Walt Whitman (1819–1892). Prose Works. 1892.
I. Specimen Days
160. The First Spring Day on Chestnut Street
WINTER relaxing its hold, has already allow’d us a foretaste of spring.
As I write, yesterday afternoon’s softness and brightness, (after the morning
fog, which gave it a better setting, by contrast,) show’d Chestnut street—say
between Broad and Fourth—to more advantage in its various asides, and all
its stores, and gay-dress’d crowds generally, than for three months past.
I took a walk there between one and two. Doubtless, there were plenty of hard-up
folks along the pavements, but nine-tenths of the myriad-moving human panorama
to all appearance seem’d flush, well-fed, and fully-provided. At all events
it was good to be on Chestnut street yesterday. The peddlers on the sidewalk—(“sleeve-buttons,
three for five cents”)—the handsome little fellow with canary-bird
whistles—the cane men, toy men, toothpick men—the old woman squatted
in a heap on the cold stone flags, with her basket of matches, pins and tape—the
young negro mother, sitting, begging, with her two little coffee-color’d
twins on her lap—the beauty of the cramm’d conservatory of rare flowers,
flaunting reds, yellows, snowy lilies, incredible orchids, at the Baldwin mansion
near Twelfth street—the show of fine poultry, beef, fish, at the restaurants—the
china stores, with glass and statuettes—the luscious tropical fruits—the
street cars plodding along, with their tintinnabulating bells—the fat, cab-looking,
rapidly driven one-horse vehicles of the post-office, squeez’d full of coming
or going letter-carriers, so healthy and handsome and manly-looking, in their
gray uniforms—the costly books, pictures, curiosities, in the windows—the
gigantic policemen at most of the corners—will all be readily remember’d
and recognized as features of this principal avenue of Philadelphia. Chestnut
street, I have discover’d, is not without individuality, and its own points,
even when compared with the great promenade-streets of other cities. I have never
been in Europe, but acquired years’ familiar experience with New York’s,
(perhaps the world’s,) great thoroughfare, Broadway, and possess to some
extent a personal and saunterer’s knowledge of St. Charles street in New
Orleans, Tremont street in Boston, and the broad trottoirs of Pennsylvania avenue
in Washington. Of course it is a pity that Chestnut were not two or three times
wider; but the street, any fine day, shows vividness, motion, variety, not easily
to be surpass’d. (Sparkling eyes, human faces, magnetism, welldress’d
women, ambulating to and fro—with lots of fine things in the windows—are
they not about the same, the civilized world over?) How fast the flitting figures
come!
The mild, the fierce, the stony face;
Some bright with thoughtless smiles—and some
Where secret tears have left their trace.
1
A few days ago one of the six-story clothing stores along here had the space inside
its plate-glass show-window partition’d into a little corral, and litter’d
deeply with rich clover and hay, (I could smell the odor outside,) on which reposed
two magnificent fat sheep, full-sized but young—the handsomest creatures
of the kind I ever saw. I stopp’d long and long, with the crowd, to view
them—one lying down chewing the cud, and one standing up, looking out, with
dense-fringed patient eyes. Their wool, of a clear tawny color, with streaks of
glistening black—altogether a queer sight amidst that crowded promenade
of dandies, dollars and drygoods.