<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Cost of Cotillion Dinners—My delicate Position—The Début of a
Beautiful Blonde—Lord Roseberry’s mot—We have better Madeira than
England—I am dubbed “The Autocrat of Drawing-rooms”—A Grand
Domino Ball—Cruel Trick of a fair Mask—An English Lady’s Maid
takes a Bath—The first Cotillion Dinners given at
Newport—Out-of-Door Feasting—Dancing in the Barn.</i></p>
</div>
<p><span class="smcap">But</span> to return to our Cotillion Dinners. A friend thought they were
impracticable on account of the expense, but I had remembered talking to
the proprietor of the famous Restaurant Phillipe in Paris, as to the
cost of a dinner, he assuring me that its cost depended entirely on what
he called <i>les primeurs</i>, i.e. things out of season, and said that he
could give me, for a napoleon a head, an excellent dinner, if I would
leave out <i>les primeurs</i>. Including them, the same dinner would cost
three napoleons. “I can give you, for instance,” he said, “a <i>filet de
bœuf aux ceps</i> at half the cost of a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_166" id="page_166"></SPAN>{166}</span> <i>filet aux truffes</i>, and so on,
through the dinner, can reduce the expense.” Submitting all this to my
friend Delmonico, I suggested a similar inexpensive dinner, and figured
the whole expense down until I reduced the cost of a cotillion dinner
for seventy-five or a hundred people to ten dollars each person, music
and every expense included. Calling on my friends, they seconded me, and
we then had a winter of successful cotillion dinners. It was no easy
task, however. How I was beset by the men to give them the women of
their choice to take in to dinner! and in turn by the ladies not to
inflict on them an uncongenial partner. The largest of these dinners,
consisting of over a hundred people, we gave at Delmonico’s, corner of
Fifth Avenue and Fourteenth Street, in the large ball-room. The table
was in the shape of a horseshoe. I stood at the door of the <i>salon</i>,
naming to each man the lady he was to take in to dinner, and well
remember one of them positively refusing to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_167" id="page_167"></SPAN>{167}</span> accept and take in a lady
assigned to him; and she, just entering, heard the dispute, and, in
consequence, would never again attend one of these dinners. Sitting at
the head of the table, with the two young and beautiful women who were
then the <i>grandes dames</i> of that time, one on either side of me, we had
opposite to us, on the other side of the narrow, horseshoe table, a
young blonde bride, who had just entered society. I well remember the
criticisms these grand ladies made of and about her. The one, turning to
me, said, “And this is your lovely blonde, the handsomest blonde in
America!” The other, the best judge of her sex that I have ever seen,
then cast her horoscope, saying, “I consider her as beautiful a blonde
as I have ever seen. That woman, be assured, will have a brilliant
career. Such women are rare.” These words were prophetic, for that
beautiful bride, crossing the ocean in her husband’s yacht, wholly and
solely by her beauty gained for her husband and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_168" id="page_168"></SPAN>{168}</span> herself a brilliant
position in London society. Turning to me, the lady who had made this
remark asked me how she herself looked. I replied, “Like Venus rising
from the sea.” My serenity was here disturbed by finding that one of the
ladies, disliking her next neighbor, as soon as she discovered by the
card who it was, had quietly made an exchange of cards, depriving a
young gallant of the seat he most coveted, and for which he had long and
earnestly prayed. Of course, I was called to explain, and quiet the
disturbed waters. The gentleman was furious, and threatened dire
destruction to the culprit. I took in the situation, and protected the
fair lady by sacrificing the waiter. After the ladies left the table, at
these dinners, the gentlemen were given time to smoke a cigar and take
their coffee. On this occasion, the Earl of Roseberry was a guest.
Whilst smoking and commenting on the dinner, he said to me, “You
Americans have made a mistake; your emblematic bird<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_169" id="page_169"></SPAN>{169}</span> should have been a
canvasback, not an eagle.”</p>
<p>It was either to this distinguished man or the Earl of Cork, at one of
these after-dinner conversations, that I held forth on the treatment of
venison, asserting that here, we always serve the <i>saddle</i> of venison,
whilst in England they give the <i>haunch</i>. And when they send it off to a
friend, they box it up in a long narrow box, much resembling a coffin.
