They were not a large family, and their pursuits and
habits were very simple; yet the summer was lapsing
toward the first pathos of autumn before they found
themselves all in such case as to be able to take the
day’s pleasure they had planned so long.
They had agreed often and often that nothing could
be more charming than an excursion down the Harbor,
either to Gloucester, or to Nahant, or to Nantasket
Beach, or to Hull and Hingham, or to any point within
the fatal bound beyond which is seasickness.
They had studied the steamboat advertisements, day
after day, for a long time, without making up their
minds which of these charming excursions would be
the most delightful; and when they had at last fixed
upon one and chosen some day for it, that day was sure
to be heralded by a long train of obstacles, or it
dawned upon weather that was simply impossible.
Besides, in the suburbs, you are apt to sleep late,
unless the solitary ice-wagon of the neighborhood
makes a very uncommon rumbling in going by; and I
believe that the excursion was several times postponed
by the tardy return of the pleasurers from dreamland,
which, after all, is not the worst resort, or the
least interesting—or profitable, for the
matter of that. But at last the great day came,—a
blameless Thursday alike removed from the cares of
washing and ironing days, and from the fatigues with
which every week closes. One of the family chose
deliberately to stay at home; but the severest scrutiny
could not detect a hindrance in the health or circumstances
of any of the rest, and the weather was delicious.
Everything, in fact, was so fair and so full of promise,
that they could almost fancy a calamity of some sort
hanging over its perfection, and possibly bred of
it; for I suppose that we never have anything made
perfectly easy for us without a certain reluctance
and foreboding. That morning they all got up
so early that they had time to waste over breakfast
before taking the 7.30 train for Boston; and they
naturally wasted so much of it that they reached the
station only in season for the 8.00. But there
is a difference between reaching the station and quietly
taking the cars, especially if one of your company
has been left at home, hoping to cut across and take
the cars at a station which they reach some minutes
later, and you, the head of the party, are obliged,
at a loss of breath and personal comfort and dignity,
to run down to that station and see that the belated
member has arrived there, and then hurry back to your
own, and embody the rest, with their accompanying
hand-bags and wraps and sun-umbrellas, into some compact
shape for removal into the cars, during the very scant
minute that the train stops at Charlesbridge.
Then when you are all aboard, and the tardy member
has been duly taken up at the next station, and you
would be glad to spend the time in looking about on
the familiar variety of life which every car presents
in every train on every road in this vast American
world, you are oppressed and distracted by the cares
which must attend the pleasure-seeker, and which
the more thickly beset him the more deeply he plunges
into enjoyment.
Copyrights
Suburban Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.