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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10939 ***
+
+AFTER WATERLOO
+
+Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819
+
+By
+
+MAJOR W.E. FRYE
+
+EDITED WITH A PREFACE AND NOTES
+
+By SALOMON REINACH
+
+Member of the Institute of France
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+1908
+
+
+
+
+To
+
+ V.A.M.
+ S.R.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The knowledge of Major Frye's manuscript and the privilege of publishing it
+for the first time I owe to the kindness of two French ladies, the Misses
+G----. Their father, a well known artist and critic, used to spend the
+summer months at Saint Germain-en-Laye together with his wife, who was an
+English woman by birth. They had been for a long time intimately acquainted
+with Major Frye, who lived and ended his life in that quiet town. The
+Major's hostess, Mme. de W----, after his death in 1858, brought the
+manuscript to Mrs. G---- and gave it to her in memory of her friend. It was
+duly preserved in the G---- family, but remained unnoticed. The Misses
+G---- rediscovered it in 1907, when it had been lying in a cupboard for
+upwards of half a century. On their showing it to me I thought it was
+interesting for many reasons, and worthy of introduction to the public. I
+hope the reader will share my opinion, which is also that of several
+English scholars and men of letters, to whom I communicated extracts from
+the manuscript.
+
+The reminiscences are in the form of letters addressed to a correspondent
+who, however, is never named and of whose health, family and private
+circumstances not the slightest mention is to be found. So I am inclined to
+believe that he never existed, and that Major Frye chose to imitate
+President de Brosses and others who thus recorded their travelling
+experiences in epistolary form.
+
+The manuscript--which will eventually be deposited in a public library--is
+entirely in Major Frye's large and legible hand; at some later time it was
+evidently revised by himself, but many names which I have endeavoured to
+complete were left in blank or only indicated by initials. There are three
+folio volumes, bound in paper boards. In this edition it has been thought
+advisable to leave out a certain number of pages devoted to theatricals, of
+which Major Frye was a great votary, and also some lengthy descriptions of
+landscapes, museums and churches, the interest of which to modern readers
+does not correspond to the space occupied by them. For the information
+contained in the footnotes I am indebted to many correspondents, English,
+French, Swiss, Belgian and Italian, to whom I here express my hearty
+thanks. I am under special obligation to Sir Charles Dilke, Mr Oscar
+Browning, Professor Novati, Professor Corrado Ricci, Commandant
+Espérandieu, Professor Cumont, Professor Stilling and Mr Höchberg.
+
+Major Frye's tombstone is in the cemetery of Saint Germain, and reads thus:
+"To the memory of Major William Edward Frye, who departed this life the 9th
+day of October, 1858." On the same stone has been added in French:
+"Perceval Edmond Litchfield, décédé le 15 Avril, 1888." About P.E.
+Litchfield I know nothing; he must have been the Major's intimate friend
+during the last period of his life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+W.E. Frye was born Oct. 29, 1784, and received his education at Eton
+(1797-9) in the time of the French Revolution. "The system was," he says,
+"to drill into the heads of the boys strong aristocratic principles and
+hatred of democracy and of the French in particular." The effect produced
+on the youth was the reverse of that intended. From 1799 to 1822 he
+belonged to the British army: here is an abstract of his services:
+
+ Ensign, 2nd Foot, 5th August, 1799.
+ Lieutenant, 2nd Foot, 7th March, 1800.
+ Half-pay, 4th Foot, 14th April, 1808.
+ Lieutenant, 24th Foot, 8th December, 1804.
+ Captain, 56th Foot, 18th April, 1805.
+ 3rd Ceylon Regt., 15th Feb., 1810.
+ Half-pay, 3rd Foot, 7th March, 1816.
+ 4th Foot, 24th Feb., 1820.
+ Brevet-Major, 12th August, 1819.
+ Sold out, 15th August, 1822.
+
+In 1799, Frye took a part in the British Expedition to Holland. In 1801 he
+was in Egypt with Lord Abercrombie's army and received the medal for war
+service. His career in India lasted six years and gave him occasion to
+visit the three presidencies and Ceylon. In 1814 he returned on furlough to
+Europe and was in Brussels during the Waterloo campaign. The subsequent
+years--1815 to 1819--he employed visiting Western Europe, as appears from
+his reminiscences. I have read letters of his which prove that he lived in
+Paris from 1830 to 1832. Later, about 1848, he took an apartment in Saint
+Germain, and died there in 1858.
+
+Major Frye was a very distinguished linguist; besides knowing Greek and
+Latin, he understood almost all European languages, and was capable of
+writing correctly in French, Italian and German. The Misses G---- have
+shown me a rare book published by him at Paris in 1844 under the following
+title:
+
+"Trois chants de l'Edda. Vaftrudnismal, Thrymsquidal, Skirnisfor, traduits
+en vers français, accompagnés de notes explicatives des mythes et
+allégories, et suivis d'autres poèmes par W.E. Frye, ancien major
+d'infanterie au service d'Angleterre, membre de l'Académie des Arcadiens de
+Rome. Se vend à Paris, pour l'auteur, chez Heideloff & Cie, Libraires, 18
+Rue des Filles St. Thomas. 1844" (In 8vo, xii, 115 pp.)
+
+At the end of that volume are translations by Major Frye of several
+Northern poems--in German, Italian and English verse--from the Danish and
+the Swedish; then come two sonnets in French verse, the one in honour of
+Lafayette, the other about the Duke of Orléans, whose premature death he
+compares with that of the Northern hero of the Edda, Balder. A part of
+Frye's translation of the Edda, before appearing in book form, had been
+published in _l'Echo de la Littérature et des Beaux Arts_, a periodical
+edited by the Major's friend, M. de Belenet.
+
+Frye loved poetry, though his ideas on the subject were rather those of the
+eighteenth century than our own. It is interesting to find an English
+officer reading Voltaire, Gessner, Ariosto, and quoting them from memory
+(which explains that some of his quotations had to be corrected). The
+sentimental vein of Rousseau's generation still flows and vibrates in him,
+as when he says that he has never been able to read the letters of Wolmar
+to St Preux in Rousseau's _Nouvelle Héloïse_ without shedding tears. German
+minor poetry, now quite forgotten, attracted him almost as much as the
+great pages of Schiller, Bürger, and Goethe. The Misses G. possess a
+manuscript translation in three volumes, in the Major's own hand, of
+Wieland's _Agathodemon_ done into English. This he evidently intended to
+publish, as he had written the title-page which is worded as follows:
+
+"Agathodemon, a philosophical romance translated from the German of Wieland
+by W.E. Frye, member of the Academy degli Arcadi in Rome, and of the Royal
+Society of Northern Antiquarians of Copenhagen, ex-major of infantry in His
+British Majesty's service."
+
+Frye describes with accuracy, and shows much appreciation of fine scenery
+and architecture. His judgements in painting and sculpture are sincere,
+though often betraying the autodidact and amateur. He loved music,
+especially Rossini's operas which were then beginning their long career of
+triumph. Theatricals of all sorts, especially ballets, had a great
+attraction for him and elicited his enthusiastic comments. In comparing
+tragedies and comedies which he had seen performed in different countries,
+he gave repeated proofs of his knowledge and critical insight. We can take
+him as a good example of that intelligent class of English travellers whose
+intercourse with the Continental _litterati_ has so well contributed to
+establish the good reputation of British culture and refined appreciation
+of the arts.
+
+The chief interest of Frye's reminiscences lies, however, in quite another
+direction. He was a friend of liberty, a friend of France, an admirer of
+Napoleon, and a hater of the Tory régime which brought about Napoleon's
+downfall. "France's attempts at European domination, in the Napoleonic era,
+are graciously described as but so many efforts towards spreading the light
+of civilization over Europe." These words, written about a quite recent
+work and à propos of the "Entente cordiale," apply perfectly to Frye's
+reminiscences. Travelling immediately before and after the Emperor's
+collapse, he found that everywhere, excepting in Tuscany, the French
+domination was regretted, because the ideals of liberty and equality had
+shone and vanished with the tricolour flag. He admires the French people,
+though not the _Ultras_ and bigots, and has fine words of praise for the
+French army: "Yes, the French soldier is a fine fellow. I have served
+against them in Holland and in Egypt, and I will never flinch from
+rendering justice to their exemplary conduct and lofty valour." He takes
+trouble to refute the exaggerated reports which were then circulated all
+over Europe about the cruelties and vandalism practised by the French: "If
+the French since the Revolution have not always fought for liberty, they
+have done so invariably for science; and wherever they carried their
+victorious arms abuses were abolished, ameliorations of all kinds followed
+and the arts of life were improved. Our government, since the accession of
+George III, has never raised its arm except in favour of old abuses, to
+uphold despotism and unfair privileges or to establish commercial
+monopoly."
+
+Sometimes, indeed, speaking of his own country and its government, Major
+Frye uses very hard words, which might seem unpatriotic if we did not know,
+from many other memoirs and letters, to what a terrible strain orthodox
+Toryism, coupled with bigotry and hypocrisy, had put the patience of
+liberal Englishmen at that period. He called the British government "the
+most dangerous, artful, and determined enemy of all liberty,"--"England,"
+he says, "has been always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to
+perpetuate abuses and to rivet the fetters of monarchical, feudal and
+ecclesiastical tyranny." And later on he inveighs against the English
+merchants, who "contributed with their gold to uphold the corrupt system of
+Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and liberticide wars."
+
+Whatever may be the final judgement of history on the Tory principles in
+politics in the days of the Congress of Vienna, Major Frye's love of
+liberty and intellectual progress entitle him to the sympathy of those who
+share his generous feelings and do not consider that personal freedom and
+individual rights are articles for home use only. Since Frye wrote, the
+whole of Europe, excepting perhaps Russia, has reaped the benefits of the
+French Revolution, and reduced, if not suppressed, what the Major called
+"kingcraft and priestcraft." He did not attempt to divine the future, but
+the history of Europe in the nineteenth century has been largely in
+accordance with his desires and hopes. It is not a small merit for a
+writer, in the midst of one of the most rabid reactions that the world has
+known, to have clung with such tenacity to ideals, the complete victory of
+which may now be contemplated in the near future.
+
+S.R.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MAY-JUNE, 1815
+
+Passage from Ceylon to England--Napoleon's return--Ostend--Bruges
+--Ghent--The King of France at Mass--Alost--Bruxelles--The Duke of
+Wellington very confident--Feelings of the Belgians--Good conduct of
+British troops--Monuments in Bruxelles--Theatricals--Genappe and
+Namur--Complaints against the Prussian troops--Mons--Major-General
+Adam--Tournay--A French deserter--General Clinton's division--Cavalry
+review--The Duke de Berri--Back to Bruxelles--Unjust opinions about
+Napoleon and the French--Battle at Ligny--The day of Waterloo in
+Bruxelles--Visit to the battlefield--Terrible condition of the
+wounded--Kindness of the Bruxellois.
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+From Bruxelles to Liége--A priest's declamation against the French
+Revolution--Maastricht--Aix-la-Chapelle--Imperial relics--Napoleon
+regretted--Klingmann's "Faust"--A Tyrolese beauty--Cologne--Difficulties
+about a passport--The Cathedral--King-craft and priest-craft--The
+Rhine--Bonn and Godesberg--Goethe's "Götz von Berlichingen"--The Seven
+Mountains--German women--Andernach--Ehrenbreitstein--German hatred against
+France--Coblentz--Intrigues of the Bourbon princes in Coblentz--Mayence--
+Bieberich--Conduct of the Allies towards Napoleon--Frankfort on the
+Mayn--An anecdote about Lord Stewart and Lafayette--German poetry--The
+question of Alsace and Lorraine--Return to Bruxelles--Napoleon's surrender.
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+From Bruxelles to Paris--Restoration of Louis XVIII--The officers of the
+allied armies--The Palais Royal--The Louvre--Protest of the author against
+the proposed despoiling of the French Museums--Unjust strictures against
+Napoleon's military policy--The _cant_ about revolutionary robberies--The
+Grand Opera--Monuments in Paris--The Champs Elysées--Saint-Cloud--The
+Hôtel des Invalides--The Luxembourg--General Labédoyère--Priests and
+emigrants--Prussian Plunder--Handsome behaviour of the English
+officers--Reminiscences of Eton--Versailles.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+From Paris to Bruxelles--Visiting the plains of Waterloo--The Duke de Berri
+at Lille--Beauvais--Return to Paris--Remarks on the French theatre
+--Talma--Mlle Duchesnois--Mlle Georges--French alexandrine verse--The Abbé
+Delille--The Opéra Comique.
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+From Paris to Milan through Dijon, Chalon-sur-Saone, Lyons, Geneva and the
+Simplon--Auxerre--Dijon--Napoleon at Chalon-sur-Saone--The army of the
+Loire--Mâcon--French _grisettes_--Lyons--Monuments and theatricals--
+Geneva--Character and opinions of the Genevois--Voltaire's chateau at
+Ferney--The chevalier Zadera--From Geneva to Milan--Crossing the
+Simplon--Arona--The theatres in Milan--Rossini--Monuments in Milan--Art
+encouraged by the French--Mr Eustace's bigotry--Return to Switzerland
+--Clarens and Vevey--Lausanne--Society in Lausanne--Return to Paris--The
+Louvre stripped--Death of Marshal Ney.
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MARCH-JUNE, 1816
+
+Ball at Cambray, attended by the Duke of Wellington--An Adventure between
+Saint Quentin and Compiègne--Paris revisited--Colonel Wardle and Mrs
+Wallis--Society in Paris--The Sourds-Muets--The Cemetery of Père La
+Chaise--Apathy of the French people--The priests--Marriage of the Duke de
+Berri.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Journey from Paris to Lausanne--Besançon--French refugees in Lausanne
+--Francois Lamarque--General Espinassy--Bordas--Gautier--Michau--M. de
+Laharpe--Mlle Michaud--Levade, a Protestant minister--Chambéry--Aix
+--Details about M. de Boigne's career in India--English Toryism and
+intolerance--Valley of Maurienne--Passage across Mont Cenis and arrival at
+Suza--Turin.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Journey from Turin to Bologna--Asti--Schiller and Alfieri--Italian
+_cuisine_--The _vetturini_--Marengo--Piacenza--The Trebbia--Parma--The
+Empress Maria Louisa--Modena--Bologna--The University--The Marescalchi
+Gallery--Character of the Bolognese.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Journey across the Appennines to Florence--Tuscan idioms and
+customs--Monuments and galleries at Florence--The Cascino--Churches--
+Theatres--Popularity of the Grand Duke--Napoleon's downfall not
+regretted--Academies in Florence.
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Journey from Florence to Rome--Sienna--Radicofani--Bolsena--Montefiascone
+wine--Viterbo--Baccano--The Roman Campagna--The papal _douans_--Monuments
+and Museums in Rome--Intolerance of the Catholic Christians--The Tiber and
+the bridges--Character of the Romans--The _Palazzi_ and _Ville_--Canova's
+atelier--Theatricals--An execution in Rome.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+From Rome to Naples--Albano--Velletri--The Marshes--Terracina--Mola di
+Gaeta--Capua--The streets of Naples--Monuments and Museums--Visit to
+Pompeii and ascent to Vesuvius--Dangerous ventures--Puzzuoli and
+Baiae--Theatres at Naples--Pulcinello--Return to Rome--Tivoli.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1816
+
+From Rome to Florence--Sismondi the historian--Reminiscences of
+India--Lucca--Princess Elisa Baciqochi--Pisa--The Campo Santo--Leghorn--
+Hebrews in Leghorn--Lord Dillon--The story of a lost glove--From Florence
+to Lausanne by Milan, Turin and across Mont Cenis--Lombardy in winter--The
+Hospice of Mont Cenis.
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MARCH-SEPTEMBER, 1817
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Clermont-Ferrand--A wretched conveyance--The
+first dish of frogs--Society in Clermont-Ferrand--General de Vergennes--
+Cleansing the town--Return to Lausanne--A zealous priest--Journey to Bern
+and back to Lausanne--Avenches--Lake Morat--Lake Neufchatel--The Diet in
+Bern--Character of the Bernois--A beautiful Milanese lady.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEPTEMBER, 1817-APRIL, 1818
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Milan, Florence, Rome and Naples--Residence at
+Naples--The theatre of San Carlo--Rossini's operas--Gaming in Naples--The
+_Lazzaroni_--Public writers--Carbonarism--Return to Rome--Christmas eve at
+Santa Maria Maggiore--Mme Dionigi--Theatricals--Society in Rome--The papal
+government--Lucien Bonaparte, prince of Canino--Louis Napoleon, ex-King of
+Holland--Pope Pius VII--Thorwaldsen--Granet--The Holy Week in Rome--The
+Duchess of Devonshire--From Rome to Florence by the Perugia road.
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+APRIL-JULY, 1818
+
+Journey from Florence to Pisa and from thence by the Appennines to
+Genoa--Massa--Carrara--Genoa--Monuments and works of art--The
+Genoese--Return to Florence--Journey from Florence through Bologna and
+Ferrara to Venice--Monument to Ariosto in Ferrara--A description of
+Venice--Padua--Vicenza--Verona--Cremona--Return to Milan--The Scala
+theatre--Verona again--From Verona to Innspruck.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1818
+
+Innspruck--Tyrol and the Tyrolese--From Innspruck to Munich--Monuments and
+churches--Theatricals--Journey from Munich to Vienna on a floss--Trouble
+with a passport--Complicated system of Austrian money--Description of
+Vienna--The Prater--The theatres--Schiller's _Joan of Arc_--A
+_Kinderballet_--The young Napoleon at Schoenbrunn--Journey from Vienna to
+Prague.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+SEPTEMBER, 1818-MARCH, 1819
+
+The splendid city of Prague--The German expression, "To give the basket"--
+Journey from Prague to Dresden--Journey from Dresden to Berlin--A
+description of Berlin--The Prussian Army--Theatricals--Peasants talk about
+Napoleon--Prussians and French should be allies--Absurd policy of the
+English Tories--Journey from Berlin to Dresden--A description of
+Dresden--The battle of Dresden in 1813--Clubs at Dresden--Theatricals--
+German beds--Saxon scholars--The picture gallery--Tobacco an ally of
+Legitimacy--Saxon women--Meissen--Unjust policy of Europe towards the King
+of Saxony.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+MARCH-APRIL, 1819
+
+Journey from Dresden to Leipzig--The University of Leipzig--Liberal
+spirit--The English disliked in Saxony--The English Government hostile to
+liberty--Journey to Frankfort--From Frankfort to Metz and Paris--A.F.
+Lemaître--_Bon voyage_ to the Allies--Return to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MAY-JUNE, 1815
+
+Passage from Ceylon to England--Napoleon's return--Ostend--Bruges--Ghent--
+The King of France at Mass--Alost--Bruxelles--The Duke of Wellington very
+confident--Feelings of the Belgians--Good conduct of British
+troops--Monuments in Bruxelles--Theatricals--Genappe and Namur--Complaints
+against the Prussian troops--Mons--Major-General Adam--Tournay--A French
+deserter--General Clinton's division--Cavalry review--The Duke de
+Berri--Back to Bruxelles--Unjust opinions about Napoleon and the
+French--Battle at Ligny--The day of Waterloo in Bruxelles--Visit to the
+battlefield--Terrible condition of the wounded--Kindness of the Bruxellois.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, May 1, 1815.
+
+I proceed to the fulfilment of my promise, to give you from time to time
+the details of my tour, and my reflections on the circumstances that occur
+at this momentous crisis.
+
+To me, who have spent the greatest part of my life out of Europe, the whole
+scene is so new that I am quite bewildered with it; and you will, I am
+afraid, as I write on the impulse of the moment, find my ideas at times
+rather incoherently put together. What changes have taken place in Europe
+within the last two years! and how great were those which occurred during
+the interval of my passage from Ceylon last year, which island I quitted
+about the time that we received in that part of the world intelligence of
+the battle of Leipsic! Having had a long passage from distant Taprobane, it
+was only on my arrival at the Cape of Good Hope, that I learned, to my
+utter astonishment, the news of the capitulation of Paris to the allied
+powers, and of the overthrow of the power and dynasty of Napoleon. I
+recollect that at the Cape there was great rejoicing and jubilee on this
+occasion; but I confess, as to myself, I did not see any reason for giving
+vent to this extravagant joy; and I must have had even at that time somehow
+or other a presentiment of what would soon happen, as in communicating this
+intelligence to a friend in India I made use of these words: "get a court
+dress made, my good friend, and a big wig, ruffled shirt, and hair-powder,
+and stick an old-fashioned sword by your side, for, depend on it, old
+fashions will come into play again; the most arbitrary and aristocratic
+notions will be revived and terrible machinations will be framed against
+the liberties of Europe."
+
+Of course at the Cape we only heard one side of the question; and I began
+to be almost convinced that it was as necessary for humanity, as for the
+repose of Europe, that the giant should be put down; and I was consoled
+when it was effected, ostensibly, at least, by the voice of the people.
+
+I had scarcely been three months in England, when the return of Napoleon
+from Elba, and the extraordinary dislocation of the Bourbons from the
+throne of France, summoned Europe again to arms; the crusade is preached at
+Vienna, and behold! his Grace of Wellington appointed the Godfrey of the
+holy league. I had reason, about six weeks before the news of this event
+reached London, from some conversation I had with an intelligent friend,
+who had just returned from a tour on the Continent, to suppose that the
+slightest combination against the Bourbons would prove successful, from
+their injudicious conduct and from the temper of the people; but I never
+could have supposed that the return of the man of Elba would be hailed with
+such unparalleled and unanimous acclamation. As I had long ago wished for
+an opportunity of visiting the continent of Europe, which had never before
+occurred to me, I eagerly embraced the offer made to me by my friend
+Major-General Wilson, formerly Lieut.-Governor of Ceylon,[1] to accompany
+him on a military tour through the country about to be the theatre of war.
+Though I had never before visited the Continent (except with the British
+army in the invasion of Holland in 1799, when I began my military career),
+yet I was not wholly unprepared for travelling, having united to a
+classical, as well as military education, a tolerable knowledge of history,
+and a partial acquirement of the principal modern European languages, which
+I had begun to learn when very young and which I kept up during my leisure
+hours in India, which, like those of Don Quixote, were many. I preferred
+this study infinitely to that of the Asiatic languages, for which I never
+felt any taste, as I dislike bombast, hyperbole and exaggeration; and
+though an ardent admirer of the Muses, I never could find pleasure in what
+Voltaire terms "le bon style oriental, ou l'on fait danser les montagnes et
+les collines," and I prefer the amatory effusions of Ovid to those of the
+great King Solomon himself.
+
+The war will no doubt commence in Belgium, and of course the Emperor
+Napoleon will be the assailant, for it cannot be supposed that after the
+act of ban passed against him by the Amphictyons of Vienna he will remain
+tranquil, and not strike the first blow, which may render him master of
+Belgium and its resources.
+
+We embarked at Ramsgate on the first of May for Ostend on board of a small
+vessel bound thither. Our fellow passengers were two officers of dragoons,
+several commissaries with their servants, horses, etc. After a passage of
+twenty-four hours, we entered the harbour of Ostend at one o'clock the
+following day. Ostend, once so flourishing and opulent, has long since
+fallen into decay; its usual dullness is however just now interrupted by
+the bustle of troops landing to join the allied army. Cavalry, infantry,
+artillery, horses, guns, stores, etc., are landed every minute. The quays
+are the only parts of this city which can boast of handsome buildings; the
+fortifications seem to be much out of repair; in fact, the aggrandizement
+of Antwerp occasioned necessarily the deterioration of Ostend.
+
+The General and myself went to put up at the _Tête d'Or_, the only inn
+where we could procure beds; and we embarked early next morning at the
+embouchure of the canal on board of a _treckschuyt_ which conveyed us in
+three hours to Bruges.
+
+The landscape between Ostend and Bruges is extremely monotonous, it being a
+uniformly flat country; yet it is pleasing to the eye at this season of the
+year from the verdure of the plains, which are all appropriated to
+pasturage, and from the appearance of the different villages and towns, of
+which the eye can embrace a considerable number. There is a good road on
+the banks of the canal, and the troops, on their line of march, enlivened
+much the scene. Bruges, formerly the grand mart and emporium of the
+commerce of the East, not only for the Low Countries, but for all the North
+of Europe, seems, if we may judge from the state of the buildings and the
+stillness that prevails, to be also in a state of decline. We however had
+only time to visit the _Hotel de Ville_ and to remark the immense height of
+the steeple on the _Grande Place_. We observed a number of pretty women in
+the streets and in the shops employed in lace making. Bruges has been at
+all times renowned for the beauty of the female sex, and this brought to my
+recollection a passage in Schiller's tragedy of the _Maid of Orleans_,
+wherein the Duke of Burgundy says that the greatest boast of Bruges is the
+beauty of its women.
+
+Another _treckschuyt_ was to start at twelve o'clock for Ghent; but we
+preferred going by land and General Wilson hired a carriage for that
+purpose. The distance is about thirty miles. The road from Bruges to Ghent
+or Gand is perfectly straight, lined with trees and paved like a street.
+The country is quite flat, and though there is nothing to bound the
+horizon, the trees on each side of the road intercept the view.
+
+We arrived at Ghent about six in the afternoon of the 4th and had some
+difficulty in finding room, as the different hotels were filled with
+officers of the allied army; but at length, after many ineffectual
+applications at several, we obtained admission at the _Hotel de Flandre_,
+where we took possession of a double-bedded room, the only one unoccupied.
+
+Gand seems to be a very neat, clean and handsome city, with an air of
+magnificence about it. The _Grande Place_ is very striking, and the
+promenades are aligned with trees. We inspected the exterior of several
+public buildings and visited the interior of several churches. In the
+cathedral we had the honour of seeing at High Mass his most Christian
+Majesty, Monsieur and the Comte de Blacas, Vicomte de Chateaubriand and
+others, composing the Court of _notre Père de Gand_, as Louis XVIII is
+humorously termed by the French, from his having fixed his head-quarters
+here. A great many French officers who have followed his fortunes are also
+here, but they seem principally to belong to the Gardes du Corps. A number
+of military attended the service in the cathedral in order to witness the
+devotions of the Bourbon family. Monsieur has all the appearance of a worn
+out debauchee, and to see him with a missal in his hand and the strange
+contrite face he assumes, is truly ridiculous. These princes, instigated no
+doubt by the priests, make a great parade of their sanctity, for which
+however those who are acquainted with their character will not give them
+much credit. But religious cant is the order of the day _intra et extra
+Iliacos muros_, abroad as well as in England. The King of France takes the
+lead, having in view no doubt the advice of Buckingham to Richard III:
+
+ A pray'r book in your hand, my Lord, were well,
+ For on that ground I'll make an holy descant.
+
+and M. de Chateaubriand will no doubt trumpet forth the devotion and
+Christian humility of his master. Those, however, who are at all acquainted
+with this prince's habits, and are not interested in palliating or
+concealing them, insinuate that his devotions at the table are more sincere
+than at the altar and that, like the Giant Margutte in the Morgante
+Maggiore of Pulci, he places more faith and reliance on a cappone lesso
+ossia arrosto than on the consecrated but less substantial wafer.[2]
+
+After contemplating this edifying spectacle, we returned to our inn, and
+the next morning after breakfast we set out on our journey to Bruxelles.
+The road is exactly similar to that between Bruges and Gand, but the
+country appears to be richer and more diversified, and many country houses
+were observable on the road side. We passed thus several neat villages. At
+one o'clock we stopped at Alost to refresh our horses and dine. At the
+table d'hôte were a number of French officers belonging to the Gardes du
+Corps. On entering into conversation with one of them, I found that he as
+well as several others of them had served under Napoleon, and had even been
+patronised and promoted by him; but I suppose that being the sons of the
+ancient _noblesse_ they thought that gratitude to a _parvenu_ like him was
+rather too plebeian a virtue. Some of them, however, with whom I conversed
+after dinner seemed to regret the step they had taken. "If we are
+successful," said they, "it can only be by means of the Allied Armies, and
+who knows what conditions they may impose on France? If we should be
+unsuccessful, we are exiled probably for life from our country." During
+dinner, two pretty looking girls with musical instruments entered the hall,
+and regaled our ears with singing some romances, among which were _Dunois
+le Troubadour_ and _La Sentinelle_. They sang with much taste and feeling.
+I surmise this is not the only profession they exercise, if I might judge
+from the _doux yeux_ they occasionally directed to some of the officers.
+These girls did not at least seem by their demeanour as if likely to incur
+the anathema of Rinaldo in the _Orlando Furioso_:
+
+ meritamente muoro Una crudele,
+
+but rather more disposed to
+
+ dar vita all'amator fidele.[3]
+
+Alost is a neat, clean town or large village, and the same description will
+serve for all the towns and villages in Brabant and Flanders, as they are
+built on the same plan. We arrived at Bruxelles late in the evening and put
+up at the _Hotel d'Angleterre_.
+
+This morning, the General and myself went to pay our respects to the _Gran
+Capitano_ of the _Holy League_, and we left our cards. He is, I hear, very
+confident of the result of the campaign, and no doubt he has for him the
+prayers of all the pious in England against those atheistical fellows the
+French; and these prayers will surely elicit a "host of angels" to come
+down to aid in the destruction of the Pandemonium of Paris where Satan's
+lieutenant sits enthroned. The reflecting people here are astonished that
+Napoleon does not begin the attack. The inhabitants of Belgium are in
+general, from all that I can hear or see, not at all pleased with the
+present order of things, and they much lament the being severed from
+France. The two people, the Belgians and Hollanders, do not seem to
+amalgamate; and the former, though they render ample justice to the
+moderation, good sense, and beneficent intentions of the present monarch,
+who is personally respected by every one, yet do not disguise their wish to
+be reunited to France and do not hesitate to avow their attachment to the
+Emperor Napoleon. This union does not please the Hollanders either, on
+other grounds. They complain that their interests have been sacrificed
+entirely to those of the house of Orange, and they say that from the
+readiness they displayed in shaking off the yoke of France, and the great
+weight they thereby threw into the scale, they were entitled to the
+restitution of all their colonies in Asia, Africa, and America. The
+colonies of the Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon are what they most regret; for
+these colonies in particular furnished ample employment and the means of
+provision for the cadets of patrician families. If you tell them they have
+acquired the Belgic provinces as an indemnification, they answer: "So much
+the worse for us, for now the patronage of the colonial offices must be
+divided between us and the Belgians."
+
+The preparations for the grand conflict about to take place are carried on
+with unabating activity; the conscription is rigorously enforced and every
+youth capable of bearing arms is enrolled. Almost all the officers of the
+Belgian army and a great proportion of the soldiery have served with the
+French and have been participators of their laurels; one cannot therefore
+suppose that they are actuated by any very devouring zeal against their
+former commander; nor have I found amongst the shop-keepers or respectable
+people with whom I have conversed, and who have been falsely represented as
+having suffered much from the tyranny of Napoleon, any who dislike either
+his person or government, and certainly none either high or low express the
+cannibal wish that I heard some English country gentlemen and London
+merchants utter for the destruction of Paris and of the French people, nor
+would it be easy to find here men of the _humane_ and _generous_ sentiments
+professed by some of our aldermen and contractors when they welcomed with
+ferocious acclamations of joy and were ready to embrace the Baschkir or
+Cossack who told them that he had slaughtered so many French with his own
+hand; nor would the ladies here be so eager to kiss old Blucher as was the
+case in London.
+
+This city is filled with British and Hanoverian troops. Their conduct is
+exemplary, nor is any complaint made against them. The Highland regiments
+are however the favourites of the Bruxellois, and the inhabitants give them
+the preference as lodgers. They are extremely well behaved (they say, when
+speaking of the Highlanders) and they cheerfully assist the different
+families on whom they are quartered in their household labour. This
+reflects a good deal of credit on the gallant sons of Caledonia. Their
+superior morality to those of the same class either in England or in
+Ireland must strike every observer, and must, in spite of all that the
+_Obscuranten_ or _Chevaliers de l'Eteignoir_ and others who wish to check
+the progress of the human mind may urge to the contrary, be mainly
+attributed to the general prevalence of education _a la portée de tout le
+monde_. Wherever the people are enlightened there is less crime; ignorance
+was never yet the safeguard of virtue. As for myself I honour and esteem
+the Scottish nation and I must say that I have found more liberal ideas and
+more sound philosophy among individuals of that nation than among those of
+any other, and it is a tribute I owe to them loudly to proclaim my
+sentiments; for though personal gratitude may seem to influence me a little
+on this subject, yet I should never think of putting forth my opinion in
+public, were it not founded on an impartial observation of the character of
+this enterprising and persevering people. A woman who had some Highlanders
+quartered in her house told me in speaking of them: "Monsieur, ce sont de
+si bonnes gens; ils sont doux comme des agneaux." "Ils n'en seront pas
+moins des lions an jour du combat," was my reply.
+
+I have amused myself with visiting most of the remarkable objects here, but
+you must not expect from me a detail of what you will find in every
+description book. You wish to have my ideas on the subjects that most
+strike me individually, and those you shall have; but it would be very
+absurd and presumptuous in me to attempt to give a _catalogue raisonné_ of
+buildings and pictures and statues, or to set up as a connoisseur when I
+know nothing either of sculpture, of architecture or painting; nor am I
+desirous of imitating the young Englishman, who, in writing to his father
+from Italy, described so much in detail, and so scientifically, every
+production, or staple, peculiar to the cities which he happened to visit,
+that he wrote like a cheese-monger from Parma, like a silk mercer from
+Leghorn, like an olive and oil merchant from Lucca, like a picture dealer
+from Florence, and like an antiquarian from Rome.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, May 10.
+
+The _Hôtel d'Angleterre_ where we are lodged is within four minutes walk
+from the finest part of the city, where the Parc and Royal Palace is
+situated. The Parc is not large, but is tastefully laid out in the Dutch
+style, and is the fashionable promenade for the _beau monde_ of Bruxelles.
+The women, without being strikingly handsome, have much grace; their air,
+manner and dress are perfectly _à la francaise_. A good café and restaurant
+is in the centre of one of the sides, and the buildings on the quadrangle
+environing the Parc, which form the palace and other tenements are superb.
+The next place I went to see was the _Hôtel de Ville_ and its tower of
+immense height. It is a fine Gothic building, but that which should be the
+central entrance is not directly in the centre of the edifice, so that one
+wing of it appears considerably larger than the other, which gives it an
+awkward and irregular appearance. On the Place or Square as we should call
+it, where the _Hôtel de Ville_ stands, is held the fruit and vegetable
+market, and a finer one or more plentifully supplied I never beheld. This
+_Place_ is interesting to the historian as being the spot where Counts
+Egmont and Hoorn suffered decapitation in the reign of Philip II of Spain,
+by order of the Duke of Alva, who witnessed the execution from a window of
+one of the houses. The conduct of these noblemen at the place of execution
+was so dignified that even the ferocious duke could not avoid wiping his
+eyes, hardened as his heart was by religious and political fanaticism; and
+though he held them in abhorrence as rebels and traitors a tear did fall
+for them down his iron cheek. How fortunate for the liberties of Holland
+that William the Taciturn did not also fall into the claws of that Moloch
+Philip! I next visited the museum and picture gallery, where I witnessed
+the annual exposition of the modern school of painting. The specimens I saw
+pleased me much, particularly because the subjects were well chosen from
+history and the mythology, which to me is far more agreeable than the
+subjects of the paintings of the old Flemish school; but I am told often
+that I know nothing about painting, so I shall make no further remarks but
+content myself with sending you a catalogue, with the pictures marked
+therein which made most impression on me. With respect to the churches of
+Brussels those of Ste. Gudule and of the Capuchins are the finest and most
+remarkable. In the former is the Temptation of Adam by the Serpent, richly
+carved in wood in figures as large as life grouped round the pulpit.[4]
+
+The _Place du Sablon_ is very striking from the space it occupies, and on
+it is a fountain erected by Lord Bruce.[5] The fountains which are to be
+met with in various parts of the city are highly ornamental, and among them
+I must not omit to mention a singularly grotesque one which is held in
+great veneration by the lower orders of the Bruxellois and is by them
+regarded as a sort of Palladium to the city. It is the figure of a little
+boy who is at _peace_, according to the late Lord Melville's[6]
+pronunciation of the words, and who spouts out his water incessantly,
+reckless of decorum and putting modesty to the blush. What would our
+vice-hunters say to this? He is a Sabbath breaker in the bargain and
+continues his occupation on Sundays as well as other days and _in fine_ he
+rejoices in the name of _Mannekenpis_.
+
+The ramparts, or rather site of the ramparts (for the fortifications of
+Bruxelles no longer exist), form an agreeable promenade; but the favourite
+resort of all the world at Bruxelles in the afternoon is the _Attee verte_.
+Here all classes meet; here the rich display their equipages and horses;
+and the lower orders assemble at the innumerable _guinguettes_ which are to
+be met with here, in order to play at bowls, dominoes, smoke and drink
+beer, of which there is an excellent sort called _Bitterman._ The avenues
+on each side of the carriage road are occupied by pedestrians, and on one
+side of the road is the canal, covered at all times with barges and boats
+decked with flags and streamers. At the cabarets are benches and tables in
+the open air under the trees; and here are to be seen the artisan, the
+bargeman and the peasant taking their afternoon _délassement_, and groups
+of men, women and children drinking beer and smoking. These groups reminded
+me much of those one sees so often in the old Flemish pictures, with this
+difference, that the old costume of the people is almost entirely left off.
+Female minstrels with guitars stroll about singing French romances and
+collecting contributions from this cheerful, laughter-loving people. The
+dark walk, as it is called, near the park is a favourite walk of the upper
+classes in the evening. There his Grace of Wellington is sometimes to be
+seen with a fair lady under his arm. He generally dresses in plain clothes,
+to the astonishment of all the foreign officers. He is said to be as
+successful in the fields of Idalia as in those of Bellona, and the ladies
+whom he honours with his attentions suffer not a little in their
+reputations in the opinion of the _compères_ and _commères_ of Bruxelles.
+
+I have only been twice to the theatre since I have been here. The _Salle de
+Spectacle_ is indifferent, but they have an excellent company of comedians.
+The representations are in French. I saw the _Festin de Pierre_ of
+Corneille exceedingly well performed. The actors who did the parts of Don
+Juan and Sganarelle were excellent, and the scene with M. Dimanche, wherein
+he demands payment of his bill, was admirably given. I have also seen the
+_Plaideurs_ of Racine, a very favourite piece of mine; every actor played
+his part most correctly, and the scene between the Comtesse de Pimbeche and
+Chicaneau and L'Intimé wherein the latter, disguised as a _Bailli_, offers
+himself to be kicked by the former, was given in very superior style. The
+scene of the trial of the dog, with the orations of Petit Jean as
+_demandeur_ and L'Intimé as _défenseur_, were played with good effect. I
+never recollect having witnessed a theatrical piece which afforded me
+greater amusement.
+
+
+NAMUR, May 12.
+
+We left Brussels yesterday afternoon, and having obtained passports to
+visit the military posts we went to Genappe, a small village half-way
+between Bruxelles and Namur, where we brought to for the night at a small
+but comfortable inn called _Le Roi d'Espagne_. Two battalions of the
+regiment Nassau-Usingen are quartered in Genappe. We arrived at Namur this
+morning at nine o'clock and put up at the _Hôtel d'Arenberg_. On the road
+we stopped at a peasant's house to drink coffee; and we were entertained by
+our hostess with complaints against the Prussians, who commit, as she said,
+all sorts of exactions on the peasantry on whom they are quartered. Not
+content with exacting three meals a day, when they were only entitled to
+two, and for which they are bound to give their rations, they sell these,
+and appropriate the money to their own use; then the demand for brandy and
+_schnapps_ is increasing. But what can be expected from an army whose
+leader encourages them in all their excesses? Blucher by all accounts is a
+vandal and is actuated by a most vindictive spirit. The Prussians reproach
+the Belgians with being in the French interest; how can they expect it to
+be otherwise? They have prospered under French domination, and certainly
+the conduct of the Prussians is not calculated to inspire them with any
+love towards themselves nor veneration for the Sovereign who has such
+all-devouring allies. I asked this woman why she did not complain to the
+officers. She answered! "Hélas, Monsieur, c'est inutile; on donne toujours
+la même réponse: '_Nichts verstehn_,'" for it appears when these complaints
+are made the Prussian officers pretend not to understand French.
+
+Namur is now the head-quarters of Marshal Blucher, who is in the enjoyment
+of divers _noms de guerre_, such as "Marshall Vorwärts," "Der alte Teufel."
+On the high road, about two miles and a half before we reached Namur, we
+met with a party of Prussian lancers, who were returning from a foraging
+excursion. They were singing some warlike song or hymn, which was
+singularly impressive. It brought to my recollection the description of the
+Rhenish bands in the _Lay of the Last Minstrel_:
+
+ Who as they move, in rugged verse
+ Songs of Teutonic feuds rehearse.
+
+The Prussian cavalry seem to be composed of fine-looking young men, and I
+admire the genuine military simplicity of their dress, to which might be
+most aptly applied the words of Xenophon when describing the costume of the
+younger Cyrus: [Greek: _En tae Persikae stolae ouden ti hubrsmenae_][7] in
+substituting merely the word [Greek: _Prussikae_] for [Greek: _Persikae_].
+One sees in it none of those absurd ornaments and meretricious foppery
+which give to our cavalry officers the appearance of Astley's men.[8]
+
+The situation of Namur is exceedingly picturesque, particularly when viewed
+from the heights which tower above the town, whereon stood the citadel
+which was demolished by order of Joseph II, as were the fortifications of
+all the frontier fortresses. The present Belgian Government however mean to
+reconstruct them, and Namur in particular, the citadel of which, from the
+natural strength of its position, is too important a post to be neglected.
+The town itself is situated on the confluent of the Sambre and Meuse and
+lies in a valley completely commanded and protected by the citadel. The
+churches are splendid, and there is an appearance of opulence in the shops.
+The inhabitants, from its being a frontier town, are of course much alarmed
+at the approaching contest, for they will probably suffer from both
+parties. We heard at the inn and in the shops which we visited the same
+complaints against the Prussians. The country in the environs of this place
+is exceedingly diversified, and it presents the first mountain scenery we
+have yet met with. The banks of the Meuse hereabouts present either an
+abrupt precipice or coteaux covered with vines gently sloping to the
+water's edge. Namur is distant thirty-four miles from Brussels, and there
+is water conveyance on the Meuse from here to Liége and Maastricht.
+
+
+MONS, May 14.
+
+We started yesterday morning at four o'clock from Namur. The whole road
+between Namur and Mons presents a fine, rich open country abounding in
+wheat, but not many trees. We stopped to breakfast at Fleurus, at an inn
+where there were some Prussian officers. One of them, a lieutenant in the
+2nd West Prussian Regiment, had the kindness to conduct us to see the field
+of battle where the French under Jourdan defeated the Austrians in 1794. It
+is at a very short distance from the town; he explained the position of the
+two armies in a manner perfectly clear and satisfactory to us. The Prussian
+officers all seem very eager for the commencement of hostilities, and their
+only fear is now that all these mighty preparations will end in nothing;
+viz., either that the French people, alarmed at the magnitude of the
+preparations against them, will compel the Emperor Napoleon to abdicate, or
+that the Allies will grow cool and, under the influence of Austria, bring
+about a negotiation which may end in a recognition of the Imperial title
+and dynasty. They would compound for a defeat at first, provided the war
+were likely to be prolonged. In the meantime, reinforcements continue to
+arrive daily for their army. We hear but little news of the intentions or
+movements of the other Allies; it being forbidden to enter into political
+discussions, it is difficult to ascertain the true state of affairs.
+
+We continued our journey through Charleroy and Binch to this place. At a
+small village between Binch and Mons we were stopped by a sentinel at a
+Prussian outpost and our passports demanded. Neither the sentinel, however,
+nor the sergeant, nor any of the soldiers present, could read or understand
+French, in which language the passport was drawn up; but the sergeant told
+me that the officers were in a house about a quarter of a mile distant and
+that he would conduct me thither, but that he himself could not presume to
+let us pass, from not knowing the tenor of our passport. I went accordingly
+with the sergeant to this house, There I found the officer commanding the
+piquet and several others sitting at table, carousing with beer and tobacco
+and nearly invisible from the clouds of smoke which pervaded the room. I
+explained to the officer who we were and requested him to put on the
+passport his _visa_ in the German language, so that the non-commissioned
+officers at the various posts through which we might pass would be able to
+understand it and let us pass without hindrance. This he did accordingly
+and we proceeded on our journey.
+
+We arrived here in the evening and put up at the _Hôtel Royal_. We found at
+Charleroy, Binch and here, a number of people employed in repairing and
+reconstructing the fortifications. Men, women and boys are all put in
+requisition to accelerate this object, as it is the intention of the
+Belgian Government to put all the frontier fortresses in the most complete
+state of defence. On ascending one of the steeples this morning we had a
+fine view of the surrounding country and of the height of Genappe, which
+are close to Mons and memorable for the brilliant victory gained by
+Dumouriez over the Austrians in 1792. The landscape presents an undulating
+campaign country, gentle slopes and alternate plains covered with corn, as
+far as the eye can reach, and interspersed with villages and farmhouses. In
+Mons is a very large splendid shop or warehouse of millinery, perfumery,
+jewellery, etc. It is called _La Toilette de Vénus_, and is served by a
+very pretty girl, who, I have no doubt from her simpering look and eloquent
+eyes, would have no objection to be a sedulous priestess at the altar of
+the Goddess of Amathus. A battalion of Hollanders--a very fine body of
+men--marched into this place yesterday evening; the rest of the garrison is
+composed of Belgians, chiefly conscripts.
+
+
+LEUZE, May 15.
+
+Yesterday morning we left Mons and proceeded to Ath to breakfast. A
+multitude of people were employed there also at the fortifications. The
+garrison of Ath is composed of Hanoverians. Ath reminded me of the wars of
+King William III and my Uncle Toby's sieges.[9] There was so little
+remarkable to be seen at Ath that we proceeded to this place shortly after
+breakfast and arrived at one o'clock, it being only ten miles distance
+between Ath and Leuze. We took up our quarters with Major-General Adam, who
+commands the Light Brigade of General Sir H. Clinton's division. This
+brigade is quartered here and in the adjacent farmhouses. General Adam,
+though he has attained his rank at a very early age, is far more fitted for
+it than many of our older generals, some of whom (I speak from experience)
+have few ideas beyond the fixing of a button or lappel, or polishing a
+belt, and who place the whole _Ars recondita_ of military discipline in
+pipe-clay, heel-ball and the goose step. Fortunately for this army, the
+Duke of Wellington has too much good sense to be a martinet and the good
+old times are gone by, thank God, when a soldier used to be sentenced to
+two or three hundred lashes for having a dirty belt or being without a
+_queue_. To the Duke of York also is humanity much indebted for his
+endeavours to check the frequency of corporal punishment. The Duke of York,
+with all his zeal for the service, never loses sight of the comfort of the
+soldier and is indefatigable in his exertions to ameliorate his conditions.
+We had a pleasant dinner party at General Adam's, and at night I went to
+sleep at the house occupied by Captain C., one of the aides-de-camp of the
+General,[10] an active, intelligent officer who had formerly served in the
+marines, which service he had quitted in order to enter the regular army.
+
+
+May 16.
+
+Yesterday morning we paid a visit to Tournay, which is distant from Leuze
+about ten miles, and we breakfasted at the _Signe d'Or_. We then proceeded
+to pay our respects to the Commandant General V.[11] The garrison consists
+of Belgians. General V. had been some time in England as a prisoner of war.
+He was made prisoner, I think he said, at Batavia. He received us very
+politely, and not only gave us permission to visit the works of the
+citadel, but sent a sergeant to accompany us. The new citadel is building
+on the site of the old one, and, like it, is to be a regular pentagon. The
+fortifications of the city itself are not to be reconstructed; these of the
+citadel, which will be very strong, rendering them superfluous. The
+sergeant was a native of Würtemberg and had served in the army of his own
+country and in that of France in most of the campaigns under Napoleon. He
+was a fine old veteran, and very intelligent, for he explained to us the
+nature of the works with great perspicuity. With true Suabian dignity he
+refused a five franc piece which I offered him as a slight remuneration for
+the trouble he had taken, and as he seemed, I thought, rather offended at
+the offer, I felt myself bound to apologize. From the number of workmen
+employed in repairing the citadel, it will not be long before it is placed
+in a respectable state of defence. Tournay is a large handsome city and the
+spacious quais on the banks of the Scheld which runs through it add much to
+the neatness of its appearance. It is only ten miles distant from Lille,
+but all communication from France is stopped. We learned that some of the
+Hanoverians had been deserting. In return we met with a young French hussar
+who had come over to the Allies. He seemed to be an impudent sort of
+fellow, and said, with the utmost _sang-froid_, that the reason he deserted
+was that he had not been made an officer as he was promised, and he hoped
+that Louis XVIII would be more sensible of his merits than the Emperor
+Napoleon. We returned to Leuze to dinner in the afternoon. This morning we
+went to assist at a review of General Clinton's division, on a plain called
+_Le Paturage_, about seven miles distant from Leuze. The Light Brigade and
+the Hanoverian Brigades form this division. The manoeuvres were performed
+with tolerable precision, but they were chiefly confined to advancing in
+line, retiring by alternate companies covered by light infantry and change
+of position on one of the flanks by _échelon_. The British troops were
+perfect; the Hanoverians not so, they being for the most part new levies.
+In one of the _échelon_ movements, when the line was to be formed on the
+left company of the left battalion, a Hanoverian battalion, instead of
+preserving its parallelism, was making a terrible diversion to its right,
+when a thundering voice from the commander of the brigade to the commandant
+of the battalion: "_Mein Gott, Herr Major, wo gehn Sie hin?_" roused him
+from his reverie; when he must have perceived, had he wheeled up into line,
+the fearful interval he had left between his own and the next battalion on
+the left.
+
+After the review had finished we repaired to the château of the Prince de
+Ligne, then occupied by Lieut.-General Sir H. Clinton, to partake of a
+breakfast given by him and his lady. On the breaking up of the breakfast
+party, General Wilson and myself remained at the château to dine with
+General Adam _al fresco_ in the garden under the trees. The palace and
+garden of the Prince de Ligne are both very magnificent. The latter is of
+great extent, but too regular, too much in the Dutch taste to please me.
+Little or no furniture is in the palace; but there are some family pictures
+and a theatre fitted up in one of the halls for the purpose of private
+theatricals. In the garden is a monument erected by the late Prince de
+Ligne to one of his sons, Charles by name, who was killed in the Russian
+service at the siege of Ismail. The present prince is a minor and resides
+at Bruxelles.
+
+
+GRAMMONT, May 18.
+
+We left Leuze yesterday afternoon and arrived here at seven in the evening
+in order to be present at the cavalry review the next morning. We partook
+of an elegant supper given to us by our friend, Major Grant of the 18th
+Hussars, and we were much entertained and enlivened by the effusions of his
+brilliant genius and inexhaustible wit. The whole cavalry of the British
+army passed in review this morning before the Duke of Wellington, who was
+there with all his staff and received the salutes of all the corps like
+Godfrey, _con volto placido e composto_. It was a very brilliant spectacle.
+The Duke de Berri was present. I think I never beheld so ignoble and
+disagreeable a countenance as this prince possesses. I thought to myself
+that he had much better have stayed away from this review; for he must be
+insensible to all patriotism who could take pleasure in contemplating a
+foreign force about to enter and ravage his own country. We learn that the
+Duchess d'Angoulême is to have a review of the _fidèles_ very shortly. She
+is certainly much more warlike than the males of that family; this
+disposition is increased by her religious fanaticism. This renders her, of
+course, a most dangerous person to meddle with politics; but great
+allowances must be made for her feelings, which must naturally be
+embittered by the recollection of so much suffering during the Revolution
+and of the barbarous and inhuman treatment experienced by her father and
+mother.
+
+I observed a peculiarity in this part of the country, viz., that there are
+villages lying close to each other in some of which French is spoken, in
+others Flemish; and that, with some few exceptions, the inhabitants of
+neighbouring villages are reciprocally unintelligible. General Wilson does
+not intend to return to Bruxelles. I shall accompany him as far as Gand and
+then return to Bruxelles to await the issue of the contest.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, June 11.
+
+I took leave of General Wilson at Gand on the 22nd of last month and
+immediately returned here, where I have been ever since. I have shifted my
+quarters to a less expensive hotel and am now lodged at the _Hôtel de la
+Paix_. We get an excellent dinner at the table d'hôte for one and a half
+francs, wine not included; this is paid for extra, and is generally at the
+price of three francs per bottle. This hotel is very neatly fitted up and
+is very near the _Hôtel de Ville_. At the table d'hôte I frequently meet
+Prussian officers who on coming in to visit Bruxelles put up here. We have
+just learned the proceedings of the _Champ de Mai_ at Paris, by which it
+appears that Napoleon is solemnly recognized and confirmed as Emperor of
+the French. This intelligence sent a young Prussian officer, who sat next
+to me, in a transport of joy, for this makes the war certain. The Prussians
+seem determined to revenge themselves for the humiliation they suffered
+from the French during the time they occupied their country, and I
+sincerely pity by anticipation the fate of the French peasants upon whom
+these gentlemen may chance to be quartered. Terrible will be the first
+shock of battle, and it may be daily expected, and dreadful will be the
+consequences to the poor inhabitants of the seat of war. Cannot this war be
+avoided? I am not politician enough to foresee the consequences of allowing
+Napoleon to keep quiet and undisturbed possession of the throne of France;
+but the consequences of a defeat on the part of the Allies will be the loss
+of Belgium and the probable annihilation of the British army; certainly the
+dissolution of the coalition, for the minor German powers, and very likely
+Austria also, would be induced to make a separate peace. We can clearly see
+that Napoleon has not now the power he formerly possessed and that the
+Republican party, into whose hands he has thrown himself, seem disposed not
+only to remain at peace, but to shackle him in every possible manner. It is
+evident, too, that his last success was owing to the dislike of the people
+to the Bourbons from their injudicious and treacherous conduct; and the
+threats and impossible language held by the priests and emigrants towards
+the holders of property paved the way for the success of his enterprise and
+enabled him to achieve a triumph unparalleled in history.
+
+On the contrary, by forcing him to go to war, should he gain the first
+victory, Belgium will be re-united to France, all the resources of that
+country brought into the scale against the Allies; Napoleon will be more
+popular than ever, the Republican party will be put to silence, the
+enthusiasm of the army will rise beyond all restraint, and, in a word,
+Napoleon will be himself again. The other Allies can do little without the
+assistance of England, and our finances are by no means in a state to bear
+such intolerable drains.
+
+As to the Prussians, on minute enquiry I do not find that they were so
+ill-treated by the French as is generally believed, and that, except the
+burden of having troops quartered on them (no small annoyance, I allow),
+they had not much reason to complain. The quartering of the troops on them
+and the payment of the war contributions was the necessary consequence of
+the occupation of their country by an enemy; but I have just been reading a
+German work, written by a native of Berlin, shortly after the entry of the
+French troops in that city after the battle of Jena in 1806. This work is
+entitled _Vertraute Briefe aus Berlin_, and in it the author distinctly
+declares that the discipline observed by the French troops during the
+occupation of Berlin was highly strict and praiseworthy, and that the few
+excesses that took place were committed by the troops of the Rhenish
+Confederation; and he adds that the inhabitants preferred having a French
+soldier quartered on them to a Westphalian, Bavarian or Würtembergher.
+Further, the troops that behaved with the greatest oppression and insolence
+towards the burghers were those belonging to a corps composed of native
+Prussians, raised for the service of Napoleon by the Prince of
+Isenburg.[12] In his recruiting address the prince invites the Prussian
+youth to enter into the service of the invincible Napoleon, and tells him
+that to the soldier of Napoleon everything is permitted. The regiment was
+soon fitted up and the soldiers began to put in practice in good earnest
+the theory of the _affiche_. They committed excesses of all sorts; and one
+officer in particular behaved so brutally and infamously to a poor tailor
+on whom he was quartered, and to whom, before he entered the French
+service, he was under the greatest obligations, that General Hulin, the
+commandant of the place at Berlin during the French occupation, was obliged
+to cashier him publicly on the parade and to cause his epaulettes to be
+torn from his coat in order to mark the disgust and indignation that he and
+all the French officers felt at the base ingratitude of this man.
+
+This work, "Vertraute Briefe" (confidential letters), contains much curious
+matter and very interesting anecdotes respecting the corruption, venality
+and depravation that prevailed in the Prussian Court and army previous to
+the war in 1806. Let this suffice to show that the Prussians have not so
+much reason to complain against the French as they pretend to have;
+besides, the conduct of the Prussian Government itself was so vacillating
+and contradictory that they had themselves only to blame for what they
+suffered. They should have supported Austria in 1805. But the fact is that
+the vanity and the _amour propre_ of the Prussian military were so hurt at
+the humiliation they experienced at and after the battle of Jena that it
+was this that has embittered them so much against the French.
+
+Let it not, however, be supposed for a moment that I seek to excuse or
+palliate the conduct of Napoleon towards Prussia. I have always thought it
+not only unjust but impolitic. Impolitic, because Prussia was, and ought
+always to be, the obvious and natural ally of France, and Napoleon, instead
+of endeavouring to crush that power, should have aggrandized her and made
+her the paramount power in Germany. It was in fact his obvious policy to
+cede Hanover in perpetuity to Prussia, and have rendered thereby the breach
+between the Houses of Brandenburgh and Hanover irreparable and
+irreconcilable. This would have thrown Prussia necessarily into the arms
+of France, in whose system she must then have moved, and all British
+influence on the Continent would have been effectually put an end to.
+Another prime fault of Napoleon was that he did not crush and dismember
+Austria in 1809 as he had it in his power to do; and by so doing he would
+have merited and obtained the thanks and good will of all Germany for
+having overturned so despotic and light-fearing a Government. But he has
+paid dearly for these errors. Instead of destroying a despotic power
+(Austria), he chose rather to crush an enlightened and liberal nation, for
+such I esteem the Prussian nation, and I always separate the Prussian
+people from their Government. The latter fell, and fell unpitied, after one
+battle; but it has been almost miraculously restored by the unparalleled
+exertions and energies of the burghers and people. May this be a lesson to
+the Government! and may the King of Prussia not prove ungrateful!
+
+Troops continue to arrive here daily, and now that the ceremony of the
+_Champ de Mai_ is over, we may expect that Napoleon will repair to his army
+and commence operations.
+
+
+June 17.
+
+Napoleon arrived at Maubeuge on the 18th and the grand conflict has begun.
+The Prussians were attacked on the 14th and 15th at Ligny and driven from
+their position.[13] They are said to have suffered immense loss and to be
+retreating with the utmost confusion. Our turn comes next. The thunder of
+the cannon was heard here distinctly the most part of yesterday and some
+part of our army must have been engaged. Our troops have all marched out of
+Bruxelles in the direction of the frontier. In the affair with the
+Prussians we learn that the Duke of Brunswick was killed and that Blucher
+narrowly escaped being made prisoner.
+
+
+June 18.
+
+The grand conflict has begun with us. It is now four o'clock p.m. The issue
+is not known. The roar of the cannon continues unabated. All is bustle,
+confusion and uncertainty in this city. Cars with wounded are coming in
+continually. The general opinion is that our army will be compelled to
+retreat to Antwerp, and it is even expected that the French will be in
+Bruxelles to-night. All the towns-people are on the ramparts listening to
+the sound of the cannon. This city has been in the greatest alarm and
+agitation since the 16th, when a violent cannonade was heard during the
+afternoon. From what I have been able to collect, the French attacked the
+Prussians on the 14th, and a desperate conflict took place on that day, and
+the whole of the 15th,[14] when the whole of the Prussian army at Ligny,
+Fleurus and Charleroy was totally defeated and driven from its position; a
+dislocation of our troops took place early in the morning of the 16th, and
+our advanced guard, consisting of the Highland Brigade and two Battalions
+of Nassau-Usingen, fell in with the advanced guard of the French Army
+commanded by Marshal Ney near Quatre-Bras, and made such a gallant defence
+against his corps d'armée as to keep it in check the whole day and enable
+itself to fall back in good order to its present position with the rest of
+the army, about ten miles in front of Bruxelles. Indeed, I am informed that
+nothing could exceed the admirable conduct of the corps above mentioned.
+Yesterday we heard no cannonade, but this afternoon it has been unceasing
+and still continues. All the caricatures and satires against Napoleon have
+disappeared from the windows and stalls. The shops are all shut, the
+English families flying to Antwerp; and the proclamation of the Baron de
+Capellen[15] to the inhabitants, wherein he exhorts them to be tranquil and
+assures them that the Bureaux of Government have not yet quitted Bruxelles,
+only serves to increase the confusion and consternation. The inhabitants in
+general wish well to the arms of Napoleon, but they know that the retreat
+of the English Army must necessarily take place through their town; that
+our troops will perhaps endeavour to make a stand, and that the
+consequences will be terrible to the inhabitants, from the houses being
+liable to be burned or pillaged by friend or foe. All the baggage of our
+Army and all the military Bureaux have received orders to repair and are
+now on their march to Antwerp, and the road thither is so covered and
+blocked up by waggons that the retreat of our Army will be much impeded
+thereby. Probably my next letter may be dated from a French prison.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, June 21.
+
+Judge, my friend, of my astonishment and that of almost everybody in this
+city, at the news which was circulated here early on the morning of the
+19th, and has been daily confirmed, viz., that the French Army had been
+completely defeated and was in full flight, leaving behind it 220 pieces of
+cannon and all its baggage, waggons and _munitions de guerre_. I have not
+been able to collect all the particulars, but you will no doubt hear enough
+of it, for I am sure it will be _said_ or _sung_ by all the partisans of
+the British ministry and all the Tories of the United Kingdom for months
+and years to come; for further details, therefore, I shall refer you to the
+Gazette. The following, however, you may consider as a tolerably fair
+précis of what took place. The attack began on the 18th about ten
+o'clock[16] and raged furiously along the whole line, but principally at
+Hougoumont, a large _Métairie_ on the right of our position, which was
+occupied by our troops, and from which all the efforts of the enemy could
+not dislodge them. The slaughter was terrible in this quarter. From twelve
+o'clock till evening several desperate charges of cavalry and infantry were
+made on the rest of our line. Both sides fought with the utmost courage and
+obstinacy, and were prodigal of life in the extreme. But it is generally
+supposed that our army must have succumbed towards the evening had it not
+been for the arrival of Bulow's division of Prussians, followed closely by
+Blucher and the rest of the army, which had rallied with uncommon celerity.
+These moved on the right flank of the French, and decided the fortune of
+the day by a charge which was seconded by a general charge from the whole
+of the English line on the centre and left of the French. Seeing themselves
+thus turned, a panic, it is said, spread among the young Guard of the
+French army, and a cry of "_Sauve qui peut! nous sommes trahis!_" spread
+like wildfire. The flight became universal; the old Guard alone remained,
+refused quarter and perished like Leonidas and his Spartans. The Prussian
+cavalry being fresh pursued the enemy all night, _l'épée dans les reins_,
+and it may be conceived from their previous disposition that they would not
+be very merciful to the vanquished. Indeed, on the 15th, it is said that
+the French were not very merciful to them. It was like the combat of
+Achilles and Hector.
+
+ No thought but rage and never ceasing strife
+ Till death extinguish rage and thought and life.
+
+France will now call out to Napoleon as Augustus did to Varus, "Give me
+back my legions!" The loss on both sides was very great, but it must have
+been prodigious on the side of the French. The whole Allied Army is in full
+pursuit. Several friends and acquaintances of mine perished in this battle,
+viz., Lieut.-General Sir T. Picton, Colonel Sir H. Ellis and Colonel
+Morice.
+
+
+June 22.
+
+This morning I went to visit the field of battle, which is a little beyond
+the village of Waterloo, on the plateau of Mont St Jean; but on arrival
+there the sight was too horrible to behold. I felt sick in the stomach and
+was obliged to return. The multitude of carcases, the heaps of wounded men
+with mangled limbs unable to move, and perishing from not having their
+wounds dressed or from hunger, as the Allies were, of course, obliged to
+take their surgeons and waggons with them, formed a spectacle I shall never
+forget. The wounded, both of the Allies and the French, remain in an
+equally deplorable state.
+
+At Hougoumont, where there is an orchard, every tree is pierced with
+bullets. The barns are all burned down, and in the court-yard it is said
+they have been obliged to burn upwards of a thousand carcases, an awful
+holocaust to the War-Demon.
+
+As nothing is more distressing than the sight of human misery when we are
+unable to silence it, I returned as speedily as possible to Bruxelles with
+Cowper's lines in my head:
+
+ War is a game, which, were their subjects wise,
+ Kings should not play at.
+
+I hope this battle will, at any rate, lead to a speedy peace.
+
+
+June 28.
+
+We have no other news from the Allied Army, except that they are moving
+forward with all possible celerity in the direction of Paris. You may form
+a guess of the slaughter and of the misery that the wounded must have
+suffered, and the many that must have perished from hunger and thirst, when
+I tell you that all the carriages in Bruxelles, even elegant private
+equipages, landaulets, barouches and berlines, have been put in requisition
+to remove the wounded men from the field of battle to the hospitals, and
+that they are yet far from being all brought in. The medical practitioners
+of the city have been put in requisition, and are ordered to make
+domiciliary visits at every house (for each habitation has three or four
+soldiers in it) in order to dress the wounds of the patients. The
+Bruxellois, the women in particular, have testified the utmost humanity
+towards the poor sufferers. It was suggested by some humane person that
+they who went to see the field of battle from motives of curiosity would do
+well to take with them bread, wine and other refreshments to distribute
+among the wounded, and most people did so. For my part I shall not go a
+second time. Napoleon, it is said, narrowly escaped being taken. His
+carriage fell into the hands of the Allies, and was escorted in triumph
+into Bruxelles by a detachment of dragoons. So confident was Napoleon of
+success that printed proclamations were found in the carriage dated from
+"Our Imperial Palace at Laecken," announcing his victory and the liberation
+of Belgium from the insatiable coalition, and wherein he calls on the
+Belgians to re-unite with their old companions in arms in order to reap the
+fruits of their victory. This was certainly rather premature, and reminds
+me of an anecdote of a Spanish officer at the siege of Gibraltar, related
+by Drinkwater in his narrative of that siege.[17] When the British garrison
+made a sortie, they carried the advanced Spanish lines and destroyed all
+their preparations; the Spanish officer on guard at the outermost post was
+killed, but on the table of his guard room was found his guard report
+filled up and signed, stating that "nothing extraordinary had happened
+since guard-mounting."
+
+Mr L. of Northumberland, having proposed to me to make a tour with him to
+Aix-la-Chapelle and the banks of the Rhine, I shall start with him in a day
+or two.
+
+
+[1] Sir Wiltshire Wilson (1762-1842), Commander of the Royal Artillery in
+ Ceylon, 1810-1815.--Ed.
+
+[2] Pulci, _Morgante_, canto XVIII, ottava 114-115. The Giant Morgante
+ meets the villain Margutte and asks him if he be a Christian or a
+ Saracen. Margutte answers that he cares not, but only believes in
+ boiled or in roasted capon:
+
+ Rispose allor Margutte: A dirtel tosto
+ Io non credo pio al nero ch'all' azzurro.
+ Ma nel cappone, o lesso, o vuogll arrosto....
+
+[3] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, iv, 63, f.--ED.
+
+[4] A work of H, Verbruggen of Antwerp (1677).--ED.
+
+[5] Lord Bruce, Earl of Ailesbury, caused this fountain to be erected in
+ 1751, as a token of gratitude to the town of Bruxelles where he had
+ lived in exile.--E.D.
+
+[6] Henry Dundas, Viscount Melville (1741-1811), elevated to the peerage in
+ 1802.--ED.
+
+[7] Xenophon, _Education of Cyrus_, II, 4, 4.--ED.
+
+[8] Astley's Amphitheatre, near Westminster Bridge.--ED.
+
+[9] Uncle Toby, in Laurence Sterne's _Tristram Shandy_.--ED.
+
+[10] Lieutenant R.P. Campbell, aide-de-camp to Major-General Adam.--ED.
+
+[11] In May, 1815, the officer commanding-in-chief at Tournai was
+ General-Major A.C. Van Diermen.--ED.
+
+[12] Karl Friedrich Ludwig Moritz, Fürst zu Ysenburg-Bierstein (1766-1820),
+ took service with Austria (1784), with Prussia (1804), and later with
+ Napoleon (1806), who commissioned him as brigadier-general. The
+ shameless conduct of this officer is exposed by B. Poten, _Allgemeine
+ Deutsche Biographie_, vol. XLIV, p. 611.--ED.
+
+[13] The battle at Ligny was fought on June 16.--ED.
+
+[14] The facts and dates here given are of course inaccurate; but this
+ proves that Major Frye wrote his text in the very midst of the crisis,
+ and that his manuscript has not been tampered with.--ED.
+
+[15] Baron van Capellen, a Dutch statesman, was governor-general of the
+ Belgian provinces, residing at Bruxelles. He was afterwards
+ governor-general of Dutch India. Born in 1778, he died in 1848. His
+ memoirs have been published in French by Baron Sirtema de Grovestins
+ (1852), and contain an interesting passage on that momentous day,
+ 18th June, 1815.--ED.
+
+[16] Not before half past eleven.--ED.
+
+[17] John Drinkwater, also called Bethune (1762-1844), published a
+ well-known _History of the Siege of Gibraltar, 1779-1783_.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+From Bruxelles to Liége--A priest's declamation against the French
+Revolution--Maastricht--Aix-la-Chapelle--Imperial relics--Napoleon
+regretted--Klingmann's "Faust"--A Tyrolese beauty--Cologne--Difficulties
+about a passport--The Cathedral--King-craft and priest-craft--The
+Rhine--Bonn and Godesberg--Goethe's "Götz von Berlichingen"--The Seven
+Mountains--German women--Andernach--Ehrenbreitstein--German hatred against
+France--Coblentz--Intrigues of the Bourbon princes in Coblentz--Mayence--
+Bieberich--Conduct of the Allies towards Napoleon--Frankfort on the
+Mayn--An anecdote about Lord Stewart and Lafayette--German poetry--The
+question of Alsace and Lorraine--Return to Bruxelles--Napoleon's surrender.
+
+
+LIÉGE, June 26.
+
+Mr L. and myself started together in the diligence from Bruxelles at seven
+o'clock in the evening of the 24th inst. and arrived here yesterday morning
+at twelve o'clock. I experienced considerable difficulty in procuring a
+passport to quit Bruxelles, my name having been included in that of General
+Wilson, which he carried back with him to England. Our Ambassador was
+absent, and I was bandied about from bureau to bureau without success; so
+that I began at last to think that I should be necessitated to remain at
+Bruxelles all my life, when fortunately it occurred to Mr L. that he was
+intimately acquainted with the English Consul, and he kindly undertook to
+procure me one and succeeded. On arrival here we put up at the _Pommelette
+d'Or_. The price of a place in the diligence from Bruxelles to Liége is
+fifteen franks. We passed thro' Louvain, but too late to see anything. The
+country about Liége is extremely striking and picturesque; the river Meuse
+flows thro' the city, and the banks of the river outside the town are very
+_riants_ and agreeable. Liége is a large, well-built city, but rather
+gloomy as to its appearance, and lies in a hollow completely surrounded by
+lofty hills. The remains of its ancient citadel stand on a height which
+completely commands the city; on another height stands a monastery, a
+magnificent building. There are a great many coal-pits in the vicinity of
+Liége, and a great commerce of coals is carried on between this city and
+Holland by the _treckschuyte_ on the Meuse. We visited the ancient
+Episcopal palace and the Churches. The Palace is completely dismantled.
+This city suffered much during the revolt of the Belgian provinces against
+the Emperor Joseph II, and having distinguished itself by the obstinacy of
+its defence, it was treated with great rigour by the Austrian Government.
+The fortifications were blown up, and nothing now remains on the site of
+the old citadel but a large barrack. I remained two whole hours on this
+height to contemplate the beauties of the expanse below. The banks of the
+river, which meanders much in these parts, and the numerous _maisons de
+campagne_ with the public promenades and allées lined with trees,
+exhilarate the scene of the environs, for the city itself is dull enough.
+Several pretty villas are situated also on the heights, and were I to dwell
+here I should choose one of them and seldom descend into the valley and
+city below,
+
+ Where narrow cares and strife and envy dwell.
+
+Liége, however sombre in its appearance, is a place of much opulence and
+commerce. A Belgian garrison does duty here. At the inn, after dinner, I
+fell into conversation with a Belgian priest, and as I was dressed in black
+he fancied I was one of the cloth, and he asked me if I were a Belgian, for
+that I spoke French with a Belgian accent; "Apparemment Monsieur est
+ecclésiastique?--Monsieur, je suis né Anglais et protestant." He then began
+to talk about and declaim against the French Revolution, for that is the
+doctrine now constantly dinned into the ears of all those who take orders;
+and he concluded by saying that things would never go on well in Europe
+until they restored to God the things they had taken from Him. I told him
+that I differed from him very much, for that the sale of the Church domains
+and of the lands and funds belonging to the suppressed ecclesiastical
+establishments had contributed much to the improvement of agriculture and
+to the comfort of the peasantry, whose situation was thereby much
+ameliorated; and that they were now in a state of affluence compared with
+what they were before the French Revolution. I added: "Enfin, Monsieur,
+Dieu n'a pas besoin des choses terrestres." On my saying this he did not
+chuse to continue the conversation, but calling for a bottle of wine drank
+it all himself with the zest of a Tartuffe. I believe that he was surprised
+to find that an Englishman should not coincide with his sentiments, for I
+observe all the adherents of the ancient régime of feudality and
+superstition have an idea that we are anxious for the re-establishment of
+all those abuses as they themselves are, and it must be confessed that the
+conduct of our Government has been such as to authorize them fully in
+forming such conjectures, and that we shall be their staunch auxiliaries in
+endeavouring to arrest and retrograde the progress of the human mind. In
+fact, I soon perceived that my friend was not overloaded with wit and that
+he was one of those priests so well described by Metastasio:
+
+ Il di cui sapere
+ Sta nel nostro ignorar....
+
+
+MAASTRICHT, 27th June.
+
+This morning, after a promenade on the banks of the Meuse--for I am fond of
+rivers and woods (_flumina amo silvasque inglorius_)--we embarked on a
+_treckschuyt_ and arrived here after a passage of four hours. The scenery
+on the banks of the Meuse all the way from Liége to Maastricht is highly
+diversified and extremely romantic; but here at Maastricht this ceases and
+the dull uniformity of the Dutch landscape begins. When on the ramparts of
+the city to the North and West an immense plain as far as the eye can reach
+presents itself to view; a few trees and sandhills form the only relief to
+the picture. The town itself is neat, clean and dull, like all Dutch towns.
+The fortifications are strong and well worth inspection. The most
+remarkable thing in the neighbourhood of Maastricht is the Montagne de St
+Pierre, which from having been much excavated for the purpose of procuring
+stone, forms a labyrinth of a most intricate nature. I advise every
+traveller to visit it, and if he has a classical imagination he may fancy
+himself in the labyrinth of Crete.
+
+
+AIX-LA-CHAPELLE, 29th June.
+
+We started in the morning of the 28th from Maastricht in the diligence for
+Aix-la-Chapelle and arrived here at twelve o'clock, putting up at Van
+Gülpen's Hotel, _Zum Pfälzischen Hofe_ (à la Cour palatine), which I
+recommend as an excellent inn and the hosts as very good people. The price
+of our journey from Liége to Maastricht in the water-diligence was 2-1/2
+franks, and from Maastricht to Aix-la-Chapelle by land was 7 franks the
+person. The road from Maastricht to this place is not very good, but the
+country at a short distance from Maastricht becomes picturesque, much
+diversified by hill and dale and well wooded. As the Meuse forms the
+boundary between the Belgic and Prussian territory, we enter the latter
+sooner after leaving Maastricht. I find my friend L. a most agreeable
+travelling companion; travelling seems to be his passion, as it is mine;
+and fortune has so far favoured me in this particular, that my professional
+duties and private affairs have led me to visit the four quarters of the
+globe. After dinner, on the first day of our arrival here, we went to visit
+the _Hôtel de Ville_, before which stands on a pedestal in a bason an
+ancient bronze statue of Charlemagne. It has nothing to recommend it but
+its antiquity. The _Hôtel de Ville_ is similar to other Gothic buildings
+used for the same purpose. In the great hall thereof there is a large
+picture representing the ambassadors of all the powers who assisted at the
+signing of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1742; and a full length
+portrait of the present King of Prussia, as master of the city, occupies
+the place where once stood that of Napoleon, its late lord. We next went to
+see the Cathedral and sat down on the throne on which the German Caesars
+used to be crowned. We viewed likewise the various costly articles of
+plate, the gifts of pious princes. The most remarkable things among them
+are several superb dresses of gold and silver embroidery, so thickly laid
+on that they are of exceeding weight. These dresses form part of the
+wardrobe of the Virgin Mary. Next to be seen is a case or chest of massy
+silver, adorned with innumerable precious stones of great value; which case
+contains the bones or ashes of Charlemagne. His right arm bone is however
+preserved separate in a glass case. The sword of this prince too, and the
+Imperial crown is to be seen here. The sacristan next proceeded to show to
+us the other relics, but having begun with the exhibition of a rag dipped
+in the sweat of Jesus Christ and a nail of the Holy Cross, we began to
+think we had seen enough and went away perfectly satisfied. There is no
+other monument in honour of Charlemagne, but a plain stone on the floor of
+the Church with the simple inscription "Carolo Magno." On going out of the
+city thro' one of the gates, and at a short distance from it, we ascended
+the mountain or rather hill called the Louisberg on which are built a
+Ridotto and Café, as also a Column erected in honour of Napoleon with a
+suitable inscription; the inscription is effaced and is about to be
+replaced by another in the German language in commemoration of the downfall
+of the _Tyrant_, as the Coalition are pleased to call him. This Tyrant is
+however extremely regretted by the inhabitants of Aix-la-Chapelle and not
+without reason, for he was a great benefactor to them and continually
+embellished the city, confirming and increasing its privileges. The
+inhabitants are not at all pleased with their new masters; for the
+behaviour of the Prussian military has been so insulting and overbearing
+towards the burghers and students that it is, I am told, a common
+exclamation among the latter, alluding to the Prussians having stiled
+themselves their deliverers: _De nostris liberatoribus, Domine, libera
+nos_. Indeed, I can evidently discern that they are not particularly
+pleased at the result of the battle of Waterloo.
+
+In the evening I went to the theatre, which has the most inconvenient form
+imaginable, being a rectangle. As anti-Gallicanism is the order of the day,
+only German dramas are allowed to be performed and this night it was the
+tragedy of Faust, or Dr Faustus as we term him in England, not the Faust of
+Goethe, which is not meant for nor at all adapted to the stage, but a drama
+of that name written by Klingmann.[18] It is a strange wild piece, quite in
+the German style and full of horrors and diableries. In this piece the
+sublime and terrible border close on the ridiculous; for instance the Devil
+and Faust come to drink in a beer-schenk or ale-house. 'Tis true the Devil
+is incognito at the time and is called "der Fremde" or "the Stranger"; it
+is only towards the conclusion of the piece that he discovers himself to be
+Satan.... The actor who played the part of the Stranger had something in
+his physiognomy very terrific and awe-inspiring. In another scene, which to
+us would appear laughable and absurd, but which pleases a German audience,
+three women in masks come on the stage to meet Faust, in a churchyard, and
+on unmasking display three skeleton heads.
