| Chiselhurst, May 25, 1892. |
(Dictated to F.L.O. Jr.)
| Dear Harry: |
Your letter of the 12th May came last night. I am sorry to hear of your illness and of Pretyman’s resignation.
All the rest of your news is reassuring and relieves me of anxieties.
You are right in supposing that I had not fully understood the scheme of the fountain. Particulars that you mention, especially the two upright jets “to be used solely for illuminating purposes,” add precisely the elements which I felt to be required.
I am still often picturing to myself the probable results next summer of our planting scheme, and thinking of expedients by which they may without much expense, be made more effective. The name of the broad-leaved Rhubarb-like plant which we saw in Guernsey, Waterer says, is Gunnera scabra. You should consider whether it is not desirable to be used largely. It might prove unsatisfactory late in the summer. It is certainly very desirable at this season.
As I drive through the commons here and along the edges of the smaller streams and ponds, I often notice beautiful effects which results from the crowding together and the crowding down of certain common plants, all to be procured here in large quantities at small cost. For example gorse, hawthorne, brambles, sweet briar, ferns, nettles, and the white birch; the latter especially, where, by the browsing of donkeys or other accidents, it has lost its top and been led to thickly throw out new spray horizontally is often very effective, overhanging banks & shores. Most of these things are to be obtained here, in the form of hedge plants & seedlings, at very low prices by the thousand. Shortened in and planted near the water they would throw out early in the season very graceful and delicate sprays, fringelike, in pleasing combinations one with another and all with the willows and reedy & rushy plants that we have. I don’t know that we shall need them, but late in the season we may conclude that an improvement can be obtained by their use, and I suppose that they could be imported in the autumn and crowded in next spring.
Again, as I imagine the result of what we have done, I often think that a good deal might be gained if the reedy planting on the water’s edge could have an occasional echo of different forms of reed & rush-like plants to be seen over them on higher ground behind. This is a return, perhaps, to my old notion of introducing patches of cane or bamboo back of the rushes. Possibly Pampas grass would answer the purpose. There is here a plant, common in wet ground, which they call bulrush, apparently; but it is three or four times as tall as our bull rush.
I am more and more prepared to approve of considerable spaces of
[531
]plain turf, and more and more disinclined to much use of bedizening bedding plants, etc.
Lunching yesterday at Mr. Brice’s with a small company, most of whom had travelled in America, one said to me: “We should be making our plans now to go to Chicago next year, but for fear that we could not stay there any time comfortably except at very extravagant cost. I believe that all the tolerable inns are liable to be overfull even under ordinary circumstances, and I suppose that during the Fair the innkeepers will very greatly advance their prices.”
We have hardly spoken to anyone in France or in England, that dread did not appear of the difficulty and cost of getting from the seabord to Chicago and of finding lodgings there at reasonable prices. “It’s too far, and too difficult and too costly,” we are told. “Why it’s a thousand miles away after you have got to America. Is it not?” a man asked me the other day. Evidently imagining that the difficulty of getting from London over two or three lines, to a place 600 miles away, would be at least ten times multiplied, for one who wished to go from New York to Chicago. To the lady at Mr Brice’s who knew what American trunk lines are, I said that I believed that a canvas was now being made with a view to a classified list, so that, as visitors approached the city, agents would meet them and offer several grades of accommodations at prices not above those that are paid for corresponding grades at the different classes of hotels under ordinary circumstances. What arrangements are making to supply visitors with such meals as Englishmen are accustomed to have at their lodgings I could not say; but I knew that very large accommodations of Cafés and restaurants were being made on the Fair ground.
Thereupon I was advised that the sooner a full and accurate statement could be given here of what visitors could be sure that they would find in respect to lodgings and board, the larger would be the number of English visitors. People here often make their plans for a summer vacation long in advance and make them with more regard for comfort and for economy than is customary with Americans. Mr. Brice said that there is much curiosity now with all classes of Englishmen with regard to America, and the number, of those who would like to go there, if they were assured that they could do so without heavy cost or great discomfort, is very large.
