Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 7, No. 39, January, 1861

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Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 7, No. 39,
January, 1861

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January,
1861, by Various
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Title: Atlantic Monthly Volume 7, No. 39, January, 1861
Author: Various
Release Date: February 16, 2004 [eBook #11118]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC
MONTHLY VOLUME 7, NO. 39, JANUARY, 1861***
E-text prepared by Joshua Hutchinson, Tonya Allen, and Project
Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders

THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.
VOL. VII.--JANUARY, 1861.--NO. XXXIX.

WASHINGTON CITY.
Washington is the paradise of paradoxes,--a city of magnificent
distances, but of still more magnificent discrepancies. Anything may be
affirmed of it, everything denied. What it seems to be it is not; and
although it is getting to be what it never was, it must always remain

what it now is. It might be called a city, if it were not alternately
populous and uninhabited; and it would be a wide-spread village, if it
were not a collection of hospitals for decayed or callow politicians. It is
the hybernating-place of fashion, of intelligence, of vice,--a resort
without the attractions of waters either mineral or salt, where there is no
bathing and no springs, but drinking in abundance and gambling in any
quantity. Defenceless, as regards walls, redoubts, moats, or other
fortifications, it is nevertheless the Sevastopol of the Republic, against
which the allied army of Contractors and Claim-Agents incessantly lay
siege. It is a great, little, splendid, mean, extravagant, poverty-stricken
barrack for soldiers of fortune and votaries of folly.
Scattered helter-skelter over an immense surface, cut up into scalene
triangles, the oddity of its plan makes Washington a succession of
surprises which never fail to vex and astonish the stranger, be he ever
so highly endowed as to the phrenological bump of locality. Depending
upon the hap-hazard start the ignoramus may chance to make, any
particular house or street is either nearer at hand or farther off than the
ordinary human mind finds it agreeable to believe. The first duty of the
new-comer is to teach his nether extremities to avoid instinctively the
hypothenuse of the street-triangulation, and the last lesson the resident
fails to learn is which of the shortcuts from point to point is the least
lengthy. Beyond a doubt, the corners of the streets were constructed
upon a cold and brutal calculation of the greatest possible amount of
oral sin which disappointed haste and irritated anxiety are capable of
committing; nor is any relief to the tendency to profanity thus
engendered afforded by the inexcusable nomenclature of the streets and
avenues,--a nomenclature in which the resources of the alphabet, the
arithmetic, the names of all the States of the Union, and the Presidents
as well, are exhausted with the most unsystematic profligacy. A man
not gifted with supernatural acuteness, in striving to get from Brown's
Hotel to the General Post-Office, turns a corner and suddenly finds
himself nowhere, simply because he is everywhere,--being at the
instant upon three separate streets and two distinct avenues. And, as a
further consequence of the scalene arrangement of things, it happens
that the stranger in Washington, however civic his birth and education
may have been, is always unconsciously performing those military
evolutions styled marching to the right or left oblique,--acquiring

thereby, it is said, that obliquity of the moral vision--which sooner or
later afflicts every human being who inhabits this strange, lop-sided
city-village.
So queer, indeed, is Washington City in every aspect, that one newly
impressed by its incongruities is compelled to regard Swift's
description of Lilliputia and Sydney Smith's account of Australia as
poor attempts at fun. For, leaving out of view the pigmies of the former
place, whose like we know is never found in Congress, what is there in
that Australian bird with the voice of a jackass to excite the feeblest
interest in the mind of a man who has listened to the debates on Kansas?
or what marvel is an amphibian with the bill of a duck to him who has
gazed aghast at the intricate anatomy of the bill of English? It is true
that the ignorant Antipodes, with a total disregard of all theories of
projectiles, throw their boomerangs behind their backs in order to kill
an animal that stands or runs before their faces, or skim them along the
ground when they would destroy an object flying overhead. And these
feats seem curious. But an accomplished "Constitutional Adviser" can
perform feats far more surprising with a few lumps of
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