+
+Poor Faust had stipulated to give his soul to the Devil for aiding him in
+the attainment of his desires; the Devil on his part agrees to allow him to
+commit four deadly sins before he shall call on him to fulfil his contract.
+Faust, in the sequel, kills his wife and his father-in-law. Satan then
+claims him. Faust pleads in arrest of judgement, that he has only committed
+two crimes out of the four for which he had agreed; and that there
+consequently remained two others for him to commit before he could be
+claimed. The Devil in rejoinder informs him that his wife was with child at
+the time he killed her, which constituted the third crime, and that the
+very act of making a contract with the Devil for his soul forms the fourth.
+Faust, overwhelmed with confusion, has not a word to say; and Satan seizing
+him by the hair of his head, carries him off in triumph. This piece is
+written in iambics of ten syllables and the versification appeared to me
+correct and harmonious, and the sentiments forcible and poetical; this
+fully compensated for the bizarrerie of the story itself, which, by the
+bye, with all the reproach thrown by the adherents of the classic taste on
+those of the romantic, is scarcely more _outré_ than the introduction of
+Death ([Greek: _thanatos_]) as a dramatic personage in the _Alcestis_ of
+Euripides.
+
+There is at Aix-la-Chapelle at one of the hotels a Faro Bank; it is open
+like the gates of Hell _noctes atque dies_ and gaming goes forward without
+intermission; this seems, indeed, to be the only occupation of the
+strangers who visit these baths. There is near this hotel a sort of Place
+or Quadrangle with arcades under which are shops and stalls. At one of
+these shops I met with the most beautiful girl I ever beheld, a Tyrolese by
+birth and the daughter of a print-seller. She was from the Italian Tyrol;
+Roveredo, I think she said, was her birthplace. She united much grace and
+manner with her beauty, on account of which I could not avoid complimenting
+her in her native tongue, which she seemed pleased to hear. Her eyes and
+eyebrows brought to my recollection the description of those of Alcina:
+
+ Sotto due negri e sottilissimi archi,
+ Son due neri occhi, anzi, due chiari soli,
+ Pietosi a riguardare, a mover parchi,
+ Intorno a cui par che Amor scherzi e volí.[19]
+
+ Two black and slender arches rise above
+ Two clear black eyes, say suns of radiant light;
+ Which ever softly beam and slowly move;
+ Round these appears to sport in frolic flight,
+ Hence scattering all his shafts, the little Love.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+We then proceeded to look at the suburb of this city called Bortscheid, by
+far the finest part of the city and at some elevation above it. It commands
+an extensive view. We also visited the various bath establishments; the
+taste of the water had some resemblance to that of Harrogate, and is good
+in bilious, scrofulous and cutaneous complaints. On our return to the hotel
+we learned the news of the capitulation of Paris to the Allied powers. It
+is said to be purely a military convention by which the French army is to
+evacuate Paris and retire behind the Loire. There is no talk and no other
+intelligence about Napoleon, except that he had been compelled by the two
+Houses of Legislature to abdicate the throne. We are still in the dark as
+to the intentions of the Allies. I regret much that my friend and fellow
+traveller L. is obliged to return to Bruxelles and cannot accompany me to
+Cologne, to which place I am impatient to go and to pay my respects to old
+father Rhine, so renowned in history.
+
+
+COLOGNE.
+
+I left Aix-la-Chapelle on the morning of the 2nd of July and arrived at
+Cologne about six o'clock in the evening, putting up at the Inn _Zum
+heiligen Geist_ (Holy Ghost), which is situated on the banks of the river.
+The price of the journey in the diligence is 18 franks. On the road hither
+lies Juliers, a large and strongly fortified town surrounded by a marsh. It
+must be very important as a military post. The road after quitting Juliers
+runs for the most part thro' a forest, and has been much improved and
+enlarged by the French; before they improved it, it was almost impassable
+in wet weather. We met on the road several Prussian waggons and
+reinforcements on their march to Bruxelles. Two of my fellow travellers in
+the diligence were very intelligent young men belonging to respectable
+families in Cologne and were returning thither; they likewise complained
+much of the overbearing demeanour of the Prussian military towards the
+burghers.
+
+Cologne is a large, but very dull looking city, as dull as Liége; it would
+seem as if all towns and cities under ecclesiastical domination were dull
+or rendered so by the prohibition of the most innocent amusements. The
+fortifications are out of repair; but the Prussian Government intend to
+make Cologne a place of great strength. The name of the village on the
+opposite of the river is Deutz, and in the time of the French occupation
+there was a _tête-de-pont_. The next morning I was obliged to appear before
+the police, and afterwards before the _Commandant de la Place_, in order to
+have my passport examined and _visé_. At the bureau of the police it was
+remarked to me that my passport was not _en règle_, the features of the
+bearer not being therein specified. I replied that it was not my fault;
+that it was given to me in that shape by the English Consul at Bruxelles
+and that it was not my province to give to the Consul any directions as to
+its form and tenor. The Commissary of Police then asked me what business I
+was about in travelling, and the following conversation took place: "Was
+haben Sie für Geschäfte?"--"Keine; ich reise nur um Vergnügen's Willen."--"
+Sonderbar!"--"Worin liegt das Sonderbare, dass man reist um ein schönes
+Land zu sehen?"[20]--He made no answer to this, but one of his coadjutors
+standing by him said in a loud whisper, "Ein Herumreiser," which means an
+adventurer or person who travels about for no good,--in a word, a
+suspicious character. I then said with the utmost calm and indifference:
+"Gentlemen, as soon as you shall have finished all your commentaries on the
+subject of my passport, pray be so good as to inform me what I am to do,
+whether I may go on to Mayence and Frankfort as is my intention, or return
+to Bruxelles." The Commissary, after a slight hesitation, signed the _visa_
+and I then carried it to the bureau of the Commandant, whose secretary
+signed it without hesitation, merely asking me if I were a military man.
+
+In the afternoon I went to visit the Dome or Cathedral. It is a fine
+specimen of Gothic architecture, but singular enough the steeple is not yet
+finished. In this Cathedral the most remarkable thing is the Chapel of the
+Three Kings, wherein is deposited a massy gold chest inlaid with precious
+stones of all sorts and of great value, containing the bones of the
+identical three Kings (it is said) who came from the East to worship the
+infant Jesus at Bethlehem. The Scriptures say it was three wise men or
+Magi. The legend however calls them Kings and gives them Gothic names. Let
+schoolmen and theologians reconcile this difference: _ce n'est point notre
+affaire_. To me it appears that when the German tribes embraced
+Christianity and enrolled themselves under the banner of St Peter, it was
+thought but fair to allow them to give vent to a little nationality and to
+blend their old traditions with the new-fangled doctrine, and no doubt the
+Sovereign Pontiffs thought that the people could never be made to believe
+too much; the same policy is practised by the Jesuit missionaries in China,
+where in order to flatter the national vanity and bend it to their purposes
+they represent Jesus Christ as being a great personal friend and
+correspondent of Confucius.
+
+To return to these monarchs, wise men or Magi: their _sculls_ are kept
+separate to the rest of the bones and each _scull_ bears a crown of gold.
+But if you are fond of miracles, legends, and details of relics, come with
+me to the Church of St Ursula in this city, and see the proof positive of
+the miraculous legend of the eleven thousand Virgins who suffered martyrdom
+in this city, in the time of Attila; the bones of all of whom are carefully
+preserved here and adorn the interior walls of the Church in the guise of
+arms arranged in an armoury. Eleven thousand sculls, each bearing a golden
+or gilt crown, grin horribly on the spectator from the upper part of the
+interior walls of the church, where they are placed in a row. What a fine
+subject this would make for a ballad in the style of Bürger to suppose that
+on a particular night in the year, at the midnight hour when mortals in
+slumbers are bound, the bones all descending from the walls where they are
+arranged, forming themselves into bodies, clapping on their heads and
+dancing a skeleton dance round the Ghost of Attila! The people of Cologne,
+in the time of the ecclesiastical Electorate, had the reputation of being
+extremely superstitious, and no doubt there were many who implicitly
+believe this pious tale; indeed, who could refuse their assent to its
+authenticity, on beholding the proof positive in the sculls and bones?
+
+I recollect that in the History of the Compère Mathiew[21] the Père Jean
+rates mightily the natives of Cologne for their bigotry and superstition
+and for the bad reception they gave to him and to his philosophy. That
+people are happier from a blind belief, as some pretend, appears to me
+extremely problematical. For my part, under no circumstances can I think
+bliss to consist in ignorance; nor have I felt any particular discomfort in
+having learned at a very early age to put under my feet, as Lucretius
+expresses it, the _strepitum Acherontis avari_. On the contrary, it has
+made me a perfect cosmopolitan, extinguished all absurd national and
+religious prejudices, and rendered me at home wherever I travel; and I meet
+the Catholic, the Lutheran, the Moslem, the Jew, the Hindou and the Guebre
+as a brother. _Quo me cunque ferat tempestas, deferor hospes_.[22] Let me
+add one word more to obviate any misrepresentation of my sentiments from
+some malignant Pharisee, that tho' I am no friend to King-craft and
+Priest-craft, and cannot endure that religion should ever be blended with
+politics, yet I am a great admirer of the beautiful and consoling
+philosophy or theosophy of Jesus Christ which inculcates the equality of
+Mankind, and represents the Creator of the universe, the Author of all
+being, as the universal Father of the human race.
+
+Cologne derives its name from _Colonia_, as it was a Roman Colony planted
+here to protect the left bank of the Rhine from the incursions of the
+German hordes. It is here that the grand and original manufactory of the
+far-famed _Eau de Cologne_ is to be seen. The _Eau de Cologne_ is a
+sovereign remedy for all kinds of disorders, and if the _affiches_ of the
+proprietor, Jean-Marie Farina, be worthy of credit, he is as formidable a
+check to old Pluto as ever Aesculapius was. The sale of this water is
+immense.
+
+On my return to the inn, I met with a Dutch clergyman who was travelling
+with his pupils, three very fine boys, the sons of a Dutch lady of rank. He
+was to conduct them to the University of Neuwied, on the right bank of the
+Rhine, in order to place them there for their education. The young men seem
+to have profited much from their studies. Their tutor seemed to be a
+well-informed man and of liberal ideas; he preferred speaking German to
+French, as he said he had not much facility in expressing himself in the
+latter language. He said if I were going his way he would be happy to have
+the pleasure of my company, to which I very willingly acceded, and we
+agreed to start the next morning early so as to arrive at Bonn to
+breakfast, and then to go on to Godesberg, where he proposed to remain a
+few days.
+
+From the windows of our inn we have a fine view of the river, and I have
+not omitted doing hommage to old Father Rhine by taking up some of his
+water in the hollow of my hand to drink. The Rhine of later years has been
+considered the guardian of Germany against the hostile incursions of the
+French, and Schiller represents this river as a Swiss vigilant on his post,
+yet in spite of his vigilance and fidelity unable to prevent his restless
+neighbour from forcing his safeguard. The following are the lines of
+Schiller where the river speaks in a distich:
+
+ Treu wie dem Schwfeizer gebührt bewach'ich Germaniens Grenze,
+ Aber der Gallier hüpft über den duldenden Strom.
+
+ In vain my stream I interpose
+ To guard Germania's realm from foes;
+ The nimble Gauls my cares deride
+ And often leap on t'other side.
+
+
+GODESBERG, 4th July.
+
+The distance from Cologne to Bonn is 18 miles and Godesberg is three miles
+further. We stopped to breakfast at Bonn and after breakfast made a
+promenade thro' the city. Bonn is a handsome, clean, well-built and
+cheerful looking city and the houses are good and solid.
+
+The Electoral Palace is a superb building, but is not occupied and is
+falling rapidly to decay. From the terrace in the garden belonging to this
+Palace, which impends over the Rhine, you have a fine view of this noble
+river. This Palace was at one time made use of as a barrack by the French,
+and since the secularization of the Ecclesiastical Electorates it has not
+been thought worth while to embellish or even repair it. There is a Roman
+antiquity in this town called the _Altar of Victory_, erected on the Place
+St Remi, but remarkable for nothing but its antiquity; it seems to be a
+common Roman altar.[23] The road from Bonn to Godesberg is three miles in
+length and thro' a superb avenue of horse-chesnut trees; but before you
+arrive at Godesberg, there is on the left side of the road a curious
+specimen of Gothic architecture called _Hochkreutz_, very like Waltham
+cross in appearance, but much higher and in better preservation; it was
+erected by some feudal Baron to expiate a homicide. The castle of Godesberg
+is situated on an eminence and commands a fine prospect; it is now a mass
+of rums and the walls only remain. It derives its name of Godesberg or
+Götzenberg from the circumstance of its having been formerly the site of a
+temple of Minerva built in the time of the Romans, and thence called
+Götzenberg by the Christians, _Götze_ in German signifying an idol.
+
+On the plain at the foot of the hill of Godesberg and at the distance of an
+eighth of a mile from the river, a shelving cornfield intervening, stand
+three large hotels and a ridotto, all striking edifices. To the south of
+these is situated a large wood. These hotels are always full of company in
+the summer and autumn: they come here to drink the mineral waters, a
+species of Seltzer, the spring of which is about a quarter of a mile
+distant from the hotels. The hotel at which we put up bears the name of
+_Die schöne Aussicht_ (la Belle Vue) and well does it deserve the name; for
+it commands a fine view of the reaches of the river, north and south.
+Directly on the opposite bank, abruptly rising, is the superb and
+magnificent chain of mountains called the _Sieben Gebirge_ or Seven
+Mountains. On the summit of these mountains tower the remains of Gothic
+castles or keeps, still majestic, tho' in ruins, and frowning on the plains
+below; they bring to one's recollection the legends and chronicles of the
+Middle Ages. They bear terrible awe-inspiring names such as Drachenfels,
+Löwenberg; the highest of them is called Drachenfels or the Rock of Dragons
+and on it stood the Burg or Chateau of a Feudal Count or _Raubgraf_, who
+was the terror of the surrounding country, and has given rise to a very
+interesting romance called _The Knights of the Seven Mountains_. This
+feudal tyrant used to commit all sorts of depredations and descend into the
+plains below, in order to intercept the convoys of merchandize passing
+between Aix-la-Chapelle and Frankfort. It was to check these abuses and
+oppressions that was instituted the famous Secret Tribunal _Das heimliche
+Gericht_, the various Governments in Germany being then too weak to protect
+their subjects or to punish these depredations. This secret tribunal, from
+the summary punishments it inflicted, the mysterious obscurity in which it
+was enveloped, and the impossibility of escaping from its pursuit, became
+the terror of all Germany. They had agents and combinations everywhere, and
+exercised such a system of espionage as to give to their proceedings an
+appearance of supernatural agency. A simple accusation was sufficient for
+them to act upon, provided the accuser solemnly swore to the truth of it
+without reserve, and consented to undergo the same punishment as the
+accused was subjected to, in case the accusation should be false; till this
+solemnity was gone through, no pursuit was instituted against the offender.
+There was scarcely ever an instance of a false accusation, for it was well
+known that no power could screen the delator from the exemplary punishment
+that awaited him; and there were no means of escaping from the omniscience
+and omnipotence of the secret tribunal.
+
+To return to Godesberg, it is a most beautiful spot and much agreeable
+society is here to be met with. The families of distinction of the
+environing country come here for the purpose of recreation and drinking the
+mineral waters. We sit down usually sixty to dinner, and I observe some
+very fine women among them. On Sunday there is a ball at the ridotto. The
+promenades in the environs are exceedingly romantic, and this place is the
+favourite resort of many new married couples who come here to pass the
+honeymoon. The scenery of the surrounding country is so picturesque and
+beautiful as to require the pencil of an Ariosto or Wieland to do justice
+to it:
+
+ Ne se tutto cercato avessi il mondo
+ Vedria di questo un pin gen til paese.[24]
+
+ And, had he ranged the universal world,
+ Would not have seen a lovelier in his round.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+To the researches of the naturalist and mineralogist the Seven Mountains
+offer inexhaustible resources. The living and accommodation of the three
+hotels are very reasonable. For one and a half florins you have an
+excellent and plentiful dinner at the table d'hôte, including a bottle of
+Moselle wine and Seltzer water at discretion; by paying extra you can have
+the Rhine wines of different growths and crops and French wines of all
+sorts.
+
+I am much pleased with the little I have seen of the German women. They
+appear to be extremely well educated. I observe many of them in their
+morning walks with a book in their hand either of poetry or a novel.
+Schiller is the favourite poet among them and Augustus Lafontaine the
+favourite novel writer.[25] He is a very agreeable author were he not so
+prolix; yet we English have no right to complain of this fault, since there
+is no novel in all Germany to compare in point of prolixity with Clarissa,
+Sit Charles Grandison, or Tom Jones. The great fault of Augustus Lafontaine
+is that of including in one novel the history of two or three generations.
+A beautiful and very interesting tale of his, however, is entirely free
+from this defect and is founded on a fact. It is called _Dankbarkeit und
+Liebe_ (Gratitude and Love). There is more real pathos in this novelette
+than in the _Nouvelle Héloïse_ of Rousseau.
+
+
+EHRENBREITSTEIN, 8 July.
+
+After a _sèjour_ of three days at Godesberg, we left that delightful
+residence and proceeded to Neuwied to deposit the boys. We stopped,
+however, for an hour or two at Andernach, which is situated in a beautiful
+valley on the left bank. We viewed the remains of the palace of the Kings
+of Austrasia and the church where the body of the Emperor Valentinian is
+preserved embalmed.
+
+Andernach is remarkable for being the exact spot where Julius Caesar first
+crossed the Rhine to make war on the German nations. Directly opposite
+Neuwied, which is on the right bank, stands close to the village of
+Weissenthurm the monument erected to the French General Hoche. We crossed
+over to Neuwied in a boat. Neuwied is a regular, well-built town, but
+rather of a sombre melancholy appearance and is only remarkable for its
+university. Science could not chuse a more tranquil abode. This University
+has been ameliorated lately by its present sovereign the King of Prussia.
+It was not the interest of Napoleon to favour any establishment on the
+right bank at the expence of those on the left, the former being out of his
+territory. At Neuwied I took leave of my agreeable fellow travellers, as
+they intended to remain there and I to go on to Ehrenbreitstein. An
+opportunity presented itself the same afternoon of which I profited. I met
+with an Austrian Captain of Infantry and his lady at the inn where I
+stopped who were going to Ehrenbreitstein in their _calèche_, and they were
+so kind as to offer me a place in it. I found them both extremely
+agreeable; both were from Austria proper. He had left the Austrian service
+some time ago and had since entered into the Russian service; from that he
+was lately transferred, together with the battalion to which he belonged,
+into the service of Prussia and placed on the retired list of the latter
+with a very small pension. He did not seem at all satisfied with this
+arrangement. He had served in several campaigns against the French in
+Germany, Italy and France, and was well conversant in French and Italian
+litterature.
+
+We stopped _en passant_ at a _maison de plaisance_ and superb English
+garden belonging to the Duke of Nassau-Weilburg. The house is in the style
+of a cottage _orné_, but very roomy and tastefully fitted up; but nothing
+can be more diversified and picturesque than the manner in which the garden
+is laid out. The ground being much broken favours this; and in one part of
+it is a ravine or valley so romantic and savage, that you would fancy
+yourself in Tinian or Juan Fernandez. We arrived late in the evening in the
+Thal Ehrenbreitstein, which lies at the foot of the gigantic hill fortress
+of that name, which frowns over it and seems as if it threatened to fall
+and crush it. My friends landed me at the inn _Zum weissen Pferd_ (the
+White Horse), where there is most excellent accommodation. Just opposite
+Ehrenbreitstein, on the left bank, is Coblentz; a superb flying bridge,
+which passes in three minutes, keeps up the communication between the two
+towns.
+
+Early the next morning, I ascended the stupendous rock of Ehrenbreitstein,
+which has a great resemblance to the hill forts in India, such as Gooty,
+Nundydroog, etc. It is a place of immense natural strength, but the
+fortifications were destroyed by the French, who did not chuse to have so
+formidable a neighbour so close to their frontier, as the Rhine then was.
+The Prussian Government, however, to whom it now belongs, seem too fully
+aware of its importance not to reconstruct the fortifications with as
+little delay as possible. Ehrenbreitstein completely commands all the
+adjacent country and enfilades the embouchure of the Moselle which flows
+into the Rhine at Coblentz, where there is an elegant stone bridge across
+the Moselle. Troops without intermission continue to pass over the flying
+bridge bound to France, from the different German states, viz., Saxons,
+Hessians, Prussians, etc., so that one might apply to this scene Anna
+Comnena's expression relative to the Crusades, and say that all Germany is
+torn up from its foundation and precipitated upon France. I suppose no less
+than 70,000 men have passed within these few days. The German papers,
+particularly the _Rheinische Mercur_, continue to fulminate against France
+and the war yell resounds with as much fury as ever. From the number of
+troops that continue to pass it would seem as if the Allies did not mean to
+content themselves with the abdication of Napoleon, but will endeavour to
+dismember France. The Prussian officers seem to speak very confidently that
+Alsace and Lorraine will be severed from France and reunited to the
+Germanic body, to which, they say, every country ought to belong where the
+German language is spoken, and they are continually citing the words of an
+old song:
+
+
+ Wo ist das deutsche Vaterland?....
+ Wo man die deutsche Zunge spricht,
+ Da ist das deutsche Vaterland.[26]
+
+In English: "Where is the country of the Germans? Where the German language
+is spoken, there is the country of the Germans!"
+
+Coblentz is a clean handsome city, but there is nothing very remarkable in
+it except a fine and spacious "Place." But in the neighbourhood stands the
+_Chartreuse_, situated on an eminence commanding a fine view of the whole
+_Thalweg_. This _Chartreuse_ is one English mile distant from the town and
+my friend the Austrian Captain had the goodness to conduct me thither. It
+is a fine large building, but is falling rapidly to decay, being
+appropriated to no purpose whatever. The country is beautiful in the
+environs of this place, and has repeatedly called forth the admiration and
+delight of all travellers. Near Coblentz is the monument erected to the
+French General Marceau, who fell gloriously fighting for the cause of
+liberty, respected by friend and foe.
+
+
+July 10th.
+
+We had a large society this day at the table d'hôte. The conversation
+turned on the restoration of the Bourbons, which nobody at table seemed to
+desire. Several anecdotes were related of the conduct of the Bourbon
+princes and of the emigration, who held their court at Coblentz when they
+first emigrated; these anecdotes did not redound much to their honor or
+credit, and I remark that they are held in great disgust and abhorrence by
+the inhabitants of these towns, on account of their treacherous and
+unprincipled conduct. It was from here that "La Cour de Coblentz," as it
+was called, intrigued by turns with the Jacobins and the Brissotins and, by
+betraying the latter to the former, were in part the cause of the
+sanguinary measures adopted by Robespierre.[27] The object of this
+atrocious policy was that the French people would, by witnessing so many
+executions, become disgusted at the sanguinary tyranny of Robespierre and
+recall the Bourbons unconditionally; which, fortunately for France and
+thanks to the heroism and bravery of the republican armies, did not take
+place; for had the restoration taken place at that time, a dreadful
+reaction would have been encouraged and the cruelties of the reign of
+Terror surpassed. With the same view, emissaries were dispatched from the
+Court of Coblentz to the South of France in order, under the disguise of
+patriots, to preach up the most exaggerated corollaries to the theories of
+liberty and equality.
+
+Among other things at Ehrenbreitstein is a superb pleasure barge belonging
+to the Dukes of Nassau for water excursions up and down the Rhine. A _coche
+d'eau_ starts from here daily to Mayence and another to Cologne. The price
+is ten franks the person. The superb _chaussée on_ the left bank of the
+Rhine, which extends all the way from Cologne to Mayence, was constructed
+by the direction of Napoleon. In the evening I went to the theatre at
+Coblentz, where Mozart's opera of Don Giovanni was represented. I
+recollected my old acquaintance "La ci darem la mano," which I had often
+heard in England.
+
+
+MAYENCE, 12th July.
+
+I embarked in the afternoon of the 11th in the _coche d'eau_ bound to
+Mayence. Except an old "Schiffer," I was the only passenger on board, as
+few chuse to go up stream on account of the delay. I, however, being master
+of my own time, and wishing to view the lovely scenery on the banks of the
+river, preferred this conveyance, and I was highly gratified. After
+Boppart, the bed of the river narrows much. High rocks on each bank hem in
+the stream and render it more rapid. Nothing can be more sublime and
+magnificent than the scenery; at every turn of the river you would suppose
+its course blocked up by rocks, perceiving no visible outlet. Remains of
+Gothic castles are to be seen on their summits at a short distance from
+each other, and where the banks are not abrupt and _escarpés_ there are
+_coteaux_ covered with vines down to the water's edge. The tolling of the
+bells at the different villages on the banks gives a most aweful solemn
+religious sound, and the reverberation is prolonged by the high rocks,
+which seem to shut you out from the rest of the world. There are the walls
+nearly entire of two castles of the Middle Ages, the one called "Die Katze"
+(the cat); the other "Die Maus" (the Mouse); each has its tradition, for
+which and for many other interesting particulars I refer you to Klebe's and
+Schreiber's description of the banks of the Rhine.
+
+We arrived early in the evening at St Goar, where we stopped and slept. St
+Goar is a fine old Gothic town, romantically situated, and is famous from
+having two whirlpools in its neighbourhood. It is completely commanded and
+protected by Rheinfels, an ancient hill fortress, but the fortification of
+which no longer exist. It requires half an hour's walk to ascend to the
+summit of Rheinfels, but the traveller is well repaid for the fatigue of
+the ascent by the fine view enjoyed from the top. I remained at Rheinfels
+nearly an hour. What a solemn stillness seems to pervade this part of the
+river, only interrupted by the occasional splash of the oar, and the
+tolling of the steeple bell! Bingen on the right bank is the next place of
+interest, and on an island in the centre of the river facing Bingen stand
+the ruins of a celebrated tower call'd the "Maüsethurm" (mouse tower), so
+named from the circumstance of Bishop Hatto having been devoured therein by
+rats according to the tradition. This was represented as a punishment from
+Heaven on the said bishop for his tyranny and oppression towards the poor;
+but the story was invented by the monks in order to vilify his memory, for
+it appears he was obnoxious to them on account of his attempts to enforce a
+rigid discipline among them and to check their licentiousness.
+
+Bieberich, a superb palace belonging to the Dukes of Nassau on the right
+bank, next presents itself to view on your left ascending; to your right,
+at a short distance from Bieberich, you catch the first view of Mayence on
+the left bank, with its towers and steeples rising from the glade. We
+reached Mayence at 4 o'clock p.m., and I went to put up at the three Crowns
+(_Drei-Kronen_). The first news I learned on arriving at Mayence was that
+Napoleon had surrendered himself to the Captain of an English frigate at
+Oléron; but though particulars are not given, Louis XVIII is said to be
+restored, which I am very sorry to hear. The Allies then have been guilty
+of the most scandalous infraction of their most solemn promise, since they
+declared that they made war on Napoleon alone and that they never meant to
+dictate to the French people the form of government they were to adopt.
+Napoleon having surrendered and Louis being restored, the war may be
+considered as ended for the present, unless the Allies should attempt to
+wrest any provinces from France, and in this case there is no saying what
+may happen. This has finally ended the career of Napoleon.
+
+There is in Mayence a remarkably fine broad spacious street called "die
+grosse Bleiche" and in general the buildings are striking and solid, but
+too much crowded together as is the case in all ancient fortified cities.
+The Cathedral is well worth seeing and contains many things of value and
+costly relics. When one views the things of value in the churches here, at
+Aix-la-Chapelle and at Cologne, what a contradiction does it give to the
+calumnies spread against the French republicans that they plundered the
+churches of the towns they occupied! There is an agreeable promenade lined
+with trees on the banks of the river called _L'Allée du Rhin._ Mayence is
+strongly fortified and has besides a citadel (a pentagon) of great
+strength, which is separated from the town by an esplanade. The _Place du
+Marché_ is striking and in the _Place Verte_ I saw for the first time in my
+life the Austrian uniform, there being an Austrian garrison as well as
+troops belonging to the other Germanic states, such as Prussians,
+Bavarians, Saxons, Hessians, and troops of the Duchy of Berg. This City
+belongs to the Germanic Confederation and is to be always occupied by a
+mixed garrison. The Archduke Charles has his head-quarters here at present.
+I attended an inspection of a battalion of Berg troops on the _Place
+Verte_; they had a very military appearance and went thro' their manoeuvres
+with great precision. From the top of the steeple of the Church of Sanct
+Stephen you have a fine view of the whole Rheingau. Opposite to Mayence, on
+the right bank, communicating by an immensely long bridge of boats, is the
+small town and fort of Castel, which forms a sort of _tête-de-pont_ to
+Mayence. The works of Castel take in flank and enfilade the embouchure of
+the river Mayn which flows into the Rhine. One of the redoubts of Castel is
+called the redoubt of Montebello, thus named after Marshal Lannes, Duke of
+Montebello.
+
+The German papers continue their invectives against France. In one of them
+I read a patriotic song recommending the youth of Germany to go into France
+to revenge themselves, to drink the wine and live at the cost of the
+inhabitants, and then is about to recommend their making love to the wives
+and daughters of the French, when a sudden flash of patriotism comes across
+him, and he says: "No! for that a German warrior makes love to German girls
+and German women only!" (_Und küsst nur Deutsche Mädchen._) With regard to
+the women here, those that I have hitherto met with, and those I saw at
+Ehrenbreitstein, were exceedingly handsome, so that the German warriors, if
+love is their object, will do well to remain here, as they may go further
+and fare worse, for I understand the women of Lorraine and Champagne are
+not very striking for personal beauty. There were some good paintings in
+the picture gallery here and this and the fortifications are nearly all
+that need call forth the attention of a traveller who makes but a fleeting
+visit.
+
+
+FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MAYN, 14th July.
+
+I arrived here the day before yesterday in the diligence from Mayence, the
+price of which is two and a half florins the person, and the distance
+twenty-five English miles; there is likewise a water conveyance by the Mayn
+for half the money. The road runs thro' the village of Hockheim, which in
+England gives the name of _Hock_ to all the wines of Rhenish growth. The
+country is undulating in gentle declivities and vales and is highly
+cultivated in vines and corn. I put up here at the _Hotel Zum Schwan_ (The
+Swan), which is a very large and spacious hotel and has excellent
+accommodation. There is a very excellent table d'hôte at one o'clock at
+this hotel, for which the price is one and a half florins the person,
+including a pint of Moselle wine and a _krug_ or jar of Seltzer water.
+About four or five o'clock in the afternoon it is the fashion to come and
+drink old Rhine wine _à l'Anglaise_. That sort called _Rudesheimer_ I
+recommend as delicious. There is also a very pleasant wine called the
+_Ingelheimer_, which is in fact the "red Hock." At one of these afternoon
+meetings a gentleman who had just returned from Paris related to us some
+anecdotes of what passed at the Conference between the French commissioners
+who were sent after the abdication of Napoleon, by the provisional
+government, to treat with the Allies; in which it appeared that the British
+commissioner, Lord S[tewart],[28] brother to the Secretary of State for
+Foreign Affairs, made rather a simple figure by his want of historical
+knowledge or recollection. He began, it seems, in rather a bullying manner,
+in the presence of the commissioners, to declaim against what he called the
+perfidy and mutiny of the French army against their lawful Sovereign; when
+the venerable Lafayette, who was one of the commissioners and who is ever
+foremost when his country has need of his assistance, remarked to him that
+the English revolution in 1688, which the English were accustomed always to
+stile glorious, and which he (Lafayette) stiled glorious also, was
+effectuated in a similar manner by the British army abandoning King James
+and ranging themselves under the standard of the Prince of Orange; that if
+it was a crime on the part of the French army to join Napoleon, their
+ancient leader who had led them so often to victory, it was a still greater
+crime on the part of the English army to go over to the Prince of Orange
+who was unknown to them and a foreigner in the bargain; and that therefore
+this blame of the French army, coming from the mouth of an Englishman,
+surprised him, the more so as the Duke of Marlborough, the boast and pride
+of the English, set the example of defection from his Sovereign, who had
+been his greatest benefactor. Lord S[tewart], who did not appear to be at
+all conscious of this part of our history, was staggered, a smile was
+visible on the countenances of all the foreign diplomatists assembled
+there, and Lord S[tewart], to hide his confusion, and with an ill-disguised
+anger, turned to Lafayette and said that the Allies would not treat until
+Napoleon should be delivered to them. "Je m'étonne, my lord, qu'en faisant
+une proposition si infâme et si deshonorante, vous vous plaisez de vous
+adresser au prisonnier d'Olmütz," was the dignified answer of that virtuous
+patriot and ever ardent veteran of liberty.[29]
+
+The main street in Frankfort called the _Zeil_ is very broad and spacious,
+and can boast of a number of splendid houses belonging to individuals,
+particularly the house of Schweitzer[30]; and on the Quai, on the banks of
+the Mayn, there is a noble range of buildings. The bridge across the Mayn
+is very fine and on the other side of the river is the suburb of
+Sachsenhansen, which is famous for being the head-quarters of the
+priestesses of the Venus vulgivaga who abound in this city. There are in
+Frankfort an immense number of Jews, who have a quarter of the city
+allotted to them. The gardens that environ the town are very tastefully
+laid out, and serve as the favourite promenade of the _beau monde_ of
+Frankfort. The Cathedral will always be a place of interest as the temple
+wherein in later times the German Caesars were crowned and inaugurated. At
+the _Hôtel de Ville_ called the _Römer_, which is an ugly Gothic building,
+but interesting from its being in this edifice that the Emperors were
+chosen, is to be seen the celebrated Golden Bull which is written on
+parchment in the Latin language with a golden seal attached to it. In the
+Hall where the Electors used to sit on the election of an Emperor of the
+Romans, are to be seen the portraits of several of the Emperors, and a very
+striking one in particular of the Emperor Joseph II, in full length, in his
+Imperial robes. There is no table d'hôte at the _Swan_ for supper, but this
+meal is served up _à la carte_, which is very convenient for those who do
+not require copious meals. At the same table with me at supper sat a very
+agreeable man with whom I entered into conversation. He was a Hessian and
+had served in a Hessian battalion in the English service during the
+American war. He was so kind as to procure me admission to the Casino at
+the Hotel Rumpf,[31] where there is a literary institution and where they
+receive newspapers, pamphlets and reviews in the German, French, English
+and Italian languages. In Frankfort there are several houses of individuals
+which merit the name of palaces, and there is a great display of opulence
+and industry in this city. In the environs there is abundance of _maisons
+de plaisance_. For commerce it is the most bustling city (inland) in all
+Germany, besides it being the seat of the present German Diet; and from
+here, as from a centre, diverge the high roads to all parts of the Empire.
+
+I have been once at the theatre, which is very near the _Swan_. A German
+opera, the scene whereof was in India, was given. The scenery and
+decorations were good, appropriate, and the singing very fair. The theatre
+itself is dirty and gloomy. The German language appears to me to be better
+adapted to music than either the French or English. The number of dactylic
+terminations in the language give to it all the variety that the
+_sdruccioli_ give to the Italian. As to poetry, no language in the world
+suits itself better to all the vagaries and phantasies of the Muse, since
+it possesses so much natural rythm and allows, like the Greek, the
+combination of compound words and a redundancy of epithets, and it is
+besides so flexible that it lends itself to all the ancient as well as the
+modern metres with complete success: indeed it is the only modern language
+that I know of which does so.
+
+As for political opinions here, the Germans seem neither to wish nor to
+care about the restoration of the Bourbons; but they talk loudly of the
+necessity of tearing Alsace and Lorraine from France. In fact, they wish to
+put it out of the power of the French ever to invade Germany again; a thing
+however little to be hoped for. For the minor and weaker Germanic states
+have always hitherto (and will probably again at some future day) invoked
+the assistance of France against the greater and stronger. I observe that
+the Austrian Government is not at all popular here, and that its bad faith
+in financial matters is so notorious and has been so severely felt here,
+that a merchant told me, alluding to the bankruptcy of the Austrian
+Government on two occasions when there was no absolute necessity for the
+measure, that Frankfort had suffered more from the bad faith of the
+Austrian Government than from all the war contributions levied by the
+French.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, 28th July.
+
+On arrival at Coblentz we heard that Napoleon had surrendered himself
+unconditionally to Capt. Maitland of the _Bellerophon_. He never should
+have humiliated himself so far as to surrender himself to the British
+ministry. He owed to himself, to his brave fellow soldiers, to the French
+nation whose Sovereign he had been, not to take such a step, but rather die
+in the field like our Richard III, a glorious death which cast a lustre
+around his memory in spite of the darker shades of his character; or if he
+could not fall in the field, he should have died like Hannibal, rather than
+commit himself into the hands of a government in which generosity is by no
+means a distinguishing feature, and which on many occasions has shown a
+petty persecuting and vindictive spirit, and thus I have no hesitation in
+portraying the characteristics of our Tory party, which, unfortunately for
+the cause of liberty, rules with undivided sway over England. He will now
+end his days in captivity, for his destination appears to be already fixed,
+and St Helena is named as the intended residence; he will, I say, be
+exposed to all the taunts and persecutions that petty malice can suggest;
+and this with the most uncomfortable reflections: for had he been more
+considerate of the spirit of the age, he might have set all the Monarchs,
+Ultras and Oligarchs and their ministers at defiance. But he wished to ape
+Charlemagne and the Caesars and to establish an universal Empire: a thing
+totally impossible in our days and much to be deprecated were it possible.
+
+Consigned to St Helena, Napoleon will furnish to posterity a proverb like
+that of Dionysius at Corinth. This banishment to St Helena will be very
+ungenerous and unjust on the part of the English Government, but I suppose
+their satellites and adherents will term it an act of clemency, and some
+_Church and Kingmen_ would no doubt recommend hewing him in pieces, as
+Samuel did to Agag.
+
+I stopped three days at Aix-la-Chapelle to drink the waters and then came
+straight to this place stopping half a day in Liége. I shall start for
+Paris in a couple of days, as the communication is now open and the public
+conveyances re-established. My passport is _visé_ in the following terms:
+"Bon pour aller à Paris en suivant la route des armées alliées." I am quite
+impatient to visit that celebrated city.
+
+
+[18] Philipp Klingmann (1762-1824) was better known as an actor than as an
+ author.--ED.
+
+[19] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, VII, 12, 1.--ED.
+
+[20] "What business have you? None, I travel for amusement. Strange! What
+ is there strange in travelling to see a fine country?"
+
+[21] _Le Compère Mathieu_, a satirical novel by the Abbé Henri Joseph
+ Dulaurens, published 1765 and sometimes (though wrongly) attributed to
+ Voltaire. One of the prominent talkers in the dialogues is Père Jean
+ de Domfront.--ED.
+
+[22] Horace, _Epist_., I, i, 15.--ED.
+
+[23] This altar, inscribed _Deae Victoriae Sacrum (Corpus inscr. lat_.
+ XIII, 8252), was erected by the Roman fleet on the Rhine at the place
+ now called _Altsburg_ near Cologne and, after its discovery, taken to
+ Bonn, where it was set up on the _Remigius-Platz_ (now called
+ _Roemer-Platz_) on Dec, 3, 1809. It is now in the Provincial
+ Museum.--ED.
+
+[24] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, vi, 20, 3.--ED.
+
+[25] August Lafontaine (1758-1831), born in Brunswick of a family of French
+ protestants, was the very prolific and now quite forgotten author of
+ many novels and novelettes.--ED.
+
+[26] From Ernst Moritz Arndt's (1779-1860) celebrated poem, _Des Deutschen
+ Vaterland_.--ED.
+
+[27] There seems to be much truth in this opinion, though the question of
+ the intrigues of Louis XVIII with Robespierre is still shrouded in
+ obscurity. Some pages of General Thiébault's memoirs might have
+ cleared it up, but they have been torn out from the manuscript
+ (_Mémoires du Général Baron Thiébault_, vol. I, p. 273). Louis XVIII
+ paid a pension to Robespierre's sister, Charlotte.--ED.
+
+[28] Sir Charles Stewart, created Lord Stewart In 1814; he was a
+ half-brother of Lord Castlereagh.--ED.
+
+[29] The same story is given, with slight differences, by Lafayette himself
+ (_Mémoires_, vol. V, p. 472-3; Paris and Leipzig, 1838). See also
+ _Souvenirs historiques et parlementaires du Comte de Pontécoulant_,
+ vol. III, p. 428 (Paris, 1863). Major Frye's narrative is by far the
+ oldest and seems the most trustworthy.--ED.
+
+[30] The house in question was built about 1780 by Nicolas de Pigage for
+ the rich merchant, Franz von Schweizer; Pigage was the son of the
+ architect of King Stanislas at Nancy. The Schweizer palace became
+ later on the _Hôtel de Russie_ and was demolished about 1890, the
+ Imperial Post Office having been erected in its place. The Schweizer
+ family is now extinct.--ED.
+
+[31] A _Casinogesellschaft_, still in existence (1908), was founded at
+ Frankfort in 1805, with the object of uniting the aristocratic
+ elements of the city, admittance being freely allowed to distinguished
+ strangers, in particular to the envoys of the _Bundestag_. The
+ _Gesellschaft_ or club occupied spacious rooms in the house of the
+ once famous _tapissier_ and decorator Major Rumpf, grandfather of the
+ German sculptor of the same name. That building, situated at the
+ corner of the _Rossmarkt_, was demolished about 1880.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+From Bruxelles to Paris--Restoration of Louis XVIII--The officers of the
+allied armies--The Palais Royal--The Louvre--Protest of the author against
+the proposed despoiling of the French Museums--Unjust strictures against
+Napoleon's military policy--The _cant_ about revolutionary robberies--The
+Grand Opera--Monuments in Paris--The Champs Elysées--Saint-Cloud--The Hôtel
+des Invalides--The Luxembourg--General Labédoyère--Priests and
+emigrants--Prussian Plunder--Handsome behaviour of the English officers--
+Reminiscences of Eton--Versailles.
+
+
+PARIS, August 3rd.
+
+Here I am in Paris. I left Bruxelles the 29th July, stopped one night at
+Mons and passing thro' Valenciennes, Péronne and St Quentin arrived here on
+the third day. The villages and towns on the road had been pretty well
+stripped of eatables by the Allied army, as well as by the French, so that
+we did not meet with the best fare. In every village the white flag was
+displayed by way of propitiating the clemency of the Allies and averting
+plunder.
+
+
+August 7th.
+
+I have put up at the _Hôtel de Cahors_, Rue de Richelieu, where I pay five
+francs per diem for a single room; such is the dearness of lodgings at this
+moment. It is well furnished, however, with sofas, commodes, mirrors and a
+handsome clock and is very spacious withal, there being an alcove for the
+bed. This situation is extremely convenient, being close to the Palais
+Royal, Rue St Honoré, Théâtre Français, Louvre and the Tuileries on one
+side, and to the Grand Opera, the Théâtre Feydeau, the Italian Opera and
+the Boulevards on the other. The National Library is not many yards distant
+from my hotel, and a few yards from that _en face_ is the Grand Opera house
+or _Académie Royale de Musique_.
+
+This city is filled with officers and travellers of all kinds who have
+followed the army. The House of Legislature of the Hundred Days,--as it is
+the fashion to style Napoleon's last reign--dissolved themselves on the
+demand of a million of francs as a war contribution made by Marshall
+Blucher. Louis XVIII has been hustled into Paris, and now occupies the
+throne of his ancestors under the protection of a million of foreign
+bayonets, and the _bannière des Lis_ has replaced the tricolor on the
+castle of the Tuileries. A detachment of the British army occupies
+Montmartre, where the British flag is flying, and in the Champs Elysées and
+Bois de Boulogne are encamped several brigades of English and Hanoverians.
+The Sovereigns of Russia, Austria and Prussia are expected and then it is
+said that the fate of France will be decided. The Army of the Loire has at
+length made its submission to the King, after stipulating but in vain for
+the beloved tricolor. Report says it is to be immediately dissolved and a
+new army raised with more legitimate inclinations. Should the King accede
+to this, France will be completely disarmed and at the mercy of the Allies,
+and the King himself a state prisoner. The entrance into Paris, thro' the
+Faubourg St Denis, does not give to the stranger who arrives there for the
+first time a great idea of the magnificence of Paris; he should enter by
+the Avenue de Neuilly or by the Porte St Antoine, both of which are very
+striking and superb.
+
+Now you must not expect that I shall or can give you a description of all
+the fine things that I have seen or am about to see, for they have been so
+often described before that it would be a perfect waste of time, and I can
+do better in referring you at once to the _Guide des Voyageurs à Paris_; so
+that I shall content myself with merely indicating these objects which make
+the most impression on me.
+
+My first visit was, as you will have no doubt guessed, to the Palais Royal:
+there I breakfasted, there I dined, and there I passed the whole day
+without the least _ennui_. It is a world in itself. It swarms at present
+with officers of the Allied army. The variety of uniforms adds to the
+splendour and novelty of the scene. The restaurants and cafés are filled
+with them. The Palais Royal is certainly the temple of animal
+gratification, the paradise of gastronomes. The officers are indulging in
+all sorts of luxury, revelling in Champaign and Burgundy, in all the
+pleasures of the belly, as well as _in iis quae sub ventre sunt_. 'Twill be
+a famous harvest for the restaurateurs and for the Cyprians who parade up
+and down the Arcades, sure of a constant succession of suitors. In fact,
+whatever be the taste of a man, whether sensual or intellectual or both, he
+can gratify himself here without moving out of the precincts of the Palais
+Royal. Here are cafés, restaurants, shops of all kinds whose display of
+clocks, jewellery, stuffs, silks, merchandize from all parts of the world,
+is most brilliant and dazzling; here you find reading-rooms where
+newspapers, reviews and pamphlets of all tongues, nations and languages are
+to be met with; here are museums of paintings, statues, plans in relief,
+cosmoramas; here are libraries, gaming houses, houses of fair reception;
+cellars where music, dancing and all kinds of orgies are carried on;
+exhibitions of all sorts, learned pigs, dancing dogs, military canary
+birds, hermaphrodites, giants, dwarf jugglers from Hindostan, catawbas from
+America, serpents from Java, and crocodiles from the Nile. Here, so
+Kotzebue has calculated, you may go through all the functions of life in
+one day and end it afterwards should you be so inclined. You may eat,
+drink, sleep, bathe, go to the _Cabinet d'aisance_, walk, read, make love,
+game and, should you be tired of life, you may buy powder and ball or opium
+to hasten your journey across Styx; or should you desire a more classic
+_exit_, you may die like Seneca opening your veins in a bath. Deep play
+goes forward day and night, and I verily believe there are some persons in
+Paris who never quit these precincts. The restaurants and cafés are most
+brilliantly fitted up. One, _Le Café des Mille Colonnes_, so called from
+the reflection of the columns in the mirrors with which the wainscoat is
+lined, boasts of a _limonadière_ of great beauty. She is certainly a fine
+woman, dresses very well, as indeed most French women do, and has a
+remarkably fine turned arm which she takes care to display on all
+occasions. I do not, however, perceive much animation in her; she always
+appears the same, nor has she made any more impression on me--tho' I am of
+a very susceptible nature in this particular--than a fine statue or picture
+would do. There she sits on a throne and receives the hommage and
+compliments of most of the visitors and the money of all, which seems to
+please her most, for she receives the compliments which are paid her with
+the utmost _sang-froid_ and indifference, and the money she takes especial
+care to count. English troops, conjointly with the National Guard, do duty
+at the entrance of the Palais Royal from the Rue St Honoré; and it became
+necessary to have a strong guard to keep the peace, as frequent disputes
+take place between the young men of the Capital and the Prussian officers,
+against whom the French are singularly inveterate.
+
+The French, when left to themselves, are very peaceable in their pleasures
+and the utmost public decorum is observed; their sobriety contributes much
+to this; but if there were in London an establishment similar to that of
+the Palais Royal, it would become a perfect pandemonium and would require
+an army to keep the peace. The French police keep a very sharp look-out on
+all political offences, but are more indulgent towards all moral ones, as
+long as public decorum is not infringed, and then it is severely punished.
+But they have none of that censoriousness or prying spirit in France which
+is so common in England to hunt out and criticise the private vices of
+their neighbours, which, in my opinion, does not proceed from any real
+regard for virtue, but from a fanatical, jealous, envious, and malignant
+spirit. Those vice-hunters never have the courage to attack a man of wealth
+and power; but a poor artisan or labourer, who buys a piece of meat after
+twelve o'clock on Saturday night, or a glass of spirits during church-time
+on Sunday, is termed a Sabbath-breaker and imprisoned without mercy.
+
+In the Palais Royal the three most remarkable temples of dissipation are
+Very's for gastronomes, Robert's faro bank for gamesters, and the Café
+Montausier for those devoted to the fair sex. The Café Montausier is fitted
+up in the guise of a theatre where music, singing and theatrical pieces are
+given; you pay nothing for admission, but are expected to call for some
+refreshment. It is splendidly illuminated, and is the Café _par
+excellence_, frequented by those ladies who have made the opposite choice
+to that of Hercules, and who, taking into consideration the shortness and
+uncertainty of life, dedicate it entirely to pleasure, reflecting that
+
+ Laggiù nell' Inferno,
+ Nell' obblio sempiterno,
+ In sempiterno orrore,
+ Non si parla d'amore.
+
+Of course, this saloon is crowded with amateurs, and the Prussians and
+English are not the least ardent votaries of the Goddess of Paphos; many a
+vanquished victor sinks oppressed with wine and love on the breast of a
+Dalilah: this last comparison suggests itself to me from the immense
+quantity of hair worn by the Prussians, as if their strength, like that of
+Samson's, depended on their _chevelure_. There is a very pretty graceful
+girl who attends here and at the different restaurants and cafés with an
+assortment of bijouterie and other knick-knacks to sell. She is full of wit
+and repartee; but her answer to all those who attempt to squeeze her hand
+and make love to her is always: "_Achetez quelque chose._" Her name is
+Céline and she has a great flow of conversation on all subjects but that of
+love, which she invariably cuts short by "_Achetez quelque chose._"
+
+
+
+10th August.
+
+I have been to see the Museum of sculpture and painting in the Louvre, but
+what is to be seen there baffles all description:
+
+ Se tante lingue avessi e tante voci
+ Quanti occhi il cielo o quante arene il mare
+ Non basterian a dir le lodi immense.
+
+The _Apollo Belvedere_, the _Venus de Medici_ and the _Laocoon_ first
+claimed my attention, and engaged me for at least an hour and a half before
+I could direct my attention to the other masterpieces. I admire indeed the
+_Laocoon_, still more the _Venus_, but the _Apollo_ certainly bears away
+the palm and I fully participate of all Winkelmann's enthusiasm for that
+celebrated statue. The _Venus_ is a very beautiful woman, but the _Apollo_
+is a god. One is lost, and one's imagination is bewildered when one enters
+into the halls of sculpture of this unparalleled collection, amidst the
+statues of Gods, Demi-Gods, Heroes, Philosophers, Poets, Roman Emperors,
+Statesmen and all the illustrious worthies that adorned the Greek and Roman
+page. What subjects for contemplation! A chill of awe and veneration
+pervaded my whole frame when I first entered into that glorious temple of
+the Arts. I felt as I should were I admitted among supernatural beings, or
+as if I had "shuffled off this mortal coil" and were suddenly ushered into
+the presence of the illustrious tenants of another world; in fact, I felt
+as if Olympus and the whole Court of Immortals were open to my view. No! I
+cannot describe these things, I can only feel them; I throw down the pen
+and call upon expressive silence to muse their praise.
+
+Of the Picture Gallery too what can I say that can possibly give you an
+idea of its variety and extent? Here are the finest works of the Italian,
+Flemish, and French schools, and you are as much embarrassed to single out
+the favourite object, as the Grand Signor would be, among six or seven
+hundred of the most beautiful women in the world, to make his choice. The
+only fault I find in this collection is that there were rather too many
+Scripture pieces, Crucifixions, Martyrdoms and allegorical pictures, and
+too few from historical or mythological subjects. Yet perhaps I am wrong in
+classing the Scripture pieces with Martyrdoms, Crucifixions, Grillings of
+Saints and Madonnas; there are very many beautiful episodes in the
+Scriptures which would furnish admirable subjects for painters. Why then
+have they chosen disgusting subjects such as Judith sawing off Holofernes'
+head, Siserah's head nailed to the bedpost, John the Baptist's on a
+trencher, etc.? But the pictures representing Martyrdoms are too revolting
+to the eye and should not be placed in this Museum.
+
+It is reported that the Allies mean to strip this Museum [of sculpture and
+painting]. No! it cannot be, they never surely can be guilty of such an act
+of Vandalism and contemptible spite. I am aware that there is a great
+clamour amongst a certain description of English for restoring these
+statues and pictures to the countries from whence they came, and that it is
+the fashion to term the translation of them to Paris a revolutionary
+robbery; but let us bring these gentlemen to a calm reasoning on the
+subject.
+
+The statues and paintings in question belonged either to Governments at war
+with France, or to individuals inhabiting those countries; now, with
+respect to individuals, I will venture to affirm, on the best authority,
+that the property of no individual was taken from him without an
+equivalent. Those who had statues and pictures of value and wished to sell
+them, received their full value from the French Government, but there was
+no force used on the occasion; in fact, many who were in want of money were
+rejoiced at the opportunity of selling, as they could never have otherwise
+disposed of those valuable articles to individuals at the same price that
+the French Government gave. I recollect a day or two ago being in
+conversation with a Milanese on this subject and others connected with the
+occupation of Italy by the French. I happened to mention that the conquest
+of Italy by the Republican armies must have been attended with confiscation
+of property; he assured me that no such thing as confiscation of property
+took place; that so far from being the losers by the French invasion and
+the establishment of their system, they had on the contrary been
+considerable gainers, for that the country flourished under their
+domination in a manner before unknown, and that one of the greatest
+advantages attendant on the occupation was the establishment of an equality
+of weight and measures, the decimal division of the coin, the introduction
+of an admirable code of laws free'd from all barbarisms--legal, political
+and theological--and intelligible to all classes, so that there was no
+occasion to cite old authors and go back for three or four hundred years to
+hunt out authorities and precedents for what men of sense could determine
+at once by following the dictates of their own judgment.
+
+With respect to the statues and pictures belonging to the different
+governments of Italy, it must never be forgotten that these governments
+made war against the French Revolution either openly or insidiously, and
+did their utmost to aid the coalition to crush the infant liberties of
+France. Those who did not act openly did so covertly and indirectly; in
+short, from their tergiversations and intrigues, they had no claim whatever
+on the mercy of the conquerors, who treated them with a great deal of
+clemency. The destruction of these governments was loudly called for by the
+people themselves, who looked on the French as their deliverers.
+
+It will be admitted, I believe, that it is and has been the custom on the
+continent, in all wars, for all parties to levy war contributions on the
+conquered or occupied countries; but Buonoparte thought it more glorious
+for the French name to take works of art instead of money; and not a statue
+or picture was taken from the vanquished governments except by a solemn
+treaty of cession, or given in lieu of contributions at the option of the
+owners, and the Princes were very glad to give up their pictures and
+statues, which the most of them did not know how to appreciate, in lieu of
+money which they were all anxious to keep; and on these articles a fair
+value was fixed by competent judges. In this manner did the French become
+the possessors of these valuable objects of art, and in this manner was the
+noble Museum in Paris filled up, and surely nothing could be more generous
+and liberal than the use made of the Museum by the French Government;
+foreigners were indeed more favoured than the inhabitants themselves. To
+the inhabitants of Paris this Museum is open twice a week; but to
+foreigners on producing their passports, it is open every day in the week
+all the year round; artists of all nations are allowed, during a certain
+number of hours each day, to come to copy the statues and pictures which
+suit their taste; and stoves are lighted for their accommodation during
+winter, and all this gratis.--Now, before these objects of art were
+collected here, they were distributed, some in churches, and some in
+Government palaces. To see the first, required a specific introduction to
+the owner; to see the second, application to the attendants of the churches
+became necessary, and for both these you were required to pay fees to the
+servants and church-attendants, who are always impatient to take your fee
+and hurry you through the apartments or chapels, scarcely giving you time
+to examine anything. To be admitted into the Government palaces was a
+matter of favour, and here also fees were required.[32] Here in the Louvre
+there is no introduction required; no court to be paid to _major-domos_, no
+favour; it is open to all classes, high and low, without exception, and no
+money is allowed to be given.
+
+But there are some people, in their ridiculous fury against the French
+Revolution, who would fain persuade us that before that epoch there was a
+golden age on the earth, that there were no acts of violence committed, no
+frauds practised, no property injured, no individuals ill-used; that every
+Prince governed like Numa; that every noble was a Bayard, and every priest
+like a primitive apostle. Why I need go no further than the Seven Years'
+war to show that in that war, during the height of European civilisation,
+and carried on between the most polished nations in Europe, there were much
+more acts of violence and rapine carried on than ever were done by the
+French republicans. I by no means wish to excuse or even palliate the acts
+of ferocity which took place at that epoch of the French Revolution called
+the reign of Terror, which were executed by a people wrought up to frenzy
+by a recollection of their wrongs; and I know too well that many virtuous
+individuals fell victims to their indiscriminating fury; but I do believe
+and aver that much more clamour was made at the execution of a handful of
+corrupt courtiers, intriguing and profligate women of quality and worthless
+priests, than all the rest put together.
+
+To return to the Seven Years' war (I may be permitted to take this
+retrospect, I hope, since it is the fashion, and those who differ with me
+in opinions go much farther back than I do), let the French royalists and
+emigrants recollect the confiscation of property and barbarity exercised by
+Marshall Richelieu in Hanover, where many families were reduced to beggary.
+They may not chuse to recollect this; but the Hanoverians do and they have
+not forgotten the _Pavillon de Hanovre_, so called by the wits of the time
+from its having been built by the Marshall with money arising from the
+spoils of Hanover; will they recollect also the harsh treatment inflicted
+on the burghers and citizens of a town in Germany, who were shut up in a
+room and kept without food or drink for nearly three days because they
+would not consent to fix a heavy and unwarrantable contribution on their
+fellow citizens; when these unhappy but virtuous men were only allowed to
+go out for the necessities of nature attended by sentries, and on the third
+day, when fainting with hunger, a little bread and water was given to them,
+with an assurance that in future they were not to expect such luxuries.
+Have they forgot the devastation committed in Berlin by the Austrians in
+the Seven Years' war, when they pillaged, burned or destroyed all the
+valuable property of the royal Palaces, the most valuable works of art,
+vases, statues of antiquity, the loss of which could never be replaced;
+when they lopped off the heads, arms and legs of the statues? Have they
+forgot the conduct of the belligerent powers at the siege of Dresden at the
+same epoch, when whole families, among whom were helpless old men and women
+with children at the breast, were compelled to leave Dresden in the middle
+of a most rigorous winter and were driven to take refuge in the fields
+where the most of them perished with hunger and cold; and where many
+individuals lost their reason and became insane from the treatment they
+received? Have they forgotten the merciless barbarities inflicted by the
+Russians in the same war on the inhabitants of the Prussian territory?
+their ripping up and burning men, women, and children? and the dreadful
+retaliation inflicted on them at the battle of Zorndorff, when the
+Prussians, exasperated at the idea of those horrors so fresh in their
+memory, on being ordered to bury the Russian dead, threw the wounded men
+also belonging to that nation into the graves dug for the dead, to be thus
+buried alive, and hastily filled them up with earth, as if fearful that
+they might relent, did they give themselves time for reflection? These are
+not exaggerations; they are given by an author celebrated for his
+impartiality and deep research and who was an eye-witness of many of these
+proceedings; I mean Archenholz in his admirable history of the Seven Years'
+war.[33]
+
+Then again in the war of American Independence (and here my countrymen must
+excuse me if I point out the acts of injustice committed by them, when
+acting in obedience to an unprincipled and arbitrary government and in a
+cause hostile to freedom), who does not recollect the private property
+wantonly destroyed and confiscated by the English? their employing the
+Indian tribes, those merciless savages of the forest, to scalp, etc., which
+called forth the indignation of a Chatham? and the grossly unjust pillage
+and confiscation of property which took place at St Eustatius by the
+commanders of a _religious and gracious King_?[34] Again, who does not
+recollect the gentle but deep reproof given by the American General
+Schuyler to the English General Burgoyne, when the latter was made prisoner
+by the Americans under Gates? General Schuyler's valuable house, barns,
+etc., had been burned by the express order of Burgoyne. Nevertheless,
+Schuyler received him with dignified politeness, magnanimously stifled the
+recollection of the injury he had received, and obtained for him a good
+quarter, merely remarking, "General, had my house and farms not been
+burned, I could have offered you a more comfortable abode." How Burgoyne
+must have felt this reproof! yet he was not by nature a harsh man, but he
+had the orders of his government to exercise severities; he was educated in
+Tory principles, and passive obedience is their motto.
+
+Can one forget likewise even, in the late war, Nelson's conduct to
+Caraccioli at Naples, whom he caused to be hanged on board of an English
+ship of war, together with a number of other patriots, in violation of a
+solemn capitulation, by which it had been stipulated that they should be
+considered as prisoners of war and sent to France? Then again the wanton
+destruction of the Capitol and other public buildings at Washington not
+devoted to military purposes, which it is not usual to destroy or deface;
+and the valuable public library too which was burned? What excuse can be
+offered for this? Were the times of Omar returned? It is fair and allowed
+by the laws of war to blow up and destroy arsenals, magazines, containing
+warlike stores and engines of destruction, but to destroy with Gothic
+barbarity buildings of great symmetry and beauty, and a library too--O fie!
+
+Why I will defy any man to point out a single instance where the French
+republican armies or Napoleon ever injured or wantonly destroyed a single
+national edifice, a single work of art, a single book belonging to any
+other country! On the contrary, they invariably extended their protection
+to the Arts and Sciences. Why at Vienna, where there is, I understand, a
+most splendid museum, and many most valuable works of art and antiquity,
+tho' this city fell twice into their possession, they never destroyed or
+took away a single article; but, on the contrary, there, as well as in
+Berlin, they invited the inhabitants to form a civic guard for the
+protection of their property. As to the Vandalism shewn during the reign of
+Terror, and I by no means seek to palliate it, that was of short duration,
+it was madness, if you will, but it was disinterested--and other nations
+who talk a great deal about their superior morality would do well to look
+at home. They would there observe, in their own historic page, that the
+atrocities of the French Revolution have not only been equalled but
+surpassed perhaps by more dreadful scenes committed at Wexford in 1798,
+under the auspices of the Government then ruling Ireland and which the
+noble and virtuous ----[35] disdained to serve.
+
+Excuse this long digression, but I feel it my duty to open the eyes of my
+countrymen and prevent them from supporting on all occasions the unjust
+acts of their Government, which reflect dishonour on a great and
+enlightened nation; which can boast, among its annals, of some of the most
+heroic, splendid, and disinterested characters that ever the world
+produced.
+
+All that I need add on the subject of the statues and pictures is, that
+putting out of the question the justice or injustice of the restitution, it
+will be a great loss to England and to English artists in particular,
+should they be removed: many an artist can afford to make a trip to Paris,
+who would find it beyond his means to make a journey to Florence or Rome.
+
+If these objects of art are to be taken away, it should be stipulated so in
+the treaty of peace; and then everybody would understand it. This would be
+putting it on the fairest footing. You then say to France: "You gained
+these things by conquest; you lose them by defeat"; but for God's sake let
+us have no more of that _cant_ about revolutionary robberies!
+
+
+PARIS, ----
+
+I went for the first time to the Grand Opera, or, as it is here called, the
+Académie Royale de Musique, which is in the Rue de Richelieu. _Armida_ was
+the piece performed, the music by Glück. The decorations were splendid and
+the dancing beyond all praise. The scenes representing the garden of Armida
+and the nymphs dancing fully expressed in the mimic art those beautiful
+lines of Tasso:
+
+ Cogliam d'amor la rosa! amiamo or, quando
+ Esser si puote riamato amando![36]
+
+The effect of the dissolution of the palace and gardens by the waving of
+Armida's wand is astonishing; it appears completely to be the work of
+inchantment, from the rapidity of execution which follows the _potentissime
+parole_. The French recitative however does not please me. The serious
+opera is an exotic and does not seem to thrive on the soil of France. The
+language does not possess sufficient intonation to give effect to the
+recitative.
+
+On the contrary, the comic operas are excellent; and here the national
+music and singing appear to great advantage. It never degenerates to the
+grotesque or absurd _buffo_ of the Italians, but is always exquisitely
+graceful, simple, touching and natural.
+
+Among the ballets, I have seen perhaps three of the best, viz., _Achille à
+Scyros, Flore et Zéphire_ and _La folle par amour_. In the ballet of Flore
+and Zéphire, the dancers who did these two parts appeared more aerian than
+earthly. To use a phrase of Burke's, I never beheld so _beautiful a vision.
+Nina_, or _la folle par amour_, is a ballet from private life. The title
+sufficiently explains its purport; it is exquisitely touching and pathetic.
+O what a divine creature is Bigottini! what symmetry of form! what innate
+grace, what a captivating expression of countenance; and then the manner in
+which she did the mad scenes and her return to reason! Oh! I was moved even
+to tears. Never had any performance such an effect upon me. What a
+magnificent _tout ensemble_ is the Grand Opera at Paris! Whenever I feel
+chagrined or melancholy I shall come here; I feel as if I were in a new
+world; the fiction appears reality; my senses are ravished, and I forget
+all my cares.
+
+I have very little pleasure in visiting royal Palaces, unless they have
+been the residence of some transcendent, person like Napoleon or Frederick
+II of Prussia, as the sight of splendid furniture and royal pomp affords me
+no gratification; and I would rather visit Washington's or Lafayette's
+farms in company with these distinguished men than dine with all the
+monarchs of Europe. After a hasty glance at the furniture of the Tuileries,
+what fixed my attention for a considerable time was "La Salle des
+Maréchaux," where are the portraits of all the modern French Marshalls.
+They are all full length portraits and are striking resemblances; some are
+in the Marshall's undress uniform and others in the full court costume
+which is very elegant, being the costume of the time of Francis I with the
+Spanish hat and plumes. I did not observe Ney's or Soult's portraits among
+them.
+
+In front of the great square of the Tuileries where the troops exercise,
+stands the Arch of Triumph erected by Napoleon, commonly called _l'Arc du
+Carrousel_. It is a beautiful piece of architecture, but is far too small
+to tally with such a vast mass of buildings as the Palace and offices of
+the Tuileries. By the side of them it appears almost Lilliputian. It would
+have been better to have made it in the style of the triumphal arch of the
+Porte St Denis. On this arc of the Carrousel are _bas-reliefs_ both outside
+and inside, representing various actions of Napoleon's life. He is always
+represented in the Roman costume, with the imperial laurel on his brows,
+with kings kneeling, and presenting the keys of conquered cities. On the
+outside are statues, large as life, in modern military costume,
+representing the different _armes_ which compose the French army.[37] On
+the top of this Arc du Carrousel is an antique car of triumph, to which are
+harnessed the four bronze horses which were taken from the façade of the
+Church of San Marco in Venice. They are of beautiful workmanship and of
+great antiquity. What various and mighty revolutions have these horses
+witnessed! Cast in Corinth in the time of the glories of the Grecian
+commonwealths and removed by conquest to Rome, they witnessed the
+successive fall of the Grecian and Roman states; transferred to
+Constantinople in the time of Constantine, and from thence removed to
+Venice when Constantinople fell into the hands of the French and Venetians;
+transferred from thence to Paris in 1798, they have witnessed the
+successive falls of the Eastern and Western Empires, of the Republic of
+Venice and the Napoleonic dynasty and Empire. Report says they are to be
+restored to Venice; and who knows whether they may not be destined one day
+to return to their original country, Greece, under perhaps Russian
+auspices?
+
+The Gardens of the Tuileries which lie at the back part of the palace are
+very spacious, well laid out in walks and lined with trees. Large basins
+inlaid with stone, fountains and statues add to the grandeur of these
+gardens; they extend from the Tuileries as far as the Place Louis XV
+parallel to the Seine, and are separated by a wall and parapet and a
+beautiful cast iron railing from the Quai, and on the other side from the
+Rue de Rivoli, one of the new streets, and the best in Paris for
+pedestrians. On the side opposite the palace itself is the _Place Louis
+XV_, called in the time of the republic _Place de la Révolution_, and where
+the unfortunate Louis XVI suffered decapitation. The _Place Louis XV_ is by
+far the most magnificent thing of the kind I have ever seen and far exceeds
+the handsomest of our squares in London. On one side of it is the _Hótel du
+Garde Meuble_, a superb edifice. On the other the Quai, the river; and on
+the other side of the river is the _Palais du Corps législatif_, now the
+place where the Chamber of Deputies hold their sitting, and which has a
+magnificent façade. In front of this place are the Champs Elysées and
+avenue of Neuilly and behind the gardens and palace of the Tuileries.
+
+My next visit was to the _Place Vendôme_, where stands the majestic column
+of the Grand Army. To me this column is the most striking thing of its kind
+that I have hitherto seen. It is of bronze and of the most beautiful
+workmanship, cast from the cannon taken from the Austrians in the war of
+1805, and on it are figured in bas-relief the various battles and
+achievements, winding round and round from the base to the capital. It is
+constructed after the model of the Column of Trajan in Rome.
+
+The next place I visited was the Chamber of Deputies. It is a fine building
+with a Doric façade and columns; it is peculiarly striking from its noble
+simplicity. On the façade are bas-reliefs representing actions in
+Napoleon's life. The flight of steps leading to the façade is very grand,
+and there are colossal figures representing Prudence, Justice, Fortitude
+and other legislative virtues. The Chamber itself where the Deputies hold
+their sittings is in the form of a Greek theatre; the arch of the
+semi-circle forms the gallery appropriated to the audience, and comprehends
+in its enclosure the seats of the deputies like the seats in a Greek
+theatre; on the chord of the semi-circle where the _proscenium_ should be,
+is the tribune and President's seat. The whole is exceedingly elegant. The
+Orator whose turn it is to speak leaves his seat, ascends the tribune and
+faces the Deputies. The anti-rooms adjoining this Chamber are fitted up
+with long tables and fauteuils and are appropriated to the sittings of the
+various committees. These antichambers are hung round with pictures
+representing the victories of the French armies; but they are covered with
+green baize and carefully concealed from the public eye in order to stifle
+recollections and prevent comparisons.
+
+
+PARIS, August.
+
+I mounted on horseback and rode out to St Cloud to breakfast, passing
+through the Champs Elysées, the Bois de Boulogne and the little town of
+Passy, and returned by the Quai, as far as the bridge of Jéna, which I
+passed and went to visit the _Hôtel des Invalides, le Champ de Mars_, the
+_Pantheon_ or Church of St Geneviève and the Palace of the Luxembourg. This
+was pretty good work for one day; and as you will expect some little
+account of my ideas thereon, I shall give you a _précis_ of what most
+interested me.
+
+In the Champs Elysées are quartered several English regiments who are
+encamped there, and this adds to the liveliness of the scene; our soldiers
+seem to enjoy themselves very much. They are in the midst of places of
+recreation of all kinds, such as guinguettes, tennis-courts, dancing salons
+and cafés, and besides these (places of Elysium for English soldiers), wine
+and brandy shops innumerable; our soldiers seem to agree very well with the
+inhabitants. In the Bois de Boulogne are Hanoverian troops as well as
+English. At Passy I stopped at the house occupied by my friend, Major C. of
+the 33rd Regt.,[38] who was to accompany me to St Cloud. St Cloud is an
+exceedingly neat pretty town, well and solidly built, and tolerably large.
+There are a great many good restaurants and cafes, as St Cloud with its
+Palace, promenades and gardens forms one of the most favourite resorts of
+the Parisians on Sundays and _jours de fête_. Diners _de société_ and
+_noces et festins_ are often made here; and there is both land and water
+conveyance during the whole day. There are two roads by land from Paris:
+the one on the Quai the whole way; the other through the Bois de Boulogne
+and Champs Elysées. The gardens of St Cloud are laid out something in the
+style of a _jardin anglais_, but mixed with the regular old fashioned
+garden; it abounds in lofty trees, beautiful sites and well arranged vistas
+commanding extensive views of Paris and the country environing. St Cloud
+was the favourite residence of Napoleon; and the furniture in the palace
+here shows him to be a man of the most refined taste. All is elegant and
+classic; there is nothing superfluous; the furniture is modern, but in
+strict imitation of the furniture of the ancients and chiefly in bronze.
+There are superb vases and candelabras in marble, magnificent clocks of
+various kinds, marble busts, and busts in bronze of great men, and bronze
+statues large as life holding lamps. The chairs and sofas too are in a
+classic taste, as are the beds and baths. We were informed here that
+Blucher, who passed one night here, tore with his spur the satin covering
+of one of the sofas and that he did it wilfully; but I never can believe
+that the old man would be so silly, and I rather think that this story is
+an invention of the keeper of the Palace, or that if it was done, it was
+done by an accident merely. But the fact is that Blucher has a contempt for
+and hates the Parisians and likes to mortify them on all occasions; he
+threatens to do a number of things which he never seriously intends, merely
+for the sake of teasing them; and it must be owned that they deserve a
+little contempt from the want of _caractère_ they showed on the entrance of
+the Allies. Be it as it may, Blucher is the _bête noire_ of the Parisians
+and they are as much afraid of him as the children are of _Monsieur
+Croque-mitaine_.
+
+We returned from St Cloud by the Quai, crossed the bridge of Jéna,
+galloped along the _Champs de Mars_, took a hasty glance at the _Hôtel des
+Invalides_, a magnificent edifice and which may be distinguished from all
+other buildings by its gilded cupola. It is a superb establishment in every
+respect, and is furnished with an excellent library. A great many old
+soldiers are to be seen in this library occupied in reading; they are very
+polite to all visitors, particularly to ladies. Nothing can better
+demonstrate the superior character, intelligence and deportment of the
+French soldiers over those of all other countries than the way in which
+they employ their time in literary pursuits, their dignified politeness to
+visitors and the intelligent answers they give to questions. I am afraid
+our British veterans, brave as they are in the field, occupy themselves,
+when laid up as invalids, more in destroying their bodies by spirituous
+liquors than in improving their minds by reading. The Chapel of this
+establishment where were displayed the banners and trophies taken at
+different epochs from the enemies of France, and which were much mutilated
+by the wars since the Revolution, is now stripped of all the ensigns of
+glory. They were all burned by the French themselves previous to the
+capitulation of Paris in 1814, in order to prevent their falling into the
+hands of the enemy. An old soldier who was my guide related this with tears
+in his eyes, but suddenly checking himself said: "_Mais telle est
+l'histoire_."
+
+The only things now in this Chapel that interest the eye of the traveller
+are the monuments of Vauban and Turenne. Of the rest nought remains but the
+brilliant souvenirs.
+
+ Fuit Ilium, et ingens
+ Gloria Teucrorum!...[39]
+
+I had a great deal of difficulty in inducing this old soldier to accept of
+three franks; I told him at last that, as he did not want it himself, to
+take it and give it to somebody that did. I then visited the rest of the
+establishment. There is a whole range of rooms which contains models or
+plans in relief of all the fortresses of France; they are admirably and
+most minutely executed; not only the fortifications and public buildings,
+but the private houses, the gardens, orchards, meadows, mountains, hill and
+dale, bridges, trees, every feature of the ground in fine and of the
+surrounding country are given in miniature. In fact it gives you the same
+idea of the places themselves and of the environing country as if you were
+held up in the air over them to inspect them; or as if you viewed them from
+a balloon at the distance of 800 yards from the earth. The models of
+Strassburg, Lille and three or four others have been taken away by the
+Austrians and Prussians, but I have seen those of Calais, Dunkirk,
+Villefranche, Toulon, and Brest, and in fact almost every other French
+fortress. This is one of the most interesting sights in Paris, and for this
+we are certainly indebted to the occupation; for I question much if
+travellers were ever permitted to see these models until Paris fell into
+the hands of the Allies. Prussian sentries do duty at the doors; how
+grating this must be to the old invalids! Among the models I must not omit
+to mention a very curious one which represents the battle of Lodi. The town
+of Lodi, the bridge and river are admirably executed. The soldiers are
+represented by little figures about a quarter of an inch in height and
+cobwebs are disposed so as to represent the smoke of the firearms,
+Buonaparte and his staff are on horseback on one side of the bridge. There
+is also a very fine model of the _Hôtel des Invalides_ itself.
+
+From hence we went to the garden and palace of the Luxembourg. These
+gardens form the midday and afternoon promenade of that part of the city.
+In one wing of the Palace is the Chamber of Peers, elegantly fitted up and
+in some respect resembling a Greek theatre. The busts of Cicero, Brutus,
+Demosthenes, Phocion and other great men of antiquity adorn the niches of
+this chamber and on the grand _escalier_ are the statues in natural size of
+Kleber, Dessaix, Caffarelli and other French generals. Report says that
+these statues will be removed.
+
+In the picture gallery at the Luxembourg is a choice collection of pictures
+of the modern French school such as Guérin, David, etc. The subjects are
+extremely well chosen, being taken from the mythology or from ancient and
+modern history. I was too glad to find no crucifixions, martyrdoms, nor
+eternal Madonnas. I distinguished in particular the _Judgment of Brutus_
+and the _Serment des Horaces et des Curiaces_. Connoisseurs find the
+attitudes too stiff and talk to you of the Italian school; but I prefer
+these; yet I had better hold my tongue on this subject, for I am told I
+know nothing about painting.
+
+Poor Labédoyère[40] is sentenced to be shot by the Court Martial which
+tried him, and the sentence will be carried immediately into execution. His
+fate excites universal sympathy, and I have seen many people shed tears
+when talking on this subject. He certainly ought to be protected by the
+12th Article of the Capitulation. The French are very uneasy; the Allies
+have begun to strip the Louvre and there is no talk of what the terms of
+peace are to be, or what is the determination of the Allies. This is a
+dreadful state of uncertainty for the French people and may lead to a
+general insurrection. The Allies continue pouring troops into France and
+levying contributions. "_Vae victis_" seems their motto. France is now a
+disarmed nation, and no French uniform is to be seen except that of the
+National Guard and the "Garde Royale." France is at the mercy of her
+enemies and prostrate at their feet; a melancholy prospect for European
+liberty!
+
+The Allies have parades and reviews two or three times a week and the
+Sovereigns of Russia, Austria and Prussia constantly attend; Wellington is
+their showman. These crowned Heads like mightily playing at soldiers; I
+should think His Grace must be heartily tired of them. Massacres and
+persecutions of the Protestants have begun to take place in the South of
+France, and the priests are at work again threatening with excommunication
+and hell the purchasers and inheritors of emigrant estates and church
+lands. These priests and emigrants are incorrigible. Frequent quarrels take
+place almost every evening in the Palais Royal between the Prussian
+officers and the French, particularly some of the officers from the army of
+the Loire. I rather suspect these latter are the aggressors. The Prussians
+being gorged with plunder come there to eat, drink and amuse themselves and
+have as little stomach for fighting as the soldier of Lucullus had after
+having enriched himself; but the officers of the army of the Loire are,
+poor fellows, in a very different predicament; they have not even been paid
+what is due to them, and they, having none of those nice felicities (to use
+an expression of Charlotte Smith's)[41] which make life agreeable, are
+ready for any combat, to set their life on any cast, "to mend it, or to be
+rid of 't." The Prussians indulge in every sort of dissipation, which they
+are enabled to do by the plunder which they have accumulated, and of which
+they have formed, I understand, a _dépôt_ at St Germain. They send these
+articles of plunder to town every day to be sold, and then divide the
+profits, which are sure to be spent in the Palais Royal, and other places
+of revel and debauchery.
