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Eliot Gregory
The Ways of Men
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4057664638335
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 3—Cyrano, Rostand, Coquelin
CHAPTER 7—Worldly Color-Blindness
CHAPTER 9—“Climbers” in England
CHAPTER 10— Calvé at Cabrières
CHAPTER 11—A Cry For Fresh Air
CHAPTER 12—The Paris of our Grandparents
CHAPTER 13—Some American Husbands
CHAPTER 15—The Grand Opera Fad
CHAPTER 16—The Poetic Cabarets of Paris
CHAPTER 17—Etiquette At Home and Abroad
CHAPTER 19—The Genealogical Craze
CHAPTER 20—As the Twig is Bent
CHAPTER 21—Seven Small Duchesses
CHAPTER 22—Growing Old Ungracefully
CHAPTER 25—La Comédie Française à Orange
CHAPTER 26—Pre-palatial Newport
CHAPTER 27— Sardou at Marly-le-Roy
CHAPTER 29—Modern “Cadets de Gascogne”
CHAPTER 30—The Dinner and the Drama
CHAPTER 32—A Nation in a Hurry
CHAPTER 33—The Spirit of History
CHAPTER 1—“Uncle Sam”
The gentleman who graced the gubernatorial armchair of our state when this century was born happened to be an admirer of classic lore and the sonorous names of antiquity.
It is owing to his weakness in bestowing pompous cognomens on our embryo towns and villages that to-day names like Utica, Syracuse, and Ithaca, instead of evoking visions of historic pomp and circumstance, raise in the minds of most Americans the picture of cocky little cities, rich only in trolley-cars and Methodist meeting-houses.
When, however, this cultured governor, in his ardor, christened one of the cities Troy, and the hill in its vicinity Mount Ida, he little dreamed that a youth was living on its slopes whose name was destined to become a household word the world over, as the synonym for the proudest and wealthiest republic yet known to history, a sobriquet that would be familiar in the mouths of races to whose continents even the titles of Jupiter or Mars had never penetrated.
A little before this century began, two boys with packs bound on their stalwart shoulders walked from New York and established a brickyard in the neighborhood of what is now Perry Street, Troy. Ebenezer and Samuel Wilson soon became esteemed citizens of the infant city, their kindliness and benevolence winning for them the affection and respect of the community.
The younger brother, Samuel, was an especial favorite with the children of the place, whose explorations into his deep pockets were generally rewarded by the discovery of some simple “sweet” or home-made toy. The slender youth with the “nutcracker” face proving to be the merriest of playfellows, in their love his little band of admirers gave him the pet name of “Uncle Sam,” by which he quickly became known, to the exclusion of his real name. This is the kindly and humble origin of a title the mere speaking of which to-day quickens the pulse and moistens the eyes of millions of Americans with the same thrill that the dear old flag arouses when we catch sight of it, especially an unexpected glimpse in some foreign land.
With increasing wealth the brickyard of the Wilson brothers was replaced by an extensive slaughtering business, in which more than a hundred men were soon employed—a vast establishment for that day, killing weekly some thousand head of cattle. During the military operations of 1812 the brothers signed a contract to furnish the troops at Greenbush with meat, “packed in full bound barrels of white oak”; soon after, Samuel was appointed Inspector of Provisions