The reason for this was given me,—that their dinners were larger than
ours, and there was not enough on a saddle for an English dinner. Again,
I called attention to the fact that here we eat the tenderloin steak,
there they eat the rump steak, which we give to our servants. The reason
for this, I was told, was that they killed their cattle younger than we
killed ours, and did not work those intended for beef. On Madeira, I
stated, “we had them,” for, I said, “You have none to liken unto ours”;
though later on, at another dinner, when I made this assertion,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_170" id="page_170"></SPAN>{170}</span> the
Duke of Beaufort took me up on this point, and insisted upon it that in
many of the old country houses in England they had excellent Madeira.</p>
<p>The following anonymous lines on this dinner were sent to me the day
afterwards:</p>
<div class="poetry">
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">There ne’er was seen so fair a sight<br/></span>
<span class="i0">As at Delmonico’s last night;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">When feathers, flowers, gems, and lace<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Adorned each lovely form and face;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">A garden of all thorns bereft,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The outside world behind them left.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">They sat in order, as if “Burke”<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Had sent a message by his clerk.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And by whose magic wand is this<br/></span>
<span class="i0">All conjured up? the height of bliss.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">’Tis he who now before you looms,—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The Autocrat of Drawing Rooms.<br/></span></div>
</div></div>
<p>One of the events of this winter was a grand domino ball, the largest
ever given here. Our Civil War was then raging; a distinguished nobleman
appeared at that ball with his friend, a member of Parliament. Before he
could enter the ball-room, a domino stepped up to him and had an
encounter of words with him. “Are you as brave as you look?” she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_171" id="page_171"></SPAN>{171}</span> asked;
“will you do a woman’s bidding? I challenge you to grant me my request!”
“What is it?” he asked. “Allow me to pin on this badge?” “Certainly,”
was the gallant reply. As he passed through the rooms, it was seen that
he was wearing a Secession badge. It was thought to be an intended
affront to Northern people, and was immediately resented. His friend,
the member of Parliament, hearing of it, at once went up to him and
removed the badge. Many felt that this distinguished man was simply the
victim of a cruel, mischievous, and silly woman.</p>
<p>The following summer, as I had been so hospitably entertained in Nassau,
at Government House, I invited my old friend, the Governor of the
Bahamas, to pay me a visit at Newport. On a beautiful summer afternoon,
I drove up to the Brevoort House, and there I found him literally
surrounded by all his worldly goods, his entire household, with all
their effects. It took two immense stages and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_172" id="page_172"></SPAN>{172}</span> a huge baggage wagon to
convey them to the Fall River boat. Imagine this party coming from an
island where it was a daily struggle to procure food, viewing the
sumptuous supper-tables of these magnificent steamers (which certainly
made a great impression on them, for it caused them to be loud in their
expressions of astonishment and admiration). Reaching Newport at 2 <small>A.M.</small>,
on attempting to go ashore, I found His Excellency had lost all his
tickets. Our sharp Yankee captain took no stock in people who did such
things; so out came the Englishman’s pocket-book to pay again for the
entire party, the dear old gentleman declaring it was his fault, and he
ought to be made to pay for such carelessness. It did not take me long
to convince our captain that we were not sharpers; that we had paid our
passages, and we must needs be allowed to go ashore.</p>
<p>I was determined to evidence to my guests that they had reached the land
of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_173" id="page_173"></SPAN>{173}</span> plenty, and before they had been with me a week, the Governor
declared, with a sigh, “That he detested the sight of food.” I put him
through a course of vapor baths, and galloped him daily. On one
occasion, we visited the beach together, when the surf was full of
people. We saw an enormously tall, Rubens-like woman, clad in a clinging
garment of calico, exhilarated by the bath, jumping up and down, and in
her ecstasy throwing her arms up over her head. “Who is the creature?”
he exclaimed. “Is this allowed here! Why, man, you should not tolerate
it a moment!” I gave one look at the female, and then, convulsed with
laughter, seized his arm, exclaiming, “It is your wife’s English maid!”