+
+They sometimes affect a fastidiousness of stomach which is quite laughable,
+and not at all peculiar to the Germans, who are in general blessed by
+nature with especial good appetites; and they spend so much money that the
+English officers who have not had the advantages of plunder that these
+Prussians have had must appear by the side of them stingy and niggardly.
+
+I was witness one day to a whimsical scene, which will serve to give you an
+idea of the airs of importance these gentlemen give themselves. I was one
+day at Versailles and after having visited the palace and gardens I entered
+the Salon of a restaurateur and called for a veal cutlet and _vin
+ordinaire_. There was a fat Prussian Major with two or three of his
+companions at one of the tables, who had been making copious libations to
+Bacchus in Burgundy and Champaign. He heard me call for _vin ordinaire_,
+and whether it was to show his own magnificence I know not, but he called
+out to the _cafetière_: "Madame, votre vin ordinaire est il buvable? car
+j'en veux donner a mon trompette, et s'il n'est pas bon, il n'en boira pas.
+Faites venir mon trompette." Now I dare say in his own country this Major
+would not have disdained even the "schwarze Bier" of Brandenburgh.
+
+Scarcely any quarrels, I believe, take place between the English and
+French, nor did I hear of any violent fracas but one. In this instance, the
+English officers concerned must have been sad, brutal, vulgar fellows.
+They, however, after behaving in a most gross insulting manner, were
+compelled by some Frenchmen not to eat but to drink their words, and that
+out of a vessel not usually employed in drinking. I shall not repeat the
+contemptible affair, but it furnished the subject of a caricature.
+
+The English officers in general behave in a handsome and liberal manner,
+and their conduct was spoken of in high terms of encomium by very many of
+the French themselves. I regret however exceedingly that any of the British
+officers should have imbibed the low prejudices and vulgar hatred against
+the French, which certain people preach up in England to cover their own
+peculations and interested views. A young friend of mine, with whom I was
+one day talking on political subjects, said to me: "I cannot help agreeing
+with you in many things, but I am staggered when I think that your ideas
+and reasoning are so contrary to the ideas in which I have been brought up;
+so that I rather avoid entering at all on political questions."
+
+I do not wonder at all at this, for I recollect when I was at school at
+Eton, the system was to drill into the heads of the boys strong
+aristocratic principles and hatred of Democracy and of the French in
+particular; we were ordered to write themes against the French Revolution
+and verses of triumph over their defeats, with now and then a sly theme on
+the great advantage of hereditary nobility; in these verses God Almighty
+was to be represented as closely allied to the British Government and a
+_sleeping partner_ of the Administration. One of the fellows of Eton
+College actually told the late Mr Adam Walker, the celebrated lecturer on
+natural and experimental philosophy, who was accustomed to give lectures
+annually to the Etonians, that his visits were no longer agreeable and
+would be dispensed with in future; as "Philosophy had done a great deal of
+harm and had caused the French Revolution."
+
+With respect to my visit to Versailles, I was much struck with the vast
+size and magnificence of the buildings and with the ingenuity displayed in
+the arrangement of the grounds and the numerous groups of statues,
+grottos, aqueducts, fountains and ruins. Still it pleases me less than St
+Cloud, for I prefer the taste of the present day in gardening and the
+arrangement of ground, to the ponderous and tawdry taste of the time of
+Louis XIV, and I prefer St Cloud to Versailles, just as I should prefer a
+Grecian Nymph in the simple costume of Arcadia to a fine court lady rouged
+and dressed out with hoops, diamonds, and headdress of the tune of Queen
+Anne. Napoleon must have had an exquisite taste.
+
+
+[32] Exceptions to this are, I understand, the Gallery at Florence, and the
+ Museo Vaticano at Rome, which are both open to all and no fees allowed.
+
+[33] Johann Wilhelm Archenholz (1743-1812), author of the _Geschichte des
+ Siebenjährigen Krieges_, 1789.--ED.
+
+[34] In February, 1781, before the declaration of war was generally known
+ in the West Indies, Rodney's fleet surrounded the Dutch island of
+ Eustatius, which had become a sort of entrepôt for supplying America
+ with British goods; two hundred and fifty ships, together with several
+ millions worth of merchandise, were seized and sold at a military
+ auction. The plunder of Eustatius was bitterly commented upon In the
+ British House of Commons.--Lee Richard Hildreth, _The History of the
+ United States_, vol. III, p. 335.--ED.
+
+[35] The name is in blank. Major Frye may have meant Beauchamp Bagenal
+ Harvey (1762-1798), the squire of Wexford who deserted to the Irish
+ rebels.--ED.
+
+[36] Tasso, _Jerusalemme liberata_, canto XVI, ottava 15.--ED.
+
+[37] For instance, a Cuirassier, a Dragoon, a Grenadier, a Tirailleur, an
+ Artilleryman.
+
+[38] Major G. Colclough, senior major of the 33rd Regt.--ED.
+
+[39] Virgil, _Aen_., II. 325.--ED.
+
+[40] La Bédoyere (Charles Huchet, Comte de) distinguished himself in
+ several of the Napoleonic wars, in particular at Ratisbonne and
+ Borodino. Being a colonel at Grenoble, in March, 1815, he deserted to
+ Napoleon's cause and was nominated by him general and _pair de
+ France_. In July, 1815, he was arrested in Paris, tried for high
+ treason and shot, August 19, in spite of Benj. Constant's efforts to
+ save him.--ED.
+
+[41] Charlotte Smith (1749-1806), author of _Emmeline, or the Orphan of the
+ Castle_ (1788), _Celestina_ (1792), _The Old Manor House_ (1793),
+ etc.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+From Paris to Bruxelles--Visiting the plains of Waterloo--The Duke de Berri
+at Lille--Beauvais--Return to Paris--Remarks on the French theatre--
+Talma--Mlle Duchesnois--Mlle Georges-French alexandrine verse--The Abbé
+Delille--The Opéra Comique.
+
+I met with my brother-in-law and his nephew at Paris, and hearing from them
+that they had an intention of returning to England by the way of Bruxelles,
+with the idea of visiting the plains of Waterloo, I was induced to
+accompany them. We started on the 18th August, taking the exact route from
+Paris that was taken by Napoleon. Passed the first night at St Quentin; the
+second at a small village on the line between Mons and Charleroy in the
+Belgian territory. The next morning, after breakfasting at Nivelles, we
+proceeded to Quatre Bras and Mont St Jean. At the little cabaret called _à
+la belle Alliance_ we met a host of Englishmen who had been to behold the
+field of battle; Lacoste, the peasant who was Napoleon's guide on the day
+of battle, was about to conduct them across the fields to Hougoumont. We
+followed them. The devastation of the place, every tree being pierced with
+bullets, and the whole premises being nearly burned to the ground, seemed
+to astonish their _weak minds_; one of them was not contented till he had
+measured the length and breadth of the garden and orchards.
+
+Cuirasses, helmets, swords and various other spoils of war found on the
+spot, were offered for sale by some boys and eagerly bought up as relics.
+My brother-in-law made a purchase of a helmet, sword and cuirass, intending
+to hang it up in his hall. For my part I have seen, and can see no reason
+whatever to rejoice at this event. I fear it is pregnant with infinite
+mischief.
+
+We arrived at Bruxelles on the afternoon of the 20th August and after
+visiting thePark, _Alée verte_ and Palace of Laeken, we proceeded the next
+morning on our journey to Lille.
+
+The Duke of Berri was at Lille and a grand _fête_ was given in the evening
+to celebrate the second restoration of the Bourbons. Fireworks were let
+off, the city was brilliantly illuminated and boys (hired of course) went
+about the streets singing the following refrain
+
+ À bas, à bas Napoléon!
+ Vivent, vivent les Bourbons!
+
+A number of beautiful women elegantly attired paraded up and down the
+public promenades, which are exceedingly well and tastefully laid out. This
+city is built with great regularity, and the streets are broad, neat, and
+clean. It is by far the handsomest city I have ever seen either in France
+or Belgium. The _Hôtel de Ville_ and the theatre both are on the _Grande
+Place_ and are well worth seeing. Lille is renowned for its fortifications;
+I much wished to visit the citadel but I was not permitted. At dinner at
+the table d'hôte at the _Hôtel du Commerce_, I remarked a French officer
+declaiming violently against Napoleon; but I heard afterwards that he was
+the son of an Emigrant; the rest of the company did not seem to approve his
+discourse and shewed visible impatience at it.
+
+Lille may be easily recognised at its approach from the immense quantity of
+wind-mills that are in the vicinity of this city, some of which are used
+for grinding of wheat and others for the expression of oil. A great deal of
+flax from whence the oil is made, grows in the country.
+
+I left Lille on the morning of the 24th inst., with the courier for Amiens.
+From Amiens I took the diligence to Beauvais and on arrival there I put up
+under the hospitable roof of my friend Major G., of the 18th Light
+Dragoons, lately made Lt.-Colonel for his gallantry at Waterloo.[42] I did
+not want for amusement here, for the next day a _fête champêtre_ was given
+just outside the walls of the town, and I admired the grace and tournure of
+the female peasantry and their good dancing. How much more creditable are
+these innocent and agreeable _fêtes_ to the fairs and meetings in England,
+which are generally signalized in drunkenness! The next afternoon presented
+a novel sight to the inhabitants of Beauvais, it being a grand cricket
+match played between the officers of the 10th and 18th Dragoons. It was won
+by the latter, mainly owing to the superior play of Colonel G. of the 18th,
+who never touched a bat since he was at Burney's school. The Officers
+afterwards dined _al fresco_ and many toasts accompanied by the huzzas were
+given, to the astonishment of the bystanders, who seemed to consider us as
+little better than barbarians. One of the officers wishing to pay a
+compliment to the inhabitants of Beauvais proposed the health of Louis
+XVIII, but they seemed to take it coldly and not at all to be flattered by
+the compliment.
+
+After five days very agreeable residence at Beauvais, I put myself in the
+diligence to return to Paris. During the journey an ardent political
+altercation arose between a young lady, who appeared to be a warm partisan
+of Napoleon, on the one side, and a Garde du Corps on the other. The lady
+was seconded by a young gentleman, of whom it was difficult to say, whether
+he sustained her argument from a dislike to the present order of things, or
+from a wish to ingratiate himself in her favour. The argument of the Garde
+du Corps was espoused, but soberly, by one of the passengers who was a
+mathematical professor at one of the Lyceums; he was not by any means an
+Ultra, but he supported the Bourbons, with moderate, gentlemanly and I
+therefore believe sincere attachment. This professor seemed a well informed
+sort of man; he told me that he was acquainted with Sir James M., formerly
+recorder at Bombay. On our arrival at the _Bureau des Messageries_, the
+whole company forgot their disputes and parted good friends; and the young
+man who was partisan of the young lady in the political dispute took care
+to
+inform himself of her abode in Paris.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Remarks on the various dramatic performances which I witnessed at Paris,
+with opinions on the French theatre in general.
+
+In my ideas of dramatic works I am neither rigidly classic nor romantic,
+and I think both styles may be good if properly managed and the interest
+well kept up; in a word I am pleased with all genres _hors le genre
+ennuyux_,[43] and tho' a great admirer of Shakespeare and Schiller, I am
+equally so of Voltaire, Racine and Corneille; I take equal delight in the
+pathos of the sentimental dramas of Kotzebue as in the admirable satire and
+_vis comica_ of the unrivalled Molière, so that on my arrival at Paris I
+was not violently prejudiced either for or against the French stage, but
+rather pre-occupied, to use a gentler term, in its favour; and I have not
+been at all disappointed, for I think I can pronounce it with safety the
+first, perhaps the only stage in Europe.
+
+I now mean to speak not of Operas, nor of Operas-comiques, nor of
+melodrames, nor of vaudevilles; all these have their respective merits; but
+when I speak of the French stage, I confine myself to the regular theatre
+of tragedy and comedy, of their classical pieces; in a word, to the
+dramatic performances usually given at the _Théâtre Français_.
+
+The first piece I saw performed was _Manlius_;[44] but I was too far off
+from the stage to judge of the acting, and could do little more than catch
+the sounds. The parterre and the whole house was full. I was in the fourth
+tier of boxes, yet I could distinguish at intervals the finest and most
+prominent traits, of Talma's acting, particularly in that scene where he
+upbraids his friend with having betrayed him. This he gave with uncommon
+energy and effect. The plot of this piece is very similar to that of
+_Venice preserved_.[45]
+
+The next piece I saw represented was the _Avare_ of Molière, which to me
+was one of the greatest dramatic treats I had ever witnessed. Every part
+was well supported. The next was _Athalie_ of Racine. Here too I was highly
+gratified. Mlle Georges performed the part of Athalie and gave me the
+perfect ideal of the haughty Queen. Her narration of the dream was given
+with the happiest effect, and in her attempt to conceal her uneasiness and
+her affected contempt of the dream in these lines:
+
+ Un songe, me devrois--je inquiéter d'un songe?
+
+she seemed in reality to labour under all the anxiety and fatigue arising
+from it. That fine scene between Joad and Joas was well given, and the
+little girl who did the part of Joas performed with a good deal of spirit.
+The actor who played Joad recited in a most impressive manner the advice to
+the young prince terminating in these lines:
+
+ Vous souvenant, mon fils, que caché sous ce lin,
+ Comme eux vous fûtes pauvre et comme eux orphelin.
+
+The interrogating scene between Athalie and Joad was given spiritedly, but
+the rather abrupt and uncourtierlike reply to the Queen's remark, "Ils sont
+deux puissans dieux"--"Lui seul est dieu, Madame, et le vôtre n'est rien"--
+excited a laugh and I fancy never fails to do so, every time the piece is
+performed.
+
+Racine has several passages in his tragedies which perhaps have rather too
+much _naiveté_ for the dignity of the cothurnus; for instance in the answer
+of Agamemnon to Achille in the tragedy of _Iphigénie_:
+
+ Puisque vous le savez, pourquoi le demander?
+
+A poet of to-day would be quizzed for a line like the above, but who dare
+venture to point out any defect in an author of whom Voltaire has said and
+with justice too, that the only criticism to be made of him (Racine) would
+be to write under every page: "Admirable, harmonieux, sublime!"
+
+The costume and the decorations at the _Théâtre français_ are so strictly
+classical and appropriate in every respect, that it is to me a source of
+high delight to witness the representation of the favourite pieces of
+Racine, Corneille, Molière and Voltaire, which I have so often read with so
+much pleasure in the closet and no small quantity of which I have by heart.
+
+The next piece I saw was the _Cinnna_ of Corneille; and here it was that I
+beheld Talma for the second time. I was of course highly pleased, tho' I
+was rather far off to hear very distinctly; this was, however, no very
+great loss, as I was perfectly well acquainted with the tragedy. Talma's
+gestures, his pause's, his natural mode of acting gave a great relief to
+the long declamation with which this tragedy abounds. When this tragedy was
+given it was during the time that poor Labédoyère's trial was going on, and
+the allusions to Augustus' clemency were eagerly seized and applauded. It
+was hoped that Louis XVIII would imitate Augustus. Vain hope!
+
+I have seen _Phèdre_; the part of Phèdre by that admirable actress Mlle
+Duchesnois, who performs the part so naturally and with so much passion
+that we entirely forget the extreme plainness of the person. She acts with
+far more feeling and pathos than Mlle Georges. I shall never be able to
+forget Mlle Duchesnois in _Phèdre_. She gave me a full idea of the
+impassioned Queen, nor were it possible to depict with greater fidelity the
+"Vénus toute entière à sa proie attachée," as in that beautiful speech of
+Phèdre to Oenone wherein she reveals her passion for Hippolyte and
+pourtrays the terrible struggle between duty and female delicacy on the one
+hand, and on the other a flame that could not be overcome, convinced as it
+were of the complete inutility of further efforts of resistance and
+invoking death as her only refuge. I was moved even to tears. I am so great
+an admirer of the whole of this speech beginning "Mon mal vient de plus
+lorn" etc., and ending "Un reste de chaleur tout prêt à s'exhaler," that I
+think in it Racine has not only united the excellencies of Euripides,
+Sappho and Theocritus in describing the passion of love, but has far
+surpassed them all; that speech is certainly the masterpiece of French
+versification and scarcely inferior to it is that beautiful and ingenuous
+confession of love by Hippolyte to Aricie. What an admirable _pendant_ to
+the love of Phèdre! In Hippolyte you behold the innocence, simplicity and
+ingenuousness of a first and pure attachment: in Phèdre the _embrasement_,
+the ungovernable delirium of a criminal passion.
+
+I have seen Mlle Duchesnois again in the _Mérope_ of Voltaire and admire
+her more and more. This is an admirable play. The dialogue is so spirited;
+the agitation of maternal tenderness, and the occasional bursts of feelings
+impossible to be restrained, render this play one of the most interesting
+perhaps on the French stage, and Mlle Duchesnois gave with the happiest
+effect her part in those two scenes; the first wherein she supposes Egisthe
+to be the person who has killed her son; in the other where having
+discovered the reality of his person, she is obliged to dissemble the
+discovery, but on Egisthe being about to be sacrificed she exclaims
+"Barbare, c'est mon fils!" The part of Egisthe was given by a young actor
+who made his appearance at this theatre for the first tune, and he executed
+his part with complete success (Firmin, I think, was his name). Lafond did
+the part of Polyphonte and did it well. At this tragedy many allusions were
+caught hold of by the audience according as they were Bourbonically or
+Napoleonically inclined; at that part of Polyphonte's speech wherein he
+says:
+
+ Le premier qui fut Roi fut un soldat heureux.
+ Qui sert bien son pays n'a pas besoin d'ayeux.
+
+Thunders of applause proceeded from those who applied it to Napoleon. At
+the line:
+
+ Est il d'autre parti que celui de nos rois?
+
+a loud shout and clapping proceeded from the Royalists; but I fancy if
+hands had been shown these last would have been in a sad minority. I have
+often amused myself with comparing the _Mérope_ of Voltaire with that of
+Maffei and am puzzled to which to give the preference. Maffei has made
+Polyphonte a more odious and perhaps on that account a more theatrical
+character, while Voltaire's Polyphonte is more in real life. In the play of
+Voltaire he is a rough brutal soldier, void of delicacy of feeling and not
+very scrupulous, but not that praeternatural deep designing villain that he
+is represented in the piece of Maffei. In fact Maffei's Polyphonte appears
+too _outré_; but then on the stage may not a little exaggeration be
+allowed, just as statues which are destined to be placed in the open air or
+on columns appear with greater effect when larger than the natural size?
+Alfleri seems to have given the preference to the Mérope of Voltaire.
+
+I have seen Talma a second time in the part of Nero in the Britannicus of
+Racine; Mlle Georges played the part of Agrippina. Talma was Nero from head
+to foot; his very entry on the stage gave an idea of the fiery and
+impatient character of the tyrant, and in the scene between him and his
+mother Agrippina nothing could be better delineated. The forced calm of
+Agrippina, while reproaching her son with his ingratitude, and the
+impatience of Nero to get rid of such an importunate monitress, were given
+in a style impossible to be surpassed. Talma's dumb show during this scene
+was a masterpiece of the mimic art. If Talma gives such effects to his
+rôles in a French drama, where he is shackled by rules, how much greater
+would he give on the English or German stages in a tragedy of Shakespeare
+or Schiller!
+
+Blank verse is certainly better adapted to tragedy than rhymed
+alexandrines, but then the French language does not admit of blank verse,
+and to write tragedies in prose, unless they be tragedies in modern life,
+would deprive them of all charm; but after all I find the harmonious pomp
+and to use a phrase of Pope's "The long majestic march and energy divine"
+of the French alexandrine, very pleasing to the ear. I am sure that the
+French poets deserve a great deal of credit for producing such masterpieces
+of versification from a language, which, however elegant, is the least
+poetical in Europe; which allows little or no inversion, scarce any poetic
+license, no _enjambement_, compels a fixed caesura; has in horror the
+hiatus; and in fine is subject to the most rigorous rules, which can on no
+account be infringed; which rejects hyperbole; which is measured by
+syllables, the pronunciation of which is not felt in prose; compels the
+alternative termination of a masculine or feminine rhyme; and with all this
+requires more perhaps than any other language that cacophony be sedulously
+avoided. Such are the difficulties a French poet has to struggle with; he
+must unite the most harmonious sound with the finest thought. In Italian
+very often the natural harmony of the language and the music of the sound
+conceal the poverty of the thought; besides Italian poetry has innumerable
+licenses which make it easy to figure in the Tuscan Parnassus, and where
+anyone who can string together _rime_ or _versi sciolti_ is dignified with
+the appellation of a poet; whereas from French poetry, a mediocrity is and
+must be of necessity banished. Neither is it sufficient for an author to
+have sublime ideas; these must be filed and pruned. Inspiration can make a
+poet of a German, an Italian or an Englishman, because he may revel in
+unbounded license of metre and language, but in French poetry inspiration
+is by no means sufficient; severe study and constant practise are as
+indispensable as poetic verve to constitute a French poet. The French poets
+are sensible of this and on this account they prefer imitating the
+ancients, polishing their rough marble and fitting it to the national
+taste, to striking out a new path.
+
+The Abbé Delille, the best poet of our day that France has produced, has
+gone further; he had read and admired the best English poets such as
+Milton, Pope, Collins and Goldsmith, and has not disdained to imitate them;
+yet he has imitated them with such elegance and judgment that he has left
+nothing to regret on the part of those of his countrymen who are not
+acquainted with English, and he has rendered their beauties with such a
+force that a foreigner Versed in both languages who did not previously know
+which was the original, and which the translation, might take up passages
+in Pope, Thomson, Collins and Goldsmith and read parallel passages in
+Delille and be extremely puzzled to distinguish the original: for none of
+the beauties are lost in these imitations. And yet, in preferring to
+imitate, it must not be inferred that he was deficient in original
+thoughts.
+
+To return to the theatre, I have seen Mlle Mars in the _rôle_ of Henriette
+in the _Femmes Savantes_ of Molière. Oh! how admirable she is! She realizes
+completely the conception of a graceful and elegant Frenchwoman of the
+first society. She does not act; she is at home as it were in her own
+salon, smiling at the silly pretensions of her sister and at the ridiculous
+pedantry of Trissotin; her refusing the kiss because she does not
+understand Greek was given with the greatest _naiveté_. In a word Mlle Mars
+reigns unrivalled as the first comic actress in Europe.
+
+I have seen too, _Les Plaideurs_ of Racine and _Les fourberies de Scapin_
+of Molière, both exceedingly well given; particularly the scene in the
+latter wherein it is announced to Géronte that his son had fallen into the
+hands of a Turkish corsair, and his answer "Que diable allait-il faire dans
+la galère?"
+
+I have seen also _Andromaque_, _Iphigénie_ and _Zaïre_. Mlle Volnais did
+the part of Andromaque; but the monotonous plaintiveness of her voice,
+which never changes, wearies me. In _Iphigénie_ I was more gratified; for
+Mlle Georges did the part of Clytemnestre, and her sister, a young girl of
+seventeen, made her début in the part of Iphigénie with great effect. The
+two sisters supported each other wonderfully well, and Lafond did Agamemnon
+very respectably.
+
+Mlle Georges the younger, having succeeded in _Iphigénie_, appeared in the
+part of Zaïre, a bold attempt, and tho' she did it well and with much
+grace, yet it was evidently too arduous a task for her. The whole onus of
+this affecting piece rests on the _rôle_ of Zaïre. In the part where
+_naiveté_ was required she succeeded perfectly and her burst: "Mais
+Orosmane m'aime et j'ai tout oublie" was most happy; but she was too faint
+and betrayed too little emotion in portraying the struggle between her love
+for Orosmane and the unsubdued symptoms of attachment to her father and
+brother and to the religion of her ancestors. In short, where much passion
+and pathos was required, there she proved unequal to the task; but she has
+evidently all the qualities and dispositions towards becoming a good
+actress, and with more study and practise I have no doubt that three or
+four years hence, she will be fully equal to the difficult task of giving
+effect to and portraying to life, the exquisitely touching and highly
+interesting _rôle_ of Zaïre. She was not called for to appear on the stage
+after the termination of the performance, tho' frequently applauded during
+it. The actor who did the part of Orosmane, in that scene wherein he
+discovers he has killed Zaïre unjustly, gave a groan which had an unhappy
+effect; it was such an awkward one, that it made all the audience laugh; no
+people catch ridicule so soon as the French.
+
+What I principally admire on the French stage is that the actors are always
+perfect in their parts and all the characters are well sustained; the
+performance never flags for a moment; and I have experienced infinitely
+more pleasure in beholding the dramas of Racine and Voltaire than those of
+Shakespeare, and for this reason that, on our stage, for one good actor you
+have the many who are exceedingly bad and who do not comprehend their
+author: you feel consequently a _hiatus valde deflendus_ when the principal
+actor or actress are not on the stage. I have been delighted to see Kemble,
+and Mrs Siddons and Miss O'Neil, and while they were on the stage I was all
+eyes and ears; but the other actors were always so inferior that the
+contrast was too obvious and it only served to make more conspicuous the
+flagging of interest that pervades the tragedies of Shakespeare, _Macbeth_
+alone perhaps excepted. I speak only of Shakespeare's faults as a
+dramaturgus and they are rather the faults of his age than his own; for in
+everything else I think him the greatest litterary genius that the world
+ever produced, and I place him far above any poet, ancient or modern; yet
+in allowing all this, I do not at all wonder that his dramatic pieces do
+not in general please foreigners and that they are disgusted with the low
+buffoonery, interruption of interest and want of arrangement that ought of
+necessity to constitute a drama; for I feel the same objections myself when
+reading Shakespeare, and often lose patience; but then when I come to some
+sublime passage, I become wrapt up in it alone and totally forget the piece
+itself. In order to inspire a foreigner with admiration for Shakespeare, I
+would not give him his plays to read entire, but I would present him with a
+_recueil_ of the most beautiful passages of that great poet; and I am sure
+he would be so delighted with them that he would readily join in the "All
+Hail" that the British nation awards him. Thus you may perceive the
+distinction I make between the creative genius who designs, and the artist
+who fills up the canvas; between the Poet and the Dramaturgus. I am
+probably singular in my taste as an Englishman, when I tell you that I
+prefer Shakespeare for the closet and Racine or Voltaire or Corneille for
+the stage: and with regard to English tragedies, I prefer as an acting
+drama Home's _Douglas_[46] to any of Shakespeare's, _Macbeth_ alone
+excepted; and for this plain reason that the interest in _Douglas_ never
+flags, nor is diverted.
+
+In giving my mite of admiration to the French stage, I am fully aware of
+its faults, of the long declamation and the _fade galanterie_ that
+prevailed before Voltaire made the grand reform in that particular: and on
+this account I prefer Voltaire as a tragedian to Racine and Corneille. The
+_Phédre_ and _Athalie_ of Racine are certainly masterpieces, and little
+inferior to them are _Iphigénie, Andromaque_ and _Britannicus_, but in the
+others I think he must be pronounced inferior to Voltaire; as a proof of my
+argument I need only cite _Zaïre, Alzire, Mahomet, Sémiramis, l'Orphelin de
+la Chine, Brutus_. Voltaire has, I think, united in his dramatic writings
+the beauties of Corneille, Racine and Crébillon and has avoided their
+faults; this however is not, I believe, the opinion of the French in
+general, but I follow my own judgment in affairs of taste, and if anything
+pleases me I wait not to ascertain whether the "master hath said so."
+
+It shows a delicate attention on the part of the directors of the _Théâtre
+Français_, now that so many foreigners of all nations are here, to cause to
+be represented every night the masterpieces of the French classical
+dramatic authors, since these are pieces that every foreigner of education
+has read and admired; and he would much rather go to see acted a play with
+which he was thoroughly acquainted than a new piece of one which he has not
+read; for as the recitation is extremely rapid it would not be so easy for
+him to seize and follow it without previous reading.
+
+Of Molière I had already seen the _Avare_, the _Femmes savantes_ and the
+_Fourberies de Scapin_. Since these I have seen the _Tartuffe_ and _George
+Dandin_ both inimitably performed; how I enjoyed the scene of the _Pauvre
+homme!_ in the _Tartuffe_ and the lecture given to George Dandin by M. and
+Mme de Sotenville wherein they recount the virtues and merits of their
+respective ancestors. Of Molière indeed there is but one opinion throughout
+Europe; in the comic line he bears away the palm unrivalled and here I
+fully agree with the "general."
+
+I must not quit the subject of French theatricals without speaking of the
+_Opéra comique_ at the _Théâtre Faydeau_. It is to the sort of light pieces
+that are given here, that the French music is peculiarly appropriate, and
+it is here that you seize and feel the beauty and melody of the national
+music; these little _chansons_, _romances_ and _ariettas_ are so pleasing
+to the ear that they imprint themselves durably on the memory, which is no
+equivocal proof of their merit. I cannot say as much for the tragic singing
+in the _Opéra seria_ at the Grand French Opera, which to my ear sounds a
+perfect psalmody. There is but one language in the world for tragic
+recitative and that is Italian. On the other hand, in the _genre_ of the
+_Opéra comique_, the French stage is far superior to the Italian. In the
+French comedy everything is graceful and natural; the Italians cannot catch
+this happy medium, so that their comedies and comic operas are mostly
+_outré_, and degenerate into downright farce and buffoonery.
+
+
+[42] Major James Grant, of the 18th Light Dragoons, was made a Brevet
+ Lieutenant Colonel on 18th June, 1815.--ED.
+
+[43] A phrase in prose, often quoted as a verse, from Voltaire's preface to
+ the _Enfant Prodigue: Tous les genres sont bons, hors le genre
+ ennuyeux_.--ED.
+
+[44] A tragedy often acted by Talma, the work of Antoine d'Aubigny de
+ Lafosse (1653-1708).--ED.
+
+[45] Thomas Otway's once celebrated tragedy, 1682.--ED.
+
+[46] _The Tragedy of Douglas_, by John Home (1722-1808).--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+From Paris to Milan through Dijon, Chalon-sur-Saône, Lyons, Geneva and the
+Simplon--Auxerre--Dijon--Napoleon at Chalon-sur-Saône--The army of the
+Loire--Mâcon--French _grisettes_--Lyons--Monuments and theatricals--
+Geneva--Character and opinions of the Genevois--Voltaire's chateau at
+Ferney--The chevalier Zadera--From Geneva to Milan--Crossing the
+Simplon--Arona--The theatres in Milan--Rossini--Monuments in Milan--Art
+encouraged by the French--Mr Eustace's bigotry--Return to Switzerland--
+Clarens and Vevey--Lausanne--Society in Lausanne--Return to Paris--The
+Louvre stripped--Death of Marshal Ney.
+
+I left Paris on the 17th Sept., in the diligence of Auxerre, The company
+was as follows: a young Genevois who had served in the National Guard at
+Paris, and had been wounded in a skirmish against the Prussians near that
+city; a young Irish Templar; a fat citizen of Dijon and an equally fat
+woman going to Dole. We arrived the following day at 11 o'clock at Auxerre,
+a town situated on the banks of the Seine. Water conveyance may be had from
+Paris to Auxerre, price 12 francs the person: the price in the diligence is
+28 francs. We had during our journey much political conversation; the
+Bourbons and the English government were the objects of attack, and neither
+my friend the barrister nor myself felt the least inclined to take up their
+cause. The Genevois had with him Fouché's exposé of the state of the
+nation, wherein he complains bitterly of the conduct of the Allies. All
+France is now disarmed and no troops are to be seen but those in foreign
+uniform. The face of the country between Paris and Auxerre is not
+peculiarly striking; but the soil appears fertile and the road excellent.
+After breakfast we started from Auxerre and stopped to sup and sleep the
+same night at Avallon. At Semur, which we passed on the following day,
+there is a one arched bridge of great boldness across the river Armançon.
+We arrived in the evening at Dijon. The country between Auxerre and Dijon
+is very undulating in gentle hill and dale, but for the want of trees and
+inclosures it has a bleak appearance. As you leave Avallon and approach
+Dijon, the hills covered with vines indicate your arrival in a wine
+country. I put up at the _Chapeau rouge_ at Dijon and remained there one
+day, in order to visit the _Chartreuse_ which is at a short distance from
+the town and commands an extensive view. It was devastated during the
+Revolution. The view from it is fine and extensive and that is all that is
+worth notice. The country about it is rich and cultivated, and the
+following lines of Ariosto might serve for its description:
+
+ Culte pianure e delicati colli,
+ Chiare acque, ombrose ripe e prati molli.[47]
+
+ 'Mid cultivated plain, delicious hill,
+ Moist meadow, shady bank, and crystal rill.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+The city of Dijon is large, handsome and well built. It has an appearance
+of industry, comfort and airiness. There are several mustard manufactories
+in this town. A dinner was given yesterday by the municipality to the
+National Guard, and an immense quantity of mustard was devoured on the
+occasion in honor of the staple manufactory of Dijon. From Dijon I put
+myself in the diligence to go to Chalon and after stopping two hours at
+Beaune, arrived at Chalon at 5 o'clock p.m. The country between Dijon and
+Chalon is flat, but cultivated like a garden. It is likewise the wine
+country _par excellence_. I do not know a wine more agreeable to palate
+than the wine of Beaune.
+
+At Chalon I put up at the _Hôtel du Parc_. Chalon is beautifully situated
+on the banks of the Saône. The Quai is well constructed and forms an
+agreeable promenade. There is an Austrian garrison in Chalon. The hostess
+of the inn told me that Napoleon stopped at her house on his way from Lyons
+to Paris, when he returned from Elba, and she related to me with great
+eagerness many anecdotes of that extraordinary man: she said that such was
+the _empressement_ on the part of the inhabitants to see him, and embrace
+him by way of testifying their affection, that the Emperor was obliged to
+say: "Mais vous m'étouffez, mes enfans!" In fact, had the army remained
+neutral, the peasantry alone would have carried the Emperor on their
+shoulders to Paris. It is quite absurd to say that a faction did this and
+that it was effectuated merely by the disaffection of the Army. The Army
+did its duty in the noblest manner, for it is the duty of every army to
+support the national cause and the voice of the people, and by no means to
+become the blind tools of the Prince; for it is absurd, as it is degrading
+to humanity, it is impious to consider the Prince as the proprietor of the
+country and the master of the people; he is, or ought to be, the principal
+magistrate, the principal soldier paid by the people, like any other
+magistrate or soldier, and like them liable to be cashiered for misconduct
+or breach of faith. This is not a very fashionable doctrine nowadays, and
+there is danger of it being forgotten altogether in the rage for what is
+falsely termed legitimacy; it becomes therefore the bounden duty of every
+friend of freedom to din this unfashionable doctrine into the ears of
+Princes and unceasingly to exclaim to them and to their ministers:
+
+ Discite justitiam moniti et non temnere gentes.[48]
+
+In their conduct on this occasion the French soldiers proved themselves far
+more constitutional than those of any other army in Europe; let despots,
+priests and weak-headed Tories say what they please to the contrary.
+
+I embarked the following morning at 12 o'clock in the _coche d'eau_ for
+Lyons. There was a very numerous and motley company on board: there were
+three bourgeois belonging to Lyons returning thither from Paris; a quiet
+good-humoured sort of woman not remarkable either for her beauty nor
+vivacity; a young Spaniard, an adherent of King Joseph Napoleon, very
+taciturn and wrapped up in his cloak tho' the weather was exceeding hot; he
+seemed to do nothing else but smoke _cigarros_ and drink wine, of which he
+emptied three or four bottles in a very short time--a young Piedmontese
+officer, disbanded from the army of the Loire, who no sooner sat down on
+deck than he began to chaunt Filicaja's beautiful sonnet, "_Italia, Italia,
+O tu cui feo la sorte_," etc.--a merchant of Lyons who had been some time
+in England, and spoke English well--a Lyonnese Major of Infantry, also of
+the army of the Loire, who had served in Egypt in the 32nd Demi-brigade;
+three Austrian officers of Artillery with their servants. A large barge
+which followed and was towed by the _coche d'eau_ was filled with Austrian
+soldiers, and on the banks of the river were a number of soldiers of the
+Army of the Loire returning to their families and homes.
+
+The peaceable demeanour and honourable conduct of this army is worthy of
+admiration, and can never be sufficiently praised: not a single act of
+brigandage has taken place. The Austrian officers expressed to me their
+astonishment at this, and said they doubted whether any other army in
+Europe, disbanded and under the same circumstances, would behave so well. I
+told them the French soldier was a free-man and a citizen and drawn from a
+respectable class of people, which was not the case in most other
+countries. Yes, these gallant fellows who had been calumniated by furious
+Ultras, by the base ministerial prints of England, and the venal satellites
+of Toryism, who had been represented as brigands or as infuriated Jacobins
+with red caps and poignards, these men, in spite, of the contumely and
+insult they met with from servile prefects, and from those who never dared
+to face them in the field, are a model of good conduct and they preserve
+the utmost subordination, tho' disbanded: they respect scrupulously the
+property of the inhabitants and pay for everything. Mr. L., the young Irish
+barrister, told me at Dijon that he left his purse by mistake in a shop
+there in which were 20 napoleons in gold, when a soldier of the army of the
+Loire, who happened to be in the shop, perceived it and came running after
+him with it, but refused to accept of anything, tho' much pressed by Mr.
+L., who wished to reward him handsomely for his disinterested conduct. Yes,
+the French soldier is a fine fellow. I have served against them in Holland
+and in Egypt and I will never flinch from rendering justice to their
+exemplary conduct and lofty valour. No! it is not the French soldiery who
+can be accused of plundering and exaction, but what brought the French name
+in disrepute was the conduct of certain _prefects_ and _administrators_ in
+Germany who were promoted to these posts for no other reason than because
+they were of the old _noblesse_ or returned _Emigrants_, whom Napoleon
+favoured in preference to the Republicans whom he feared. These emigrants
+repaid his favours with the basest ingratitude; after being guilty of the
+grossest and most infamous _concussions_ on the inhabitants of those parts
+of Germany where their jurisdiction extended, they had the hypocrisy after
+the restoration to declaim against the oppression of the _Usurper's_
+government and its system: but Napoleon richly deserved to meet with this
+ingratitude for employing such unprincipled fellows. I believe he was never
+aware of the villany they carried on, or they would have met with his
+severest displeasure in being removed from office, as was the case with
+Wirion at Verdun.[49]
+
+I do not find that the French soldiers with whom I have conversed are so
+much attached to the person of the Emperor as I was led to believe; but
+they are attached to their country and liberty; and in serving him, they
+conceived they were serving the man _par excellence_ of the People.
+
+The French army too was beloved by the people, instead of being dreaded by
+them as the armies of most other European nations are. In short, whenever I
+met with and held conversation with soldiers of this army, I was always
+tempted to address them in the words of Elvira to Pizarro when she seeks to
+console him for his defeat:
+
+ Yet think another morning shall arise,
+ Nor fear the future, nor lament the past.[50]
+
+The French Major was very much inclined to take up a quarrel with an
+Austrian officer, on my account, but I dissuaded him. The cause was as
+follows. A young Austrian boy, servant to one of the officers of Artillery,
+had entered the _coche d'eau_ at Chalon, some minutes before his master,
+and began to avail himself of the right of conquest by taking possession of
+the totality of one of the cabins and endeavouring to exclude the other
+passengers; among other things he was going to thrust my portmanteau out of
+its place. I called to him to let it alone, when the French Major stepped
+forward and said that if he dared to touch any of the baggage belonging to
+the passengers, he would punish him on the spot and his master also, for
+that he longed to measure swords with those "Jean F---- d'Autrichiens."
+Fearful of a serious quarrel between them and being unwilling that any
+dispute should occur on my account, I requested the Major not to meddle
+with the business, for that I was sure the Austrian officer would check the
+impertinence of his servant when he came on board; and that if he did not,
+I was perfectly able and willing to defend my own cause. The Austrian
+officers came on board a few minutes after, when I addressed them in
+German, and explained to them the behaviour of the boy; they scolded him
+severely for his impertinence to us and threatened him with the _Schlag_,
+should it occur again. The rest of the journey passed without any incident.
+I found that my friend the Major had served in the French army in Egypt in
+the division Lanusse in the battle of the 21st March, 1801, (30 Ventose)
+and that consequently we were opposed to each other in that battle, as I
+was then serving as a Lieutenant in the Queen's Regiment, commanded by that
+excellent and amiable officer the Earl of D[alhousie] in General Doyle's
+brigade.
+
+The voyage on the Saône presents some pleasing and picturesque points of
+view; the _coteaux_ on the banks of the river are covered with vines. We
+arrived at 8 o'clock in the evening to sup and sleep at Mâcon and put up at
+the _Hôtel des Sauvages_. We had a most sumptuous repast, fish, flesh,
+fowls, game, fruit and wine in profusion, for all which, including our
+beds, we had only to pay 2-1/2 francs the person.
+
+There is a spacious Quai at Mâcon, which always adds to the beauty of a
+city, and there are some fine buildings, public and private. I need not
+enlarge on the excellence of the Mâcon wine. The country girls we observed
+on the banks of the river as we floated along, and the _grisettes_ of the
+town who were promenading on the Quai when we arrived, wore a peculiarly
+elegant _costume_ and their headdress appeared to me to be something
+Asiatic.
+
+The voyage on the subsequent day was more agreeable than the preceding one.
+The country between Mâcon and Lyons is much more beautiful and diversified
+than that which we have hitherto seen and resembles much the picturesque
+scenery of the West-Indian landscape. One part between Mâcon and Trévoux
+resembles exactly the island of Montserrat.
+
+Within two miles of Trévoux we were hailed by some _grisettes_ belonging to
+the inns at that place, in order to invite us to dine at their respective
+inns. There was one girl exceedingly beautiful whose name was Sophie,
+daughter of the proprietor of the _Hôtel des Sauvages_ at Trévoux. She, by
+her grace and coquetry, obtained the most recruits and when we disembarked
+from the boat, she led us in triumph to her hotel. From her beauty and
+graceful manner, Sophie, in a country where so much hommage is paid to
+beauty, must be a most valuable acquisition to the interests of the inn,
+and tho' she smiles on all, she takes care not to make herself cheap, and
+like Corisca in the _Pastor Fido_ she holds put hopes which she does not at
+all intend to gratify. After passing by the superb scenery on the banks of
+the river (which increases in interest as you approach Lyons), the _Isle
+Barbe_ and _la Tour de la belle Allemande_, we arrived at Lyons at 5 p.m.
+and debarked on the _Quai de la Saône_. A _fiacre_ took me up and deposited
+me safe at the _Hôtel du Nord_ situated on the _Place St Claire_ and not
+many yards distant of the _Quai du Rhône_.
+
+
+LYONS, 26th Sept.
+
+Lyons is situated on a tongue of land at the junction of the Saône and
+Rhône, and there is a fine bridge on the spot where the streams unite,
+called _le pont du Confluent_, which joins the extremity of the tongue of
+land with the right bank of the Saône. There is besides a large bridge
+across the Rhône, higher up, before it joins the Saône, leading in a right
+line from the _Hôtel de Ville_; and two other bridges across the Saône. The
+_Quai du Rhône_ is by far the finest and most agreeable part of the city.
+It is spacious, well paved, aligned with trees, and boast the finest
+edifices public and private in the whole city; it is the favourite
+promenade of the _beaux_ and _belles_ of Lyons. The sight of the broad and
+majestic Rhône itself is a grand object, and on a fine day the prospect is
+augmented by the distant view of the fleecy head of Mont Blanc. On this
+Quai and within a 100 yards of the bridge on the Rhône are the justly
+celebrated _bains du Rhône_, fitted up in a style of elegance even superior
+to those called _les Bains Vigier_ on the Seine at Paris. The grand
+Hospital is also on the Quai; the facade is beautiful; its architecture is
+of the Ionic order and the building itself as well as its interior economy
+has frequently elicited the admiration of travellers. Among the Places in
+this city the finest is that of Bellecour.
+
+The scenery is extremely diversified in the environs of Lyons, and in the
+city there is great appearance of wealth and splendour. Lyons flourished
+greatly during the time of the continental blockade, as it was the central
+depôt of the commerce between France and Italy. Napoleon is much respected
+and regretted here, and with reason, as he was a great benefactor to this
+city. The Lyonnese are too frank, too open in their sentiments and too
+grateful not to render justice to his great talents and good qualities,
+while they blame and deplore his ambition. In fact an experience of a few
+days and some acquaintance I made here has given me a very favourable
+impression of the inhabitants of this city. The men are frank in their
+manners, polite, well informed, and free from all frivolity. The women are
+in general handsome, well shaped, and have much grace and are exceedingly
+well educated; they seem totally free from the _Petite-maîtressism_ of the
+Parisian women, and both sexes seem to possess a good deal of what the
+French term _caractère_. Had the Parisians resembled the Lyonnese, Paris
+would never have fallen twice into the hands of the enemy, nor would the
+Lyonnese women have welcomed the entry of the invaders into their city with
+waving handkerchiefs, etc. These qualities of the inhabitants, the beauty
+of the country, and the cheapness of all the comforts and luxuries of life,
+would make Lyons one of the most agreeable places of residence to a
+foreigner of liberal sentiments and principles.
+
+Cloth and silk are the staple manufactures of Lyons, particularly the
+latter; I accompanied my friend Mr M---- to see his fabrique of silk which
+is of considerable extent and importance, and everything appeared to me, as
+far as one totally ignorant of the business and its process could judge,
+admirably regulated and rapid in its execution. The _tournure_ of the
+_grisettes_ of Lyons is very striking and they possess completely the
+_grata protervitas_, the _vultus nimium lubricus aspici_ which Horace so
+much admires in Glycera.
+
+I visited both the theatres here, viz.: the _Grand Théâtre_, situated near
+the _Hôtel de Ville_, and the smaller one called the _Théâtre des
+Célestins_. At the former was some good dancing, and at the latter I was
+engaged in a conversation which I cannot forbear citing as it will serve to
+show the dislike the people have to the feudal system and the dread they
+have of its re-establishment, tho' they can know nothing about it except by
+tradition. The piece performed was called _Le petit Poucet_ (Tom Thumb and
+the Ogre); but I missed my old acquaintance the Ogre and his seven-league
+boots of Mother Goose, and found that in this melodrama he was transformed
+into a tyrannical and capricious _Seigneur Féodal_. There was a very pretty
+young lady about 16 years of age accompanied by her father in the same box
+with me, and I observed to her, "Où est donc l'Ogre? il parait que l'on en
+a fait un Seigneur féodal." "Oui, monsieur (she replied), et avec raison,
+car ils étaient bien les Ogres de ce temps là." I entered into a long
+conversation with my fair neighbour and found her well informed and well
+educated, with great good sense and knowledge of the world far beyond her
+years. She told me that she had begun to study English and that her father
+was a miniature painter. I took leave of her not without feeling much
+affected and my heart not a little "percosso dall' amoroso strale."
+
+I must not forget to mention that there is a most spacious and magnificent
+building on the _Quai du Rhône_ to the North of the bridge, which serves as
+a café and ridotto or assembly room for balls, etc. I am afraid to say how
+many feet it has in length; but it is the most superb establishment of the
+kind I have ever met with.
+
+Fortunately for the city of Lyons, the famous decree of Robespierre for
+its destruction, and the column with the inscription, "Lyon a porté les
+armes contre la liberté; Lyon n'est plus," which was to occupy its place,
+was never put in execution and tho' this city suffered much from
+revolutionary vandalism yet it soon recovered and has flourished ever since
+in a manner unheard of at any former period. No people are more sensible
+than the Lyonnese of the great benefits produced by the Revolution, and no
+people more deprecate a return to the _ancien régime_.
+
+
+Oct. 2nd, GENEVA.
+
+I started in the diligence for Geneva on the 28th Sept. and found it
+exceedingly cold on ascending the mountain called the _Cerdon_; the scenery
+is savage and wild, and the road in many parts is on the brink of
+precipices. We stopped at Nantua for supper and partook of some excellent
+trout. There is a large lake near the town, and 'tis here that the Swiss
+landscape begins. Commanding a narrow pass stands the fort of L'Ecluse. The
+Austrians lost a great many men in attempting to force it. From this place
+you have a noble view of the Alps and Mont-Blanc towering above them. As
+this was the first time I beheld these celebrated mountains I was
+transported with delight and my mind was filled with a thousand classical
+and historical recollections! The scenery, the whole way from Fort l'Ecluse
+to Geneva, is most magnificent and uncommonly varied. Mountain and valley,
+winter and summer, on the same territory. Descending, the city of Geneva
+opens gradually; you behold the lake Leman and the Rhône issuing from it.
+We entered the city, which is fortified, and after crossing the double
+bridge across the Rhône, we arrived at the _Hôtel de l'Eau de Genève_ at 12
+o'clock. The most striking thing in the city of Geneva to the traveller's
+eye as he enters it, is the view of the arcades on each side of the street,
+excellent for pedestrians and for protection against sun and rain, but
+which give a heavy and gloomy appearance to the city. An immense number of
+watch-makers is another distinguishing feature in this city. The first
+thing shewn to me by my _valet de place_ was the house where Jean Jacques
+Rousseau was born; I then desired him to shew me the spot where that
+barbarian Calvin caused to be burnt the unhappy Servetus for not having the
+same religious opinions as himself.
+
+The most agreeable promenades of the city are on the bastions and ramparts,
+a place called _La Treille_ and a garden or park of small extent called
+_Plain Palais_. In this park stands on a column the bust of J.J. Rousseau.
+This park was the scene of a great deal of bloodshed in 1791 on account of
+political disputes between the aristocratic and democratic parties, or
+rather between the admirers and imitators of the French Revolution and
+those who dreaded such innovations. This affair excited so much horror, and
+the recollection of it operated so powerfully on the imagination of the
+inhabitants, that the place became entirely abandoned as a public
+promenade, and avoided as a polluted spot for many years. Very likely
+however a sort of lustration has taken place; an oration was pronounced and
+the place again declared worthy of contributing to the recreation of the
+inhabitants. It is now become the favourite promenade of the citizens of
+Geneva, tho' there are still some who cannot get over their old prejudices
+and never set their foot in it. There is likewise a pleasant walk as far as
+the town of Carrouge in Savoy, which town has been lately ceded by the King
+of Sardinia to the republic of Geneva. In Geneva the sentiments of the
+inhabitants do not seem to be favourable either to the French Revolution,
+or to Napoleon. Their political ideas accord very much with those professed
+by the government party in England, and they make a great parade of them
+just now, as a means of courting the favour of England and of the Allied
+Sovereigns. The government here have shewn a great disposition to second
+the views of the Allied Powers in persecuting those Frenchmen who have been
+proscribed by the Bourbon government.
+
+This state lost its independence during the revolutionary wars and was
+incorporated with France. As the citizens were suspected of being more
+favourable to the English than suited the policy of the French government
+of that time, they were viewed with a jealous eye and I believe some
+individuals were harshly treated; but what most vexed and displeased them
+was the enforcement of the conscription among them, for the Genevois do not
+like compulsion; they are besides more pacific than war-like and tho' like
+the Dutch they have displayed great valour where their interest is at
+stake, yet Mercury is a deity far more in veneration among them than
+Bellona. The natural talent of this people is great, and it has been
+favoured and developed by the freedom of their institutions; and this
+republic has produced too many eminent men for that talent to be called in
+question; they seem to have decided talents and dispositions for financial
+operations. A Genevois has the aptitude of great application united to a
+very discerning, natural genius, and he generally succeeds in everything he
+undertakes. Literature is much cultivated here, and the females, who are
+in general handsome and graceful, excel not only in the various feminine
+accomplishments, such as music, dancing and drawing, but they carry their
+researches into the higher branches of litterature and science and acquire
+with great facility foreign languages. It is true that you now and then
+meet with a little pedantry on the part of the young men and some of the
+young women are _tant soit feu précieuses_; and you may guess from their
+conversation, which is sometimes forced, that the person who speaks has
+been learning his discourse by heart from some book in the morning, with
+the intention of sporting it as a natural conversation in the evening. In
+short, one does not meet with that _abandon_ in society that is to be met
+with in Paris; you must measure your words well to shine in a Genevese
+society. This, however, is a very pardonable sort of coxcombry; and tho' it
+appear sometimes pedantic, and occasionally laughable, yet it tends to
+encourage learning and science, and compels the young men to read in order
+to shine and captivate the fair.
+
+The Genevese women make excellent wives and mothers; and many strangers,
+struck with their beauty and talent, as well as with the _agrémens_ of the
+country in general, marry at Geneva and settle themselves there for life.
+It is observed that the Genevoises are so attached to their country that on
+forming a matrimonial connection with foreigners, they always stipulate
+that they shall not be removed from it. On the dismemberment of the Empire
+of Napoleon, Geneva was _agregé_ to the Helvetic Confederation, as an
+independent Canton of which there are now twenty-two. Three, viz. Geneva,
+Vaud, and Neufchatel, are French in language and manners. One, the Tessino,
+is Italian, and the remaining eighteen are all German. It is a great
+advantage to Geneva to belong to the Helvetic Confederacy, as formerly,
+when she was an isolated independent state, she was in continual dread of
+being swallowed up by one or other of her two powerful neighbours, France
+and the King of Sardinia, and only existed by their forbearance and mutual
+jealousy.
+
+I walked out one morning to Ferney in order to visit the chateau of
+Voltaire and to do hommage to the memory of that great man, the benefactor
+of the human race. It was he who gave the mortal blow to superstition and
+to the power of the clergy. It is the fashion for priests, Ultras and
+Tories to rail against him, but I judge him by his works and the effect of
+his works. His memory is held in reverence by the inhabitants of Ferney as
+their father and benefactor. He spent his whole fortune in acts of the most
+disinterested charity; he saved entire families from ruin and portioned off
+many a young woman who was deprived of the gifts of fortune and enabled
+them to form happy matrimonial connections; in short, doing good seems to
+have been one of the most ardent passions of his soul. In three memorable
+instances he shewed his hatred of cruelty and injustice, and unmasked
+triumphantly ecclesiastical imposture and fanaticism. He has been
+reproached with vanity, but surely that may be pardoned in a man who
+received the hommage of the whole literary world, who was considered as an
+oracle, and whose every sentence was recorded; whose talent was so
+universal, that he excelled in every branch of litterature that he
+undertook.
+
+Ferney, which was only a miserable village when Voltaire first took up his
+residence there, is now a large flourishing and opulent town.
+
+I found Voltaire's Chateau occupied by a fat heavy Swiss Officer who was on
+duty there, Ferney being at this moment occupied by the troops of the Swiss
+confederation. He was at breakfast, but on my stating to him that I was
+come to see the apartments of Voltaire he directed the housekeeper to shew
+them to me. On the left hand side after ascending a flight of steps, before
+you come into the Château, is a Chapel built by Voltaire with this simple
+inscription: "_Deo erexit Voltaire_." In the apartment usually occupied by
+him for the purpose of composition, are preserved his chair, table,
+inkstand and bed as sacred relics; and in the Salon are to be seen the
+portraits of several public characters, his contemporaries, and which were
+constantly appended there in his life time. Among these portraits I
+distinguished those of Frederick the Great of Prussia, Catherine II of
+Russia, Lekain, Diderot, Alembert, Franklin, Helvetius, Marmontel and
+Washington, besides many others. There is nothing remarkable either in the
+Château, or in the gardens appertaining to it; but as it stands on an
+elevation, it commands a fine view, which is so well described in that ode
+which begins:
+
+ Ô maison d'Aristippe, ô jardins d'Epicure!
+
+I returned to Geneva and dined with my friend M. Picot the banker, who
+presented me to his brother's family, which I found a very amiable one, and
+I was particularly delighted with his father, a fine venerable old man, who
+is a pastor of the Church of Geneva and a great admirer of our poets
+Thomson and Milton.
+
+I have made acquaintance at the _Ecu de Genève_ with a very gallant and
+accomplished officer, the Chevalier Zadera, a Pole by birth and a Colonel
+in the French army.[51] He had been on the staff of the Prince d'Eckmühl at
+Hamburgh and had served previously in St Domingo, in Germany and in Italy.
+He had just quitted the French service, having a great repugnance to serve
+under the Bourbon dynasty, and he is about to go to Italy on private
+business. He seems a very well informed man and well versed in French,
+Italian and German litterature. He also understands well to read and write
+English and speaks it, but not at all fluently. He acquired his English in
+the United States of America, whither he went when he escaped from the
+horrors of St Domingo. By the Americans he was received with open arms and
+unbounded hospitality as the compatriot of Pulaski who fell gloriously
+fighting in their cause, the cause of liberty, at the battle of Savannah.
+He was liberally supplied with money by several individuals without the
+smallest expectation or chance of repayment at the time, and was forwarded
+in this manner from town to town and from state to state throughout the
+whole Union; so that the tour he made and the time he passed in that land
+of liberty, he reckons as far the most agreeable epoch of his life. One
+evening at the _Ecu de Genève_ I found Zadera in altercation on political
+subjects with two French Ultras who had been emigrants, a Genevois and a
+Bernois, both anti-liberal. This was fearful odds for poor Zadera to be
+alone against four _acharnés_. I sat down and espoused his cause and we
+maintained our argument gloriously. The dispute began on the occasion of
+Zadera condemning the harshness shewn by the government of Geneva towards
+the _Conventionnels_ and others who were banished from France on the second
+restoration of Louis XVIII by a vote of the _Chambre introuvable_ in
+refusing them an asylum in the Republic and compelling them to depart
+immediately in a very contumelious manner. I said it was inconsistent and
+unworthy of the Genevese who called themselves republicans to persecute or
+join in the persecution of the republicans of France in order to please
+foreign despots. The others then began to be very violent with me. I
+replied, "Messieurs, vous avez beau parler; les Genevois sont de très bons
+cambistes et les meilleurs banquiers de l'Europe, mais il ne sont pas bons
+républicains."
+
+Geneva has been so often described by tourists that I shall not attempt any
+description except to remark that there are several good Cabinets and
+collections of pictures belonging to individuals. There is a magnificent
+public library. The manufactures are those of watches and models of the
+Alps which are exceedingly ingenious. There are no theatrical amusements
+here; and during divine service on Sunday the gates of the city are shut,
+and neither ingress nor egress permitted; fortunately their liturgy (the
+Calvinistic) is at least one hour shorter than the Anglican. Balls and
+concerts take place here very often and the young Genevois of both sexes
+are generally proficient in music. They amuse themselves too in summer with
+the "tir de l'arc" in common with all the Swiss Cantons.
+
+
+October 3rd.
+
+I have been in doubt whether I should go to Lausanne, return to Paris or
+extend my journey into Italy; but I have at length decided for the latter,
+as Zadera, who intends to start immediately for Milan, has offered me a
+place in his carriage _à frais communs_. I found him so agreeable a man and
+possessing sentiments so analogous to my own that I eagerly embraced the
+offer, and we are to cross the Simplon, so that I shall behold a travel
+over that magnificent _chausée_ made by Napoleon's orders, which I have so
+much desired to see and which everybody tells me is a most stupendous work
+and exceeding anything ever made by the Romans. As the Chevalier has served
+in Italy and was much _répandu_ in society there, I could not possibly have
+a pleasanter companion. He has with him Dante and Alfieri, and I have
+Gessner's _Idylls_ and my constant travelling companion Ariosto, so that we
+shall have no loss for conversation, for when our native wits are
+exhausted, a page or two from any of the above authors will suggest
+innumerable ideas, anecdotes, and subjects of discourse.
+
+
+MILAN, 10th Oct.
+
+We started from Geneva at seven in the morning of the 4th October, and in
+half an hour entered the Savoyard territory, of which _douaniers_ with blue
+cockades (the cockade of the King of Sardinia) gave us intimation. The road
+is on the South side of the lake Leman. In Evian and Thonon, the two first
+villages we passed thro', we do not find that _aisance_, comfort and
+cleanliness that is perceivable on the other side of the lake, in the
+delightful Canton de Vaud. The double yoke of priestcraft and military
+despotism presses hard upon the unhappy Savoyard and wrings from him his
+hard-earned pittance, while no people are better off than the Vaudois; yet
+the Savoyards are to the full as deserving of liberty as the Swiss. The
+Savoyard possesses honesty, fidelity and industry in a superior degree, and
+these qualities he seldom or ever loses, even when exposed to the
+temptations of a great metropolis like Paris, to which they are compelled
+to emigrate, as their own country is too poor to furnish the means of
+subsistence to all its population. When in Paris and other large cities,
+the Savoyards contrive, by the most indefatigable industry and incredible
+frugality, to return to their native village after a certain lapse of time,
+with a little fortune that is amply sufficient for their comfort. The
+poorest Savoyard in Paris never fails to remit something for the support of
+his parents. Both Voltaire and Rousseau have rendered justice to the good
+qualities of this honest people. It is a thousand pities that this country
+(Savoy) is not either incorporated with France, or made to form part of the
+Helvetic confederacy.
+
+On passing by La Meillerie we were reminded of "La nouvelle Héloise" and
+the words of St Preux: "Le rocher est escarpé: l'eau est profonde et je
+suis au désespoir." On the opposite side of the lake is to be seen the
+little white town of Clarens, the supposed residence of the divine Julie. A
+little beyond St Gingolph, which lies at the eastern extremity of the lake,
+we quit Savoy and enter into the Valais, which now forms, a component part
+of the Helvetic confederacy. German is the language spoken in the Valais.
+As the high road into Italy passes thro' the whole length of this Canton,
+Napoleon caused it to be separated from the Helvetic union and to form a
+Republic apart, with the ulterior view and which he afterwards carried into
+execution of annexing it to the French Empire. The Valais forms a long and
+exceedingly narrow valley, thro' the whole length of which the Rhône flows
+and falls into the lake Leman at St Gingolph. The breadth of this valley in
+its widest part is not more probably than 1,000 yards, and in most places
+considerably narrower, and it is enclosed on each side, or rather walled up
+by the immense mountains of the higher Alps which rise here very abruptly
+and seem to shut out this valley from the rest of the world. The high road
+runs nearly parallel to the course of the Rhône and is sometimes on one
+side of the river and sometimes on the other, communicating by bridges;
+from the sinuosity of the road and the different points of view presented
+by the salient and re-entering angles, of the mountains the scenery is
+extremely picturesque, grand and striking, and as sometimes no outlet
+presents itself to view, you do not perceive how you are ever to get out of
+this valley but by a stratagem similar to that of Sindbad in the Valley of
+Diamonds. At St Maurice is a remarkable one-arched bridge built by the
+Romans. We stopped at Martigny to pass the night; within one mile of
+Martigny and before arriving at it, we perceived the celebrated waterfall
+called the _Pissevache_; and the appellation, though coarse, is perfectly
+applicable. From Martigny a bridle road branches off which leads across the
+Grand St Bernard to Aoste. The next morning we arrived at Sion, called in
+the language of the country Sitten, the metropolis of the Valais; it is a
+neat-looking and tolerably large town, and which from its position might be
+made a most formidable military post, as there is a steep hill close to it
+which rises abruptly from the centre of the valley, and commands an
+extensive view east and west. Works erected on this height would enfilade
+the whole road either way and totally obstruct the approach of an enemy.
+There is besides a large castle on the southern _paroi_ of mountains which
+hem in this valley, which would expose to a most galling fire and take in
+flank completely those who should attempt to force the passage whether
+coming from St Maurice or Brieg. We stopped two hours at Sion to mend a
+wheel and this gave me time to ascend the mountain on which the castle
+stands. There were several masons and workmen employed in the construction
+of a church which they are erecting at the request and entire expense of
+His Sardinian Majesty. I could not ascertain what were the reasons that
+induced the King to build a church in a foreign territory. I did not
+observe either on the road or in any of the village thro' which we passed
+any striking specimen of Valaisan female beauty; but I often remarked the
+prominent bosom that Rousseau describes as frequent among them. We met with
+several _crétins_ or idiots, all of whom had _goitres_ in a greater or less
+degree. These _souls of God without sin_, as the crétins are called, are
+very merry souls; they always appear to be laughing. They seem to have
+adopted and united three systems of philosophy: they are Diogenes as to
+independence and neglect of decency and cleanliness; Democriti as to their
+disposition to laugh perpetually; and Aristippi inasmuch as they seem to be
+perfectly contented with their state. They are in general fat and well fed,
+for the poorest inhabitants give them something. They have a good deal of
+cunning, and many curious anecdotes are related of them which shews that
+they are endowed with a sort of sagacity resembling the instinct of
+animals. I recollect one myself mentioned by Zimmermann in his Essay on
+Solitude, of a crétin who was accustomed to imitate with his voice the
+sound of the village clock whenever it struck the hours and quarters; one
+day, by some accident, the clock stopped; yet the cretin went through the
+chimes of the hours and quarters with the same regularity as the clock
+would have done had it been going.
+
+We arrived at night at the village of Brieg at the foot of the Simplon and
+put up at a very comfortable inn. Brieg and Glisse are two small villages
+lying within a quarter of a mile distance from each other. The direct road
+runs thro' Brieg and is a great advantage to this town; while Glisse lost
+this benefit from the opposition shewn by its inhabitants to the annexation
+of the Valais to the French Empire. They now deeply regret this refusal as
+few travellers chuse to stop at Glisse.
+
+_Passage of the Simplon_.
+
+ Chi mi darà la voce e le parole
+ Convenienti a si nobil soggetto?[52]
+
+ Who will vouchsafe me voice that shall ascend
+ As high as I would raise my noble theme?
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+How shall I describe the Simplon and the impressions that magnificent piece
+of work, the _chaussée_ across it, made on my mind? On arrival at the
+village of the Simplon, which lies at nearly the greatest elevation off the
+road and is more than half-way across, I wrote in my enthusiasm for the
+author of this gigantic work, the following lines:
+
+ O viaggiator, se avessi tu veduto
+ Quel monte, pria che fosse il cammin fatto,
+ Leveresti le mani, e stupefatto
+ Diresti, "chi l'avrebbe mai creduto?
+ Son come quel d'Alcide i tuoi miracoli!
+ Vincesti, Napoleon', più grandi ostacoli!"
+
+Imagine a fine road or causeway broad enough for three carriages to go
+abreast, cut in the flanks of the mountains, winding along their contours,
+sometimes zigzag on the flank of one ravine, and sometimes turning off
+nearly at right angles to the flank of another; separated from each other
+by precipices of tremendous depth, and communicating by one-arched bridges
+of surprising boldness; besides stone bridges at each re-entering angle, to
+let pass off the water which flows from the innumerable cascades, which
+fall from the summits of the mountains. Ice and snow eternal on the various
+_pics_ or _aiguilles_ (as the summits are here called) which tower above
+your head, and yet in the midst of these _belles horreurs_ the road is so
+well constructed, so smooth, and the slope so gentle that when there are
+fogs, which often happen here and prevent you from beholding the
+surrounding scenery, you would suppose you were travelling on a plain the
+whole time. Balustrades are affixed on the sides of the most abrupt
+precipices and buttresses also in order to secure the exterior part of the
+_chaussèe_. On the whole length of the _chaussèe_ on the exterior side are
+conical stones of four feet in height at ten paces distant from each other,
+in order to mark the road in case of its being covered with snow. There are
+besides _maisons de refuge_ or cottages, at a distance of one league from
+each other, wherein are stationed persons to give assistance and food to
+travellers, or passengers who may be detained by the snow storms. There is
+always in these cabins a plentiful supply of biscuit, cheese, salt and
+smoked meats, wine, brandy and fire-wood. In those parts of the road where
+the sides of the ravines are not sloping enough to admit of the road being
+cut along them, subterraneous galleries have been pierced through the rock,
+some of fifty, some of a hundred and more yards in length, and nearly as
+broad as the rest of the road. In a word it appears to me the grandest work
+imagined or made by man, and when combined with its extreme utility, far
+surpasses what is related of the Seven Wonders of the world. There are
+fifty-two bridges throughout the whole of this route, which begins at the
+distance of three miles from Geneva, skirts the southern shore of the lake,
+runs thro' the whole Valais, traverses the Simplon and issuing from the
+gorges of the mountains at Domo d'Ossola terminates at Rho in the Milanese.
+From Brieg to the toll-house, the highest part of the road, the distance is
+about 18 miles. It made me dreadfully giddy to look down the various
+precipices; and what adds to the vertigo one feels is the deafening noise
+of the various waterfalls. As the road is cut zigzag, in many parts, you
+appear to preserve nearly the same distance from Brieg after three hours'
+march, as after half an hour only, since you have that village continually
+under your eyes, nor do you lose sight of it till near the toll-house.
+Brieg appears when viewed from various points of the road like the
+card-houses of children, the Valais like a slip of green baize, and the
+Rhône like a very narrow light blue ribband; and when at Brieg before you
+ascend you look up at the toll-house, you would suppose it impossible for
+any human being to arrive at such a height without the help of a balloon.
+It reminded me of the castle of the enchanter in the _Orlando Furioso_, who
+keeps Ruggiero confined and who rides on the Hippogriff.
+
+The village of the Simplon is a mile beyond the toll-house, descending. We
+stopped there for two hours to dine. A snow storm had fallen and the
+weather was exceedingly cold; the mountain air had sharpened our appetite,
+but we could get nothing but fish and eggs as it was a _jour maigre_, and
+the Valaisans are rigid observers of the ordinances of the Catholic church.
+We however, on assuring the landlord that we were _militaires_, prevailed
+on him to let us have some ham and sausages. German is the language here.
+The road from the toll-house to Domo d'Ossola (the first town at the foot
+of the mountain on the Italian side) is a descent, but the slope is as
+gentle as on the rest of the road. Fifteen miles beyond the village of the
+Simplon stands the village of Isella, which is the frontier town of the
+King of Sardinia, and where there is a rigorous _douane_, and ten miles
+further is Domo d'Ossola, where we arrived at seven in the evening. Between
+Isella and Domo d'Ossola the scenery becomes more and more romantic,
+varying at every step, cataracts falling on all sides, and three more
+galleries to pass. Domo d'Ossola appears a large and neat clean town, and
+we put up at a very good inn. At Isella begins the Italian language, or
+rather Piedmontese.
+
+The next morning we proceeded on our journey till we reached Fariolo, which
+is on the northern extremity of the _Lago Maggiore_. The road from Domo
+d'Ossola thro' the villages of Ornavasso and Vagogna is thro' a fertile and
+picturesque valley, or rather gorge, of the mountain, narrow at first, but
+which gradually widens as you approach to the lake. The river Toso runs
+nearly in a parallel direction with the road. The air is much milder than
+in Switzerland, and you soon perceive the change of climate from its
+temperature, as well as from the appearance of the vines and mulberry trees
+and Indian corn called in this country _grano turco_.
+
+At Fariolo, after breakfast, my friend Zadera took leave of me and embarked
+his carriage on the lake in order to proceed to Lugano; and I who was bound
+to Milan, having hired a cabriolet, proceeded to Arona, after stopping one
+hour to refresh the horses at Belgirate. The whole road from Fariolo to
+Arona is on the bank of the _Lago Maggiore_, and nothing can be more neat
+than the appearance of all these little towns which are solidly and
+handsomely built in the Italian taste.
+
+Before I arrived at Arona, and at a distance of two miles from it, I
+stopped in order to ascend a height at a distance of one-eighth of a mile
+from the road to view the celebrated colossal statue in bronze of St
+Charles Borromaeus, which may be seen at a great distance. It is seventy
+cubits high, situated on a pedestal of twenty feet, to ascend which
+requires a ladder. You then enter between his legs, or rather the folds of
+his gown, and ascend a sort of staircase till you reach his head. There is
+something so striking in the appearance of this black gigantic figure when
+viewed from afar, and still more when you are at the foot of it, that you
+would suppose yourself living in the time of fairies and enchanters, and it
+strongly reminded me of the Arabian Nights, as if the statue were the work
+of some Génie or Peri; or as if it were some rebel Genius transformed into
+black marble by Solomon the great Prophet. I am not very well acquainted
+with the life and adventures of this Saint, but he was of the Borromean
+family, who are the most opulent proprietors of the Milanese. Every tract
+of land, palace, castle, farm in the environs of Arona seem to belong to
+them. If you ask whose estate is that? whose villa is that? whose castle is
+that? the answer is, to the Count Borromeo, who seems to be as universal a
+proprietor here as _Nong-tong-paw_ at Paris or _Monsieur Kaniferstane_ at
+Amsterdam.[53] Arona is a large, straggling but solidly built town, and
+presents nothing worth notice.
+
+We proceeded on our journey the next morning. Shortly after leaving Arona,
+the road diverges from the lake and traverses a thick wood until it reaches
+the banks of the Tessino; on the other bank of which, communicating by
+means of a flying bridge, stands the town of Sesto Calende. The Tessino
+divides and forms the boundary between the Sardinian and Austrian
+territory, and Sesto Calende is the frontier of His Imperial, Royal and
+Apostolic Majesty. After a rigorous search of my portmanteau at the
+_Douane_, and exhibiting my passport, I was allowed to proceed on my
+journey to Milan.
+
+At Rho, where I stopped to dine, stands a remarkably ancient tree said to
+have been planted in the time of Augustus. The country presents a perfect
+plain, highly cultivated, all the way from Sesto to Milan. The _chaussée_
+is broad and admirably well kept up and lined on both sides with poplars.
+The roads in Lombardy are certainly the finest in Europe. I entered Milan
+by the gate which leads direct to the esplanade between the citadel and the
+city, and drove to the _Pension Suisse_, which is in a street close to the
+Cathedral and Ducal palace.
+
+
+MILAN, 12 October.
+
+I am just returned from the _Teatro della Scala_, renowned for its immense
+size: it certainly is the most stupendous theatre I ever beheld and even
+surpassed the expectation I had formed of it, so much so that I remained
+for some minutes lost in astonishment. I was much struck with the
+magnificence of the scenery and decorations. An _Opera_ and _Ballo_ are
+given every night, and the same are repeated for a month, when they are
+replaced by new ones. The boxes are all hired by the year by the different
+noble and opulent families, and in the _Parterre_ the price is only thirty
+soldi or sous, about fifteen pence English, for which you are fully as well
+regaled as at the _Grand Opéra_ at Paris for three and a half francs and
+far better than at the Italian theatre in London for half a guinea. The
+opera I saw represented is called _L'Italiana in Algieri_, opera buffa, by
+Rossini.
+
+The _Ballo_ was one of the most magnificent spectacles I ever beheld. The
+scenery and decorations are of the first class and superior even to those
+of the _Grand Opéra_ at Paris. The _Ballo_ was called _Il Cavaliere del
+Tempio_. The story is taken from an occurrence that formed an episode in
+the history of the Crusades and which has already furnished to Walter Scott
+the subject of a very pleasing ballad entitled the _Fire-King_, or _Count
+Albert and Fair Rosalie_. Battles of foot and horse with real horses,
+Christians and Moslems, dancing, incantations, excellent and very
+appropriate music leave nothing to be desired to the ravished spectator. In
+the _Ballo_ all is done in pantomime and the acting is perfect. The
+Italians seem to inherit from their ancestors the faculty of representing
+by dumb show the emotions of the mind as well as the gestures of the body,
+and in this they excel all other modern nations. The dancing is not quite
+so good as what one sees at the Paris theatre, and besides that sort of
+dancing they are very fond in Italy of grotesque dances which appear to me
+to be mere _tours de force_. But the decorations are magnificent, and the
+cost must be great.
+
+It was a fine moonlight night on my return from the _Scala_, which gave a
+very pleasing effect to the _Duomo_ or Cathedral as I passed by it. The
+innumerable aiguilles or spires of the most exquisite and delicate
+workmanship, tapering and terminating in points all newly whitened, gave
+such an appearance of airiness and lightness to this beautiful building
+that it looked more visionary than substantial, and as if a strong puff of
+wind would blow it away. The next morning I went to visit the Cathedral in
+detail. It stands in the place called _Piazza del Duomo_. On this _piazza_
+stands also the Ducal Palace; the principal cafés and the most splendid
+shops are in the same _piazza_, which forms the morning lounge of Milan.
+Parallel to one side of the _Duomo_ runs the _Corsia de' Servi_, the widest
+and most fashionable street in Milan, the resort of the _beau monde_ in the
+evening, and leading directly out to the _Porta Orientale_. The Cathedral
+appears to me certainly the most striking Gothic edifice I ever beheld. It
+is as large as the Cathedral of Notre Dame at Paris, and the architecture
+of the interior is very massive. There is little internal ornament,
+however, except the tomb or mausoleum of St Charles Borromeo, round which
+is a magnificent railing; there are also the statues of this Saint and of
+St Ambrogio. There are several well-executed bas-reliefs on the outside of
+the Church, from Scripture subjects, and the view from any of the balconies
+of the spires is very extensive. On the North the Alps, covered with snow
+and appearing to rise abruptly within a very short horizon, tho' their
+distance from Milan is at least sixty or seventy miles; and on all the
+other sides a vast and well-cultivated plain as far as the eye can reach,
+thickly studded with towns and villages, and the immense city of Milan nine
+miles in circumference at your feet. The streets in general in Milan are
+well paved; there is a line of trottoir on each side of the street
+equi-distant from the line of houses; so that these trottoirs seem to be
+made for the carriage wheels to roll on, and not for the foot passengers,
+who must keep within the space that lies between the trottoirs and line of
+houses. With the exception of the _Piazza del Duomo_ there is scarcely
+anything that can be called a _piazza_ in all Milan, unless irregular and
+small open places may be dignified with that name; the houses and buildings
+are extremely solid in their construction and handsome in their appearance.
+A canal runs thro' the city and leads to Pavia; on this canal are stone
+bridges of a very solid construction. The shops in Milan are well stored
+with merchandize, and make a very brilliant display. The finest street,
+without doubt, is the _Corsia de' Servi_. In the part of it that lies
+parallel to the Cathedral, it is about as broad as the _Rue St Honoré_ at
+Paris; but two hundred yards beyond it, it suddenly widens and is then
+broader than Portland Place the whole way to the _Porta Orientale_. On the
+left hand of this street, on proceeding from the Cathedral to the _Porta
+Orientale_, is a beautiful and extensive garden; an ornamental iron railing
+separates it from the street. From the number of fine trees here there is
+so much shade therefrom that it forms a very agreeable promenade during the
+heat of the day. On the right hand side of the _Corsia de' Servi_,
+proceeding from the Cathedral, are the finest buildings (houses of
+individuals) in Milan, among which I particularly distinguished a superb
+palace built in the best Grecian taste with a colonnaded portico,
+surmounted by eight columns. Just outside the _Porta Orientale_ is the
+_Corso_, with a fine spacious road with _Allées_ on each side lined with
+trees. The _Corso_ forms the evening drive and _promenade à cheval_ of the
+_beau monde_. I have seen nowhere, except in Hyde Park, such a brilliant
+show of equipages as on the Corso of Milan. I observe that the women
+display a great _luxe de parure_ at this promenade.
+
+The women here appear to me in general handsome, and report says not at all
+cruel. They have quite a _fureur_ for dress and ornaments, hi the adapting
+of which, however, they have not so much taste as the French women have.
