The Gilded Age


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nation's veneration, and will be known as the Great-Great-Grandfather of  
his Country. The memorial Chimney stands in a quiet pastoral locality  
that is full of reposeful expression. With a glass you can see the  
cow-sheds about its base, and the contented sheep nimbling pebbles in the  
desert solitudes that surround it, and the tired pigs dozing in the holy  
calm of its protecting shadow.  
Now you wrench your gaze loose, and you look down in front of you and see  
the broad Pennsylvania Avenue stretching straight ahead for a mile or  
more till it brings up against the iron fence in front of a pillared  
granite pile, the Treasury building-an edifice that would command respect  
in any capital. The stores and hotels that wall in this broad avenue are  
mean, and cheap, and dingy, and are better left without comment. Beyond  
the Treasury is a fine large white barn, with wide unhandsome grounds  
about it. The President lives there. It is ugly enough outside, but  
that is nothing to what it is inside. Dreariness, flimsiness, bad taste  
reduced to mathematical completeness is what the inside offers to the  
eye, if it remains yet what it always has been.  
The front and right hand views give you the city at large. It is a wide  
stretch of cheap little brick houses, with here and there a noble  
architectural pile lifting itself out of the midst-government buildings,  
these. If the thaw is still going on when you come down and go about  
town, you will wonder at the short-sightedness of the city fathers, when  
you come to inspect the streets, in that they do not dilute the mud a  
little more and use them for canals.  
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