidity the work may be carried on ; and this was, in fact, the object of my requisition for so large a number of solar compasses, the tripod being in my opinion the only useful por- tion of that absurd instrument. Having given Lieut. Root charge of the triangulation and detached Mr. Jinkins with a small party on hydrographical duty (to sound a man's well, on the upper part of Dupont street, and report thereon), on the 5th of February I left the Plaza, with the savants and the remainder of my party, to commence the examination and survey of Kearny street. Besides the mules drawing the cart which carried the transit-instrument, I had procured two fine pack-mules, each of which carried two barrels of ale for the draftsmen. Following the tasteful example of that gallant gentleman who conducted the Dead Sea Expedition, and wishing likewise to pay a compliment to the 8 Report on the Central Route. administration under which I was employed, I named the mules " Fanny Pierce " and " Fanny Bigler." Our cortege^ passing along Kearny street, attracted much attention from the natives ; indeed, our appearance was sufficiently im- posing to excite interest even in less untutored minds than those of these barbarians. First came the cart, bearing our instruments ; then a cart containing Lieut. Zero with a level, with which he constantly noted the changes of grade that might occur; then one hundred and fifty men, four abreast, armed to the teeth, each wheeling before him his personal property and a mountain howitzer; then the savants, each with note-book and pencil, constantly jotting down some object of interest, (Doctor Tush- maker was so zealous to do something that he pulled a tooth from an iron rake standing near a stable-door, and was cursed therefor by the illiberal proprietor,) and finally, the Chief Profes- sor, walking arm in arm with Dr. Dunshunner, and gazing from side to side with an air of ineffable blandness and dignity. I had made arrangements to measure the length of Kearny street by two methods ; first, by chaining its sidewalks, and secondly, by a little instrument of my invention called the " go-it- ometer." This last consists of a straight rod of brass, firmly strapped to a man's leg and con- nected with a system of clock-work placed on his back, with which it performs, when he Report on the Central Route. 9 walks, the office of a ballistic pendulum. About one foot below the ornamental buttons on the man's back appears a dial-plate connected with the clock-work, on which is promptly registered, by an index, each step taken. Of course, the length of the step being known, the distance passed over in a day may be obtained by a very simple process. We arrived at the end of Kearny street, and encamped for the night about sundown, near a large brick building inhabited by a class of people called " The Orphans," who, I am credibly informed, have no fathers nor mothers. After seeing the camp properly arranged, the wheelbarrows parked and a guard detailed, I sent for the chainmen and go-it-ometer- bearer, to ascertain the distance travelled during the day. Judge of my surprise to find that the chain- men, having received no instructions, had simply drawn the chain after them through the streets, and had no idea of the distance whatever. Turning from them in displeasure, I took from the go-it-ometer the number of paces marked, and, on working the distance, found it to be four miles and a half. Upon close ques- tioning the bearer, William Boulder (called by his associates " Slippery Bill "), I ascertained that he had been in a saloon in the vicinity, and, after drinking five glasses of a beverage known among the natives as Lager B'ler^ had danced 10 Report on the Central Route. a little for their amusement. Feeling very much dissatisfied with the day's survey, I stepped out of the camp, and, stopping an omni- bus, asked the driver how far he thought it to the Plaza. He replied, "Haifa mile;" which I accordingly noted down, and returned very much pleased at so easily obtaining so much valuable information. It would appear, there- fore, that " Slippery Bill," under the influence of five glasses (probably 2J^ quarts) of Lager Bier^ had actually danced four miles in a few moments. Kearny street, of which I present above a spirited engraving from a beautiful drawing by Mr. Kraut, is a pass, about fifty feet in width. The soil is loose and sandy, about one inch in depth ; below which Dr. Dunshunner discovered a stratum of white pine three inches in thick- ness, and beneath this again, sand. It is densely populated, and smells of horses. Its surface is intersected with many pools of sulphuretted protoxide of hydrogen, and we found several specimens of a vegetable substance, loosely distributed, which is classed by Mr. Weegates as the Stalkus cabbagiensis. It being late in the evening when our arrange- ments for encamping were completed, we saw Report on the Central Route. ii but little of the natives until the next morning, when they gathered about our camp to the number of eighteen. We were surprised to find them of diminutive stature, the tallest not exceeding three feet in height. They were excessively mischievous, and disposed to steal such trifling things as they could carry away. Their countenances are of the color of dirt, and their hair white and glossy as the silk of maize. The one that we took to be their chief was an exceedingly diminutive personage, but with a bald head which gave him a very venerable appearance. He was dressed in a dingy robe of jaconet, and was borne in the arms of one of his followers. On making them a speech, proposing a treaty, and assuring them of the protection of their great Father Pierce, the chief was affected to tears ; and, on being comforted by his followers, repeatedly exclaimed, " Da, da, — da, da; " which, we were informed by the interpreter, meant " father,'* and was in- tended as a respectful reference to the President. We presented him afterwards with some beads, hawk-bells and other presents, which he imme- diately thrust into his mouth, saying " Goo," and crowing like a cock; which was rendered by the interpreter into an expression of high satisfaction. All his followers having received presents from us, they at length departed, well pleased, and we shortly after took up our line of march. From the notes of Dr. Bigguns I 12 Report on the Central Route. transcribe the following description of one of this deeply interesting people: ** Kearny street native; name — Bill; — height, two feet nine inches; — hair, white; — complexion, dirt color; — eyes, blue; — no front teeth; — opal at extremity of nose; — dress, a basquine of bluish bom- bazine, with two gussets, ornamented down the front with crochet-work of molasses candy, three buttons on one side and eight buttonholes on the other — leggings of tow cloth, fringed at the bottoms and per- mitting free ventilation behind — one shoe and one boot; — occupation, erecting small pyramids of dirt and water; when asked what they were, replied * pies,' (a Spanish word, meaning feet; supposed they might be the feet or foundation of some barbarian structure) — religious belief, obscure; — when asked who made him, replied * Par ' (supposed to be the name of one of their principal deities)." We broke up our encampment and moved North by compass across Market street, on the morning of the 6th, and about noon had com- pleted the survey as far as the corner of Second street. While crossing Market street, being anxious to know the exact time, I concluded to deter- mine it by observation. Having removed the sidereal clock from the cart, and put it in the street, we placed the cart in the plane of the meridian, and I removed the eye and object- glass of the transit for the purpose of wiping them. While busily engaged in this manner, an individual, who, I have reason to believe, is Report on the Central Route. 13 connected with a fire company, approached, and, seeing the large brazen tube of the transit pointed to the sky, mistook it for a huge speak- ing trumpet. Misled by this delusion, he mounted the cart, and in an awful tone of voice shouted through the transit, " TVash her^ Thir- teen!'" but having miscalculated the strength of his lungs, he was seized with a violent fit of coughing, and before he could be removed he had completely coughed the vertical hairs out of the instrument. I was in despair at this sudden destruction of the utility of our most valuable instrument ; but fortunately recollecting a grid- iron that we had among our kitchen apparatus, I directed Dr. Heavysterne to hold it up in the plane of the true meridian, and with an opera- glass watched and noted by the clock the pass- age of the sun's centre across the five bars. Having made these observations, I requested the principal computer to work them out, as I wished to ascertain the time immediately; but he replying that it would take some three months to do it, I concluded not to wait, but sent a man into the grocery, corner of Market and Second, to inquire the time. The desired information was quickly obtained. It may be thought singu- lar that, with so many gold watches in our party, we should ever be found at a loss to ascertain the time; but the fact is, I had directed every one of our employees to set his watch by Greenwich mean time, which, though 14 Report on the Central Route. excellent to give one the longitude, is for ordi- nary purposes the meanest time that can be found. A distressing casualty that befell Dr. Bigguns on this occasion may be found worthy of record. An omnibus, passing during the time of observation, was driven carelessly near our sidereal clock, with which it almost came into contact. Dr. Bigguns, with a slight smile, remarked that " the clock was nearly run down^^ and immediately fainted away. The pursuits of science cannot be delayed by acci- dents of this nature; two of the workmen re- moved our unfortunate friend, at once, to the Orphan Asylum, where, having rung the bell, they left him on the steps and departed, and we never saw him afterwards. From the corner of Market to the corner of Second and Folsom streets, the route presents no object of interest worthy of mention. We were forced to the conclusion, however, that little throwing of stones prevails near the latter point, as the inhabitants mostly live in glass houses. On the 8th we had brought the survey nearly up to Southwick's Pass on Folsom street, and we commenced going through the pass on the morning of the 9th. This pass consists of a rectangular ravine, about 10 feet in length, the sides lined with pine boards with a white oak {^uercus albus) bar that at certain occasions forms across, entirely obstructing the whole route. We found no difficulty in getting through Report on the Central Route. 15 the pass with the wheelbarrows; but the mule- carts and the " two Fannies " were more troublesome, and we were finally unable to get them through without a considerable pe- cuniary disbursement, amounting in all to one dollar and fifty cents (;^i.5o). We under- stand that the city of San Francisco is de- sirous of effecting a safe and free passage through this celebrated canon, but a large appro- priation (;^220,ooo) is required for the purpose. The following passages relating to this portion of the route, transcribed from the geological notes of Dr. Dunshunner, though not directly connected with the objects of the survey, are extremely curious in a scientific point of view, and may be of interest to the general reader. **The country in the vicinity of the route, after leaving Southwick's Pass, is very productive, and J observed with astonishment that red-headed children appear to grow spontaneously. A building was pointed out to me, near our line of march, as the locale of a most astounding agricultural and architec- tural phenomenon, which illustrates the extreme fer- tility of the soil. A small pine wardrobe, which had been left standing by the side of the house (a frame cottage with a piazza), at the commencement of the rainy season, took root, and in a few weeks grew to the prodigious height of thirty feet, and, still preserving its proportions and characteristic ap- pearance, extended in each direction until it covered a space of ground some forty by twenty feet in measurement. i6 Report on the Central Route. ** This singular phenomenon was taken advantage of by the proprietors ; doors and windows were cut in the wardrobe, a chimney erected, and it now an- swers every purpose of an addition to the original cottage, being two stories in height ! This, doubt- less, appears almost incredible ; but fortunately the house and attached wardrobe may be seen any day, from the road, at a trifling expense of omnibus hire. Some distance beyond, rises a noble structure, built entirely of cut-wood, called * The Valley House, by Mrs. Hubbard.' Not imagining that a venial species of profanity was conveyed by this legend, I concluded that Mrs. Hubbard was simply the proprietor. This brought to my mind the beautiful lines of a primitive poet, Spenser,* if I mis- take not : * Old Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard To get her poor dog a bone ; But when she got there, the cupboard was bare, And so the poor dog got none.' '* Feeling curious to ascertain if this could, by any possibility, be the ancient residence of the heroine of these lines, perchance an ancestress of the present proprietor, I ventured to call and inquire ; and my antiquarian zeal was rewarded by the information that such was the case ; and that if I returned at a later hour during the evening, I could be allowed a sight of the closet and a view of the skeleton of the origi- nal dog. Delighted with my success, 1 returned accordingly, and, finding the door closed, ventured to knock; when a sudden shower of rain fell, lasting but about five seconds, but drenching me to the skin. Undeterred by this contretemps ^ I elevated my um- *The Doctor is in error; the lines quoted are from Chaucer. J.P, Report on the Central Route. 17 brella and knocked again, loudly, when a violent concussion upon the umbrella, accompanied by a thrill down the handle which caused me to seat myself pre- cipitately in a bucket by the side of the door, con- vinced me that electrical phenomena of an unusual character were prevalent, and decided me to return with all speed to our encampment. Here I was astounded by discovering, inverted on the summit of my umbrella, a curious and deeply interesting vase of singularly antique shape, and composed, apparently, of white porcelain. Whether this vase fell from the moon, a comet, or a passing meteor, I have not yet decided ; drawings of it are being prepared, and the whole subject will receive my thorough investigation at an early day.* "I subsequently attempted to pursue my investiga- tions at the * Valley House ; ' but the curt manner of the proprietor led me to suspect that the subject was distasteful, and I was reluctandy compelled to abandon it. ** Near the * Valley House,' I observed an adver- tisement of *The Mountain View,' by P. Buckley ; but the building in which it is exhibited being closed, I had no opportunity to judge of the merits of the painting or the skill of Mr. Buckley as an artist. A short distance farther, I discovered a small house oc- cupied by a gentleman who appeared engaged in some description of traffic with the emigrants ; and, on watching his motions intently, my surprise was great to find that his employment consisted in selling * This curious antique, to which I have given the name of the " Dunshunner Vase," has singularly the appearance of a wash- basin. When the drawings are completed, it is to be presented to the California Academy of Natural Sciences. J. P. 1 8 Report on the Central Route. them small pieces of pasteboard at fifty cents apiece ! Curious to know the nature of these valuable bits ot paper, I watched carefully the proprietor's motions through a window for some hours ; but being at length observed by him, I was requested to leave — and I left. This curious subject is, therefore, I regret to say, enwrapped in mystery, and I reluctantly leave it for the elucidation of some future savant. The beautiful idea, originated by Col. Benton, that buffa- loes and other wild animals are the pioneer engineers, and that subsequent explorations can discover no bet- ter roads than those selected by them, would appear to apply admirably to the Central Route. Many pigs, singly and in droves, met and passed me contin- ually ; and as the pig is unquestionably a more saga- cious animal than the buffalo, their preference for this route is a most significant fact. I was, moreover, in- formed by the emigrants that this route was * the one followed by Col. Fremont when he lost his men.* This statement must be received cum grano sails, as, on my inquiry — * What men ? ' my informant re- plied, * A box of chessmen ; ' which answer, from its levity, threw an air of doubt over the whole piece of information, in my mind. There can be no ques- tion, however, that Lieut. Beale has frequently trav- elled this route, and that it was a favorite with him ; indeed, I am informed that he took the first omnibus over it that ever left San Francisco for the Mission ot Dolores. **The climate in these latitudes is mild ; snow ap- pears to be unknown, and we saw but little ice ; what there was being sold at twenty-five cents per lb. **The geological formation of the country is not volcanic. I saw but one small specimen of trap dur- Report on the Central Route. 19 ing the march, which I observed at the * Valley House,' with a mouse in it. From the vast accu- mulations of sand in these regions, I am led to adopt the opinions of the ethnologists of the * California Academy of Natural Sciences,' and conclude that the original name of this territory was Sand Francisco, from which the final * d ' in the prefix has been lost by time, like the art of painting on glass. ** Considering the innumerable villages of pigs to be found located on the line of march, and the conse- quent effect produced on the atmosphere, I would re- spectfully suggest to the chief engineer the propriety of changing the name of the route by a slight altera- tion in the orthography, giving it the appropriate and euphonious tide of the * ScentvdX R. R. Route.' ** Respectfully submitted, "ABRAHAM DUNSHUNNER, LL. D. '*P. G. C. R. R. R. S." From Southwick's Pass the survey was con- tinued with unabated ardor until the evening of the 1 0th instant, when we arrived opposite Mrs. Freeman's " American Eagle," where we encamped. From this point a botanical party under Prof. Weegates was sent over the hills to the S. and W. for exploration. They returned on the 1 1 th, bringing a box of sardines, a tin can of preserved whortleberries, and a bottle of whiskey, as specimens of the products of the country over which they had passed. They reported discovering on the old plank road, an inn or hostel kept by a native American Irish- man whose sign exhibited the harp of Ireland 20 Report on the Central Route. encircling the shield of the United States, with the mottoes, ** Erin go unum, E Pluribus bragh." On the 14th, the party arrived in good health and excellent spirits at the " Nightingale,** Mission of Dolores. History informs us, that **The Nightingale club at the village was held. At the sign of the Cabbage and Shears." It is interesting to the antiquarian to look over the excellent cabbage-garden, still extant imme- diately opposite the Nightingale, and much more so to converse with Mr. Shears, the re- spected and urbane proprietor. The survey and reconnoissance being finished on our arrival at the Mission, it may be expected that I should here give a full and impartial statement as to the merits or demerits of the route in connection with the proposed railroad. Some three months must elapse, however, before this can be done, as the triangulation has yet to be perfectly computed, the sub-reports examined and compiled, the observations worked out, and the maps and drawings executed. Be- sides, I have received a letter from certain par- ties interested in the Southern and the Northern routes, informing me that if I suspend my opinion on the Central for the present, it will be greatly to my interest ; and as my in- Report on the Central Route. 21 terest is certainly my principal consideration, I shall undoubtedly comply with their request, unless, indeed, greater inducement is offered to the contrary. Meanwhile I can assure the public that a great deal may certainly be said in favor of the Central route. A full report accompanied by maps, charts, sub-reports, diagrams, calculations, tables and statistics, may be expected shortly. Profiles of Prof. Heavysterne, Dr. Dunshun- ner and myself, executed in black court-plaster by Mr. Jinkins, R. A., one of the artists of the expedition, in his unrivalled style of elegance, may be seen for a short time at Messrs. Le Count & Strong's; scale, ly^ inch to i foot. In conclusion I beg leave to return my thanks to the professors, assistants, and artists of the expedition, for the energy, fidelity and zeal with which they have ever co-operated with me and seconded my efforts ; and to assure them that I shall be happy at any time to sit for my portrait for them, or to accept the handsome service of plate which I am told they have pre- pared for me, but feel too much delicacy to speak to me about. I remain, with the highest respect and esteem for myself and everybody else, JOHN PHCENIX, A. M., Chief Engineer and Astronomer, S.F. A.M.D.C.R. The annexed sketch of our route, prepared by Mr. Jinkins and Kraut, is respectfully sub- 22 Report on the Central Route. mitted to the public. It is not, of course, com- piled with that accuracy which will characterize our final maps ; but for the ordinary purposes of travel will be found sufficiently correct. J. P., A. M. C. E. & C. A. RECONNOISSANCE OF THK CENTRAL RAILROAD ROUTE, FROM SAN PRANCISCO TO THE MISSION OF DOLORES, By Prof. John Phoenix, Esq., A. M. dt. C. A. db C. E. DBAWN BY KRAUT JLND JINKIN8, K. A., ABTI8T8 TO THK EXPEDITION. Pin KEARNY STREET. H^^^^ r^-- ■ "■ 1 7 8 3 4 6 7 5 1 ^ \ / OrphuDB, Note— The eoundingi are in fathoms, showing the depth of mud and water during the rainy season. MAR K E T STREET. A.. (a) Represents a man walking down the street at the time of the passage of the Expedition. B SEC O N D STREET. F O L S O M (a) STREET. Nightingale. (a) Southwick's Pass. E. Ealfrtd Jinkint, Del. A. Kravi, 8eu!p. A New System of English Grammar. I HAVE often thought that the adjectives of the English language were not suffi- ciently definite for the purposes of de- scription. They have but three degrees of comparison; a very insufficient num- ber, certainly, when we consider that they are to be applied to a thousand objects, which, though of the same general class or quality, differ from each other by a thousand different shades or degrees of the same peculiarity. Thus, though there are three hundred and sixty- five days in a year, all of which must, from the nature of things, differ from each other in the matter of climate, — we have but half a dozen expressions to convey to one another our ideas of this inequality. We say, " It is a fine day," " It is a very fine day," " It is the finest day we have seen;" or, "It is an unpleasant day," "a very unpleasant day," "the most unpleasant day we ever saw." But it is plain that none of these expressions give an exact idea of the nature of the day, and the two superlative expressions are generally untrue. I once heard 23 24 A New System of English Grammar. a gentleman remark, on a rainy, snowy, windy and (in the ordinary English language) inde- scribable day, that it was "most preposterous weather." He came nearer to giving a correct idea of it than he could have done by any ordi- nary mode of expression; but his description was not sufficiently definite. Again, we say of a lady, " She is beauti- ful," " She is very beautiful,'* or " She is per- fectly beautiful," — descriptions, which, to one who never saw her, are no descriptions at all; for, among thousands of women he has seen, probably no two are equally beautiful ; and as to a perfectly beautiful woman, he knows that no such being was ever created — unless by G. P. R. James, for one of the two horsemen to fall in love with, and marry at the end of the second volume. If I meet Smith in the street, and ask him — as I am pretty sure to — how he does, he infallibly replies, " Tolerable, thank you.** This gives me no exact idea of Smith's health; for he has made the same reply to me on a hundred different occasions, on every one of which there must have been some slight shade of difference in his physical economy and, of course, a corresponding change in his feelings. To a man of a mathematical turn of mind, to a student and lover of the exact sciences, these inaccuracies of expression, this inability to understand exactly how things are, must be a A New System of English Grammar. 25 constant source of annoyance; and to one who, like myself, unites this turn of mind to an ardent love of truth for its own sake, the reflection that the English language does not enable us to speak the truth with exactness is peculiarly painful. For this reason I have, with some trouble, made myself thoroughly acquainted with every ancient and modern language, in the hope that I might find some one of them that would enable me to express my ideas precisely; but the same insufficiency of adjectives exists in all except that of the Flathead Indians of Puget Sound. This language consists of but forty-six words, mostly nouns; to the constant use of which exists the objection that nobody but that tribe can understand it. And as the literary and scientific advancement of the Flatheads is not such as to make a residence among them de- sirable, I have abandoned the use of their language, in the belief that for me it is Hyas cultus^ or, as the Spaniard hath it, no me vale nada. Despairing, therefore, of making new discov- eries in foreign languages, I have set myself seriously to work to reform our own; and have, I think, made an important discovery, which, when developed into a system and universally adopted, will give a precision of expression and a consequent clearness of idea that will leave little to be desired, and will, I modestly hope, immortalize my humble name as the promul- 26 A New System of English Grammar. gator of the truth and the benefactor of the human race. Before entering upon my system I will give you an account of its discovery (perhaps I might with more modesty term it an adaptation and enlargement of the idea of another), which will surprise you by its simplicity, and, like the method of standing eggs on end, of Columbus, the inventions of printing, gunpowder and the mariner's compass, prove another exemplifica- tion of the truth of Hannah More*s beautifully expressed sentiment: — ** Large streams from little fountains flow. Large aches from little toe-corns grow.*' During the past week my attention was at- tracted by a large placard embellishing the cor- ners of our streets, headed in mighty capitals with the word " Phrenology," and illustrated by a map of a man's head, closely shaven and laid off in lots duly numbered from one to forty-seven. Beneath this edifying illustration appeared a legend, informing the inhabitants of San Diego and vicinity that Professor Dodge had arrived, and taken rooms (which was inac- curate, as he had but one room) at the Gyascu- tus House, where he would be happy to examine their heads and furnish them with charts show- ing the moral and intellectual endowments, at the low price of three dollars each. Always gratified with an opportunity of spend- A New System of English Grammar. 27 ing my money and making scientific researches, I immediately had my hair cut and carefully combed, and hastened to present myself and my head to the Professor's notice. I found him a tall and thin professor, in a suit of rusty, not to say seedy, black, with a closely buttoned vest, and no perceptible shirt-collar or wristbands. His nose was red, his spectacles were blue, and he wore a brown wig, beneath which, as I sub- sequently ascertained, his bald head was laid off in[ lots marked and numbered with Indian ink after the manner of the diagram upon his adver- tisement. Upon a small table lay many little books with yellow covers, several of the pla- cards, pen and ink, a pair of iron calipers with brass knobs, and six dollars in silver. Having explained the object of my visit, and increased the pile of silver by six half-dollars (whereat the Professor smiled, and I observed he wore false teeth — scientific men always do; they love to encourage art) I was placed in a chair. The Professor, rapidly manipulating my head after the manner of a sham pooh (I am not cer- tain as to the orthography of this expression), said that my temperament was " lymphatic, nervous, bilious." I remarked that I thought myself dyspeptic; but he made no reply. Then, seizing on the calipers, he embraced my head with them in various places, and made notes upon a small card that lay near him on the table. He then stated that my hair was getting very 28 A New System of English Grammar. thin on the top, placed in my hand one of the yellow-covered books, an almanac containing anecdotes about the virtues of Dodge's Hair Invigorator, and, recommending it to my perusal, remarked that he was agent for the sale of this wonderful fluid, and urged me to purchase a bottle ; price, two dollars. Perceiving my will- ingness to purchase, the Professor produced a bottle from a hair trunk standing in the corner. The trunk, he stated, by the way, was originally an ordinary pine box, on which the hair had grown since the Invigorator had been placed in it. He recommended me to be cautious and wear gloves while rubbing it upon my head, as un- happy accidents had occurred; the hair grow- ing freely from the ends of the fingers if used with the bare hand. He then seated himself at the table, and, rapidly filling up what appeared to me a blank certificate, he soon handed over the following singular document : ** Phrenological Chart of the Head of M. John Phcenix, by Flatbroke B. Dodge, Professor of Phrenology, and inventor and proprietor of Dodge's celebrated Hair Invigorator, Stimulator of the Con- science and Arouser of the Mental Faculties: Temperament, — Lymphatic y Nervous, Bilious, Size of Head, 1 1 . Imitation, 1 1 . Amativeness, ii^. Self-esteem, ^. Caution, 3. Benevolence, 12. Combativeness, 2^/^. Mirth, I. Credulity, i. Language, i 2. A New System of English Grammar. 29 Causality, 12. Firmness, 2. Conscientiousness, 12. Veneration, 12. Destructiveness, 9. Philoprogenitiveness, o." Hope, 10. Having gazed on this in mute astonishment for a few moments — during which the Profes- sor took a glass of brandy and water, and afterwards a mouthful of tobacco — I turned to him and requested an explanation. " Why," said he, " it's very simple ; the number 12 is the maximum, i the minimum. For instance, you are as benevolent as a man can be; therefore I mark you. Benevolence, 12. You have little or no self-esteem; hence I place you. Self-esteem, ^. You've scarcely any credulity — don't you see ? " I did see ! This was my discovery. I saw at a flash how the English language was sus- ceptible of improvement, and, fired with the glorious idea, I rushed from the room and the house. Heedless of the Professor's request that I would buy more of his Invigorator, heedless of his alarmed cry that I would pay for the bottle I'd got, heedless that I tripped on the last step of the Gyascutus House and smashed there the precious fluid (the step has now a growth of four inches of hair on it, and the people use it as a door-mat), I rushed home, and never grew calm till with pen, ink and paper before me, I commenced the development of my system. 30 A New System of English Grammar. This system — shall I say this great system? — is exceedingly simple, and easily explained in a few words. In the first place, figures won't lie. Let us, then, represent by the number lOO, the maximum, the ne plus ultra of every human quality, — grace, beauty, courage, strength, wis- dom, learning — everything. Let perfection, I say, be reJ3resented by lOO, and an absolute min- imum of all qualities by the number i. Then, by applying the numbers between to the adjec- tives used in conversation, we shall be able to arrive at a very close approximation to the idea we wish to convey; in other words, we shall be enabled to speak the truth. Glorious, soul- inspiring idea ! For instance, the most ordinary question asked of you is, " How do you do ? *' To this, instead of replying, " Pretty well,** " Very well," " Quite well," or the like absurd- ities — after running through your mind that perfection of health is lOO, no health at all, i — you say, with a graceful bow, " Thank you, Pm 52 to-day;" or, feeling poorly, " Pm 13, Pm obliged to you;" or " Tm 68," or "75," or "87^," as the case may be. Do you see how very close in this way you may approxi- mate to the truth; and how clearly your ques- tioner will understand what he so anxiously wishes to arrive at, — your exact state of health ? Let this system be adopted into our ele- ments of grammar, our conversation, our liter- ature, and we become at once an exact, precise, A New System of English Grammar. 31 mathematical, truth-telling people. It will apply to everything but politics; there, truth being of no account, the system is useless. But in literature, how admirable ! Take an example. As a 19 young and 76 beautiful lady was 52 gaily tripping down the sidewalk of our 84 frequented street, she accidentally came in con- tact 100 (this shows that she came in close contact) with a 73 fat, but 87 good-humored- looking gentleman, who was 93 (i. e. intently) gazing into the window of a toy-shop. Grace- fully 56 extricating herself, she received the excuses of the 96 embarrassed Falstaff with a 68 bland smile, and continued on her way. But hardly 7 had she reached the corner of the block ere she was overtaken by a 24 young man, 32 poorly dressed, but of an 85 expression of countenance; 91 hastily touching her 54 beautifully rounded arm, he said, to her 67 surprise, — " Madam, at the window of the toy-shop yonder, you dropped this bracelet, which I had the 71 good fortune to observe, and now have the 94 happiness to hand to you." (Of course, the expression " 94 happiness " is merely the young man's polite hyperbole.) Blushing with 76 modesty, the lovely (76, as before, of course) lady took the bracelet, which was a 24 magnificent diamond clasp ("24 magnificent," playfully sarcastic; it was 32 A New System of English Grammar. probably not one of Tucker's), from the young man's hand, and 84 hesitatingly drew from her beautifully 38 embroidered reticule a 67 porte- monnaie. The young man noticed the action, and 73 proudly drawing back, added, — " Do not thank me; the pleasure of gazing for an instant at those 100 eyes (perhaps too exaggerated a compliment), has already more than compensated me for any trouble that I might have had." She thanked him, however, and with a 67 deep blush and a 48 pensive air, turned from him, and pursued with a 33 slow step her promenade. This is but the commencement of a pretty little tale which I might throw ofF, if I had a mind to, showing in two volumes, or forty-eight chapters of thrilling interest, how the young man sought the girl's acquaintance, how the interest first excited deepened into love, how they suffered much from the opposition of parents (her parents of course), and how, after much trouble, annoyance and many perilous adventures, they were finally married ; their happiness, of course, being represented by 100. But I trust that I have said enough to recommend my system to the good and truthful of the literary world; and besides, just at pres- ent I have something of more immediate im- portance to attend to. You would hardly believe it, but that ever- lasting (100) scamp of a professor has brought A New System of English Grammar. 