+The Milanese women do not understand the _simplicité recherchée_ in their
+attire, and are too fond of glaring colours. The Milanese women are accused
+of being too fond of wine, and a calculation has been made that two bottles
+_per diem_ are drank by each female in Milan; but, supposing this
+calculation were true, let not the English be startled, for the wine of
+this, country is exceedingly light, lighter indeed than the weakest
+Burgundy wine; indeed, I conceive that two bottles of Lombard wine are
+scarce equivalent in strength to four wine glasses of Port wine. The
+Lombards for this reason never drink water with their wine; and indeed it
+is not necessary, for I am afraid that all the wine drank in Milan is
+already baptised before it leaves the hands of the vendor, except that
+reserved for the priesthood; such, at any rate, was the case before the
+French Revolution, and no doubt the wine sellers would oppose the abolition
+of so _ancient_ and _sacred_ a custom. The Milanese are a gay people,
+hospitable and fond of pleasure: they are more addicted to the pleasures of
+the table than the other people of Italy, and dinner parties are in
+consequence much more frequent here than in other Italian towns. The women
+here are said to be much better educated than in the rest of Italy, for
+Napoleon took great pains to promote and encourage female instruction, well
+knowing that to be the best means of regenerating a country.
+
+The dialect spoken in the Milanese has a harsh nasal accent, to my ear
+peculiarly disagreeable. Pure Italian or Tuscan is little spoken here, and
+that only to foreigners. French, on the contrary, is spoken a good deal;
+but the Milanese, male and female, among one another, speak invariably the
+_patois_ of the country, which has more analogy to the French than to the
+Italian, but without the grace or euphony of either.
+
+I have visited likewise the _Zecca_, or Mint, where I observed the whole
+process of coining. They still continue to coin here Napoleons of gold and
+silver, with the date of 1814, and they coin likewise crowns or dollars
+with Maria Theresa's head, with the date of the last year of her reign. The
+double Napoleon of forty _franchi_ of the Kingdom of Italy is a beautiful
+coin; on the run are the words, _Dio protegge l'Italia_. It may not be
+unnecessary to remark that in Italy by the word _Napoleone_, as a coin, is
+meant the five franc piece with the head of Napoleon, and a twenty franc
+gold piece is called _Napoleone d'oro_.
+
+At the _Zecca_ I was shown some gold, silver and bronze medals, struck in
+commemoration of the formation of the Lombardo-Venetian Kingdom, under the
+sceptre of Austria. They bear the following inscription, which, if I
+recollect aright, is from Horace:
+
+ Redeunt in aurum
+ Tempora priscum,[54]
+
+but this golden age is considered by the Italians as a very leaden one; and
+it seems to bear as much analogy to the golden age, as the base Austrian
+copper coin, daubed over with silver, and made to pass for fifteen and
+thirty soldi, has to the real gold and silver _Napoleoni_, which by the way
+are said to be fast disappearing; they are sent to Vienna, and Milan will
+probably be in time blessed with a similar paper currency to that of
+Vienna.
+
+Napoleon seems to be as much regretted by the Milanese as the Austrian
+Government is abhorred; in fact, everybody speaks with horror and disgust
+of the _aspro boreal scettro_ and of the _aquila che mangia doppio_, an
+allusion taken from the arms of Austria, the double-headed Eagle.
+
+I have visited the ancient Ducal, now the Royal, Palace; it is a spacious
+building, chaste in its external appearance, but its ulterior very
+magnificent; its chiefest treasures are the various costly columns and
+pilasters of marble and of _jaune antique_ which are to be met with. The
+_salle de danse_ is peculiarly elegant, and in one of the apartments is a
+fine painting on the plafond representing Jupiter hurling thunderbolts on
+the Giants. Jupiter bears the head of Napoleon. Good God! how this man was
+spoiled by adulation!
+
+The staircase of the Palace is superb, and the furniture is of the most
+elegant description, being faithfully and classically modelled after the
+antique Roman and Grecian. After visiting the Ambrosian library (by the
+way, it is quite absurd to visit a library unless you employ whole days to
+inspect the various editions), I went to the Hospital, which is a
+stupendous building, and makes up 8,000 beds. The arrangement of this
+hospital merits the greatest praise. I then peeped into several churches,
+and I verily believe my conductor would have made me visit every church in
+Milan, if I had not lost all patience, and cried out: _perche sempre
+chiese? sempre chiese? andiamo a vedere altra cosa_. He conducted me then
+to the citadel, or rather place where the citadel stood, and which now
+forms a vast barrack for the Austrian troops. We then went to visit the
+_Teatro Olimpico_, which was built by Napoleon. It is built in the style of
+the Roman amphitheatres, but much more of an oval form than the Roman
+amphitheatres were in general; that is to say, the transverse axis is much
+longer in proportion to the conjugate diameter than is the case in the
+Roman amphitheatres, and it is by no means so high. In the time of
+Napoleon, games were executed in this circus in imitation of the games of
+the ancients, for Napoleon had a great hankering to ape the Roman Caesars
+in everything. There were, for instance, gymnastic exercises, races on
+foot, horse races, chariot races like those of the Romans, combats of wild
+beasts, and as water can be introduced into the arena, there were sometimes
+exhibited _naumachiae_ or naval fights. These exhibitions were extremely
+frequent at Milan during the vice-regency of Prince Eugène Napoleon; during
+this Government, indeed, Milan flourished in the highest degree of opulence
+and splendour and profited much by being one of the principal depôts of the
+inland trade between France and Italy, during the continental blockade,
+besides enjoying the advantage of being the seat of Government during the
+existence of the _Regno d'Italia_. Even now, tho' groaning under the leaden
+sceptre of Austria, it is one of the most lively and splendid cities I ever
+beheld; and I made this remark to a Milanese. He answered with a deep sigh:
+"Ah! Monsieur, si vous aviez été ici dans le temps du Prince Eugène! Mais
+aujourd'hui nous sommes ruinés."
+
+My next visit was to the _Porta del Sempione_, which is at a short distance
+from the amphitheatre, and which, were it finished, would be the finest
+thing of the kind in Europe; it was designed, and would have been completed
+by Napoleon, had he remained on the throne. Figures representing France,
+Italy, Fortitude and Wisdom adorn the façade and there are several
+bas-reliefs, among which is one representing Napoleon receiving the keys of
+Milan after the battle of Marengo. All is yet unfinished; columns,
+pedestals, friezes, capitals and various other architectural ornaments,
+besides several unhewn blocks of marble, lie on the ground; and probably
+this magnificent design will never be completed for no other reason than
+because it was imagined by Napoleon and might recall his glories. Verily,
+Legitimacy is childishly spiteful!
+
+Yesterday morning I went to see an Italian comedy represented at the
+_Teatro Re_. The piece was _l'Ajo nell' imbarazzo_--a very droll and
+humorous piece--but it was not well acted, from the simple circumstance of
+the actors not having their parts by heart, and the illusion of the stage
+is destroyed by hearing the prompter's voice full as loud as that of the
+actors, who follow his promptings something in the same way that the clerk
+follows the clergyman in that prayer of the Anglican liturgy which says "we
+have erred and strayed from our ways like lost sheep." An Italian audience
+is certainly very indulgent and good-natured, as they never hiss, however
+miserable the performance.
+
+But in speaking of theatrical performances, no person should leave Milan
+without going to see the _Teatro Girolamo_, which is one of the
+"curiosities" of the place, peculiar to Milan, and more frequented,
+perhaps, than any other. This is a puppet theatre, but puppets so well
+contrived and so well worked as to make the spectacle well worth the
+attention of the traveller. It is the _Nec plus ultra of Marionettism_, in
+which Signer Girolamo, the proprietor, has made a revolution, which will
+form an epoch in the annals of puppetry; having driven from the stage
+entirely the _graziosissima maschera d'Arlecchino_, who used to be the hero
+of all the pieces represented by the puppets and substituted himself, or
+rather a puppet bearing his name, in the place of Harlequin, as the
+principal _farceur_ of the performance. He has contrived to make the puppet
+Girolamo a little like himself, but so much caricatured and so monstrously
+ugly a likeness that the bare sight of it raises immediate laughter. The
+theatre itself is small, being something under the size of our old
+Haymarket little theatre, but is very neatly and tastefully fitted up. The
+puppets are about half of the natural size of man, and Girolamo, aided by
+one or two others, works them and gives them gesture, by means of strings,
+which are, however, so well contrived as to be scarcely visible; and
+Girolamo himself speaks for all, as, besides being a ventriloquist, he has
+a most astonishing faculty of varying his voice, and adapting it to the
+_rôle_ of each puppet, so that the illusion is complete. The scenery and
+decorations are excellent. Sometimes he gives operas as well as dramas, and
+there is always a _ballo_, with transformation of one figure into another,
+which forms part of the performance. These transformations are really very
+curious and extremely well executed. Almost all the pieces acted on the
+theatre are of Girolamo's own composition, and he sometimes chooses a
+classical or mythological subject, in which the puppet Girolamo is sure to
+be introduced and charged with all the wit of the piece. He speaks
+invariably with the accent and _patois_ of the country, and his jokes never
+fail to keep the audience in a roar of laughter; his mode of speech and
+slang phrases form an absurd contrast to the other figures, who speak in
+pure Italian and pompous _versi sciolti_. For instance, the piece I saw
+represented was the story of Alcestis and was entitled _La scesa d'Ercole
+nell Inferno_, to redeem the wife of Admetus. Hercules, before he commences
+this undertaking, wishes to hire a valet for the journey, has an interview
+with Girolamo, and engages him. Hercules speaks in blank verse and in a
+phrase, full of _sesquipedalia verba_, demands his country and lineage.
+Girolamo replies in the Piedmontese dialect and with a strong nasal accent:
+"_De mi pais, de Piemong_." Girolamo, however, though he professes to be as
+brave as Mars himself has a great repugnance to accompanying his master to
+the shades below, or to the "_casa del diavolo_," as he calls it; and while
+Hercules fights with Cerberus, he shakes and trembles all over, as he does
+likewise when he meets _Madonna Morte_.
+
+All this is very absurd and ridiculous, but it is impossible not to laugh
+and be amused at it. An anecdote is related of the _flesh and blood_
+Girolamo, that he had a very pretty wife, who took it into her head one day
+to elope with a French officer; and that to revenge himself he dramatized
+the event and produced it on his own theatre under the title of _Colombina
+scampata coll'uffiziale_, having filled the piece with severe satire and
+sarcastic remarks against women in general and Colombina in particular.
+
+The atelier of the famous artist in mosaic Rafaelli is well worth
+inspecting; and here I had an opportunity of beholding a copy in mosaic and
+nearly finished of the celebrated picture of Leonardo da Vinci representing
+the _Caena Domini_. What a useful as well as admirable art is the mosaic to
+perpetuate the paintings of the greatest masters! I recollected on
+beholding this work that Eustace, in his _Tour thro' Italy_,[55] relates
+with a pious horror that the French soldiers used the original picture as a
+target to practise at with ball cartridge, and that Christ's head was
+singled out as the mark. This absurd tale, which had not the least shadow
+of truth in it, has, it appears, gained some credit among weak-minded
+people; and I therefore beg leave to contradict it in the most formal
+manner. It was Buonaparte who, the moment the picture was discovered,
+ordered it to be put in mosaic. No! the French were the protectors and
+encouragers, and by no means the destroyers of the works of art; and this
+ridiculous story of the picture being used as a target was probably
+invented by the priesthood, who seemed to have taken great delight in
+imposing on poor Eustace's credulity. To me it seems that such a story
+could only have been invented by a monk, and believed and repeated by an
+old woman or a bigot. The priests and French emigrants have invented and
+spread the most shameful and improbable calumnies against the French
+republicans and against Napoleon, and that credulous gull John Bull has
+been silly enough to give full credence to all these tales, and stand
+staring with his eyes and mouth open at the recital, while a vulgar jobbing
+ministry (as Cobbet would say) _picked his pockets_.
+
+Quite of a piece with this is the said Mr Eustace's bigotry, in not chusing
+to call Lombardy by its usual appellation "Lombardy," and affectedly
+terming it "the plain of the Po." Why so, will be asked? Why because Mr
+Eustace hates the ancient Lombards, and holds them very nearly in as much
+horror as he does the modern French; because, as he says, they were the
+enemies of the Church and made war on and despoiled the Holy See. The fact
+is that the Lombard princes were the most enlightened of all the monarchs
+of their time; they were the first who began to resist the encroachments of
+the clergy and to shake off that abject submission to the Holy See which
+was the characteristic of the age. The Lombards were a fine gallant race of
+men and not so bigoted as the other nations of Europe. Where has there ever
+reigned a better and more enlightened and more just and humane prince than
+Theodoric?[56] But Theodoric was an Arian, hence Mr Eustace's aversion, for
+he, with the most servile devotion, rejects, condemns and anathematizes
+whatever the Church rejects, condemns and anathematizes. For myself I look
+on the extinction of the Lombard power by Charlemagne to have been a great
+calamity; had it lasted, the reformation and deliverance of Europe from
+Papal and ecclesiastical tyranny would have happened probably three hundred
+years sooner and the Inquisition never have been planted in Spain. I have
+made this digression from a love of justice and from a wish to vindicate
+the French Republic and Napoleon from one at least of the many unjust
+aspersions cast on them. I feel it also my duty to state on every occasion
+that I, belonging to an army sent to Egypt in order to expel them from that
+country, have been an eyewitness of the good and beneficial reforms and
+improvements that the French made in Egypt during a period of only three
+years. They did more for the good of that country in this short period,
+than we have done for India in fifty years.
+
+Being obliged to be in London on the 24th December I took leave of the
+agreeable city of Milan with much regret on the 19th of October and engaged
+a place in a Swiss _voiture_ going to Lausanne. My fellow travellers were
+two Brunswick officers in the service of the Princess of Wales, who were
+returning to their native country; and a Hungarian and his son settled in
+Domo d'Ossola. Nothing occurred till we arrived at Arona, where we were
+detained a whole day, in consequence of some informality in the passport of
+the two Germans, viz., that of its not having been _visé_ by the Sardinian
+Chargé d'Affaires at Milan.
+
+During our detention at Arona, I fell in with a young Frenchman who was
+going to Milan in company of some Swiss friends. The Swiss were permitted
+to proceed, but the other was not, for no other reason than because he was
+a Frenchman; so that he took a place in our carriage in order to return to
+Switzerland. I found him a very agreeable companion, for tho' much
+chagrined and vexed at this harsh and ungenerous treatment on the part of
+the Piedmontese authorities, he soon recovered his good humour, and
+contributed much to the pleasure of our journey. The Germans came back to
+Arona very late at night, and during the rest of the journey gave vent to
+their feelings with many an execration such as _verfluchter Spitzbube,
+Hundsfott_, on the heads of the inexorable police officers of Arona. The
+next day, on passing by Belgirate, we took a boat to visit the Borromean
+islands, and afterwards returned to rejoin our carriage at Fariolo. The
+first of these islands that we visited was the _Isola Bella_, where there
+is a large and splendid villa, belonging to the Borromean family. The rooms
+are of excellent and solid structure, and there are some good family
+pictures. The furniture is ancient, but costly. The _rez de chaussée_ or
+lower part of the house, which is completely _à fleur d'eau_ with the lake,
+is tastefully paved, and the walls decorated with a mosaic of shells. One
+would imagine it the abode of a sea nymph. I thought of Calypso and
+Galatea. There are in these apartments _à fleur d'eau_ two or three
+exquisite statues.
+
+
+LAUSANNE, 11th November.
+
+I have been now nearly three weeks at Lausanne and am much pleased both
+with the inhabitants, who are extremely affable and well-informed, and with
+the beautiful sites that environ this city, the capital of the Canton de
+Vaud. The sentiments of the Vaudois, with the exception of a few absurd
+families among the _noblesse_, who from ignorance or prejudice are
+sticklers for the old times, are highly liberal; and as they acquired their
+freedom and emancipated themselves from the yoke of the Bernois, thro' the
+means of the French Revolution, they are grateful to that nation and
+receive with hospitality those who are proscribed by the present French
+Government; their behaviour thus forming a noble contrast to the servility
+of the Genevese. The Government of the Canton de Vaud is wholly democratic
+and is composed of a Landamman and grand and petty council, all
+_bourgeois_, or of the most intelligent among the agricultural class, who
+know the interests of their country right well, and are not likely to
+betray them, as the _noblesse_ are but too often induced to do, for the
+sake of some foolish ribband, rank, or title. The _noblesse_ are in a
+manner self-exiled (so they say) from all participation in the legislative
+and executive power; for they have too much _morgue_ to endure to share the
+government with those whom they regard as _roturiers_; but the real state
+of the case is that the people will not elect them, and the people are
+perfectly in the right, for at the glorious epoch when, without bloodshed,
+the burghers and plebeians upset the despotism of Bern, the conduct of the
+_noblesse_ was very equivocal. La Harpe was the leader of this beneficial
+Revolution, for which, however, the public mind was fully prepared and
+disposed; and La Harpe was a virtuous, ardent and incorruptible patriot.
+
+This canton had been for a long period of years in a state of vassalage to
+that of Bern; all the posts and offices of Government were filled by
+Bernois and the Vaudois were excluded from all share in the government, and
+from all public employments of consequence. When the Sun of Revolution,
+after gloriously rising in America, had shone in splendour on France, and
+had successfully dissipated the mists of tyranny, feudality, priestcraft
+and prejudice, it was natural that those states which had languished for so
+many years in a humiliating situation should begin to look about them and
+enquire into the origin of all the shackles and restraints imposed on them;
+and no doubt the Vaudois soon discovered that it was an anomaly in politics
+as well as in reason that two states of such different origin, the one
+being a Latin and the other a Teutonic people, with language, customs, and
+manners so different, should be blended together in a system in which all
+the advantages were on the side of Bern, and nought but vassalage on the
+part of Vaud. A chief was alone wanting to give the impulse; he was soon
+found; the business was settled in forty-eight hours; and by the mediation
+of the French Government, Vaud was declared and acknowledged an independent
+state and for ever released from the dominion of Bern. The federative
+constitution was then abolished throughout the union, and a general
+Government, called the Helvetic Republic, substituted in its place; but
+this constitution not suiting the genius and habits of the people, nor the
+locality of the country, was not of long duration; troubles broke out and
+insurrections, which were fomented and encouraged by the adherents of the
+old régime. But Napoleon, by a wise and salutary mediation, stepped in
+between them, and prevented the effusion of blood, by restoring the old
+confederation, modified by a variety of ameliorations. In the act of
+mediation, Napoleon contented himself with separating the Valais entirely
+from the confederation, and shortly after annexing it to France, on account
+of the high road into Italy across the Simplon running thro' that
+territory, and which it became of the utmost importance to him to be master
+of. The new Helvetic Confederation was inviolably respected and protected
+by Napoleon; for never after the act of mediation did any French troops
+enter in the Canton de Vaud, or any part of the Union to pass into Italy.
+They always moved on the Savoy side of the Lake to enter into the Valais.
+This act of mediation saved probably a good deal of bloodshed and in a very
+short time gave such general satisfaction, and was in every respect so
+useful and beneficial to the Helvetic Union, that in spite of the intrigues
+of the Senate of Bern, who have never been able to digest the loss of Vaud,
+the Allied Powers in the year 1814 solemnly guaranteed the Helvetic
+Confederation as established by the Act of Mediation, merely restoring the
+Valais to its independence and aggregating it as an independent Canton to
+the general Union. Geneva, on its being severed from the French Empire, and
+recovering its independence, solicited the Helvetic Union to be admitted as
+a member and component part of that Confederacy; which was agreed to, and
+it was and remains aggregated to it also.
+
+In 1815, on the return of Napoleon from Elba and on the renewal of the war,
+the Bern Government made a most barefaced attempt to regain possession of
+the Canton de Vaud; to this they were no doubt secretly encouraged by the
+Allies, and principally it is said by the British Government, the most
+dangerous, artful and determined enemy of all liberty; but this project was
+completely foiled, by the penetration, energy and firmness of the
+inhabitants of the Canton de Vaud and of its Government in particular. The
+central Government of the Union was at that time held at Bern and it was
+agreed upon in the Diet that Switzerland should remain perfectly neutral
+during the approaching conflict; an army of observation of 80,000 men was
+voted and levied to enforce this neutrality, but the command of it was
+given to De Watteville, who had been a colonel in the English service, and
+was a determined enemy of the French Revolution and of everything connected
+with or arising out of it. On the approach of the Austrian army, De
+Watteville, instead of defending the frontier and repelling the invasion,
+disbanded his army and allowed the Austrians to enter. No doubt he was
+encouraged, if not positively ordered to do this, by the Government of
+Bern, many members of which are supposed to have received bribes from the
+British Government to render the decreed neutrality null and void. At the
+same moment that this army was disbanded, the directoral Canton (Bern)
+caused to be intimated to the Canton de Valid that it was the wish and
+intention of the High Allies to replace Switzerland in the exact state it
+was in, previous to the French Revolution; and that, in consequence, two
+Commissioners would be sent from Bern to Lausanne, to take charge of the
+Bureaux, Archives and _insignia_ of Government, etc., and to act as a
+provisional Government under the direction of Bern. The Landamman and the
+grand and petty council at Lausanne, on learning this intelligence,
+immediately saw thro' the scheme that was planned to deprive them of their
+independence; they, therefore, passed a decree, threatening to arrest and
+punish as conspirators the Commissioners, should they dare to set their
+foot in the Canton, and declaring such of their countrymen who should aid
+or abet this scheme, or deliver up a single document to the Commissioners,
+traitors and rebels; they likewise called on the whole Canton to arm in
+defence of its independence and proclaimed at the same time that should
+this plan be attempted to be carried into execution, they would join their
+forces to those of Napoleon and thus endanger the position of the Allies.
+They took their measures accordingly; the whole Canton Sew to arms; the
+Bernois and the Allies were alarmed and consultations held; the Count de
+Bubna, the Austrian General, being consulted, thought the attempt so
+hazardous and so pregnant with mischief that he had the good sense to
+recommend to the Allied Powers and to the Canton of Bern to desist from
+their project and not to make or propose any alteration in the Helvetic
+Constitution, as guaranteed in 1814. His advice was of great weight and was
+adopted, and thus the Vaudois by their firmness preserved their
+independence. They met with great support likewise on this trying occasion
+from General La Harpe, preceptor to the Emperor of Russia, and a relation
+to the gentleman of the same name who was so instrumental in the
+emancipation of Vaud. La Harpe, who enjoyed the confidence of his pupil,
+exerted himself greatly in procuring his good offices in favour of the
+Vaudois his countrymen, and this was no small weight in the scale.
+
+Lausanne is an irregularly built city, and not very agreeable to
+pedestrians, for its continual steep ascents and descents make it extremely
+fatiguing, and there is a part of the town to which you ascend by a flight
+of stairs; the houses in Lausanne have been humorously enough compared to
+musical notes. The country in the environs is beautiful beyond description
+and has at all times elicited the admiration of travellers. There is an
+agreeable promenade just outside the town, on the left hand side of the
+road which leads to Geneva, called _Montbenon_, which is the fashionable
+promenade and commands a fine view of the lake. On the left hand side is a
+Casino and garden used for the _tir de l'arc_, of which the Vaudois, in
+common with the other Helvetic people, are extremely fond. On the right
+hand side of the road is a deep ravine planted in the style of an English
+garden, with serpentine gravel walks, and on the other side of the ravine
+stands the upper part of the city, the Cathedral, _Hôtel de Ville_, and the
+_Chateau du Bailli_, which is the seat of Government. From the terrace of
+the Cathedral you enjoy a fine view, but a still finer and far more
+comprehensive one is from the Signal house, or _Belvédère_ near the forest
+of Sauvabelin (_Silva Bellonae_ in Pagan times)[57]. In this wood fairs,
+dances and other public festivals are held, and it is the favourite spot
+for parties of pleasure to dine _al fresco_; it is a pity, however, that
+the edifice called the _Belvédère_ was not conceived in a better taste; it
+has an uncouth and barbarous appearance.
+
+Lausanne is situated about a quarter of a mile (in a right line) from the
+lake, and you descend continually in going from the city to the Lake Leman
+by a good carriage road, until you arrive on the borders of the lake, where
+stands a neat little town called Ouchy, or as it is sometimes termed _le
+port de Lausanne_. There is a good quai and pier. The passage across the
+lake from Ouchy to the Savoy side requires four hours with oars.
+
+I have made several pleasant acquaintances here, viz., M. Pidon the
+Landamman, a litterato of the first order; Genl La Harpe, the tutor of the
+Emperor of Russia; but the most agreeable of all is the Baron de
+F[alkenskiold], an old gentleman of whose talents, merits and delightful
+disposition I cannot speak too highly. He has the most liberal and
+enlightened views and opinions, and is extremely well versed in English,
+French and German litterature. He is a Dane by birth and was exiled early
+in life from his own country, on account of an accusation of being
+implicated in the affair of Struensee; and it is generally supposed that he
+was one of Queen Matilda's favoured lovers, which supposition is not
+improbable, as in his youth, to judge from his present dignified and
+majestic appearance, he must have been an uncommonly handsome man. He has
+lived ever since at Lausanne, and tho' near seventy-four years of age and
+tormented with the gout, he never loses his cheerfulness, and passes his
+time mostly with his books. He gives dinner parties two or three times a
+week, which are exceedingly pleasant, and one is sure to meet there a
+small, but well informed society of natives and foreigners. Most German
+travellers of rank and litterary attainments, who pass thro' Lausanne,
+bring letters of introduction and recommendation to the Baron and are sure
+to meet with the utmost hospitality and attention.
+
+The women of the Canton de Vaud are in general very handsome, well shaped
+and graceful; litterature, music, dancing and drawing are cultivated by
+them with success; and among the men, tho' one does not meet perhaps with
+quite as much instruction as at Geneva (I mean that it is not so general),
+yet no pedantry whatever prevails as in Geneva. At Lausanne they have
+sincere and solid republican principles and they do not pay that servile
+court to the English that the Genevese do; nor have they as yet adopted the
+phrase "_Dieu me damne_."
+
+
+PARIS, Dec. 5th.
+
+I returned to Paris by Geneva and crossing the Jura chain of mountains
+passed thro' Dole, Auxonne and Dijon. At Geneva, where I stopped three
+days, I met, at a musical party given by M. Picot the banker, the
+celebrated cantatrice Grassini, who looked as beautiful as ever, and sung
+in the most fascinating style several airs, particularly "_Quelle pupille
+tenere_" in the opera of the _Orazj e Curiazi_. To my taste her style of
+singing is far preferable to that of Catalani; there is much more pathos
+and feeling in the singing of Grassini; it is completely and truly the
+"_cantar che nell'anima si sente_." Catalani is very powerful, wonderful,
+if you will, in execution; but she does not touch my heart as Grassini
+does.
+
+On my return to Paris from Geneva I found that the conditions of peace had
+been made public. They are certainly hard, not so much on account of the
+cession of territory, which is trifling, as on account of the vast sums of
+money that Prance is obliged to pay, and the still more galling condition
+of having to pay and feed at her expense an army of occupation of 150,000
+men, of the Allied troops, for a term of three or five years, and to cede
+during that period several important fortresses. The inhabitants of Paris
+look very gloomy and nobody seems to think that the peace will last half as
+long. Prussia and Austria strove hard to wrest Alsace and German Lorraine
+from France; hosts of German publicists had accompanied their armies into
+France and had written pamphlet upon pamphlet to prove that mountains and
+not rivers were the proper boundaries of nations and that wherever the
+German language prevails, the country ought to belong to the Germanic body.
+Ergo, the Vosges mountains were the natural boundaries of France, and
+Alsace and German Lorraine should revert to Germany. Russia and England,
+however, opposed this, and insisted that these two provinces should remain
+with France; but I have no doubt that the first movements that may occur in
+France (and they will perhaps be secretly encouraged) will serve as a
+pretext for the Allies to separate these countries definitively from
+France.
+
+The Louvre has been stripped of the principal statues and pictures which
+have been sent back to the places from whence they were taken, to the great
+mortification of the Parisians, most of whom would have consented to the
+cession of Alsace and Lorraine and half of France to boot on condition of
+keeping the statues and pictures. The English Bureaux are preparing to
+leave Paris and the troops will soon follow; a new French army is
+organizing and several Swiss battalions are raised. It is generally
+supposed that by the end of December France, with the exception of the
+fortresses and districts to be occupied by the Allied Powers, will be freed
+from the pressure of foreign troops.
+
+The Chamber of Peers is occupied with the trial of Marshall Ney, the
+Conseil de Guerre, which was ordered to assemble for that purpose having
+declared itself incompetent. The friends of Ney advised him to claim the
+protection of the 12th Article of the Capitulation of Paris, and Madame
+Ney, it is said, applied both to the Duke of Wellington and to the Emperor
+of Russia; both ungenerously refused; to the former Nature has not given a
+heart with much sensibility, and the latter bears a petty spite against Ney
+on account of his title, _Prince de la Moskowa_. It is pretty generally
+anticipated that poor Ney will be condemned and executed; for tho' at the
+representation of _Cinna_ a few nights ago, at the Théâtre Français, the
+allusions to clemency were loudly caught hold of and applauded by the
+audience, yet I suspect Louis XVIII is by no means of a relenting nature,
+and that he is as little inclined to pardon political trespasses as his
+ancestor Louis IX was disposed to pardon those against religion; for,
+according to Gibbon, his recommendation to his followers was: _"Si
+quelqu'un parle contre la foi chrétienne dans votre présence, donnez lui
+l'épée ventre-dedans_."
+
+
+December 18th.
+
+I met with an emigrant this day at the Palais Royal who was acquainted with
+my family in London. It was the Vicomte de B*****ye.[58] He had resided
+some time in England and also in Switzerland. He is an amiable man, but a
+most incorrigible Ultra. He displayed at once the ideas that prevail among
+the Ultras, which must render them eternally at variance with the mass of
+the French nation. In speaking of the state of France, he said: "_Je n'ai
+jamais cessé et jamais je ne cesserai de regarder comme voleurs tous les
+acquéreurs des biens des émigrés. Il faudroit, pour le bonheur de la
+France, qu'elle fût placés dans le même état ou elle était avant la
+Révolution._" He would not listen to my reasons against the possibility of
+effecting such a plan, even were the plan just and reasonable in itself. I
+told him that for the emigrants to expect to get back their property was
+just as absurd as for the descendants of those Saxon families in England,
+whose ancestors were dispossessed of their estates by William the
+Conqueror, to think of regaining them, and to call upon the Duke of
+Northumberland, for instance, as a descendant of a Norman invader, to give
+up his property as unjustly acquired by his progenitors. We did not hold
+long converse after this; his ideas and mine diverged too much from each
+other.
+
+The English are very much out of favour with the emigrants, as well on
+account of the stripping of the Louvre as on account of not having shot all
+the _libéraux_. They had the folly to believe that the Allied troops would
+merely make war for the emigrants' interests, and after having put to death
+a considerable quantity of those who should be designated as rebels and
+Jacobins by them (the emigrants), would replace France in the exact
+position she was in 1789, and then depart.
+
+Poor Marshall Ney's fate is decided. He was sentenced to death, and the
+sentence was carried into execution not on the _Place de Grenelle_ as was
+given out, but in the gardens of Luxemburgh at a very early hour. He met
+his fate with great firmness and composure. I leave Paris to-morrow for
+London.
+
+
+[47] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, VI, 20, 7.
+
+[48] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 620 (temnere _divos_).--ED.
+
+[49] Louis Wirion (1764-1810), an officer of _gendarmerie_,
+ commander-general of the _place_ de Verdun since 1804, was accused in
+ 1808 of having extorted money from certain English prisoners quartered
+ in Verdun (Estwick, Morshead, Garland, etc.). Wirion shot himself
+ before the end of the long proceedings, which do not seem to have
+ established his guilt, but had reduced him to misery and despair.--ED.
+
+[50] Richard Brinsley Sheridan's (1751-1816) _Pizarro_, produced at Drury
+ Lane in 1799.--ED.
+
+[51] Three brothers Zadera, all born in Warsaw, served in the Imperial
+ army.--ED.
+
+[52] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_ III, 2, i.--ED.
+
+[53] These words mean, or are supposed to mean, in French and in Dutch: "I
+ don't understand" (_je n'entends pas_).--ED.
+
+[54] Horace, _Carm._, IV, 2,39.--ED.
+
+[55]John Chetwode Eustace (1762-1815), author of _A Tour through Italy_
+ (2 vol., London, 1813), the eighth edition of which appeared in
+ 1841.--ED.
+
+[56] Theodoric was a Goth, not a Lombard.--ED.
+
+[57] Of course, _Silva Beleni_.--ED.
+
+[58] Perhaps Clement François Philippe de Laâge Bellefaye, mentioned in the
+ _Souvenirs_ of Baron de Frénilly, p. 94. His large estates had been
+ confiscated in the Revolution.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER
+WATERLOO
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MARCH-JUNE,1816
+
+Ball at Cambray, attended by the Duke of Wellington--An Adventure between
+Saint Quentin and Compiègne--Paris revisited--Colonel Wardle and Mrs
+Wallis--Society in Paris--The Sourds-Muets--The Cemetery of Père La
+Chaise--Apathy of the French people--The priests--Marriage of the Duke de
+Berri.
+
+
+March, 1816.
+
+This time I varied my route to Paris, by passing thro' St Omer, Douay and
+Cambray. At Cambray I was present at a ball given by the municipality. The
+Duke of Wellington was there. He had in his hand an extraordinary sort of
+hat which had something of a shape of a folding cocked hat, with divers red
+crosses and figures on it, so that it resembled a conjurer's cap. I
+understand it is a hat given to his Grace by magnanimous Alexander; St
+Nicholas perhaps commissioned the Emperor to present it to Wellington, for
+his Grace is entitled to the eternal gratitude of the different Saints, as
+well as of the different sovereigns, for having maintained them
+respectively in their celestial and terrestrial dominions; and it is to be
+hoped, after his death, that the latter will celebrate for him a brilliant
+apotheosis, and the former be as complaisant to him and make room for him
+in the Empyreum as Virgil requests the Scorpion to do for Augustus:
+
+ ...Ipse tibi jam brachia contrahit ardens
+ Scorpios, et coeli jusiâ plus parts reliquit.[59]
+
+I met with an adventure in my journey from St Quentin to Compiègne, which,
+had it happened a hundred years ago in France, would have alarmed me much
+for my personal safety. It was as follows. I had taken my place at St
+Quentin to go to Paris; but all the diligences being filled, the _bureau_
+expedited a _calèche_ to convey me as far as Compiègne, there to meet the
+Paris diligence at nine the next morning. It was a very dark cold night,
+and snowed very hard.
+
+Between eleven and twelve o'clock at night, half way between St Quentin and
+Compiègne, the axle tree of the carriage broke; we were at least two miles
+from any village one way and three the other; but a lone house was close to
+the spot where the accident happened. We had, therefore, the choice of
+going forward or backward, the postillion and myself helping the carriage
+on with our hands, or to take refuge at the lone house till dawn of day. I
+preferred the latter; we knocked several times at the door of the lone
+house, but the owner refused to admit us, saying that he was sure we were
+_gens de mauvaise vie_, and that he would shoot us if we did not go away.
+The postillion and I then determined on retrograding two miles, the
+distance of the nearest village, and remaining there till morning. We
+arrived there with no small difficulty and labour, for it snowed very fast
+and heavily, and it required a good deal of bodily exertion to push on the
+carriage. Arrived at the village, we knocked at the door of a small
+cottage, the owner of which sold some brandy. He received me very civilly,
+gave me some eggs and bacon for supper, and a very fair bed.
+
+The next morning, after having the axle tree repaired, we proceeded on our
+journey to Compiègne. I suffered much from the cold during this adventure,
+and did not sleep well, having fallen into a train of thought which
+prevented me from so doing; and I could not help bringing to my
+recollection the adventure of Raymond in the forest near Strassburg, in the
+romance of _The Monk_. Nothing worthy of note occurred during the rest of
+the journey; but this adventure obliged me to remain one day at Compiègne
+to wait for the next diligence.
+
+
+PARIS, April 8th, 1816.
+
+I delivered my letters to the Wardle family and am very much pleased with
+them. I meet a very agreeable society at their house. Col Wardle is quite a
+republican and very rigid in his principles.[60] His daughter is a young
+lady of first rate talents and has already distinguished herself by some
+poetical compositions. I met at their house Mrs Wallis, the sister of Sir
+R. Wilson.[61] She is an enthusiastic Napoleonist, and wears at times a
+tricolored scarf and a gold chain with a medal of Napoleon's head attached
+to it; this head she sometimes, to amuse herself, compels the old emigrants
+she meets with in society to kiss. The trial of her brother is now going on
+for aiding and abetting the escape of Lavalette. I sincerely hope he will
+escape any severity of punishment, but I more fear the effects of Tory
+vengeance against him in England, in the shape of depriving him of his
+commission, than I do the sentence of any French court. Yet tho' I wish him
+well, I cannot help feeling the remains of a little grudge against him for
+his calumny against Napoleon in accusing him of poisoning the sick of his
+own army before the walls of St Jean d'Acre. I have always vindicated the
+character of Napoleon from this most unjust and unfounded aspersion,
+because having been in Egypt with Abercrombie's army and having had daily
+intercourse with Belliard's division of the French army, after the
+capitulation of Cairo, and during our joint march on the left bank of the
+Nile to Rosetta, I knew that there was not a syllable of truth in the
+story. Mrs Wallis, however, tells me that her brother has expressed deep
+regret that he ever gave credence and currency to such a report; and that
+he acknowledges that he was himself deceived. But he did Napoleon an
+irreparable injury, and his work on the Egyptian campaign contributed in a
+very great degree to excite the hatred of the English people against
+Napoleon, as well as to flatter the passions and prejudices of the Tories.
+
+In the affair however of Lavalette Wilson has nobly retrieved his character
+and obliterated all recollection of his former error. It is amazing the
+popularity he and his two gallant associates have acquired in France by
+this generous and chevaleresque enterprise.
+
+I meet at Col Wardle's a very pleasant French society: conversation, music
+and singing fill up the evening.
+
+
+April 15th.
+
+I have been presented to a very agreeable lady, Madame Esther Fournier, who
+holds a _conversazione_ at her house in the Rue St Honoré every Wednesday
+evening. Here there is either a concert, a ball or private theatricals;
+while in a separate room play goes forward and _crebs_, a game of dice
+similar to hazard, is the fashionable game. Refreshments are handed round
+and at twelve o'clock the company break up. Mme Fournier is a lady of very
+distinguished talent and always acts a principal rôle herself in the
+dramatic performances given at her private theatricals.
+
+I have become acquainted too with a very pleasant family, M. and Mme
+Vanderberg, who are the proprietors of a large house and magnificent garden
+in the Faubourg du Roule. M. Vanderberg is a man of very large fortune.[62]
+He has three daughters, handsome and highly accomplished, and one son; one
+of them was married to General R----, but is since divorced; the second is
+married to a young colonel of Hussars, and the third is still unmarried;
+but being very young, handsome, accomplished and rich, there will be no
+lack of suitors whenever she is disposed to accept the connubial chain. I
+have dined several times with this family. There is an excellent table. The
+choicest old wines are handed about during dinner, and afterwards we
+adjourn to another room to take coffee and liqueurs.
+
+If there is no evening party, the company retire, some for the theatre,
+some for other houses, where they have to pass the evening; if the family
+remain at home you have the option of retiring or remaining with them, and
+the evening is filled up with music or _petits jeux_. I meet with several
+agreeable and distinguished people at this house, among whom are M. Anglas,
+Mme Duthon from the Canton de Vaud, a lady of great vivacity and talent,
+and General Guilleminot and his lady. Col. Paulet, who married M.
+Vanderberg's second daughter, was on the staff of General Guilleminot at
+the battle of Waterloo and suffered much from a fever and ague that he
+caught on the night bivouacs.
+
+I have attended a séance of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_ founded
+by the famous Abbé de l'Epée, and continued with equal success by his
+successor the Abbé S[icard],[63] who delivered the lecture and exhibited
+the talent and proficiency of his pupils. The eldest pupil, Massieu,
+himself deaf and dumb, is an extraordinary genius and he may be said in
+some measure to direct all the others. Massieu, who has a very interesting
+and even handsome countenance, and manners extremely prepossessing,
+conducts the examination of the pupils by means of signs, and writing on a
+slate or paper; and it is wonderful to observe the progress made by these
+interesting young persons, who have been so harshly treated by Nature. The
+definitions they give of substances and qualities are so just and happy;
+and in their situation, definition is everything, for they cannot learn by
+rote, as other boys often do, who, in the study of philology, acquire only
+words and not things or meanings. The deaf and dumb persons, on the
+contrary, acquire at once by this method of instruction the philosophy of
+grammar; and then it is far from being the dry study that many people
+suppose. A German princess who was present exclaimed in a transport of
+admiration at some of the specimens of definitions and inferences given by
+the pupils; " Oh! I wish that I were born deaf and dumb, were it only to
+learn grammar properly!" Sir Sidney Smith was present at this lecture and
+seemed inclined to make himself a little too conspicuous. For instance,
+before the examination began, he seated himself close by the Abbé S[icard]
+and pulling a paper out of his pocket said that he had found it on the
+ground on his way hither; and that it was part of a leaf from an edition of
+Cicero which contained a sentence so applicable to the character and
+talents of his friend the Abbé, that he requested permission to read it
+aloud and translate it into French for the benefit of those who did not
+understand Latin. He then read the sentence. The Abbé, not to be out-done
+in compliments, then rose and made a most flaming speech in eulogium of his
+friend "the heroic defender of St John d'Acre" and pointed him out to the
+audience as the first person who had foiled the arms of the "Usurper."
+
+Now this word "Usurper" applied to Napoleon did not at all please the
+audience, and it shewed a great deal of servility on the part of the Abbé
+to insult fallen greatness, and in the person too of a man who had rendered
+such vast services to science. In fact this episode was received coldly,
+and somewhat impatiently by the audience; and many thought it was a thing
+_got up_ between the Admiral and the Abbé to flatter each other's vanity;
+indeed my friend Mrs Wallis, next to whom I was placed, and who does not at
+all agree with the gallant Admiral in politics, intimated this in a
+whisper, loud enough to be heard by all the audience and added: "Such a
+humbug is enough to make one sick." Sir Sidney Smith heard all this and
+seemed a good deal abashed and disconcerted; he, however, had the good
+sense to say nothing, and the examination began.
+
+
+PARIS, May 5th.
+
+I formed a party with some friends to visit the cemetery of Père la Chaise.
+We remarked in particular the places where poor Labédoyère and Marshal Ney
+are buried. There is no tombstone on the former, but some shrubs have been
+planted, and a black wooden cross fixed to denote the spot where he lies.
+
+To Marshal Ney there is a stone sepulchre with this inscription: "_Cy-gît
+le Maréchal Ney, Prince de la Moskowa_." This cemetery is most beautifully
+laid out. The multitude of tombs, the variety of inscriptions in prose and
+verse, some of which are very affecting, the yews, the willows, all render
+this a delightful spot for contemplation; it commands an extensive view of
+Paris and the surrounding country. Foreigners of distinction who die in
+Paris are generally buried here; but it would require a volume to describe
+to you in detail this interesting cemetery. I think the practice of
+strewing flowers over the grave is very touching and classic; it reminded
+me of the description of Marcellus's death in Virgil:
+
+ ... Manibus date lilia plenis.
+
+We however strewed over the tombs of Labédoyère and Ney not lilies, but
+violets, for my friend Mrs W[allis], who was of our party, has a great
+aversion to the lily.
+
+We have just heard of Didier's capture and execution at Grenoble.[64] There
+are continual reports of insurrections and plots, but it is now well known
+that the most of them are _got up_ by the Ultras to entrap the unwary. The
+French people seem sunk in apathy and to wish for peace at any rate;
+nothing but the most extreme provocation will induce them to take up arms;
+but then, if they once do so, woe to the _Chambre Introuvable_, as the
+present Chamber of Deputies is called; certainly such a set of venal,
+merciless and ignorant bigots and blockheads never were collected in any
+assembly. There have occurred several scandalous scenes at Nîmes and other
+places. The Protestants are openly insulted and threatened, and the
+government is either too weak to prevent it, or, as is supposed, secretly
+encourages those excesses. In fact in Paris there are two polices; the one,
+that of the Government, the other, and by far the most troublesome, that of
+_Monsieur_[65] and the violent Ultra party, or as they are collectively
+called the _Pavilion Marsan_.[66] The priests are at work everywhere
+trumping up old legends, forging communications from the Holy Ghost,
+receiving letters dropped from heaven by Jesus Christ, and all this is done
+with the idea of working on fanatical minds, to induce them to commit acts
+of outrage and violence on those whom the priests designate as enemies to
+the faith, and on weak ones, with the idea of frightening them into
+restoring the lands and property which they have purchased or inherited and
+which formerly belonged to emigrants or to the Church.
+
+A lady of my acquaintance (to give you an idea of the arts of these holy
+hypocrites) sent for a priest to confess and to receive absolution, not
+from any faith in the efficacy of the business, but merely from a desire of
+conforming to the ceremonies of the national worship. The priest arrived,
+but began by apologizing to her that he was sorry he could not administer
+to her the sacrament of absolution; she, surprized, asked the reason; he
+answered that it was because her uncle had purchased Church lands, which
+she inherited, and that unless she could resolve to restore them to the
+church, he could not think of giving her absolution. The lady was at a loss
+whether to be indignant at his impudence or to laugh outright at his folly.
+She however assumed a becoming gravity and _sang-froid_, and told him that
+he was very much mistaken if he thought he had got hold of a simpleton or a
+bigot in her; that she had sent for him merely with the idea of conforming
+to the national worship, and not with the most remote persuasion of the
+necessity or efficacy of his or any other priest's absolution; she added:
+"Your conduct has opened my eyes as to the views of all your cloth; I see
+you are incurable. I shall never send for any of you again; and be assured
+this anecdote shall not be forgotten. You may retire." The priest, abashed
+and mortified in finding himself mistaken in his supposed prey, stammered
+an excuse and retired.
+
+I intend to remain at Paris until after the marriage ceremony of the Duke
+and Duchess of Berri, and I shall then proceed to Lausanne. It is expected
+there will be some disturbance on the occasion of this marriage.
+
+I have witnessed an execution by the guillotine on the Place de Grève near
+the _Hôtel de Ville_. The criminal was guilty of a burglary and murder. It
+is the only execution (except political ones) that has taken place at Paris
+for the last six months, whereas in England they are strung up by dozens
+every fortnight. Independent of there being far less crimes committed in
+France than in England, the French code punishes but few offences with
+death.
+
+Why is not the sanguinary English criminal code with death in every
+line--why is it not reformed, I say? 'Twould be well if our legislators,
+instead of their puerile and frothy declamations against revolutionary
+principles and the ambition of Napoleon, would occupy themselves seriously
+with this subject. But then the lawyers would all oppose the simplification
+of our Code. They find by experience that a complicated one, obstructed by
+customs, statutes and acts of Parliament, difficult to be correctly
+interpreted, and frequently at variance with each other, is a much more
+profitable thing, a much wider and more lucrative field for the exercise of
+their profession, than the simplicity of the Code Napoléon; and they would
+die of rage and despair at the thought of anybody not a lawyer being able
+to interpret the laws himself. Now as our country gentlemen and members of
+Parliament are always much inclined to take lawyer's advice, and are
+besides fully persuaded and convinced that there are no abuses whatever in
+England and that everything is as it should be, there is no hope of any
+amelioration in this particular. All reasoning and argument is lost on such
+political optimists.
+
+The punishment of the guillotine certainly appears to be the most humane
+mode of terminating the existence of a man that could possibly be invented.
+The apparatus is preserved in the _Hôtel de Ville_, and is never exposed to
+view or erected on the place of execution, till about an hour before the
+execution itself takes place. At the hour appointed the criminal is brought
+to the scaffold, fastened to the board, placed at right angles with the
+fatal instrument, the head protruding thro' the groove, which embraces the
+neck; the executioner pulls a cord, the axe descends and the head of the
+criminal falls into a basket. The whole ceremony of the execution does not
+take three minutes when the criminal once arrives at the foot of the
+guillotine. There is none of that horrible struggling that takes place in
+the operation of hanging.
+
+June 21st, 1816.
+
+The ceremony of the marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Berri passed off
+quietly enough. Several people, it is true, were arrested for seditious
+expressions, but no tumult occurred. A great apprehension seemed to prevail
+lest something should occur, but the gendarmerie and police were so
+vigilant that all projects, had there been any, would have proved abortive.
+
+
+[59] Virgil, _Georg._, I, 35.--ED.
+
+[60] Colonel Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle was the celebrated exposer of the scandal
+ in 1808-9, when the mistress of the Duke of York was found to be
+ trafficking in Commissions. He had retired from active service in
+ 1802, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Financial reasons obliged
+ him, after 1815, to live on the Continent; he died in Florence,
+ 1833.--ED.
+
+[61] Sir Robert Thomas Wilson (1779-1849), author of _The History of the
+ British Expedition to Egypt_, 1802; a French translation of that work
+ elicited a protest from Napoleon.--ED.
+
+[62] Vanderberg had made a fortune as a contractor to the French army; he
+ is mentioned in Ida Saint Elme's _Mémoires d'une contemporaine_ and
+ elsewhere.--ED.
+
+[63] Abbé Sicard (Rooh Ambroise) was director of the Institution of
+ Sourds-Muets from 1790 to 1797 and from 1800 to 1822.--ED.
+
+[64] Paul Didier (1758-1816) took part in a Bonapartist conspiracy at Lyons
+ in 1816, raised an insurrection in the Isère and fled to Piedmont,
+ whence he was surrendered to the French authorities, condemned to
+ death and executed at Grenoble.--ED.
+
+[65] The King's brother, afterwards Charles X.--ED.
+
+[66] The N.E. pavilion of the Tuileries.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Journey from Paris to Lausanne--Besançon--French refugees in
+Lausanne--François Lamarque--General Espinassy--Bordas--Gautier--Michau--
+M. de Laharpe--Mlle Michaud--Levade, a Protestant minister--Chambéry--Aix--
+Details about M. de Boigne's career in India--English Toryism and
+intolerance--Valley of Maurienne--Passage across Mont Cenis and arrival at
+Suza--Turin.
+
+
+LAUSANNE, July 8th.
+
+Departing from Paris on the 24th June, 1816, I varied my journey into
+Switzerland this time, for instead of travelling thro' Lyons or Dole, I
+took the route of Besangon, Pontarlier, Jougne and Orbe. The country
+between Dijon and Besançon is a rich and fertile plain. At Besançon the
+mountainous country begins; it is a strong fortress, and the last
+considerable town of the French frontier. It lies in a very picturesque
+situation, being nearly environed by the Doubs, which meanders under its
+walls, and by very lofty mountains; on the other side of the Doubs stands
+the citadel, its chief strength. The town of Besangon is exceedingly
+handsome and well built, and there are several agreeable promenades, two of
+which I must particularize, viz., the promenade de Chamarre and the garden
+of the Palace of Granvelle. There are besides several Roman antiquities and
+the remains of a large amphitheatre. I amused myself very well for a couple
+of days at Besançon, and met with some agreeable society at the _Hôtel de
+France_ where I lodged. I left Besançon at eight in the morning of the 30th
+June, and arrived at Pontarlier at six the same evening. Pontarlier is a
+dreary, melancholy looking place, consisting of a very long street and
+several offsets of streets, situated in the midst of mountains, eternally
+covered with snow. Winter reigns here during nine months of the year. At
+Pontarlier the whole garrison were under arms, when I arrived, to pay the
+last duties to a most respectable and respected officer, whose death was
+occasioned by falling into the river, while at the _necessary_, by the
+under board giving way. This officer had served in almost all the campaigns
+of Napoleon and had greatly distinguished himself. What a cruel death for a
+warrior who had been in fifty battles! That death should have shunned him
+in the field of battle, to make him fall in a manner at once inglorious and
+ridiculous! yet such is destiny. Pyrrhus fell by a tile flung from a house
+by an old woman, and I am acquainted with a gallant captain in the British
+Navy who lost his leg by amputation, having broken it (oh horror!) by a
+fall from the top of a stage coach.
+
+I left Pontarlier on the 2d July, and arrived at Lausanne the same evening
+at five o'clock. On my return to Lausanne I had the pleasure to form an
+acquaintance with several eminent Frenchmen proscribed and banished from
+France, on account of having voted the death of Louis XVI, as members of
+the National Convention, which tried him, and for having voted, after the
+return of Napoleon from Elba, the _Acte additionnel_, which excluded the
+Bourbons for ever from the throne of France, Among them are, 1st, Monsieur
+Lamarque, who was one of the commissioners sent by the Convention to arrest
+Dumouriez, but being seized by him, and delivered over to the Austrians, he
+passed some time in captivity and was at length released, by being
+exchanged with some others against the Duchess d'Angoulême.[67] He is a
+very able man and seems to have far more political talent than any of the
+other _Conventionnels_ who are here. On Napoleon's return from Elba he
+voted for him, but made strong objections against the formation of a
+peerage, which he said was perfectly useless in France, and pregnant with
+mischief to boot, as it would only serve as an _appui_ to despotism. He
+wrote a pamphlet with some excellent remarks on this, subject. He therein
+points out the evils of an hereditary Chamber, and of a priviledged
+aristocracy, who have nothing to expect from the people, but all from the
+Prince; and in its stead he proposes an additional elective Chamber,
+something on the plan of the Senate in America, but he decidedly reprobates
+an hereditary peerage.
+
+The next is General Espinassy, a very good classical scholar and a most
+upright and amiable man.[68] In his vote he was solely influenced by strong
+but conscienscious republican principles; he resides here with his wife and
+two sons; he was considered as one of the best engineer officers in France
+and he opposed the nomination of Napoleon to the Imperial dignity in 1804.
+
+Another, M. Bordas,[69] opposed Napoleon's assumption of the Consulship on
+the 18th Brumaire, and was proscribed by him for a short time, but
+afterwards amnestied and received into favour. He gave his vote for
+Napoleon on the _Champ de Mai_ in 1815, but accompanied this vote by a bold
+speech towards Napoleon wherein he found fault with his former despotic
+practises, and reminded him of the solemnity of his promise to govern in
+future paternally and nationally, as became the sovereign of a free people.
+M. Bordas is a very cheerful, lively, companionable man and tho' seventy
+years of age, he has an uncommon share of vivacity, with something of the
+_ci-devant jeune homme_ about him, and He is pleased to be considered still
+as a man _à bonnes fortunes_.
+
+The next to him is M. Gauthier, who had been a lawyer, and held a
+considerable post as a magistrate in the time of the Republic and under the
+Empire.[70] He possesses a good deal of talent, close logical reasoning,
+and has determined public principle.
+
+The next, M. Michaud, had been also an advocate, and is possessor of
+considerable property in the department of the Doubs;[71] he is a most
+rigid unbending republican, something in the style of Verrina in Schiller's
+_Fiesco_; he opposed the assumption of the supreme power by Buonaparte on
+the 18th Brumaire; he voted against the Consulship for life, as well as
+against the assumption of the Imperial dignity. He is a very good classical
+scholar. He is a widower and has with him here Mlle Elisa, his only
+daughter, who follows her father's fortunes. She is a very amiable and
+accomplished young lady; she has a thorough knowledge of music and of
+painting in oils, and is classically versed in the Italian language. I soon
+became acquainted with the whole of these illustrious exiles, and I find
+great delight and instruction from their conversation; and this is a great
+relief to me, for the life one leads in a Swiss town is rather monotonous.
+
+
+LAUSANNE.
+
+I dine very often with my neighbour the Baron de Falkenskioeld, and at his
+house I became acquainted with M. de Laharpe, who was preceptor to the
+present Emperor of Russia. He is a native of this Canton, and has returned
+here to pass the remainder of his life. He is married to a very amiable
+Russian lady, and having acquired a pretty good fortune in Russia, he lives
+here very happily and comfortably; but notwithstanding this, he is often
+tempted to visit Paris, Milan and other great cities, and when there, sighs
+to return to his native mountains.
+
+As the Ultras of France bear a great hatred towards the inhabitants of the
+Canton de Vaud, on account of the asylum given and sympathy shown to the
+_proscrits_, they have been at the pains of trumping up and printing a
+pretended petition from the inhabitants of the department of the Doubs,
+praying that the French Government would endeavor to obtain the removal of
+these _proscrits_ from the Canton de Vaud, and stating that the said Canton
+was the _foyer_ of Jacobinical principles, and the place where Napoleon's
+return from Elba was planned and accelerated, and thro' which the
+conveyance of intelligence backwards and forwards was conducted. I have no
+doubt that in this petition more is meant than meets the ear; that the
+Oligarchs of Bern, as well as the Ultras of France, have a share in it, and
+that it may be considered not so much as an attempt to compel the Canton to
+refuse asylum to these exiles, as to excite the Great Powers to enforce the
+abolition of the independence of Vaud, and to replace it under the dominion
+and authority of the Canton of Bern.
+
+Everybody here, however, sees thro' the drift of this petition, and many
+persons whose names are put down as having signed it, have written to their
+friends at Lausanne, to declare not only that they never signed such a
+petition, but their entire ignorance even of the agitation of the question
+till they saw the petition itself in print. The French government, however,
+has not ventured to act any further upon it, than to make a pompous display
+of the royalist zeal and _bon esprit_ that pervades the Department of the
+Doubs.
+
+I see a good deal of Mlle Michaud. I find her conversation extremely
+agreeable. She had lent to me an Italian work by Verri entitled _Le notti
+Romane al sepolcro di Stipione_. She is a very rigid Catholic, having been
+educated by a priest of very strict ideas. Her devotion however does not
+render her less cheerful or less amiable. She having expressed a wish to
+hear the Protestant church service, I offered to accompany her and we went
+together one Sunday to the Cathedral Church at Lausanne. But it
+unfortunately happened that on that day a sermon was preached which must
+have given a great deal of pain to her filial feelings. Mr Levade, the
+minister, took it into his head to give a political sermon, in which, after
+a great deal of commonplace abuse of Voltaire, Rousseau and the French
+Revolution, and very fulsome adulation towards the English government (a
+subject which was brought in by the head and shoulders), of that _island_
+(as he termed it) _surrounded by the Ocean_, he lavished a great deal of
+still more fulsome adulation on the Bourbons; and then most wantonly and
+unnecessarily began a furious declamation against the _régicides_ as he
+termed them, who had taken refuge in the Canton, and intimated pretty
+plainly how pleasing it would be to God Almighty that they should be
+expelled from it. This intolerant discourse, more worthy of a raving Jesuit
+than of a Protestant minister, was deservedly scouted by the inhabitants of
+Lausanne; but this did not hinder poor Mlle Michaud from being much
+affected at the opprobrious tirade directed against a set of men, among
+whom her father bore a conspicuous part, and who acted from patriotic
+motives. I must not omit to state that in this discourse M. Levade
+interwove some hyperbolical compliments towards the young Prince of Sweden,
+who attended the service that morning. He told him that the eyes of all
+Europe were fixed upon him, and that Providence had him under his especial
+care.
+
+Now the following is the character of M. Levade.[72] He is a time-serving,
+meddling priest, and a most flagrant adulator of the powers that be. He
+thinks that by declaiming against the French Revolution, and against
+Voltaire and Rousseau, that he will get into favor with the great people
+who pass thro' Lausanne, with the French and English Government adherents,
+and with the great Tory families of England. No considerable personage ever
+passes through Lausanne, but Mr Levade is the first to make him a visit;
+and no rich or noble English family arrives with whom he does not
+ingratiate himself, and he is not sparing of his adulations. This mode of
+procedure has been a very profitable concern to him, as he has received a
+vast number of presents, and several valuable legacies, besides securing a
+number of pupils among the English families, that come or that have been
+here. He is in short a thorough parasite and time server, in every sense of
+the word. This adulation of the Bourbon family in his sermon, besides the
+meanness of it, was highly misplaced, coming from the mouth of a Protestant
+minister, and somebody exclaimed on leaving the Church: "_Que doit-on
+penser d'un ministre protestant du Canton de Vaud, qui prodigue des
+louanges à une famille qui a été l'ennemie acharnée de l'Elise reformée, et
+qui a persécuté les protestants d'une manière si atroce?_" But Mr Levade
+(tho' to the honor of the clergymen of the Canton de Vaud he is singular
+among _them_), yet he has many persons who perfectly resemble him among the
+members of the Church of England, and who are as eager to support despotism
+and to crush liberty as any disciple of Loyola or any Janissary of the
+Grand Signor. The other Protestant ministers of this Canton were highly
+indignant at this sermon; in fact, it was the first time in this city that
+the House of God had been profaned by the introduction of political
+subjects into a religious discourse. This sermon was the common topic of
+conversation for many days after.
+
+
+CHAMBÉRY, 2d August.
+
+I left Lausanne for Geneva on 28 July. I stopped at Nyon to pay a visit to
+Mme Duthon, with whom I became acquainted at Paris. I dined with her and
+passed a most agreeable day. Her talents are of the first order, and she is
+as great an enthusiast for the German language and litterature as myself,
+besides being well versed in Italian. She had a female relation with her.
+We took a boat after dinner to navigate the lake, and we visited the
+Château and domains of Joseph Napoleon. The next day I proceeded to Geneva.
+
+I determined on making the journey into Italy this time by Mont-Cenis, and
+to make it on foot as far as the foot of Mont-Cenis on the Italian side,
+intending to profit of the opportunity of the first conveyance I should
+meet with at Suza to proceed to Turin. I accordingly forwarded my
+portmanteau to Turin to the care of a banker there, and sallied forth from
+Geneva at six o'clock on the morning of 1st August.
+
+I stopped to dine at Frangy and reached Romilly at seven in the evening.
+There is nothing worthy of remark at Romilly. The next morning I stopped at
+Aix to breakfast, and visited the bath establishment. The scenery is
+picturesque on this route, and the whole road from Aix to Chambéry is
+aligned with remarkably fine large trees. At three in the afternoon I
+arrived at Chambéry, the capital of Savoy. It is a large handsome city,
+situated in a fruitful valley, with a great many gardens and orchards
+surrounding it. There is a strong garrison here. Among the many _maisons de
+plaisance_ in the environs of this city, the most distinguishable is the
+villa of General De Boigne, who has passed the greatest part of his life in
+India, in the service of Scindiah, one of the Mahratta chiefs;[73] and it
+was by De Boigne's assistance that Scindiah, from being a petty chief, with
+not more than three or four hundred horse, became the founder of a powerful
+kingdom, comprized chiefly of the provinces of the Ganges and Jumna, torn
+from the Mogol Empire, whose Sovereign fell into the hands of Scindiah.
+Scindiah caused the Mogol Emperor's eyes to be put out, and kept him as a
+state prisoner in Delhi, till the year 1805, when on the Mahrattas engaging
+in war with the English, Scindiah was defeated by Lake and lost the greater
+part of his conquests. De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, long before
+this rupture took place, and at that time Scindiah had a fine regular army
+of thirty battalions of 1,000 men, each disciplined, armed and equipped in
+the European manner. He had likewise sixty squadrons of regular cavalry and
+a formidable train of artillery. At Chambéry I met with two French
+_voyageurs de commerce_, who with that positiveness, which is often the
+national characteristic, insisted that De Boigne owed his riches and
+fortune to his treachery, in having betrayed and sold Tippoo Saib to the
+English, when he was in Tippoo's service; and I find this is the current
+report all over Savoy.
+
+Now it is an accusation totally devoid of foundation, as I shall presently
+show; and I took this opportunity of vindicating the reputation of De
+Boigne, by simply stating that De Boigne could never have betrayd Tippoo,
+since he was never in his service; 2dly, that he had, when in the service
+of Scindiah, fought against Tippoo, when the Mahrattas coalesced with the
+English against that Prince in 1792; and that had it not been for the
+assistance given by the Mahrattas to the English (a most impolitic
+coalition on the part of the Mahrattas, as it turned out afterwards),
+Tippoo would not have been compelled to conclude so humiliating a treaty of
+peace; 3dly, that De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, three years before
+the second war and death of Tippoo in 1799. I stated, too, that I was
+perfectly well acquainted with these particulars of De Boigne's career,
+from having served six years in India, and from having been personally
+acquainted with a gentleman of the name of Lucius Ferdinand Smith, who was
+the ultimate friend of De Boigne and his lieutenant general in the service
+of Scindiah; I added that I could not conceive how so unjust and unfounded
+an aspersion on De Boigne's character could find currency.
+
+I hope that what I said will be effectual towards doing away this injurious
+report; but very probably it will not, for when the vulgar once imbibe an
+opinion, it is difficult to eradicate it from their minds, and they are not
+at all obliged to the person who endeavors to undeceive them, so that
+General De Boigne's treachery and sale of Tippoo to the English will be
+handed down to posterity among the Savoyards, as a fact of which it will be
+as little permitted to doubt as of the treachery of Judas.
+
+
+CHAMBÉRY, August 3d.
+
+At the _table d'hôte_ this day I nearly lost all patience on hearing an
+elderly English gentleman extolling the English Ministry to the skies, and
+abusing the army of the Loire, calling them rebels and traitors. I stood up
+in defence of these gallant men, and stated that the French Army in the
+time of the Republic and of the Empire were the most constitutional of all
+the European armies, since they were taken from and identified with the
+people; and that it was this brotherly feeling for their fellow citizens
+that induced them to join the standards of Napoleon, on his return from
+Elba; that they only followed the voice of the nation; that all France was
+indignant at the tergiversation and breach of faith on the part of the
+restored Government, in a variety of instances; and that, had Napoleon and
+the army been out of the question, the Bourbons would not have failed to be
+upset, from the indignation their measures had excited among the people. He
+then said that the Army of the Loire was a most dangerous body of men, and
+that that was the reason why the Allies insisted on their being disbanded.
+I replied that this was the highest compliment he could pay them, and the
+greatest feather in their cap, since it went to prove, that as long as this
+Army was in existence, neither the crowned despots, nor the Ultras thought
+themselves safe; and that they could not venture to pursue their
+anti-national projects, which were all directed towards depriving the
+French people of all they had gained by the Revolution and bringing them
+back to the _blessings_ of the ancient _régime_. He could say nothing in
+reply, but that he feared I had Jacobin principles, to which I made
+rejoinder: "If these be Jacobin principles, I glory in them." Some
+Sardinian officers, who were present, seemed to enjoy my argument, tho'
+they said nothing; and one took me aside, when we quitted the table, and
+said he rejoiced to see me take the old man in hand, as he disgusted them
+every day by his tirades against the liberal party, and by his fulsome
+adulations of the British Government. The old gentleman held forth likewise
+in a long speech respecting the finances of England, in praise of the
+sinking fund, and when it was suggested to him that England from the
+immense national debt must one day become bankrupt: "_Non, Monsieur_," (he
+said),"_la Caisse d'Amortissement empêchera cela_." In fine, the _Caisse
+d'Amortissement_ was to work miracles. I replied that the principle of the
+_Caisse d'Amortissement_ was good, provided a constant and consistent
+economy were practised; but that at present and during the whole time from
+its establishment, it had been a mockery on the understanding of the
+Nation, when we reflected on the profligate expenditure of public money,
+occasioned by the ruinous, unjust and liberticide wars, which were entered
+into and fomented by the British Government. Indeed, I said it was like the
+conduct of a man who possessing an income of 200£ per annum, should set
+apart, in a box as a _Caisse d'épargne_, 20£ annually, and at the same time
+continue a style of living, the annual expence of which would so far exceed
+his income, as to oblige him to borrow 7 or 800£ every year. The old
+gentleman was all amort at this comparison, which must be obvious to every
+one. Nothing shows in a more glaring light the blind and superstitious
+reverence paid to great names; for because this sinking fund was proposed
+by Pitt, all his adherents extol it to the skies, without analysing it, and
+give him besides the credit of an invention to which he had no right
+whatever.
+
+
+ST JEAN DE MAURIENNE.
+
+I started from Chambéry on the morning of the fourth of August, and stopped
+at Montmélian to breakfast. Here begins the valley of Maurienne, and as
+this valley, along which the road is cut, is extremely narrow, being hemmed
+in on each side by the High Alps, Montmélian, which stands on an eminence
+in the centre of the valley (the road running thro' the town), must be a
+post of the utmost importance towards the defence of this pass. It was a
+fortified place of great consideration in the former wars, and if the
+fortifications were repaired and improved, it might be made almost
+impregnable, as it would enfilade the road on each side. From the
+above-mentioned features of the ground, the valley narrowing more and more
+as you proceed, from the high mountains that align it and from its
+sinuosities, it follows that at every angle or curve caused by these
+sinuosities, you appear as if you were shut out from all the rest of the
+world and could proceed no further. The river Isère runs thro' and parallel
+with this valley. It rises in the mountains of Savoy and falls into the
+Rhône in Dauphiné. I passed the night at Aiguebelle.
+
+From Aiguebelle to St Jean de Maurienne is twelve leagues, and I found
+myself so tired with walking, and my legs from being swelled gave me so
+much pain, that I determined to give up the _gloriole_ of making the whole
+journey on foot as I intended and to remain here for two days to repose and
+then profit by the first conveyance that might pass to conduct me to Turin.
+
+From Aiguebelle the valley becomes still more narrow, and there is a
+continual ascent, tho' it is so gentle as scarcely to be perceptible. Every
+spot of ground in this valley, which will admit of cultivation, is put to
+profit by the industry of the inhabitants. Here one sees beans, indian
+corn, and even wines; for the heat is very great indeed in summer and
+autumn, owing to the rays of the sun being concentrated, as it were, into a
+focus, in this narrow valley, and were the bed of the Isère to be deepened,
+or were it less liable to overflow, from the melting of the snow in spring
+and summer, much land, which is now a marsh, might be applied to
+agricultural purposes. The inhabitants of this valley regret very much the
+separation of Savoy from France, as during the time that Duchy was annexed
+to the French Empire, each peasant possessing an ass could earn three
+franks per diem in transporting merchandise across Mont-Cenis. St Jean de
+Maurienne is a neat little town. I put up at the same inn, and slept in the
+same bedroom which was occupied by poor Didier who was put to death at
+Grenoble for having raised the standard of liberty. He was surprized here
+in bed by the _Carabiniere Reali_ of the Sardinian government, those
+satellites of despotism; and according to the barbarous principles laid
+down by the crowned heads, delivered over to the French authorities. I
+observed a great many _crétins_ in this valley.
+
+
+SUZA, 10th August.
+
+On the morning of the 8th August two _vetturini_ passed by the inn at St
+Jean de Maurienne, and I engaged a place in one of them, as far as Turin.
+We arrived at the village of Modena in the evening. The landscape is much
+the same as what we have hitherto passed, but the climate is considerably
+colder, from the land being more elevated. Hitherto I had suffered much
+inconvenience from the heat. The next morning we reached Lans-le-Bourg, the
+last town of Savoy lying at the foot of Mount Cenis.
+
+After breakfast we began the ascent of Mont Cenis, and I made the whole way
+from Lans-le-Bourg to the _Hospice_ of Mont Cenis, that is, the whole
+ascent, a distance of twenty-five Italian miles, on foot. This _chaussée_
+is another wonderful piece of work of Napoleon; a broad carriage road, wide
+enough for three carriages to go abreast, and cut zig-zag with so gentle a
+slope as to allow a heavy French diligence to pass, with the utmost ease,
+across a mountain where it was formerly thought impossible a wheel could
+ever run. This _chaussée_ is passable at all seasons of the year; the
+mountain is not so high as that of the Simplon and is less liable to
+impediments from the snow; the obstacles from nature are less, and you can
+descend in a sledge from the _Hospice_ by gliding down the side of the
+cone, and thus descending in nine or ten minutes, whereas the ascent
+requires four hours' time. From Lans-le-Bourg to the _Hospice_ on
+Mont-Cenis the road is on the flank of an immense mountain and you have no
+ravines to cross; the road is cut zig-zag on the flank of the mountain and
+forms a considerable number of very acute angles, as it is made with so
+gentle a slope that you scarcely feel the difficulty of the ascent. These
+repeated zig-zags and acute angles formed by the road, and the very slight
+slope given to the ascent, make the different branches appear to be almost
+parallel to each other, and it is a very curious and novel sight when a
+number of carriages are travelling together on this road to see them with
+their horses' heads turned different ways, yet all following the same
+course, just like ships on different tacks beating against the wind to
+arrive at the same port, a comparison that could not fail immediately to
+occur to a sailor. There is scarcely ever any detention on this road from
+the fall of snow, as there are a considerable number of persons employed to
+_deblay_ it as soon as it falls; but here, as well as on the Simplon, there
+are _maisons de refuge_ at a short distance from each other. We stopped for
+two hours at the inn at Mont-Cenis, which is about one hundred yards from
+the _Hospice_. It was a remarkable fine day, and I enjoyed my walk very
+much. The mountain air was keen and bracing and particularly delightful
+after being shut up for some many days in the close valley. We had some
+excellent trout for dinner. At Mont-Cenis, near the _Hospice_, is a large
+lake which is frozen during eight months of the year. Here reigns eternal
+winter and the mountains are covered with snows that never melt. From
+Mont-Cenis to Suza the descent is very grand and striking, and the scenery
+resembles that of the Simplon; there are more obstacles of nature than on
+the former part of the road, and here ravines are connected by the means of
+bridges, and there are subterraneous galleries to pass thro. Several
+_chutes d'eau_ are here observable; one of them I cannot avoid mentioning,
+as being very magnificent. It is formed by the Cenischia[74] which divides
+Savoy from Piedmont and runs into the Dora at Suza. We were highly
+gratified at the sight of the sublime scenery on all sides, and at the
+magnificent _chaussée_, and we all (I mean the passengers in the two
+coaches and myself) did hommage to the mighty genius who conceived and
+caused to be executed such a stupendous work. We arrived at Suza at six
+o'clock p.m.
+
+
+TURIN, 18th August.
+
+Suza is a tolerably large town and has a neat appearance. It is commanded
+and defended by the fort of Brunetti, now dismantled, but which is to be
+repaired according to the treaty of 1815. It will then be a very important
+post and completely barr the pass of Suza. The road from Suza to Rivoli is
+thro' a valley widening at every step; at Rivoli you _débouche_ at once
+from the gorge of the mountain into a boundless plain. The road is then on
+a magnificent _chaussée_ the whole way to Turin, and every vegetable
+production announces a change of climate to those coming from Savoy. Here
+are fields of wheat, indian corn, mulberry and elm trees and vines hung in
+festoons from tree to tree, which give a most picturesque appearance to the
+landscape, and, together with the country houses, serve as a relief to the
+boundless plain. The _chaussée_ is lined with trees on each side the whole
+way from Rivoli to Turin; I observed among carriages of all sorts small
+cars, like those used by children, drawn by dogs. These cars contain one
+person each. They are frequent in this part of the country, and such a
+conveyance is called a _cagnolino_. The Convent of St Michael, situated on
+an immense height to the right of the road between Suza and Rivoli, is a
+very striking object. The mountain forms a single cone and it appears
+impossible to reach the summit except on the back of a Hippogriff:
+
+ E ben appar che d'animal ch'abbia ale
+ Sia questa stanza nido o tana propria.[75]
+
+ The castle seemed the very neat and lair
+ Of animal, supplied with plume and quill.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+
+TURIN, 14 August.
+
+Turin is a large, extremely fine and regular city, with all the streets
+built at right angles. The shops are very brilliant; the two _Places_, the
+_Piazza del Castello_ and the _Piazza di San Carlo_, are very spacious and
+striking, and there are arcades on each side of the quadrangle formed by
+them. The _Contrada del Po_ (for in Turin the streets are called
+_Contrade_) leads down to the Po, and is one of the best streets in Turin.
+Over the Po is a superb bridge built by Napoleon. In the centre of the
+_Piazza del Castello_ stands the Royal Palace, and on one side of the
+_Piazza_ the Grand Opera house. The streets in Turin are kept clean by
+sluices. The favorite promenades are, during the day, under the arcades of
+the _Piazza del Castello_ and those of the _Contrada del Po_; and in the
+evening round the ramparts of the city, or rather on the site where the
+ramparts stood. The French, on blowing up the ramparts, laid out the space
+occupied by them in walks aligned by trees. The fortifications of the
+citadel were likewise destroyed.
+
+In the Cathedral Church here the most remarkable thing is the _Chapelle du
+Saint Suaire_ (holy winding sheet). It is of a circular form, is inlaid
+with black marble and admits scarce any light; so that it has more the
+appearance of a Mausoleum than of a Chapel. It reminded me of the _Palace
+of Tears_ in the Arabian Nights.
+
+In the environs of Turin, the most remarkable buildings are a villa
+belonging to the King called _La Venezia_, and the _Superga_, a magnificent
+church built on an eminence, five miles distant from Turin. In the Royal
+Palace, on the _Piazza del Castello_, there is some superb furniture, but
+the exterior is simple enough. The country environing Turin forms a plain
+with gentle undulations, increasing in elevation towards the Alps, which
+are forty miles distant, and is so stocked with villas, gardens and
+orchards as to form a very agreeable landscape. From the steeple of the
+_Superga_ the view is very fine.
+
+In the University of Turin is a very good _Cabinet d'Histoire naturelle_,
+containing a great variety of beasts, birds and fishes stuffed and
+preserved; there is also a Cabinet of Comparative Anatomy, and various
+imitations in wax of anatomical dissections. Among the antiquities, of
+which there is a most valuable collection, are two very remarkable ones:
+the one a beautiful bronze shield, found in the Po, called the shield of
+Marius; it represents, in figures in bas-relief, the history of the
+Jugurthine war.[76] This shield is of the most exquisite workmanship. The
+other is a table of the most beautiful black marble incrusted and inlaid
+with figures and hieroglyphics of silver. It is called the _Table of Isis_,
+was brought from Egypt and is supposed to be of the most remote antiquity.
+It is always kept polished. Among the many valuable pieces of sculpture to
+be met with here is a most lovely Cupid in Parian marble. He is represented
+sleeping on a lion's skin. It is the most beautiful piece of sculpture I
+have ever seen next to the Apollo Belvédère and the Venus dei Medici; it
+appears alive, and as if the least noise would awake it.[77]
+
+Turin used to be in the olden time one of the most brilliant Courts and
+cities in Europe, and the most abounding in splendid equipages; now very
+few are to be seen. When Piedmont was torn from the domination of the House
+of Savoy and annexed to France, Turin, ceasing to be the capital of a
+Kingdom, necessarily decayed in splendor, nor did its being made the _Chef
+lieu_ of a _Préfecture_ of the French Empire make amends for what it once
+was. The Restoration arrived, but has not been able to reanimate it; an air
+of dullness pervades the whole city. Obscurantism and anti-liberal ideas
+are the order of the day.
+
+I witnessed a military review at which the King of Sardinia assisted. The
+troops made a very brilliant appearance and manoeuvred well. His Majesty
+has a very good seat on horseback and a distinguished military air. He is a
+man of honor tho' he has rather too high notions of the royal dignity and
+authority, and is too much of a bigot in religion; but his word can be
+depended on, a great point in a King; there are so many of them that break
+theirs and falsify all their promises. He will not hear of a constitution,
+and endeavors to abolish or discountenance all that has been effected
+during his absence. The priests are caressed and restored to their
+privileges, so that the inhabitants of Piedmont are exposed to a double
+despotism, a military and a sacerdotal one; the last is ten times more
+ruinous and fatal to liberty and improvement than the former.
+
+I have put up in Turin in the _Pension Suisse_, where for seven franks per
+diem I have breakfast, dinner, supper and a princely bed room. The houses
+are in general lofty, spacious and on a grand scale.