If I had given him an electric shock, he could not have sprung out of
the wagon quicker. Rushing to the water’s edge, he shouted, “Down with
you! down with you, this instant, you crazy jade! how dare you disgrace
me in this way!” The poor girl, one could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_174" id="page_174"></SPAN>{174}</span> see, felt innocent of all
wrong, but quitted the water at lightning speed when she saw the crowd
the Governor had drawn around him.</p>
<p>The first Cotillion Dinner ever given at Newport, I gave at my Bayside
Farm. I chose a night when the moon would be at the full, and invited
guests enough to make up a cotillion. We dined in the open air at 6
<small>P.M.</small>, in the garden adjoining the farm-house, having the gable end of
the house to protect us from the southerly sea breeze. In this way we
avoided flies, the pest of Newport. In the house itself we could not
have kept them from the table, while in the open air even a gentle
breeze, hardly perceptible, rids you of them entirely. The farm-house
kitchen was then near at hand for use. You sat on closely cut turf, and
with the little garden filled with beautiful standing plants, the
eastern side of the farm-house covered with vines, laden with pumpkins,
melons, and cucumbers, all giving a mixture of bright color against a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_175" id="page_175"></SPAN>{175}</span>
green background, with the whole farm lying before you, and beyond it
the bay and the distant ocean, dotted over with sailing craft, the sun,
sinking behind the Narragansett hills, bathing the Newport shore in
golden light, giving you, as John Van Buren then said to me, “As much of
the sea as you ever get from the deck of a yacht.” Add to this, the
exquisite toilets which our women wear on such occasions, a table laden
with every delicacy, and all in the merriest of moods, and you have a
picture of enjoyment that no shut-in ball-room could present. No
“pent-up Utica” then confined our powers. Men and women enjoyed a
freedom that their rural surroundings permitted, and, like the lambs
gambolling in the fields next them, they frisked about, and thus did
away with much of the stiff conventionality pertaining to a city
entertainment.</p>
<p>On this little farm I had a cellar for claret and a farm-house attic for
Madeira, where the cold Rhode Island winters have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_176" id="page_176"></SPAN>{176}</span> done much to preserve
for me wines of seventy and eighty years of age. On this occasion, I
remember giving them Amory of 1811 (one of the greatest of Boston
Madeiras), and I saw the men hold it up to the light to see its
beautiful amber color, inhale its bouquet, and quaff it down “with
tender eyes bent on them.”</p>
<p>A marked feature of all my farm dinners was <i>Dindonneaux à la Toulouse</i>,
and <i>à la Bordelaise</i> (chicken turkeys). In past days, turkeys were
thought to be only fine on and after Thanksgiving Day in November, but I
learnt from the French that the turkey <i>poult</i> with <i>quenelle de
volaille</i>, with either a white or dark sauce, was the way to enjoy the
Rhode Island turkey. I think they were first served in this way on my
farm in Newport. Now they are thus cooked and accepted by all as the
summer delicacy.</p>
<p>After dinner we strolled off in couples to the shore (a beach
three-quarters of a mile in length), or sat under the group of trees
looking on the beautiful bay.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_177" id="page_177"></SPAN>{177}</span></p>
<p>My brother, Colonel McAllister, had exercised his engineering skill in
fitting up my barn with every kind and sort of light. He improvised a
chandelier for the center of it, adorned the horse and cattle stalls
with vines and greens, fitted them up with seats for my guests (all
nicely graveled), and put a band of music in the hay-loft, with the
middle part of the barn floored over for dancing. We had a scene that
Teniers has so often painted. We danced away late into the night, then
had a glorious moonlight to drive home by.</p>
<p>I must not omit to mention one feature of these parties. It was the
“Yacht Club rum punch,” made from old Plantation rum, placed in huge
bowls, with an immense block of ice in each bowl, the melting ice being
the only liquid added to the rum, except occasionally when I would pour
a bottle of champagne in, which did it no injury.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_178" id="page_178"></SPAN>{178}</span></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_179" id="page_179"></SPAN>{179}</span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="AN_ERA_OF_GREAT_EXTRAVAGANCE" id="AN_ERA_OF_GREAT_EXTRAVAGANCE"></SPAN>AN ERA OF GREAT EXTRAVAGANCE.</h2>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_180" id="page_180"></SPAN>{180}</span> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_181" id="page_181"></SPAN>{181}</span> </p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />