(two or three stories,) wide, neat, and free from any
quaintness of architectural ornamentation; locust trees bordering the sidewalks (they call them acacias;) a stirring, business-look about the streets and the stores; fast walkers; a familiar new look about the houses and every thing; yea, and a driving and smothering cloud of dust that was so like a message from our own dear native land that we could hardly refrain from shedding a few grateful tears and execrations in the old time-honored American way.
The shops had still a pleasant
quaintness; and Philip stood in front of that in which things useful to seamen were sold, sea-boots and tarpaulins and tackle, and remembered that he had felt there in his childhood the thrill of the sea and the adventurous magic of the unknown.
Those indications of its youth which first attract the eye, give it a
quaintness and oddity of character which, to a visitor from the old country, is amusing enough.
Old Captain Peleg, many years her chief-mate, before he commanded another vessel of his own, and now a retired seaman, and one of the principal owners of the Pequod, --this old Peleg, during the term of his chief-mateship, had built upon her original grotesqueness, and inlaid it, all over, with a
quaintness both of material and device, unmatched by anything except it be Thorkill-Hake's carved buckler or bedstead.
I liked the hush, the gloom, the
quaintness of these retreats in the day; but I by no means coveted a night's repose on one of those wide and heavy beds: shut in, some of them, with doors of oak; shaded, others, with wrought old English hangings crusted with thick work, portraying effigies of strange flowers, and stranger birds, and strangest human beings,-- all which would have looked strange, indeed, by the pallid gleam of moonlight.
"You might want to take hold of it," he added with conscious
quaintness. "But that's a very correct copy--except, of course, the handwriting.
Grafted upon the
quaintness and oddity of his appearance, was something so indescribably engaging, and bespeaking so much worth, and there were so many little lights hovering about the corners of his mouth and eyes, that it was not a mere amusement, but a positive pleasure and delight to look at him.
Any private hours in her day were usually spent in her blue-green boudoir, and she had come to be very fond of its pallid
quaintness. Nothing had been outwardly altered there; but while the summer had gradually advanced over the western fields beyond the avenue of elms, the bare room had gathered within it those memories of an inward life which fill the air as with a cloud of good or bad angels, the invisible yet active forms of our spiritual triumphs or our spiritual falls.
Something about that flight of steps up to the shop, something about the quietude and
quaintness of the restaurant, roused all the detective's rare romantic fancy and made him resolve to strike at random.
This
quaintness is, in fact, a very powerful adjunct to ideality, but in the case in question it arises independently of the author's will, and is altogether apart from his intention.
Quaintness strove with a menace at once banal and operatic a reanimated corpse raising its head from a Wagnerian lake, to the applause of businessmen.
"The little town of Ma-po, the river port of Seoul, looks picturesque from the opposite side of the Han River; but the effect is destroyed once one gets into its narrow streets, with all the dirtiness and none of the
quaintness of a Chinese town ?