+
+
+[67] Francois Lamarque, born 1756, a member of the Convention, ambassador
+ in Sweden, prefect of the Tarn and member of the Cour de Cassation
+ (1804). He was exiled in 1816.--ED.
+
+[68] Major Frye (who wrote the name Despinassy) certainly means
+ Antoine-Joseph Marie Espinassy de Fontanelle's (1787-1829), who was a
+ member of the Convention, voted the King's death and served in the
+ Republican army of the Alps. In 1816, he was banished and went to
+ Lausanne, where he died 1829.--ED.
+
+[69] Pardoux Bordas (1748-1842) was a member of the Convention. Though he
+ had not voted the death of Louis XVI, he was banished from France in
+ 1816 and did not return there before 1828.--ED.
+
+[70] Antoine Francis Gauthier des Orcières (1752-1838) was elected to the
+ Etats Généraux in 1789, and, in 1792, to the Convention, where he
+ voted the death of Louis XVI. Later on, he was member of the Conseil
+ des Anoiena, juge au tribunal de la Seine and conseiller à la cour
+ impériale de Paris (1815). Banished in 1816, he returned to France in
+ 1828.
+
+[71] Jean Baptists Michaud, a member of the Directoire du département du
+ Doubs, and a member of the National Convention, voted the death of
+ Louis XVI and against the proposed appeal to the people.--ED.
+
+[72] Jean Daniel Paul Etienne Levade (1750-1834), Protestant minister first
+ in England, then in Amsterdam, finally minister at Lausanne and
+ professor of theology at the _Académie_ of the same town.--ED.
+
+[73] Countess de Boigne, in her interesting _Memoirs_ (of which there is an
+ English translation) abstained from describing her husband's career in
+ India; this lends additional interest to the information collected by
+ Major Frye,--ED.
+
+[74] The manuscript has _Sennar_, a name quite unknown at Suza.--ED.
+
+[75] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, iv, 13, 5.--ED.
+
+[76] This shield, now at the _Armoria Reale_, is not antique, but is
+ ascribed to Benvenuto Cellini.--ED.
+
+[77] This statue of Cupid is not antique, and has been recently ascribed to
+ Michelangelo (Knapp, _Michelangelo_, p. 155.)--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Journey from Turin to Bologna--Asti--Schiller and Alfieri--Italian
+_cuisíne_--The _vetturini_--Marengo--Piacenza--The Trebbia--Parma--The
+Empress Maria Louisa--Modena--Bologna--The University--The Marescalchi
+Gallery--Character of the Bolognese.
+
+
+August ---- 1816
+
+'Twas on a fine morning the 16th August that I took my departure from Turin
+with a _vetturino_ bound to Bologna. I agreed to pay him sixty francs for
+my place in the coach, supper and bed. When this stipulation for supper and
+bed is included in the price fixed for your place with the _vetturino_, you
+are said to be _spesato_, and then you have nothing extra to pay for but
+your breakfast. There were two other travellers in the _vettura_, both
+Frenchmen; the one about forty years of age was a Captain of cavalry _en
+retraite_, married to a Hungarian lady and settled at Florence, to which
+place he was returning; the other, a young man of very agreeable manners,
+settled likewise at Florence, as chief of a manufactory there, returning
+from Lyons, his native city, whither he had been to see his relations. I
+never in my life met with two characters so diametrically opposite. The
+Captain was quite a _bourru_ in his manners, yet he had a sort of dry,
+sarcastic, satirical humour that was very diverting to those who escaped
+his lash. Whether he really felt the sentiments he professed, or whether he
+assumed them for the purpose of chiming in with the times, I cannot say,
+but he said he rejoiced at the fall of Napoleon. My other companion,
+however, expressed great regret as his downfall, not so much from a regard
+for the person of Napoleon, as for the concomitant degradation and conquest
+of his country, and he spoke of the affairs of France with a great deal of
+feeling and patriotism.
+
+The Captain seemed to have little or no feeling for anybody but himself;
+indeed, he laughed at all sentiment and said he did not believe in virtue
+or disinterestedness. When, among other topics of conversation, the loss
+the French Army sustained at Waterloo was brought on the _tapis_, he said,
+"_Eh bien! qu 'importe? dans une seule nuit à Paris on en fabriquera assez
+pour les remplacer!_" A similar sentiment has been attributed to the great
+Condé.[78] We had a variety of amusing arguments and disputes on the road;
+the Captain railed at merchants, and said that he did not believe that
+honor or virtue existed among mercantile people (no compliment, by the bye,
+to the young fabricant, who bore it, however, with great good humour,
+contenting himself with now and then giving a few slaps at the military for
+their rapacity, which mercantile people on the Continent have now and then
+felt, before the French Revolution, as well as after). The whole road from
+Turin to Alexandria della Paglia is a fine broad _chausée_. The first day's
+journey brought us to Asti. A rich plain on each side of the road, the
+horizon on our right bounded by the Appennines, on our left by the Alps,
+both diverging, formed the landscape. Asti is an ancient, well and solidly
+built city, but rather gloomy in its appearance. It is remarkable for being
+the birthplace of Vittorio Alfieri, the celebrated tragic poet, who has
+excelled all other dramatic poets in the general _dénouement_ of his
+pieces, except, perhaps, Voltaire alone. I do not speak of Alfleri so much
+as a poet as a _dramaturgus_. I may be mistaken, and it is, perhaps,
+presumptuous in me to attempt to judge, but it has always appeared to me
+that Voltaire and Alfieri have managed dramatic effect and the intrigue and
+catastrophe of their tragedies better than any other authors. Shakespeare,
+God as he is in genius, is in this particular very deficient. Schiller,
+too, the greatest modern poetic genius perhaps and the Shakespeare of
+Germany, has here failed also, and nothing can be more correct than the
+estimate of Alfieri made by Forsyth[79] when, after speaking of his
+defects, he says: "Yet where lives the tragic poet equal to Alfieri?
+Schiller (then living also) may perhaps excel him in those peals of terror
+which flash thro' his gloomy and tempestuous scene, but he is far inferior
+in the mechanism of his drama."
+
+To return to my first day's journey from Turin. It was a very long day's
+work, and we did not arrive at Asti till very late, after having performed
+the last hour, half in the dark, on a road which is by no means in good
+repute. The character of the lower class of Piedmontese is not good. They
+are ferocious, vindictive and great marauders. They make excellent soldiers
+during war and they not unfrequently, on being disbanded after peace, by
+way of keeping their hand in practise and of having the image of war before
+their eyes, ease the traveller of his coin and sometimes of his life. Our
+conversation partook of these reminiscences, and during the latter part of
+our journey turned entirely on bandits "force and guile," so that we were
+quite rejoiced at seeing the smoke and light of the town of Asti and
+hearing the dogs bark, which reminded me of Ariosto's lines:
+
+ Non molto va che dalle vie supreme
+ De' tetti uscir vede il vapor del fuoco
+ Sente cani abbajar, muggire armento,
+ Viene alla villa, e piglia alloggiamenti.[80]
+
+ Nor far the warrior had pursued his best,
+ Ere, eddying from a roof, he saw the smoke,
+ Heard noise of dog and kine, a farm espied,
+ And thitherward in quest of lodging hied.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+We met on alighting at the door of a large spacious inn, two ladies who had
+very much the appearance of the two damsels at the inn where Don Quixote
+alighted and received his order of knighthood; but, in spite of their
+amorous glances and a decided leer of invitation, I had like Sacripante's
+steed more need of "_riposo e d'esca che di nuova giostra_." The usual
+Italian supper was put before us, and very good it was, viz., _Imprimis: A
+minestra_ (soup), generally made of beef or veal with vermicelli or
+macaroni in it and its never failing accompaniment in Italy, grated
+Parmesan cheese. Then a _lesso_ (bouilli) of beef, veal or mutton, or all
+three; next an _umido_ (fricassée) of cocks' combs and livers, a favourite
+Italian dish; then a _frittura_ of chickens' livers, fish or vegetables
+fried. Then an _umido_ or ragout of veal, fish with sauce; and lastly, an
+arrosto (roast) of fowls, veal, game, or all three. The _arrosto_ is
+generally very dry and done to cinders almost. Vegetables are served up
+With the _umidi_, but plain boiled, leaving it optional to you to use
+melted butter or oil with them. A salad is a constant concomitant of the
+_arrosto_. A desert or fruit concludes the repast. Wine is drank at
+discretion. The wine of Lombardy is light and not ill flavored; it is far
+weaker than any wine I know of, but it has an excellent quality, that of
+facilitating digestion. A cup of strong coffee is generally made for you in
+the morning, for which you pay three or four _soldi_ (sous), and in giving
+five or six _soldi_ to the waiter, all your expenses are paid supposing you
+are _spesato_, i.e., that the _vetturino_ pays for your supper and bed; if
+not, your charges are left to the conscience of the aubergiste, which in
+Italy is in general of prodigious width. I therefore advise every traveller
+who goes with a _vetturino_ to be a spesato, otherwise he will have to pay
+four or five times as much and not be a whit better regaled. The
+_vetturini_ generally pay from three to three and a half francs for the
+supper and bed of their passengers. As the _vetturini_ invariably make a
+halt of an hour and half or two hours at mid-day in some town or village,
+this halt enables you to take your _déjeuner à la fourchette_, which you
+pay for yourself, unless you stipulate for the payment of that also with
+the _vetturino_ by paying something more, say one a half franc per diem for
+that. In this part, and indeed in the whole of the north of Italy not a
+female servant is to be seen at the inns and men make the beds. It is
+otherwise, I understand, in Tuscany.
+
+The whole appearance of the country from Asti to Alexandria presents an
+immense plain extremely fertile, but the crops of corn being off the
+ground, the landscape would not be pleasing to the eye, were it not
+relieved by the frequency of mulberry trees and the vines hung in festoons
+from tree to tree. The villages and farmhouses on this road are extremely
+solid and well built. We arrived at Alexandria about twelve o'clock, and
+after breakfast I hired a horse to visit the field of battle of Marengo,
+which is in the neighbourhood of this city, Marengo itself being a village
+five miles distant from Alexandria. Arrived on the plain, I was conducted
+to the spot where the first Consul stood at the time that he perceived the
+approach of Desaix's division. I figured to myself the first Consul on his
+white charger, halting his army, then in some confusion, riding along the
+line exposed to a heavy fire from the Austrians, who cannonaded the whole
+length of the line; aides-de-camp and orderlies falling around him, himself
+calm and collected, "spying 'vantage," and observing that the Austrian
+deployment was too extended, and their centre thereby weakened, suddenly
+profiting of this circumstance to order Desaix's division to advance and
+lead the charge which decided the victory on that memorable day, which,
+according to Mascheroni:
+
+ _splende
+ Nell' abisso de' secoli, qual Sole_.
+
+The whole field of battle is an extensive plain, with but few trees, and to
+use Campbell's lines:
+
+ every turf beneath the feet
+ Marks out a soldier's sepulchre.
+
+The Column, erected to commemorate this glorious victory, has been thrown
+down by order of the Austrian government--a poor piece of puerile spite,
+but worthy of legitimacy. Alexandria is, or rather _was_, for the
+fortifications no longer exist, more remarkable for being an important
+military post than for the beauty of the city itself. There is, however, a
+fine and spacious _Place_, which serves as a parade for the garrison, and
+being planted with trees by the French when they held it, forms an
+agreeable promenade. The fortifications were blown up by the Austrians
+before the place was given over to the Sardinian authorities, a flagrant
+breach of faith and contract, since by the treaty of 1814 they were bound
+to give up all the fortified places that were restored or ceded to the King
+of Sardinia in the same state in which they were found when the French
+evacuated them, and the Austrians took possession provisorily. The French
+regarding (and with reason) this fortress as the key of Lombardy always
+kept the fortifications in good repair and well provided with cannon. But
+the Austrian government, knowing itself to be unpopular in Italy and
+trembling for the safety of her dominions, being always fearful that the
+Piedmontese Government might one day be induced to favour an
+insurrectionary or national movement in the north of Italy, determined,
+finding that it could not keep the fortress for itself, which it strove
+hard to do under divers pretexts, to render it of as little use as they
+possibly could do to the King of Sardinia; so they blew up the
+fortifications and carried off the cannon, leaving the King without a
+single fortified place in the whole of his Italian dominions to defend
+himself, in case of attack, against an Austrian invasion.
+
+On the morning of the 15th August we passed thro' Tortona, now no longer a
+fortress of consequence. All this country may be considered as classic
+ground, immortalized by the campaigns of Napoleon, when commander in chief
+of the army of the French Republic in Italy, a far greater and more
+illustrious _rôle_ than when he assumed the Imperial bauble and
+condescended to mix with the vulgar herd of Kings.
+
+We arrived at Voghera to breakfast and at Casteggio at night. The country
+is much the same as that which we have already passed thro', being a plain,
+with a rich alluvial soil, mulberry trees and a number of solidly built
+stone farmhouses. The next morning at eleven o'clock we arrived at Piacenza
+on the Po, and were detained a quarter of an hour at the _Douane_ of Her
+Majesty the Archduchess, as Maria Louisa, the present Duchess of Parma, is
+stiled, we being now arrived in her dominions. We drove to the _Hôtel di
+San Marco_, which is close to the _Piazza Grande_, and alighted there. On
+the Piazza stands the _Hôtel de Ville_, and in front of it are two
+equestrian statues in bronze of the Princes Farnesi; the statues, however,
+of the riders appear much too small in proportion with the horses, and they
+resemble two little boys mounted on Lincolnshire carthorses.
+
+I did not visit the churches and palaces in this city from not having time
+and, besides, I did not feel myself inclined or _bound_ (as some travellers
+think themselves) to visit every church and every town in Italy. I really
+believe the _ciceroni_ think that we _Ultramontani_ live in mud hovels in
+our own country, and that we have never seen a stone edifice, till our
+arrival in Italy, for every town house which is not a shop is termed a
+_palazzo_, and they would conduct you to see all of them if you would be
+guided by them. I had an opportunity, during the two hours we halted here,
+of walking over the greater part of the city, after a hasty breakfast.
+Piacenza is a large handsome city; among the females that I saw in the
+streets the Spanish costume seems very prevalent, no doubt from being so
+long governed by a Spanish family.
+
+On leaving Piacenza we passed thro' a rich meadow country and met with an
+immense quantity of cattle grazing. The road is a fine broad _chaussée_
+considerably elevated above the level of the fields and is lined with
+poplars. Where this land is not in pasture, cornfields and mulberry trees,
+with vines in festoons, vary the landscape, which is additionally enlivened
+by frequent _maisons de plaisance_ and excellently built farmhouses. We
+passed thro' Firenzuola, a long well-built village, or rather _bourg_, and
+we brought to the night at Borgo San Donino. At this place I found the
+first bad inn I have met with in Italy, that is, the house, tho' large, was
+so out of repair as to be almost a _masure_; we however met with tolerably
+good fare for supper. We fell in with a traveller at Borgo San Donino, who
+related to us an account of an extraordinary robbery that had been
+committed a few months before near this place, in which the _then_ host was
+implicated, or rather was the author and planner of the robbery. It
+happened as follows. A Swiss merchant, one of those men who cannot keep
+their own counsel, a _bavard_ in short, was travelling from Milan to
+Bologna with his cabriolet, horse and a large portmanteau. He put up at
+this inn. At supper he entered into conversation with mine host, and asked
+if there was any danger of robbers on the road, for that he should be sorry
+(he said) to fall into their hands, inasmuch as he had with him in his
+portmanteau 24,000 franks in gold and several valuable articles of
+jewellery. Mine host assured him that there was not the slightest danger.
+The merchant went to bed, directing that he should be awakened at daybreak
+in order to proceed on his journey. Mine host, however, took care to have
+him called full an hour and half before daybreak, assuring him that light
+would soon dawn. The merchant set out, but he had hardly journeyed two
+miles when a shot from behind a hedge by the road side brought his horse to
+the ground. Four men in masks rushed up, seized him and bound him to a
+tree; they then rifled his portmanteau, took out his money and jewels and
+wished him good morning.
+
+Before we arrived at Borgo San Donino we crossed the Trebbia, one of the
+many tributary streams of the Po, and which is famous for two celebrated
+battles, one in ancient, the other in modern tunes (and probably many
+others which I do not recollect); but here it was that Hannibal gained his
+second victory over the Romans; and here, in 1799, the Russians under
+Souvoroff defeated the French under Macdonald after an obstinate and
+sanguinary conflict; but they could not prevent Macdonald from effecting
+his junction with Massena, to hinder which was Souvoroff's object. In fact,
+in this country, to what reflections doth every spot of ground we pass,
+over, give rise! Every field, every river has been the theatre of some
+battle or other memorable event either in ancient or modern times.
+
+ _Quis gurges aut quae flumina lugubris
+ Ignara belli?[81]_
+
+We started from Borgo San Donino next morning; about ten miles further on
+the right hand side of the road stands an ancient Gothic fortress called
+Castel Guelfo. Between this place and Parma there is a very troublesome
+river to pass called the Taro, which at times is nearly dry and at other
+times, so deep as to render it hazardous for a carriage to pass, and it is
+at all times requisite to send on a man to ford and sound it before a
+carriage passes. This river fills a variety of separate beds, as it
+meanders very much, and it extends to such a breadth in its _débordements_,
+as to render it impossible to construct a bridge long enough to be of any
+use.
+
+This, however, being the dry season, we passed it without difficulty. Two
+or three other streams on this route, _seguaci del Po_, are crossed in the
+same manner.
+
+The road to Parma, after passing the Taro, lies nearly in a right line and
+is bordered with poplars. If I am not mistaken, it was somewhere in this
+neighbourhood that the Carthaginians under Hannibal suffered a great loss
+in elephants, who died from cold, being incamped during the winter. I am
+told there is not a colder country in Europe than Lombardy during the
+winter season, which arises no doubt from its vicinity to the Alps.
+
+Opulence seems to prevail in all the villages in the vicinity of Parma, and
+an immense quantity of cattle is seen grazing in the meadows on each side
+of the road. The female peasantry wear the Spanish costume and are
+remarkably well dressed.
+
+We arrived at Parma at twelve o'clock and stopped there three hours.
+
+
+PARMA.
+
+After a hasty breakfast, Mr G-- and myself sallied forth to see what was
+possible during the time we stopped in this city, leaving the Captain, who
+refused to accompany us, to smoke his pipe. This city is very large and
+there is a very fine _Piazza._ The streets are broad, the buildings
+handsome and imposing, and there is a general appearance of opulence. We
+first proceeded to visit the celebrated amphitheatre, called _l'Amfiteatro
+Farnese_ in honour of the former sovereigns of the Duchy. It is a vast
+building and unites the conveniences both of the ancient and modern
+theatres. It has a roof like a modern theatre, and the seats in the
+_parterre_ are arranged like the seats in an ancient Greek theatre. Above
+this are what we should call boxes, and above them again what we usually
+term a gallery. A vast and deep arena lies between the _parterre_ and the
+orchestra and fills up the space between the audience and the _proscenium_.
+It is admirably adapted both for spectators and hearers; when a tragedy,
+comedy or opera is acted, a scaffolding is erected and seats placed in the
+arena. At other times the arena is made use of for equestrian exercises and
+chariot races in the style of the ancients, combats with wild beasts, etc.,
+or it may be filled with water for the representation of naval fights
+(_naumachia_); in this case you have a vast oval lake between the
+spectators and the stage. It is a great pity that this superb and
+interesting building is not kept in good repair; the fact is it is seldom
+or ever made use of except on very particular occasions: it is almost
+useless in a place like Parma, "so fallen from its high estate," but were
+such an amphitheatre in Paris, London, or any great city, it might be used
+for all kinds of _spectacles_ and amusements. A small theatre from the
+design of Bernino stands close to this amphitheatre, and is built in a
+light tasteful manner. If fresh painted and lighted up it would make a very
+brilliant appearance. This may be considered as the Court theatre. At a
+short distance from the theatres is the Museum of Parma, in which there is
+a well chosen gallery of pictures. Among the most striking pictures of the
+old school is without doubt that of St Jerôme by Correggio; but I was full
+as much, dare I be so heretical as to say more pleased, with the
+productions of the modern school of Parma. A distribution of prizes had
+lately been made by the Empress Maria Louisa, and there were many
+paintings, models of sculpture and architectural designs, that did infinite
+credit to the young artists. I remarked one painting in particular which is
+worthy of a Fuseli. It represented the battle of the river God Scamander
+with Achilles. The subjects of most of the paintings I saw here were taken
+from the mythology or from ancient and modern history; and this is perhaps
+the reason that they pleased me more than those of the ancient masters. Why
+in the name of the [Greek: to kalon] did these painters confine
+themselves so much to Madonnas, Crucifixions, and Martyrdoms, when their
+own poets, Ariosto and Tasso, present so many subjects infinitely more
+pleasing? Then, again, in many of these crucifixions and martyrdoms, the
+gross anachronisms, such as introducing monks and soldiers with match-locks
+and women in Gothic costume at the crucifixion, totally destroy the
+seriousness and interest of the subject by annihilating all illusion and
+exciting risibility.
+
+Parma will ever be renowned in history as the birthplace of Caius Cassius,
+the Mend and colleague of Brutus.
+
+The Empress Maria Louisa lives here in the Ducal Palace, which is a
+spacious but ornamental edifice. She lives, 'tis said, without any
+ostentation. Out of her own states, her presence in Italy would be attended
+with unpleasant consequences to the powers that be, on account of the
+attachment borne to Napoleon by all classes of society; and it is on this
+account that on her last visit to Bologna she received an intimation from
+the papal authorities to quit the Roman territory in twenty-four hours. We
+next passed thro' St Hilario and Reggio and brought to the evening at the
+village of Rubbiera. At St Hilario is the entrance into the Duke of
+Modena's territory, and here we underwent again &n examination of trunks,
+as we did both on entering and leaving the territory of Maria Louisa.
+
+Reggio is a large walled city, but I had only time to visit the Cathedral
+and to remark therein a fine picture of the Virgin and the Chapel called
+"Capella della Morte." Reggio pretends to the honour of having given birth
+to the Divine Ariosto:
+
+ Quel grande che cantò l'armi e gli amorl,
+
+as Guarini describes him, I believe. The face of the country from Parma to
+Reggio is exactly the same as what we have passed thro' already.
+
+The next day (20 August) we passed thro' Modena, where we stopped to
+breakfast and refresh horses. It is a large and handsome city, the Ducal
+Palace is striking and in the Cathedral is presented the famous bucket
+which gave rise to the poem of Tassoni called _La Secchia rapita._ An air
+of opulence and grandeur seems to prevail in Modena.
+
+At Samoggia we entered the Papal territory and again underwent a search of
+trunks. Within three miles of Bologna a number of villas and several
+tanneries, which send forth a most intolerable odour, announce the approach
+to that celebrated and venerable city. On the left hand side, before
+entering the town, is a superb portico with arcades, about one and a half
+miles in length, which leads from the city to the church of San Luca. On
+the right are the Appennines, towering gradually above you. Bologna lies at
+the foot of these mountains on the eastern side and here the plain ends for
+those who are bound to Florence, which lies on the western side of the vast
+ridge which divides Italy. We arrived at Bologna at half-past seven in the
+evening, and here we intend to repose a day or two; I shall then cross the
+Appennines for the first time in my life. A reinforcement of mules or oxen
+is required for every carriage; from the ascent the whole way you can
+travel, I understand, very little quicker _en poste_ than with a
+_vetturino_. We are lodged at Bologna in a very comfortable inn called
+_Locanda d'Inghilterra_.
+
+
+BOLOGNA, 22d August.
+
+The great popularity of Bologna, which is a very large and handsomely built
+city, lies in the colonnaded porticos and arcades on each side of the
+streets throughout the whole city. These arcades are mightily convenient
+against sun and rain, and contradict the assertion of Rousseau, who
+asserted that England was the only country in the world where the safety of
+foot passengers is consulted, whereas here in Bologna not only are
+_trottoirs_ broader than those of London in general, but you are
+effectually protected against sun and rain, and are not obliged to carry an
+umbrella about with you perpetually as in London. This arcade system, is,
+however, rather a take off from the beauty of the city, and gives it a
+gloomy heavy appearance, which is not diminished by the sight of friars and
+mendicants with which this place swarms, and announce to you that you are
+in the holy land. At Bologna it is necessary to have a sharp eye on your
+baggage, on account of the crowds of ragged _fainéans_ that surround your
+carriage while it is unloading.
+
+The first thing that the _ciceroni_ generally take you to see in Italy are
+the churches, and mine would not probably have spared me one, but I was
+more anxious to see the University. I however allowed him to lead me into
+two of the principal churches, viz., the _Duomo_ or Cathedral, and the
+church of San Petronio, both magnificent Gothic temples and worth the
+attention of the traveller. On the _Piazza del Gigante_ is a fine bronze
+statue of Neptune. The _Piazza_ takes its name from this statue, as at one
+time in Italy, after the introduction of Christianity and when the ancient
+mythology was totally forgotten, the statues of the Gods were called Giants
+or named after Devils and their prototypes believed to be such.
+
+In the Museum at the University is an admirable collection of fossils,
+minerals, and machines in every branch of science. There are some excellent
+pictures also; the University of Bologna was, you know, at all times famous
+and its celebrity, is not at all diminished, for I believe Bologna boasts
+more scientific men, and particularly in the sciences _positives_, than any
+other city in Italy.
+
+In the _Palazzo pubblico_ (_Hôtel de Ville_) is a Christ and a Samson by
+Guido Reni; but what pleased me most in the way of painting was the
+collection in the gallery of Count Marescalchi. The Count has been at great
+pains to form it and has shown great taste and discernment. It is a small
+but unique collection. Here is to be seen a head of Christ, the colouring
+of which is so brilliant as to illuminate the room in which it is appended,
+when the shutters are closed, and in the absence of all other light except
+what appears thro' the crevices of the window shutters. This head, however,
+does not seem characteristic of Christ; it wants the gravity, the soft
+melancholy and unassuming meekness of the _great Reformer_: in short, from
+the vivid fire of the eyes and the too great self-complacency of the
+countenance, it gave me rather the idea
+
+ Del biondo Dio che in Tessalia si adorá.
+
+I passed two hours in this cabinet. I next repaired to the centre of the
+city with the intention of ascending one at least of the two square towers
+or _campanili_ which stand close together, one of which is _strait_, the
+other a leaning one. _Garisendi_ is the name of the leaning tower, and it
+forms a parallelipipedon of 140 feet in height and about twenty feet in
+breath and length. It leans so much as to form an angle of seventy-five
+degrees with the ground on which it stands. The other tower, the strait
+one, is called _Asinelli_ and is a parallelipipedon of 310 feet in height
+and about twenty-five feet in length and breadth. I ascended the leaning
+tower, but I found the fatigue so great that I was scarcely repaid by the
+fine view of the surrounding country, which presents on one side an immense
+plain covered with towns, villages and villas, and on the other the
+Appennines towering one above another. When on the top of _Garisendi_,
+_Asinelli_ appears to be four times higher than its neighbour, and the bare
+aspect of its enormous height deterred me from even making the attempt of
+ascending it. When viewed or rather looked down upon from _Garisendi_,
+Bologna, from its being of an elliptical form and surrounded by a wall and
+from having these two enormous towers in the centre, resembles a boat with
+masts.
+
+From the great celebrity of its University and the eminent men it has
+produced, Bologna is considered as the most litterary city of Italy.
+Galvani was born in Bologna and studied at this University, and among the
+modern prodigies is a young lady who is professor of Greek and who is by
+all accounts the most amiable _Bas bleu_ that ever existed.[82] The
+Bolognese are a remarkably fine, intelligent and robust race of people, and
+are renowned for their republican spirit, and the energy with which they at
+all times resisted the encroachments of the Holy See. Bologna was at one
+time a Republic, and on their coins is the word Libertas. The Bolognese
+never liked the Papal government and were much exasperated at returning
+under the domination of the Holy Father. In the time of Napoleon, Bologna
+formed part of the _Regno d'ltalia_ and partook of all its advantages.
+Napoleon is much regretted by them; and so impatiently did the inhabitants
+bear the change, on the dismemberment of the kingdom of Italy, and their
+transfer to the pontifical sceptre, that on Murat's entry in their city in
+1815 the students and other young men of the town flew to arms and in a few
+hours organised three battalions. Had the other cities shown equal energy
+and republican spirit, the revolution would have been completed and Italy
+free; but the fact is that the Italians in general, tho' discontented, had
+no very high opinion of Murat's talents as a political character, and he
+besides _committed_ a great fault in not entering Rome on his march and
+revolutionising it. Murat, like most men, was ruined by half-measures. The
+last tune that Maria Louisa was here the people surrounded the inn where
+she resided and hailed her with cries of _Viva I'Imperatrice!_ The Pope's
+legate in consequence intimated to her the expediency of her immediate
+departure from the city, with a request that she would not repeat her
+visit. Bologna is considered by the Ultras, _Obscuranten,_ and _Éteignoirs_
+as the focus and headquarters of Carbonarism.
+
+In the evening I visited the theatre built by Bibbiena and had the pleasure
+of hearing for the first time an Italian tragedy, which, however, are now
+rarely represented and scarcely ever well acted. This night's performance
+formed an exception and was satisfactory. The piece was _Romeo and
+Giulietta_. The actress who did the part of Giulietta performed it with
+great effect, particularly in the tomb scene. In this scene she reminded me
+forcibly of our own excellent actress, Miss O'Neill. This was the only part
+of the play that had any resemblance to the tragedy of Shakespeare. All the
+rest was on the French model. I saw a number of beautiful women in the
+boxes. The Bolognese women are remarkable for their fine complexions; those
+that I saw were much inclined to _embonpoint_.
+
+
+[79] And also to Napoleon, after the battle at Eylau.--ED.
+
+[80] Joseph Forsyth (1763-1815), author of _Remarks on antiquities, arts
+ and letters in Italy_, London, 1813.--ED.
+
+[81] Horace, _Carm._, II, I, 33.--ED.
+
+[82] The young woman in question was Clotilda Tambroni (1768-1818). She
+ taught Greek at the University of Bologna and was in correspondence
+ with the great French scholar Ansse de Villoison.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Journey across the Appennines to Florence--Tuscan idioms and
+customs--Monuments and galleries at Florence--The Cascino--Churches--
+Theatres--Popularity of the Grand Duke--Napoleon's downfall not
+regretted--Academies in Florence.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 26th August.
+
+The moment you leave Bologna to go to Florence you enter the gorges of the
+Appennines, and after journeying seven miles, begin to ascend the ridge.
+The ascent begins at Pianoro. Among these mountains the scenery is wild and
+romantic, and tho' not so grandiose and sublime as that of the Alps, is
+nevertheless extremely picturesque. One meets occasionally with the ruins
+of old castles on some of the heights, and I was strongly reminded, at the
+sight of these antique edifices, of the mysteries of Udolpho and the times
+of the Condottieri. The silence that reigns here is only interrupted by the
+noise of the waterfall and the occasional scream of the eagle. The wild
+abrupt transition of landscape would suggest the idea of haunting places
+for robbers, yet one seldom or never hears of any, on this road. In Tuscany
+there is, I understand, so much industry and morality, that a robbery is a
+thing unknown; but in his Holiness's dominions, from the idleness and
+poverty that prevails, they are said to be frequent. Why it does not occur
+in these mountains, in that part of them, at least, which belongs to the
+Papal Government, I am at a loss to conceive.
+
+Here the chesnut and olive trees salute the Ultramontane traveller for the
+first time. The olive tree, tho' a most useful, is not an ornamental one,
+as it resembles a willow or osier in its trunk and in the colour of its
+leaves. The chesnut tree is a glorious plant for an indolent people, since
+it furnishes food without labour, as the Xaca or Jack fruit tree does
+to the Cingalese in Ceylon. On one of the heights between Pianoro and
+Lojano you have in very clear weather a view of both the Adriatic and
+Tyrrhene seas. We brought to the night at Scarica l'Asino and the next
+morning early we entered the Tuscan territory at Pietra Mala, where there
+is a _Douane_ and consequently an examination of trunks. At one o'clock we
+arrived at an inn called _Le Maschere_, about fifteen miles distance from
+Florence; it is a large mansion and being situated on an eminence commands
+an extensive view. One becomes soon aware of being in the Tuscan territory
+from the number of cultivated spots to be seen in this part of the
+Appennines: for such is the industry of the inhabitants that they do
+wonders on their naturally sterile soil. One sees a number of farms. Every
+spot of ground is in cultivation, between _Le Maschere_ and Florence in
+particular; these spots of ground, gardens, orchards and villas forming a
+striking and pleasing contrast with the wild and dreary scenery of the
+Appennines. Another thing that indicates one's arrival among the Tuscans is
+their aspiration of the letter _c_ before _a_, _o_ and _u_, which is at
+first extremely puzzling to a foreigner accustomed only to the Roman
+pronunciation. For instance, instead of _camera_, _cotto_, _curvo_, they
+pronounce these words _hamera_, _hotto_, and _hurvo_ with an exceeding
+strong aspiration of the _h_. It is the same too with the _ch_ which they
+aspirate, _ex gr._ instead of _pochino_, _chiave_, they say _pohino_,
+_hiave_. The language however which is spoken is the most classical and
+pure Italian and except the above mentioned aspiration it is delightful to
+the ear; peculiarly so to those who come from the north of Italy, and have
+only hitherto heard the unpleasing nasal twang of the Milanese and the
+exceeding uncouth barbarous dialect of Bologna. Another striking
+peculiarity is the smart appearance of the Tuscan peasantry. They are a
+remarkably handsome race of men; the females unite with their natural
+beauty a grace and elegance that one is quite astonished to find among
+peasants. They express themselves in the most correct and classical
+language and they have a great deal of repartee. As the peasantry of
+Tuscany enjoy a greater share of _aisance_ than falls to the lot of those
+of any other country, and as the females dress with taste and take great
+pains to appear smart on all occasions, they resemble rather the
+shepherdesses on the Opera stage or those of the fabled Arcadia than
+anything in real life. The females too are remarkably industrious and will
+work like horses all the week to gain wherewithal to appear smart on
+holidays. Their dress is very becoming, and they wear sometimes jewellery
+to a large amount on their persons; a very common ornament among them is a
+collar of gold around their necks. Their usual head-dress is either a white
+straw hat, or a black round beaver hat, with black ostrich feathers. I
+prefer the straw hat; it is more tasteful than the round hat which always
+seems to me too masculine for a woman. At the inn at _Le Maschere_ we were
+waited on by three smart females. The whole road from _Le Maschere_ to
+Florence is very beautiful and diversified. Vineyards, gardens, farm houses
+and villas thicken as one approaches and when arrived within three miles of
+Florence, which lies in a basin surrounded by mountains, one is quite
+bewildered at the sight of the quantity of beautiful villas and _maisons de
+plaisance_ in every direction.
+
+Every thing indicates life, industry and comfort in this charming country.
+We stopped at a villa belonging to the Grand Duke called _II Pratolino_,
+seven miles distant from Florence. Here is to be seen the famous statue
+representing the genius of the Appennines. The Villa is unfurnished and out
+of repair and the garden and grounds are neglected: it is a great pity, for
+it is a fine building and in a beautiful position. The celebrated Bianca
+Capello, a Venetian by birth, and mistress of Francesco II de' Medici,
+Grand Duke of Tuscany, used to reside here.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 27th August.
+
+I am extremely well pleased with my accommodations at the hotel where I am
+lodged. Mme Hembert, the proprietor, was once _femme de chambre_ to the
+Empress Joséphine; she is an excellent woman and a very attentive hostess,
+and I recommend her hotel to all those travellers who visit Florence and do
+not care to incur the expence of Schneider's. There is an excellent and
+well served _table d'hôte_ at two o'clock, wine at discretion, for which,
+and for my bedroom, I pay seven _paoli_ per day. This hotel has the
+advantage of being in a very central situation. It is close to the _Piazza
+del Gran Duca_, the post-office, the _Palazzo Vecchio_, the Bureaux of
+Government, the celebrated Gallery of Sculpture and Painting and to the
+Arno. It is only 300 yards from the _Piazza del Duomo_, where the Cathedral
+stands, and 600 yards from the principal theatre _Della Pergola_ on the one
+side; while on the other side, after crossing the _Ponte Vecchio_, stands
+the _Palazzo Pitti_, the residence of the Grand Duke, at a distance of
+seven or 800 yards.
+
+The _Piazza del Gran Duca_ is very striking to the eye of the northern
+traveller; the statues of the Gods in white marble in the open air would
+make him fancy himself in Athens in the olden time. The following statues
+in bronze and white marble are to be seen on this _Piazza_. In bronze are:
+a statue of Perseus by Cellini; Judith with the head of Holofernes by
+Donatello; David and Goliath; Samson. In white marble are the following
+beautiful statues: a group representing Hercules and Cacus; another
+representing a Roman carrying off a Sabine woman. The Hercules, who is in
+the act of strangling Cacus, rests on one leg. Nearly in the centre of the
+_Piazza_, opposite to the post office and in front of the _Palazzo
+Vecchio_, is the principal ornament of the _Piazza_, which consists of a
+group representing Neptune in his car or conch (or shell) drawn by
+sea-horses and accompanied by Tritons. The statue of Neptune is of colossal
+size, the whole group is in marble and the conch of Egyptian granite. This
+group forms a fountain. There is likewise on this _Piazza_ an immense
+equestrian statue in bronze of Cosmo the First by John of Bologna. The
+_Palazzo Vecchio_ is a large Gothic building by Arnulpho and has a very
+lofty square tower or _campanile_.
+
+The Gallery of Florence being so close to my abode demanded next my
+attention. The building in which this invaluable Museum is preserved forms
+three sides of a parallelogram, two long ones and one short one, of which
+the side towards the south of the quai of the Arno is the short one.
+
+On the north is an open space communicating with the _Piazza del Gran
+Duca_. The Gallery occupies the whole first floor of this vast building.
+The _rez de chaussée_ is occupied, on the west side, by the bureaux of
+Government, and on the south and east sides by shopkeepers, in whose shops
+is always to be seen a brilliant display of merchandize. As there are
+arcades on the three sides of this parallelogram, they form the favorite
+meridian promenade of the _belles_ and _beaux_ of Florence, particularly on
+Sundays and holidays, after coming out of Church. I ascended the steps from
+a door on the east side of the building, to visit the Gallery.
+
+The quantity and variety of objects of art, of the greatest value, baffle
+all description, and it would require months and years to attempt an
+analysis of all it contains. I shall therefore content myself with pointing
+out those objects which imprinted themselves the most forcibly on my
+imagination and recollection. In a chamber on the left hand of one wing of
+the Gallery stands the Venus de' Medici, sent back last year from France.
+In the same chamber with her are the following statues: the extremely
+beautiful _Apollino_; the spotted Faun; the _Rémouleur_ or figure which is
+in the act of whetting a sickle. All these were in Paris, and are now
+restored to this Gallery. In this chamber two pictures struck me in
+particular: the one the Venus of Titian, a most voluptuous figure; the
+other a portrait of the mistress of Rafaello, called "_La Fornarina_," from
+her being a baker's daughter.
+
+Returning to the Gallery I was quite bewildered at the immense number of
+statues, pictures, sarcophagi, busts, altars, etc. Among the pieces of
+sculpture those that most caught my attention were: the _Venus genetrix_
+(which I had seen before at Paris); the _Venus victrix_; the _Venus
+Anadyomene_; Hercules and Nessus, a superb groupe; a young Bacchus; and an
+exquisitely chiselled group representing Pan teaching Olympus to play the
+syrinx, tho' the attitude of the former is rather indecorous from not being
+in a very quiescent state; a fine statue of Leda with the swan; a Mercury,
+both worthy of great attention. I remarked also in particular a statue of
+Marsyas attached to a tree and flayed. It is of a pale reddish marble, and
+tho' I perfectly agree with Forsyth, that colored marble is not at all
+adapted to statuary, yet in this instance it gives a wonderful effect and
+is strikingly suitable, as the slight reddish colour gives a full idea of
+the flesh after the skin is torn off. It makes one shudder to look at it.
+In one of the halls are the statues of Niobe and her daughters, a beautiful
+group. Then there is the celebrated copy of the group of the Laocoon by
+Bandinelli, which none but the most perfect and skilful connoisseur could
+distinguish from the original. But it is totally impossible for me to
+describe the immense variety of paintings, historical, portrait and
+landscape; the statues single or in groups; the sarcophagi, altars,
+bas-reliefs, inscriptions, bronzes, medals, vases, baths, candelabra,
+cameos, Etruscan and Egyptian idols with which this admirable Museum is
+filled. In a line on each side of the Gallery near the ceiling is a
+succession of portraits in chronological order of the Grand Dukes of
+Tuscany, the Germanic Emperors, the Kings of France, of England, of Spain,
+of Portugal, of the Popes and of the Ottoman Emperors. Among the
+antiquities I particularly noticed a large steel mirror and a Roman Eagle
+in bronze of the 24th Legion.
+
+Having passed full four hours in this Museum, I descended the steps,
+crossed the Arno and repaired to the building in which is preserved the
+_Cabinet d'Histoire Naturelle_. In this Museum what is most remarkable are
+the imitations in wax of the whole anatomy of the human body. It is the
+first collection of its kind; indeed it is unique in Europe. These
+imitations are kept in glass cases and are so true and so perfectly correct
+as to leave nothing to desire to the student in anatomy. These imitations
+in wax not only include all the details of anatomy, but also the progress
+of generation, gestation, and of almost every malady to which the human
+body is liable. They are of a frightful exactitude. There are likewise in
+this Museum imitations in wax of various plants and shrubs exotic as well
+as indigenous and the collection of stuffed birds, beasts and fishes and
+that of insects, mineralogy and conchology scarcely yields to the
+collection at the _Jardin des Plantes_ at Paris. Neither here nor at the
+Florentine gallery are fees allowed to be taken; on the contrary a strict
+prohibition of them is posted up in the French, Italian, German and English
+languages.
+
+On the _Ponte Vecchio_ on each side are jewellers' shops, who sell besides
+jewellery, cameos and works in mosaic. The Quais on each side of the Arno
+are very broad and spacious and form agreeable promenades in the winter
+season. The buildings on the banks of the Arno are magnificent. The streets
+of Florence have this peculiarity that they are all paved with large flag
+stones, which makes them mightily pleasant for pedestrians, but dangerous
+at times for horses who are apt to slip. Most of the houses in Florence
+have walls of prodigious thickness; one would suppose each house was meant
+to be a fortress in case of necessity.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 29th August.
+
+On the other side of the Arno, a little beyond the _Cabinet Physique_ and
+Museum of Natural History stands the _Palazzo Pitti_, the residence of the
+Grand Duke. It is a vast building and has a large and choice collection of
+pictures; but its finest ornament in my opinion is the statue of Venus by
+Canova, which to me at least appears to equal the Medicean Venus in beauty
+and in grace. The magnificent and spacious garden belonging to the Palace
+is called the garden of Boboli. These gardens form the grand promenade of
+the Florentines on Sundays and holidays. The alleys are well shaded by
+trees, which effectually protect the promenaders from the rays of the sun.
+There are a great many statues in this garden, but the most striking is a
+group which lies nearly in the centre of the garden. It is environed by a
+large circular basin or lake lined with stone and planted with orange trees
+on the whole circumference. In the centre of the lake is a rock and on this
+rock is a colossal statue in white marble of Neptune in his car. The car is
+in the shape of a marine conch and serves as a basin and fountain at the
+same time. There are several other fountains and _jets d'eau_, among which
+is a group representing Adam and Eve and the statue of a man pouring out
+water from a vase which he has on his shoulder.
+
+The _Corso_ or grand evening promenade for carriages and equestrians is on
+a place called the Cascino, pronounced by the Florentines _Hascino_. The
+Cascino consists of pleasure grounds on the banks of the Arno outside the
+town, laid out in roads, alleys and walks for carriages, equestrians and
+pedestrians. There is a very brilliant display of carriages every evening.
+There are _restaurants_ on the Cascino and supper parties are often formed
+here. This place is often the scene of curious adventures. Cicisbeism is
+universal at Florence, tho' far from being always criminal, as is generally
+supposed by foreigners. I find the Florentine women very graceful and many
+very handsome; but in point of beauty the female peasantry far exceed the
+_noblesse_ and burghers. All of them however dress with taste. The
+handsomest woman in Florence is the wife of an apothecary who lives in the
+_Piazza del Duomo_ and she has a host of admirers.
+
+On the promenade _lungo l'Arno_ near the Cascino is a fountain with a
+statue of Pegasus, with an inscription in Italian verse purporting that
+Pegasus having stopped there one day to refresh himself at this fountain,
+found the place so pleasant that he remained there ever since. This is a
+poetic nation _par excellence_. _Affiches_ are announced in sonnets and
+other metres; and tho' in other countries the votaries of the Muses are but
+too apt to neglect the ordinary and vulgar concerns of life, yet here it by
+no means diminishes industry, and the nine Ladies are on the best possible
+terms with Mr Mercury.
+
+I shall not attempt a description of the various _palazzi_ and churches of
+Florence, tho' I have visited, thanks to the zeal and importunity of my
+_cicerone_, nearly all, except to remark that no one church in Florence,
+the Cathedral and Baptistery on the _Piazza del Duomo_ excepted, has its
+façade finished, and they will remain probably for ever unfinished, as the
+completion of them would cost very large sums of money, and the restored
+Government, however anxious to resuscitate the _ancient faith_, are not
+inclined to make large disbursements from their own resources for that
+purpose. I wish however they would finish the façade of two of these
+churches, viz., that of _Santa Maria Novella_ and that of _Santa Croce_.
+_Santa Maria Novella_ stands in the Piazza of that name which is very
+large. It is a beautiful edifice, and can boast in the interior of it
+several columns and pilasters of _jaune antique_ and of white marble. But
+they have a most barbarous custom in Florence of covering these columns
+with red cloth on _jours de Fête_, which spoils the elegant simplicity of
+the columns and makes the church itself resemble a _théâtre des
+Marionnettes_. But the Italians are dreadfully fond of gaudy colours. In
+the church of _Santa Croce_ what most engaged my attention was the monument
+erected to Vittorio Alfieri, sculptured by Canova. It is a most beautiful
+piece of sculpture. A figure of Italy crowned with turrets seems fully
+sensible of the great loss she has sustained in one who was so ardent a
+patriot, as well as an excellent tragic poet. This monument was erected at
+the expence of the Countess of Albany (Queen of England, had _legitimacy_
+always prevailed, or been as much in fashion as it now is) as a mark of
+esteem and affection towards one who was so tenderly attached to her, and
+of whom in his writings Alfieri speaks with the endearing and affectionate
+appellation of _mia Donna_. The beautiful sonnet to her, which accompanies
+the dedication of his tragedy of _Mirra_, well deserves the monument; there
+is so much feeling in it that I cannot retrain from transcribing it:
+
+ Vergognando talor, che ancor si taccia,
+ Donna, per me l'almo tuo nome in fronte
+ Di queste omai glà troppe a te ben conte
+ Tragedie, ond'io di folle avrommi taccia;
+
+ Or vo' qual d'esse meno a te dispiaccia
+ Di te fregiar; benchè di tutte il fonte
+ Tu sola fosti, e'l viver mio non conte
+ Se non dal Di, ch'al viver tuo si allaccia.
+
+ Della figlia di Ciniro infelice
+ L'orrendo a un tempo ed innocente amore
+ Sempre da' tuoi begli occhi il planto elice;
+
+ Prova emmi questo, ch'al mio dubbio core
+ Tacitamente imperiosa dice,
+ Ch'io di Mirra consacri a te il dolore.
+
+In this sanctuary (church of the _Santa Croce_) are likewise the tombs and
+monuments of other great men which Italy has produced. There is the
+monument erected to Galileo which represents the earth turning round the
+sun with the emphatic words: _Eppur si muove._ Here too repose the ashes of
+Machiavelli and Michel Angelo. This church is in fact the Westminster Abbey
+of Florence.
+
+To go from the _Piazza del gran Duca_ to the _Piazza del Duomo_, where
+stands the Cathedral, you have only to pass thro' a long narrow street or
+rather alley (for it is impervious to carriages) with shops on each side
+and always filled with people going to or returning from the Duomo. This
+Cathedral is of immense size. The architecture is singular from its being a
+mixture of the Gothic and Greek. It appears the most ponderous load that
+ever was laid on the shoulders of poor mother earth. There is nothing light
+in its structure to relieve the massiveness of the building, and in this
+respect it forms a striking contrast to the Cathedral of Milan which
+appears the work of Sylphs. The outside of this Duomo of Florence is
+decorated and incrusted with black and white marble, which increases the
+massiveness of its appearance. The steeple or Campanile stands by itself,
+altogether separate from the Cathedral, and this is the case with most of
+the Churches in Italy that are not of pure Gothic architecture. This
+_Campanile_ is curiously inlaid and incrusted on its outside with red,
+white and black marble. The Baptistery is another building on the same
+_Piazza_. It is in the same stile of building as the Duomo, but incloses
+much less space, and was formerly a separate church, called the church of
+St John the Baptist. The immense bronze doors or rather gates, both of the
+Duomo and Battisterio, attracted my peculiar notice. On them are figured
+bas-reliefs of exquisite and admirable workmanship, representing Scripture
+histories. It was the symmetry and perfection of these gates that induced
+Michel Angelo to call them in a fit of enthusiasm _The Gates of Paradise_.
+At the door of the Battisterio are the columns in red granite, which once
+adorned the gates of the city at Pisa, and were carried off by the
+Florentines in one of their wars. Chains are fastened round these columns,
+as a memorial of the conquest. The cupolas both of the Duomo and
+Battisterio are octangular. There is a stone seat on the _Piazza del Duomo_
+where they pretend that Dante used occasionally to sit; hence it is called
+to this day _Il Sasso di Dante_.
+
+You will now no doubt expect me to give some account of the theatres. At
+the _Pergola_, which is a large and splendid theatre, I have seen two
+operas; the one, _L'Italiana in Algieri_, which I saw before at Milan last
+year; the other, the _Barbieri di Seviglia_ by Rossini, which afforded to
+my ears the most delightful musical feast they ever enjoyed. The cavatina
+_Una voce poco fa_ gave me inconceivable delight. The _Ballo_ was of a very
+splendid description and from a subject taken from the Oriental history
+entitled _Macbet Sultan of Delhi_. How the Mogul Sultan came to have the
+name of Macbet I know not. On the _plafond_ of the _Pergola_ is an
+allegorical painting representing the restored Kings of Europe replaced on
+their thrones by Valor and Justice. The decorations at this theatre are not
+quite so splendid as those of the _Scala_ at Milan, but living horses and
+military evolutions seem to be annexed to every historical _Ballo_. Horses
+indeed appear to be an indispensable ingredient in the _Balli_ in the large
+cities of Italy.
+
+In the _Teatro Cocomera_, comedies are performed, and very generally those
+of the inexhaustible Goldoni. I saw the _Bugiardo_ very fairly performed at
+this theatre. The story is nearly the same as that of our piece, _The
+Liar_, which is I believe imitated from _Le Menteur_ of Corneille. The
+actor who did the Liar was a very good one. The actresses screamed too much
+and were rather coarse. Another night at the theatre I saw a piece call'd
+_II furioso_, a _comédie larmoyante_ which was interesting and well given;
+but the voice of the prompter was occasionally too loud. Tragedies are very
+seldom played; the language of Alfieri could never, I will not say be given
+with effect, but even conceived by the modern actors. It would be like a
+tragedy of Sophocles performed by boys at school. There is another reason
+too why these tragedies are not given; they abound too much in republican
+and patriotic sentiments to be grateful to the ears of the Princes who
+reign in Italy, all of whom being of foreign extraction and unshackled by
+constitutions, come under the denomination of those beings called by Greeks
+[Greek: Turannoi], I use this word in its Greek sense. Of the Tuscan
+Government it is but justice to say that from the days of Leopold to the
+present day it was and is a mild, just and paternal government, more so
+perhaps than any in Europe; and the only one that can any way reconcile one
+altogether to those lines of Pope:
+
+ For forms of Government let fools contest;
+ Whate'er is best administer'd is best.[83]
+
+In the time of Leopold the factious nobility were kept in check, and the
+industrious classes, mercantile and agricultural, encouraged. The peasantry
+were, and are, the most affluent in Europe; and this is no small incitement
+to the industry that prevails. On the elevation of Leopold to the throne of
+the Caesars, the present Grand Duke succeeded in Tuscany; and he followed
+the same system that Leopold did, and was equally beloved by his subjects.
+Tuscany was the only country in Italy that did not desire a change at the
+period of the French conquest, and the only state wherein the French were
+not hailed as deliverers. The Tuscans exhibited a very honorable spirit on
+the occasion of Buonaparte's visit to the Grand Duke in 1797. They went
+together to the Theatre della Pergola, and on their entering into the Grand
+Ducal box, the Grand Duke was hailed with cries of _Viva il Nostro
+Sovrano_: now this proof of attachment at a period when Buonaparte was
+all-mighty in Italy, when the Grand Duke was but an inferior personage, at
+a time too when it was doubtful whether or not he would be dethroned, and
+in the very presence of the mighty conqueror, reflects great honor and
+credit on the Tuscan character. Buonaparte was much struck at this proof of
+disinterested attachment on the part of the Florentines towards their
+Sovereign, and told the Grand Duke very ingenuously that he had received
+orders to revolutionize the country, from the French Directory; but that as
+he perceived the people were so happy, and the Prince so beloved, he could
+not and would not attempt to make any change.
+
+The applause given to the Grand Duke at this critical period is so much the
+more creditable to the Florentines as they in general receive their Prince,
+on his presenting himself at the theatre, with no other ceremonial than
+rising once and bowing. There is no fulsome _God save the King_ repeated
+even to nausea, as at the English theatres. In fact none of the Italians
+pay that servile adulation to their Sovereigns that the French and English
+do.
+
+The changes projected in Italy at the treaty of Lunéville by Napoleon then
+first Consul, and his further views on Italy, induced him at length to
+eject an Austrian Prince from the sovereignty of a country which he
+intended to annex to the French Empire. The Grand Duke was indemnified with
+a principality in Germany, where he remained until the downfall of Napoleon
+in 1814; subsequent arrangements again restored him to the sway of the land
+he loved so well, and he returned to Florence as if he had only been absent
+on a tour, finding scarcely any change in the laws and customs and habits
+of the country; for tho' Tuscany was first erected into a Kingdom by the
+title of Etruria, and afterwards annexed to the French Empire, the
+institutions and laws laid down by Leopold and followed strictly by his
+successor were preserved; very little innovation took place, and the few
+innovations that were effected were decided ameliorations; for the Emperor
+Napoleon had too much tact not to preserve and protect the good he found,
+tho' he abolished all old abuses. The improvements introduced by the French
+have been preserved and confirmed by the Grand Duke on his return, for he
+is a man of too much good sense, and has too much love of justice, to think
+of abolishing the good that has been done, merely because it was done by
+the French. Tuscany has now a respectable military force of 8,000 men well
+armed, clothed and equipped in the French manner.
+
+Tuscany is the only part of Italy where the downfall of Napoleon was not
+regretted; the inhabitants of Leghorn indeed rejoiced at it, for the
+commerce of Tuscany being chiefly maritime, Leghorn suffered a good deal
+from the continental system. Leghorn in fact decayed in the same proportion
+that Milan and other inland cities rose into opulence.
+
+The character of the Tuscan people is so amiable and pacific that crime is
+very rare indeed. Murder is almost unknown and the punishment of death is
+banished from the penal code. Where the government is good, the people are
+or soon become good. I know of no country in the world more agreeable for a
+foreigner to settle in than Tuscany.
+
+I omitted to remark that in the street called _Borgo d'Ognissanti_ is a
+large house or _palazzo_ which belonged to Americo Vespucci. His bust is to
+be seen in the Florentine Gallery. It is curious to remark the different
+appellations given to the word _street_ in the different cities of Italy.
+In Milan a street is called _vico_ and in Turin, _contrada_; in Florence
+_strada_ and in Rome, I understand, _via_.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 1st Sept.
+
+I shall start in a day or two for Rome, being very impatient to behold the
+Eternal City, a plan which I have had in view from my earliest days and
+which I have not been able hitherto to effect; for like the Abbé Delille I
+had sworn to visit the sacred spot where so many illustrious men had spoke
+and acted, and to do hommage in person to their Manes. I was always a great
+admirer of the "_Popolo Re_."
+
+In Florence there are a great many literary societies such as the
+_Infuocati, Immobili_, and the far renowned _La Crusca_.
+
+Frequent _Academies_, for so a sitting of a litterary society in Italy is
+termed, are held in Florence. There are likewise two Casinos, one for the
+nobility and the other for the merchants and burghers; the wives and
+daughters of the members attend occasionally; and cards, music and dancing
+are the amusements. Florence abounds in artists in alabaster whose
+workmanship is beautiful. They make models in alabaster of the most
+celebrated pieces of sculpture and architecture, on any scale you chuse:
+they fabricate busts too and vases in alabaster. The vases made in
+imitation of the ancient Greek vases are magnificent, and some of them are
+of immense size. Foreigners generally chuse to have their busts taken; for
+almost all foreigners who arrive here are or pretend to be smitten with an
+ardent love for the fine arts, and every one wishes to take with him models
+of the fine things he has seen in Italy, on his return to his native
+country. Here are English travellers who at home would scarcely be able to
+distinguish the finest piece of ancient sculpture--the Mercury, for
+instance, in the Florentine Gallery, from a Mercury in a citizen's garden
+at Highgate--who here affect to be in extacies at the sight of the Venus,
+Apollino, &c., and they are fond of retailing on all occasions the terms of
+art and connoisseurship they have learned by rote, in the use of which they
+make sometimes ridiculous mistakes. For instance I heard an Englishman one
+day holding forth on the merits of the Vierge _quisouse_, as he called it.
+I could not for some time divine what he meant by the word _quisouse_, but
+after some explanation I found that he meant the celebrated painting of the
+_Vierge qui coud_, or _Vierge couseuse_, as it is sometimes called, which
+latter word he had transformed into _quisouse_. This affectation, however,
+of passion for the _belle arti_, tho' sometimes open to ridicule, is very
+useful. It generates taste, encourages artists, and is surely a more
+innocent as well as more rational mode of spending money and passing time
+than in encouraging pugilism or in racing, coach driving and cock fighting.
+
+
+[83] Pope, _Essay on Man_, ep. III, 303-4.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Journey from Florence to Rome--Sienna--Radicofani--Bolsena--Montefiascone
+wine--Viterbo--Baccano--The Roman Campagna--The papal _douane_--Monuments
+and Museums in Rome--Intolerance of the Catholic Christians--The Tiber and
+the bridges--Character of the Romans--The _Palassi_ and _Ville_--Canova's
+atelier--Theatricals--An execution in Rome.
+
+
+September----, 1816.
+
+I made an agreement with a _vetturino_ to take me to Rome for three _louis
+d'or_ and to be _spesato_. In the carriage were two other passengers, viz.,
+a Neapolitan lady, the wife of a Colonel in the Neapolitan service, and a
+young Roman, the son of the _Barigello_ or _Capo degli Sbirri_ at Rome. We
+issued from the _Porta Romana_ at 6 o'clock a.m. the 3d September.
+
+The road winds thro' a valley, and has a gentle ascent nearly the whole way
+to Poggibonsi, where we brought to the first night. The soil hereabouts is
+far from fertile, but every inch of it is put to profit. The olive tree is
+very frequent and several farms and villages are to be met with. The next
+day we arrived at 12 o'clock at Sienna. The approach to Sienna is announced
+by a quantity of olive trees. The situation of this city being on an
+elevation, makes it cold and bleak. We remained here three hours, so that I
+had time to visit some of the places worthy of remark in this venerable
+city, which is handsome and very solidly built, but has rather a sombre
+appearance. The _Piazza Grande_ lies in a bottom to which you descend from
+the environing streets. It is in the shape of a mussel shell and of very
+large size. The Cathedral is Gothic and is a very majestic and venerable
+building. Inside it is of black and yellow marble. The pavement of this
+church contains Scripture histories in mosaic. A library is annexed to the
+church. The librarian pointed out to me 80 folio volumes of church music
+with illuminated plates; likewise an ancient piece of sculpture much
+mutilated, viz., a group of the three Graces. In one of the chapels of this
+Cathedral are eight columns of _verd-antique_. I observed a monument of the
+Piccolomini family who belong to this city; one of which family figured a
+good deal in the Thirty Years' War in Germany. I saw several women in the
+Cathedral and at the windows of the houses. The greater part of them were
+handsome. The Italian language is spoken here in its greatest purity; it is
+the pure Tuscan dialect without the Tuscan aspiration. The Siennese
+language is in fact the identical _lingua Toscana in bocca Romana_.
+
+We arrived the same evening at Buon Convento, an old dismal dirty-looking
+town formerly fortified; but the country in the environs is pleasing
+enough. The inn here is very bad. On the road between Sienna and this place
+I observed a number of mulberry trees.
+
+The next morning, the 5th Sept., we arrived at Radicofani or rather at an
+inn or post house facing Radicofani. This is a very ancient city, and from
+its being on an eminence it has an imposing appearance. Above it towers an
+immense conical shaped mountain, evidently a volcano in former times. In
+fact, the whole country hereabouts is volcanic, which is plainly seen from
+the immense masses of calcined stones, the exhalations of sulphur and the
+dreary wild appearance of the country, where scarce a tree is to be seen. I
+never in my life saw so many calcined rocks and stones of great magnitude
+heaped together as at Radicofani. It gave the idea as if it were the
+identical field of battle between Jupiter and the Titans, and as if the
+masses of rock that everywhere meet the eye had been hurled at the Empyreum
+by the Titans and had fallen back on the spot from whence they were torn
+up. It is indeed very probable that this volcano which vomited forth rocks
+and stones in a very remote age, gave rise to the Fable of the war between
+Jupiter and the Giants; just as the volcanos in Sicily and Stromboli gave
+rise to the story of the Cyclops with one eye (the crater) in their
+forehead. But the mountain of Radicofani must have been a volcano anterior
+even to Aetna; it presents the image of an ancient world destroyed by fire.
+
+At Ponte Centino the next morning we took our leave of
+
+ _La patria bella
+ Di vaghe Donne e di dolce favella;_
+
+in plain prose, we left the Tuscan territory, and re-entered the dominions
+of His Holiness. After being detained half an hour at the _Douane_, we
+proceeded to Acquapendente to breakfast. The country between Radicofani and
+Acquapendente is dreary, thinly populated, little cultivated, and volcanic
+steams of sulphur assail the nostrils. Before we arrived at Acquapendente
+we had a troublesome river to cross, which at times is nearly dry, and at
+other times the water comes down in torrents from the surrounding mountains
+and precipices, so as to render its passage extremely dangerous. It is
+always necessary previous to the passage of a carriage, to send on a man to
+ford and sound it, from its meandering and forming different beds crossed
+seven times, twice less than Styx _novies interfusa_, and it is a very slow
+operation from the number of rocks and quicksands; so that, should the
+torrent come down while you are in the act of crossing, you and your whole
+equipage would be swept away by the stream and drowned or dashed to pieces.
+Travellers going to and returning from Rome are frequently detained for a
+day or two at Ponte Centino or Acquapendente during the rainy season; for
+immediately after heavy rains, there is always a great risk and it is
+better to halt for several hours to allow the waters to pass off. The
+extent of ground that this river covers by its meandering and forming so
+many beds nearly parallel to each other renders it impossible to construct
+a bridge long enough; and it would be always liable to be swept away by the
+torrent. Nobody ever thinks of crossing the river in the dark. There having
+no rain fallen for several days we passed it without difficulty.
+
+Within a mile of Acquapendente the landscape varies and the approach to
+this town is exceedingly picturesque. Acquapendente is situated on a lofty
+eminence from which several magnificent cascades descend into the ravine
+below and which give the name to the town. There are a great number of
+trees about this town and they afford a great relief to the eye of the
+traveller after so many hours' journey thro' volcanic wastes. The town of
+Acquapendente is very ancient; it is very large, but ill-paved and dirty;
+the best buildings in it are, however, modern. The inhabitants appear lazy
+and dirty. On entering into conversation with some soldiers belonging to
+the Papal army, who were stationed at this place, I found that most of them
+had served under Napoleon. They spoke of him with tears of affection in
+their eyes, and I pleased them much by reciprocating their opinions of that
+great man. To speak well of Napoleon is the surest passport to civility and
+good treatment on the part of the soldiers and _douaniers_.
+
+In the evening we arrived at Bolsena, the ancient Volsinium, a city of the
+Volscians. It is an ancient looking town, not very clean, and inhabited by
+indolent people. It is situated on the banks of a large lake, on which
+there are three small islands. It is very aguish and unhealthy, and the
+inhabitants appear sickly, with marvellous sallow complexions. The inn
+where we put up was a pretty good one, and as this lake abounds in fish, we
+had some excellent trout and pike for supper; among other dishes there was
+one that was very gratifying to me, an old East and West Indian; and that
+was the _Peveroni_ or large red and green peppers or capsicums fried in
+oil. Some excellent Orvieto wine crowned our repast, and helped to restore
+us from our fatigues.
+
+On leaving Bolsena the next morning, the 7th, and within a very short
+distance from that town we entered a thick and venerable forest, thro'
+which the road runs for several miles. Fine old trees of immense height
+covered with foliage and thickly studded together give to this forest an
+aweful and romantic appearance. It is quite a _lucus opaca ingens_. This
+forest has been held sacred since the earliest times and is even now held
+in such superstitious veneration by the people that they do not allow it to
+be cut. The Dryads and Hamadryads have no doubt long ago taken their
+flight, but the wood, from its length and opaqueness, inspired me with some
+apprehension lest it might be the abode of some modern votaries of Mercury,
+people having confused ideas of _meum_ and _tuum_, and the _appropriative
+faculty_ too strongly developed in their organization, and I expected every
+moment to hear a shot and the terrible cry of _ferma_; but we met with no
+accident nor did we fall in with a living soul. On issuing from this forest
+we perceived on an eminence before us, at a short distance, the town of
+Montefiascone. We stopped there as almost all travellers do to taste the
+famous Montefiascone wine or _Est_ wine, as it is frequently called. This
+wine is fine flavored, _pétillant_ and wonderfully exhilarating. It is
+renowned for having occasioned the death of a German prelate in the
+sixteenth century, who was travelling in Italy and who was remarkably fond
+of good wine. The story is as follows. He was accustomed to send on his
+servant to the different towns thro' which he was to pass with directions,
+to taste and report on the quality of the different wines to be found
+there, and if they were good to mark the word _Est_ on the casks from which
+he tasted them. The servant, on arrival at Montefiascone, was highly
+pleased with the flavour of the wine, of which there were three casks at
+the inn where they put up. He accordingly wrote the word _Est_ on each of
+the casks. The Bishop arrived soon after and took such a liking to this
+wine that he died in a few days of a fever brought on by continual
+intoxication. He was buried in one of the churches at Montefiascone and the
+monks of the Convent there, themselves _bons-vivans_, determined to give
+him a suitable epitaph. They accordingly caused to be engraved on his tomb
+the following Latin inscription commemorative of the event: _Est, Est, Est,
+propter nimium Est, Dominus Episcopus mortuus_ EST. From the above
+circumstance this wine is called _Vino d'Est_, and it affords no small
+revenue to the proprietor of the _cabaret_ on the road side who sells it.
+
+We arrived at Viterbo to breakfast and at Ronciglione in the evening.
+Viterbo is a large and handsome city and contains several striking
+buildings. It is paved with lava and contains a great variety of fountains.
+There is some appearance of commerce and industry in this town and there
+are several _maisons de plaisance_ in the neighbourhood. From Viterbo,
+thro' Monterosi, to Ronciglione the road lies over a mountain of steep
+ascent; here and there are patches of forest. There is not a house to be
+seen on this route and from there being a good deal of wood, and no
+appearance of cultivation, one fancies oneself rather in the wilds of a new
+country like America, than in so old a one as Italy.
+
+Ronciglione is an old rubbishing town half in ruins and contains no one
+thing remarkable.
+
+The next morning at four o'clock we started from Ronciglione and reached
+Baccano to breakfast.
+
+Baccano contains only two buildings; but they are both very large and
+roomy; the one is the inn, and the other serves as a barrack for the
+Military. There is always a strong military detachment here for the
+security of the road against robbers, who occasionally infest this
+neighbourhood. The inn is of immense size. Travellers, who arrive here
+late, would do well to halt here the whole night, as not only the road is
+dangerous on account of robbers, but because if they arrive at Rome after
+five o'clock p.m., they cannot release their baggage and carriage from the
+Custom house till next day. Every carriage public or private that arrives
+in Rome is bound, unless a special permission to the contrary be obtained
+from the Government, to drive direct to the Custom house (_Dogana_). In the
+like manner, on travelling from Rome to Florence, people generally prefer
+to start from Rome at twelve o'clock and bring to the night at Baccano, so
+as to avoid the bad inn at Ronciglione and sleep in preference at Viterbo.
+I here speak only of those who travel by short stages as the _vetturini_
+do.
+
+Ariosto has given a celebrity to this wretched place Baccano in his poem of
+the _Orlando Furioso_, in the story of Giocondo in the 28th Canto, as being
+the identical place where Fausto, the brother of Giocondo, remained to
+await the return of his brother from Rome, to which place he had gone back,
+when half way between Baccano and Rome, to fetch the _monile_ which he had
+left behind him, and found his wife not _alone_ and _dying with grief_ as
+he apprehended, but _sotto la coltre_ with a servant of the family.
+
+The country between Baccano and Rome is as unpleasing and even worse than
+that between the former place and Ronciglione. It is hilly, but not a tree,
+nor a house, nor a sign of cultivation to be seen except the two or three
+wretched hovels at La Storta. There is nothing at all that announces the
+approach to a capital city; and in addition to the dismal landscape there
+is a sight still more dismal that salutes the eye of the traveller at
+intervals of two or three miles and which does not tend to inspire pleasing
+ideas; and this is the sight of arms and legs of malefactors and murderers
+suspended on large poles on the road side; for it is the custom here to cut
+off the arms and legs of murderers after decapitation, and to suspend them
+_in terrorem_ on poles, erected on the very spot where they committed the
+murder. The sight of these limbs dangling in the wind is not a very
+comfortable one towards the close of the evening.
+
+We left the _Sepolero di Nerone_, an ancient tomb so called, on the right
+of our road and half a mile beyond it crossed the Tiber at the _Ponte Molle
+(Pons Milvius)_, where there is a gate, bridge and military post. From this
+post to the _Porta del Popolo_, the entrance into the city for those coming
+from the North, the distance is one mile; there is a white wall on each
+side of the road the whole way, and some farm houses and villas. Near the
+_Ponte Molle_ is the field of battle where Maxentius was defeated by
+Constantine.
+
+We entered the _Porta del Popolo_, crossed the _Piazza_ of the same name,
+where three streets present themselves to view. In the centre is the street
+called the _Corso_, running in a direct line from the _Porta_ across the
+_Piazza_. We drove along the _Corso_ till we arrived at a _Piazza_ on our
+right hand, which _Piazza_ is called _della Colonna_ from the Column of
+Antoninus, which stands on it. We then crossed the _Piazza_ which is very
+large and soon reached the _Dogana_ or Custom house, formerly the temple of
+Antoninus Pius, where vile modern walls are built to fill up the intervals
+between eleven columns of Grecian marble. Here our baggage underwent a
+rigorous research; this rigour is not so much directed against the
+fraudulent introduction of contraband or duty-bearing merchandise, as
+against _books_, which undergo a severe scrutiny. Against Voltaire and
+Rousseau implacable war is waged, and their works are immediately
+confiscated. Other authors too are sometimes examined, to see whether they
+contain anything against Mother Church. As the people employed in
+inspecting books are not much versed in any litterature or language but
+their own, except perhaps a little French, it is not easy for them to find
+out the contents of books in other languages. I had Schiller's works with
+me, a volume of which one of the _douaniers_ took up and looked at; on
+seeing the Gothic letter he seemed as much astonished as if he had got hold
+of a book of _Cabbala_ or _Magic_. He detained the whole work, but it was
+sent to me the next day, on my declaring that there was nothing damnable or
+heretical in it; for there was no person belonging to the department who
+could read German. When the _douaniers_ proceeded to the examination of the
+books belonging to one of my fellow travellers, the Neapolitan lady, she
+expressed great repugnance to the procedure; the _douaniers_ however
+insisted and, behold! there were several _livres galants_ with plates
+somewhat _lubriques_, the discovery of which excited blushes on her part
+and considerable laughter on the part of the byestanders. These books,
+however, not being contraband, were immediately returned to her, as was an
+edition of Baffo, belonging to my other fellow traveller, returned to him.
+Now this Baffo was a Venetian poet and his works are the most profligate
+that ever were penned or imagined by mortal man. Martial and Petronius
+Arbiter must hide their diminished heads before Baffo. The owner of this
+book chose to read out loud, quite unsolicited, several _choice_ sonnets of
+this poet for our edification during the journey; and this branch of
+litterature seemed to be the only one with which he was acquainted.
+
+When the examination was over I took leave of my fellow travellers, and
+repaired to the _German Hôtel_ in the _Via de' Condotti_, where I engaged
+an apartment, and sat down to dinner at an excellent _table d'hôte_ at five
+o'clock. There was a profusion of everything, particularly of fish and
+game. Mullets and wild boar are constant dishes at a Roman table. The
+mullets at Rome are small but delicious, and this was a fish highly prized
+by the ancient Romans. Game of all kinds is very cheap here, from the
+abundance of it that is to be met with in wild uninhabited wastes of Latium
+and in the Pontine marshes. Every peasant is a sportsman and goes
+constantly armed with fire-arms, not only to kill game, but to defend
+himself against robbers, who infest the environs of Rome, and who sometimes
+carry their audacity so far as to push their _reconnaissances_ close to the
+very walls of the city. At the _German Hôtel_ the price of the dinner at
+_table d'hôte_, including wine at discretion, is six _paoli_, about three
+franks. I pay for an excellent room about three _paoli_ per diem and my
+breakfast at a neighbouring _Caffé_ costs me one _paolo_. A _paolo_ is
+worth about five pence English. There are ten _paoli_ to a _scudo Romano_
+and ten _bafocchi_ to a _paolo_, The _bafocco_ is a copper coin.
+
+
+ROME, 12th Sept.
+
+A great number of Germans dine at the _table d'hôte_ of Franz's hotel.
+Among them I distinguished one day a very intelligent Bavarian Jew. I
+proposed to him a walk to the Coliseum the following morning, as
+independent of the benefit I derived from his conversation I was curious to
+see whether it was true or not that the Jews always avoided walking under
+the Arch of Titus, which was erected in commemoration of the capture of
+Jerusalem by the Romans under Titus, in the reign of Vespasian. On stepping
+out of the _Hôtel Allemand_, the first thing that met my eye was the
+identical beggar described by Kotzebue in his travels in Italy, and he
+gives the very same answer now as then to those who give him nothing, viz.,
+_Pazienza_.
+
+We crossed the _Piazza di Spagna_, ascended the superb flight of steps of
+the _Trinità de' Monti_, where there is a French church called the Church
+of St Louis: near it is the _Villa Medici_, which is the seat of the French
+Academy of the fine arts at Rome. We then filed along the _Strada Felice_
+till we arrived at the church of _Santa Maria maggiore_, a superb edifice,
+the third church in Rome in celebrity, and the second in magnificence. An
+immense Egyptian Obelisk stands before it. We then, turning a little to the
+right, made the best of our way to the Coliseum where we remained nearly
+two hours. I had figured to myself the grandest ideas of this stupendous
+building, but the aspect of it far exceeded the sketch even of my
+imagination. In Egypt I have seen the Pyramids, but even these vast masses
+did not make such an impression on me as the Coliseum has done. I am so
+unequal to the task of description that I shall not attempt it; I will give
+you however its dimensions which my friend the Jew measured. It is an
+ellipse of which the transverse axis is 580 feet in length and its
+conjugate diameter 480; but it is not so much the length and breadth as the
+solidity of this building that strikes the traveller with astonishment. The
+arcaded passage or gallery (on the _rez de chaussée_ between the interior
+and the exterior wall), which has a vaulted roof over which the seats are
+built, is broad enough to admit three carriages abreast: and the walls on
+each side of this gallery are at least twenty feet thick. What a
+magnificent spectacle it must have been in the time of the ancient Romans,
+when it was ornamented, gilded, and full of spectators, of which it could
+contain, it is said, 86,000! The Coliseum has been despoiled by various
+Popes and Cardinals to furnish stone and marble to build their palaces;
+otherwise, so solid is the building, Time alone would never suffice to
+destroy it. At present strict orders are given and sentries are posted to
+prevent all further dilapidations, and buttresses have been made to prop up
+those parts which had given way. What a pity it is that the Arena has not
+been left empty, instead of being fitted up with tawdry niches and images
+representing the different stations of the Crucifixion! In the centre is an
+immense Cross, which whoever kisses is entitled to one hundred days
+indulgence. To what reflections the sight of this vast edifice leads! What
+combats of gladiators and wild beasts! What blood has been spilled! Was it
+not here that the tyrannical and cowardly Domitian ordered Ulpius Glabrio,
+of consular dignity, to descend into the arena and fight with a lion? The
+Christian writers mention that many of their sect suffered martyrdom here
+by being compelled to fight with wild beasts; but even this was not half so
+bad as the conduct of the Christians, when they obtained possession of
+political power and dominion, in burning alive poor Jews, Moors and
+heretics some centuries afterwards. Indeed the cruelty of the Pagans was
+much exaggerated by the above writers and were it even true to its full
+extent, their severity was far more excusable than that of the Christians
+in later times, for the efforts of the Christian sect in the times of
+Paganism were unceasingly directed towards the destruction of the whole
+fabric of polytheism, on which was based the entire, social and political
+order of the Empire; and they thus brought on themselves perhaps merited
+persecution, by their own intolerance; whereas, when they got the upper
+hand, they showed no mercy to those of a different religion, and Orthodoxy
+has wallowed successively in the blood of Arians, Jews, Moors and
+Protestants.
+
+How many a poor Jew or Moor in Spain and Portugal has been burned alive for
+no other reason than
+
+ _Pour n'avoir point quitté la foi de leurs ancêtres._
+
+No, no; no sect or religion was ever so persecuting as the Catholic
+Christians! The Polytheists of all times, both ancient and modern, were
+tolerant to all religions and so far from striving to make proselytes,
+often adopted the ceremonies of other worships in addition to their own;
+witness the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans of old, and the Hindoos and
+Chinese of the present day. The Jews, ferocious and prejudiced as they
+were, never persecuted other nations on the ground of religion, and if they
+held these nations in abhorrence as idolaters, and considered themselves
+alone as the holy people, the people of God (Yahoudi), they never dreamed
+of making converts. The Mussulmans tho' they hold it as a sacred precept of
+their religion to endeavour to make converts to Islam, do not use violent
+means and only compel those of a different faith to pay a higher tribute.
+At any rate, they never have or do put people to death merely for the
+difference of religious opinions. Such were the reflections I made on
+walking about the Arena of this colossal edifice so worthy of the _popolo
+Re_.