33 a suit against me for stealing a bottle of his disgusting Invigorator ; and as the suit comes ofF before a Justice of the Peace, whose only- principle of law is to find guilty and fine any accused person whom he thinks has any money (because if he don*t he has to take his costs in county scrip), it behooves me to take time by the fore-lock. So, for the present, adieu. Should my system succeed to the extent of my hopes and expectations, I shall publish my new grammar early in the ensuing month, with suit- able dedication and preface ; and should you, with your well-known liberality, publish my prospectus, and give me a handsome literary notice, I shall be pleased to furnish a presenta- tion copy to each of the little Pioneer children. P. S. I regret to add that having just read this article to Mrs. Phoenix, and asked her opinion thereon, she replied, that if a first-rate magazine article were represented by 100, she should judge this to be about 13; or if the quintessence of stupidity were 100, she should take this to be in the neighborhood of 96. This, as a criticism, is perhaps, a little discour- aging; but as an exemplification of the merits of my system it is exceedingly flattering. How could she, I should like to know, in ordinary language, have given so exact and truthful an idea; how expressed so forcibly her opinion (which, of course, differs from mine) on the subject ? 34 A New System of English Grammar. As Dr. Samuel Johnson learnedly remarked to James Boswell, Laird of Auchinleck, on a certain occasion, — " Sir, the proof of the pudding is in the eat- ing thereof." ^^Ingomar" and ^^The Plains." San Diego, July lo, 1854. AS your valuable work is not sup- posed to be so entirely identified with San Franciscan interests as to be careless what takes place in other portions of this great kedntry^ and as it is received and read in San Diego with great interest (I have loaned my copy to over four different literary gentlemen, most of whom have read some of it), I have thought it not improbable that a few critical notices of the musical performances and the drama of this place might be acceptable to you and interest your readers. I have been encouraged to this task, moreover, by the perusal of your inter- esting musical and theatrical critiques on San Francisco performers and performances; as I feel convinced that, if you devote so much space to them, you will not allow any little feeling of rivalry between the two great cities to prevent your noticing ours, which, without the slightest feeling of prejudice, I must consider as infinitely superior. I propose this month to call your 35 36 "Ingomar" and "The Plains." attention to the two great events in our theat- rical and musical world : the appearance of the talented Miss Pelican and the production of Tarbox's celebrated " Ode Symphonie " of " The Plains." The critiques on the former are from the columns of The Vallecitos Sentinel^ to which they were originally contributed by me, appearing on the respective dates of June ist and June 31st. From the Vallecitos Sentinel, June ist. Miss Pelican. — Never during our dramatic ex- perience, has a more exciting event occurred than the sudden bursting upon our theatrical firmament, full, blazing, unparalleled, of the bright, resplendent and particular star whose honored name shines refulgent at the head of this article. Coming among us un- heralded, almost unknown, without claptrap, in a wagon drawn by oxen across the plains, with no agent to get up a counterfeit enthusiasm in her favor, she appeared before us for the first time at the San Diego Lyceum, last evening, in the trying and diffi- cult character of Ingomar, or the Tame Savage. We are at a loss to describe our sensations, our admiration of her magnificent, her superhuman efforts. We do not hesitate to say that she is by far the superior of any living actress; and, as we believe hers to be the perfection of acting, we cannot be wrong in the be- lief that no one hereafter will ever be found to ap- proach her. Her conception of the character of Ingo- mar was perfection itself; her playful and ingenuous manner, her light girlish laughter, in the scene with Sir Peter, showed an appreciation of the savage char- "Ingomar" and "The Plains." 37 acter which nothing but the most arduous study, the most elaborate training, could produce ; while her awful change to the stern, unyielding, uncompromis- ing father, in the tragic scene of Duncan's murder, was indeed nature itself. Miss Pelican is about seventeen years of age, of miraculous beauty, and most thrilling voice. It is needless to say that she dresses admira- bly, as in fact we have said all we can say when we called her most truthfully, perfection. Mr. John Boots took the part of Parthenia very creditably, etc., etc. From the Vallecitos Sentinel^ Ju7ie J 1st. Miss Pelican. — As this lady is about to leave us to commence an engagement on the San Francisco stage, we should regret exceedingly if anything we have said about her, should send with her a prestige which might be found undeserved on trial. The fact is. Miss Pelican is a very ordinary actress; indeed, one of the most indifferent ones we ever happened to see. She came here from the Museum at Fort Lara- mie, and we praised her so injudiciously that she be- came completely spoiled. She has performed a round of characters, during the last week, very miserably, though we are bound to confess that her performance of King Lear, last evening, was superior to anything of the kind we ever saw. Miss Pelican is about forty-three years of age, singularly plain in her per- sonal appearance, awkward and embarrassed, with a cracked and squeaking voice, and really dresses quite outrageously. She has much to learn, poor thing! I take it the above notices are rather ingeni- ous. The fact is, Fm no judge of acting, and don't know how Miss Pelican will turn out. 38 "Ingomar" and "The Plains." If well, why there's my notice of June the ist; if ill, then June 31st comes in play, and, as there is but one copy of the Sentinel printed, it's an easy matter to destroy the incorrect one. Both can't be wrong; so I've made a sure thing of it in any event. Here follows my musical cri- tique, which I flatter myself is of rather superior order. The Plains. Ode Symphonie par Jabez Tarbox. — This glorious composition was pro- duced at the San Diego Odeon, on the 31st of June, ult., for the first time in this or any other country, by a very full orchestra (the perform- ance taking place immediately after supper), and a chorus composed of the entire " Sauer- Kraut Verein," the "Wee-Gates Association," and choice selections from the " Gyascutus " and " Pikeharmonic " societies. The solos were rendered by Herr Tuden Links, the recita- tions by Herr von Hyden Schnapps, both per- formers being assisted by Messrs. John Smith and Joseph Brown, who held their coats, fanned them, and furnished water during the more over- powering passages. " The Plains " we consider the greatest musi- cal achievement that has been presented to an enraptured public. Like Waterloo among bat- tles. Napoleon among warriors, Niagara among falls, and Peck among senators, this magnificent composition stands among oratorios, operas, musical melodramas and performances of Ethi- "Ingomar" and "The Plains." 39 opian Serenaders, peerless and unrivalled. // frappe toute chose parfaitement froid. " It does not depend for its success " upon its plot, its theme, its school or its master, for it has very little if any of them ; but upon its soul-subduing, all-absorbing, high-faluting effect upon the audience, every member of which it causes to experience the most singular and exquisite sensations. Its strains at times re- mind us of those of the old master of the steamer McKim, who never went to sea without being unpleasantly affected; — a straining after effect, he used to term it. Blair, in his Lectures on Rhetoric, and Mill, in his Syste«fr of Logic (p. 31), have referred to the feeling which might be pro- duced in the human mind by something of this transcendentally sublime description; but it has remained for M. Tarbox, in the production of The Plains, to call this feeling forth. The symphonic opens upon the wide and boundless plains, in longitude 115° W., latitude 35° 21 ' 03' ' N., and about sixty miles from the west bank of Pitt River. These data are beau- tifully and clearly expressed by a long (topograph- ically) drawn note from an Eb clarinet. The sandy nature of the soil, sparsely dotted with bunches of cactus and artemisia, the extended view, flat, and unbroken to the horizon save by the rising smoke in the extreme verge, denoting the vicinity of a Piute village, are represented by the bass drum. A few notes on the piccolo 40 "Ingomar" and "The Plains." call the attention to a solitary antelope, picking up mescal beans in the foreground. The sun, having an altitude of 36° 27 ', blazes down upon the scene in indescribable majesty. " Gradually the sounds roll forth in a song " of rejoicing to the god of day : — ** Of thy intensity And great immensity Now then we sing ; Beholding in gratitude Thee in this latitude. Curious thing." Which swells out into " Hey Jim along, Jim along Josey," then decrescendo^ mas menos^ poco poquita^ dies away and dries up. Suddenly we hear approaching a train from Pike County, consisting of seven families, with forty-six wagons, each drawn by thirteen oxen. Each family consists of a man in butternut- colored clothing driving the oxen, a wife in butternut-colored clothing riding in the wagon, holding a butternut baby, and seventeen butter- nut children running promiscuously about the establishment; all are barefooted, dusty, and smell unpleasantly. (These circumstances are expressed by pretty rapid fiddling for some min- utes, winding up with a puff from the ophicleide played by an intoxicated Teuton with an atrocious breath. It is impossible to misunderstand the description.) Now rises o'er the plains,in mellif- luous accents, the grand Pike County chorus : — "Ingomar" and "The Plains.'' 41 ** Oh, we'll soon be thar In the land of gold. Through the forest old. O'er the mounting cold. With spirits bold — Oh, we come, we come. And we'll soon be thar. Gee up Bolly ! whoo, up, whoo haw!" The train now encamps. The unpacking of the kettles and mess-pans, the unyoking of the oxen, the gathering about the various camp-fires, the frizzling of the pork, are so clearly expressed by the music that the most untutored savage could readily comprehend it. Indeed, so vivid and lifelike was the representation that a lady, sitting near us, involuntarily exclaimed aloud, at a certain passage, " Thar^ that pork's burn- ing ! " It was truly interesting to watch the gratified expression on her face when, by a few notes of the guitar, the pan was removed from the fire and the blazing pork extinguished. This is followed by the beautiful aria^ — ** O ! marm, I want a pancake!" followed by that touching recitative^ — " Shet up, or I will spank you!" To which succeeds a grand crescendo move- ment representing the flight of the child with the pancake, the pursuit of the mother, and the final arrest and summary punishment of the former, represented by rapid strokes of the castanets. 42 "Ingomar" and "The Plains." The turning in for the night follows; and the deep and stertorous breathing of the encamp- ment is well given by the bassoon, while the sufferings and trials of an unhappy father with an unpleasant infant are touchingly set forth by the cornet-a-pistons. Part Second. — The night attack of the Pi- utes, the fearful cries of the demoniac Indians, the shrieks of the females and children, the rapid and effective fire of the rifles, the stampede of the oxen, their recovery and the final repulse of the Piutes after a loss of thirty-six killed and wounded, while the Pikes lose but one scalp (from an old fellow who wore a wig, and lost it in the scuffle), are faithfully given, and excite the most intense interest in the minds of the hearers; the emotions of fear, admiration and delight, suc- ceeding each other in their minds with almost pain- ful rapidity. Then follows the grand chorus, — ** Oh ! we gin them fits. The Ingen Utahs; With our six-shooters We gin 'em pertickuler fits." After which, we have the charming recitative of Herr Tuden Links to the infant, which is really one of the most charming gems in the performance : — ** Now, dern your skin, canU you be easy?'* Morning succeeds. The sun rises magnifi- cently (octavo-flute) ; breakfast is eaten in " Ingomar " AND " The Plains." 43 a rapid movement in three sharps; the oxen are caught and yoked up by a small drum and triangle; the watches, purses, and other valuables of the conquered Piutes, are stored away in a camp-kettle to a small movement on the pic- colo, and the train moves on, with the grand chorus, — ** We '11 soon be thar. Gee up Bolly! Whoo hup! whoo haw! " The whole concludes with the grand hymn and chorus, — ** When we die we '11 go to Benton, Whup! Whoo, haw! The greatest man that e'er land saw. Gee! Who this little airth was sent on, Whup! Whoo, haw! To tell a * hawk from a hand-saw * ! Gee!" The immense expense attending the produc- tion of this magnificent work, the length of time required to prepare the chorus, the incred- ible number of instruments destroyed at each rehearsal, have hitherto prevented M. Tarbox from placing it before the American public, and it has remained for San Diego to show herself superior to her sister cities of The Union in musical taste and appreciation and in high- souled liberaHty, by patronizing this immortal prodigy and enabhng its author to bring it forth 44 "Ingomar" and "The Plains." in accordance with his wishes and its capabilities. We trust every citizen of San Diego and Valle- citos will listen to it ere it is withdrawn; and if there yet lingers in San Francisco one spark of musical fervor, or a remnant of taste for pure harmony, we can only say that the Southerner sails from that place once a fortnight, and that the passage money is but forty-five dollars. The Death of Squibob. Reported by his friend Skew ball. San Francisco, June 15, 1853. EDITOR HERALD : It becomes my melancholy duty to inform you of the decease, under most painful circumstances, of your friend and contributor, the unfor- tunate Squibob. It has been evident to the public for some days past that his faculties were becoming much impaired, and his friends had noticed, with regret, growing evidences of imbecility, evinced by a disposition to make unnecessary and inappropriate puns, and a tendency to ridicule the Board of Aldermen, the code of duelling and other equally serious subjects and sacred institutions. Hopes were still entertained of his rallying, and many believed that he would yet be spared to us ; but, on the 13th instant, he was seized with a violent attack of the Evening Journal, a species of intermittent epidemic which made its appearance regularly at four o'clock each afternoon, under the influence of which he 45 46 The Death of Squibob. rapidly sunk. He sent for me, late yesterday evening, and I had the mournful satisfaction of being with him in his last moments and of closing one of his eyes. I say one of his eyes ; for the other persisted in remaining partly open, and his interesting countenance preserves, even in death, that ineffable wink of intelligence which so eminently characterized him while among the living. I found him suf- fering much from physical and mental prostra- tion, but evidently well aware of his approaching end, and calm and resigned in the contempla- tion of that event. Some idea may be formed of his condition from a remark that he made. " I sent to the cook for a broiled pork-chop,'* he feebly articulated, " and he sent me 2, fried one. It is satisfactory, in one's last moments, thus to receive the consolations of religion from a San Franciscan friar '^ I could not resist an expression of horror at this sad evidence of the alarmingly low state to which he had been brought. He smiled sadly, and said, with in- effable sweetness, " Never mind ; it's better so. My friends have all advised me to die, and it is my safest course. If I had continued in the papers, some bellicose individual would have ' called me out^ and the Herald would have been ' rifled of its sweets.' " He was here seized with an alarming paroxysm, during which his hands were extended in a right line from the tip of his nose, the fingers separated and " twid- The Death of Squibob. 