I suppose I must admit that it appears now that you were right in thinking that I was travelling too fast and doing too much when in France. At least, with the access of the first period of hot, moist summer weather here, I am very much pulled down. But I do not feel that my reasoning was wrong. It was desirable that I should be enjoying the journey very much and be as diverted by it as I could without over strain. It was very undesirable that I should be thinking of myself and my infirmities and shaping my course and coddling myself with regard to them. It was best that I should be thinking of the young men and their education as well as of myself, and, altogether, as far as I understand my own condition, I think I pursued a perfectly sensible course. I can only conclude
[532
]now that I am older and more used up than I had supposed. I am making up my mind to leave out of the question a large part of what I had hoped to see and do in England. I have declined several invitations that I should have been very glad to accept.
I am more concerned now about how I shall meet the various conflicting requirements that will be coming upon me when I get home. I doubt whether, with the hot weather coming on, I shall be any more fit for long railway journeys than I was before I left, and of course this doubt is depressing. But I have enjoyed the journey very much and I think that if I should live a few years longer and be able to work, it will prove to have been very profitable.
Phil and Rick are having most valuable educational opportunities also, and I do not doubt that the profession will profit by what they will acquire from them.
The atmosphere here now gives the greatest possible charm to landscape in all conditions. I have been keeping my bed but it has been a luxury to look out of the window. Most likely, now, Phil and I will return by the Cunarder to Boston of the 9th June.
Yours Truly,
Fredk Law Olmsted.
| Dear Harry; | 16th June, 1892 |
You know that I am practically in prison here. I am fairly successful in enforcing patience and resignation upon myself, considering what attractive prospects lie just without the walls, but I am still a reasoning being and do not exclude myself from thinking of the concern which my disappointments must bring to you. I am only to have you as well informed as I can. Every day I look for a decided improvement and thus far every day, I am disappointed. I believe that Dr Rainer, my prison keeper, is the very best man in the world to handle me, and he is most assiduous—is doing absolutely his very best—to set me free. He is disappointed from day to day, as I am. He knows the difficulty, however, and the need of patience and is not discouraged. He was a few years ago in a similar condition himself—worse indeed, except that he was younger. He was wholly without sleep for a week. He says with confidence, after repeated examinations, of all my anatomy, that I have no organic trouble and that I may reasonably expect under favorable circumstances to keep at work for several years to come. He regards my present trouble (apparently) but as a variation in form of the troubles which led me to come abroad. He thinks that my course has not been unwise; that it would probably have been best for me to take more rest than nature prompted; that it is a peculiarity of my case that over-exertion does not produce the sensation of fatigue. He fully expects that I shall be set up again. He hints, in answer to my suggestions, that it may be best before I am set entirely free, to send me for a short time to one of several establishments (water cures or sanitariums) as a convalescent hospital; the Malvern Hills, or to one which he thinks well of near Hampton Court. I am not falling back at all; am apparently gaining a little; have at no time been much cast down or lost cheerfulness, and my guess, today, is that he will let me out next week; out that is to say, as a ticket-of-leave man. (He takes me out for a walk on the heath, or lets me have a drive in one of the nearer parks, evy day).
[534Phil comes to me nearly evy day, and appears to me to be occupying himself instructively and educationally, as he might, within a few hours journey, of London, for six months.
Of course, my difficulty is that I cannot calculate even a week ahead with confidence. Even if the doctor should send me to one of his convalescent hospitals, however, I think that he would agree that I shall be in a condition within three weeks to travel much as I did during our first fortnight in England. He would advise me to do so as the best means of establishing convalescence, for two or three weeks before leaving for home.
I have written simply to give you the best knowledge I can of the situation. This is the first writing I have done since I last wrote John. You will understand that I was not as much advanced then, as I thought & represented. Except Waterer and Miss Wilkinson, who came here to see me, I have met no one whom I wanted to (professionally). I have had invitations to meet several but have not dared to accept them. But I expect to do better yet. Let me know if I can do anything for Chicago. I see Adlumia cirhosa, advertised as exceedingly attractive creeper at 3 for 1/.
I should like the briefest reference to your progress not only at Chicago, but at Louisville, Marquette, Reid’s, Twombly and Newport. You see I am not expecting to sail before I hear from you again.
Faithfully,
F.L.O.