+
+On leaving the Coliseum the first thing that meets the eye is the Arch of
+Constantine, under which the Roman triumphal and ovationary processions
+moved towards the Capitol. The Arch of Constantine stands just outside the
+Coliseum. It is of immense size and extremely well preserved. The ground on
+which it stands being much filled up and only half of the Arch appearing,
+the rest remaining buried in the earth, it was judged adviseable to
+excavate all around it in order to come to the pedestal; so that now there
+is a walled enclosure all around it and into this enclosure it is a descent
+of at least eighteen feet from the ground outside. Several statues of
+captive Kings and bas-reliefs representing the victories of Constantine
+adorn the facade of this triumphal arch. The inscriptions are perfect, and
+the letters were formerly filled up with bronze; but these have been taken
+out at the repeated sackings that poor Rome has undergone from friend and
+foe. At a short distance from the Arch of Constantine is the Arch of Titus,
+under which we moved along on our road towards the Capitol and my friend
+the Jew was too much of a cosmopolite to feel the smallest repugnance at
+walking under the Arch. Our conversation then turned on the absurd hatred
+and prejudice that existed between Christians and Jews; he was very liberal
+on this subject and in speaking of Jesus Christ he said: "Jesus Christ was
+a Jew and a real philosopher and was therefore persecuted, for his
+philosophy interfered too much with, and tended to shake the political
+fabric of the Jewish constitution and to subvert our old customs and
+usages: for this reason he was put to death. I seek not to defend or
+palliate the injustice of the act or the barbarity with which he was
+treated; but our nation did surely no more than any other nation ancient or
+modern has done or would still do against reformers and innovators."
+
+The Arch of Titus is completely defaced outside, but in the interior of the
+Arch, on each side, is a bas relief: the one representing Vespasian's
+triumph over the Jews, and the Emperor himself in a car drawn by six
+horses; the other represents the soldiers and followers of the triumph,
+bearing the spoils of the conquered nation, and among them the famous
+candlesticks that adorned the temple of Jerusalem are very conspicuous.
+These figures are in tolerable preservation, only that the Emperor has lost
+his head and one of the soldiers has absconded.
+
+On issuing from the Arch of Titus we found ourselves in the Forum, now the
+_Campo Vaccino_: so that cattle now low where statesmen and orators
+harangued, and lazy priests in procession tread on the sacred dust of
+heroes.
+
+ Où des prêtres heureux foulent d'un pied tranquille
+ Les tombeaux des Catons et les cendres d'Emile.
+
+So sings Voltaire, I believe, or if they are not his lines, they are the
+Abbé Delille's.[84]
+
+The imagination is quite bewildered here from the variety of ancient
+monuments that meet the eye in every direction. What vast souvenirs crowd
+all at once on the mind! Look all around! the _Via Sacra_, the Arch of
+Severus, and the Capitol in front; on one side of you, the temple of Peace,
+that of Faustina and that of the Sun and Moon: on the other the remaining
+three columns of the temple of Jupiter Stator; the three also of the temple
+of Jupiter Tonans; the eight columns of the temple of Concord; and the
+solitary column of Phocas. At a short distance the temple of Castor and
+Pollux and that of Romulus and Remus, which is a round building of great
+antiquity, whose rusticity forms a striking contrast with the elegance of
+the colonnaded temples, and which was evidently built before the conquest
+of Greece by the Romans and the consequent introduction of the fine arts
+and of the Grecian orders of architecture.
+
+You may wish to know my sensations on traversing this sacred ground. The
+_Via Sacra_ recalled to me Horace meeting the _bavard_ who addresses him:
+_Quid agis, dulcissime rerum_?[85] I then thought of the Sabine rape; of
+Brutus' speech over the body of Lucretia; then I almost fancied I could see
+the spot where stood the butcher's shop, from whence Virginius snatched the
+knife to immolate his daughter at the shrine of Honor; next the shade of
+Regulus flitted before my imagination, refusing to be exchanged; then I
+figured to myself Cicero thundering against Catiline; or the same with
+delicate irony ridiculing the ultra-rigor of the Stoics, so as to force
+even the gravity of Cato to relax into a smile; then the grand, the heroic
+act of Marcus Brutus in immolating the great Caesar at the altar of
+liberty. All these recollections and ideas crowded on my imagination
+without regard to order or chronology, and I remained for some time in a
+state of the most profound reverie, from which I was only roused by my
+friend the Jew reminding me that we had a quantity of other things to see.
+
+The first object that engaged my attention on being roused from my reverie,
+was the Arch of Severus at the foot of the Capitol which towers above it.
+Excavations have been made around this Arch (for otherwise only half of it
+could be seen) and a stone wall built around the excavated ground in the
+same manner as at the Arch of Constantine. Round several of the columns of
+the temples I have above enumerated, excavations have been also made;
+otherwise the lower half of them would remain buried in the earth and give
+to the monuments the appearance of a city which had been half swallowed up
+by an earthquake. By dint of digging round the column of Phocas, the
+ancient paved road which led to the Capitol has been discovered and is now
+open to view. This ancient road is at least thirty feet below the surface
+of the present road and the ground about it. This shows how the ground must
+have been filled up by the destruction of buildings at the different
+sackings of Rome and the consequent accumulation of rubbish. The French
+when they were here began these excavations and the Duchess of Devonshire
+continues them.[86] It is useful in every way; it employs a number of poor
+people and may be the means of discovering some valuable remains of
+antiquity and objects of art. At any rate it is highly gratifying to have
+discovered the identical road to the Capitol on which so many Consuls,
+Dictators and Emperors moved in triumph, and so many captive Kings wept in
+chains.
+
+We then ascended the steps that lead to the modern Capitol and mounted on
+the _Campanile_ of the same, from whence there is a superb panoramic view
+of Rome. On descending from the _Campanile_, we visited the Tarpeian rock,
+which is now of inconsiderable height, the ground about it and heaps of
+rubbish having filled up the abyss below. We then entered the court yard of
+the Capitol. The Capitol and building annexed to it form three sides of a
+rectangle, the centre or _corps de logis_ lying North and South, and the
+wings East and West, the whole inclosing a court yard open on the South
+side of the rectangle, from whence you descend into the street on the plain
+below, by a most magnificent escalier or flight of steps. Of the Capitol,
+the _corps de logis_ or central building to which the _Campanile_ belongs,
+is reserved for the occupation and habitation of the _Senator Romano_, a
+civil magistrate, corresponding something to the mayor in France or
+_Oberbürgermeister_ in the German towns, and who is chosen from among the
+nobility and nominated by the Pope. The wings contain the _Museum
+Capitolinum_ of painting and sculpture. There is a great deal to call forth
+the admiration of the traveller in the court yard of the Capitol. The most
+prominent object is the famous bronze equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius,
+which cannot fail to rivet the attention of the least enthusiastic
+spectator. I observed at each angle of the façade of the Capitol a colossal
+statue of a captive King in a Phrygian dress; but still more striking than
+these are the colossal statues of Castor and Pollux leading horses, which
+stand a little in front of the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius, and
+nearer the _escalier_, the one on the right the other on the left. Two
+lions in basalt on each side of the _escalier_ are very striking objects,
+and the _escalier_ itself is the most superb thing of the kind perhaps in
+the world. This _escalier_ and the Marcus Aurelius, unique also in its
+kind, are both the workmanship of Michael Angelo.[87] We descended this
+_escalier_ and then fronted it to take a view of the Capitol from the
+bottom; but the statue of Marcus Aurelius is so prominent and so grand that
+it absorbed all my attention.
+
+After dinner I walked a little in the gardens on the Pincian hill, and then
+visited some friends belonging to the French Academy of Painting and
+Sculpture, who were so good as to shew me their productions, and also a
+copy of the superb folio edition of Denon's work on Egypt which to me, who
+had been in that country, was highly gratifying. Oh! what a pity that the
+French could not keep that country! What a paradise they would have made of
+it! As it is (and to their credit be it said) they did more good for the
+country during three years only, than we have done for our possessions in
+India for fifty years.
+
+
+ROME, 15th Septr.
+
+The next morning, after an early breakfast, I repaired to the Pantheon, now
+called _Santa Maria della Rotonda_, and appropriated to the Catholic
+worship. It is easily recognizable by its rotundity and by the simple
+grandeur of its façade and portico. The bronze has been taken out of the
+letters of the inscription. This beautiful specimen of ancient architecture
+is situated in a small _piazza_ or square called _Piazza della Rotonda_,
+where a market of poultry, game, and vegetables is held. There are only now
+three or four steps on the _escalier_ to ascend, in order to enter into the
+portico; but as it is known that according to the descriptions of the
+Pantheon in ancient times there was an immense flight of steps to ascend,
+it is an additional proof how much the ground on which modern Rome stands
+has been filled up, and consequently it is evident that the greater part of
+this flight of steps remains still buried in the earth.
+
+If I was so struck with the appearance of this interesting edifice outside,
+how much more so should I have been on seeing the inside, were not the
+niches, where formerly stood the statues of the Gods, filled with tawdry
+dolls representing the Virgin Mary and _he_ and _she_ saints. The columns
+and pilasters in the interior of this temple are beautiful, all of _jaune
+antique_ and one entire stone each. How much better would it have been to
+replace the statues of the _Dii Majorum Gentium_ which occupied the niches,
+by statues in marble of the Apostles, instead of the dolls dressed in
+tawdry colors, and the frippery gilding of the altars on which they stand,
+which disfigure this noble building. The Pantheon was built by Agrippa as
+the inscription shews. In the interior are sixteen columns of _jaune
+antique_. The bronze that formerly ornamented this temple was made use of
+to fabricate the baldachin of St Peter's. Of late years it has been the
+fashion to erect monuments affixed to the walls of the interior of the
+Pantheon to the memory of the great men and heroes of poetry, painting,
+sculpture and music who were natives of Italy, or for foreigners,
+celebrated for their excellence in those arts, who have died in Rome. Here
+are for instance, tablets to the memory of Metastasio, Rafael Mengs,
+Sacchini, Poussin, Winckelmann; the Phidias of modern days, the illustrious
+Canova, has recommended the placing in the Pantheon of the busts in marble
+of all the great men who have flourished in Italy, as the most appropriate
+ornament to this temple. He himself with a princely liberality has made a
+present to it of the busts of Dante, Petrarca, Ariosto, Tasso, Guarini,
+Alfieri, Michel Angelo, Rafaello, Metastasio and various other worthies.
+These busts are all the production either of Canova himself, or made by his
+pupils under his direction; they are not the least remarkable ornament of
+the place. In the centre of the _Piazza della Rotonda_ stands an obelisk
+brought from Egypt, which belonged to a temple sacred to Isis in that
+country.
+
+I next repaired to the _Piazza di Navona_, a large and spacious square,
+where there is a superb fountain representing a vast rock with four
+colossal figures, one of which reclines at the foot of the rock, at each
+angle of the pedestal that supports it, and it is surmounted by an Obelisk
+which was brought from Egypt and was found in the gardens of Sallust. The
+four colossal figures represent the four river Gods of the four great
+rivers in Europe, Asia, Africa and America, viz., the Danube, the Ganges,
+the Nile, and the Plata. The statue of the Nile has his head half-concealed
+by a cloak, emblematical of the source of that river not being discovered.
+In the _Piazza_ are frequently held fairs, shews of wild beasts, theatrical
+exhibitions and sometimes combats of wild beasts.
+
+I crossed the Tiber on my way to St Peter's at the _Ponte di Sant' Angelo_;
+directly on the other side of the river stands the castle of that name, an
+immense edifice formerly the _Moles Adriana_ or Mausoleum of the Emperor
+Adrian. It is of a circular form and is a remarkably striking object. From
+here there is a spacious street as broad as Portland place, which leads to
+the magnificent _Piazza_, where stands the Metropolitan Church of the
+Christian world, the pride of Christendom, the triumph of modern
+architecture, flanked on each side by a semi-circular colonnaded portico,
+which constitutes one of its greatest beauties and distinguishes it from
+all the other temples in the world. On the Piazza, considerably in front of
+this wonderful edifice and nearly in the centre, stands an immense Egyptian
+Obelisk, and at a short distance on each side of the Obelisk two
+magnificent fountains which spout water to a great height and which
+contribute greatly to the ornament of the _Piazza_.
+
+Now you must not expect me to give you a description of this glorious
+temple. I never in my life possessed descriptive powers, even for objects
+of no great importance: how then could I attempt to delineate the
+innumerable beauties of this edifice? Yet, vast as it is, the proportions
+of the façade are so correct, that they, together with the semi-circular
+colonnaded portico, serve to diminish its apparent size and to render its
+mass less imposing, but perhaps more beautiful. On this account it appears
+at first sight of less size than the Church of St Paul's in London. The
+beauty of the architecture, viz., of the façade and of the colonnaded
+portico would require days to examine and admire. What shall I say then of
+the wonders of the interior, crowded and charged as it is with the finest
+pieces of sculpture, columns of the most beautiful _verd antique_ and of
+_jaune antique_; the masterpieces of painting copied in mosaic; the
+precious, stones and marbles of all sorts that adorn the variety of
+magnificent chapels and altars; the immense baldachin with its twisted
+columns of bronze (the spoils of the Pantheon and of the temple of
+Jerusalem); the profusion of gilding and ornament of all sorts and where in
+spite of this profusion there seems _rien de trop_. At first entrance the
+eye is so dazzled with the magnificent _tout ensemble_ as to be incapable
+for a long time of examining any thing in detail. Each chapel abounds in
+the choicest marbles and precious stones: in a word it would seem as if the
+whole wealth of the Earth were concentrated here. Without impiety or
+exaggeration, I felt on entering this majestic temple for the first time
+just as I conceive a resuscitated mortal would feel on being ushered into
+the scene of the glories of Heaven. The masterpieces of painting are here
+perpetuated in mosaic, and so correctly and beautifully done, that unless
+you approach exceedingly close indeed, it is impossible to distinguish them
+from paintings. What an useful as well as ornamental art is the mosaic!
+There are a great variety of confessionals where penitents and pilgrims may
+confess, each in his own tongue, for there is a confessional for the use of
+almost every native tongue and language in the Catholic world. The cupola!
+What an astonishing sight when you look up at it from below! How can I
+better describe it than by relating the anecdote of Michel Angelo its
+constructor, who when some one made a remark on the impossibility of making
+a finer Cupola than that of the Pantheon, burst out into the following
+exclamation: "Do you think so? Then I will throw it in the air," and he
+fulfilled his word; for the cupola of St Peter's is exactly of the size of
+that of the Pantheon, tho' at such an elevation as to give it only the
+appearance of one fourth of its real size, or even less. The sublimity of
+the design can only be equalled by the boldness and success of its
+execution. Till it was done, it was thought by every artist impossible to
+be done. What an extraordinary genius was this Michel Angelo! Ariosto has
+hot at all exaggerated in his praise when he speaks of him in punning on
+his name:
+
+ _Michel_ più che mortal, _Angel_ divino.[88]
+
+ Michael, less man than Angel and divine.
+
+ --Trans, W.S. ROSE.
+
+Among the various splendid marble monuments with which this temple abounds
+is one erected to the memory of Pope Rezzonico, constructed by Canova and
+reckoned one of his masterpieces. The Pope is represented in his
+canonicals. Behind and above him is a colossal statue of Religion with a
+cross in one hand and rays in form of spikes issuing from her head. I do
+not like these spikes. On the dexter side of this monument, is a beautiful
+male youthful figure representing a funereal genius with an inverted torch.
+The signal delicacy, beauty and symmetry of this statue forms a striking
+contrast with the figure of an immense lion sleeping on the sinister side;
+and this lion is an irrefragable proof that Canova excels in the
+delineation of the terrible as well as the beautiful, for it is admirably
+executed.
+
+At another monument is a superb female figure of colossal size representing
+Truth. It was formerly naked, but they have contrived to execute in
+coloured marble a vestment to cover her loins and veil her secret beauties.
+The reason of which is, that this beautiful statue made such an impression
+once upon a traveller (some say he was an Englishman, others a Spaniard)
+that it inspired him with a sort of Pygmalionic passion which he attempted
+to gratify one night; he was discovered in the attempt, and since that
+time, to prevent further scandal or attempts of the sort and to conceal
+from profane eyes the charms of the too alluring Goddess, this colored
+marble vestment was imagined and executed. This story is borrowed from
+Lucian.[89]
+
+There is also here a fine statue of Pope Gregory XIII and a magnificent
+bas-relief, the subject of which is the reform of the calendar by that
+Pope. Here too is a monument to Christina Queen of Sweden, and a bas-relief
+representing her abjuration of the Lutheran Faith.
+
+But why should I attempt to detail all these monuments, while it would
+require folios for the purpose; let me rather introduce you to the hero and
+tutelary saint of this sanctuary. St Peter, a superb bronze statue
+something above the usual size of men, is seated on a curule chair in the
+nave of the church on the right hand side as you approach the baldachin. He
+holds in his hands the keys of Heaven. He receives the adoration of all the
+faithful who enter into this temple, and this adoration is performed by
+kissing his foot which, from the repeated kissings, is become of a bright
+polish and is visibly wearing away. The statue was formerly a statue of
+Jupiter Capitolinus, but on the grand revolution among the inhabitants of
+Olympus and the downfall of Jupiter, it was broken to pieces, melted down
+and fabricated into an image of St Peter, so that this statue has lost
+little of its former sovereignty and still rules Heaven and Earth if not
+with regal, with at least vice-regal power, tho' under a different name.
+
+In the Sistine Chapel is the celebrated painting al fresco of the day of
+Judgment by Michel Angelo, an aweful subject and nobly and awefully
+executed.
+
+In the porch under the façade of St Peter's are two marble statues on
+horseback, one at each end of the porch: they represent Constantine the
+Great and Charlemagne, the two great benefactors of the holy Catholic
+Church; the one, in fact, its founder, the other its preserver.
+
+As the Palace of the Vatican stands close to the Church of St Peter's and
+communicates with it by an _escalier_, I ascended the _escalier_ in order
+to behold and examine the famous Museum of the Vatican, the first in the
+world, and unique for the vast treasures of the fine arts that it contains;
+treasures which the united wealth of all Europe and India to boot could not
+purchase at their just price. Here in fact it may be said are preserved the
+riches and plunder of the whole world, which was stripped of all its
+valuables by those illustrious brigands the ancient Romans. And mark in
+this point the good fortune of Rome; instead of losing them again as other
+nations have lost their trophies, Superstition came to her aid and caused
+them to be respected and preserved, 'till an enlightened age arose which
+guided by Philosophy, Humanity and Science will for ever preserve them
+secure against all attacks of barbarians in a sanctuary so worthy of them.
+
+
+_Museum Vaticanum_[90]
+
+A superb flight of steps leads into a hall of immense length filled on each
+side with statues, busts, sarcophagi, altars, urns, vases and candelabra,
+all monuments of antiquity and of the most exquisite workmanship. The walls
+on each side of this hall are inlaid with tablets bearing inscriptions in
+Greek, Latin and Etruscan. One is quite bewildered amongst such a profusion
+of Gods, Semi-Gods, Heroes. I must single out a few of the most remarkable
+for their workmanship. Here is a group representing the sacrifice of
+Mithras. On ascending a few steps at the other end of this hall, in a small
+octangular room, are the statue of Meleager; the famous Torso; the tomb of
+Scipio with bas-reliefs. On leaving the chamber you come into an octangular
+gallery, issuing from which are four circular chambers; each chamber
+contains a masterpiece of art. In one is the Apollo Belvedere, in another
+the Laocoon (both safely arrived from Paris); in the third Antinous; in the
+fourth the Perseus of Canova, with Medusa's head and his famous group of
+the two pugilists. Descriptions of the three first would be superfluous--
+for of them
+
+ Mills altri han detto e con via miglior plettro,
+
+and even with respect to the Perseus of Canova, I shall content myself with
+remarking that the sculptor had evidently the Apollo Belvedere in his
+ideal, and if he has not quite equalled that celebrated statue, it is
+because it is impossible; but he certainly has given the nearest possible
+approximation to its excellence.
+
+In another hall and just at its entrance are the statues of Menander and
+Posidippus in a sitting posture, one on either side. In this hall are
+innumerable fine statues, but the further end of it, fronting you as you
+enter, is a statue which at once engages and rivets your undivided
+attention; it at once induces you to approach and to take no notice of the
+statues on the right and left of the hall. And how should it be otherwise,
+since it is the identical statue of the father of the Gods and men, the
+famous Jupiter Capitolinus which adorned the Capitol in ancient Rome. He is
+sitting on a throne with a sceptre in one hand and the thunderbolts in the
+other, at his feet an eagle. It is a glorious statue and in every respect
+characteristic; such grandeur, such majesty in the countenance! It is
+impossible not to feel awe and reverence on beholding it. It was on
+contemplating this venerable statue that an Englishman who was at Rome some
+sixty years ago, stood wrapt for a time in silent veneration; then suddenly
+breaking silence he made a profound obeisance before the statue and
+exclaimed: "Recollect, O father of the Gods and men, that I have paid my
+hommage to you in your adversity and do not forget me, should you ever
+raise your head above water again!"
+
+In the hall of the Muses are the statues of the tuneful Nine which were
+found underground among the ruins of Hadrian's villa at Tivoli.
+
+In the centre of a circular chamber of vast dimensions, is an enormous
+circular basin of porphyry, of forty-one feet in diameter. A superb mosaic
+adorns the floor of the centre of this chamber, and is inclosed.
+Appropriate ornaments to this immense chamber are the colossal statues of
+the _Dii majorum Gentium_. Here are Juno, Minerva, Cybele, Jupiter,
+Serapis, Mars, Ceres, and others.
+
+In another hall are two enormous Egyptian Gods in yellow granite; two
+superb sarcophagi in red marble and two immense Sphinxes in granite. In
+another chamber is an antique car drawn by two horses: the near one is
+modern, the off one ancient. The wheels of this car are modern; both car
+and horses are of exquisite workmanship. Several fine statues adorn this
+chamber, among which the most remarkable are a Phocion, a Paris, an
+Antinous, and a Triton carrying off a Nereid.
+
+I must not omit to mention that in one of the halls is the famous group of
+the Nile, represented by an enormous colossal River God, surrounded by
+fourteen children playing with young crocodiles. Opposite to this group is
+another equally celebrated, viz., the colossal statue of the Tiber, with
+the she-wolf giving suck to Romulus and Remus by his side. The mosaic
+pavements in this Museum surpass in richness any in the world. In one of
+the halls, among the works of modern times, are two beautiful marble tables
+richly inlaid with all sorts of stones of value, with bas-reliefs on them;
+the one representing the visit of the Emperor Joseph II, and the other that
+of Gustavus III of Sweden to Rome, and their reception by the Pope.
+
+One of the halls of sculpture is appropriated to the figures of animals of
+all kinds, from the lion and eagle down to the rat and crawfish in marbles
+of all colors, and of all sizes; the best executed among them appeared to
+me a group representing a greyhound bitch giving suck to her young. As for
+the valuable cameos, coins, medals, and smaller remnants of antiquity in
+this Museum, they are innumerable.
+
+With regard to the paintings that belong to this Museum, there is only a
+small, collection but it is unique. Here is the Transfiguration and some
+other masterpieces of Rafaello.
+
+In the _Stanze di Rafaello_ (so they are called) are several large fresco
+paintings, viz., one representing the battle of Maxentius and Constantine;
+another, the school of Athens and Socrates sitting among the other
+philosophers; a third representing a fire; besides others.
+
+In one of these _stanze_ is a work in tapestry representing Jesus Christ
+bursting forth from the sepulchre, but he has a visage far too rubicund and
+wanting in dignity; he looks like a person flushed with wine issuing from a
+tavern; in the countenance there is depicted (so it appears to me) a
+vulgar, not a dignified triumph.
+
+The Palace of the Vatican is of immense size and is said to cover as much
+ground as the city of Turin; and I am inclined to think that there is not a
+great deal of exaggeration in this statement, for the vista along the
+corridors and galleries appears to be endless. The Library of the Vatican
+is of course very extensive and of immense value; but the books, as well as
+the manuscripts, are kept in presses which are locked, and it is rather
+awkward to be continually applying to the _custode_ to take out and put
+back a book.
+
+The Museum of the Vatican is open twice a week to the public, viz.
+Thursdays and Sundays; but foreigners, on shewing their passports, may
+obtain admission at any time.
+
+
+ROME, 17th Sept.
+
+My next visit was to the Capitol in order to inspect the _Museum
+Capitolinum_. This time I ascended the magnificent _escalier_ of Michel
+Angelo, having the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius in front. On
+arriving at the courtyard, I entered the building on my left (which is on
+the right of the façade). Under the colonnaded portico of this wing are the
+statues of Caesar and Augustus; here too is the naval column of the consul
+Duilius, in commemoration of the first naval victory gained over the
+Carthaginians; also a colossal statue of the Rhine called Marforio. In one
+of the halls two large statues of the Egyptian Goddess Isis and various
+other Egyptian divinities. In this Museum among other things is an altar
+representing Claudia drawing to the land the Ship of Cybele; a magnificent
+sarcophagus with a bas relief on its side representing the progress of
+life; Amalthea giving suck to Jupiter; the God Anubis found among the ruins
+of Adrian's palace at Tivoli. On ascending the staircase, I observed on the
+right hand fixed in the wall a tablet with a plan of ancient Rome carved on
+it. In one of the halls above stairs the most remarkable statue is that of
+the dying gladiator (brought back from Paris); this is certainly a noble
+piece of sculpture; the bodily pain and mental anguish are singularly well
+expressed in the countenance; a superb bronze statue of Hercules; a Centaur
+in black marble; a Faun in _rosso antico_; a group of Cupid and Psyche; a
+Venus in Parian marble rather larger than the common size. One of the halls
+in this museum contains the busts of all the philosophers; another those of
+all the Roman emperors; there is also a colossal statue of Pyrrhus; a
+superb Agrippina and the celebrated mosaic of the four pigeons. In
+enumerating the above I have only to observe that they only constitute a
+thousandth part of what is to be seen here. After passing three hours in
+this wing of the building, I went over across the courtyard to the other
+wing. Under the portico of this wing the following are the most remarkable
+among the statues: a Roman _triumphans_, two Phrygian kings in black
+marble. In one of the rooms above stairs is a very remarkable piece of
+antiquity, viz., the bronze wolf giving suck to Romulus and Remus, which
+was found in the temple of Romulus and which was struck by lightning during
+the consulate of Julius: the marks made by the lightning are quite
+distinct. There is in this wing a small but excellent collection of
+paintings, and a great variety of statues, busts, sarcophagi, candelabra,
+and antiquities of all sorts.
+
+The front part, or _corps de logis_ of the Capitol is called _Il Palazzo
+del Senato conservatore_, and is the residence of the _Senator Romano_ who
+is chosen by the Pope. By the bye, I understand this dignity is generally
+given to a foreigner, the Pontiffs being, rather jealous of the Roman
+nobility.
+
+This wing of the Capitol employed me two hours; but I must visit this
+Museum as well as that of the Vatican often again; for it would require
+months and years to examine them duly.
+
+
+ROME, 18th Sept.
+
+On this side of the river which is called _Transtevere_, I had an
+opportunity of observing the inhabitants, who are called _Transteverini_,
+the most of whom pretend to be the descendants of the ancient Romans,
+unmixed with any foreign blood. They certainly have very much of that
+physiognomy that is attributed to the ancient Romans, for they are a tall,
+very robust race of men having something of a ferocious dignity in their
+countenance which, however, is full of expression, and the aquiline nose is
+a prominent feature among them. They are exceedingly jealous of their
+women, whom they keep within doors as much as they can, and if a stranger
+on passing by their doors should chance to observe their wives or daughters
+who may be standing there and should stop to admire them (for many of them
+have an air of antique beauty and majesty of countenance which is
+remarkably striking), they will instantly order the females to retire, with
+an air of asperity.
+
+Whether they really be the pure descendants of the ancient Romans is
+difficult to say: but it is by no means improbable, since even to this day
+they intermarry solely with one another, and refuse to give their daughters
+in marriage to foreigners or to those of mixed blood.
+
+Instances have been known of these families, who are for the most part very
+poor, refusing the most advantageous offers of marriage made to their
+daughters by rich foreign merchants and artists, on the ground merely that
+the suitors were not _Romani_ but _Barbari._
+
+As for the _bourgeoisie_ of Rome in general, they _have been_ for some
+centuries back and _are_ a very mixed race, composed of all the nations of
+Europe. Most of the foreign artists who come here to study the fine arts,
+viz., Belgians, Dutch, German, French, English, Swedes, Danes, Poles and
+Russians, as well as those from other parts of Italy, struck with the
+beauty of the women, and pleased with the tranquility and agreeable society
+that prevails in this metropolis, and the total freedom from all _gêne_ and
+etiquette, marry Roman women and fix here for life: so that among this
+class you meet with more foreign names than Roman; and it is this sort of
+colonisation which keeps up the population of Rome, which would otherwise
+greatly decrease as well from the celibacy of the number that become
+priests, as from the malaria that prevails in and about the city in July
+and August.
+
+
+ROME, 19th Sept.
+
+I have been employed for the last two days in visiting some of the
+churches, _palazzi_ and villas of modern Rome; but the number is so
+prodigious and there are such a variety of things to be seen in each that I
+shall only make mention of a few; indeed there are many that I have not
+seen and probably shall not have time to see. As sacred things should
+precede profane, let us begin with the churches.
+
+The first that claims the attention of the traveller after St Peter's, is
+the church of St John Lateran which is the oldest church in Christendom,
+and was the metropolitan of Rome and of the Christian world before the
+building of St Peter's. It lies very nearly in a right line with the
+_Piazza di Spagna_, and on a prolonged line, forming an obtuse angle with
+the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, which, as I first visited, I shall
+first describe and afterwards resume what I have to remark on the subject
+of St John Lateran.
+
+Santa Maria Maggiore is the third church in importance, but the second in
+magnificence in Rome. Before its façade stands a single column of granite
+of the Corinthian order. The façade of this church is beautiful but it
+would be far better without the _campanile_, which I think always
+disfigures a church of Grecian architecture; besides it is not in the
+centre of the building. The church is richly adorned with mosaics and its
+several chapels are admirable from the execution of their architecture and
+sculpture and the value of the different rich marbles and precious stones
+with which the monuments therein are made and incrusted. Among these
+Chapels are those of Sixtus V, Paul V. The grand altar is of porphyry. But
+the most striking beauty of this church and which eclipses all its other
+ornaments, are the forty columns of beautiful Grecian marble on each side
+of the nave. The ceiling, too, is superb and richly gilt; the gilding must
+have cost an immense sum and was done, it is said, with the first gold that
+was brought from America. Nothing can be more rich than this plafond. The
+above forty columns belonged formerly to the temple of Juno Lucina. It is
+singular that the ceremony of the _accouchement_ of the Virgin and the
+birth of Christ should be performed here. On the 24th December this
+pantomime is regularly acted, and crowds of all sorts of people attend,
+particularly women. At the moment that the Virgin is supposed to be
+delivered a salve of artillery announces the good tidings. This is
+singular, I say, when one recollects the peculiar attributes of Juno Lucina
+and the assistance she was supposed to give to persons in the same
+situation.
+
+You cannot expect me to detail to you all the riches in precious stones and
+gifts of pious princes that adorn the several chapels of this and other
+churches; but they appear to contain every stone and jewel mentioned in the
+Arabian Nights as being to be found in the cave where Aladdin was left by
+the magician; and it must be allowed that the Popes have been remarkably
+adroit inchanters in conjuring to Rome all the riches of the Earth.
+
+The church of St John Lateran is larger and more striking as to its
+exterior and as to its architecture than that of Santa Maria Maggiore, but
+it is not so charged with ornament and there is scarce any gilding. There
+is a simple elegance about it that I think far more pleasing than the
+magnificence of Santa Maria.
+
+St John Lateran contains several beautiful pieces of sculpture in white
+marble, rather larger than the usual size of man, of the twelve Apostles,
+six on one side of the nave and six on the other; and above them are
+bas-reliefs, also in marble, representing the various scenes from the
+history of the Old and New Testament. These twelve statues are admirably
+well executed and they give to this temple an air of simple grandeur. In
+this church are very few paintings on mosaics, but little gilding and no
+superfluous ornaments. Sculpture is, in my opinion, far more appropriate to
+a place of worship than paintings or dazzling ornaments. Another very
+striking beauty of this noble and venerable temple are the columns it
+contains some of which are in granite and others of the most beautiful
+_verd-antique_. There are besides two superb Corinthian columns of bronze
+which adorn one of the altars. Among the chapels of this Cathedral is one
+belonging to the Corsini family, which is probably the richest in Europe,
+and contains more precious stones and marbles than any other. Yet as this
+and the other chapels are in recesses and separated from the aisles of the
+church by large bronze gates, you cannot see their contents till you enter
+the said chapels; and thus your attention is not diverted by them from the
+contemplation of the simple grandeur of the columns and statues which adorn
+the body of the temple.
+
+The bronze columns above mentioned were taken from the temple of Jupiter
+Capitolinus. On one side in front of the church of St John Lateran stands
+an immense Egyptian Obelisk 115 feet in height, brought from Egypt to Rome
+in the time of Constantine.
+
+I think the placing of these Obelisks in front of the façade of the most
+remarkable edifices is an excellent arrangement, as they are never-failing
+landmarks to distinguish from afar off the edifices to which they belong.
+This Obelisk was found in the _Circus Maximus_, from which it was removed
+and placed on this spot by Sixtus V. A large Orphan establishment is close
+to this church; and close to it also the _Battisterio_ of Constantine,
+which rests on forty-eight columns of porphyry, said to be the finest in
+Europe. Another church in the vicinity contains _La Scala Santa_ or holy
+staircase of marble which, according to the tradition, adorned Pontius
+Pilate's palace at Jerusalem, and on which identical staircase Jesus Christ
+ascended to be interrogated by Pilate. The tradition further says that it
+was transported to Rome by Angels. This staircase has twenty-eight steps,
+and no one is allowed to mount it except on his knees. Nobody ever descends
+it, but there are two other _escaliers_ parallel to it, one on the right
+hand, the other on the left, by which you descend in the usual manner. Not
+being aware of this ceremony, I, on entering the edifice, began to ascend
+the _escalier_ which was nearest to me, which proved to be the _Scala
+Santa_, for no sooner had I begun to ascend it as I would any other flight
+of steps than two or three voices screamed out: "_Signore! O signore! a
+ginocchia; o'è la scala santa_!" I asked what was meant and was then told
+the whole story, and that it was necessary to mount this staircase on one's
+knees or not at all. This I did not think worth the trouble, being quite
+contented with beholding it. The marble of this staircase is much worn by
+the number of devout people who ascend it in this manner, and this
+ceremony, aided by a _quantum suff_ of faith is no doubt of great efficacy.
+
+The fourth church in estimation, and I believe the next ancient in Rome to
+St John Lateran, is the church of _San Paolo fuor della mura_, so called
+from its being situated outside the gates of the city. It is of immense
+size, but out of repair and neglected. The most striking object of its
+architectural contents are the 120 columns of Parian marble which support
+its nave.
+
+_St Pietro in Vincoli_ is chiefly remarkable for its being built near the
+dungeon where, according to the tradition, St Peter was confined and from
+whence he was released by Angels; its chief ornament is the colossal statue
+of Moses. Somewhere close to this place are shewn the ruins of the
+Mamertine prison where Jugurtha was incarcerated and died.
+
+There are in Rome about three hundred other churches, all of which can
+boast of very interesting and valuable contents. One in particular called
+the Portuguese Church is uncommonly beautiful tho' small; another, that of
+St Ignazio, or the Jesuits' church, is vast and imposing, and very fine
+singing is occasionally to be heard there.
+
+
+ROME, 21st Sept.
+
+The Palace occupied by the Pope is that of the Quirinal, standing on the
+Quirinal Hill, which is commonly called _Monte Cavallo_ from the statues of
+the two _Hippodamoi_ or tamers of horses, thought to be meant for Castor
+and Pollux which stand on this hill; this group is surmounted by an
+Egyptian obelisk. These statues are said to be the work of Phidias; but
+there is a terrible disproportion between the men and the horses they are
+leading; they give you the idea of Brobdignagians leading Shetland ponies.
+The Quirinal palace is every way magnificent and worthy of the Sovereign
+Pontiff; there are large grounds annexed to it; it stands nearly in the
+centre of Rome and from this palace are dated the Papal edicts. The Pope
+resides here during the whole year, with the exception of three or four
+months in the hot season, when he repairs to Castel Gandolfo near la
+Riccia.
+
+Of the fountains the grandest and most striking is that of Trevi, which
+lies at the foot of Quirinal Hill. Here is a magnificent group in marble of
+Neptune, in his car in the shape of a mussel-shell drawn by Sea-horses and
+surrounded by Nymphs and Tritons. An immense basin of white marble, as
+large as a moderate sized pond, receives the water which gushes from the
+nostrils of the Sea-horses and from the mouths of the Tritons. There is a
+very good and just remark made on the subject of this group by Stolberg,
+viz. the attention of Neptune seems too much directed towards one of his
+horses, a piece of minutiae more worthy of a charioteer endeavouring to
+turn a difficult corner, than of the God who at a word could control the
+winds and tranquillize the Ocean.
+
+The fountain Termina, so called from its vicinity to the Thermes of
+Diocletian, is the next remarkable fountain. Here is a colossal statue of
+Moses striking the rock and causing the water to gush forth. The grandeur
+and majesty of this statue would be more striking but for the incongruity
+of the arcades on each side of the rock, and the two lions in black basalt
+who spout water. Moses and the rock would have been sufficient. Simplicity
+is, in my opinion, the soul of architecture, and where is there in all
+history a subject more peculiarly adapted to a fountain than this part of
+the history of Moses?
+
+The Fountain Paolina is a fountain that springs from under a beautiful
+arcade, but there are no statues nor bas-reliefs. It is a plain neat
+fountain and the water is esteemed the best in Rome. This fountain is
+situated on the Janicule Hill, from which you have perhaps the best view of
+Rome; as it re-unites more than any other position, at one _coup d'oeil_,
+both the modern and débris of the ancient city, without the view of the one
+interfering with or being intercepted by the other. From here you can
+distinguish rums of triumphal arches, broken columns, aqueducts, etc., as
+far as the eye can reach. It demonstrates what an immense extent of ground
+ancient Rome must have covered. Near the fountain is the church where St
+Peter is said to have suffered martyrdom with his head downwards.
+
+The Column of Trajan is near the fountain Trevi, and it stands in an
+inclosure, the pavement of which is seven feet lower than the _piazza_ on
+which it stands. The inclosure is walled round. Had not this excavation
+been made, one third of the column (lower part) would not be seen. The
+_Piazza_, on which this column stands is called _Il foro Trajano_. The
+column represents Trajan's triumphs over the Daci, Quadi and Marcomanni,
+and is the model from whence Napoleon's column of the Grand Army in the
+_Place Vendôme_ at Paris is taken. A statue of St Peter stands on this
+column.
+
+The Column of Antoninus stands on the _Piazza Colonna_; on it are
+sculptured the victories gained by that Emperor. Round this column it has
+not been necessary to make excavations. On this column stands the statue of
+St Paul.
+
+Amongst the immense variety of edifices and ruins of edifices which most
+interest the antiquarian are the Thermes of Diocletian. Here are four
+different semi-circular halls, two of which were destined for philosophers,
+one for poets and one for orators; baths; a building for tennis or rackets;
+three open courts, one for the exercise of the discus, one for athletes and
+one for hurling the javelin. Of this vast building part is now a
+manufactory, and the hall of the wrestlers is a Carthusian church.
+
+I have now, I believe, visited most, if not all that is to be seen in Rome.
+I have visited the Pyramid of Cestius, the tomb of Metella, I have
+consulted, the nymph Egeria, smelled at the _Cloaca Maxima_; in fine, I
+have given in to all the _singeries_ of _pedantry_ and _virtù_ with as much
+ardour as Martinus Scriblerus himself would have done. But it yet remains
+for me to speak of the most interesting exhibition that modern Rome can
+boast, and of the most interesting person in it and in all Italy, and that
+is the atelier of Canova and Canova himself, the greatest sculptor,
+perhaps, either of ancient or modern times, except the mighty unknown who
+conceived and executed the Apollo of the Vatican.
+
+In the atelier of Canova the most remarkable statues I observed are: a
+group of Hector and Ajax of colossal size, not quite finished; a Centaur,
+also colossal; a Hebe; two Ballerine or dancing girls, one of which
+rivetted my attention most particularly. She is reclining against a tree
+with her cheek _appuyéd_ on one hand; one of her feet is uplifted and laid
+along the other leg as if she were reposing from a dance. The extreme
+beauty of the leg and foot, the pulpiness of the arms, the expressive
+sweetness of the face, and the resemblance of the marble to wax in point of
+mellowness, gives to this beautiful statue the appearance of a living
+female _brunette_. It was a long time before I could withdraw my eyes from
+that lovely statue.
+
+The next object that engaged my attention was a group representing a Nymph
+reclining on a couch _semi-supine_, and a Cupid at her feet. The luxurious
+contour of the form of this Nymph is beyond expression and reminded me of
+the description of Olympia:
+
+ Le parti che solea coprir la stola
+ Fur di tanta eccellenza, ch'anteporse
+ A quante n'avea il mondo potean forse.[91]
+
+ Parts which are wont to be concealed by gown
+ Are such, as haply should be placed before
+ Whate'er this ample world contains in store.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE
+
+This group is destined for the Prince Regent of England. Another beautiful
+group represents the three Graces; this is intended for the Duke of
+Bedford. Were it given to me to chuse for myself among all the statues in
+the atelier of Canova, I should chuse these three, viz., the Ballerina, the
+Nymph reclining, and this group of the Graces.
+
+Canova certainly is inimitable in depicting feminine beauty, grace and
+delicacy. Among the other statues in this atelier the most prominent are: a
+statue of the Princess Leopoldina Esterhazy in the attitude of drawing on a
+tablet with this inscription:
+
+ _Anch'io voglio tentar l'arte del bello._
+
+This lady is, it seems, a great proficient in painting.
+
+Here too are the moulds of the different statues made by Canova, the
+statues themselves having been finished long ago and disposed of; viz., of
+the Empress Maria Louisa of France; of the mother of Napoleon (_Madame
+Mère_ as she is always called) in the costume and attitude of Agrippina; of
+a colossal statue of Napoleon (the statue itself is, I believe, in the
+possession of Wellington.[92]) Here too is the bust of Canova by Canova
+himself, besides a great variety of bas-reliefs and busts of individuals,
+models of monuments, etc.
+
+And now, my friend, I have given you a _précis_ not of all that I have
+seen, but of what has most interested me and made on my mind impressions
+that can never be effaced. I trust entirely to my memory, for I made no
+notes on the spot. Many of the things I have seen too much in a hurry to
+form accurate ideas and judgment thereon; most of what we see here is shewn
+to us like the figures in a _lanterna magica_, for in the various _palazzi_
+and villas the servants who exhibit them hurry you from room to room,
+impatient to receive your fee and to get rid of you. I am about to depart
+for Naples. On my return to Rome I shall not think of revisiting the
+greater number of the _palazzi_, villas and churches; but there are some
+things I shall very frequently revisit and these are the two Museums of the
+Vatican and of the Capitol, St Peter's, the Coliseum and antiquities in its
+neighbourhood, the Pantheon, and last but not least the atelier of the
+incomparable Canova.
+
+You may perhaps be unwilling to let me depart from Rome without some
+information as to theatricals. With regard to these, Rome must hang down
+her head, for the pettiest town in all the rest of Italy or France is
+better provided with this sort of amusement than Rome. There is a theatre
+called _Teatro della Valle_, where there is a very indifferent set of
+actors, and this is the only theatre which is open throughout the year.
+Comedies only and farces are given. The theatres Aliberti and Argentino are
+open during the Carnaval only. Operas are given at the Argentino, and
+masquerades at the Aliberti. But in fact the lovers of Operas and of the
+Drama must not come to Rome for gratification. It is not considered
+conformable to the dignity and sanctity of an ecclesiastical government to
+patronize them; and it is not the custom or etiquette for the Pope,
+Cardinals or higher Clergy ever to visit them. The consequence is that no
+performer of any consideration or talent is engaged to sing at Rome, except
+one or two by chance at the time of the Carnaval. In amends for this you
+have a good deal of music at the houses of individuals who hold
+_conversazioni_ or assemblies; in which society would flag very much but
+for the music, which prevents many a yawn, and which is useful and
+indispensable in Italy to make the evening pass, as cards are in England.
+
+I intend to stop several days here on my return from Naples, for which
+place I shall start the day after to-morrow having engaged a place in a
+_vettura_ for two and half _louis d'or_ and to be _spesato_. I am not to be
+deterred from my journey by the many stories of robberies and
+assassinations which are said to occur so frequently on that road.
+
+By the bye, talking of robberies and murders, a man was executed the day
+before yesterday on the _Piazza del Popolo_ for a triple murder. I saw the
+guillotine, which is now the usual mode of punishment, fixed on the centre
+of the _Piazza_ and the criminal escorted there by a body of troops; but I
+did not stop to witness the decapitation, having no taste for that sort of
+_pleasuring_. This man richly deserved his punishment.
+
+
+[84] These lines are from Voltaire's _Henriade_, a poem which no Frenchman
+ reads nowadays, but that Major Frye could quote from memory. The
+ correct reading of the first verse is: _Des prêtres fortunés_, etc.
+ (_Henriade_, canto iv. ed. Kehl, vol. x, p. 97.)--ED.
+
+[85] Horace, _Sat_., 1, 9, 4.--ED.
+
+[86] Lady Elizabeth Hervey, second wife of William, fifth Duke of
+ Devonshire (1809); died March, 1824.--ED.
+
+[87] A singular slip of the pen; Frye must have known that the equestrian
+ statue is a Roman work--ED.
+
+[88] Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, xxxiii, 2, 4.--ED.
+
+[89] See Lucian, _Imag._, iv; _Amores_, xv, xvi.--ED.
+
+[90] Major Frye's description is incorrect in many particulars, on which it
+ seemed unnecessary to draw attention.--ED.
+
+[91] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, XI, 67, 6.
+
+[92] That colossal marble statue was given to the Duke of Wellington by
+ Louis XVIII, and is still to be seen in London, at Apsley House.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+From Rome to Naples--Albano--Velletri--The Marshes--Terracina--Mola di
+Gaeta--Capua--The streets of Naples--Monuments and Museums--Visit to
+Pompeii and ascent to Vesuvius--Dangerous ventures--Puzzuoli and
+Baiae--Theatres at Naples--Pulcinello--Return to Rome--Tivoli.
+
+I started from Rome on the 26th September; in the same _vettura_ I found an
+intelligent young Frenchman of the name of R---- D----, a magistrate in
+Corsica, who was travelling in Italy for his amusement. There were besides
+a Roman lawyer and not a very bright one by the bye; and a fat woman who
+was going to Naples to visit her lover, a Captain in the Austrian service,
+a large body of Austrian troops being still at Naples. We issued from Rome
+by the _Porta Latina_ and reached Albano (the ancient Alba) sixteen miles
+distant at twelve o'clock. We reposed there two hours which gave me an
+opportunity of visiting the _Villa Doria_ where there are magnificent
+gardens. These gardens form the promenade of the families who come to
+Albano to pass the heat of the summer and to avoid the effect of the
+exhalations of the marshy country about Rome.
+
+As Albano is situated on an eminence, you have a fine view of the whole
+plain of Latium and Rome in perspective. The country of Latium however is
+flat, dreary and monotonous; it affords pasture to an immense quantity of
+black cattle, such as buffaloes, etc.
+
+Just outside of Albano, on the route to Naples, is a curious ancient
+monument called _Il sepolcro degli Orazj e Curiazj._ It is built of brick,
+is extremely solid, of singular appearance, from its being a square
+monument, flanked at each angle by a tower in the shape of a cone. It is of
+an uncouth rustic appearance and must certainly have been built before
+
+ _Grecia capia ferum victorem cepit et artes
+ Intulit agresti Latio....._[93]
+
+and I see no reason against its being the sepulchre of the Horatii and
+Curiatii, particularly as it stands so near Alba where the battle was
+fought; but be this as it may there is nothing like faith in matters of
+antiquity; the sceptic can have little pleasure.
+
+The country on leaving Albano becomes diversified, woody and picturesque.
+Near Gensano is the beautiful lake of Nemi, and it is the spot feigned by
+the poets as the scene of the amours of Mars and Rhea Silvia. Near Gensano
+also is the country residence of the Sovereign Pontiffs called Castel
+Gandolfo. La Riccia, the next place we passed thro', is the ancient Aricia,
+mentioned in Horace's journey to Brundusium. We arrived in the evening at
+Velletri.
+
+Velletri is a large town or rather city situated on a mountain, to which
+you ascend by a winding road skirting a beautiful forest. From the terrace
+of one of the _Palazzi_ here, you have a superb view of all the plain below
+as far as the rock of Circe, comprehending the Pontine marshes. There are
+several very fine buildings at Velletri, and it is remarkable as being the
+birthplace of Augustus Caesar. There is a spacious _Piazza_ too on which
+stands a bronze statue of Pope Urban VIII. Velletri is twenty-eight miles
+from Rome.
+
+The next morning, the 27th, we started early so as to arrive by six o'clock
+in the evening at Terracina. At Cisterna is a post-house and at Torre tre
+Ponti is a convent, a beautiful building, but now delapidated and
+neglected. Near it is a wretched inn, where however you are always sure to
+find plenty of game to eat. Here begin the Pontine marshes and the famous
+Appian road which runs in a right line for twenty-five miles across the
+marshes. It was repaired and perfectly reconstructed by Pius VI, and from
+him it bears its present appellation of _Linea Pia_. This convent and
+church were also constructed by Pius VI with a view to facilitate the
+draining and cultivating of the marshes by affording shelter to the
+workmen. The _Linea Pia_ is a very fine _chaussée_ considerably raised
+above the level of the marsh, well paved, lined with trees and a canal sunk
+on one side to carry off the waters. The Pontine marshes extend all the way
+from Torre tre Ponti to Terracina. On the left hand side, on travelling
+from Rome to Naples, you have two miles or thereabouts of plain bounded by
+lofty mountains; on the right a vast marshy plain bounded by the sea at a
+distance of seven or eight miles. Nothing can be more monotonous than this
+strait road twenty-five miles in length, and the same landscape the whole
+way. The air is extremely damp, aguish and unhealthy. Those who travel late
+in the evening or early in the morning are recommended not to let down the
+glasses of the carriage, in order to avoid inhaling the pestilential miasma
+from the marshes, which even the canal has not been able to drain
+sufficiently.
+
+No one can find amusement in this desolate region but the sportsman; and he
+may live in continual enjoyment, and slay wild ducks and snipes in
+abundance; a number of buffaloes are to be seen grazing on the marshes.
+They are not to be met with to the North of Rome. They resemble entirely
+the buffaloes of Egypt and India, being black, and they are very terrific
+looking animals to the northern traveller, who beholds them here for the
+first time.
+
+These marshes supply Rome abundantly with waterfowl and other game of all
+kinds. Every _vetturino_ who is returning to Rome, on passing by, buys a
+quantity, for a mere trifle, from the peasantry, who employ themselves much
+_à la chasse_, and he is certain to sell them again at Rome for three or
+four times the price he paid, and even then it appears marvellous cheap to
+an Englishman, accustomed as he is to pay a high price for game in his own
+country.
+
+We arrived a little before six at Terracina, which is on the banks of the
+Mediterranean and may be distinguished at a great distance by its white
+buildings. The chain of mountains on the left of our road hither form a
+sort of arch to the chord of the _linea Pia_ and terminates one end of the
+arch by meeting the _linea Pia_ at Terracina, which forms what the sailors
+call a bluff point. Terracina stands on the situation of the ancient Anxur
+and the description of it by Horace in his Brundusian journey;
+
+ Impositum saxis late candentibus Anxur[94]
+
+is perfectly applicable even now. It is a handsome looking city and is the
+last town in the Pope's territory: part of it is situated on the mountain
+and part on the plain at its foot close to the sea.
+
+The fine white buildings on the heights, the temple of Jupiter Anxurus (of
+which the façade and many columns remain entire) towering above them, the
+orange trees and the sea, afford a view doubly pleasing and grateful to the
+traveller after the dreary landscape of the Pontine Marshes. There is but
+one inn at Terracina but that is a very large one; there is, however, but
+very indifferent fare and bad attendance. The innkeeper is a sad
+over-reaching rascal, who fleeces in the most unmerciful manner the
+traveller who is not _spesato_. He is obliged to furnish those who are
+_spesati_ with supper and lodging at the _vetturino's_ price; but he always
+grumbles at it, gives the worst supper he can and bestows it as if he were
+giving alms. As the road between Terracina and Fondi (the first Neapolitan
+town) is said to be at times infested by robbers, few travellers care to
+start till broad daylight. We did so accordingly the following morning. On
+arriving at a place called the _Epitafio_, from there being an ancient tomb
+there, we took leave of the last Roman post. At one mile and half beyond
+the _Epitafio_ is the first Neapolitan post at a place called _Torre de'
+Confini_, where we were detained half an hour to have our passports
+examined and our portmanteaus searched. Three miles beyond this post is the
+miserable and dirty town of Fondi, wherein our baggage again underwent a
+strict search. On leaving Terracina the road strikes inland and has
+mountains covered with wood to the right and to the left, nor do we behold
+the sea again till just before we arrive at Mola di Gaeta, which is an
+exceeding long straggling town on its banks; several fishing vessels lie
+here and it is here that part of the Bay of Naples begins to open. The
+country from Terracina to Fondi is uncultivated and very mountainous;
+between Fondi and Mola di Gaeta it is pretty well cultivated; Itri, thro'
+which we passed, is a long, dirty, wretched looking village.
+
+The next day at twelve o'clock we arrived and stopped to dine at St Agatha,
+a miserable village, with a very bad tho' spacious inn the half of which is
+unroofed. We arrived at Capua the same evening having passed the rivers
+Garigliano and Volturno, and leaving the Falernian Hills on our left during
+part of the road. The landscape is very varied on this route, sometimes
+mountainous, sometimes thro' a rich plain in full cultivation.
+
+Capua is a fortified town situated in a flat country and marshy withal. It
+is a gloomy, dirty looking city and whatever may have been its splendour
+and allurements in ancient times, it at present offers nothing inviting or
+remarkable. The lower classes of the people of this town are such thieves
+that our _vetturino_ recommended us to remove every thing from the carriage
+into our bed rooms, so that we had the trouble of repacking every thing
+next morning. Capua is the only place on the whole route where it is
+necessary to take the trunks from the carriage. From Capua to Naples is
+twenty miles; a little beyond Capua are the remains of a large Amphitheatre
+and this is all that exists to attest the splendour of ancient Capua. The
+road between Capua and Naples presents on each side one of the richest and
+most fruitful countries I ever beheld. It is a perfect garden the whole
+way. The _chaussée_ is lined with fruit trees. Halfway is the town or
+_borgo_ of Aversa which is large, well-built, opulent and populous. We
+entered Naples at one o'clock, drove thro' the _strada di Toledo_ and from
+thence to the _largo di Medina_ where we put up at the inn called the
+_Aquila nera_. A cordon of Austrian troops lines the whole high road from
+Fondi to the gates of Naples; and there are double sentries at a distance
+of one mile from each other the whole way.
+
+
+NAPLES, Octr. 5th.
+
+In Naples the squares or _Piazze_ are called _Larghi_; they are exceedingly
+irregular as to shape; a trapezium would be the most appropriate
+denomination for them. The _Largo di Medina_ is situated close to the Mole
+and light house and is not far from the _Largo del Palazzo_ where the Royal
+Palace stands, nor from the _Strada di Toledo_, which is the most bustling
+part of the town. On the Mole and sometimes in the _Largo di Medini_
+Pulcinello holds forth all day long, quacks scream out the efficacy of
+their nostrums and _improvisatori_ recite battles of Paladins. Here and in
+the _Strada di Toledo_ the noise made by the vendors of vegetables, fruit,
+lemonade, iced water and water-melons, who on holding out their wares to
+view, scream out "_O che bella cosa_!"--the noise and bustle of the cooks'
+shops in the open air and the cries of "_Lavora_!" made by the drivers of
+_calessini_ (sort of carriage) makes such a deafening _tintamarre_ that you
+can scarcely hear the voice of your companion who walks by your side. In
+the _Largo del Palazzo_ there is always a large assembly of officers and
+others, besides a tolerable quantity of _ruffiani_, who fasten upon
+strangers in order to recommend to them their female acquaintances. A
+little further is the Quai of St Lucia, where the fish market is held, and
+here the cries increase. The quantity of fish of all sorts caught in the
+bay and exposed for sale in the market is immense and so much more than can
+be sold, that the rest is generally given away to the _Lazzaroni_. Here are
+delicious mullets, oysters, whitings, soles, prawns, etc. There is on the
+Quai of St Lucia a _restaurant_ where naught but fish is served, but that
+is so well dressed and in such variety that amateurs frequently come to
+dine here on _maigre_ days; for two _carlini_[95] you may eat fish of all
+sorts and bread at discretion. The wine is paid for extra. On the Quai of
+St Lucia is a fountain of mineral water which possesses the most admirable
+qualities for opening the _primae viae_ and purifying the blood. It is an
+excellent drink for bilious people or for those afflicted with abdominal
+obstructions and diseases of the liver. It has a slight sulfurous mixed
+with a ferruginous taste, and is impregnated with a good deal of fixed air,
+which makes it a pleasant beverage. It should be taken every morning
+fasting. The presidency over this fountain is generally monopolized by a
+piscatory nymph who expects a _grano_ for the trouble of filling you a
+glass or two. In reaching it to you she never fails to exclaim _"Buono per
+le natiche,"_ and it certainly has a very rapid effect; I look upon it as
+more efficacious than the Cheltenham waters and it is certainly much more
+agreeable in taste. At the end of the Quai of St Lucia is the _Castello
+dell 'Uovo,_ a Gothic fortress, before the inner gate of which hangs an
+immense stuffed crocodile. This crocodile is said to have been found alive
+in the _fossé_ of the castle, but how he came there has never been
+explained; there is an old woman's story that he came every day to the
+dungeon where prisoners were confined, and took out one for his dinner. The
+_Castello dell 'Uovo_ stands on the extremity of a tongue of land which
+runs into the sea. After passing the _Castello dell 'Uovo_ I came to the
+_Chiaia_ or Quai properly so called, which is the most agreeable part of
+Naples and the favorite promenade of the _beau-monde._ The finest buildings
+and _Palazzi_ line the _Chiaia_ on the land side and above them all tower
+the Castle of St Elmo and the _Chartreuse_ with several villas intervening.
+The garden of the _Chiaia_ contains gravel walks, grass plots, alleys of
+trees, fountains, plantations of orange, myrtle and laurel trees which give
+a delightful fragrance to the air; and besides several other statues, it
+boasts of one of the finest groups in Europe, called the _Toro Farnese._ It
+is a magnificent piece of sculpture and represents three men endeavouring
+to hold a ferocious bull. It is a pity, however, that so valuable a piece
+of sculpture should be exposed to the vicissitudes of the season in the
+open air. The marble has evidently suffered much by it. Why is such a
+valuable piece of sculpture not preserved in the Museum?
+
+On the _Chiaia_ are _restaurants_ and _cafés_. 'Tis here also that the
+nobility display their carriages and horses, it being the fashionable drive
+in the afternoon: and certainly, except in London, I have never seen such a
+brilliant display of carriages as at Naples.
+
+The principal street at Naples is the _Strada di Toledo_. It resembles the
+_Rue St Honoré_ and can boast of as much wealth in its shops. The houses
+are good, solid and extremely lofty, and the streets are paved with lava.
+There are two excellent _restaurants_ at Naples, one in the _Largo del
+Palazzo_, nearly opposite the Royal Palace, called the _Villa di Napoli_;
+the other not far from it in the _Strada di Toledo_, called _La Corona di
+Ferro_. Naples is renowned for the excellency of its ices. You have them in
+the shape of all kinds of fruit and wonderfully cheap. Many of the ice
+houses and _caffès_ remain open day and night; as do some of the gaming
+tables, which are much frequented by the upper classes. The theatre of St
+Carlo, which was consumed last year by fire, is rising rapidly from its
+ashes and will soon be finished. In the mean time Operas are performed at
+the _Teatro Fondi_, a moderate sized theatre. I here saw performed the
+opera of _Don Giovanni_ of Mozart, with the _ballo_ of _La pazza per
+amore_. Mme Colbran, a Spanish lady, is the _Prima Donna_ and an excellent
+singer.
+
+In all the private societies at Naples a great deal of gaming goes on, and
+at some houses those visitors, who do not play, are coolly received. The
+following may be considered as a very fair specimen of the life of a young
+man of rank and fashion at Naples. He rises about two p.m., takes his
+chocolate, saunters about in the _Strada di Toledo_ or in the _Largo del
+Palazzo_ for an hour or two, then takes a _promenade à cheval_ on the
+_Chiaia_; dines between six and seven; goes to the Opera where he remains
+till eleven or half-past eleven; he then saunters about in the different
+Cafés for an hour or two; and then repairs to the gaming table at the
+_Ridotto_, which he does not quit till broad daylight. The ladies find a
+great resource in going to church, which serves to pass away the time that
+is not spent in bed, or at the Opera, or at the _promenade en voiture_. The
+ladies seldom take exercise on foot at Naples. There being very little
+taste for litterature in this vast metropolis, the most pleasant society is
+among the foreign families who inhabit Naples or at the houses of the
+_Corps diplomatique_. There is, however, a good _cabinet littéraire_ and
+library in the _Strada di San Giacomo_, where various French and Italian
+newspapers may be read. The Austrians occupy the greater part of the
+military posts at Naples; at the Royal Palace however the Sicilian guards
+do duty; they are clothed in scarlet and _à anglaise_.
+
+
+NAPLES, 8th Octr.
+
+One day I went to visit the Museum or _Studii_, as it is called, which is
+situated at the extremity of the _Strada di Toledo_ on the land side. Here
+is a superb collection of sculpture and painting; and this building
+contains likewise the national library, and a choice and unique collection
+of Etruscan vases. A large hall contains these vases, which were found at
+Pompeii[96]; they are much admired for their beauty and simplicity; each
+vase has a mythological or historical painting on it. In this Museum I was
+shewn the rolls of papyrus found in Pompeii and Herculaneum and the method
+of unrolling them. The work to unroll which they are now employed at this
+Museum is a Greek treatise on philosophy by Epicurus. It is a most delicate
+operation to unroll these leaves, and with the utmost possible care it is
+impossible to avoid effacing many of the letters, and even sentences, in
+the act of unrolling. It must require also considerable learning and skill
+in the Greek language, combined with a good deal of practise, to supply the
+deficiency of the words effaced. When these manuscripts are put in print,
+the letters that remain on the papyrus are put in black type, and the words
+guessed at are supplied in red; so that you see at one glance what letters
+have been preserved, and what are supplied to replace those effaced by the
+operation of unrolling; and in this manner are all the papyrus manuscripts'
+printed.
+
+
+_Visit to Pompeii and Ascent of Vesuvius_.
+
+_11th Oct_.
+
+We returned, Mr R---- D---- and I, from our visit to Vesuvius, half dead
+with fatigue from having had little or no rest the whole night, about three
+o'clock to Naples.
+
+We left Naples in a _calèche_ yesterday after breakfast and drove to
+Portici. Portici, Resina, and Torre del Greco are beautiful little towns on
+the sea-shore of the bay of Naples or rather they may be termed a
+continuation of the city, as they are close together in succession, and the
+interval filled up with villas. The distance from the gates of Naples to
+Portici is three miles. The road runs through the court yard of the Royal
+Palace at Portici which has a large archway at its entrance and sortie. We
+proceeded to Resina and alighted in order to descend under ground to
+Herculaneum, Resina being built on the spot where Herculaneum stood. There
+are always guides on this road on the look out for travellers; one
+addressed us, and conducted us to a house where we alighted and entered.
+Our guide then prepared a flambeau, and having unlocked and lifted up a
+trap door invited us to descend. A winding _rampe_ under ground leads to
+Herculaneum. We discovered a large theatre with its proscenium, seats,
+corridors, vomitories, etc., and we were enabled, having two lighted
+torches with us, to read the inscriptions. Some statues that were found
+here have been removed to the Museum at Portici. This is the only part of
+Herculaneum that has been excavated; for if any further excavations were
+attempted, the whole town of Resina, which is built over it, would fall in.
+Herculaneum no doubt contains many things of value, but it would be rather
+too desperate a stake to expose the town of Resina to certain ruin, for the
+sake of what _might_ be found. At Pompeii the case is very different, there
+being nothing built over its site.
+
+After having satisfied our curiosity here, we regained the light of heaven
+in Resina, and proceeded to Pompeii, which is seven miles further, the
+total distance from Naples to Pompeii being ten miles. The part of Pompeii
+already discovered looks like a town with the houses unroofed situated in a
+deep gravel or sand pit, the depth of which is considerably greater than
+the height of the buildings standing in it. You descend into it from the
+brink, which is on a level with the rest of the country; Pompeii is
+consequently exposed to the open air, and you have neither to go under
+ground, nor to use _flambeaux_ as at Herculaneum, but simply to descend as
+into a pit. There is always a guard stationed at Pompeii to protect the
+place from delapidation and thefts of antiquarians. From its resembling, as
+I have already said, a town in the centre of a deep gravel pit, you come
+upon it abruptly and on looking down you are surprized to see a city newly
+brought to day. The streets and houses here remain entire, the roofs of the
+houses excepted, which fell in by the effect of the excavation; so that you
+here behold a Roman city nearly in the exact state it was hi when it was
+buried under the ashes of Vesuvius, during its first eruption in the year
+79 of the Christian era. It does not appear to me that the catastrophe of
+Pompeii could have been occasioned by an earthquake, for if so the streets
+and houses would not be found upright and entire: it appears rather to have
+been caused by the showers of ashes and _écroulement_ of the mountain,
+which covered it up and buried it for ever from the sight of day. The first
+place our guide took us to see was a superb Amphitheatre about half as
+large as the Coliseum: the arena and seats are perfect, and all the
+interior is perfectly cleared out: so are the dens where the wild beasts
+were kept; so that you look down into this amphitheatre as into a vast
+basin standing on its brink, which is on a level with the rest of the
+ground around it, and by means of the seats and passages you may descend
+into the _arena_. This Amphitheatre is at a short distance from the rest of
+the town. What is at present discovered of this city consists of a long
+street with several off-sets of streets issuing from it: a temple, two
+theatres, a praetorium, a large barrack, and a peculiarly large house or
+villa belonging probably to some eminent person, but no doubt when the
+excavation shall be recommenced many more streets will be discovered, as
+from the circumstance of there being an amphitheatre, two other theatres
+and a number of sepulchral monuments outside the gates, it must have been a
+city of great consequence. Most of the houses seem to have had two stories;
+the roofs fell in of course by the act of excavation, but the columns
+remain entire. I observe that the general style of building in Pompeii in
+most of the houses is as follows: that in each building there is a court
+yard in the centre, something like the court yard of a convent, which is
+sometimes paved in mosaic, and generally surrounded by columns; in the
+middle of this court is a fountain or basin: the court has no roof and the
+wings of the house form a quadrangle environing it. The windows and doors
+of the rooms are made in the interior sides of the quadrangle looking into
+the court yard; on the exterior there appears to be only a small latticed
+window near the top of the room to admit light. I have seen in Egypt and in
+India similarly built houses, and it is the general style of building in
+Andalusia and Barbary. In the rooms are niches in the walls for lamps,
+precisely in the style of the Moorish buildings in India.
+
+In many of the chambers of the houses at Pompeii are paintings _al fresco_
+and arabesques on the walls which on being washed with water appear
+perfectly fresh. The subjects of these paintings are generally from the
+mythology. In some of the rooms are paintings _al fresco_ of fish, flesh,
+fowl and fruit; in others Venus and the Graces at their toilette, from
+which we may infer that the former were dining rooms and the latter
+boudoirs. A large villa (so I deem it as it stands without the gates) has a
+number of rooms, two stories entire and three court yards with fountains,
+many beautiful fresco paintings on the walls of the chambers. Annexed to
+this villa is a garden arranged in terraces and a fish pond. A covered
+gallery supported by pillars on one of the sides of the garden served
+probably as a promenade in wet weather. In the cellars of this villa are a
+number of _amphorae_ with narrow necks. Had the ancients used corks instead
+of oil to stop their _amphorae_, wine eighteen hundred years old might have
+been found here. It is not the custom even of the modern Italians to use
+corks for the wine they keep for their own use: a spoonful of oil is poured
+on the top of the wine in the flask and when they mean to drink it they
+extract the oil by means of a lump of cotton fastened to a stick or long
+pin which enters the neck of the flask and absorbs and extracts the oil.
+
+Among the buildings discovered in Pompeii is a large Temple of Isis; here
+you behold the altar and the pillar to which the beasts of sacrifice were
+fastened. In this temple at the time of the first excavation were found all
+the instruments of sacrifice and other things appertaining to the worship
+of that Goddess. These and other valuables such as statues, coins, utensils
+of all sorts were removed to Portici, where they are now to be seen in the
+Museum of that place. The _Praetorium_ at Pompeii is the next remarkable
+thing; it is a vast enclosure: a great number of columns are standing
+upright here and the most of them entire; the steps forming the ascent to
+the elevated seat where the Praetor usually sat, remain entire. There is a
+large building and court yard near one of the gates of the city supposed to
+have been a barrack for soldiers; three skeletons were found here with
+their legs in a machine similar to our stocks. The scribbling and
+caricatures on the walls of this barrack are perfectly visible and legible.
+When one wanders thro' the streets of this singularly interesting city, one
+is tempted to think that the inhabitants have just walked out. What a
+dreadful lingering death must have befallen these inhabitants who could not
+escape from Pompeii at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius which covered
+it with ashes. The air could only be exhausted by degrees, so that a
+prolonged suffocation or a death by hunger must have been their lot.
+
+Four skeletons were found upright in the streets, having in their hands
+boxes containing jewellery and things of value, as if in the act of
+endeavouring to make their escape: these must soon have perished, but the
+skeleton of a woman found in one of the rooms of the houses close to a bath
+shews that her death must have been one of prolonged suffering.
+
+What a fine subject Pompeii would furnish for the pen of a Byron! As I have
+before remarked, all the valuables and utensils of all sorts found here
+have been removed to Portici; it is a great pity that everything could not
+be left in Pompeii in the exact situation in which it was found on its
+first discovery at the excavation. What a light it would have thrown (which
+no description can give) on the melancholy catastrophe as well as on the
+private life and manners of the ancients! But if they had been left here,
+they would, even tho' a guard of soldiers were stationed here to protect
+them, have been by degrees all stolen.
+
+There were some magnificent tombs just outside the gates which must have
+been no small ornament to the city.
+
+We returned to Resina to dinner at six o'clock.
+
+We had made an arrangement with one of the guides of Vesuvius called
+Salvatore that he should be ready for us at Resina at seven o'clock with a
+mule and driver for each of us to ascend the mountain, and we found him
+very punctual at the door of the inn at that hour. The terms of the journey
+were as follows. One _scudo_ for Salvatore and one _scudo_ for each mule
+and driver for which they were to forward us to the mountain, remain the
+whole night and reconduct us to Resina the following morning. The object in
+ascending at night and remaining until morning is to combine the night view
+of the eruption with the visit (if possible) to the crater, which cannot
+with safety be undertaken by night, and to enjoy likewise the noble view at
+sunrise of the whole bay and city of Naples and the adjacent islands. We
+started therefore at a quarter past seven and arrived at half past nine at
+a small house and chapel, called the hermitage of Vesuvius, which is
+generally considered as half-way up the mountain. In this house dwells an
+old ecclesiastic who receives travellers and furnishes them with a couch
+and frugal repast. We dismounted here and our worthy host provided us with
+some mortadella and an omelette; and we did not fail to do justice to his
+excellent _lacrima Christi_, of which he has always a large provision. We
+then betook ourselves to rest, leaving orders to be awakened at two o'clock
+in order to proceed further up the mountain. There was a pretty decent
+eruption of the mountain, which vomited fire, stones and ashes at an
+interval of twenty-five minutes, so that we enjoyed this spectacle during
+our ascent. A violent noise, like thunder, accompanies each eruption, which
+increases the awefulness and grandeur of the sight. At two o'clock our
+guide and muleteers being very punctual, we bade adieu to the hermit,
+promising him to come to breakfast with him the next morning; we then
+mounted our mules and after an hour's march arrived at the spot where the
+ashes and cinders, combined with the steepness of the mountain, prevent the
+possibility of going any further except on foot. We dismounted therefore at
+this place, and sent back our mules to the hermitage to wait for us there.
+We now began to climb among the ashes, and tho' the ascent to the position
+of the ancient crater is not more than probably eighty yards in height, we
+were at least one hour before we reached it, from its excessive steepness
+and from gliding back two feet out of three at every step we made. We at
+length reached the old crater and sat ourselves down to repose till
+day-break. Tho' it was exceeding cold, the exhalation from the veins of
+fire and hot ashes kept us as warm as we could wish: for here every step is
+literally
+
+ _per ignes
+ Suppositos cineri doloso_.[97]
+
+We remained on this spot till broad daylight and witnessed several
+eruptions at an interval of twenty or twenty-five minutes. I remarked that
+the mountain toward the summit forms two cones, one of which vomited fire
+and smoke, and the other calcined stones and ashes, accompanied by a
+rumbling noise like thunder. The stones came clattering down the flanks of
+the mountain and some of them rolled very near us; had we been within the
+radius formed by the erupted stones we probably should have been killed.
+
+At daylight Mr R---- D---- proposed to ascend the two cones in spite of the
+remonstrances of our guide Salvatore, who told us that no person had yet
+been there and that we must expect to be crushed to death by the stones,
+should an eruption take place, and that it was almost as much madness to
+attempt it, as it would be to walk before a battery of cannon in the act of
+being fired. Tho' I did not admit all the force of this comparison, yet I
+began to think there was a little too much risk in the attempt; my French
+friend however was deaf to all remonstrance and said to me, "_As-tu peur_?"
+I replied: "No! that I was at all times very indifferent as to life or
+death, but that I did not like pain, and was not at all desirous to have an
+arm or leg broken, the former accident having happened to a German a few
+days before; nevertheless, I added, if you persist in going, I will
+accompany you." We accordingly started to ascend the cone, which vomited
+fire and smoke, taking care to place ourselves on the windward side in
+ascending, and after much fatigue we arrived in about fifteen minutes close
+to the apex of the cone, after groping amidst the ashes and stumbling on a
+vein of red hot cinders. My shoes were sadly burnt, my stockings singed and
+my feet scorched; my friend was less fortunate, for he tumbled down with
+his hands on a vein of red hot cinders and burned them terribly. My great
+and principal apprehension in making this ascent was of stumbling upon
+holes slightly encrusted with ashes and that the whole might give way and
+precipitate me into some _gouffre._ On arrival at the summit of the cone we
+had just time to look down and perceive that there was a hole or _gouffre,_
+but whether it were very deep or not we could not ascertain, for a blast of
+fire and smoke issuing from it at this moment nearly suffocated us; we
+immediately lost no time in gliding down the ashes on the side of the cone
+on our breech, and reached its base in a few seconds, where we waited till
+an eruption took place from the other cone, in order to profit of the
+interval to ascend it also. It required four minutes' walk to reach the
+base of the other cone and about twelve to ascend to its apex; on arrival
+at the brink, where we remained about two minutes, we had just sufficient
+time to observe that there was no deep hole or bottomless _gouffre_ as we
+expected, but that it formed a crater with a sort of slant and not
+exceeding thirty feet in depth to the bottom, which looked exactly like a
+lime-kiln, being of a dirty white appearance, and in continual agitation,
+as it were of limestones boiling; so that a person descending to the bottom
+of this crater would probably be scorched to death or suffocated in a few
+minutes, but would infallibly be ejected and thrown into the air at the
+first eruption. I mean by this that he would not disappear or fall into a
+bottomless pit (as I should have supposed before I viewed the crater), but
+that his friends would be sure of finding his body either yet living or
+dead, outside the brink of the crater, within the radius made by the
+erupted stones and ashes.
+
+Our guide now begged us for God's sake to descend, as an eruption might be
+expected every minute. We accordingly glided down the exterior surface of
+the cone among the ashes, on our breech, for it is impossible to descend in
+any other way and in a few seconds we reached its base. Finding ourselves
+on a little level ground we began to run or rather wade thro' the ashes in
+order to get out of reach of the eruption, but we had not gone thirty yards
+when one took place. The stones clattered down with a frightful noise and
+we received a shower of ashes on our heads, the dust of which got into our
+eyes and nearly blinded us. On reaching the brink of the old crater we
+stopped half an hour to enjoy the fine view of Parthenope in all her glory
+at sunrise. We then descended rapidly, sometimes plunging down the ashes on
+our feet and sometimes gliding on our breech till we arrived at the place
+where we had descended from our mules, and this distance, which required
+one hour to ascend, cost us in its descent not more than seven minutes.
+
+We then walked to the hermitage in about an hour and a quarter, and arrived
+there with no other accident than having our shoes and stockings totally
+spoiled, our feet a little singed, the hands of Mr. R.D. severely burned
+and both begrimed with ashes like blacksmiths. The ecclesiastic gave us a
+breakfast of coffee and eggs and a glass of Maraschino, and we gave him two
+_scudi_ each. Before we departed he presented to us his Album, which he
+usually does to all travellers, inviting them to write something. I took up
+the pen and feeling a little inspiration wrote the following lines:
+
+ Anch'io salito son sul gran Vesuvio,
+ Mentre cadsa di cineri un diluvio;
+ Questo cammin mi piace d'aver fatto,
+ Ma plù mi piace il ritornare intatto.
+
+which pleased the old man very much to see a foreigner write Italian verse.
+I pleased him still more by letting him know that I was an enthusiastic
+admirer and humble cultivator of the Tuscan Muse, and that having read and
+studied most of their poets, particularly _il divino Ariosto_, I now and
+then caught a _scintilletta_ from his verse. We now took a cordial farewell
+of our worthy old host, mounted our mules and descended the mountain. On
+arrival at Portici we dismissed our guide Salvatore with a _scudo pour
+boire_, besides the stipulated price. Salvatore asked me to give him a
+written certificate of his services, which he generally sollicits from all
+those whom he conducts to the Volcano. I asked him for his certificate
+book, and begged to know whether he would have it in prose or verse. He
+laughed and said: _Vostra Excellenza è padrone_. I took out my pencil and
+wrote the following quatrain:
+
+ Dal monte ignivomo tornati siam stanchissimi,
+ E del buon Salvator siam tutti contentissimi;
+ Felice il pellogrin che a Salvator si fida,
+ Che di lui non si può trovare un miglior guida.
+
+I never saw any body so delighted as Salvatore appeared when I read to him
+what I had written in his book.
+
+I have another observation to make before I take leave of this celebrated
+mountain, which is, that the liquid lava which it ejects is far more
+dangerous and destructive than the eruption of stones and ashes; the lava
+flows from the flanks of the mountain in a liquid stream. Sometimes there
+will be an eruption and no lava flowing: at other tunes the lava flows from
+the flanks of the mountain, without any eruption from the crater; at other
+times, and then it is most alarming, the eruption takes place accompanied
+by the flowing of the lava. All this demonstrates that the volcano is the
+effect of the efforts of the subterraneous fire to get some vent and escape
+from its confinement. This time I did not observe any lava flowing, except
+a slight vein of it on the spot where Mr R.D. fell down and burned his
+hands; but it is easy to observe on the side of the mountain the course and
+route taken at different times by the lava, which has become hardened and
+is very plainly to be distinguished, as it resembles a _river_ (if I may
+use the word) of slate meandering between the green sward of the mountain
+and descending toward the sea. You can plainly distinguish the course and
+direction of the lava which destroyed part of Torre del Greco and swept it
+into the sea.