47 dling '* (if I may be allowed the expression) in a convulsive manner. On recovering, his eye fell on a copy of the Evening Journal. He shud- dered, and muttering in an incoherent manner, " I am done. Brown," turned away. I then gave him a glass of bimbo, which appeared to arouse his energies, and he requested that his daguerreotype of " Greene," in his great char- acter of Sir Harcourt Courtly, might be shown him. As I held before him the representation of that artist, a barrel-organ in the street below struck up his favorite tune, " The Low-backed Car." As the well-known sound struck on his ear, a light spread over his countenance. Sitting up in bed, he seized the miniature and clasped it to his breast. " Where is M. W. ? " he screamed. " Give it me quick! quick!!" I hastily handed him yesterday's Herald. His eye fell on the lines. Gazing alternately on them and the miniature, and eagerly listening to the organ, " Poetry ! music ! and the drama ! " he exclaimed, " farewell ! farewell forever ! " The light passed from his visage, his eye glazed, he fell back upon his pillow, and his gentle spirit passed away without a struggle. * 5i< * * * * * I had left the room to give directions to the weeping Nancy with reference to the disposal of the body. On returning, judge of my sur- prise at finding him sitting up in bed. " Look here, old fellow," said he, " by George ! I 48 The Death of Squibob. quite forgot my last words : " This is the last of earth I — / still live ! ! — I wish the con- stitution TO BE PRESERVED ! ! ! HERE'S LUCK ! ! ! ! " Then lying down, and closing one eye, with a wink, the intense meaning of which beggars all description, he expired; this time " positively without reserve." P.S. — The funeral ceremonies will take place to-morrow, at 1 1 o'clock, at " Patty and Bar- ren's." The public generally are invited to attend (with rifles). The Tangarees (of which association the deceased was a member), and the Moral Reform Society, will form around the bier (Lager), and accompany the body to its last resting-place. Winn is now busily engaged in the melan- choly duty of modelling his features in soft gingerbread. A copy of the bust in candy he promises shall be sent to the offices of the Herald and the Evening Journal. A spiritual medium (one of the tipping ones) has just been experimenting in the room with the remains. The following questions were put, eliciting the following answers : — Question. — " Is the spirit of Squibob pres- ent ? " Answer. — " Slightually." Question. — " Are you happy ? " Answer. — " Rather." The spirit here asked, through the medium, the following question: — The Death of Squibob. 49 " Are the public generally glad I am dead ? ** A regard for veracity compelled every person in the room to reply, '' Very ! " when the table on vi^hich the experiments were being con- ducted was violently capsized, and the remains, sitting up in bed, threw a boot at the medium, which broke up the meeting; the medium very properly remarking that it would be bootless to prosecute the inquiry further. Should anything further of interest transpire, I shall take much pleasure in informing you. Yours respectfully, SKEWBALL. Street Introductions. No matter of local interest worthy the pen of history having oc- curred since the return of the Congressional Rifles from their target excursion at San Mateo, I propose to devote a few moments to the reprobation of an uncomfortable custom prevalent in this city to an alarming extent; a custom which strikes me as calculated to destroy public confidence, and, to use an architectural metaphor, shake the framework of society to its very piles. I refer to the pernicious habit, which everybody seems to have adopted, of making general, indiscriminate and public introductions. You meet Brown on Montgomery street : " Good morning. Brown." " How are you. Smith ? Let me introduce you to Mr. Jones." And you forthwith shake hands with a seedy individual, who has been boring Brown for the previous hour for a small loan, probably; an individual you never saw before, never had the slightest desire to see, and wish never to see again. Being naturally of an arid disposition, and perhaps requiring 50 Street Introductions. 51 irrigation at that particular moment, you un- guardedly invite Brown, and your new friend Jones, of course, to step over to Parry and Bat- ten's and imbibe. What is the consequence ? The miscreant Jones introduces you to fifteen more equally desirable acquaintances, and in two minutes from the first introduction there you are, with seventeen newly formed friends, all of whom " take sugar in their'n" at your expense. This is invading a man's quarters with a ven- geance. But this is not the worst of it. Each gentleman to whom you have been introduced, wherever you may meet thereafter, in billiard- room, tenpins alley, hot-house or church, intro- duces you to somebody else; and so the list in- creases in geometrical progression, like the sum of money which Colburn, in his Arithmetic, informs us the gentleman paid for the horse with such a number of nails in his shoes, — a story which in early childhood I remember to have implicitly believed. In this manner you form a crowd of acquaintances, of the majority of whom you recollect neither names nor faces; but, being continually assailed by bows and smiles on all sides from unknown gentlemen, you are forced, to avoid the appearance of rudeness, to go bowing and smirking down the street like a distinguished character in a public procession, or one of those graven images at Tobin & Duncan's, which are eternally wag- 52 Street Introductions. ging their heads with no definite object in view. This custom is peculiarly embarrassing in other respects. If you are so unfortunate as to possess an indifferent memory for names and a decided idiosyncrasy for forgetting faces, you are continually in trouble as to the amount of familiarity with which to receive the salutation of some unknown individual to whom you have been introduced, and who persists in remember- ing all about you though you have utterly for- gotten him. Only the other day, at the Ori- ental Hotel, I met an elderly gentleman, who bowed to me in the most pleasant manner as I entered the bar-room. I wasn't quite sure, but I thought I had been introduced to him at Pat Hunt's ; so, walking up, I seized him familiarly by one hand, and, slapping him on the shoulder with the other, exclaimed, " How are you, old cock ? " I shall not soon for- get his suspicious glance, as muttering, " Old cock, sir!" he turned indignantly away; nor my confusion at learning, shortly after, that I had thus irreverently addressed the Rev. Am- minadab Sleek, chairman of the Society for Propagating the Heathen in California, to whom I had brought a letter of introduction from Mrs. Harriet B. Stowe. On the same day, I met and addressed, with a degree of distant respect almost amounting to veneration, an in- dividual whom I afterwards ascertained to be Street Introductions. 53 the husband of my washerwoman; a discovery which I did not make until I had inquired most respectfully after his family, and promised to call at an early day to see them. There are very few gentlemen in San Fran- cisco to whom I should dislike to be introduced; but it is not to gentlemen alone, unhappily, that this introduction mania is confined. Everybody introduces everybody else; your tailor, your barber, and your shoemaker, deem it their duty to introduce you to all their numerous and by no means select circle of acquaintance. An unfortunate friend of mine, T — hf — 1 J s, tells me that, stopping near the Union Hotel, the other day, to have his boots blacked by a Frenchman, he was introduced by that exile, during the operation, to thirty-eight of his compatriots; owing to which piece of civility he is now suffering with a cutaneous disorder, and has been fi donc'd^ ici^d^ and g d ever since, to that degree that he hates the sight of a French roll and damns the memory of the great Napoleon. My own circle of acquaintance is not large ; but if I had a dollar for every introduction I have received during the last six weeks I should be able to back up the Baron in one of his mag- nificent schemes, or purchase the entire estab- lishment of the Herald office. But I have said quite enough to prove the absurdity of indiscriminate introductions. Hop- 54 Street Introductions. ing that you will excuse my introduction of the subject, and that Winn won't make an adver- tisement out of this article, I remain, as ever, yours faithfully. The Flight of the Collector. Oriental Hotel, San Francisco. PASSING up Montgomery street, yes- terday afternoon between 3 and 4 o'clock, my attention was attracted by a little gentleman with a small moustache, who rushed hastily past me, and, turning down Commercial street, sought to escape observation by plunging among the crowd of drays that perpetually tangle up Long Wharf. Though slightly lame, he passed me with a speed that may have been equalled, but by a man of his size could never have been excelled ; and his look of frantic terror, his countenance, wild, pallid with apprehension, as I caught for an instant his horror-stricken gaze, I shall never forget. I turned partly around to watch his flight, when with a sudden shock I was borne hurriedly along, and in an instant found myself struggling and plunging in the midst of a mighty crowd who were evidently in hot pursuit. There were old men, young men and maidens — at least I presume they were maidens, it was no time for close scrutiny — ; there were Frenchmen, Englishmen, Chinamen, and every other description of men; gentlemen 55 56 The Flight of the Collector. with spectacles and gentlemen who were specta- cles to behold ; men with hats and men without hats ; an angry sea of moustaches, coat-tails and hickory shirts, with here and there a dash of foam in the way of a petticoat ; and all pouring and rushing down Long Wharf with me in the midst, like a bewildered gander in a mill-race. There was no shouting, a look of stern and gloomy determination sat on the countenance of each individual ; and save an occasional muttered ejaculation of " There he goes ! " "I see him ! " we rushed on in horrid silence. A sickly feeling came over me as the con- viction that I was in the midst of the far-famed and dreaded Vigilance Committee settled on my mind ; here was I, borne along with them, an involuntary and unwilling member — I, a life member of the Anti-capital Punishment Society, and author of the little work called " Peace, or Directions for the use of the Sword as a Prun- ing-hook," who never killed a fly in my life; here I was, probably about to countenance, by my presence, the summary execution of the un- happy little culprit with the small moustache, who, for aught I knew to the contrary, might be as immaculate as Brigham Young himself. What would brother Greeley say to me! But it was no time for reflection. " Onward we drove in dreadful race, pursuers and pur- sued," over boxes, bales, drays and horses. The Jews screamed and shut their doors as The Flight of the Collector. 57 they saw us coming ; there was a shower of many-bladed knives, German-silver pencils and impracticable pistols, as the show-cases flew wildly in the air. It was a dreadful scene. I am not a fleshy man — that is, not particularly fleshy — , but an old villain with a bald head and spectacles punched me in the abdomen ; I lost my breath, closed my eyes, and remember noth- ing further. On recovering my faculties, I found myself jammed up flat against a sugar- box, like a hoe-cake, with my head protruding over the top in the most uncomfortable manner, and apparently the weight of the whole crowd (amounting by this time to some six thousand) pressed against me, keeping me inextricably in my position. Here, for an instant, I caught a glimpse of a Stockton boat just leaving the wharf; then everything was obscured by a sudden shower of something white, and then burst from the mob a deep and melancholy howl, prolonged, terrific, hideous. I wrenched myself violently from the sugar-box, and con- fronted a seedy-looking individual with a bat- tered hat. In his hand he held a crumpled paper, and on his countenance sat the gloom of de- spair. " In the name of Heaven," I gasped, " what is this ? " " He has escaped," he re- plied, with a deep groan. " Who is the crim- inal ? " I asked ; " what has he done ? " " Done ? " said he of the seedy garments, turn- ing moodily away, " nothing. It is the new Col- 58 The Flight of the Collector. lector!! ! He's off to Stockton." The crowd dispersed ; slowly and sadly they all walked off. I looked over the side of the wharf. I am not given to exaggeration. You will believe me when I tell you that the sea was white with letters that had been thrown by that crowd ; for miles it was white with them, and, far out in the stream, her wheels filled with letter paper, her shafts clogged with dissolving wafers, lay the Stockton boat. On her upper deck danced the pilot in frenzied agony, his hand grasping his shattered jaw. An office-seeker had thrown a letter attached to a stone which had dislodged four of his front teeth ! As I gazed, the steamer's wheels began to move. At her after-cabin win- dow appeared a nose above a small moustache, a thumb and fingers twinkled for an instant in the sunlight, and she was gone. I walked up the wharf, and gazed ruefully on my torn cloth- ing and shattered boots, which had suffered much in this struggle of democracy. " Thank God, O Squibob!" said I, "that you are a fool, or, what amounts to the same thing in these times — a Whig, and have no offices to dis- pense and none to seek for. Verily, the apho- rism of Scripture is erroneous. It should read. It is equally cursed to give and to received I repaired to my room at the Oriental. Pass- ing the chamber of the Collector, I espied with- in, the chambermaid, an interesting colored person named Nancy. Now, I used to have an The Flight of the Collector. 59 unworthy prejudice against the colored race ; but since reading that delightful and truthful work, " Uncle Stowe's Log," my sympathies have been enlisted, and I have rather encouraged a Platonic attachment for Nancy, engendered between us by numerous acts of civility on my part and amiability on hers. So I natur- ally stopped to speak to her. She stood up to her middle in unopened letters. There must have been on the floor of that room eighteen thou- sand unopened letters. The monthly mail from the East would be nothing to it. " Mr. Squi- bob," said Nancy, with a sweet smile, " is you got airy shovel ? " " No, Nancy," said I ; " why do you want a shovel ? " " To clar out dese yere letters," said she ; " de Collecker said I muss frow dem all away ; he don't want no such trash about him." A thought struck me. I hastened to my room, seized a slop-pail, returned and filled it with letters, opened them, read them, and selected a few which strike me as peculiarly deserving. If the Collector reads the Herald — and I know he "does nothing else" — these must attract his attention, and the object of the writers will be attained. Here they are. Of course, I suppress the dates and signatures ; the authors will doubtless be recog- nized by their peculiar styles, and the time and place at which they were written is quite im- material. 6o The Flight of the Collector. No. I. My Dear Friend : — I presume you will be perfectly surrounded this morning, as usual, by a crowd of heartless office-seekers ; I therefore take this method of addressing you. I thank God, I want no office for myself or others. You have known me for years, and have never known me to do a mean or dishonorable action. I saw W up at Stockton, the other day, and he is very anxious that I should be appointed Inspector of Steamboats. He said that I needed it, and deserved it, and that he hoped you would give it to me ; but I told him I was no office- seeker — I should never ask you for any office. He said he would write to you about it. Please write to me as soon as you receive this, care of Parry & Batten. Your affectionate friend, P. S. — My friend John Smith, who you know is a true Pierce & King man, is anxious to get the appointment of Weigher and Gauger of Macaroni. He is an excellent fellow, and a true friend of yours. I hope, whether you can spare an Inspectorship for me or not, you will give Smith a chance. The Flight of the Collector. 6i No. II. My Dear Sir : — Allow me to congratulate you on your success in obtaining your wishes. I have called twice to see you, but have not been able to find you in. You were kind enough to assure me, before leaving for Washing- ton, that I might depend upon your friendship. I think it very improbable that I shall be re-nom- inated. The Water-front Extension project has not been received with that favor that I expected, and what with Roman and the Whigs and that d d Herald, I feel very doubtful. You will oblige me by retaining in your possession, until after the Convention, the office of to the Custom House. I must look about me to command the means of subsistence. I will see you again on this subject. Very truly yours, P. S. — My young friend, Mr. John Brown,, wishes to be made Inspector of Vermicelli. He is a pure Democrat, dyed in the wool, and I trust in making your appointments you will not overlook his claims. Brown tells me he con- siders himself almost a relative of yours. His aunt used to go to school with your father. She frequently writes to him, and always speaks, of you with great esteem. 62 The Flight of the Collector. No. III. MoN Amie : — I ave been ver malade since that I hav arrive, I ver muche thank you for you civilite on la vapor v^^hich we come ici, juntos. The peoples here do say to me, you si pued give to me the littel offices in you customs house. I wish if si usted gustan you me shall make to be Inspectors de cigarritos. Je 1 en- tends muy bien. Come to me see. Countess de Mister Jose Jones he say wish to be entree clerky. You mucho me oblige by make him do it. No. IV. The following was evidently dictated by some belligerent old Democrat to an amanuensis, who appears not to have got precisely the ideas intended : Sir : — I have been a dimocrat of the Jack- son School thank God for twenty years. If you sir had been erected to an orifice by the pusil- lanimous sufferings of the people as I was onst I would have no clam but sir you are appointed by Pierce for whom I voted and King who is dead as Julia's sister and I expectorate the office for which my friends will ask you sir I am a plane man and want the orifice of Prover and taster of Brandy and wish you write to me The Flight of the Collector. 63 at the Niantic where I sick three days and have to write by a young gentleman or come to see me before eleven o'clock when I generally get sick Yours P. S. My young man mr. Peter Stokes I re- quest may be made inspector of pipes. No. V. Mr. Colected H . Detor Elizer Muggins fore dosen peaces . . . $12 . . Receat pament. Mister Colected My husban Mikel Mug- gins will wish me write you no matur for abuv if you make him inspector in yore custom hous, he always vote for Jackson and Scott and all the Dimocrats and he vote for Bugler and go for extension the waser works which I like very much. You will much oblige by call and settel this one way or other. ELIZIR MUGGINS. Mike wants Mr. Timothy flaherty, who was sergent in Pirces regiment and held Pirces boss when he rared and throwed him to be a inspec- tor too hes verry good man. E. M. 64 The Flight of the Collector. No. VI. Sir : — I have held for the last four years the appointment of Surveyor of Shellfish in the Custom House, and have done my duty and understand it. I have been a Whig, but never interfered in politics, and should have voted for Pierce — it W2is my intention — but a friend by mistake gave me a wrong ballot, and I acci- dentally put it in, having been drinking a little. Dear sir, I hope you will not dismiss me ; no man in this city understands a clam as I do, and I shall be very much indebted to you to keep my office for the present though have much finer offers but don't wish at present to accept. Very respectfully, P. S. — My friend Mr. Thomas Styles wishes to keep his office. Dear sir, he is Inspector of Raccoon Oysters ; he is an excellent gentleman, and though they call him a Whig I think dear sir, there is great doubt. I hope you'll keep us both ; it's very hard to get good Inspectors who understand shell-fish. So much for to-day. If any gentleman, in- cited by a laudable curiosity, wishes to peruse more of these productions, let him proceed to The Flight of the Collector. 65 Telegraph Hill, and on the summit of the tower at the extremity of the starboard yard- arm, in the discharge of his duty will be found, always ready, attentive, courteous and obliging, SQUIBOB. The Return of the Col- lector. INTELLIGENCE having reached the city, yesterday morning, that the new Col- lector might be expected by the Sophie from Stockton, at an early hour in the after- noon the crowd of office-seekers began to assemble, and by eight o'clock last evening, every avenue of approach to Long Wharf was entirely closed and the wharf itself so densely packed with human beings that the merchants and others compelled to resort thither, were obliged to step from the corner of Montgomery and Commercial streets upon the heads of the crowd and proceed to their places of business over a living pavement. Much suffering hav- ing been caused by the passage of loaded drays and other carriages over the shoulders of the crowd, and many serious accidents having occurred to individuals — among which we can only notice the unfortunate case of a plethoric elderly gentleman, who, slipping on a glazed hat, fell down and broke himself somewhere — , our worthy mayor, ever alive to the calls of humanity, throwing aside all political prejudice, 66 The Return of the Collector. 67 caused planks to be laid over the heads of the as- sembly from Sansome street to the extremity of the wharf, which in a great measure alleviated the suffering. There was no fighting or disorder among the crowd, for so closely were they packed that no man could move a finger. One unfortunate in- dividual who at an early stage of the proceed- ings had inadvertently raised his arm above his head, remained with it fixed in that position. Like that of an East Indian fakir who has taken a vow to point forever toward heaven, the melancholy hand was seen for hours di- rected towards the nearest bonded warehouse. Some idea of the amiable feeling existing among the multitude may be gathered from the state- ment of Capt. J B , familiarly known as " Truthful James." He informs me that early this morning the keeper of a restaurant on the wharf picked up no less than seven hundred and eighty-four ears and three peck-basketfuls of mutilated fragments ! To use the words of James, as with horror-stricken countenance he made me this communication, " they had been chawed^ sir ! actilly chawed off! " Such horrible barbarity makes humanity shudder. But I for- bear comment; the business of your reporter is to state facts, not to indulge in sentiment. At half-past nine o'clock an electric shock ran through the vast assemblage at the well- known sound of the Sophie's bell. All the 68 The Return of the Collector. agony and suffering of the past few hours was forgotten ; for an instant Long Wharf quivered like an aspen leaf, and then rose to heaven a mighty shout, which shook every building in the city to its foundations. The Sophie approached the wharf, the Collector and her other passengers disembarked, and in a few moments a procession was formed and proceeded in the following or- der to the Oriental : — THE NEW collector, In a carriage drawn by two horses, lashed to their utmost speed, tearing along Battery street towards the Hotel. All the male inhabitants of Stockton (except one reckless and despairing old Whig, who, knowing he had no chance and being confined to his bed by sickness, remained behind to take charge of the city) running eight abreast, at the top of their speed. THE POLICE OF SAN FRANCISCO, On a dead run, and much blown. Candidates for office in the Custom House who had known the Collector in his early youth, ten abreast, bearing a banner with the following motto : " Don't you remember the path where we met, long, long ago ? " (A fire company, who had inadvertently turned into Battery street, were driven furiously along The Return of the Collector. 69 with the procession, and were wondering how the d — I they were ever to get out of it.) Candidates for office who had lately become acquainted with the Collector, twelve abreast. Banner : " We saw him but a moment, but methinks we've got him now." Candidates who fervently wished to the Lord they could get acquainted with him. Candidates who had frequently heard of him, forty-five abreast. THE U. S. ARMY, Consisting of a discharged sergeant of the 9th Infantry, slightly inebriated, one abreast, de- siring the deputy collectorship, or the porter- age, or that the Collector would give him four bits; didn't care a d — n which. MUSIC, By an unhappy dog, trodden under foot by the crowd and giving vent to the most unearthly yells. All the members of the Democratic party in California who did not wish for an office in the Custom House, consisting of a fortunate miner who had made his pile and was going home on the first of the month. Gentlemen who had the promise of appoint- ments from influential friends and were sure of getting them, walking arm in arm with gentle- 70 The Return of the Collector. men, without distinction of party, who were confident of drawing the diamond watch in Reeve's Lottery. This part of the procession was four hours in passing a given point. M. L. WINN, Bearing in his right hand a pole from which floated a bill of fare three hundred and twenty- six feet in length, and in his left a buckwheat cake glittering with golden syrup. MR. BRANCH, Supporting the other extremity of the bill of fare. CITIZENS GENERALLY. The procession having moved with great rapidity, soon arrived at the Oriental; but not so soon as the Collector, who, rushing hastily into his room, locked and barricaded the door, hav- ing previously instructed the landlord to inform all persons who might inquire for him that he was dead. Meanwhile the multitude had com- pletely surrounded the hotel, and signified their impatience and disgust at finding the doors closed by angry roars, uttered at half-second intervals. Finding their cries disregarded, a sudden movement took place among them, and for a few moments I feared the hotel was to be carried by storm, when a window on Bush The Return of the Collector. 71 street opened, and a gentleman, whom the darkness of the evening prevented my com- pletely identifying, but whom I religiously be- lieve to have been the Collector, appeared, and amid the most profound silence made the fol- lowing beautiful and touching address : " Gen- tlemen, I wish to God you would all go to bed ; you have worried and annoyed me beyond endurance. I am not to be caught by you as was General Scott; for I actually have no time to remove any portion of my clothing. I do not love brogue ; I beseech you, therefore, to retire and allow me a little repose." The address here concluded with some allusion to the Deity and a reference to the eyes of the crowd, which, being pronounced indistinctly, your reporter was not able entirely to comprehend, and with a sud- den slam the window closed. The scene without now beggared description : roars, yells, frantic cries for " ladders ! " " lad- ders ! " rent the air. Within the hotel all was alarm and confusion; the ladies screamed, children cried, the alarmed proprietor spoke of sending for the Mary Ann Rifles, when — the scene suddenly changed. Upon the piazza of the house appeared a gentleman, walking slowly, with his hands in the pockets of a shawl dress- ing-gown ; he wore a brown wig, and an enor- mous pair of false whiskers framed his well- rouged cheeks. In a word, he was dressed in the character of Sir Harcourt Courtly. Turn- 72 The Return of the Collector. ing slowly towards the crowd, he withdrew one hand from the pocket of the shawl dressing- gown, and slowly and awkwardly extending it, said, — "Cool!" It was sufficient. For an instant, a shudder ran through the mob, then, with cries of " It's him ! it's Greene ! " they broke and dispersed in every direction; up Bush and down Battery, through Stockton street and over the sand-hills, they fled like frightened deer. The earth seemed to have opened and swallowed them up, so sudden and complete was the dispersion. In one moment, where stood a mob of fifteen thousand, remained but two individuals. Above, with a sidelong bow and melancholy smile, slowly retired Sir Har- court; and on the earth below, with open mouth and distended eyes, his admiring gaze fixed upon that extraordinary man with reverential awe, stood PHCENIX. Saturday morning. P. S. " Truthful James " has just rushed up in a frantic state to inform me that the Collector did not arrive last night, after all. When I made my report I did not know whether he had or not; but I am inclined now to think he might have done so. I don't know that it makes any difference. If he did arrive, my report is all true now. If he did not, why, when he does arrive, it will be all true then ; and those The Return of the Collector. 73 who read it this morning, and find it false, will have the pleasure of reading it again when it becomes the history of an actual oc- currence. Of course, you won't publish this. PHGENIX. The San Francisco Antiqua- rian Society and California Academy of Arts and Sci- ences. Pursuant to notice, a large num- ber of those of our citizens interested in the advancement of the arts and sciences in California, assembled in the large hall over the Union Hotel, at 8 o'clock on Thursday evening, the 31st of June ult. The meeting having come to order, our distinguished fellow-citizen. Dr. Keensarvey, was called to the chair, and A. Cove, Esq., was made secretary. The chairman then rose, and in that lucid style which ever characterizes his public ad- dresses, briefly explained the object of the meet- ing. It had been urged, he said, and he feared with too much justice, by our scientific friends in the Eastern States, that the inhabitants of California, residing in a country which opens to the geologist, the ethnologist, the mineralogist, the botanist, the taxidermist, the antiquarian, 74 S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. 75 the historian, the philosopher and, in short, the savant, the richest and most unexampled field on the face of the globe or elsewhere for their labors, were entirely regardless of their privi- leges in this respect, utterly absorbed in the pursuit of gain, and, while excavating from the bowels of the earth its auriferous deposits in sufficient quantity, they cared not, to use a forcible illustration, the execration of a tinker for those sciences in the pursuit of which they could alone find a rational manner of expending their accumulated wealth. Was it possible that this could be the case ? Had we not among us men of science, of lib- erality, of intelligence ? (Cries of " Yes, yes ! " from the meeting, and "iS"/, Senorf^^ from a Cas- tilian savant in a glazed hat and judicious state of spiritual elevation.) Had we not in our midst many who, having acquired a sufficiency of worldly wealth, now wished to find among the treasures of science that calm satisfaction which the possession of no amount of d'lnero could possibly afford ? (Tumultuous shouts of "Yes, yes!" ^' Seguro f' ''Si, Senor /'' and a voice, " Whar is he?") It was the pride and pleasure of the chairman to believe that such was the case; and it was in the hope of being able to hurl back the aspersions of the savants of the east that the meeting was called together; it was with the hope of forming a permanent, scientific, California association. 76 S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. composed of such material as could not be found elsewhere, an association whose transac- tions should be read with mingled emotions of astonishment, delight and envy by every en- lightened lover of science, from the eastern end of the north Farallone Island, proceeding easterly, to the western end of the same. (Loud applause; cries of "Good!" '-^Bonf' ^-^Buenof' broke from the meeting, and a deep moan of acquiescence from the Castilian savant, who, with the glazed hat partially shrouding his mas- sive intellectual developments, had become slightly somnolent.) The applause consequent upon this beautiful effort of the chairman having subsided, Mr. B. S. Bags rose to address the chair: — He had not the advantage of an early educa- tion — not much, he hadn't; but he read a good deal, and liked it; and he dare say now, that, if the truth had been found out, he knowed a great deal more than some of those philosophers at the east. He wanted to see science go on in Cali- fornia. He had a considerable interest in the place, and expected to spend his days thar. He was now fifty-three years old; he come out here twenty-three years ago as steward of a whale-ship, and he run away and turned doc- tor. (Laughter; cries of " Hush, hush ! ") But he married a Californy widder with a large ranch; and he had, when the gold mines broke out, made his " pile." He had over three hun- S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. 77 dred thousand dollars, and he didn't care who knowed it. He meant to devote the interest of the same to learning science. (Uproarious ap- plause; cries of " Go it ! " "That's the pint!'* and " Caramba ! ") He had three daughters, and he meant each on 'em should be a scientific man (loud applause); one of 'em wore green specs now, (immense applause, accompanied by a cry of " Hep — ah ! " from a person in a white hat and blue-blanket coat, who, having evidently mistaken his place, was requested by the chair to leave at once — but he didn't do it). Order being restored, Mr. Bags went on to say that he had money enough, and had gin up trading stock, and begun to study science for itself. He had bought a " Mahomedon," and could tell how hot it was any time; he had examined the Ah — teasing well in the square, and knew something about hydrocyanics from a contemplation of scientific structures. By read- ing the papers daily, particularly the Alta California, he found all sorts of new matters which he supposed give him considerable idea of new mattix; but above all, having seen in the papers from the States an account of the bosilist pendulum and its application to the Bunker Hill monument, by which it showed how the earth turned round from east to west, he had ever since, for three hours each day, watched the flagstaff on the Plaza, and he could assure the meeting that when the flag was 78 S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. trailed it always flew out to the west, and when it was histed the rope always bent out to the east. ("Hear! hear!") Gentlemen might say it was the wind that did it, but what made the wind ? If any gentleman here had ever rid out to the Mission on a calm day (" Hear ! " from a savant who kept a livery stable in Kearny street), he must have felt a breeze blowing in his face. Well ! he made that wind, he did, a-going ! and it was the earth that made the wind by turning around in just the same way. (Deep impression produced: low re- marks, "We must examine this !" "Bags is a trump," &c.) Mr. Bags concluded that he had took up a good deal of time, but he hoped that a society would be formed, and that he would pay his share towards it (applause), and more too (loud applause). He hoped he would be able to do more. He was now reading a paper in Silli- man's Journal on the horizontal paralysis with its effects on the cellular system, and he hoped to get some ideas out of it which he would adapt to California; and if he should, the society should have the benefit of it. Mr. Bags here sat down amid prolonged and continued cheering. Barney Braglagan was now loudly called for, but not appearing, the meeting was addressed by several of our most scientific citizens, the tendency of whose remarks was entirely and S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. 