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The principal material used in the construction
of the buildings on the avenue is brown stone. This
gives to the street a somber look, but of late
years, white marble, brick, and the lighter-colored
stones have been used to a great extent, and the
upper portion of the avenue presents a much lighter
and more attractive appearance than the regions
below it. In spite of the general uniformity of the
street, however, it is a grand sight upon which the
eye rests from any point of view.
The interior of the houses is in keeping with their
external grandeur. They are decorated in magnificent
style by artists of ability and taste, and are
furnished in the most superb and costly manner. Rare
and valuable works of art abound in all, and
everything that luxury can devise or wealth provide
is here in abundance. The softest and richest
carpets cover the floors and deaden every foot fall,
the windows are draped with curtains the cost of
which would provide an average family with a home in
other cities, and which shut out the bright daylight
and give to the apartments a soft, luxurious glow;
costly chandeliers shed a flood of warm light
through the elegantly furnished rooms, and through
the half open doors you may catch a view of the
library, with its rows of daintily bound books in
elaborate cases, its works of art scattered about in
tasteful negligence, and its rich and cozy
furniture.
The "Library" forms quite a feature in a Fifth
avenue mansion. Whether the books are read or not,
it is the correct thing to have. The chambers and
upper rooms are furnished with equal magnificence,
the cost of fitting up one of these houses sometimes
exceeding the amount paid for the building.
Everything is perfect in its way, each appointment
being the most sumptuous that wealth can purchase.
Some of these mansions are furnished with rare taste
and good judgment, but many, on the other hand, are
simply vast collections of flashy and costly
furniture and decorations, their owners lacking the
culture necessary to make a proper disposition of
their riches. There is no more attractive sight to
the stranger in New York than a stroll along Fifth
avenue about dusk on New Year's Day. It is the
custom of those who receive calls on that day to
leave window curtains partly drawn, and through
these openings one can see the richly furnished,
brightly lighted drawing rooms, with their elegantly
dressed occupants, and can thus enjoy a succession
of "pictures from life" unequaled in any part of the
world.
The dwellers in the Fifth avenue mansions represent
all the various phases of the wealthier class of New
York. You will find here many persons whose fortunes
are so secure and great that they can amply afford
the style in which they live; and also many who are
sacrificing everything in order to shine for awhile
in such splendor. Men make money very quickly in New
York. A Fifth avenue mansion is either purchased or
rented, and then commences a life of fashion and
dissipation to which neither they nor their families
are accustomed. Everything is sacrificed to maintain
their newly gained position; money flows like water;
the recently gotten wealth vanishes, and in a few
years the family disappears from the avenue, to
begin life anew in an humbler sphere. The history of
the street abounds in such cases. No wonder so many
men living in these palaces have weary, careworn
faces, restless glances, and quick, nervous ways.
The strain they are living under to keep their
places in the avenue is too great. They are not able
to keep pace with those whose firmly-secured
millions justify them in a lavish style of living,
and they know it. They dread the day that must
inevitably come, when they must leave all this
luxury behind them and go out into the world again
to begin life anew. Even if they maintain their
places, they cannot resist the conviction that their
splendor has been bought at too dear a price.
The avenue mansions contain many families of wealth
and culture, many whose names have been household
words in New York for generations. These live
elegantly, and proportion to their means, but avoid
show and vulgar display. They are courtly in manner,
hospitable and warm-hearted, and constitute fine
specimens of the cultured American. They do not make
up the majority of the dwellers in the avenue,
however. These latter represent mainly the newly
rich families, that have risen to affluence through
the lucky ventures of the husband and father, and
have come to their new honors without the refinement
or culture necessary to sustain them with dignity.
You may know them by their loud voices, vulgar
countenances, flashy dressing, and coarse ways. They
plunge headlong into the dissipations of society
with a recklessness unknown to persons accustomed to
such pleasures, and their fast life soon tells upon
them. The men go to their business heavy and jaded
in the morning, after a night of fashionable
dissipation, and the women sink into an indolence
from which nothing can rouse them save a renewal of
the excesses which caused their lassitude.
They greatly err who imagine that the possessor of a
Fifth avenue mansion is, as a matter of course, to
be envied. These splendid palaces hide many aching
hearts, and could tell many a tale of sorrow, and
even of shame, could they speak. The master of the
house goes often to his business in the morning with
knit brows and a tragedy lurking in his heart, and
returns with reluctant steps to his splendid palace
in the evening; and Madame, for all her gorgeous
surroundings, fails to wear a happy or contented
look, and sighs as she thinks of the price she has
paid for such luxury. Generally the skeleton is kept
securely within the closet, but sometimes it will
break forth, and then Fifth avenue is startled for a
moment by its revelations. Sometimes the scandal is
hushed up, but frequently the divorce courts are
called in to straighten matters out.
One does not see home life in its truest sense in
the avenue. The demands of fashion are too exacting
to permit an indulgence in this richest of
pleasures. Day and night are spent in a ceaseless
whirl of gayety, and in many cases the only times
husband and wife are really in their home for more
than a few hours at a time, is when their parlors
are crowded with guests in attendance upon some
grand entertainment given by them. Thus it happens
that they lead different lives, with but little
common interest between them. The husband has his
"affinity," and seeks in her society the pleasures
his wife will not share with him; and Madame has her
"lovers," who are as much of a grief as a happiness
to her, as she lives in constant terror of being
compromised. Fortunately, children are scarce in the
avenue; the necessities of fashion forbid large
families.
Such as come receive little of a mother's care until
they are old enough to be put on exhibition, to
accompany "mamma" in a drive through the Park, or to
occupy the front seats of the opera-box, when they
should be soundly sleeping in their beds. They are
dressed to death, are always in charge of a maid
when out for a walk, and know little of the pure,
free joys of childhood. So they grow up to be
premature men and women, fitted only to imitate the
follies, and, alas, too often to repeat the bitter
experience of their parents.
After all, in spite of its splendor, in spite of its
wealth, and its mad round of pleasures, Fifth avenue
does not hold the happiest homes in New York. You
can see the glare and the glitter of the false metal
all around you; but if you would find the pure gold
of domestic happiness, you must seek it in more
modest sections of the great city.
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