+
+At Portici, having washed ourselves at the inn from head to foot in order
+to get rid of our blacksmith's appearance, and having purchased a new pair
+of shoes and stockings each, we visited the Royal Palace and Museum with a
+view principally of examining the objects of art and valuables discovered
+in Pompeii. The Royal Palace is called _la Favorita_, its architecture is
+beautiful; the garden or rather lawn which is ornamented by statues and
+enriched by orange groves extends to the sea. The first thing that presents
+itself to the view of the visitor at the Museum of Portici are the two
+equestrian statues of Marcus Balbus proconsul and procurator and of his
+son, which statues were found in Herculaneum. I forgot to mention that
+there is an inscription with that name on the side of the proscenium of the
+theatre easily legible by the light of _flambeaux_.
+
+To return to the Museum at Portici, we were then shewn into a room
+containing curious _morceaux_ of antiquity discovered at Pompeii: a tripod
+in bronze and various other articles of the same metal; tables, various
+lamps in bronze, resembling exactly those used in Hindostan, wooden pens,
+dice, grains of corn quite black and scorched, a skeleton of a woman with
+the ashes incrusted round it (the form of her breast is seen on the crust
+of ashes; golden armlets were found on her which were shewn to us), steel
+mirrors, combs, utensils for culinary purposes, such as _casseroles_,
+frying pans, spoons, forks, pestles and mortars, instruments of sacrifice,
+weights and measures, coins, a _carcan_ or _stock_, &c.
+
+In the upper rooms are to be seen the paintings and _fresques_ found in the
+same place. The paintings are poor things, and in their landscapes the
+Romans seem to have had little more idea of perspective than the Chinese;
+but the _fresques_ are beautiful: the female figures belonging thereto are
+delineated with the utmost grace and delicacy. They consist of subjects
+chiefly from the mythology. I noticed the following in particular, viz.,
+Chiron teaching the young Achilles to draw the bow; the discovery of
+Orestes; Theseus and the Minotaur (he has just slain the Minotaur and a boy
+is in the act of kissing his hand as if to thank him for his deliverance;
+the Minotaur is here represented as a monster with the body of a man and
+the head of a bull); a Centaur carrying off a nymph; a car drawn by a
+parrot and driven by a cricket: a woman offering to another little Loves
+for sale (she is pulling out the little Cupids from a basket and holding
+them by their wings as if they were fowls); a beautiful female figure
+seated on a monster something like the Chimaera of the ancients and holding
+a cup before the monster's mouth (emblematical of Hope nourishing a
+Chimaera). The arabesques taken from Pompeii and preserved here are very
+beautiful. Here also are two statues found in Pompeii: the one representing
+a drunken Faun, the other a sitting Mercury. We met two Polish ladies here,
+who were amusing themselves in copying the _fresques_. We returned to
+Naples at five o'clock, and dined at the _Villa di Napoli_. In the evening
+we went to the _Teatro de' Fiorentini_. The piece performed was Pamela or
+_La virtû premiata,_ which I understand is quite a stock piece in Italy. It
+is written by Goldoni. It was very badly performed; the actors were not
+perfect in their parts, and the prompter's voice was as loud as usual. The
+costume was appropriate enough, which is far from being always the case at
+this theatre.
+
+
+NAPLES, 13 Octr.
+
+We started on the 12th at six o'clock in the morning (Mr R----- D. and
+myself) in a _calèche_ in order to visit Puzzuoli, Baii and all the
+classical ground in that direction. We of course passed through the grotto
+of Pausilippo. This grotto is thirty feet high and about five hundred feet
+long. In fact, it is a vast rock undermined and a high road running thro'
+it, the breadth of which is sufficient for three carriages to go abreast.
+From its great length it is of course exceeding dark; in order therefore to
+obviate this inconvenience lamps constantly lighted are suspended from the
+roof and on the sides of the grotto, and holes pierced towards the top to
+admit a little daylight. The road pierced thro' this rock and called the
+grotto of Pausilippo abridges the journey to Puzzuoli very considerably, as
+otherwise you would be obliged to go round by Cape Margelina, which would
+increase the distance ten miles. On issuing from the grotto on the other
+side, you arrive in a few minutes on the seashore, on the bay formed
+between Cape Margelina and Puzzuoli. We stopped at the lake Agnano which is
+strongly impregnated with sulfur. On the banks of this lake are the
+_Thermae_ or vapour baths, and here is also the famous _Grotto del Cane_,
+the pestilential vapour arising from which rises about three inches from
+the ground and has the appearance of a spider's web. An unfortunate dog
+performs the miracle of the resurrection to all those who visit this
+natural curiosity; and we also were curious to see its effect. The guardian
+of the Thermes seized the poor animal and held his nose close to the place
+from whence the vapour exhales. The dog was seized with strong convulsions
+and in two minutes he was perfectly senseless and to all appearance dead;
+but on being placed in the open air, he soon recovers. The poor beast shews
+evident repugnance to the experiment, and I wonder he does not endeavor to
+make his escape, for he has sometimes to perform this feat four or five
+times a day. I should suppose that he will not be very long lived, for the
+repeated doses of this mephitic vapour must surely accelerate his
+dissolution. The heat of the _Thermae_ and steam of the sulphur is almost
+insupportable; but it has a most beneficial effect on maladies of the
+nerves and cutaneous complaints.
+
+We then proceeded on our journey to Puzzuoli, the ancient Puteoli, where
+are the remains of the famous mole (or bridge as others call it) of
+Caligula, intended to embrace or unite the two extremes of the bay of Baiae
+formed on one side by Puzzuoli and on the other by cape Misenus. We
+alighted to take a _déjeuner à la fourchette_ at Puzzuoli, and then went to
+visit the temple of Jupiter Serapis, which is a vast edifice and tho' in
+ruins very imposing. On wandering thro' the enceinte of this famous temple,
+I thought of Apollonius of Tyana and his sudden appearance to his friend
+Damis at the porch of this very temple, when he escaped from the fangs of
+Domitian and when it was believed that, by means of magic art, he had been
+able at once to transport himself from the Praetorium at Rome to Puteoli.
+As I said before, the bay included by cape Misenus and Puzzuoli is what is
+called Baiae. The land is low and marshy from Puzzuoli to a little beyond
+the lake Avernus; but from Monte Nuovo it begins to rise and form high
+cliffs nearly all way to Cape Misenus. It was on these high cliffs that the
+opulent Romans built their villas and they must have been as much crowded
+together as the villas at Ramsgate and Broadstairs. We embarked in a boat
+at Puzzuoli to cross over to Baiae (i.e., the place where the villas
+begin), but we stopped on our way thither at a landing place nearly in the
+centre of the bay in order to visit the lake Avernus and the Cave of the
+Cumaean Sybil, described by Virgil, as the entrance into the realm of
+Pluto. The lake Avernus, in spite of its being invested by the poets with
+all that is terrible in the mythology as a river of Hell, looks very like
+any other lake, and tho' it is impregnated with sulphur, and emits a most
+unpleasant smell, birds do not drop down dead on flying over it as
+formerly. The ground about it is marshy and unwholesome. The silence and
+melancholy appearance of this lake and its environing groves of wood are
+not calculated to inspire exhilarating ideas. Full of classic souvenirs we
+went to descend into the Cave of the Sybil, and as we descended I could not
+refrain from repeating aloud Virgil's lines:
+
+ _Di quibus imperium est animarum umbrasque silentes_,[98] etc.
+
+This descent really is fitted to give one an idea of the descent to the
+shades below, and what added to the illusion was that when we arrived at
+the bottom of the descent and just at the entrance of the cave where the
+Sybil held her oracles, we discovered four fierce looking fellows with
+lighted torches in their hands standing at the entrance. My friend cried
+out _Voilà les Furies_, and these proved to be our boatmen who, while we
+were contemplating the _bolge d'Averno_, had run on before to provide
+torches to shew us the interior of the grotto of the Sybil. As this grotto
+is nearly knee-deep filled with water we got on the backs of the boatmen to
+enter it. It is about twenty-five feet long, fifteen broad and the height
+about thirteen feet. As we were neither devoured by Cerberus nor hustled by
+old Charon into his boat, we returned from the _Shades below_ to the light
+of heaven, triumphant like Ulysses or Aeneas, considering ourselves now
+among the _Pauci quos aequus amavit Jupiter_.[99]
+
+Acheron, the dreadful Acheron, is not far from Avernus and is likewise a
+lake, tho' call'd a river in the mythology. It is also sulfuric and the
+ground about it is woody, low, marshy and consequently aguish.
+
+We next ascended the cliffs of Baiae and we were shown the remains of the
+villas of Cicero, Caesar, Sylla and other great names. We then went to the
+baths of Nero (so called). Here it is the fashion to descend under ground
+in order to feel the effect of the sulfuric heat, which is intense, and my
+friend who descended soon returned dripping with perspiration and calling
+out: _Qui n'a pas vu cela n'a rien vu!_ but I did not chuse to descend, as
+I could feel no pleasure in being half stifled and the _grotto del Cane_
+had already given me a full idea of the force of the vapour of the
+_Thermes_.
+
+We then descended from the cliffs of Baiae on the other side, and visited
+the remains of three celebrated temples of antiquity situated on the beach
+nearly and very close to each other, viz., the temples of Diana, of Venus
+and of Mercury; all striking objects and majestic, tho' in a state of
+dilapidation. Each of these temples has cupolas. We then ascended the slope
+of ground leading towards cape Misensus, to visit the _Cento Camarelle_ and
+_Piscina mirabile_, both vast edifices under ground, serving as cellars or
+appendages to a Palace that stood on this spot. We then visited the lake
+called the _Mare Morto_ or Styx; and then went round to the other side of
+it, to visit those beautiful _coteaux_ planted in vines and their summits
+crowned with groves which have obtained the name of the Elysian fields.
+This Styx and these Elysian fields look like any other lake and _coteaux_
+and are entirely indebted to the lyre of Maro for their celebrity.
+
+From thence we went to the extremity of cape Misenus and embarked in our
+boat (which we had sent on there to wait for us) to return to Puzzuoli by
+crossing the bay at once. In this bay and near cape Misenus a Roman fleet
+was usually stationed and Pliny's uncle, I believe, commanded one there at
+the time of the first eruption of Vesuvius which cost him his life.
+
+There is a singular phenomenon in this bay of a mountain that in one of the
+later eruptions and earthquakes was formed in twenty-four hours near the
+seashore and was named _Monte Nuovo._
+
+The small salt water lake called _Lacus Lucrinus_ is also on this bay. It
+appears to me to be an artificial lake, made probably by the opulent Romans
+who resided at Baiae to hold their mullets and other sea fish which they
+wished to fatten.
+
+Near Puzzuoli likewise is the famous _Solfaterra,_ the bed of an ancient
+volcano. It is well worth examining. It has been long since extinguished,
+but you meet with vast beds of sulphur and calcined stones, and the smell
+is at times almost insupportable. We returned to Naples by half-past seven
+o'clock, not a little tired but highly gratified by our excursion.
+
+
+NAPLES, 14th Oct.
+
+At the _Teatro Nuovo_ I have seen another Italian tragedy performed. The
+piece was _Tito Manlio Torquato_, taken from the well known anecdote in the
+Roman history. The scenery, decorations and _costume_ were good and
+appropriate, not so the acting; for the actors as usual were imperfect in
+their parts. I fully agree with Alfieri that Italy must be united and enjoy
+a free popular government before one can expect to see tragedies well
+performed. It is very diverting to see the puppet shows at Naples and to
+hear the witticisms and various artifices of the showman of Pulcinello to
+secure payment in advance from his audience, who would otherwise go away
+without paying as soon as the performance was over.
+
+This performance is much attended by the _lazzaroni_ and _fainéans_ of the
+lower orders of Naples and the puppet showman is obliged to have recourse
+to various stratagems and ingenious sallies to induce a handsome
+contribution to be made. Sometimes he will say with a very grave face (the
+curtain being drawn up and no Pulcinello appearing) that he is very sorry
+there can be no performance this day; for that poor Signor Pulcinello is
+sick and has no money to pay the Doctor: but that if a _quête_ be made for
+him, he will get himself cured and make his appearance as usual. All the
+while that one of the showmen goes about collecting the _grani_, the other
+holds a dialogue with Pulcinello (still invisible). Pulcinello groans and
+is very miserable. At length the collection is made. Pulcinello takes
+medicine, says he is well again, makes his appearance and begins. At
+another time the audience is informed that there can be no performance as
+Pulcinello is arrested for debt and put in prison, where he must remain
+unless a subscription of money be made for him to pay his debts and take
+him out of gaol. Then follows an absurd dialogue between Pulcinello
+(supposed to answer from the prison) and the showman. The showman scolds
+him for being a spendthrift and leading a profligate life, calls him a
+_briccone_, a _birbante_, and Pulcinello only groans out in reply, _Povero
+me, Povero Pulcinello, che disgrazia! sventurato di me! di non aver
+denari!_ These strokes of wit never fail to bring in many a _grano_.
+
+At another time the curtain is drawn up and discovers a gibbet and
+Pulcinello standing on a ladder affixed to it with a rope round his neck.
+The showman with the utmost gravity and assumed melancholy informs the
+audience that a most serious calamity is about to happen to Naples: that
+Signor Pulcinello is condemned to be hanged for a robbery, and that unless
+he can procure _molti denari_ to bribe the officers of justice to let him
+escape, he will inevitably be hanged and the people will never more behold
+their unhappy friend Pulcinello. The showman now implores the commiseration
+of the audience, and now reproaches Pulcinello with his profligacy and
+nefarious pranks which have brought him to an untimely end. Pulcinello
+sobs, cries, promises to reform and to attend mass regularly in future.
+What Neapolitan heart can resist such an appeal? The _grani_ are collected.
+Pulcinello gives money to the puppet representing the executioner; down
+goes the gibbet, and Pulcinello is himself again.
+
+I shall return in a day or two to Rome, having seen nearly all that Naples
+affords. I have now full liberty to die when I chuse according to the
+proverb: _Veder Napoli e poí morire_.
+
+Naples certainly is, taking it all in all, the most interesting city in
+Europe, for it unites every thing that is conducive to the _agrémens_ of
+life. A beautiful city, a noble bay, a vast commerce, provisions of the
+best sort, abundant and cheap, a pleasant society, a delicious climate,
+music, Operas, _Balli,_ Libraries, Museums of Painting and Sculpture; in
+its neighbourhood two subterraneous cities, a volcano in full play, and
+every spot of ground conveying the most interesting _souvenirs_ and
+immortalized in prose and verse. Add thereto the vapour baths of sulphur
+for stringing anew the nerves of those debilitated by a too ardent pursuit
+of pleasure, and the Fountain of St Lucia for those suffering from a
+redundancy of bile. Now tell me of any other residence which can equal
+this? Adieu.
+
+
+ROME, 22nd Octr.
+
+Nothing material occurred on my return from Naples to Rome; but on the 2d
+day after my arrival I made an excursion to Tivoli, which is about eighteen
+miles distant from Rome. I passed the night at the only inn at Tivoli. The
+next morning I walked to the _Villa d'Este_ in this neighbourhood, which is
+a vast edifice with extensive grounds. Here on a terrace in front of the
+villa are models in marble of all the principal edifices and monuments,
+ancient and modern, of Rome, very ingeniously executed. From the _Villa
+d'Este_ is a noble view of the whole plain of Latium and of the "Eternal
+City."
+
+From hence I walked about two miles further to visit the greatest antiquity
+and curiosity of the place, which is the Villa or rather the ruins of the
+celebrated Villa built by Adrian, which must have been of immense size from
+the vast space of ground it occupies. It was intended to unite everything
+that the magnificent ideas of a Prince could devise who wished to combine
+every sort of recreation, sensual as well as intellectual, within the
+precincts of his Palace; columns, friezes, capitals, entablatures and
+various other spoils of rich architecture cover the ground in profusion:
+many of the walls and archways are entire and almost an entire cupola
+remains standing. Besides the buildings above ground, here are cellars
+under ground intended as quarters for the guards and capable of holding
+three thousand men, as well as stabling for horses. In the inclosure of and
+forming part of this Villa, which covers a circumference of seven miles,
+were a gymnasium, baths, temples, a school of philosophers, tanks, a
+theatre, &c. The greatest part of these buildings are choaked up and
+covered with earth, since it is by excavation alone that what does appear
+was brought to light. It was by excavation that a man discovered a large
+hall wherein he found the nine beautiful statues of the Muses, which now
+adorn the Museum of the Vatican; and no doubt if the Roman government would
+recommence the excavations many more valuables might be found. Hadrian's
+villa has already furnished many a statue, column and pilaster to the
+Museums, churches and Palaces of Rome.
+
+I was much more gratified in beholding the remains of this Villa than in
+visiting Tivoli and I remained here several hours. At four o'clock in the
+afternoon I started on my return to Rome; it was imprudent not to have
+started sooner, as it is always dangerous to be outside the walls of Rome
+after dark, in consequence of the brigands who infest the environs and
+sometimes come close to the walls of the city.
+
+I reached my hotel in Rome at nine o'clock, one hour and half after dark,
+but had the good fortune to meet nobody. The Roman peasantry generally go
+armed and those who feed cattle in the fields of the Campagna or have any
+labour to perform there never sleep there on account of the _mal'aria._
+
+
+[93] Horace, _Epist.,_ II, 1, 156.--ED.
+
+[94] Horace, Sat., i, 5, 26.--ED.
+
+[95] A _carlino_ is of the value of half a franc or five pence English. The
+ accounts in Naples are kept in _ducati_, _carlini_ and _grani_. Ten
+ _carlini_ make a ducat and ten _grani_ (a copper coin) make a carlino.
+ A grano is a _sou_ French in value. The _ducato_ is an imaginary coin.
+ The _soudo Napoletano_, a handsome silver coin of the size of an _écu
+ de six francs_, is equal to twelve carlini.
+
+[96] Not one of these vases was found at Pompeii.--ED.
+
+[97] Horace, _Carm_., II, 1, 7.--ED.
+
+[98] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 264.--ED.
+
+[99] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 129.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1816
+
+From Rome to Florence--Sismondi the historian--Reminiscences of
+India--Lucca--Princess Elisa Baciocchi--Pisa--The Campo Santo--Leghorn--
+Hebrews in Leghorn--Lord Dillon--The story of a lost glove--From Florence
+to Lausanne by Milan, Turin and across Mont Cenis--Lombardy in winter--The
+Hospice of Mont Cenis.
+
+
+FLORENCE, Novr. 20th.
+
+I bade adieu to Rome on the 28th October and returned here by the same road
+I went, viz., by Radicofani and Sienna. I arrived here after a journey of
+six days, having been detained one day at Aquapendente on account of the
+swelling of the waters. The day after my arrival here I despatched a letter
+to Pescia to Mr Sismondi de' Sismondi, the celebrated author of the history
+of the Italian Republics, to inform him of my intended visit to him, and I
+forwarded to him at the same time two letters of introduction, one from
+Colonel Wardle and the other from Mr Piton, banker at Geneva, who mentioned
+me in his letter to Sismondi as having _des idées parfaitement analogues
+aux siennes_. I received a most friendly answer inviting me to come to
+Pescia and to pass a few days with him at his villa. Pescia is thirty miles
+distant from Florence and the same from Leghorn. I was delighted with the
+opportunity of seeing a man whom I esteemed so much as an author and as a
+citizen, and of visiting at the same time the different cities of Tuscany,
+particularly Lucca and Pisa. I accordingly hired a cabriolet and on the
+morning of the 6th Novr drove to Prato, a good-sized handsome town, solidly
+built, ten miles distant from Florence. The country on each side of the
+road appears highly cultivated, and the road is lined with villas and farm
+houses with gardens nearly the whole way. Changing horses at Prato, I
+proceeded ten miles further to Pistoia, a large elegant and well-built town
+on the banks of the Ombrone.
+
+The streets in Pistoia are broad and well paved and the _Palazzo pubblico_
+is a striking building; so is the _Seminario_ or College. Here I changed
+horses again and proceeded to Pescia, where I alighted at the villa of M.
+Sismondi. The distance between Pistoia and Pescia is about ten or eleven
+miles.
+
+Pescia is a beautiful little town, very clean and solidly built, lying in a
+valley surrounded nearly on all sides by mountains. Its situation is
+extremely romantic and picturesque, and there are several handsome villas
+on the slopes and summits of these mountains. On market days Pescia is
+crowded with the country people who flock hither from all parts, and one is
+astonished to see such a number of beautiful and well dressed country
+girls. Industry and comfort are prevalent here, as is the case indeed all
+over Tuscany; I mean agricultural industry, for commerce is just now at a
+stand.
+
+I passed three most delightful days and which will live for ever in my
+recollection, with Mr Sismondi, in whom I found an inexhaustible fund of
+talent and information, combined with such an unassuming simplicity of
+character and manner that he appeared to me by far the most agreeable
+litterary man that I ever met with. His mother, who is a lady of great
+talent and perfectly conversant in English litterature, resides with him.
+His sister also is settled at Pescia, being married to a Tuscan gentleman
+of the name of Forti. The sister has a full share of the talents and
+amiable qualities of her mother and brother. With a family of such
+resources as this, you may suppose our conversation did not flag for a
+moment, nor do I recollect in the course of my whole life having passed
+such a pleasant time; and I only wished that the three days could be
+prolonged to three years. Politics, the occurrences of the day, living
+characters, classical reminiscences, French, English, Italian and German
+litterature, afforded us an inexhaustible variety of topics for
+conversation: and the profound local knowledge that Mr Sismondi possesses
+of Italy, of its history and antiquities, renders his communications of the
+utmost value to the traveller. Our supper was prolonged to a late hour and
+I question if the suppers and conversations of Scipio and Atticus, those
+_nodes caenaeque Deum_[100] were more piquant or afforded more variety than
+ours. Shakespeare, Schiller, Voltaire, Ariosto, Dante, Filangieri, Michel
+Angelo, Washington, Napoleon, all furnished anecdotes and reflexions in
+abundance.
+
+The last evening that I passed here, two families of Pescia came in. One of
+the gentlemen was a great reader of voyages and travels, and India suddenly
+became the subject of discourse. As I had passed six years in that country,
+during which time I had visited the three Presidencies of Calcutta, Madras,
+and Bombay, having ascended the Ganges as far as Benares, having visited
+the Mysore country and Nizam's territory, having sojourned three weeks
+among the splendid and magnificent ruins of Bijanagur or Bisnagar, having
+travelled thro' the whole of the Deccan from Pondicherry to cape Comorin,
+besides having traversed on horseback the whole circumference of Ceylon and
+across the whole island from East to West by the Wanny, I was enabled to
+furnish them with many an anecdote from the Eastern world, which to them
+was a great treat, and I dare say at times my narration appeared almost as
+marvellous as a story in the Arabian Nights, particularly when I related
+the various religious ceremonies, the grim Idol of Juggernaut, the swinging
+to _recover cast_, the exposure of old people to the holy death in the
+Ganges by stopping up their nose, mouth and ears with mud, and placing them
+on the water's edge at low tide in order that they should be swept off at
+the high water; the holy city of Benares; the magnificent remains of
+Bisnagar; the splendid Pagodas of Ramisseram; the policy of the Bramins;
+the appalling voluntary penances of the _Joguis_ or _Fakirs_ as the
+Europeans call them; the bed of spikes; the arm held up in the air for
+fifteen years; the tiger hunt; the method of catching the elephant in
+Ceylon; the pearl fishery; Sepoy establishment; in short I must have
+appeared to them a Ulysses or a Sindbad, and I dare say that they thought I
+added from time to time a little embellishment from my imagination, tho' I
+can safely and solemnly aver that I did not extenuate nor exaggerate any
+thing, but simply related what I had myself seen and witnessed.
+
+Mr Sismondi is under a sort of banishment from his native country Geneva in
+consequence of the side of the question he took in his writings on the
+return of the Emperor Napoleon from Elba. It was indeed natural for the
+restored government (the Bourbons) to desire the removal from France of a
+man of talent who had exposed their past and might scrutinize their future
+conduct and wilful faults; but why the Government of Geneva should espouse
+their quarrel and visit one of their most estimable citizens with
+banishment for opinions not at all connected with nor influential upon
+Geneva, appears to me not only absurd and anomalous, but unjust in the
+highest degree. But such is the state of degradation to which Europe is
+reduced by the triumph of the old _régime_; and the Swiss Governments are
+compelled to become the instruments of the vengeance of the coalition. But
+I shall dwell no more on this subject at present. Let us hope that in a
+short time a more liberal spirit will arise, and the Genevese will be eager
+to recall in triumph the illustrious citizen of whom they have so much
+reason to be proud.
+
+We spent our mornings, Mr Sismondi and I, in promenades towards the most
+striking points of the country immediately environing Pescia, and as I had
+at this time some idea of coming to settle in Tuscany, he was so kind as to
+conduct me to look at several villas that were to let; and I inspected
+three very beautiful ones well furnished and each capable of holding a
+large family, that were to be let for 18, 20, and 24 _louis d'or_ per
+annum.
+
+Wine and every article of life is of prodigious cheapness here, and the
+inhabitants are so respectable, and there is such an absence of all crime,
+that Pescia must be a very desirable and economical residence for any
+foreign family possessing a sufficient knowledge of Italian to mix with the
+society of the natives. There are several ancient and noble families in the
+neighbourhood, highly respectable in point of moral character and manners,
+but rather in _décadence_ in point of fortune.
+
+It was with the greatest regret that I bade adieu to the amiable Sismondi,
+his mother and sister; but I hope for a time only, as I have some idea of
+removing my domicile from Lausanne to this part of the world.
+
+I started at 10 o'clock a.m. on the 11th of November and after two hours'
+journey in a cabriolet arrived at Lucca, a distance of ten miles, and put
+up at the _Hôtel del Pelicano._ The road runs thro' a highly cultivated
+country.
+
+Lucca is a large fortified city, situated hi a beautifully luxuriant plain
+or basin surrounded on all sides by hills and mountains of various slopes,
+contours and heights, and abounding in villas, vineyards, mulberry and
+olive plantations. Every spot of ground is in cultivation and the industry
+of the inhabitants of Lucca is proverbial. Indeed the whole territory of
+this little _ci-devant_ Republic is a perfect paradise.
+
+The city itself, from the massiveness and solidity of the edifices, has
+more of a solemn than a lively appearance; but there is a delightful walk
+on the ramparts which are lined with trees. The streets are well paved. The
+extreme antiquity of the city and style of its edifices make it appear less
+_riani_ than the other cities in Tuscany. The Cathedral is Gothic and there
+are in it the statues of the four Evangelists. This and the _Palazzo
+Pubblico_ are the most conspicuous edifices. Tho' the Republic is
+annihilated, the word _Libertas_ still remains on an escutcheon on the
+gates of the city. Lucca, tho' no longer a Republic and enclavée in
+Tuscany, is for the present an independent state and belongs to an Infanta
+of Spain (formerly Princess of Parma) who takes the title of Duchess of
+Lucca. It is generally supposed however that on the demise of Maria Louisa,
+ex-Empress of the French and now Duchess of Parma, this family, viz., the
+Duchess of Lucca and her son will resume their ancient possessions in the
+Parmesan, and that Lucca will then be incorporated with Tuscany.
+
+Before the fall of Napoleon the Princess Elisa Baciocchi his sister was
+sovereign of Lucca, and she it was who has embellished the outside of the
+city with some beautiful promenades. She devoted her whole time, talents
+and resources to the good of her subjects and is highly esteemed and much
+regretted by them. The present Duchess of Lucca has no other character but
+that which seems common to the Royal families of France, Spain and Naples;
+viz., of being very weak and priest-ridden. Lucca furnishes excellent
+female servants who are remarkable for their industry and probity. Their
+only solace is their lover or _amoroso_, as they term him; and when they
+enter into the service of any family, they always stipulate for one day in
+the week on which they must have liberty to visit their _amoroso_, or the
+_amoroso_ must be allowed to come to the house to visit them. This is an
+ancient custom among them and has no pernicious consequences, nor does it
+interfere with their other good qualities. At the back of Lucca is an
+immense mountain which stands between it and Pisa, and intercepts the
+reciprocal view of the two cities which are only ten miles distant from
+each other. This mountain and its peculiarity is the very one mentioned by
+Dante in his _Inferno_ in the _episode_ of Ugolino:
+
+ _Cacciando il lupo e i lupicini_ AL MONTE,
+ PER CHE i Pisan veder Lucca NON ponno.[101]
+
+I started from Lucca in a cabriolet and in two hours arrived at Pisa,
+putting up at the _Tre Donzelle_ on the Quai of the Arno. Between Lucca and
+Pisa are the _Bagni di Lucca_, a favorite resort for the purpose of bathing
+and drinking the mineral waters.
+
+Pisa is one of the most beautiful cities I have seen in Italy. The extreme
+elegance and comfort of the houses, the spacious Quai on the Arno which
+furnishes a most agreeable promenade, the splendid style of architecture of
+the _Palazzi_ and public buildings, the cleanliness of the streets, the
+salubrity of the climate, the mildness of the winter, the profusion and
+cheapness of all the necessaries of life, and above all the amenity and
+simplicity of the inhabitants, combine to make Pisa an agreeable and
+favorite residence. Yet the population having much decreased there appears
+an air of melancholy stillness about the city and grass may be seen in some
+of the streets. This decay in population causes lodgings to be very cheap.
+
+The most striking object in Pisa is the leaning tower _(Torre cadente)_ and
+after that the Cathedral, Baptistery, and _Campo Santo_ which are all close
+to the tower and to each other. Imagine two fine Gothic Churches in a
+square or place like Lincoln's Inn Fields; a large oblong building nearly
+at right angles with the churches and inclosing a green grass plot in its
+quadrangle and a leaning tower of cylindrical form facing the churches: and
+then you will have a complete idea of this part of Pisa.
+
+I must not omit to mention that there is a breed of camels here belonging
+to the Grand Duke; I believe it is the only part of Europe except Turkey
+where the breed of camels is attempted to be propagated.
+
+
+LEGHORN, 17 Novr.
+
+I left Pisa for Leghorn on the morning of the 15th November, and after a
+drive of two hours in a cabriolet I arrived at the latter place and put up
+at the _Aquila Nera._ The distance between Pisa and Leghorn is only 10 or
+11 miles and a plain with few trees, either planted in corn or in
+pasturage, forms the landscape between the two cities.
+
+Leghorn (Livorno), being a modern city, does not offer anything remarkably
+interesting to the classical traveller either from its locality or its
+history. Founded under the auspices of the Medici it has risen rapidly to
+grandeur and opulence, and has eclipsed Genoa in commerce. It is a
+remarkably handsome city, the streets being all broad and at right angles;
+the _Piazze_ are large and the _Piazza Grande_ in particular is
+magnificent. There is a fine broad street leading from the _Piazza Grande_
+to the Port. The Port and Mole are striking objects and considerable
+commercial bustle prevails there.
+
+Among the few things worthy of particular notice is the Jewish Synagogue,
+decorated with costly lamps and inscriptions in gold in the Hebrew and
+Spanish languages, many of which allude to the hospitality and protection
+afforded to the Hebrew nation by the Sovereigns of Tuscany. There are a
+great number of Hebrew families here: they all speak Spanish, being the
+descendants of those unfortunate Jews who were expelled from Spain at the
+time of the expulsion of the Moors in the reign of Don Felipe III surnamed
+_el Discreto_, who was determined not to suffer either a Jew, Mahometan or
+heretic in all his dominions. This barbarous decree was the ruin and
+destruction of a number of industrious families, thousands of whom died of
+despair at being exiled from their native land. In return for this what has
+Spain gained? The Inquisition--despotism in its worst form--poverty--rags
+--lice--an overbearing insolent and sanguinary priesthood of whom the
+monarch is either the puppet or the slave; a degraded nobility; a half
+savage, grossly ignorant, lazy and brutal people. A proper judgment on the
+Spanish nation for its cruelty and fanaticism! My guide at Leghorn
+conducted me to see the burying ground belonging to the English factory,
+which is interesting enough from the variety of tombs, monuments and
+inscriptions. Here all Protestants, to whatever nation they belong, are
+buried. I noticed Smollett's tomb. It is on the whole an interesting spot,
+tho' not quite so much so as the cemetery of Père La Chaise at Paris.
+
+I returned to Florence from Leghorn _tout d'une traite_ in the diligence.
+We stopped at Fornacetti (half way) to dine. There is a good _table d'Hôte
+(ordinario)_ there.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 22nd Novr.
+
+I have become acquainted with Lord Dillon[102] and his family, who are
+residing here and from whom I have received much civility. I met at his
+house the Marchese Giuliani, one of the adherents of King Joachim, a very
+amiable and clever man who speaks English fluently. Lord Dillon is a man of
+much reading and information and his conversation is at all times a great
+treat. His lady too is very amiable and accomplished. I went one day with a
+friend of mine to a _pique-nique_ party at the Cascino, where a laughable
+adventure occurred perfectly in the stile of the _novelle_ of Boccacio. As
+it is not the custom in Florence that husbands and wives should go together
+to places of public amusement, the lady is generally accompanied by her
+_cavalier servente:_ but it by no means follows that the _cavalier
+servente_ is the favored lover: one is often adopted as a cover to another
+who enjoys the peculiar favors of the lady. A gentleman who arrived at the
+hall where the supper table was laid out, somewhat earlier than the rest of
+the company and before the chamber was lighted, observed a gentleman and
+lady ascend the staircase, turn aside by a corridor and enter a chamber
+together. It was dark and he could not distinguish their persons. He waited
+fifteen or twenty minutes and observed them leave the chamber together,
+pass along the corridor and disappear. He had the curiosity to go into the
+chamber they had just left and found on the bed a lady's glove. He took up
+the glove and put it in his pocket, determined that this incident should
+afford him some amusement at supper and the company also by putting some
+fair one to the blush. Accordingly, when the supper was nearly over, he
+held up the glove and asked with a loud voice if any lady had lost a glove;
+when his own wife who was sitting at the same table at some distance from
+him called out with the utmost _sangfroid: E il mio! dammelo: l'ho lasciato
+cadere._ You may conceive what a laugh there was against him, for he had
+related the circumstances of his finding it to several of the company
+before they sat down to supper. This reminded me of an anecdote mentioned
+by Brantôme as having occurred at Milan in his time, a glove being in this
+case also the cause of the _désagrément_. A married lady had been much
+courted by a Spanish Cavalier of the name of Leon: one day, thinking he had
+made sure of her, he followed her into her bedroom, but met with a severe
+and decided repulse and was compelled to leave her _re infectà_. In his
+confusion he left one of his gloves on the bed which remained there
+unperceived by the lady. The husband of the lady arrived shortly afterwards
+and as he was aware of the attentions of the Spaniard to his wife and had
+noticed his going into the house, he went directly to his wife's chamber,
+where the first thing that captivated his attention was a man's military
+glove on the bed. He, however, said nothing, but from that moment abstained
+from all conjugal duty. The lady finding herself thus neglected by a
+husband who had been formerly tender and attentive, was at a loss to know
+the reason, and determined to come to an _éclaircissement_ with him in as
+delicate a manner as she could. She therefore took a slip of paper, wrote
+the following lines thereon and placed it on his table:
+
+ _Vigna era, vigna son;
+ Era podada, or più non son;
+ E non sò per qual cagion
+ Non mi poda il mio patron._[103]
+
+The husband, on reading these lines, wrote the following in answer:
+
+ _Vigna eri, vigna sei;
+ Eri podada, e più non sei;
+ Per la gran fa del Leon
+ Non ti poda il tuo patron._
+
+The lady on reading these lines perceived at once the cause of her
+husband's estrangement and succeeded in explaining the matter
+satisfactorily to him, which was facilitated by the ingenuous declaration
+of Leon himself that he had tried to succeed but had been repulsed. The
+husband and wife being perfectly reconciled lived happily and no doubt the
+vine was cultivated as usual.
+
+I left Florence the 27th November, and arrived at Turin 5th December. In an
+evil hour I engaged myself to accompany an old Swiss Baroness with whom I
+became acquainted at the Hotel of Mine Hembert to accompany her to Turin.
+She had with her her son, a fine boy of thirteen years of age but very much
+spoiled. We engaged a _vetturino_ to conduct us to Turin, stopping one day
+at Milan. The Baroness did not speak Italian and generally sent for me to
+interpret for her when any disputes occurred between her and the people at
+the inns, and these disputes were tolerably frequent, as she always gave
+the servants wherever she stopped a good deal of trouble and on departing
+generally forgot to give them the _buona grazia._ I sometimes paid them for
+her myself in order to avoid noise and tumult; at other times we departed
+under vollies of abuse and imprecations such as _brutta vecchia, maladetta
+carogna,_ and so forth. The Baroness had strong aristocratic prejudices and
+was a bitter enemy of the French Revolution to which she attributed
+collectively all the _désagrémens_ she had experienced during life and all
+the inconveniences she met with during our present journey. The negligence
+and impertinence of the servants in Italy were invariably attributed by her
+to the revolutionary principle and she told me that the servants in her
+native canton Bern were the best in the world, but that even in them the
+French Revolution had made a great deal of difference and that they were
+not so submissive as they used to be. As she sent for me to be her dragoman
+in all her disputes on the road, you may conceive how glad I was to arrive
+at Turin to be rid of her. She put me in mind of Gabrina in the _Orlando
+Furioso._ We stopped one day at Milan but we were very near being detained
+two or three days at Fiacenza owing to an informality in the Baroness's
+passport, which had not been visé by the Austrian Legation at Florence. In
+vain she pleaded that she was told at the inn at Florence that such _visa_
+was not necessary; the police officer at the Austrian _Douane_, at a short
+distance beyond Piacenza, was inexorable and refused to _viser_ her
+passport to allow her to proceed. She was in a sad dilemma and it was
+thought we should be obliged to remain at Piacenza. I however recommended
+her to be guided by me and not to talk with or scold anybody, and that I
+would ensure her arrival at Milan without difficulty, for I had observed
+that her scolding the officer at the _Douane_ only served to make him more
+obstinate. I recommended her therefore that when we should arrive within
+sixty or seventy paces of the gate at Milan, she should get out of the
+carriage with her son and walk thro' the gate on foot with the utmost
+unconcern as if she belonged to the town and was returning from a
+promenade; and that while they stopped us who were in the carriage to
+examine our passports, she should walk direct to the inn where we were to
+lodge, then write to the Consul of her nation to explain the business. She
+followed my advice and passed unobserved and unmolested into Milan. On the
+preceding evening at Castel-puster-lengo at supper I asked whether she
+thought the rigour of the Austrian government was also the offspring of the
+French Revolution. The Baroness had brought up her son in all these
+feelings and particularly in a determined hatred of the Canton de Vaud; for
+in the evening when we arrived at the inn and were sitting round the fire,
+he would shake the burning faggots about and say: _Voilà la ville de
+Lausanne en cendres!_ If he grows up with these ideas and acts upon them,
+he stands a good chance of being shot in a duel by some Vaudois. It is a
+pity to see a child so spoiled, for he was a very fine boy, tho' very
+violent in his temper which probably he inherited from his mother. Somebody
+at the _pension Surpe_ at Milan who knew her told me that the Baroness was
+of an aristocratic family and had married a rich _bourgeois_ of Bern whom
+she treated rather too much _de haut en bas;_ in short that it was a
+marriage quite _à la George Dandin_, till the poor man took it into his
+head to die one day. At Turin we parted company, she for Genoa and I for
+Lausanne.
+
+
+_From Turin to Lausanne_.
+
+I felt the cold very sensibly in the journey from Florence to Milan and
+Turin. There is not a colder country in Europe than Lombardy in the winter.
+The vicinity of the Alps contributes much to this; and the houses being
+exceedingly large and having no stoves it is quite impossible that the
+fireplaces can give heat sufficient to warm the rooms. I started from Turin
+on the morning of the 9th December in the French diligence bound to Lyon,
+but taking my place only as far as Chambéry. In the diligence were a
+Piedmontese Colonel who had served under Napoleon, and a young Scotchman, a
+relation of Lord Minto. The latter was fond of excursions in ice and snow
+and on our arrival at Suza he proposed to me to start from there two or
+three hours before the diligence and to ascend Mont Cenis on foot as far as
+the _Hospice_ and I was mad enough to accede to the proposal, for it
+certainly was little less than madness in a person of my chilly habits and
+susceptibility of cold and who had passed several years within the tropics
+to scale the Alps on foot in the middle of December and to walk 24 miles in
+snow and ice at one o'clock in the morning, which was the hour at which we
+started. I was well clad in flannel and I went thro' the journey valiantly
+and in high spirits and without suffering much from the cold till within
+five miles of the Hospice, when a heavy snow storm came on; it then began
+to look a little ugly and but for Napoleon's grand _chaussès_ we were lost.
+We struggled on three miles further in the snow before we fell in with a
+_maison de refuge_. We knocked there and nobody answered. We then
+determined _coûte que coûte_ to push on to the _Hospice_ which we knew
+could not be more than two miles distant; indeed it was much more advisable
+so to do than to run the risk of being frozen by remaining two or three
+hours in the cold air till the diligence should come up. In standing still
+I began to feel the cold bitterly; so in spite of the snow storm, we pushed
+on and arrived at the inn at Mont-Cenis at five in the morning. We rubbed
+our hands and faces well with snow and took care not to approach the fire
+for several minutes, fortifying ourselves in the interim with a glass of
+brandy. We then had some coffee made and laid ourselves down to sleep by
+the side of an enormous fire until the diligence arrived, which made its
+appearance at eight o'clock. The passengers stopped to breakfast and the
+Scotchman proposed to me to make the descent of Lans-le-Bourg also on foot;
+but I was quite satisfied with the prowess I had already exhibited and
+declined the challenge. He however set off alone and thus performed the
+entire passage of Mont Cenis on foot. As for the rest of us we were carried
+down on a _traineau_; that is to say the diligence was unloaded and its
+wheels taken off; the baggage and wheels were put on one _traineau_ and the
+diligence with the passengers in it on another, and in this manner we
+descended to Lans-le-Bourg. Nothing remarkable occurred on this journey and
+we arrived at Chambéry in good case. I hired a _calèche_ to go to Geneva,
+remained there three days and arrived at Lausanne on the 18th December.
+
+
+[100] Horace, _Sat_., II, 6, 65.--ED.
+
+[101] Dante, _Inferno_, I, 33,29.--ED.
+
+[102] Henry Augustus, thirteenth Viscount Dillon (1777-1832), married
+ (1807) to Henrietta Browne (died 1862).--ED.
+
+[103] Quoted from memory, with mistakes. The text has been corrected as it
+ stands in Brantôme, _Les Dames galantes_, ed. Chasles, vol. I, p.
+ 351.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER
+WATERLOO
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MARCH-SEPTEMBER, 1817
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Clermont-Ferrand--A wretched conveyance--The
+first dish of frogs--Society in Clermont-Ferrand--General de
+Vergeunes--Cleansing the town--Return to Lausanne--A zealous
+priest--Journey to Bern and back to Lausanne--Avenches--Lake Morat--Lake
+Neufchatel--The Diet in Bern--Character of the Bernois--A beautiful
+Milanese lady.
+
+I started from Lausanne on the 4th March 1817, and arrived on the same day
+at 4 o'clock at Geneva. On my arrival at Geneva, my banker informed me that
+I had been denounced to the police, for some political opinions I had
+spoken at the _Hôtel de l'Ecu de Genéve_, previous to my journey into
+Italy, and that I had been traced as far as Turin. I went directly on
+hearing this to the police, and desired to know who my accusers were, and
+that the accusation against me might be investigated immediately. Both
+these propositions were however declined, and I was told it was an _affaire
+passeé_, and of no sort of consequence; so that from that day to this I
+have never been able to ascertain who my friends were.
+
+I left Lausanne with the intention of paying a visit to my friend Col.
+Wardle and his family at Clermont-Ferrand, in the Department of the Puy de
+Dôme, in Auvergne, where they are residing. I staid three days at Geneva,
+and then set off at 7 in the evening on the 8th March with the Courier for
+Lyons.
+
+I never regretted any thing so much, and was near paying severely for my
+rashness in putting myself into such a wretched conveyance, at such a
+season of the year; but I had made the agreement with the Courier without
+inspecting his carriage, and was obliged to adhere to the bargain. It was a
+vehicle entirely open before; it was a bitter cold, rainy, snowy night; and
+I had the rain and snow in my face the whole way, and on crossing the
+Cerdon I was seized with a violent ague fit, and suffered so much from it
+that on arrival at a village beyond Nantua where we stopped for supper, I
+determined to proceed no further, but to rest there that night; and I asked
+the innkeeper if he could furnish me with a bed for the night. He however
+made so many objections and seemed so unwilling that I should remain, that
+I was obliged to make up my mind to proceed. I allayed the _frissonnement_
+by a large glass of brandy and water, made fiery hot. At eight o'clock next
+morning I arrived at Lyons, more dead than alive. A warm bath, however,
+remaining in bed the whole day, buried in blankets, abstaining from all
+food, a few grains of calomel at night and copious libations of rice gruel
+the next day restored me completely to health; and after a _séjour_ of four
+days at Lyons, I was enabled to proceed on my journey to Clermont on the
+14th March. We arrived at Roanne in the evening and I stopped there the
+whole night.
+
+Between Lyons and Roanne is the mountain of Tarare where the road is cut
+right athwart the mountain and is consequently terribly steep; indeed it is
+the steepest ascent for a carriage I ever beheld. All the passengers were
+obliged to _bundle out_ and ascend on foot; and even then it is a most
+arduous _montée_ for such a cumbrous machine as a French diligence.
+
+The country between Lyons and Roanne appears diversified; but this is not
+the season for enjoying the beauties of nature. Roanne consists of one
+immensely long street, but it is broad, and contains excellently built
+houses and shops. There is a theatre also and baths. It is situated on the
+Loire which I now salute for the first time.
+
+The following morning at nine o'clock a _patache_ (a sort of two wheeled
+carriage) was in waiting to convey me the remainder of my journey; and I
+arrived at night at a large village or town called Thiers. Halfway between
+Roanne and Thiers, on stopping at a small village to dine, I observed a
+dish of frogs at the kitchen fire at the inn; and as it was the first time
+I had observed them as an article of food in France, I was desirous to
+taste them. They were dressed in a _fricassée_ of white sauce, and I found
+them excellent. The legs only are used. They would be delicious as a curry.
+The next morning we continued our journey; and crossing the river Allier at
+twelve o'clock, arrived at Clermont-Ferrand at 2 p.m., and dined with Col.
+Wardle. Clermont and Ferrand are two towns within a mile and half distant
+from each other and this Clermont is generally called Clermont-Ferrand to
+distinguish it from other towns of the same name.
+
+
+CLERMONT, March 26th.
+
+I have taken lodgings for a month, and board with a French family for 90
+franks per month. On the road hither the immense mountain called the Puy de
+Dôme is discernible at a great distance; it is said to have been a volcano.
+
+Clermont is a very ancient city and has an air of dullness; but the _Place_
+and promenades round the town are excellent. It is the capital of this
+department (Puy de Dôme). There is a terrible custom here of emptying the
+_aguas mayores y menores_ (as the Spaniards term those secretions) into the
+small streets that lie at the back of the houses. The consequence is that
+they are clogged up with filth and there is always a most abominable
+stench. One must be careful how one walks thro' these streets at night,
+from the liability of being saluted by a golden shower. The lower classes
+of the Auvergnats have the reputation of being dirty, slovenly and idle.
+
+Here is a church built by the English in the time of Edward III, when the
+Black Prince commanded in this country; and it was in a chapel in this
+city, the remains of which still exist, that Peter the Hermit preached the
+first crusade. These are almost the only things worthy of remark in the
+town itself, except that there is a good deal of commerce carried on,
+manufactures of crockery, cloth and silk stockings. But in the natural
+curiosities of the environs of Clermont there is a great deal to interest
+the botanist and mineralogist and above all there is a remarkable
+petrifying well, very near the town, where by leaving pieces of wood,
+shell-fish and other articles exposed to the dropping of the water, they
+become petrified in a short time. This water has the same effect on dead
+animals and rapidly converts them into stone. I have myself seen a small
+basket filled with plovers' eggs become in eight days a perfect
+petrifaction.
+
+
+CLERMONT, April 2d.
+
+I am arrived here at rather a dull season: the Carnaval is just over and
+all the young ladies are taking to their _Livres d'Heures_ to atone for any
+levity or indiscretion they may have been guilty of during the hey day of
+the Carnaval. The Wardle family have a very pleasant acquaintance here,
+chiefly among the _libéraux_, or moderate royalists, but there are some
+most inveterate _Ultras_ in this city, who keep aloof from any person of
+liberal principles, as they would of a person infected with the plague. The
+noblesse of Auvergne have the reputation of being in general ignorant and
+despotic. There is but little _agrément_ or instruction to be derived from
+their society, for they have not the ideas of the age. In general the
+nobles of Auvergne, tho' great sticklers for feudality and for their
+privileges, and tho' they disliked the Revolution, had the good sense not
+to emigrate.
+
+There is a Swiss regiment of two battalions quartered here. It bears the
+name of its Colonel, De Salis. As there are a number of officers of the old
+army here, on half pay, about three hundred in number, it is said, frequent
+disputes occur between them and the Swiss officers. The Swiss are looked
+upon by the people at large as the satellites of despotism and not without
+reason. It is, I think, degrading for any country to have foreign troops in
+pay in time of peace. Several attempts have been made in the Chamber of
+Deputies to obtain their removal or _licencíement_, but without success. As
+it is supposed that the song of the _Ranz des Vaches_ affects the
+sensibility of the Swiss very much, and makes them long to return to their
+native mountains, a wag has recommended to all the young ladies in France
+who are musicians to play and sing the _Ranz des Vaches_ with all their
+might, in order to induce the Swiss to betake themselves to their native
+country.
+
+There has been a great deal of denunciation going forward here; but the
+General de V----[104] who commands the troops in Clermont, determined to
+put a stop to it. He had the good sense to see that such a system, if
+encouraged, would be destructive of all society, prejudicial to the
+Government, and vexatious to himself; as he would be thereby kept
+continually in hot water. Accordingly, on a delator presenting himself and
+accusing another of not being well affected to the present order of things,
+and of having spoken disrespectfully of the King, M. de V---- said to him:
+"I have no doubt, Sir, that your denunciation proceeds from pure motives,
+and I give you full credit for your zeal and attachment to the royal cause;
+but I cannot take any steps against the person whom you accuse, unless you
+are willing to give me leave to publish your name and consent to be
+confronted with him, so that I may examine fairly the state of the case,
+and render justice to both parties." The accuser declined acceding to this
+proposition. The General desired him to withdraw, and shortly after
+intimated publicly that he would listen to no denunciation, unless the
+denouncer gave up his name and consented to be confronted with the accused.
+The consequence of this intimation was that all denunciations ceased. The
+late Prefect however was not so prudent, and chose rather to encourage
+delation; but mark the consequence! He arrested several persons wrongfully,
+was obliged to release them afterwards, was in continual hot water and it
+ended by the Government being obliged to displace him. To avoid the merited
+vengeance of many individuals whom he had ill-treated, he was obliged, on
+giving up his prefecture, to make a precipitate retreat from Clermont. The
+delators attempted the same system with the new Prefect and Col. Wardle,
+having invited some of the Swiss officers to a ball, to which were likewise
+invited people of all opinions, an information was lodged against him,
+purporting that he wanted to corrupt the Swiss officers from their
+allegiance. The Prefect sent the letter to Col. Wardle and said that it had
+not made the slightest impression on his mind, and that he treated it as a
+malicious report. The new Prefect adopted the same system as the General
+and tranquillity is since perfectly restored.
+
+Things have been taking a better turn since the dissolution of the _Chambre
+introuvable_. Decazes, the present minister, is an able man, and if he is
+not _contrarié_ by the _Libéraux_, he will keep the fanatical _Ultras_ in
+good order. The Bishop of Clermont is a liberal man also, and as it seems
+the wish of the present public functionaries here to conciliate, it is to
+be hoped that their example will not be lost on the _bons vieux
+gentilshommes_ of Auvergne.
+
+I find an inexhaustible fund of entertainment from the conversation of M.
+C----. He has so many interesting anecdotes to relate respecting the French
+Revolution. With regard to his present occupations, which are directed
+towards rural economy, he tells me that he has succeeded in a plan of
+cleansing the town from its Augean filth, and making it very profitable to
+himself; and that he calculates to obtain a revenue thereby of twenty
+thousand franks annually. He has, in short, undertaken to be the grand
+_scavenger_ of the town, and the Government, in addition to a salary of
+2,500 francs per annum, which they give him for his trouble, give to him
+the exclusive privilege of removing all the dung he can collect in the
+precincts of the city, and of converting it to his own advantage. He began
+by fitting up a large enclosure, walled on each side, and in which he
+deposits all the filth he can collect in the stables, yards and streets of
+Clermont. He sends his carts round the town every morning to get them
+loaded. All their contents are brought to this repository, and shot out
+there. Straw is then placed over this dung, and then earth or soil
+collected from gullies and ravines, and this arranged _stratum super
+stratum_, till it forms an immense compact cake of rich compost; and when
+it has filled one of the yards and has completed a thickness of five feet,
+he sells it to the farmers, who send their carts to carry it off. He has
+divided this enclosure or repository into three or four compartments. The
+compost therefore is prepared, and ready to be carried off in one yard,
+while the others are filling. In this he has rendered a great benefit to
+the public, for the Auvergnats are incurable in their custom of emptying
+their _pots de chambre_ out of the windows; so that the streets every
+morning are in a terrible state: but thanks to the industry of C---- his
+cars go round to collect the precious material, and all is cleared away by
+twelve o'clock. He collects bones too, and offal to add to the compost. He
+conducted me to see his premises; but the odour was too strong....
+
+I returned to Lausanne by the same route, leaving Clermont on the 6th
+April, staying four days at Lyons and as many at Geneva. Young Wardle
+accompanied me. We met with no other adventure on the road than having a
+young Catholic priest, fresh from the seminary, for our travelling
+companion, from Thiers to Roanne. This young man wished to convert Wardle
+and myself to Catholicism.
+
+Among many arguments that he made use of was that most silly one, which has
+been so often sported by the Catholic theologians, viz.: that it is much
+safer to be a Catholic than a Protestant, inasmuch as the Catholics do not
+allow that any person can be saved out of the pale of their church, whereas
+the Protestants do allow that a Catholic may be saved. I answered him that
+this very argument made more against Catholicism than any other, and that
+this intolerant spirit would ever prevent me (even had such an idea entered
+into my head) of embracing such a religion. I then told him that, once for
+all, I did not wish to enter into any theological disputes; that I had
+fully made up my mind on these subjects; and that I would rather take the
+opinion of a Voltaire or a Franklin on these matters than all the opinions
+of all the theologians and churchmen that ever sat in council from the
+Council of Nicsea to the present day. This silenced him effectually. Such
+is the absurd line of conduct pursued by the Catholic priests of the
+present day in France. Instead of reforming the discipline and dogmas of
+their church and adapting it to the enlightened ideas of the present age,
+they are sedulously employd in preaching intolerant doctrines, and reviving
+absurd legends, and pretended miracles, which have been long ago consigned
+to contempt and oblivion by all rational Catholics; and by this they hope
+to re-establish the ecclesiastical power in its former glory and
+preponderance. Vain hope! By the American and French Revolutions a great
+light is gone up to the _Gentiles_. Catholicism is on its last legs, and
+they might as soon attempt to replace our old friend and school
+acquaintance Jupiter on the throne of heaven, as to re-establish the Papal
+power in its pristine splendour; to borrow the language of the _Pilgrim's
+Progress_, the Giant _Pope_ will be soon as dead as the Giant _Pagan_.
+
+On arrival at Lyons we put up at the _Hôtel du Parc_, where I found cheaper
+and better entertainment than at the _Hôtel du Nord_.
+
+My friend young Wardle has fallen in love with a very beautiful _cafetière_
+at Lyons', and spends a great part of his time in the _café_, at which this
+nymph administers, and looks at her, _sighs, looks and sighs again_. It is
+not probable however that he will succeed in his suit, for she has been
+courted by very many others and no one has succeeded. She remains constant
+to her _good man_, and the breath of calumny has never ventured to assail
+her. I met one day at Lyons with my old friend W----s of Strassburg, who
+was a Lieutenant in the 25th Regiment in the French service and served in
+the battle of Waterloo.[105] He is now here and being on _demi-solde_,
+employs himself in a mercantile house here as principal commis. He dined
+with us and we passed a most pleasant day together.
+
+I arrived on the 20th April at Lausanne.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After remaining some weeks, at Lausanne on my return from Clermont, I
+determind on making a pedestrian trip as far as Bern and Neufchatel
+previous to returning into Italy, which it is my intention to do in
+September. I sent on my portmanteau accordingly to Payerne near Avenches,
+intending to pay a visit and pass three days with my friend, the Revd. Mr.
+J[omini],[106] the rector of the parish there, from whom I had received a
+pressing invitation. I was acquainted at Lausanne with his daughter, Mme
+C----, and was much pleased in her society. She had great talent of
+conversation, and I never in my life met with a lady possessed of so much
+historical knowledge. I started on the 27th June from Lausanne, passed the
+first night at Mondon and the next afternoon arrived at Avenches, the
+_Aventicum_ of the ancient Romans. Payerne is only a mile distant from
+Avenches, and I was received with the utmost cordiality by the worthy
+pastor and his daughter. The scenery on the road to Avenches is very like
+the scenery in all the rest of the Canton de Vaud, viz., alternate mountain
+and valley, lofty trees, and every spot capable of cultivation bearing some
+kind of produce; corn just ready for the sickle and fruit such as cherries
+and strawberries in full bloom. Avenches has an air of great antiquity and
+looks very gloomy withal, which forms a striking contrast to the neat, well
+built towns and villages of this Canton on the banks of the lake Leman
+where everything appears so stirring and cheerful. Avenches, on the
+contrary, is very dull, and there is little society.
+
+At Mr. J[omini] there were, besides his daughter, his son and his son's
+wife. All the _ministres_ (for such is the word in use to designate
+Protestant clergymen and you would give great offence were you to call them
+_prêtres_) have a fixed salary of 100£ sterling per annum, with a house and
+ground attached to the cure; so that by farming a little they can maintain
+then? families creditably. M. Jomini lost his wife some time ago, and still
+remains a widower.
+
+I left Payerne on the fifth of July and walked to the _campagne_ of M. de
+T[reytorre]us,[107] situated on the banks of the lake Morat. It is a very
+pretty country house, spacious and roomy, and I was received with the
+utmost cordiality by M. de T[reytorrens] and his amiable family. He is a
+very opulent proprietor in this part of the country, and has spent part of
+his life in England. He is a dignified looking man, a little too much
+perhaps of the old school and no friend to the innovations and changes
+arising from the French Revolution. Having lived much among the Tory
+nobility of England, he has imbibed their ideas and views of things. His
+son is now employed in one of the public offices in London. His wife and
+three daughters, one of whom is married to a _ministre_, dwell with him.
+With this family I passed three days in the most agreeable manner. I find
+the style and manner of living of the _noblesse_ (or country gentlemen, as
+we should style them) of Switzerland very comfortable, in every sense of
+the word. I wish my friends the French would take more to a country life,
+it would essentially benefit the nation. The way of living in M. de
+T[reytorre]us family is as follows. A breakfast of coffee and bread and
+butter is served up to each person separately in their own room, or in the
+_Salle à manger_, Before dinner every one follows his own avocation or
+amusement. At one, the family assemble to dinner which generally consist of
+soup, _bouilli, entrées_ of fish, flesh and fowl, _entremets_ of
+vegetables, a _rôti_ of butcher's meat, fowl or game, pastry and desert.
+The wine of the country is drunk at dinner as a table wine, and _old_ wines
+of the country or wines of foreign growth are handed round to each guest
+during the desert. After dinner coffee and liqueurs are served. After an
+hour's conversation or repose, promenades are proposed which occupy the
+time till dusk. Music, cards or reading plays fill up the rest of the
+evening, till supper is announced at nine o'clock, which is generally as
+substantial as the dinner.
+
+On taking leave of Mr. de T[reytorre]ns' family I walked to the banks of
+the lake Neufchâtel, having a stout fellow with me to carry my _sac-de
+nuit_. On arrival at the lake I crossed over in a boat to Neufchâtel, which
+lies on the other side. I remained there the whole of the day. It is a very
+pretty neat little city, in a romantic position. Its government is a
+complete anomaly. Neufchâtel forms a component part of the Helvetic
+confederacy, and yet the inhabitants are vassals of the King of Prussia,
+and the aristocracy are proud of this badge of servitude. The King of
+Prussia however does not at all interfere with its internal government, and
+his supremacy is in no other respects useful to him than in giving him a
+slight revenue. French is the language spoken in the canton. There is a
+marked distinction of rank all over Switzerland, except in Geneva, Vaud and
+the small democratic cantons such as Zug and Schwytz, where it is merely
+nominal. In short, tranquillity is the order of the day. Each rank respects
+the privileges of the other and the peasant, however rich, is not at all
+disposed to vary from his usual mode of life or to ape the noble; and
+hence, tho' sumptuary laws are no longer in force, they continue so
+virtually and the peasantry in all the German cantons adhere strictly to
+the national costume.
+
+
+BERN, 14 July.
+
+I put myself in the diligence that plies between Neufchatel and Bern at
+nine p.m., on the 12 July, and the following morning put up at the _Crown
+Inn_ in the city of Bern, in the _Pays Allemand_, whereas the French
+cantons are termed the _Pays Romand_. Bern is a remarkably elegant city as
+much so as any in Italy, and much cleaner withal. The streets are broad,
+and in most of them are _trottoirs_ under arcades. There are a great number
+of book-sellers here, and the best editions of the German authors are to be
+procured very cheap. Bern is situated on an eminence forming almost an
+island as it were in the middle of the river Aar; steep ravines are on all
+sides of it; and there is a bridge over the Aar to keep up the
+communication; and as the borders of the island, on which the city stands,
+are very steep, a zig-zag road, winding along the ravines, brings you to
+the city gates. These gates are very superb. On each side of the gates are
+two enormous white stone bears, the emblems of the tutelary genius of this
+city. The houses are very lofty and solidly built. The promenades in the
+environs of Bern are the finest I have seen anywhere, and the grounds
+allotted to this purpose are very tastefully laid out. These promenades are
+paved with gravel and cut thro' the forests, that lie on the _coteaux_ and
+ravines on the other side of the Aar. There are several neat villas in the
+neighbourhood of these promenades, and there are _cafés_ and _restaurants_
+for those who chuse to refresh themselves. Such is the beauty of these
+walks, that one feels inclined to pass the whole day among them. They are
+laid out in such variety, and are so multiplied, that you often lose your
+way; you are sure however to be brought up by a _point de vue_ at one or
+other of the angles of the zig-zag; and this serves as a guide _pour vous
+orienter_, as the French say. Another favorite promenade is a garden, in
+the town itself, that environs the whole city from which and from the
+superb terrace of the Cathedral you have a magnificent view of the glaciers
+that tower above the Grindelwald and Lauterbrunn. The immense forests that
+are in the neighbourhood of Bern form a striking contrast with the
+cornfields in the vallies and on the _coteaw._ There are but few vineyards
+in the neighbourhood of Bern.
+
+
+BERN, 16 July.
+
+The Diet is held this year in Bern and it is now sitting. I have met with
+the two Deputies of the Canton de Vaud, MM. P----- and M-----. I am glad to
+hear from them that the animosity existing between the two cantons of Bern
+and Vaud is beginning to subside. M. P------ has made a most able and
+conciliating speech at the Diet. Still there is a good deal of jealousy
+rankling in the breast of the Bern _noblesse_ and the _avulsumimperium_ is
+a very sore subject with them. I recollect once at Lausanne meeting with a
+young man of one of the principal families of Bern, who had been hi the
+English service. The conversation happened to turn on the emancipation of
+the Canton de Vaud from the domination of Bern, when the young man became
+perfectly furious and insisted that the Vaudois had no right whatever to
+their liberty, for that the Canton of Bern had purchased the province of
+Vaud from the Dukes of Savoy. _"En un mot" (said he), "ils sont nos
+esclaves, nos ilotes et ils sont aussi clairement notre propriété que les
+nègres de la Jamaïque le sont de leurs maîtres"_
+
+A very harsh measure has lately been passed in the Diet, evidently
+suggested by the aristocracy of Bern, which tended to fine and punish those
+Swiss officers who remained in Prance to serve under Napoleon after his
+return from Elba, and who did not obey the order of the Diet which recalled
+them. A very able objection has been made to this measure in a _brochure,_
+wherein it is stated that many of these officers had no means of living
+out of France and that, on a former occasion, when a number of Swiss
+officers were serving the English Government and were employed in America
+in the war against the United States in 1812 and 1818, the Diet, then under
+Napoleon's influence, issued a decree recalling them and commanding them to
+quit the English service forthwith. This they refused to do and continued
+to serve. No notice whatever was taken of this act of disobedience, when
+they returned to their native country on being disbanded in 1814, and they
+were very favourably received. Why then, says the author of this pamphlet,
+is a similar act of disobedience to pass unnoticed in one instance and to
+be so severely punished in another? Or do you wish to prove that your
+vengeance is directed only against those who remained in France, to fight
+for its liberties, when invaded by a foreign foe, while those who remained
+in America to fight against the liberties and existence of the American
+Republic you have received with applause and congratulation? Is such
+conduct worthy of Republicans? O, fie!
+
+Such an argument is in my opinion convincing for all the world except for
+an English Tory, a French _Ultra_ or a Bern Oligarch.
+
+The Arsenal here is well worth seeing; here is a superb collection of
+ancient armour, much of which were the spoils of the Austrian and
+Burgundian chivalry, who fell in their attempts to crush Helvetic liberty.
+
+By way of shewing how fond the Bernois are of old institutions and customs,
+they have been at the trouble to catch three or four bears and keep them in
+a walled pit in the city, where they are well fed and taken care of. The
+popular superstition is that the bears entertained in this manner
+contribute to the safety of the commonwealth; and this establishment
+continued ever in full force, until the dissolution of the old Confederacy
+took place and the establishment in its place of the Helvetic Republic
+under the influence of the French directorial government. The custom, then,
+appearing absurd and useless, was abolished, and the bears were sold. But
+since the peace of 1814 other bears have been caught and are nourishd, as
+the former ones were, at the expence of the state.
+
+Bern derives its name from _Büren_, the German word for _Bears_ (plural
+number). Only the French spell _Berne_, with an _e_ at the end of it.
+
+There are no theatrical amusements going forward here. Cards and now and
+then a little music form the evening recreations.
+
+In the inn at Bern I became acquainted with a most delightful Milanese lady
+and her son. Her name is L------; she is the widow of an opulent banker at
+Milan and has a large family of children. She was about thirty-eight years
+of age and is still a remarkably handsome woman. Time has made very little
+impression on her and she unites very pleasing manners with a great taste
+for litterature. She is greatly proficient in the English language and
+litterature, which she understands thoroughly, tho' she speaks it with
+difficulty. She is an enthusiastic admirer of Shakespeare, Milton and
+Byron. She had been to Zurich for her son, who was employed in a commercial
+house there, in order to take him back with her into Italy. She spoke
+French as well as Italian, and her son had a very good knowledge of German.
+She offered me a seat in her carriage, on the understanding that I was
+going to Lausanne, where she intended to stop a day or two. An offer of the
+kind made by so elegant and fascinating a woman you may be assured I did
+not scruple to accept, and I was in hopes of improving on this acquaintance
+and renewing it at Milan. Indeed, did not business oblige me to remain some
+weeks at Lausanne, I should certainly offer my services to escort her all
+the way to Milan. She had letters of introduction for Lausanne, and during
+her stay there I acted as her _cicerone_, to point out the most interesting
+objects and points of view, which the place affords.
+
+
+[104] Louis Charles Joseph Gravier, vicomte de Vergennes d'Alonné, was the
+ son of the Comte de Vergennes, who was minister under the reign of
+ Louisi XVI. Born at Constantinople in 1766, he took service at the
+ early age of thirteen, was promoted captain in 1782 and colonel in
+ 1788. Having emigrated in 1791, he served in Condé's army, then took
+ service in England from 1795 to 1797. On the 3rd March, 1815, he
+ re-entered the army as "maréchal de camp," and, on the 2nd November of
+ that same year, was promoted general commander of the department of
+ Puy de Dôme. He retired on the 8th March, 1817, and seems to have been
+ much regretted at Clermont. Died 1821.--ED.
+
+[105] Jean François Wlnkens, born at Aix-la-Chapelle In 1790, is mentioned
+ in the records of the French War Office as having served in the 25th
+ Regiment at Waterloo. His family may have belonged to Strassburg.--ED.
+
+[106] Pierre Jacques Jomini, Protestant minister at Avenches from 1808 to
+ 1819.--ED.
+
+[107] The Treytorrens family, of old nobility and fame, now extinct,
+ possessed a large estate at Guévaux, on the borders of the lake of
+ Morat.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEPTEMBER 1817-APRIL 1818
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Milan, Florence, Rome and Naples--Residence at
+Naples--The theatre of San Carlo--Rossini's operas--Gaming in Naples--The
+_Lazzaroni_--Public writers--Carbonarism--Return to Rome--Christmas eve at
+Santa Maria Maggiore--Mme Dionigi--Theatricals--Society in Rome--The papal
+government--Lucien Bonaparte, prince of Canino--Louis Napoleon, ex-King of
+Holland--Pope Pius VII--Thorwaldsen--Granet--The Holy Week in Rome--The
+Duchess of Devonshire--From Rome to Florence by the Perugia road.
+
+I started from Lausanne with a party of two ladies in a Milanese _vettura_
+on the morning of the 20th September. We arrived at Milan on the 25th late
+in the evening. On passing the Simplon we met with three or four men who
+had the appearance of soldiers, and asked for alms something in the style
+of the old Spanish soldier who accosted Gil Blas on his first journey. Our
+ladies were a little alarmed. On travelling over the plains of Lombardy,
+one of these ladies, who had never before been out of her country
+(Switzerland) and was consequently accustomed to see the horizon bounded at
+a very short distance by immense mountains on all sides, was much alarmed,
+on arrival at the plain, at seeing no bounds to the horizon; she was
+apprehensive of _falling down_ and _rolling over_. Her remark reminded me
+of one of the objections made to the project of Columbus's voyage in
+discovery of a western passage to India; it was said that in consequence of
+the rotundity of the earth they would roll down and never be able to get up
+again. The sensation experienced by my fellow traveller, however, may be
+well accounted for and explained by any one who from a plain surface
+situated on a great height looks down without a railing or balcony.
+
+These ladies were quite delighted with the splendour and bustle of Milan
+and particularly when I took them to the _Scala_ theatre, where a very
+splendid _Ballo_ was given, intitled _Sammi Ré d'Egitto_. The scenery and
+decorations were magnificent, being taken from Denon's drawings of Egyptian
+views, and the costume was exceedingly appropriate. My fellow travellers
+were much struck at the appearance of the horses on the stage and the
+grotesque dancing. The last scene was the most magnificent. It represented
+the great Pyramids, on the angles of which stood a line of soldiers from
+the _base_ to the _apex_ holding lighted torches. The _coup d'oeil_ was
+enchanting. I took the ladies to see my old friend Girolamo and in fine was
+their _cicerone_ every where. We remained only four days at Milan and then
+proceeded to Florence, where we arrived on the 7th October. We employed six
+days for our journey and one day we halted at Bologna. After remaining four
+days at Florence and taking the Radicofani road we arrived at Rome the 18th
+October.
+
+At Rome I met my friend P.G. and his wife who were travelling towards
+Naples and I likewise made two very pleasant acquaintances, the one a
+Portuguese, the other a Milanese. The Milanese is a cousin of the
+Neapolitan minister Di M------; and the Portuguese (M. de N------) had been
+employed by his Government in a diplomatic capacity at Vienna. At Rome I
+engaged appartments from the 20th of December for three months and then
+started for Naples, with the intention of passing two months there, and
+returning to Rome, to be in time to witness the fete at Christmas Eve. At
+Velletri I met with a Jamaica family, Mr and Mrs O------, with their
+daughter and daughter-in-law; and we were strongly advised to take an
+escort as far as _Torre tre ponti_, being obliged to start very early from
+Velletri in order to reach Terracina before night-fall. Nothing however
+occurred and we arrived at Terracina without accident. The rascally
+innkeeper there made Mr O------ pay forty franks for each miserable room
+that he occupied, and fifteen franks a head for his supper; he was very
+insolent with all. I was rejoiced to find that in one instance he failed in
+his hopes of extortion. As he is obliged by law to furnish supper and beds
+at a fixed price to those who travel with _vetturini_ and are _spesati_,
+he, whenever a _vetturino_ arrives locks up all his decent chambers and
+says that they are engaged, in order to keep them for those travellers who
+may arrive in their own carriages and whom he can fleece _ad libitum_. A
+friend of mine and his lady, who were travelling in their own carriage,
+had, in order to avoid this extortion, engaged with a _vetturino_ to
+conduct them from Naples to Rome with _his horses_, but their own carriage,
+and, had stipulated to be _spesati_. Mine host of Terracina, seeing a smart
+carriage drive up, ordered one of his best rooms to be got ready, ushered
+them in himself and returnd in half an hour to ask what they would have for
+supper; when to his great astonishment and mortification, they referred him
+for the arrangement of the supper to the _vetturino_, saying that they were
+_spesati_. He then began to curse and swear, said that they should not have
+that room, and wanted to turn them out of it forcibly; but my friend Major
+G---- took up one of his pistols, which were lying on the table, and told
+the innkeeper that if he did not cease to molest them and instantly quit
+the room, he would blow out his brains. This threat had the desired effect,
+and he withdrew. It appears that this fellow has in the end outwitted
+himself, for most people now, who travel on this road in their own
+carriage, chuse to travel with a _vetturino_ and his horses and are
+_spesati_, solely in order to avoid the extortion practised upon them.
+
+We arrived at Naples on the 29th October without accident. A _buona grazia_
+of a _scudo_ at the frontier obviated the delay which would otherwise have
+occurred in examining our baggage by the _douaniers_. I put up at No 1
+_Largo St Anna di Palazzo_, near the _Strada di Toledo_, at the house of
+one Berlier, who had been a domestic of poor Murat's. The Austrian troops
+being now withdrawn, the military cordon of sentinels from the frontier to
+Naples is kept up by the Neapolitan troops; but what a contrast between the
+vigilance of the Austrian sentinels, and the negligence of the Neapolitans!
+The last time I travelled on this road, I never failed, after dusk, to hear
+the shout of _Wer da?_ of the Austrian sentries, long before I came up to
+them, and I always found them alert. Now that the cordon was Neapolitan, I
+always found the sentries either asleep, or playing at cards with their
+companion (the sentries being double), both having left their arms at the
+place where they were posted. At night I have no doubt they all fall
+asleep, so that three or four active _banditti_ might come and cut the
+throats of the whole chain of sentries in detail.
+
+
+30th October, 1818.
+
+I have begun my course of water drinking at the fountain of Sta Lucia.
+Since I was here the last time, the theatre of St Carlo has been finished
+and I went to visit it the second night after my arrival. It is a noble
+theatre and of immense size, larger it is said than the _Scala_ at Milan,
+tho' it does not appear so. The profusion of ornament and gilding serves to
+diminish the appearance of its magnitude. It is probably now the most
+magnificent theatre in Europe. The performance was _Il Babiere di Siviglia_
+by Rossini, and afterwards a superb _Ballo_ taken closely from Coleman's
+_Blue-Beard_ and arranged as a _Ballo_ by Vestris. The only difference lies
+in the costume and the scenery; for here the _Barbe Bleue,_ instead of
+being a Turkish Pacha, as in Coleman's piece, is a Chinese Mandarin, and
+the decorations are all Chinese. A great deal of Scotch music is introduced
+in this _Ballo,_ and seems to give great satisfaction. At the little
+theatre of San Carlino I witnessed the representation of Rossini's
+_Cenerentola,_ a most delightful piece. The young actress who did the part
+of Cenerentola acted it to perfection and sung so sweetly and correctly,
+that it would seem as if the _rôle_ were composed on purpose for her. The
+part of Don Magnifico was extremely well played, and those of the sisters
+very fairly and appropriately. The three actresses who did the part of
+Cenerentola and her sisters, were all handsome, but she who did Cenerentola
+surpassed them all; she was a perfect beauty and a grace. I think the music
+of this opera would please the public taste in England. Rossini seems to
+have banished every other musical composer from the stage.
+
+I have seen, at the Theatre of San Carlo, the _Don Giovanni_ of Mozart; but
+certainly, after being accustomed to the extreme vivacity of Rossini's
+style, the music, even of the divine Mozart, appears to go off heavily.
+There is too much of what the French call _musique de fanfares_ in the
+opera of _Don Giovanni_ and I believe most of the Italians are of my way of
+thinking.
+
+We have just heard of the death of the poor Princess Charlotte. I am no
+great admirer of Kings and Queens; and yet I must own, I could not help
+feeling regret for the death of this princess. I had formed a very high
+opinion of her, from many traits in her character; and I fancied and hoped
+that she was destined to redeem England from the degradation and bad odour
+into which she had been plunged by the borough-mongers and bureaucrats,
+engendered by the Pitt system. She had liberal ideas and an independent
+spirit. I really almost caught myself shedding tears at this event, and had
+she been buried here, I should have gone to scatter flowers upon her tomb:
+
+ His saltem accumulem donis, et fungar inani
+ Munere.[108]
+
+Has no royalist or ministerial poet been found to do hommage to her
+_manes_? Had she lived to be Queen of England she would have found a
+thousand venal pens to give her every virtue under heaven.
+
+There is a professor of natural philosophy now at Naples, of the name of
+Amici, from Modena, who has invented a microscope of immense power. The
+circulation of the blood in the thigh of a frog (the coldest animal in
+nature), when viewed thro' this microscope, appears to take place with the
+rapidity of a Swiss torrent.
+
+Since I have been here, I have once more ascended Vesuvius; there was no
+eruption at all this time, but I witnessed the sight of a stream of red-hot
+liquid lava flowing slowly down the flank of the mountain. It was about two
+and a half feet broad.
+
+In my letters from Naples, the last time I was there, I gave you some idea
+of the state of society. Among the upper classes gaming is reduced to a
+science and is almost exclusively the order of the day. There is little or
+no taste for litterature among any part of the native society. The upper
+classes are sensualists; the middling ignorant and superstitious. With
+regard to the _Lazzaroni_, I do not think that they at all deserve the ill
+name that has been given to them. They always seem good humoured and
+willing to work, when employment is given to them; and they do not appear
+at all disposed to disturb the public peace, which, from their being so
+numerous and formidable a body, they could easily do. The Neapolitan
+dialect has a far greater affinity to the Spanish than to the Tuscan, and
+there are likewise, a great many Greek words in it. When one takes into
+consideration the extreme ignorance that prevails among the Neapolitans in
+general, one is astonished that such a prodigy of genius as Filangieri
+could have sprung up among them. What talent, application, deep research
+and judgment were united in that illustrious man! And yet there are many
+Neapolitans of rank who have never heard of him. Would you believe that on
+my asking one of the principal booksellers in Naples for Filangieri's work
+on legislation (an immortal work which has called forth the admiration and
+eulogy of the greatest geniuses of the age, of which Benjamin Franklin and
+Sir Wm Jones spoke in the most unqualified terms of approbation; a work
+which has been translated into all the languages of Europe), I was told by
+the bookseller that he had never heard either of the author or of his work.