79 unreservedly in favor of the formation of a per- manent society ; and, the meeting being wound up to the highest state of scientific excitement, it was unanimously resolved: That this meet- ing resolve itself into a permanent scientific association, to be known as the " San Francisco Antiquarian Society and California Academy of Arts and Sciences," and immediately enter into correspondence with all learned and scientific associations on the face of the earth. After the passage of the above resolution, a committee consisting of Dr. Keensarvey, A. Cove, and James Calomel, M. D., were appointed to prepare a constitution for the society. Leaving the hall, they immediately repaired to the saloon of the California Ex- change; and, returning in seven minutes and five seconds (mean solar time), they submitted the following draft of a constitution, which was adopted by acclamation. Article I. — The officers of this Society shall consist of a President, Corresponding Sec- retary, Recording Secretary, Treasurer and Librarian, who shall be elected annually, by ballot. Article IL — The objects of this Society shall comprise inquiries into everything in the remotest degree scientific or artful. Article IIL — The Society shall consist of members, corresponding members and honorary members. The first to be persons residing in 8o S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. California; the two last to include both persons and residents of any other place on the face of the globe or elsewhere. Article IV. — There shall be an annual pay- ment of one hundred dollars, in City, County, or State scrip, by each member residing in the City of San Francisco or its vicinity. The Society now proceeded to the election of officers for the ensuing year, with the following result: President, Dr. Keensarvey; Vice-Presi- dent, M. Quelque Chose; Corresponding Sec- retary, G. Squibob; Recording Secretary, A. Cove; Treasurer, Buck S. Bags; Librarian, the Consul for Ireland, ex off. On motion, the Treasurer received permis- sion from the Society to apply to the City Coun- cil for liberty to stack the scrip forming the funds of the association upon the Plaza under cover of a tarpaulin. On motion, committees were appointed to report, at the first meeting of the Society, on the following subjects, namely: ist. Antiquity; 2d. Geology; 3d. Toxicology; 4th. Ethnology; all as applicable to California. On motion, the proceedings of this meeting and the future transactions of the Society, shall be published in the San Francisco Daily Alta Cal- ifornian, Silliman's Journal, the Boston Olive Branch, and the extra documents accompanying the President's annual message. On motion, the Society adjourned to hold its S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. 8i first regular meeting on Thursday evening, July 15th, in the remains of the old adobe building anciently standing on the northwest corner of the Plaza. Immediately on adjournment the several committees entered with zeal upon their various duties. The Committee on Antiquities left at once, on the night boat, for Vallejo, the residence of their chairman, who had informed them of the existence at that place of some specimens of a substance termed " Old Monongahela " lately discovered by a scientific gentleman residing at the capitol; the Committee on Geology were seen eagerly inquiring for the omnibus for Yerba Buena Island; that on Ethnology appointed a sub-committee for the city of San Francisco, and made arrangements for the departure of its main body to the upper counties of the State, for the purpose of holding interviews with the primitive inhabitants ; while the Castilian savant in the glazed hat, who had been appointed chair- man of the Committee on Toxicology, repaired incontinently to a drinking-saloon, where he commenced a series of experiments in hydrosta- tics, with the endeavor to ascertain the quantity of fluid possible to be raised from a glass in a given time by a straw applied to his mouth. The experiments resulted so much to his satis- faction that he was seen to emerge therefrom at four o'clock on the following morning, in a 82 S. F. A. S. & C. A. A. S. high state of pleasurable excitement, chanting huskily, as he meandered down the street, that highly refreshing Mexican anthem, — ** Castro viene en poco tiempo! Cuidado los Americanos! " A. COVE, Sec. pro tern. G. Squibob, Cor. Sec. S. F. A. S. and C. A. A. S. San Francisco, July lo, 1851. The Ladies' Relief Society. Editor of the San Francisco, July i 2. LEARNING that a meeting of the " Ladies' Relief Society " was to be held this morning, at the Pine Church, on Baptist street, your reporter, ac- tuated by a desire to discharge his duty to the public by collecting valuable infor- mation, and incited by a laudable curiosity to ascertain what on earth the ladies desired to be relieved from (on which last point he obtained the most complete satisfaction, as will appear), repaired to that sacred edifice, and ensconcing himself in a pew conveniently situated in case of a sudden retreat becoming expedient, pa- tiently awaited the commencement of the pro- ceedings. At half-past nine, A. M. precisely, as I ascer- tained by reference to the magnificent silver watch, valued at $18, which I did not draw in Tobin and Duncan's grand raffle, yesterday, but which, " on the contrary, quite the reverse," was bestowed on me by my deceased grand- mother, (excuse the digression; I am approach- ing a painful subject and like to do it gradually,) 83 84 The Ladies' Relief Society. the ladies began to assemble in their beauty, and, I regret to add, their strength. From the somewhat inconvenient position which, from motives of delicacy and a desire to avoid the appearance of intrusion, I had assumed on the floor of the pew, I counted fifty-two of the " sweeteners of our cup of human happiness,** of every age, figure and appearance. There was the maid of blushing sixteen, and there was the widow of sixty, dressed in all imaginable styles of colors, — white hats, red shawls, chip bonnets, green aprons and pink-colored boots. The Pine Church looked like a conservatory, and as I lay perdu, like an innocent (green) snake among the flowers, listening to the merry laugh and innocent playful gurglings of delight that fell from their hundred and four lips, — " How'd do, dear ? " " My ! what a love of a bonnet ! '* " What did you draw, Fanny ? '* " Is Lizzy going to marry that fellow ? '* &c., I thought that my lines were cast in very pleas- ant places and I had a goodly heritage. How painfully was I undeceived, how totally was I engulfed ! (a preferable mode of expression, that " engulfed," to the common but indeli- cate one of " sucked in "). But I will not anticipate. As the town clock struck ten the doors were closed, and a lady of mature age and benign though unyielding expression (I do you justice. Madam, though you haven't used me well), The Ladies' Relief Society. 85 ascended the steps of the pulpit, and, taking from the desk a fireman's speaking-trumpet that laid thereon, she smote an awful blow upon a copy of the sacred scriptures, and vociferated through the brazen instrument, '-^ Order/** Conversa- tion ceased, laughter was hushed, and with the exception of an irrepressible murmur and a sub- dued snicker from your reporter as some charm- ing being exclaimed, sotto voce^ " Don't pinch me," silence reigned profound. " Ladies," said the president, " you are aware of the object of this meeting. Tied down by the absurd preju- dices of society, trammelled by the shackles of custom and unworthy superstition, we have found it necessary to form ourselves into a society, where, free from the intrusion of exe- crable man, aloof from his jealous scrutiny, whether as father, brother, or that still more objectionable character of husband, we may throw ofF restraint, exert our natural liberty, and seek relief {vom the tedious and odious routine of duty imposed upon us in our daily walk of life. Any motion is in order." At this instant, while my wondering gaze was attracted by an elderly female in a Tuscan bon- net and green veil, who, drawing a black pint- bottle from the pocket of her dress, proceeded to take a " snifter " therefrom with vast satis- faction, then tendered it to the lady that sat next (a sweet little thing in a Dunstable, with cherry-colored ribbons), a lady rose and said, — 86 The Ladies' Relief Society. " Mrs. President, I move that a committee of one be appointed to send a servant to Batty and Parrens for fifty-two brandy smashes ^ A thrill of horror ran through my veins ; I rose mechanically to my feet, exclaimed "Gracious goodness ! " and fell, in a fainting condition, against the back of the pew. // was my Susan! ! You remember the instant that intervenes be- tween the flash of lightning and the ensuing thunderclap. For an instant there was silence, dead silence — you might have heard a paper of pins fall, — then " at once there rose so wild a yell" ! " A man ! a man ! " they cried, and a scene of hubbub and confusion ensued that beg- gars description. The venerable female in the Tuscan shied the pint-bottle at my head, the little thing in the Dunstable gave me a back- handed wipe with a parasol, and for an instant my life was in positive danger from the shower of fans, hymn-books and other missiles that fell around me. " Put him out, Martha," said an old lady to a lovely being in a blue dress in an adjacent pew. " I shan't," was the reply; " I haven't been introduced to him." " Wretched creature," said the president in an awful voice, " who are you ? " " Reporter for the Alta " rose to my throat; but my lips refused their utterance. " What do you want ? " she con- tinued. " I want to go home," I feebly articu- lated. " Put him out ! " she rejoined ; and before I could think, much less expostulate, I Relief Society. 87 was pounced upon by two strong-minded women, and found myself walking rapidly down Baptist street with the impression of a number three gaiter boot on my clothing about ten inches be- low the two ornamental buttons upon the small of my back. From this latter circumstance I have formed the impression that the little thing with the Dunstable and the cherry-colored rib- bons assisted at my elimination. And now, Mr. Editor, what are we to think of this ? Does it not give rise to very serious reflections, that a society should exist in our very midst of so nefarious but indignation is useless. I cannot do justice to the subject. Ruffled in disposition, wounded to the heart in the best and most sacred feelings of my common nature, I can only subscribe myself. Your outraged reporter. Benicia. Benicia, October i, 1850. LEAVING the metropolis, last even- ing, by the gradually-increasing-in- popularity steamer West Point, 1 " skeeted " up Pablo Bay with the intention of spending a few days at the world-renowned seaport of Benicia. Our captain (a very pleasant and gentlemanly little fellow, by the way) was named Swift, our pas- sengers were emphatically a fast set, the wind blew like well-watered rose-bushes, and the tide was strong in our favor. All these circum- stances tended to impress me with the idea that we were to make a wonderfully quick passage, but, alas, " the race is not to the Swift ; '* the Senator passed us ten miles from the wharf, and it was nine o'clock, and very dark at that, when we were roped in by the side of the " ancient and fishlike"-smelling hulk that forms the broad wharf of Benicia. As I shouldered my carpet-bag, and stepped upon the wharf among the dense crowd of four individuals that were there assembled, and gazed upon the mighty city whose glimmering lights, feebly dis- ss Benicia. 89 cernible through the Benician darkness, extended over an area of five acres, an overpowering sense of the grandeur and majesty of the great rival of San Francisco affected me. I felt my own extreme insignificance, and was fain to lean upon a pile of watermelons for support. " Boy ! " said I, addressing an intelligent specimen of humanity who formed an integral portion of the above-mentioned crowd, " Boy ! can you direct me to the best hotel in this city ? " " Ain't but one," responded the youth ; " Winn keeps it, right up the hill thar." Decidedly, thought I, I will go in to Winn; and, reshouldering my carpet-bag, I blundered down the ladder upon a plank foot-path leading over an extensive morass in the direction indicated, not noticing, in my abstraction, that I had inadvertently retained within my grasp the melon upon which my hand had rested. " Saw yer ! " resounded from the wharf as I retired; ^^ Saw yer!'^ repeated several individuals upon the foot-path. For an instant my heart beat with violence at the idea of being seen accidentally appropriating so con- temptible an affair as a watermelon; but, hearing a man with a small white hat and large white moustache, shout "Hello!" and immediately rush with frantic violence up the ladder, I com- prehended that Sawyer was his proper name, and by no means concerned me or my proceed- ings; so, slipping the melon in my carpet-bag, I tranquilly resumed my journey. A short 90 Benicia. walk brought me to the portal of the best and only hotel in the city, a large two-story build- ing dignified by the title of the Solano Hotel, where I was graciously received by mine host, who welcomed me to Benicia in the most win- ning manner. After slightly refreshing my inner man with a feeble stimulant, and undergoing an introduction to the oldest inhabitant, I calmly seated myself in the bar-room and contemplated with intense interest the progress of a game of billiards between two enterprising citizens; but finding, after a lapse of two hours, that there was no earthly probability of its ever being con- cluded, I seized a candlestick and retired to my room. Here I discussed my melon with in- tense relish, then, seeking my couch, essayed to sleep. But, oh ! the fleas ! skipping, hopping, crawling, biting ! " Won't some one establish an agency for the sale of D. L. Charles & Co.'s Heabane, in Benicia ? " I agonizingly shouted; and echo answered through the reverberating halls of the Solano Hotel, " Yes, they won't ! " What a night! But everything must have an end (circles and California gold excepted), and day at last broke over Benicia. Magnificent place! I gazed upon it from the attic window of the Solano Hotel with feelings too deep for utterance. The sun was rising in its ma- jesty, gilding the redwood shingles of the U. S. storehouses in the distance ; seven deserted hulks were riding majestically at anchor in the Benicia. 91 bay; clothes-lines, with their burdens, were flapping in the morning breeze; a man with a wheelbarrow was coming down the street, — everything, in short, spoke of the life, activity, business and bustle of a great city. But in the midst of the excitement of this scene, an odor- iferous smell of beefsteak came, like a holy calm, across my olfactories, and, hastily drawing in my cabeza^ I descended to breakfast. This operation concluded, I took a stroll in company with the oldest inhabitant, from whom I ob- tained much valuable information, which I hasten to present. There are no less than forty-two wooden houses, many of them two stories in height, in this great place, and nearly twelve hun- dred inhabitants, men, women and children. There are six grocery, provision, dry goods, auc- tion, commission, and where-you-can-get-almost- any-little-thing-you-want stores, one hotel, one school-house which is also a brevet church, three billiard-tables, a post-office — from which I actually saw a man get a letter — and a ten- pins alley, where, I am told, a man once rolled a whole game, paid ^1.50 for it, and walked ofF chuckling. Then there is a monte-bank, a Common Council, and a Mayor, who, my guide informed me, is called Carne^ from a singular habit he has of eating roast beef for dinner. But there isn't a tree in all Benicia. " There was one," said the guide, " last year, 92 Benicia. only four miles from here; but they chopped it down for firewood for the ' Post.' " Alas ! why didn't the woodman spare that tree? The dwelling of one individual pleased me indescrib- ably; he had painted it a vivid green. Imagi- inative being ! He had evidently tried to fancy it a tree, and, in the enjoyment of this sweet illusion, had reclined beneath its grateful shade, secured from the rays of the burning sun, in the full enjoyment of rural felicity even among the crowded streets of this great metropolis. How pretty is the map of Benicia! We went to see that, too. It's all laid off in squares and streets for ever so far, and you can see the pegs stuck in the ground at every corner, only they are not exactly in a line, sometimes; and there is Aspinwall's wharf, where they are building an iron steamer that looks like a large pan, and Semple Slip, all divided on the map, by lines and dots, into little lots of incredible value; but just now they are all under water, so no one can tell what they are actually worth. O, decidedly Benicia is a great place. " And how much, my dear sir," I modestly inquired of the gentlemanly recorder who displayed the map, " how much may this lot be worth ? " and I pointed with my finger to lot No. 97, block 16,496, situated as per map, in the very centre of the swamp. " That, sir," replied he with much suavity, " ah ! it would be held at about Benicia. 93 three thousand dollars, I suppose." I shuddered and retired. The history of Benicia is singular. The origin of its name, as related by the oldest in- habitant, is remarkable. " Many years ago,'* said that aged man, " this property was owned by two gentlemen, one of whom, from the ex- treme candor and ingenuousness of his char- acter, we will call Simple; the other being distinguished for waggery and a disposition for practical joking, I shall call, as in fact he was familiarly termed in those days, Larkin. While walking over these grounds in company^ on one occasion, and being naturally struck by its natural advantages, said Simple to Larkin, 'Why not make a city here, my boy; have it surveyed into squares, bring up ships, build houses, make it a port of entry, establish depots, sell lots, and knock the centre out of Yerba Buena straight?' (Yerba Buena is now San Francisco, reader.) 'Ah!' quoth Larkin, a pleasant grin diffusing itself over his agreeable countenance, 'that would be nice, hey?'" Need we say that the plan was adopted, car- ried out, proved successful; and Larkin's memorable remark " be nice^ ^O'," being adopted as the name of the growing city, gradually be- came altered and vulgarized into its present form, Benicia! A curious history this, which would have delighted Home Tooke beyond measure. 94 Benicia. Sonoma, October lo, 1850. I left Benicia with satisfaction. Ungrateful people ! I expected, after the very handsome manner in which I had spoken of their city, the glowing description of its magnitude, prosperity and resources that I had given; the consequent rise in property that had taken place ; the mani- fest effect that my letter would produce upon the action of Congress in making Benicia a port of entry ; in view of all these circumstances, I indeed expected some trifling compliment, — a public dinner, possibly, or peradventure a delicate present of a lot or two, the deeds in- closed in a neat and appropriate letter from the Town Council. But no ! the name of Squi- bob remains unhonored and unsung, and, what is far worse, unrecorded and untaxed in magnifi- cent Benicia. " How sharper than a serpent's thanks it is to have a toothless child," as Pope beautifully remarks in his Paradise lost. One individual characterized my letter as " a d — d burlesque." I pity that person, and forgive him. Benicia, Cal., June 10, 1855. Benicia is not a paradise. Indeed, I am in- clined to think that had Adam and Eve been originally placed here, the human race would Benicia. 95 never have been propagated. It is my impres- sion that the heat and the wind and some other little Benician accidents, would have been too much for them. It would have puzzled them, moreover, to disobey their instructions; for there is no tree of knowledge, or any other kind, in Benicia. If they had managed this, what, in the absence of fig-leaves, would they have done for clothing ? Maybe tule would have answered the purpose ; there's plenty of that. I re- marked to my old friend. Miss Wiggins, the other day, in a conversation on Benicia, its advantages and its drawbacks, that there was not much society here. " Wal," replied the old lady, " thar's two^ the Methodists and Mr. Woodbridge's ; but I don't belong to nuther." " I don't either," said I, and the conversation terminated. I hardly know what to write to you. I re- mind myself of the old Methodist elder, way down on the French Broad, in Tennessee, who was unexpectedly called upon to address a camp-meeting. He slowly rose and ejaculated, " Brutherin," — here an idea struck him, — " Brutherin," said he, " the term Brutherin arose from an old custom of the apostles, who used to go up to the tabernacle and breathe therein! Hence the term, Brutherin. But my brutherin," he went on, " I'm not a-going to take my text from any particular part of the Bible, to-night. I'll tell you," said he, with a pleasant smile, as 96 Benicia. he warmed to his work, " PU tell you all about old brother Paul, who went down to Corinth and got into an all-fired scrape, and was knocked down and drug out, and left thar for dead; all of which is written by Helicar- nassus, up the Archi/)^lago — bless-ed be the Lord ! " Now, like this ancient worthy, who, by the way, went on and made a very effective speech of it, I'm not going to take my text from anything in particular; but I will commence this rambling epistle by an anecdote of " old brother " Tushmaker, which, I think, has never yet been published. Dr. Tushmaker was never regularly bred as a physician, or surgeon, but he possessed natu- rally a strong mechanical genius and a fine appetite; and, finding his teeth of great service in gratifying the latter propensity, he con- cluded that he could do more good in the world and create more real happiness therein by put- ting the teeth of its inhabitants in good order than in any other way. So Tushmaker became a dentist. He was the man that first invented the method of placing small cog-wheels in the back teeth for the more perfect mastication of food, and he claimed to be the original discov- erer of that method of filling cavities with a kind of putty, which, becoming hard directly, causes the tooth to ache so grievously that it has to be pulled, thereby giving the dentist two successive fees for the same job. Tushmaker Benicia. 97 was one day seated in his office, in the city of Boston, Massachusetts, when a stout old fellow named Byles presented himself to have a back tooth drawn. The dentist seated his patient in the chair of torture, and, opening his mouth, discovered there an enormous tooth, on the right-hand side, " about as large," as he after- wards expressed it, " as a small Polyglot Bible." I shall have trouble with this tooth, thought Tushmaker; but he clapped on his heaviest for- ceps, and pulled. It didn't come. Then he tried the turn-screw, exerting his utmost strength; but the tooth wouldn't stir. " Go away from here," said Tushmaker to Byles, " and return in a week, and I'll draw that tooth for you or know the reason why." Byles got up, clapped a handkerchief to his jaw, and put forth. Then the dentist went to work, and in three days he invented an instrument which he was confident would pull anything. It was a combination of the lever, pulley, wheel and axle, inclined plane, wedge and screw. The castings were made, and the machine put up in the office, over an iron chair rendered perfectly stationary by iron rods going down into the foundations of the granite building. In a week old Byles returned ; he was clamped into the iron chair, the forceps connected with the machine attached firmly to the tooth, and Tushmaker, stationing himself in the rear, took hold of a lever four feet in length. He turned it slightly. Old Byles gave 98 Benicia. a groan, and lifted his right leg. Another turn ; another groan, and up went the leg again. '' What do you raise your leg for ? " asked the doctor. " I can't help it," said the patient. " Well," rejoined Tushmaker, " that tooth is bound to come, now." He turned the lever clear round with a sudden jerk, and snapped old Byles' head clean and clear from his shoul- ders, leaving a space of four inches between the severed parts ! They had a post-mortem exam- ination. The roots of the tooth were found extending down the right side through the right leg, and turning up in two prongs under the sole of the right foot ! " No wpnder," said Tushmaker, " he raised his right leg." The jury thought so, too ; but they found the roots much decayed, and, five surgeons swearing that mortification would have ensued in a few months, Tushmaker was cleared on a verdict of "justifiable homicide." He was a little shy of that instrument for some time afterward. But one day an old lady, feeble and flaccid, came in to have a tooth drawn ; and Tushmaker, think ing it would come out very easy, concluded, just by way of variety, to try the machine. He did so, and at the first turn drew the old lady's skeleton completely and entirely from her body, leaving her a mass of quivering jelly in her chair ! Tushmaker took her home in a pillow- case. She lived seven years after that, and they called her the " India-rubber woman." She Benicia. 99 had suffered terribly with the rheumatism; but after this occurrence never had a pain in her bones. The dentist kept them in a glass case. After this, the machine was sold to the con- tractor of the Boston Custom House, and it was found that a child of three years of age could, by a single turn of the screw, raise a stone weighing twenty-three tons. Smaller ones were made, on the same principle, and sold to the keepers of hotels and restaurants. They were used for boning turkeys. There is no moral to this story whatever, and it is possible that the circumstances may have become slightly exaggerated. Of course, there can be no doubt of the truth of the main incidents. P. S. — You think this a stupid letter, perhaps. Think of my surroundings, young man ! 'Tis not often you get a good thing out of Nazareth. O Benicia, Benicia, " don't you cry for me!" for, I positively assure you, the feeling will not be reciprocated. The Lost Stove-pipe. Mission of Dolores, January 15, 1855. IT was my intention to furnish you, this month, with an elaborate article on a deeply interesting subject ; but a serious domestic calamity has prevented. I re- fer to the loss of my stove-pipe in the terrific gale of the 31st of December. There are few residents of this city whose business or inclination has called them to the Mission of Dolores, that have not seen and admired that stove-pipe. Rising above the kitchen chimney to the noble altitude of nearly twelve feet, it pointed to a better world, and was pleasantly suggestive of hot cakes for breakfast. From the window of my back porch I have gazed for hours upon that noble structure ; and, watching its rotary cap, shifting with every breeze and pouring forth clouds of gas and vapor, I have mused on politics and fancied myself a politician. It was an accomplished stove-pipe. The melody accompanying its movements, inaptly termed creaking by the soulless, gave evidence of its taste for music, and its proficiency in drawing was the wonder The Lost Stove-pipe. ioi and delight of our family circle. It had no bad habits ; it did not even smoke. I fondly hoped to enjoy its society for years, but one by one our dearest treasures are snatched from us : the soot fell, and the stove-pipe has followed soot. On the night of the 31st of December, a gale arose, unexampled in its terrific violence. Houses shook as with ter- tian ague, trees were uprooted, roofs blown off, and ships foundered at the docks. A stove- pipe is not a pyramid. What resistance could mine oppose to such a storm ? One by one its protecting wires were severed ; and as it bowed its devoted head to the fury of the blast, shrieks of more than mortal agony attested the despe- rate nature of its situation. At last the storm- spirit fell in its wrath, upon the feeble and reel- ing structure, and, whirling it madly in the air with resistless force, breaking several tenpenny nails and loosening many of the upper bricks of the chimney, dashed it down to earth. But why harrow up the feelings of your readers by a continuation of the distressing narrative ? The suffering that we have endured, the tears that have been shed, since this loss, will be under- stood and commiserated when I add, — the next morning the kitchen chimney smoked, and has been doing it intermittently ever since. Since my last, scarcely a gleam of fun has come to illumine the usual dull monotony of the Mission of Dolores; the days have been 102 The Lost Stove-pipe. **Dark and dreary; It rains, and the wind is never weary.** It is amusing to observe the shifts a maker of poetry will resort to, when compelled to make use of an irrelevant subject to eke out his rhyme, to convince himself and his readers that the/aux pas was quite intentional, the result of study, and should be admired rather than criti- cised. In a poem called " Al Aaraaf," by Edgar A. Poe, who, when living, thought him- self, in all seriousness, the only living original poet, and that all other manufacturers of poetry were mere copyists, continually infringing on his patent, — occurs the following passage, in which may be found a singular instance of the kind in question. ** Ligeia! Ligeia! My beautiful one! Whose harshest idea Will to melody run. Oh ! is it thy will On the breezes to toss ? Or, capriciously still. Like the lone Albatross, Incumbent on Night, (As she on the air). To keep watch with delight On the harmony there?" A foot-note informs us that "the albatross is said to sleep on the wingP Who said so ? I should The Lost Stove-pipe. 103 like to know. BufFon doesn't mention it; neither does Audubon. Coleridge, who made the habits of that rare bird a study, never found it out; and the undersigned, who has gazed on many- albatrosses, and had much discourse with an- cient mariners concerning them, never suspected the circumstance, or heard it elsewhere remarked upon. I am inclined to believe that it never occurred to Mr. Poe until, having become embarrassed by that unfortunate word "toss," he was obliged to bring in either a " boss " or an albatross ; and, preferring the bird as the more poetical, invented the extraordinary fact to explain its appearance. The above lines, I am told, have been much admired ; but if they are true poetry, so are the following : — Highflier! Highflier! My long-legged one! Whose mildest idea Is to kick up and run; Oh, is it thy will Thy switch-tail to toss ? Or caper viciously still. Like an old sorrel horse, (hoss,) Incumbent on thee. As on him, to rear, (rare,) And though sprung in the knee. With thy heels in the air ? A note for me, and the man waiting for an answer, said ye? Now, by the shade of Shad- 104 The Lost Stove-pipe. rach and the chimney of Nebuchadnezzar's fiery furnace ! 'tis the bill for the new chimney ! Bills, bills, bills! How can a man name his child William? The horrid idea of the partner of his joys and sorrows presenting him with a Bill! and to have that Bill continually in the house, constantly running up and down stairs, always unsettled, — distraction's in the thought! Tell that man, Bridget, I'm sick; and, lucky thought! say it's the smallpox; and ask him to call again when I've got better and gone to San Diego for my health. — He's gone. I see him from a hole in the window curtain, flying off in a zigzag direction, and looking back timorously, like a jacksnipe, with his long bill. I shall write no more; like that bill, I feel unsettled. Adieu ! Unfortunate Oliver. San Francisco, June lo, 1853. THE sympathies of the community have been strongly excited, within the last few days, in favor of an unfortunate gentleman of the He- brew persuasion on whom the offi- cers of the Golden Gate perpetrated a most inhuman atrocity during her late trip from Panama. I gather from information of indig- nant passengers, and by contemplation of an affecting appeal to the public posted in the form of a hand-bill at the corners of the streets, that this gentleman was forced by threats and entreaties to do violence to his feelings and constitution by eating his way through a barrel {not a half-barrel, as has been stated by interested individuals, anxious to palliate the atrocious deed) of clear pork ! The hand-bill referred to is headed by a graphic and well-executed sketch by Solomon Ben David, a distinguished artist of this city, and represents the unhappy sufferer as he emerged from the barrel, after his oleaginous repast, in the act of asking, very naturally, for 105 io6 Unfortunate Oliver. a drink of water. The offence alleged, I find from a hasty perusal of the resolutions contained in the hand-bill, was simply that this gentle- man, whose name appears to be Oliver, was heard inquiring for Colonel Moore, our well- known and respected ex-postmaster. My friend Saul Isaacs, who keeps the anything-on this-table-for-a- quarter stand, tells me that on " doffing his cask " the miserable Oliver was found completely bunged up, and that he is now engaged in composing a pathetic ode, describing his sufferings, to be called "The Barrel i" with a few staves of which he favored me on the spot. It was truly touching. But it is need- less to ring the chimes further on this subject. Who is the witty individual that has adopted my time-honored signature in the Evening Jour- nal} Funny beggar! He certainly, he! he! he! does get off, ha ! ha ! ha ! the drollest things, ho ! ho ! ho ! that I ever ever heard. I was taking my dinner at the Oriental when that capital hit at the Japan Expedition met my eye, and was borne from the room by two strong waiters, choking with half a glass of water imbibed the wrong way, kicking violently in the air with convulsions of laughter and delight, and exclaim- ing, " Oh! d n it!" thus losing my repast, and forfeiting forever the esteem of a grave and elderly gentleman with green spectacles, who sits opposite me and has made strenuous efforts Unfortunate Oliver. 