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It is less than four miles from Harvard Square to Boston City Hall, a building rather exceptional for its fine architecture among public edifices, but the change in 1865 was like the change from one sphere of human thought and activity to another.
In Boston politics was everything, and literature, art, philosophy nothing, or next to nothing.
There was mercantile life, of course, and careworn merchants anxiously waiting about the gold-board; but there were no tally-ho coaches; there was no golf or polo, and very little yachting.
Fashionable society was also at a low ebb, and as
Wendell Phillips remarked in 1866, the only parties were boys' and girls' dancing-parties.
A large proportion of the finest young men in the city had, like the Lowells, shed their blood for the
Republic.
The young people danced, but their elders looked grave.
At this time the political centre of
Massachusetts and, to a certain extent of
New England, was the
Bird Club, which met every Saturday afternoon at Young's Hotel to dine and discuss the affairs of the nation.
Its membership counted both
Senators, the
Governor, a number of ex-Governors and four or five members of