Christmas in the city: "The suburban life
of our great cities is a marked social feature of the day; the taste for
the quiet domestic pursuits, which naturally spring up in the abundant
leisure of the country, contest their place warmly with the fashion and
gaiety of the town. Every year more families give up their city residences,
and, save a month or two at some hotel, or with friends who are glad enough
to return the compliment when summer comes, pass the year out of the sight
of bricks and mortar. They certainly have fewer excuses, if they do not
live "a sober, righteous, and godly life," than those who are drawn more
or less into the vortex of "society," under which we include party-giving
and party-going, shopping, calling, the opera, the concert - all that envious
people sum up with the convenient title of "city dissipation. "
"City people, in the mean time, shrug their
shoulders, and wonder what people can possibly find to do with themselves,
and look on their "country cousins" as the victims of routine, and narrow-mindedness,
and general stupidity!"
"We present these rival claims in what may
be supposed to be the chief enjoyment of each separate life. Christmas,
the general holiday, has its charms for each. In town there is much consultation
as to toilet, for though the children absorb the morning, and it is proper
to be seen at church, it is not less certain that the intimate male gentlemen
friends of the family will make their appearance by the time a demi-toilet
can be dispatched, a little rehearsal of the general reception that marks
the New Year. There are symptoms of it in the well spread lunch table of
the luxurious drawing-room, in the impromptu grouping of ladies
of the house with the first tinkle of the door bell, and its enjoyment
culminates in the entrance of "the coming man," who "takes the liberty
of bringing his friend Marks," already well known in society an "superb
in the German."
Christmas in the country: "Their country
cousins, meantime, have already dined ! -unfashionable creatures - and
enjoyed with keen appetites the ample bountiful Christmas dinner the barn
yard, and the garden's latest gifts of crisp celery, winter vegetables
and fruit, have contributed to. The air is keen and clear, the sky unclouded
sapphire, the roads in their prime of sleighing from yesterday's travel
over the last cheerful snow storm. They, too, have "gentlemen friends"
who are only too happy to pay their devoirs in the clear open air,
and in much merriment the sleighing party is made up, to dash along with
chiming bells, and song and laughter. An upset now and then is counted
in with the amusements of the day, so that no one is hurt, and who ever
is? - by a fall into a yielding snowbank!"
"We leave our lady friends to choose for
themselves in which scene lies the best opportunity for amusement and -
a proposal!"
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