107 for mv conversion with great hope of ultimate success. Adopt another name, funny man, and do not continue to enhance thus undeservedly the literar\' reputation of SQUIBOB. A Walk with Sappho, Tired at last of monotony, even in beautiful Sonoma, I packed up my carpet-bag, and, taking the two-mule stage, passed through pretty little Napa again, and found myself, one evening, once more at Benicia. It had increased some- vi^hat since I had left it. I observed several new clothes-poles had been erected, and noticed a hand-cart, at the corner of a street, that I had never seen before. But I had little time for observation ; for the New World came puffing up to the hulks as I arrived, and I hastily stepped on board. Ascending to the cabin on the upper deck, I had the satisfaction of a formal presentation to Dr. Collyer and his interesting family. Sober, high-toned, moral and well-conducted citizens may sneer, if they please, at the " Model Artist " exhibitions of this family ; rowdies may visit them and utter their loud and vulgar remarks ; but I pretend to say that no right- minded man, with anything like the commence- ment of a taste for the beautiful and artistic, 1 08 A Walk with Sappho, 109 can attend one of these exhibitions without feehng astonished, gratified, and, if an en- thusiast, delighted. As our gallant boat, dash- ing the spray from her bow, bore us safely and rapidly onward through the lovely bay of San Pablo, the moon tipping with its silvery rays each curling wave around us and shedding a flood of yellow light upon our upper deck, " I walked with Sappho." "Oh, beautiful being!" said I, somewhat excited by the inspiring nature of the scene, and possibly the least thought by the turpentine I had imbibed, " do you never feel, when in the pride of your match- less charms you stand before us, the living, breathing representation of the lovely, poetic, and ill-fated Sappho ; do you never feel the in- spiration of the moment, and, entering into the character, imagine yourself in mind, as in form, her beauteous illustration ? " '' Well — yes," said she, with the slightest possible indication of a yawn, " I don't know but I do ; but it 's dreadful tearing on the legs ! " Washington Ladies' Deposi- tory. The late J. P. Squibob, while walking down Pennsylvania avenue, was sorely mystified by a modest little sign standing in the window of a neat little shop on the left-hand side as you go down. The sign bore, in gayly painted letters, the legend, " Washington Ladies' Depository." Flattening his nose against the window, Squibob descried two ladies, whom he describes as of exceeding beauty, neatly dressed and busily en- gaged in sewing, behind a little counter. The foreground was filled with lace caps, babies' stockings, compresses for the waist, capes, collars and other articles of still life. Hat in hand, Squibob reverently entered, and with intense politeness addressed one of the ladies as follows : " Madam, I perceive by your sign that this is the depos- itory for Washington ladies. I am going north for a few days, and should be pleased to leave my wife in your charge. I don't know if, by your rules, you could receive her, as she is a Baltimore woman ! " " One of the ladies," says Squibob, " a pretty little girl in a no Washington Ladies' Depository, hi blue dress, sewing on a thing that looked Hke a pillow-case with arm-holes, turned very red, and, holding down her head, made the remark ' Tehee! * But the elder of the twain, after making as if she would laugh but by a strong-minded effort holding in, replied, ' Sir, you have made a mis- take ; this is the place where a society of Washington ladies deposit their work, to be sold for the benefit of the distressed natives of the island of Fernando de Noronha,' or words to that effect." Gravely did the wicked Squibob bow, all solemnly begged her pardon, and, put- ting on his hat, walked off, followed by a sound from that depository as of an autumnal brook gurgling and babbling gayly over its pebbly bed in a New England forest. San Diego, April 20, 1854. Farewell to San Francisco. San Diego, Aug. lo, 1853. IT was about 7^^ A. M., on the first day of this present month of August, that I awaked from a very pleasant dream, in the great city of San Fran- cisco, to the very unpleasant convic- tion that it was a damp and disagreeable morn- ing and that my presence was particularly required in the small city of San Diego. So, having shaken hands with Frink, taken an affec- tionate leave of the chambermaid, and, lastly, devoured a beefsteak at the Branch of Alden, which viand, in perfect keeping with the weather, was both cold and raw, I shouldered my cane with a carpet-bag suspended at each end, a la chinoise^ and left the Tehama House without " one lingering hope or fond regret." When a man is going down, every- body lends him a kick, — an aphorism which I came very near realizing in my own proper person; for, as I went on my way down Long Wharf, I accidentally grazed a mule, which, being in an evil frame of mind and harnessed to a dray, might be considered as passionately at- Farewell to San Francisco. i i 3 tached to that conveyance. This interesting animal, fancying from my appearance that I was going down, lent me a kick, which, had his legs been two inches longer, would have put a stop to my correspondence forever. As it was, I escaped, and hurried on down the wharf, think- ing with a shudder on the mysterious prophecy of my friend, little Miss B., who had told me I was " sure to be kicked " before I left San Francisco, and wondering if she was really " among the prophets." The Northerner, like the steamboat runners, was lying at the end of the wharf, blowing off steam, and, as usual when a steamer is about to leave for Panama, a great crowd surrounded her. What made them all get up so early? Out of the three or four hundred people on the end of that wharf I don't believe fifty had friends that were about to sail. No ; they love to look upon a steamer leaving. It brings to their minds recollections of the dear ones at home to whom she is speeding with fond tidings, and they love to gaze and wish to Heaven they were going on her. The usual mob of noisy fruit-venders encompassed the gangway-plank. Green pears they sold to greener purchasers ; apples, also, whereof everything but the shape of an apple had long since de- parted, and oranges, the recollection of one of which doth to this day abide by me and set my teeth on edge. But high above their din, the roar of the steamer and the murmuring of 114 Farewell TO San Francisco. the crowd, rang the shrill cry of the newsboy in his unknown tongue, Here's the Alteruldni- guntimes Heupf I stepped across the plank and found myself in the presence of three fine bul- locks. How fat and sleek they looked ; uneasy though, as if they smelled mischief in the wind. A tall gaunt specimen of Pike County hu- manity stood regarding them approvingly, his head thrown slightly back, to get their points to better advantage. It was the tomb gazing on its victim. As I paused for a moment to look on the picture. Pike yawned fearfully, his head opening like the top of an old-fashioned fall- back chaise. The nearest bullock, turning, caught his eye. I thought the unhappy animal shuddered, and nudged his companion, as who should say, " Ye living, come and view the grave where ye shall shortly lie." It was quite a touching little scene. On deck all was bustle and excitement. The sailors, apparently in the last extremity of physical suffering, judging by their ago- nized cries, were heaving away at mysterious ropes. The mate, Mr. Dall, was engaged in busy, not tender dalliance with the breast- lines; while Burns, the purser, exhibited an activity and good nature only to be accounted for by the supposition that he had eaten two boxes of Russian salve (which is good for Burns — see your advertising columns) for his break- fast. Farewell to San Francisco. 115 As the last line fell from the dock, and our noble steamer, with a mighty throb and deep sigh at bidding adieu to San Francisco, swung slowly round, the passengers crowded to the side to exchange a farewell salutation with their friends and acquaintances. " Good bye, Jones'," " Good bye. Brown," " God bless you, old fel- low, take care of yourself!" they shouted. Not seeing any one that I knew, and fearing the passengers might think I had no friends, I shouted " Good bye. Muggins," and had the satisfaction of having a shabby man, much inebriated, reply, as he swung his rimless hat, " Good bye, my brother." Not particularly elated at this recognition, I tried it again with, '' Good bye. Colonel," whereat thirty-four re- spectable gentlemen took off their hats, and I got down from the position that I had occupied on a camp-stool, with much dignity, inwardly wondering whether my friends were all aids to Bigler; in which case their elevated rank and affection for me would both be satisfactorily accounted for. Away we sped down the bay, the captain standing on the wheel-house, directing our course. " Port, port a little, port," he shouted. " What's he a-calling for ? " inquired a youth of good-natured but unmistakable verdancy of appearance. " Port wine," said I, " and the storekeeper doesn't hear him; you'd better take him up some." " I will," said Innocence ; Ii6 Farewell to San Francisco. " I've got a bottle of first-rate in my state- room." And he did, but soon returned with a particularly crestfallen and sheepish appearance. " Well, what did he say to you," inquired I. " Pointed at the notice on that tin," said the poor fellow; " 'Passengers not allowed on the wheel-house.' He is, though, ain't he ? " added my friend with a faint attempt at a smile, as the captain in an awful voice shouted, " Star- board ! " " Is what ? " said I, " ' loud on the wheel-house ' / " Good God ! I went below. At 9 o'clock in the evening we arrived at Monterey, where our modest salute was an- swered by the thundering response of a 24- pounder from the fort. This useful defensive work, which mounts some twenty heavy guns and contains quarters for a regiment, was built in 1848 by Halleck, Peachy & Billings. It is now used as a hermitage by a lonely officer of the U. S. Army. The people of Monterey have a wild legend concerning this desolate recluse. I was told that he passes the whole of his time in sleep, never by any chance get- ting out of bed until he hears the gun of a steamer; when he rushes forth in his shirt, fires ofF a 24-pounder, sponges and reloads it, takes a drink and turns in again. They never have seen him ; it's only by his semi-monthly reports that they know of his existence. " Well," said I to my informant, a bustling little fellow named Bootjacks, who came ofF on board of us, " sup- P^AREWELL TO SaN FrANCISCO. I 1 7 pose, some day a steamer should arrive and he should not return her gun ? " " Well, sir," replied Bootjacks, with a quaint smile, " we should conclude that he was either dead or out of powder''' Logical deduction this, and a rather curious story, altogether. How I should like to see him! Bootjacks kindly presented me with the fol- lowing state of the markets, &c., in Monterey, which will give you a better idea of the large business and commercial prosperity of that flour- ishing city than anything that I can write on those subjects. MONTEREY MARKETS. The arrival of a stranger by the Maj. Tompkins from San Francisco, during the past week, with specie to the amount of $4.87^, most of which has been put in circulation, has produced an unprecedented activity among our business men. Confidence is in a great measure restored, and our merchants have had no reason to complain of want of occupation. The following is the state of our market for the principal articles of domestic consumption: Flour — Twenty-five pounds, imported by Boston & Co. per Major Tompkins, still in first hands; flour in small quantities is jobbing readily at 15 @ 18 cents ^ lb. We notice sales of 10 lb by Boston & Co. to Judge Merritt, on private terms. Pork — The half bbl. imported by Col. Russell, in March last, is nearly all in the hands of jobbers; sales of 4 lb at $1, half cash; remainder in note at 4 ii8 Farewell to San Francisco. months. A half bbl. expected by Bootjack & Co., early in September, will overstock the market. Candy — Sales of 6 sticks by Boston & Co. to purser of Maj. Tompkins, on private terms; the mar- ket has a downward tendency; candy is jobbing in sticks at 6 @ 8 cents. Potatoes — We notice arrival of lo lb from the Santa Cruz; no sales. Dry Goods — Sales of two cotton pocket hdkfs. by McKinley & Co. at 62^ @ 75 cents; indorsed note at 6 months. Lively place, this. Thank Heaven, my lot is not cast there. It was once, but the people sold it for taxes. Having taken on board the U. S. mail, containing one letter (which I believe must have been the resignation of the Collector), our noble steamer bore away to the southward. Four bells tinkled from the little bell aft, four bells chimed from its deep-toned brother forward, and I, being of a retiring disposition, retired. At Sea. BRIGHT and beautiful rose the sun from out the calm, blue sea, its early rays gleaming on the snow-white decks of the Northerner, and "gild- ing refined gold " as they penetrated state-room " A," and, lingering, played among the tresses of the slumbering McAuburn. It was a lovely morning, " the winds were all hushed, and the waters at rest," and no sound was heard but the throbbing of the engine and the splash of the paddle-wheels as the gallant old Northerner sped on her way, " tracking the trackless sea." There was no excuse for being sick that morning ; so our passengers, still pale, but with cheerful hope depicted in their countenances, soon began to throng the deck. Cigars were again brought into requisition, and we had an opportunity of ascertaining whether there was any Bourbon among us. A capital set of fel- lows they were. There was Moore, and Parker, and Bowers (one of Joe Bowers's boys), and Sarsaparilla Meade, and Freeman, which 119 120 At Sea. last-mentioned gentlemen, so amusing were they, appeared to be travelling expressly to en- tertain us. And there were no ladies, which to me was a blessed dispensation. *< O woman! in our hours of ease Uncertain, coy, and hard to please ; When pain and anguish wring the brow, A ministering angel thou." Certainly ; but at sea, woman, you are de- cidedly disagreeable. In the first place, you generally bring babies with you, which are a crying evil, and then you have to have the best state-room and the first seat at the table. You monopolize the captain's attention and his room, and you make remarks to one another about us, and our cigars and profanity, and accuse us of singing rowdy songs, nights ; and you generally wind up by doing some scandalous thing your- self, when half of us take your part and the other half don't, and we get all together by the ears, and a pretty state of affairs ensues. No, woman ! you are agreeable enough on shore, if taken homeopathically, but on a steamer you are a decided nuisance. We had a glorious day aboard the old North- erner ; we played whist, and sang songs, and told stories, many of which were coeval with our ancient school-lessons, and, like them, came very easy, going over the second time. Many drank strong waters, and, becoming mopsed At Sea. 121 thereon, toasted " the girls we'd left behind us"; whereat one, who, being a temperance man, had guzzled soda-water until his eyes seemed about to pop from his head, pondered deeply, sighed, and said nothing. And so we laughed, and sang, and played, and whiskied, and soda- watered through the day. And fast the old Northerner rolled on. At night the captain gave us a grand game-supper in his room, at which game we played not, but went at it in sober earnest ; and then there were more songs (the same ones, though, and the same stories too, over again), and some speechifying and much fun until, at eight bells, we separated, some shouting, some laughing, some crying (but not with sorrow), all extremely happy, — and so we turned in. But before I sought state- room " A," that night, I executed a small scheme for insuring undisturbed repose, which I had revolved in my mind during the day, and which met with the most brilliant success, as you shall hear. You remember the two snobs that every night, in the pursuit of exercise under difficul- ties, walk up and down on the deck, arm in arm, right over your state-room. You remem- ber how, when just as you are getting into your first doze, they commence, — tramp ! tramp ! tramp ! right over your head ; then you " hear them fainter, fainter still ; " you listen in horri- ble dread of their return, nourishing the while 122 At Sea. a feeble-minded hope that they may have gone below — when, horror ! here they come, louder, louder, till tramp ! tramp ! tramp ! they go over your head again, and with rage in your heart at the conviction that sleep is impossible, you sit up in bed and despairingly light an unnecessary cigar. They were on board the Northerner, and the night before had aroused my indignation to that strong pitch that I had determined on their downfall. So, before retiring, I proceeded to the upper deck, and there did I quietly at- tach to the stanchions a small cord, which, stretching across, about six inches from the planking, formed what in maritime matters is known as a " booby-trap." This done, I re- paired to my room, turned in and calmly await- ed the result. In ten minutes they came; I heard them laughing together as they mounted the ladder. Then commenced the exercise, louder, louder, tramp ! tramp ! — thump ! (a dou- ble-barrelled thump) down they came together. " Oh, what a fall was there, my countrymen!" Two deep groans were elicited, and then fol- lowed what, if published, would make two closely printed royal octavo pages of profanity. I heard them d — n the soul of the man that did it. It was my soul that they referred to ; but I cared not, I lay there chuckling. When at length they limped away, their loud profanity subdued to a blasphemous growl, I turned over in a sweet frame of mind and, falling instantaneously At Sea. 23 asleep, dreamed a dream, a happy dream of " home and thee," Susan Ann Jane ! The next morning bright and early, the Coronados hove in sight, and at 10 o'clock we rounded Point Loma and ran alongside the coal- hulk, Clarissa Andrews, at the Playa of San Diego; just forty-nine hours from San Fran- cisco. The captain (he is the crew also) of the Clarissa Andrews, the gallant Bogart, stood on her rail, ready to catch our flying line, and in a few moments we were secured alongside, our engine motionless and my journey ended. End of Volume I. PRINTED FOR THE CAXTON CLUB BY R. R. DONNELLEY & SONS CO. AT THE LAKESIDE PRESS, CHICAGO MDCCCXCVII LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 016 112 426 6