+
+A very curious thing at Naples is the number of public writers; who compose
+letters and memorials in booths, fitted up in the streets. As the great
+majority of the people are so ignorant as to be unable to read or write, it
+follows that when they receive letters, they must find somebody to read
+them for them and to write the answers required. They accordingly, on the
+receipt of a letter, bring it to one of these public scribes, ask him to
+read it for them and to write an answer, for which trouble he receives a
+fixed pay. These writers are thus let into the secrets of family affairs of
+more than half of the city; and as some-of them are in the pay of the
+Government for communicating intelligence, you may guess how formidable
+they may become to liberty and how dangerous an engine in the hands of a
+despotic Government.
+
+It appears that the theatre of San Carlo is principally kept up by gaming;
+that is to say, the managers and proprietors would not undertake the
+direction of it without the Gaming Bank being annexed to it; for otherwise
+they would lose money, the expence of the Opera on account of the
+magnificent decorations of the Ballets being very great, which the receipts
+of the theatre are insufficient to meet; but the profits of the Casino
+cover all and amply reimburse the proprietors.
+
+With regard to political opinions here there is a great stagnation. It
+costs the Neapolitans too much trouble to think and reflect. M-----, the
+principal minister, is however no favourite; neither is N-----, who has
+quitted the Austrian service, and is nominated Captain-General of the
+Neapolitan army.[109]
+
+There is a great talk about the increase of Carbonarism. You will probably
+ask me what Carbonarism means. I am not initiated in the secret of the
+Carbonari; but as far as I can understand, this sect or secret society has
+its mysteries like modern Free-masonry or like the Orphics of old, and
+several progressive degrees of initiation are required. Its secret object
+is said to be the emancipation of Italy from a foreign despotism and the
+forming of a government purely national. This is the reason why this sect
+is regarded with as much jealousy by the different governments of Italy as
+the early Christians used to be by the Pagan Emperors. Great proofs of
+courage, constancy and self denial are required from the initiated; and
+very many fail, or do not rise beyond the lower degrees of initiation, for
+it is very difficult for an Italian to withstand sensuality. But the
+leaders of this sect are perfectly in the right to require such proofs, for
+no man is fit to be trusted with any political design whatever, who has not
+obtained the greatest mastery over his passions. The word _Carbonari_, I
+need not tell you, means _Coalmen_; the Italian history presents many
+examples of secret societies taking their appellation from some mechanical
+profession.
+
+I have now been nearly two months in Naples, and the _zampogne_ or
+bag-pipes, which play about the streets at night, announce the speedy
+approach of Christmas, so that I shall soon take my departure for Rome.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I left Naples on the 18th of December and arrived at Rome on the 22d. I am
+settled in my old lodgings, No. 29 _Piazza di Spagna_. Nothing worth
+mentioning occurred during the journey.
+
+The fete, of the birth of Christ held at Santa Maria Maggiore on the
+evening of the 24th December is of the most splendid description, and
+attended by an immense crowd of women. Guns are fired on the moment that
+the birth of the Saviour is announced, and this event occurs precisely at
+midnight. The Romans seem to rejoice as much at the anniversary of this
+event, as if it happened for the first time, and as if immediate temporal
+advantage were to be derived from it.
+
+I have mixed a good deal in society in Rome since my return from Naples.
+Among other acquaintance I must particularly distinguish Mme Dionigi, a
+very celebrated lady, possessing universality of talent.[110] She is well
+known all over Italy, for the extent of her litterary attainments, but more
+particularly for her proficiency in the fine arts, above all in painting,
+of which she is an adept. She also possesses the most amiable qualities of
+the heart, and is universally beloved and respected for the worth of her
+private character, and for her generous disposition. She has all the
+vivacity of intellect belonging to youth, tho' now nearly eighty-six years
+of age,[111] and of a very delicate physical constitution; in short she
+affords, and I often tell her so, the most striking proof of the
+immortality of the soul. There is a _conversazione_ at her house twice a
+week, where you meet with foreign as well as Italian _litterati_, and
+persons of distinction of all nations, tongues and languages. Her eldest
+daughter, Mme D'Orfei, is an excellent _improvisatrice_, and has frequently
+given us very favourable specimens of the inspiration which breathes itself
+in her soul. I have likewise witnessed the talent of two very extraordinary
+_improvisatori_, the one a young girl of eighteen years of age, by name
+Rosa Taddei. She is the daughter of the proprietor of the _Teatro della
+Valle_ at Rome, and sometimes performs herself in dramatic pieces; yet,
+strange to say, tho' she is an admirable _improvisatrice_ and possesses a
+thorough classic and historical knowledge, she is but an indifferent
+actress.
+
+It is a great shame that her father obliges her to act on the stage in very
+inferior parts, when she ought only to exhibit on the tripod. I assisted at
+an _Accademia_ given by her one evening at the _Teatro della Valle_, when
+she improvised on the following subjects, which were proposed by various
+members of the audience: 1st, _La morte d'Egeo_; 2dy, _La Madre Ebrea_;
+3rd, _Coriolano alle mura di Roma_; 4th, _Ugolino_; 5th, _Saffo e Faone_;
+6th, in the Carnaval with the following _intercalario: "Maschera ti
+conosco, tieni la benda al cor_!" which _intercalario_ compels a rhyme in
+_osco_, a most difficult one. The _Madre Ebrea_ and _Coriolano_ were given
+in _ottava rima_ with a _rima obbligata_ for each stanza. The _Morte
+d'Egeo_ was given in _terza rima_. Her versification appeared to be
+excellent, nor could I detect the absence or superabundance, of a single
+syllable. She requires the aid of music, chuses the melody; the audience
+propose the subject, and _rima obbligata_, and the _intercalario_, where it
+is required. In her gestures, particularly before she begins to recite, she
+reminded me of the description given of the priestess of. Delphi. She walks
+along the stage for four or five minutes in silent meditation on the
+subject proposed, then suddenly stops, calls to the musicians to play a
+certain symphony and then begins as if inspired. Among the different rhimes
+in _osco_, a gentleman who sat next to me proposed to her _Cimosco_. I
+asked him what _Cimosco_ he meant; he replied a Tuscan poet of that name.
+For my part, I had never heard of any other of that name than the King
+_Cimosco_ in the _Orlando Furioso_, who makes use of fire-arms; and Rosa
+Taddei was, it appears, of my opinion, since this was the _Cimosco_ she
+chose to characterise; and she made thereby a very neat and happy
+comparison between the gun of Cimosco and the arrow of Cupid. This talent
+of the _improvisatori_ is certainly wonderful, and one for which there is
+no accounting. It appears peculiar to the Italian nation alone among the
+moderns, but probably was in vogue among the ancient Greeks also. It is
+certain that Rosa Taddei gives as fine thoughts as are to be met with in
+most poets, and I am very much tempted to incline to Forsyth's opinion that
+Homer himself was neither more nor less than an _improvisatore_, the Greek
+language affording nearly as many poetic licences as the Italian, and the
+faculty of heaping epithet on epithet being common in both languages.
+
+The other genius in this wonderful art is Signer Sgricci. He is so far
+superior to Rosa Taddei in being five or six years older, in being a very
+good Latinist and hi _improvising_ whole tragedies on any subject, chosen
+by the audience. When the subject is chosen, he develops his plan, fixes
+his _dramatis personae_ and then strikes off in _versi sciolti_. He at
+times introduces a chorus with lyric poetry. I was present one evening at
+an _Accademia_ given by him in the Palazzo Chigi. The subject chosen was
+_Sophonisba_ and it was wonderful the manner in which he varied his plot
+from that of every other dramatic author on the same subject. He _acted_
+the drama, as well as composed it, and pourtrayed the different characters
+with the happiest effect. The ardent passion and impetuosity of Massinissa,
+the studied calm philosophy and stoicism of Scipio, the romantic yet
+dignified attachment of Sophonisba, and the plain soldierlike honorable
+behaviour of Syphax were given in a very superior style. I recollect
+particularly a line he puts in the mouth of Scipio, when he is endeavouring
+to persuade Massinissa to resist the allurements and blandishments of love:
+
+ Chè cor di donne è laberinto, in quale
+ Facil si perde l'intelletto umano.
+
+This drama he divided into three acts, and on its termination he improvised
+a poem in _terza rima_ on the subject of the contest of Ajax and Ulysses
+for the armour of Achilles.
+
+Wonderful, however, as this act of improvising may appear, it is not
+perhaps so much so as the mathematical faculty of a youth of eight years of
+age, Yorkshireman by birth, who has lately exhibited his talent for
+arithmetical calculation _improvised_ in England and who in a few seconds,
+from mental calculation, could give the cube root of a number containing
+fifteen or sixteen figures.
+
+Is not all this a confirmation of Doctor Gall's theory on craniology? viz.,
+that our faculties depend on the organisation of the scull. I think I have
+seen this frequently exemplified at Eton. I have known a boy who could not
+compose a verse, make a considerable figure in arithmetic and geometry; and
+another, who could write Latin verse with almost Ovidian elegance, and yet
+could not work the simplest question in vulgar fractions. Indeed, I think
+there seems little doubt that we are born with dispositions and
+propensities, which may be developed and encouraged, or damped and checked
+altogether by education.
+
+I have become acquainted with several families at Rome, so that I am at no
+loss where to spend my evenings. Music is the never failing resource for
+those with whom the spirit of conversation fails. The society at Rome is
+perfectly free from etiquette or _gêne_. When once presented to a family
+you may enter their house every evening without invitation, make your bow
+to the master and mistress of the house, enter into conversation or not as
+you please. You may absent yourself for weeks together from these
+_conversazioni_, and nobody will on your re-appearance enquire where you
+have been or what you have been doing. In short, in the intercourse with
+Roman society, you meet with great affability, sometimes a little _ennui_,
+but no _commérage_. The _avvocati_ may be said to form almost exclusively
+the middling class in Rome, and they educate their families very
+respectably. This class was much caressed by the French Government during
+the time that Rome was annexed to the French Empire, and most of the
+employés of the Government at that time were taken from this class. I have
+met with several sensible well-informed people, who have been accurate
+observers of the times, and had derived profit in point of instruction from
+the scenes they had witnessed.
+
+The Papal Government began, as most of the restored governments did, by
+displacing many of these gentlemen, for no other fault than because they
+had served under the Ex-government, and replaced them by ecclesiastics, as
+in the olden time. But the Papal Government very soon discovered that the
+whole political machine would be very soon at a stand, by such an
+_épuration_; and the most of them have been since reinstated. Consalvi, the
+Secretary of State, is a very sensible man; he has hard battles to fight
+with the _Ultras_ of Rome in order to maintain in force the useful
+regulations introduced by the French Government, particularly the
+organisation of a vigilant police, and the putting a stop to the murders
+and robberies, which used formerly to be committed with impunity. The
+French checked the system of granting asylum to these vagabonds altogether.
+But on the restoration of the Papal Government a strong interest was made
+to allow asylums, as formerly, to criminals. Many of these gentry began to
+think that the good old times were come again, wherein they could commit
+with impunity the most atrocious crimes; and no less than eighty persons
+were in prison at one time for murder. This opened the eyes of the
+Government, and Consalvi insisted on the execution of these men and carried
+his point of establishing a vigilant police. The Army too has been put on a
+better footing. The Papal troops are now clothed and disciplined in the
+French manner, and make a most respectable appearance. The infantry is
+clothed in white; the cavalry in green. The cockade is white and yellow. No
+greater proof can be given of the merit and utility of the French
+institutions in Italy, than the circumstance of all the restored
+Governments being obliged by their interests (tho' contrary to their wishes
+and prejudices), to adopt and enforce them. There is still required,
+however, a severer law for the punishment of post office defalcations.
+Simple dismissal is by no means adequate, when it is considered how much
+mischief may ensue from such offences. A very serious offence of this
+nature and which has made a great sensation, has lately occurred. As all
+foreign letters must be franked, and as the postage to England is very
+high, one of the clerks at the Post office had been in the habit of
+receiving money for the franking of letters, appropriated it to his own
+use, and never forwarded the letters. This created great inconvenience; a
+number of families having never received answers to their letters and being
+without the expected remittances, began to be uneasy and to complain. An
+enquiry was instituted, and it was discovered that the clerk above
+mentioned had been carrying on this game to a great extent. He used to tear
+the letters and throw the fragments into a closet. Several scraps of
+letters were thus discovered and, on being examined, he made an ample
+confession of his practises. He was merely discharged, and no other
+punishment was indicted on him. I am no advocate for the punishment of
+death for any other crime but wilful murder; but surely this fellow was
+worse than a robber, and deserved a greater severity of punishment.
+
+
+ROME, 10th February, 1818.
+
+The Carnaval has long since begun, and this is the heaven of the Roman
+ladies. On my remarking to a lady that I was soon tired of it and after a
+day or two found it very childish, she replied: "_Bisogna esser donna e
+donna Italiana per ben godere de' piaceri del Carnevale_."
+
+When I speak of the Carnaval, I speak of the last ten days of it which
+precede Lent. The following is the detail of the day's amusement during the
+season.
+
+After dinner, which is always early, the masks sally out and repair to the
+_Corso_. The windows and balconies of the houses are filled with
+spectators, in and out of masks. A scaffolding containing an immense number
+of seats is constructed in the shape of a rectangle, beginning at the
+_Piazza del Popolo_, running parallel to the _Corso_ on each side, and
+terminating near the _Piazza di Venezia_; close to which is the goal of the
+horse race that takes place in this enclosure. Carriages, with persons in
+them, generally masked, parade up and down this space in two currents, the
+one ascending, the other descending the _Corso_. They are saluted as they
+pass with showers of white comfits from the spectators on the seats of the
+scaffolding, or from the balconies and windows on each side of the street.
+These comfits break into a white powder and bespatter the clothes of the
+person on whom they fall as if hair-powder had been thrown on them. This
+seems to be the grand joke of this part of the Carnival. After the
+carriages have paraded about an hour, a signal is given by the firing of a
+gun that the horse race is about to begin. The carriages, on the gun being
+fired, must immediately evacuate the _Corso_ in order to leave it clear for
+the race; some move off and _rendezvous_ on the _Piazza del Popolo_ just
+behind the scaffolding, from the foot of which the horses start; others
+file off by the _Via Ripetta_ and take their stand on the _Piazza Colonna_.
+The horse-race is performed by horses without riders, generally five or six
+at a time. They are each held with a bridle or halter by a man who stands
+by them, in order to prevent their starting before the signal is given; and
+this requires no small degree of force and dexterity, as the horses are
+exceedingly impatient to set off. The manes of the horses are dressed in
+ribbands of different colours to distinguish them. Pieces of tin, small
+bells and other noisy materials are fastened to their manes and tails, in
+order by frightening the poor animals, to make them run the faster, and
+with this view also squibs and crackers are discharged at them as they pass
+along. A second gun is the signal for starting; the keepers loose their
+hold, and off go the horses. The horse that arrives the first at the goal
+wins the grand prize; and there are smaller ones for the two next. This
+race is repeated four or five times till dusk, and then the company
+separate and return home to dress. They then repair to the balls at the
+different casinos, and at the conclusion of the ball, supper parties are
+formed either at _restaurants_ or at each other's houses. During the time
+occupied in the balls and promenades, as every body goes masked either in
+character or in _domino_, there is a fine opportunity for pairing off, and
+it is no doubt turned to account. This is a pretty accurate account of a
+Roman Carnaval. A great deal of wit and repartee takes place among the
+masks and they are in general extremely well supported, and indeed they
+ought to be, for there is a great sameness of character assumed at every
+masquerade, and very little novelty is struck out, except perhaps by some
+foreigner, who chuses to introduce a national character of his own, which
+is probably but little, or not at all, understood by the natives, and very
+often not at all well supported by the foreigner himself. An American
+gentleman once made his appearance as an Indian warrior with his
+war-hatchet and calumet; he danced the war dance, which excited great
+astonishment. He then presented his calumet to a mask, who not knowing what
+the ceremony meant, declined it, when the Mohawk flourished his hatchet and
+gave such a dreadful shriek as to set the whole company in alarm.[112] On
+the whole this character was so little understood that it was looked upon
+as a _mauvaise plaisanterie_.
+
+The usual characters are Pulcinelli, Arlecchini, Spanish Grandees, Turks,
+fortune tellers, flower girls and Devils; sometimes too they go in the
+costume of the Gods and Goddesses of the ancient mythology. I observe that
+the English ladies here prefer to appear without masks in the costume of
+the Swiss and Italian peasantry.
+
+There is a very large English society at Rome, and at some of the parties
+here, you could suppose yourself in Grosvenor Square.
+
+The late political changes have brought together in Rome many persons of
+the most opposite parties and sentiments, who have fallen from the height
+of political power and influence into a private station, but who enjoy
+themselves here unmolested, and even protected by the Government, and are
+much courted by foreigners. I have seen at the same masquerade, in the
+_Teatro Aliberti_, in boxes close to each other, the Queen of Spam (mother
+of Ferdinand VII), and the Princess Borghese, Napoleon's sister. In a box
+at a short distance from them were Lucian Buonaparte, his wife and
+daughters. Besides these, the following ex-Sovereigns and persons of
+distinction, fallen from their high estate, reside in Rome, viz., King
+Charles IV of Spain; the ex-King of Holland, Louis Buonaparte; the
+abdicated King of Sardinia, Victor Emanuel; Don Manuel Godoy, the Prince of
+Peace; Cardinal Fesch, and Madame Letitia, the mother of Napoleon.
+
+I had an opportunity of being presented to Lucian, who bears the title of
+Prince of Canino, before I left Rome for Naples, as on leaving the Pays de
+Vaud I was charged by a Swiss gentleman to deliver a letter to him, the
+purport of which was to state that he had rendered services to Joseph
+Napoleon, when he was resident in that Canton, in consequence of which he
+had been persecuted and deprived of his employment at Lausanne, which was
+that of Captain of the Gendarmerie; and in the letter he sollicited
+pecuniary assistance from the Prince of Canino. I rode out one morning to
+the Villa of Ruffinella where the Prince resides and was very politely
+received; it appeared however that the Prince was totally unacquainted with
+the person who wrote the letter, nor was he at all aware of the
+circumstances therein mentioned. I told him that I was but little
+acquainted with the writer of the letter, but that he, on hearing of my
+intention of going to Rome, asked me to deliver it personally. The Prince
+told me he would write himself to the applicant on the subject. Here the
+negotiation ended; but on my taking leave the Prince said he should be
+happy to see me whenever I chose to call. The Prince has the character of
+being an excellent father and husband, and seems entirely and almost
+exclusively devoted to his family. He has a remarkably fine collection of
+pictures and statues in his house at Rome.
+
+I had an opportunity likewise of seeing the ex-King of Holland, Louis
+Napoleon, who seems to be a most excellent and amiable man, and in fact
+everybody agrees in speaking of him with eulogy.
+
+With regard to the present Pontiff Pius VII, from the excellence of his
+private character and virtues, and from his unassuming manners and goodness
+of heart, there is but one opinion respecting him. Even those who do not
+like the ecclesiastical Government, and behold in it the degradation of
+Italy, render justice to the good qualities of Pius VII. He always
+displayed the greatest moderation and humanity in prosperity, and in
+adversity he was firm and dignified. In his morals and habits he is quite a
+primitive Christian, and if he does not possess that great political talent
+which has distinguished some of his predecessors, he has been particularly
+fortunate and discriminating in the choice of his minister, in whom are
+united ability, firmness, suavity of manner and unimpeachable character. I
+think I have thus given a faithful delineation of Cardinal Consalvi.
+
+
+ROME, March 12th.
+
+I have made a very valuable acquaintance in M. K[ölle][113] the envoy of
+the King of Würtemberg, to the Holy See. He is an enthusiastic admirer of
+his countryman the poet Schiller, and thro' his means of procuring German
+books, I am enabled to prosecute my studies in that noble language. An
+Italian lady there having heard much of Schiller and Bürger, and not being
+acquainted with the German language, requested me to make an Italian
+translation of some of the pieces of those poets; chusing the _Leonora_ of
+Bürger as one, and leaving to myself the choice of one from Schiller, I
+represented the extreme difficulty of the task, but as she had read a
+sonnet of mine on Lord Guildford's project of establishing an University in
+the Italian language, she would not hear of any excuse. To work then I set,
+and completed the translation of _Leonora_, together with one of Schiller's
+_Feast of Eleusis_. These and my sonnet were the cause of my being
+recommended for admission as a member of the Academy _degli Arcadi_ in Rome
+and I received the pastoral name of _Galeso Itaoense_.
+
+The Carnaval is now over and the ladies are all at their _Livres d'Heures_,
+posting masses and prayers to the credit side, to counterbalance the sins
+and frailties committed during the carnaval in the account which they keep
+in the Ledger of Heaven. Dancing and masquerading are now over and
+_Requiems_ and the _Miserere_ the order of the day at the _conversazioni_.
+
+At Mr K[ölle]'s house I have become acquainted with Thorwaldsen, the famous
+Danish sculptor, who is by many considered as the successful rival of
+Canova; but their respective styles are so different, that a comparison can
+scarce be made between them. Canova excels in the soft and graceful, in the
+figures of youthful females and young men; Thorwaldsen in the grave, stern
+and terrible. In a word, did I wish to have made a Hebe, a Venus, an
+Antinoüs, an Apollo, I should charge Canova with their execution. Did I
+wish for an Ajax, an Hercules, a Neptune, a Jupiter, I should give the
+preference to Thorwaldsen.
+
+In their private characters they much resemble each other, being both
+honorable, generous, unassuming, and enthusiastic lovers of their
+profession and of the fine arts hi general.
+
+I have been to see a remarkably fine picture, by a modern French artist, of
+the name of Granet. It may be considered as the _chef d'oeuvre_ of the
+perspective or dioramic art. This picture represents the ulterior of the
+convent of the Capuchins, near the Barberini Palace. The picture is by no
+means a very large one; but the optical deception is astonishing. You fancy
+you are standing at the entrance of a long hall and ready to enter it; on
+looking at it, thro' a piece of paper rolled hi form of a speaking
+trumpet--which by hiding from the sight the frame of the picture, prevents
+the illusion from being dissipated--you suppose you could walk into the
+hall; and each figure of a monk therein appears a real human creature, seen
+from a long distance, so skilfully has the artist disposed his light and
+shade. This picture has excited the admiration of connoisseurs, as well as
+others, and it is universally proclaimed a masterpiece. M. Granet's house
+is filled every day with persons coming to see this picture, and many
+repeat their visits several tunes in the week. He has received several
+orders for copies of this picture, and I fancy he begins to be tired of
+eternally copying the same thing; for he told me that he wished that the
+gentlemen who employed him would vary their subjects, and either chuse some
+other themselves, or let him chuse for them. But no! such is the effect of
+vogue and fashion, and such the despotic influence they exercise even over
+the polite arts, that everybody must have a copy of Granet's picture of the
+interior of the Convent of Capuchins _coûte que coûte_; so that poor Granet
+seems bound to this Convent for life; except in the intervals of his
+labours, he should hit off another subject, with equal felicity, and this
+alone may perhaps serve to diminish the universal desire of possessing a
+copy of the Convent. The original picture is destined for the King of
+France.[114]
+
+I remarked, in the collection of the works of this artist, a small picture
+representing Galileo in prison, and a monk descending the steps of the
+dungeon bringing him his scanty meal. A lamp hangs suspended from the roof,
+in the centre of the dungeon, and the artist has made a very happy hit in
+throwing the whole glare of the lamp on the countenance of Galileo, who is
+seated reading a book, while the gaoler monk is left completely in the
+shade. On seeing this I exclaimed: _Veramente, Signor Granet, e buonissimo
+quel vostro concetto!_
+
+
+Easter Tuesday.
+
+I have at length seen all the fine sights that Rome affords during the Holy
+Week, and have witnessed most of the religious ceremonies, viz., the
+illuminated cross hi St Peter's on Good Friday; the high mass celebrated by
+the Pope in person on Easter Sunday; the Papal benediction from a window of
+the church above the façade on the same day; the illumination of the façade
+of St Peter's on Easter Monday, and the _Girandola_ or grand firework at
+the Castle of St Angelo on the same evening. The ceremony of the Pope
+washing the feet of twelve poor men I did not see, for I could not get into
+the Sistine Chapel, where the ceremony was performed: and at the mass
+performed by the Pope in the Sistine Chapel I did contrive to enter, but
+was so oppressed by the crowd and heat, that I almost fainted away, and was
+very glad to get out of the Chapel again, before the ceremony commenced.
+Why in the name of commonsense do they perform these ceremonies in the
+Sistine Chapel which is small, instead of doing them in the church of St
+Peter's, which would contain so many people and produce a much grander
+effect?
+
+A great many people are deprived of seeing the ceremonies in the Sistine
+Chapel from the difficulty of getting in. The Pope's Swiss Guard attend on
+that day in their ancient _costume_, with helmets, cuirasses and halberds;
+these guard the entrance of the staircase leading to the Chapel, and they
+have no small trouble and difficulty in maintaining order, as there is
+always a great scuffle to get in, and they are particularly importuned by
+German visitors, who thinking to be favored by them, in speaking to them in
+their own language, vociferate; _Ich bin Ihr Landsmann!_ and hope by this
+to obtain a preference.
+
+On Friday evening a large Cross is erected before the grand altar; every
+part of this Cross is filled with lamps, and at seven in the evening the
+whole is illuminated. It has a most brilliant appearance and gives the
+happiest _chiaro-oscuro_ effect to the statues, columns and pilasters which
+abound in this vast temple. There is no other light on this occasion than
+that reflected from the Cross. On Easter Sunday, when the Pope celebrates
+high mass in the church of St Peter's, the Papal noble Guard, composed of
+young men from the principal families in Rome, form a hedge on each side of
+the nave of the church, from the entrance of the facade to the grand altar.
+The street or interval formed between this double line may be about thirty
+feet broad, and behind this guard or in any other part of the church, the
+spectators may stand; but as these guards wear very large feathers in their
+hats, they intercept very much the sight of those who stand behind them.
+The uniform of the Papal Noble Guard is very splendid, being a scarlet
+coat, covered with gold lace, white feathers, white breeches and long
+military boots. The approach of the Pope is announced by the thunder of
+cannon, and he is brought into the Church dressed in full pontificals, with
+the triple Crown on his head, on a chair borne by men, _palanquin_ fashion;
+he is conducted thro' the lane formed by the Papal Guard, and as he passes
+he makes the sign of the cross several times with his finger, repeating the
+words: _Urbi et Orbi_. He is then set down, with his face fronting the
+baldachin, when he immediately takes off the tiara, and begins the
+ceremony. That ended, he leaves the church in the same state, and then
+ascends the staircase, in order to prepare to give the benediction, which
+is usually given from a window above the facade of the church. The Pope is
+there seated on a chair with the triple Crown on his head. Troops of
+cavalry and infantry are drawn up in a semi-circle before the façade of the
+church, and the whole vast _arena_ of the _Piazza di San Pietro_ is covered
+with spectators. On a sudden his Holiness rises, extends his hands towards
+heaven, then spreads them open, and seems as if he scattered something he
+held in them on the crowd below; a silly young Frenchman who was standing
+next to me said: _Le voilà! Le voilà qui arrache la bénédiction au ciel, et
+qui la répand sur tout le monde!_ I could not refrain from laughing at this
+sally, tho' I was much impressed with the solemnity of the scene, which I
+think one of the grandest and most sublime I ever beheld. This ceremony
+concluded, salves of ordnance were fired. The Pope retires amidst clouds of
+smoke, and seems to vanish from the Earth. The troops then fire a _feu de
+joie_ and move off, playing a march in quick time, and the company
+disperse.
+
+It is the étiquette on these occasions that no person be admitted either
+into the church of St Peter or into the Sistine Chapel except in full
+toilette. The ladies dress generally in black with caps and feathers; the
+gentlemen either in black full dress or in military uniform. From the
+variety of foreigners of all nations that are here, most of whom are
+military men, or intitled to wear military uniforms, much is added to the
+splendour of the spectacle.
+
+On the evening of Easter Monday, I was present at the illumination of the
+facade of St Peter's. Rows of lamps are suspended the whole length of the
+columns and pilasters and all over the cupola, so that, when illuminated,
+the style of the architecture is perceptible. The illumination takes place
+almost at once. How it is managed I cannot say; but a splendid illuminated
+temple seems at once to drop from the clouds, like the work of an
+enchanter; I say _drop from the clouds_, because the illumination begins
+from the cross and cupola and is communicated with the rapidity of
+lightning to every other part of the edifice. About ten o'clock the same
+evening the most magnificent firework perhaps in the world begins to play
+from the castle of St Angelo. All kinds of shapes are assumed by these
+fireworks: here are castles, pagodas, dragons, griffins, etc. These last
+about an hour and then conclude, and with them conclude all the ceremonies
+used in commemoration of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+
+Among the sights of Rome I must not omit that of a famous robber of the
+name of Barbone, who was the terror of the whole surrounding country from
+the depredations he committed. Having capitulated, and surrendered himself
+to the Papal Government, he is now confined in the Castle of St Angelo as a
+state prisoner. His wife, or a woman calling herself so, is confined there
+with him, and she is said to be a woman of uncommon beauty. It is quite the
+rage among the English here to go to see these _illustrious_ captives, and
+Madame Barbone, superbly dressed, receives the hommage of the visitors. The
+Duchess of D[evonshire] is said to have visited her, and made her a present
+of a pearl necklace. I hope this is not true. Surely the Duchess, who is a
+woman of talent and an encourager of the fine arts, might have found some
+other object worthier of her munificence. What claims the mistress, or even
+the wife, of a public robber can have on the generosity of travellers, I am
+at a loss to conceive; but such is the _bizarrerie_ and _inconsequence_ of
+the English, and no doubt, be this story of her Grace of D[evonshire]
+having given a present true or not, it will occasion many other presents
+being made to the captive Princess by a host of silly lord-aping English
+men and women. Barbone has, it is said, made an excellent capitulation. He
+has stipulated to be released from prison after a year and a day's
+confinement, and no doubt he will then resume his old trade of brigandage.
+In the meantime he has disbanded his troops, as he calls them; but will his
+troops obey him, now that he is a captive? will they not rather chuse
+another leader?
+
+In the time of the French occupation, nothing of this kind took place; but
+the present Government is weak and timid. I have not been myself to see
+either Barbone or his wife, but I have heard quite enough about them; they
+form one of the principal sights in Rome, and I am quite _unfashionable_ in
+not having gone to visit them; for according to the opinion of my English
+acquaintance, he who has not seen Barbone and his wife has seen nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I started from Rome on the second of April with a _vetturino_, and on
+arrival at Baccano, we struck off into a road on the right hand, and
+arrived at Cività Castellana at a late hour. Cività Castellana merits no
+further attention, except that it is supposed to stand on the site of the
+ancient city of Veii. The following day at ten o'clock we reached the small
+town of Narni. Here are the remains of a beautiful bridge, constructed over
+the ravine, thro' which flows the river Nera, and which was built in the
+time of Augustus. It affords a very favorable specimen of the Roman bridge
+architecture. There is a small chapel here, and it contains, engraved on a
+stone, a description of a miracle wrought here about four years ago by the
+Virgin Mary, who saved the life of a postillion. He went into the river to
+water his horses, when he was carried off by the torrent and would have
+been drowned, had not the Virgin, on her aid being invoked, dashed into the
+river and haled him out by the hair of his head. Of this story, to use a
+phrase of old Josephus,[115] every one may believe as much as he thinks
+proper; but certain it is that the postillion made oath (which oath is
+registered) that his life was saved by the Virgin Mary in this manner, and
+he has put up a votive tablet at her shrine, which remains to this day,
+commemorative of the event. There is also a Roman aqueduct in the
+neighbourhood, eleven Italian miles in length.
+
+We arrived at Terni at three o'clock and immediately hired a _calèche_ (the
+other travellers and myself) to visit the famous cascade of the Velino,
+about three miles distant from the town of Terni. The road thither is very
+rugged, and is a continual ascent on the flank of a ravine. For a long time
+before you arrive on the brink of the cascade, you hear the roaring of the
+waters; and it certainly is the most magnificent and awe-inspiring sight of
+the kind I ever beheld. It is far more stupendous than any cascade in
+Switzerland. That of Tivoli compared to it is as an infant six months old
+to a Goliath. The Velino forms three successive falls, and the last is
+tremendous, since it falls from a height of 1,068 feet into the abyss
+below. The foam and the froth it occasions is terrific; and the spray
+ascends so high that in standing at the distance of fifty yards from the
+fall you become as wet as if you had been standing in a shower of rain. The
+first fall it forms is of 800 feet; the second little less; the third I
+have stated already. No painting can possibly give a faithful delineation
+of this, and very possibly no poetic description can give an adequate idea
+thereof. We passed the whole night at Terni and the next morning we stopped
+to dine at Spoleto. The same evening we arrived at Foligno. Spoleto is a
+neat town and well paved. Several ruins of ancient buildings are in its
+vicinity. Before you arrive there, on the left of the road, is an immensely
+high two-arched bridge. There is an aqueduct likewise just outside the
+town. We did not omit to read the inscription on the gate of the town, in
+commemoration of the repulse of Hannibal, who failed in his attempt to make
+himself master of this city, after having beat the Romans near the lake
+Trasymene. The gate is called in consequence _Porta Fugae_, and this gate
+constitutes the principal glory of Spoleto. We were shown the rums of a
+Palace built by Theodoric. On leaving the town, just outside the gate, we
+were shewn a bridge which had laid underground for many centuries and had
+been lately discovered. A bridge was known to have been built here in the
+time of Augustus, and it is very probably the identical one; we could only
+see the top and part of the parapet.
+
+Foligno is a large, well built city, neatly paved, populous and commercial,
+renowned for manufactories of paper, wax, and confectionary.
+
+The whole road between Spoleto and Foligno is thro' a beautiful valley in
+high cultivation. There is a good deal of rich pasture ground, and it is
+watered by the river called in ancient tunes Clitumnus. Here are to be seen
+a fine breed of white cattle for which this part of the country has been
+long renowned, which cattle were used, in preference, for sacrifices
+(_Albi, Clitumne, greges_).[116] A similar breed is to be found in India
+and Egypt.
+
+The streets in Foligno are broad. I remarked the _Palazzo Pubblico_ and
+Cathedral as very fine buildings. Our next day's journey brought us to
+Perugia, after passing by Assisi, the birth place of the famous St Francis,
+founder of the order of Franciscans. It is situated on an eminence:
+convents and churches abound therein.
+
+Perugia is a large and opulent city, standing like a fortress on a
+mountain, and towering over the plain below. It is of steep ascent from the
+plain, and there are various terraces along the ramparts, commanding
+several fine points of view of the rich and fertile plains all round. These
+terraces are planted with trees and form the promenades appertaining to the
+city. The architecture of the various churches and Palaces is very
+superior. The streets are broad and every building has an air of
+magnificence. The Cathedral, dedicated to St Laurence, is well worth
+visiting; it stands on the _Piazza del Duomo_, where there is a fine
+fountain ornamented with statues. In the church of St Peter's there are
+some fine columns of marble and some pictures of Perugino and Raffaello.
+
+
+[108] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 886.--ED.
+
+[109] Of the two persons here mentioned, by their initials only, the first,
+ Luigi de' Medici, was chosen as Chancellor of the Exchequer by King
+ Ferdinando in June, 1815. The second was Nugent, an Austrian
+ _marescallo_, who became _capitano generale_ of the Neapolitan army,
+ August, 1816, and _capo del supremo comando_, February, 1817.--ED.
+
+[110] This most distinguished lady, Marianna Candidi, was born in Rome in
+ 1756; her mother, Magdalena Scilla, was the daughter of a well known
+ antiquary of Messina, Agostino Scilla. Marianna learned Latin, drawing
+ and music; she achieved a reputation as landscape painter, and was
+ elected a member of the Academies of St Luke in Rome, of Bologna, Pisa
+ and Philadelphia. She married the lawyer Domenico Dionigi, and gave him
+ seven children, one of whom, Henrietta, became Madame Orfei, and was
+ much esteemed as "improvisatrice." Madame Dionigi herself published
+ several works, among which a _Storia de' tempi presenti_, written in
+ view of the education of her children. Her _salon_ in Rome was
+ frequented by many men of distinction, such as Visconti, d'Agincourt,
+ Erskine, etc. She died on the 10th June, 1826, at the age of seventy.
+ --ED.
+
+[111] She was no more than sixty-two at that time.--ED.
+
+[112] To present the calumet is an offer of peace and amity among the
+ aborigines of North America and to refuse it is regarded as the
+ greatest insult.
+
+[113] Frye gives only the initial of the name, which I have completed from
+ the _Almanach de Gotha_, 1818.--ED.
+
+[114] The Interior of the Convent of the Capucini was first painted by
+ Granet in the year 1811. None of the numerous replicas are in the
+ Louvre, but there is one in London (Buckingham Palace) and one at
+ Chatsworth.--ED.
+
+[115] The author may have meant "old Herodotus."--ED.
+
+[116] Virgil, _Georg._, II, 146.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+APRIL-JULY, 1818
+
+Journey from Florence to Pisa and from thence by the Appennines to
+Genoa--Massa-Carrara--Genoa--Monuments and works of art--The
+Genoese--Return to Florence--Journey from Florence through Bologna and
+Ferrara to Venice--Monument to Ariosto in Ferrara--A description of
+Venice--Padua--Vicenza--Verona--Cremona--Return to Milan--The Scala
+theatre--Verona again--From Verona to Innspruck.
+
+It is the custom for most travellers going to Genoa to embark on board of a
+_felucca_ at Spezia, which lies on the sea coast, not far from Sarzana: but
+I preferred to go by land, and I cannot conceive why anyone should expose
+himself to the risks, inconveniences and delays of a sea passage, when it
+is so easy to go by land thro' the Appennines. I started accordingly the
+following morning, mounted on a mule, and attended by a muleteer with
+another mule to convey my portmanteau. I found this journey neither
+dangerous nor difficult, but on the contrary agreeable and romantic. The
+road is only a bridle road. I paid forty-eight franks for my two mules and
+driver, and started at seven in the morning from Sarzana. The wild
+appearance of the Appennines, the aweful solitudes and the highly
+picturesque points of view that present themselves at the various
+sinuosities of the mountains and valleys; the view of the sea from the
+heights that tower above the towns of Oneglia and Sestri Levante, rendered
+this journey one of the most interesting I have ever made. I stopped to
+dine at Borghetto and brought to the night at Sestri Levante, breakfasted
+the next morning at Rapallo, and arrived the same evening at four o'clock
+in Genoa. Borghetto is a little insignificant town situate in a narrow
+valley surrounded on all sides by the lofty crags of the Appennines. Sestri
+Levante is a long and very straggling town, part of it being situated on
+the sea shore, and the other part on the gorge of the mountain descending
+towards the sea beach; so that the former part of the town lies nearly at
+right angles with the latter, with a considerable space intervening. The
+road for the last four miles between Borghetto and Sestri Levante is a
+continual descent. The inn was very comfortable and good at Sestri Levante.
+The beginning of the road between Sestri and Rapallo is on the beach till
+near Rapallo, when it strikes again into the mountains and is of
+considerable ascent. Rapallo is a very neat pretty place, situate on an
+eminence commanding a fine view of the sea. The greater part of the road
+between Rapallo and Genoa is on the sea-coast, but cut along the mountains
+which here form a bluff with the sea. Villas, gardens and vineyards line
+the whole of this route and nothing can be more beautiful. The neatness of
+the villas and the abundance of the population form a striking contrast to
+the wild solitudes between Sarzana and Sesto, where (except at Borghetto)
+there is not a house to be seen and scarce a human creature to be met, and
+where the eagle seems to reign alone the uncontrolled lord of the creation.
+
+
+GENOA, 23rd April.
+
+The view of Genoa from the sea is indisputably the best; for on entering by
+land from the eastern side, the ramparts are so lofty as to intercept the
+fine view the city would otherwise afford. From the sea side it rises in
+the shape of an amphitheatre; a view therefore taken from the sea gives the
+best idea of its grandeur and of the magnificence of its buildings, for
+everybody on beholding this grand spectacle must allow that this city well
+deserves its epithet of _Superba_.
+
+I observe in my daily walks on the _Esplanade_ a number of beautiful women.
+The Genoese women are remarkable for their beauty and fine complexions.
+They dress generally in white, and their style of dress is Spanish; they
+wear the _mezzara_ or veil, in the management of which they display much
+grace and not a little coquetry. Instead of the fan exercise recommended to
+women by the _Spectator_, the art of handling the _mezzara_ might be
+reduced to a manual and taught to the ladies by word of command.
+
+I put up at the house of a Spanish lady on the _Piazza St Siro_, and here
+for four _livres_ a day I am sumptuously boarded and lodged. There are
+three principal streets in Genoa, viz., _Strada Nuova_, _Balbi_, and
+_Nuovissima_. Yet these three streets may be properly said to form but one,
+inasmuch as they lie very nearly in a right line. These streets are broad
+and aligned with the finest buildings in Genoa. This street or streets are
+the only ones that can be properly called so, according to the idea we
+usually attach to the word. The others deserve rather the names of lanes
+and alleys, tho' exceedingly well paved and aligned with excellent houses
+and shops. In fact the streets _Nuova_, _Nuovissima_ and _Balbi_ are the
+only ones thro' which carriages can pass. The others are far too narrow to
+admit of the passage of carriages. The houses on each side of them are of
+immense height, being of six or seven stories, which form such a shade as
+effectually to protect those who walk thro' these alleys from the rays of
+the sun. The houses diminish in height in proportion as they are built on
+the slant of the mountain from the bottom to the top, those at the bottom
+being the loftiest. Carriages are scarcely of any use in the city of Genoa,
+except to drive from one end of the town to another thro' the streets
+_Nuova_, _Balbi_ and _Nuovissima_; and accordingly a carriage with four
+wheels, or even with two, is a rare conveyance in Genoa. The general mode
+of conveyance is on a sedan chair, carried by porters, or on the backs of
+mules or asses. Genoa is distinguished by the beauty of the Palaces of its
+patricians, which are more numerous and more magnificent than those of any
+other city, probably, in the world.
+
+The Ducal Palace or Palace of Government, where the Doge used to reside,
+claimed my first attention; yet, tho' much larger, it is far less splendid
+than many of the Palaces of individual patricians. In fact, the Ducal
+Palace is built in the Gothic taste and resembles a Gothic fortress, having
+round towers at each angle. The Hall, where the Grand Council used to sit,
+is superb, and is adorned with columns of _jaune antique_. On the _plafond_
+is a painting representing the discovery of America by Columbus; for the
+Genoese duly appreciate, and never can forget their illustrious countryman.
+The lines of Tasso, "_Un uom della Liguria avrà ardimento_," etc., and the
+following stanza, _Tu spiegherai Colombo a urn nuovo polo_, etc. are in the
+mouth of everyone.[117] The Hall of the Petty Council is neat, but it is
+the recollection of the history of this once famous Republic that renders
+the examination of this Palace so interesting. But now Genoa's glory is
+gone; she has been basely betrayed into the hands of a Government she most
+detested. The King of Sardinia is nowhere; and he is not a little proud of
+being the possessor of such a noble sea port, which enables him to rank as
+a maritime power.
+
+The Genoese are laborious and make excellent sailors; but now there is
+nothing to animate them; and they will never exert themselves in the
+service of a domination which is so little congenial to them. They sigh for
+their ancient Government, of whose glories they had so often heard and
+whose brilliant exploits have been handed down to the present day not
+merely by historical writers and poets, but by _improvisatori_ from mouth
+to mouth. The Genoese nobles, those merchant Kings, whose riches exceeded
+at one time those of the most powerful monarchs of Europe, who were the
+pawn-brokers to those Sovereigns, are now in a state of decay. Commerce can
+only flourish on the soil of liberty, and takes wing at the sight of
+military and sacerdotal chains; and tho' the present Sovereign affects to
+caress the Genoese _noblesse_, they return his civilities with sullen
+indifference, and half concealed contempt and aversion. The commerce of
+Genoa is transferred to Leghorn, which increases in prosperity as the
+former decays.
+
+The climate of Genoa is said to be exceedingly mild during the winter,
+being protected on the north by the Appennines, which tower above it to an
+immense height. Beautiful villas and grounds tastefully laid out in
+plantations of orange trees, pomegranates, etc., abound in the environs of
+this city, and everything announces the extreme industry of the
+inhabitants, for the soil is proverbially barren. This shews what they have
+done and what they could still do were they free; but now they have nothing
+to animate their exertions. The public promenades are on the bastions and
+curtains of the fortifications, on the _Esplanade_ and in the streets
+_Balbi_, _Nuova_ and _Nuovissima_. There is also another very delightful
+promenade, tho' not much used by the ladies, viz., on the Mola or Pier
+enveloping the harbour.
+
+One of the most remarkable constructions in Genoa is the bridge of
+Carignano, which is built over an immense ravine and unites the hills
+Fengano and Carignano. It is so high that houses of six stories stand under
+its arches in the valley below. No water except in times of flood runs
+under this bridge and it much resembles, tho' somewhat larger, the bridge
+at Edinburgh which unites the old and new towns. The principal churches
+are: first, the Cathedral, which is not far from the Ducal Palace; it is
+richly ornamented and incrusted with black marble; the church of the
+Annunziata and that of St Sire. They are all in the Gothic style of
+architecture and loaded with that variety of ornament and diversity of
+beautiful marbles which distinguish the churches of Italy from those of any
+other country. Near the bridge of Carignano is a church of the same name,
+wherein are four marble colossal statues.
+
+On the west of the city and running two miles along the sea-beach is the
+_faubourg_ of St Pietro d'Arena, which presents a front of well built
+houses the whole way; these houses are principally used as magazines and
+store houses.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 5 May.
+
+I left Genoa on the 30th April, returned on mule-back from Genoa to
+Sarzana, stopping the first night at Sestri. The second evening when near
+Sarzana, it being very dark, I somehow or other got out of the road and my
+mule fell with me into a very deep ditch; but I was only slightly bruised
+by the fall; my clothes however were covered with dirt and wet. The road
+from Genoa to Sarzana might with very little expense be made fit for
+carriages by widening it. At present it is only a bridle road, and on some
+parts of it, on the sides of ravines, it is I think a little ticklish to
+trust entirely to the discretion of one's _monture_; at least I thought so
+and dismounted twice to pass such places on foot. A winding stream is to be
+forded in two or three places, but it is not deep except after rains; and
+then I think it must be sometimes dangerous to pass, till the waters run
+off. Those, who are fond of mountain scenery will, like myself, be highly
+gratified in making this journey; for it is thro' the loftiest, wildest and
+most romantic part of the Appennines. From Sarzana I hired a cabriolet to
+return to Pisa and from thence I took the diligence to Florence.
+
+
+FERRARA.
+
+On the 9th of May I set out from Florence on my journey hither. Two days'
+journey brought me to Bologna where I stopped one day; and the following
+day I reached this place (Ferrara), six miles distant from Bologna. The
+country between these two cities is a perfect plain and very fertile. At
+Malalbergo (half-way) We crossed the Reno in a boat. I put up at the _Tre
+Mori_ in Ferrara. Having remained two and half days here I have had time to
+inspect and examine almost everything of consequence that the city affords.
+The city itself has an imposing, venerable appearance and can boast of some
+fine buildings; yet with all this there is an air of melancholy about it.
+It is not peopled in proportion to its size and grass is seen growing in
+several of the streets. I believe the unhealthiness of the environing
+country is the cause of the decrease of population, for Ferrara lies on a
+marshy plain, very liable to inundation In the centre of the city stands
+the ancient Palace of the Dukes of Ferrara, a vast Gothic edifice, square,
+and flanked with round towers, and a large court-yard in the centre. It was
+in this court-yard that Hugo and Parisina were decapitated. From the top of
+this palace a noble view of the plain of the Po represents itself, and you
+see the meanderings of that King of Rivers, as the Italian poets term it.
+As the Po runs thro' a perfectly flat country, and is encreased and swollen
+by the torrents from the Alps and Appennines that fall into the smaller
+rivers, which unite their tributary streams with the Po and accompany him
+as his _seguaci_ to the Adriatic, this country is liable to the most
+dreadful inundations: flocks and herds, farm-houses and sometimes whole
+villages are swept away. Dykes, dams and canals innumerable are in
+consequence constructed throughout this part of the country, to preserve it
+as much as possible from such calamities. Ariosto's description of an
+over-flowing of this river is very striking, and I here transcribe it:
+
+ Con quel furor che il Re de' fiumi altero,
+ Quando rompe tal volta argine e sponda,
+ E che ne' campi Ocnei si apre il sentiero,
+ E i grassi solchi e le biade feconde,
+ E con le sue capanne il gregge intero,
+ E co' cani i pastor porta neil' onde, etc.[118]
+
+ Even with that rage wherewith the stream that reigns,
+ The king of rivers--when he breaks his mound.
+ And makes himself a way through Mantuan plains--
+ The greasy furrows and glad harvests, round,
+ And, with the sheepcotes, nock, and dogs and swains
+ Bears off, in his o'erwhelming waters drowned.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+The next place I went to see was the Lyceum or University, where there is a
+very fair cabinet of natural history in all its branches. The Library is
+very remarkable, and possesses a great number of valuable manuscripts. But
+my principal object in visiting this Museum was to see the monument erected
+in honour of Ariosto, which has been transferred here from the Benedictine
+church. The inkstand and chair of this illustrious bard are carefully
+preserved and exhibited. They exactly resemble the print of them that
+accompanies the first edition of Hoole's translation of the _Orlando
+Furioso_. Among the manuscripts what gratified me most was the manuscript
+of the _Gerusalemme liberata_ of Tasso. But few corrections appear in this
+manuscript; tho from the extreme polish and harmony of the versification
+one would expect a great many. It is written in an extremely legible hand.
+
+I also inspected the original manuscripts of the _Pastor Fido_ of Guarini
+and of the _Suppositi_ of Ariosto.
+
+I then went to visit the Hospital of St Anna, for the sake of seeing the
+dungeon where poor Tasso was confined and treated as mad for several years.
+When one beholds this wretched place, where a man can scarce stand upright,
+one only wonders how he could survive such treatment; or how he could
+escape becoming insane altogether. The old wooden door of this cell will
+soon be entirely cut away by amateurs, as almost everyone who visits the
+dungeon chops off a piece of wood from the door to keep as a relic. The
+door is in consequence pieced and repaired with new wood, and in a short
+time will be in the state of Sir John Cutter's worsted stockings which were
+darned so often with silk that they became finally all silk.
+
+Ferrara has a strong citadel which is still garrisoned by Austrian troops;
+and they will probably not easily be induced to evacuate it. The Austrian
+Eagle seldom looses his hold.
+
+
+VENICE, 18th May.
+
+On the 16th May at six o'clock in the morning I left Ferrara in a
+_cabriolet_ to go to the _Ponte di Lago oscuro_, which is a large village
+on the south bank of the Po, three miles distant from Ferrara. A flying
+bridge wafted me across the river, which is exceedingly broad and rapid to
+the north bank, where a barge was in waiting to receive passengers for
+Venice. This barge is well fitted up and supplied with _comestibles_ of all
+sorts and couches to recline on. The price is twelve francs for the
+passage, and you pay extra for refreshments. The bark got under weigh at
+seven o'clock and descended rapidly this majestic river, which however,
+from its great breadth, and from the country on each side of it being
+perfectly flat, did not offer any interesting points of view. Plains and
+cattle grazing thereon were the only objects, for they take care to build
+the farms and houses at a considerable distance from the banks, on account
+of the inundations. After having descended the Po for a considerable
+distance, we entered a canal which unites the Po with the Adige. We then
+descended the Adige for a short distance, and entered another canal which
+unites the Adige with the Brenta. Here we stopped to change barges, and it
+required an hour and half to unload and reload the baggage. We then entered
+the Brenta and from thence into the Lagoons, and passing by the islands of
+Malamocco and Chiozzo entered Venice by the _Canale grande_ at three
+o'clock in the morning. The whole night was so dark as totally to deprive
+us of the view of the approach of Venice. The barge anchored near the Post
+office and I hired a gondola to convey me to the inn called _Le Regina
+d'Ungheria_.
+
+
+VENICE, 26th May.
+
+I was much struck, as everyone must be who sees it for the first time, at
+the singular appearance of Venice. An immense city in the midst of the
+Ocean, five miles distant from any land; canals instead of streets;
+gondolas in lieu of carriages and horses! Yet it must not be inferred from
+this that you are necessarily obliged to use a gondola in order to visit
+the various parts of the city; for its structure is as follows. It is built
+in compartments on piles on various mud banks, always covered indeed by
+water, but very shallow and separated from each other (the mud banks I
+mean) by deep water. On each of these compartments are built rows of
+houses, each row giving front to a canal. The space between the backs of
+the rows of houses forms a narrow street or alley paved with flag stones,
+very like Cranborn Alley for instance; and these compartments are united to
+each other (at the crossings as we should say) by means of stone bridges;
+so that there is a series of alleys connected by a series of bridges which
+form the _tout ensemble_ of this city; and you may thus go on foot thro'
+every part of it. To go on horseback would be dangerous and almost
+impracticable, for each bridge has a flight of steps for ascent and
+descent. All this forms such a perfect labyrinth from the multiplicity and
+similarity of the alleys and bridges, that it is impossible for any
+stranger to find his way without a guide. I lost my way regularly every
+time that I went from my inn to the _Piazza di San Marco_, which forms the
+general rendezvous of the promenaders and is the fashionable lounge of
+Venice; and every time I was obliged to hire a boy to reconduct me to my
+inn. On this account, in order to avoid this perplexity and the expence of
+hiring a gondola every time I wished to go to the _Piazza di San Marco_ I
+removed to another inn, close to it, called _L'Osteria della Luna_, which
+stands on the banks of the _Canale grande_ and is not twenty yards from the
+_Piazza_.
+
+I then hired a gondola for four days successively and visited every canal
+and every part of the city. Almost every family of respectability keeps a
+gondola, which is anchored at the steps of the front door of the house.
+After the _Piazza di San Marco_, of which I shall speak presently, the
+finest buildings and Palaces of the nobility are on the banks of the
+_Canale grande_, which, from its winding in the shape of an S, has all the
+appearance of a river. The _Rialto_ is the only bridge which connects the
+opposite banks of the _Canale grande_; but there are four hundred smaller
+bridges in Venice to connect the other canals.
+
+The _Rialto_, the resort of the money changers and Jews, is a very singular
+and picturesque construction, being of one arch, a very bold one. On each
+side of this bridge is a range of jewellers' shops. A narrow Quai runs
+along the banks of the _Canale grande_.
+
+I have visited several of the _Palazzi_, particularly those of the families
+Morosini, Cornaro, Pisani, Grimani, which are very rich in marbles of
+_vert_ and _jaune antique_; but they are now nearly stripped of all their
+furniture, uninhabited by their owners, or let to individuals, mostly
+shopkeepers; for since the extinction of the Venetian Republic almost all
+the nobility have retired to their estates on the _terra firma_, or to
+their villas on the banks of the Brenta; so that Venice is now inhabited
+chiefly by merchants, shopkeepers, chiefly jewellers and silk mercers,
+seafaring people, the constituted authorities, and the garrison of the
+place.
+
+Tho' Venice has fallen very much into decay, since the subversion of the
+Republic, as might naturally be expected, and still more so since it has
+been under the Austrian domination, yet it is still a place of great
+wealth, particularly in jewellery, silks and all articles of dress and
+luxury. In the _Merceria_ you may see as much wealth displayed as in
+Cheapside or in the Rue St Honoré.
+
+I have had the pleasure of witnessing a superb regatta or water _féte_,
+given in honour of the visit of the Archduke Rainier to this city, in his
+quality of Viceroy of the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom. There were about one
+hundred and fifty barges, each fitted up by some department of trade and
+commerce, with allegorical devices and statues richly ornamented,
+emblematical of the trade or professions to which the barge belonged. Each
+barge bore an appropriate ensign, and the dresses of the crew were all
+tasteful, and thoroughly analogous to the profession they represented.
+These barges are richly gilded, and from the variety of the costumes and
+streamers, I thought it one of the most beautiful sights I ever beheld.
+Here were the bankers' barge, the jewellers', the mercers', the tailors',
+the shoe-makers', and, to crown all, the printers' barge, which showered
+down from the masthead sonnets in honor of the _féte_, printed on board of
+the barge itself. Every trade or profession, in short, had a barge and
+appropriate flag and costumes. A quantity of private barges and gondolas
+followed this procession. The Archduke and his staff occupied the
+Government barge, which is very magnificent and made in imitation of the
+Bucentaur. Musicians were on board of many of the barges, and the houses on
+both banks of the _Canale Grande_ were filled with beautiful women and
+other spectators waving their handkerchiefs. Guns were fired on the
+embarkation of the Viceroy from the _Piazzetta di San Marco_, and on his
+return. The _Piazza_ itself was splendidly illuminated, and the _cafés_
+which abound there, and which constitute one half of the whole quadrangle,
+were superbly and tastefully decorated.
+
+The _Piazza di San Marco_ is certainly the most beautiful thing of the kind
+in the world. It is a good deal in the style of the _Palais Royal_ at
+Paris, and tho' not so large, is far more striking, from the very tasteful
+and even sumptuous manner in which the _cafés_ are fitted up, both
+internally and externally; they have spacious rooms with mirrors on all
+sides, some in the shape of Turkish tents, others in that of Egyptian
+temples. The _Piazza_, forming an oblong rectangle, is arcaded on the two
+long sides, and of the two short ones, one presents a superb modern palace
+built by Napoleon, and richly adorned with the statues of all the heathen
+Gods on the top, which Palace was usually occupied by Eugene Napoléon; the
+other presents the church of St Marco and the old palace of Government,
+where in the time of the Republic the Doge used to reside. The church of St
+Mark is unique as a temple in Europe, for it is neither Grecian nor Gothic,
+but in a style completely Oriental, from the singularity of its structure,
+its many gilded cupolas and the variety of its exterior ornaments. At
+_first sight_ it appears a more striking object than either St Peter's in
+Rome or St Paul's in London. On the top of the façade, which is singularly
+picturesque, stand the four bronze horses which have been brought back from
+Paris to their old residence.
+
+I ascended the top of the façade in order to examine them. They are
+beautifully formed, in very good cast and have not at all been damaged by
+the journey. The _Piazza_ is paved with broad flagged stones. The Doge's
+palace is a vast building, very picturesque withal, and seems a _mélange_
+of Gothic and Moorish architecture. At right angles to it and facing the
+_Piazzetta_, which issues from the _Piazza_ and forms a quai to the _Canale
+Grande_, stands the famous state prison and _Ponte de 'Sospiri_. On the
+_Piazzetta_ and fronting the landing place stand two columns of white
+marble, on one of which stands the winged Lion of St Marco and on the other
+a crocodile, emblematical of the foreign commerce and possessions of the
+Republic. The space between these two columns was allotted for the
+execution of State criminals. Not far from the church of St Marco, and near
+to that angle of the _Piazza_ which connects it with the _Piazzetta_,
+stands the famous _Campanile_ or Steeple of San Marco. It is a square
+building 800 feet in height, from the top of which one has the best view of
+Venice and its adjacent isles, the distant Alps and the _marina dove il Po
+discende_. A Quai, if Quai it may be called, which has a row of houses on
+each side, one row of which is on the water's edge, leads from the
+_Piazzetta_ to some gardens, which terminate on a point of land. This Quai
+is very broad and well paved, and is the only thing that can be called a
+street in all Venice. The _Piazza di San Marco_, therefore, this Quai and
+the garden before mentioned form the only promenades in Venice. This garden
+moreover has trees, and these are the only trees that are to be met with in
+this city. In this garden are two _Cafés_.
+
+The variety of costume is another very agreeable spectacle at Venice. Here
+you meet with Albanians, Greeks, Turks, Moors, Sclavonians and Armenians,
+all in their respective national costumes. The first Armenian I met with
+here was sitting on a stone bench on the _Piazza di San Marco_, and this
+brought forcibly to my recollection the Armenian in Schiller's
+_Ghost-seer_.
+
+These _Cafés_ and _Casinos_ on the _Piazza_ are open day and night. Ices
+and coffee superiorly made and other refreshments of all kinds at very low
+prices are to be had. Some of these _casinos_ are devoted to gaming. The
+first families in Venice repair to the _Piazza_ in the evening after the
+Opera, female as well as male. They promenade up and down the _Piazza_ or
+sit down and converse in the _Cafés_ and _Casinos_ till a late hour. Few go
+to bed in Venice in the summer time before six In the morning, so that
+sleep seems for ever banished from the _Piazza_. Music and singing goes
+forward in these _casinos_, and the ear is often charmed with the sound of
+those delightful Venetian airs, whose simple melody ravishes the soul. The
+Venetian dialect is very pleasing, and scarcely yields in harmony to the
+Tuscan. It contains a great many Sclavonic words. It is the only dialect of
+Italy that is at all pleasing to my ear, for I do not at all relish the
+nasal twang and truncated terminations of the Piedmontese and Lombard
+dialects, nor the semi-barbarous jargon of the Genoese and the Neapolitan
+and, least of all, the execrable cacophony of the Bolognese.
+
+I visited of course the Arsenal and the Doge's Palace. The apartments in
+the latter are very spacious and ornamented in the Gothic taste of
+grandeur. The chamber of the Council is peculiarly magnificent. There is a
+good deal of tapestry and some fine paintings and statues: among the former
+I particularly noticed an allegorical picture, representing the triumph of
+Venice over the league of Cambray. Venice is represented by the winged
+Lion, and the powers of the Coalition are pourtrayed by various other
+beasts. Among the latter is a beautiful group in marble representing
+Ganymede and the Eagle. The terror depicted in the countenance of the
+beautiful boy, and the passion that seems to agitate the Eagle, are
+surprizingly well pourtrayed.
+
+The principal theatre at Venice, the _Teatro Fenice_, is not open; but I
+have visited the other theatres, and among other things witnessed the
+representation of a new opera, call'd _Il Lupo d'Ostende_. The piece itself
+was rather interesting; but the music was feeble and did not seem to give
+general satisfaction. The singing is in general very good at Venice, but in
+scenery, dresses and decorations the theatres here are far inferior to
+those of Milan and Naples.
+
+I find the air of Venice very hot and unpleasant, arising from the
+exhalation from the canals; and it appears to me as if I were on board of
+an enormous ship. I begin to pant for _terra firma_ and green fields.
+
+I have visited in a gondola some of the islands, viz., Malamocco and St
+Lazare, where there is a convent of Armenian monks.
+
+Why are the gondolas hung with black? it gives to them such a dismal
+funereal appearance. They always resemble the bodies of hearses placed on
+boats. I am not fond of gaudy colours in general, yet I do think a gondola
+should have a somewhat livelier color than black.
+
+
+PADUA, 8th June.
+
+Padua is not above ten miles distant from Fusina. As I started from Venice
+at six in the morning I had a fine receding view of the Ocean Queen, with
+her steeples and turrets rising from the sea. Venice has no fortifications
+and needs them not. Her insular position protects her from land attacks,
+and the shoals prevent the approach of ships of war. Floating batteries
+therefore and gunboats are her best defence. The road from Fusina to Padua
+is on the banks of the Brenta the whole way, and is lined with trees. There
+are a great number of villas on the banks of the Brenta, well built in the
+best style of architecture, the most of them after the designs of Palladio,
+the Prince of modern architects.
+
+Padua is an exceedingly large city: but its arcades and the narrowness of
+the streets give it a gloomy appearance. There are however some beautiful
+promenades in the suburbs. There are also the remains of an ancient Arena.
+Padua is famous for its Seminario or University, which is a superb edifice.
+The Church of St Anthony of Padua is of vast size, having six cupolas.
+There are four organs in this church. In the chapel of the Saint himself
+are a great many ornaments, among which are a crucifix in bronze and
+fresques representing the different actions and miracles of this patron
+Saint of the Padovani. Probably as this city was founded by the Trojan
+Antenor they have transformed his name into that of a Christian Saint and
+called him St Anthony, just as Virgil has been transformed into a magician
+at Naples. There is a fine view from the steeple of this immense edifice.
+There is another magnificent church also in this city, that of St Justine,
+built after the designs of Palladio, the principal ornament of which is a
+painting of the martyrdom of the Saint by Paul Veronese. But one of the
+greatest curiosities in this ancient city is the immense Saloon in the
+_Palazzo della Giustizia_. It is, I presume, the loftiest and largest hall
+in the world that is supported by nothing but its walls, it being three
+hundred feet long, one hundred feet broad and one hundred feet high. In
+the Saloon is the tomb of Livy, the Historian, who was a native of Padua.
+The inhabitants of Padua dress much in black, seem a quiet, staid sort of
+people, and are very industrious. I put up at the _Stella d'Oro_, a good
+inn.
+
+
+VICENZA, 10th June.
+
+I arrived at this beautiful _bijou_ of a town on the morning of the 9th
+June at eight o'clock. I call it a _bijou_ from its exceeding neatness, and
+the extreme beauty of the architecture of its edifices, which are almost
+all after the designs of Palladio, of white stone and in the Greek taste.
+Palladio was a native of Vicenza. The _Piazza_ and _Palazzo Pubblico_
+perfectly correspond with the beauty of the rest of the city, and the
+promenades about it are tastefully laid out. But the two most striking
+objects in point of edifices in Vicenza and both constructed by Palladio
+are the covered portico and the _Teatro Olimpico_. The covered portico is
+two miles in length and leads to the chapel of the _Madonna del Monte_,
+situated on an eminence, at that distance from the city. A magnificent
+triumphal arch stands before it, and there is an extensive view of the
+surrounding country. The _Teatro Olimpico_ is a small, but beautiful
+theatre, built strictly after the model of the ancient Greek theatres. It
+is peculiarly precious as being the only one of the kind in Europe. How
+admirably adapted both for seeing and hearing are such theatres! It has,
+for scenery, the model of a Palacé, curiously carved in wood, which
+represents a Royal Palace, for the ancients never shifted their scenes, and
+this may account for their adhering so strictly to the unities. Statues and
+bas-reliefs adorn this beautiful little theatre. Many years ago, on
+particular occasions, it was the custom to act plays here, either
+translated from the Greek, or taken strictly from the Greek model. This
+theatre is esteemed Palladio's _chef d'oeuvre_.
+
+The _Campo di Marie_ is a vast _Place_ outside the town. The Place and its
+gate are well worth inspecting, so is the famous villa with the Rotonda,
+belonging to the Marchese di Capra, the original after which the villa
+belonging to the Duke of Devonshire at Chiswick is built. The environs of
+this interesting city are very beautiful and present an exceeding rich
+soil, highly cultivated in corn, mulberry trees and vines hanging from them
+in festoons.
+
+
+VERONA, 12th June.
+
+I started yesterday morning from Vicenza and arrived here in about three
+hours, the distance being nearly the same as between Vicenza and Padua. We
+crossed the Adige which divides the city into two unequal parts and drove
+to the _Due Torri_, a large and comfortable inn with excellent rooms and
+accommodations. Verona is a very handsome city, for here also Palladio was
+the designer or builder of many edifices. It has a very cheerful and gay
+appearance, tho' not quite so much so as Vicenza. The reason of this
+difference is that in Verona the greater part of the buildings are in the
+Gothic style, which always appears heavy and melancholy, whereas in Vicenza
+all is Grecian. The Amphitheatre of course claimed my first notice. It
+yields only to the Coliseum in size and grandeur and is in much better
+preservation, the whole of the ellipse and its walls being entire, whereas
+in the Coliseum part of the walls have been pulled down. Indeed the
+Amphitheatre of Verona may be said to be almost perfectly entire. _Tempus
+edax rerum_ has been its only enemy; whereas avarice and religious
+fanaticism have contributed, much more than time, to the dilapidation of
+the Coliseum. The Amphitheatre of Verona can contain 24,000 persons. In it
+is constructed a temporary theatre of wood, where they perform plays and
+farces in the open air. Verona is much embellished by several _Palazzi_
+built by Palladio, which form a curious contrast with the other buildings
+and churches which are in the Gothic style. Verona can boast among its
+antiquities of three triumphal arches, the first, _Porta de' Bursari_,
+erected in the year 252 in the reign of the Emperor Gallienus; the second,
+called _Porta del Foro_; and the third, built by Vitruvius himself, in
+honour of the family Gavia.
+
+The churches here are richly ornamented and the _Palazzo del Consiglio_ has
+many fine marble and bronze statues. In this city also are the tombs and
+monuments of the Scala family, who were at one time Sovereigns of Verona.
+They are in the Gothic style and of curious execution. The Cathedral has an
+immense _campanile_ (steeple), from which is a fine view of the surrounding
+country, and the progressive risings of the Alps, the lower parts of which
+lie close upon Verona. Beautiful villas and farmhouses abound in the
+neighbourhood of this city. The favourite promenades are the _Corso_ and
+the _Bra_. On the _Bra_ I saw a very brilliant display of carriages, and
+some very pretty women in them. The theatre is by Palladio, is exquisitely
+beautiful, and very tastefully fitted up. I assisted at the representation
+of _La Gazza Ladra_, one of Rossini's best operas.
+
+I should think Verona would be a very delightful séjour; everything is very
+cheap; a fine country highly cultivated; a remarkably healthy climate; a
+society which unites much urbanity and a love of amusement with a taste for
+the fine arts and for the graver sciences, and a general appearance of
+opulence and comfort. The shops in Verona appear very splendid, and the
+_Bra_, when lighted up in the evening, is a very lively and animating
+scene.
+
+
+MANTUA, 15 June.
+
+I could not go to Milan without stepping a little out of my road to visit
+this ancient and redoubtable fortress, so celebrated in the early campaigns
+of Buonaparte, besides the other claims it has on the traveller's attention
+as the birth place of Virgil. This place is of immense strength, as a
+military post; being situated on a small isthmus of land, separating two
+lakes, and communicating with the rest of the country by an exceeding
+narrow causeway. This position, added to the strength of the
+fortifications, render the fortress impregnable, if well garrisoned and
+provisioned. The city is, however, unhealthy from the lake and marshy land
+about it, and there is but a scanty population. Grass grows in the streets
+and it is the dullest and indeed the only dull town in all Italy.
+Everything in this city announces decay and melancholy, and I met with
+several men looking full as halfstarved and deplorable as Shakespeare's
+Apothecary in Romeo and Juliet. Yet the city is by no means an ugly one.
+The buildings are imposing, the streets broad and well paved, and there is
+a fine circular promenade in the centre of which is a Monument erected in
+honor of Virgil by the French general Miollis, who had a great veneration
+for all poets. The _Palazzo pubblico_ and the Cathedral are the most
+striking buildings. The latter contains the tombs and monuments of the
+Gonzaga family, the whilom Sovereigns of Mantua. There are also several
+monuments in honor of some French officers, who were killed in the
+campaigns of Italy under Buonaparte and erected to their memory by his
+direction.
+
+Outside the town, at a short distance from the causeway and _tête de pont_,
+is the celebrated palace called the T, from its being in the form of that
+letter, which was the usual residence of the Dukes of Mantua. It is a noble
+edifice and its gardens are well laid out. These gardens have this
+peculiarity, that at the entrance of each of the grand avenues is a figure
+of a man on horseback caparizoned in armour, like the Knights of old. This
+is all I have to say about Mantua. The Mincio beset with "osiers dank"
+flows into the lake.
+
+
+CREMONA, 16th June.
+
+From Mantua I directed my course to this city, which is large and
+fortified, situated on the Po which forms many little islands in the
+environs. This city is of great antiquity, and has a number of Gothic
+buildings. You do not find here the specimens and imitations of Grecian
+architecture as at Vicenza and Verona. The _campanile_ of the Cathedral is
+of immense height, but one is repaid for the fatigue of ascending by the
+extensive view from its summit. There are 498 steps. I put up at the
+_Colombina_, a very good inn. The Cremonese seem to be an industrious
+people. There is a great deal of pasture land in the environs of this city
+and much cheese is made here and in the Lodesan. Several ricefields are
+also to be met with between this place and Lodi.
+
+
+MILAN, 25 June.
+
+I have been on a visit to the ancient and venerable city of Pavia, which is
+about eighteen miles distant from Milan, thro' a rich highly cultivated
+plain. The road lies in a right line the whole way. About three miles
+distant from Pavia on the Milan side stands the celebrated _Certosa_, which
+we stopped to visit. The church of the _Certosa_ contains the greatest
+quantity of riches in marbles, and precious stones, of any building in the
+world, probably. The architecture is Gothic, and the workmanship of the
+exterior exquisite; but the ulterior is most dazzling; and at the sight of
+the rich marbles and innumerable precious stones of all kinds with which it
+abounds, I was reminded of Aladdin and began to fancy myself in the cavern
+of the Wonderful Lamp. This church was built by Galeazzo Visconti, whose
+coffin is here, and his statue also, in white marble. There are several
+bas-reliefs of exquisite workmanship. There are no fewer than seventeen
+altars here and of the most beautiful structure you can conceive, being
+inlaid in mosaic with jasper, onyx and lapis-lazuli. Besides these precious
+marbles of every colour and quantity under heaven, here are abundance of
+rubies, emeralds, amethysts, aquamarines and topazes, incrusted in the
+different chapels and altars. Here again is a proof of the falsehood and
+injustice of the aspersions cast on the French army, as being the
+plunderers of churches; for if they were so, how comes it that the
+_Certosa_ the richest of all, was spared? Mr Eustace[119] in his admiration
+of Church splendour, should at least have given the French no small degree
+of credit for their abstinence from so rich a prize. A canal runs parallel
+to the road the whole way from Milan to Pavia, where it joins the Tessino.
+The banks of the Canal and each side of the road are lined with poplars.
+Pavia is one of the most ancient cities in Italy and has something very
+antique and solemn in its appearance. It is quite Gothic and was the
+capital city of the Lombard Kings. The streets are broad and the _Piazza_
+is large. I could not find any traces of the ancient palace of the Lombard
+Kings, which I should like much to have done; for then I should have
+endeavoured to make out the chamber into which Jocondo peeped and
+discovered what cured him of his melancholy, and where the impatient Queen
+received the petulant answer from her beloved Nano, conveyed by one of her
+waiting maids who told her:
+
+ E per non stare in perdita d'un soldo,
+ A voi nega venire fl manigoldo.[120]
+
+ Nor, lest he lose a doit, his paltry stake,
+ Will that discourteous churl his game forsake
+
+ --_Trans._ W.S. ROSE.
+
+
+MILAN, 28th June.
+
+I have been to the _Scala_ theatre, to see the _Ballet of the Vestal_, one
+of the most interesting Ballets I ever beheld. Oh! what a mighty magician
+is the ballet master Vigano, and as for the prima ballerina, Pallerini,
+what praises can equal her merit? then, the delightful soul soothing music,
+so harmonious, so pathetic, and the decorations so truly tasteful and
+classical! I can never forget the impression this fascinating Ballet made
+on me. It is called _La Vestale_. It opens with a view of the Circus in
+ancient Rome, and various gymnastic exercises, combats of gladiators, of
+athletes, and ends with a chariot race with real horses. The Roman Consuls
+are present in all their pomp, surrounded by Lictors with axes and fasces.
+The Vestal virgins assist at this spectacle, and from one of them the
+victor in the games receives a garland, as the recompense of his prowess.
+The victor is the son of one of the Consuls and the hero of the piece; the
+heroine is the Vestal Virgin who crowns him with the garland. The young
+victor becomes desperately enamored of the Vestale, and she appears also to
+feel an incipient flame. After the games are over, the victor returns to
+his father's house, and meeting there one of his friends, discloses to him
+his love for the Vestale and his idea of entering by stealth into the
+temple of Vesta, where his beloved was appointed to watch the sacred fire.
+His friend endeavors, but in vain, to dissuade him from so rash an attempt,
+which can only end in the destruction, both of his beloved and himself. All
+the remonstrances, however, of the friend are vain; and the hero fixed in
+his resolve watches for the opportunity, when it is the turn of his beloved
+to officiate in the temple of Vesta, and enters therein. The Vestale is
+terrified and supplicates him to retire: in vain; and after a long but
+ineffectual struggle she sinks into his arms at the foot of the altar.
+Suddenly the sacred flame becomes extinguished; a noise is heard; the
+Vestals enter; the unfortunate fair is roused from her stupor by the noise
+of footsteps and has just time to oblige her lover to retire, which he
+reluctantly does, but not unperceived by the Vestals. The Matron of the
+Vestals reproaches her with the crime she has committed and orders her to
+be placed in a dungeon. She is brought out to be examined by the High
+Priest, found guilty and condemned by him to the usual punishment of the
+Vestals for a breach of their vow, viz., the being buried alive outside the
+gates of Rome. The moment the sentence is pronounced a black veil is thrown
+over her. The scene then changes to the place of execution; the funeral
+procession takes place; the vault is dug and a man stands by with a pitcher
+of water and loaf of bread, to deliver to her when she should descend. The
+Consuls are present, attended by the Lictors and Aediles. All the other
+vestals are present, of whom the culprit takes an affectionate leave and is
+about to descend into the vault. Suddenly a noise of arms and shouts are
+heard. It is her lover who having collected a few followers come rushing
+forward with arms in their hands to arrest the execution. He forces his way
+into the presence of the Consuls, but the sight of his father inspires him
+with awe; he staggers back; at this moment a Lictor at the command of the
+other Consul plunges a spear into his breast. The Vestal is hurried to the
+brink of the vault, into which she is forced to descend to the
+accompaniment of mournful music, while her dying lover vainly endeavours to
+crawl towards her. The curtain falls.
+
+The exquisite acting of La Pallerini drew tears from my eyes: it was indeed
+too horrible a subject for a _Ballo_, which in my opinion ought to end
+happily. The scenery was the finest of the kind I think I ever witnessed.
+The first scene represents the _Circus maximus_; the interior of the temple
+of Vesta and the place of execution outside the walls of Rome were most
+classically correct and appropriate: the music was beyond all praise and
+singularly affecting. This Ballet has excited such an enthusiastic
+approbation that Vigano the Ballet master, Pallerini who acts the Vestal
+and the young man who performs the hero of the piece were summoned every
+evening after the termination of the Ballet, to appear on the stage, and
+receive applauses, which seemed to increase at every representation. I have
+been to see this ballet six or seven times, and always with increased
+delight. I was there on the last night of its representation, when some
+amateurs and people connected with the theatre put in practice what
+appeared to mean ill-judged _concetto_, however well merited the compliment
+it meant to convey. When the Vestal was about to descend into the vault, a
+genius with wings rose from it and repeated a few lines beginning _Tu non
+morrai_ and telling her that the suffrages of the Insubrian people had
+decreed to her immortality, and printed sonnets were showered down on the
+stage from all parts of the house. I think it would have been much better
+to let the piece finish in the usual way, and then at its termination call
+for La Pallerini to advance and receive the garlands and hommage so justly
+her due.
+
+I was in the _loge_ belonging to my friend Mme L-----; there were three or
+four _litterati_ with her, and they were all unanimous that it was an
+absurd and pedantic _concetto_.
+
+In a day or two I shall start from Milan for Munich thro' Brescia and
+Verona and the Tyrol.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+JULY-SEPTEMBER 1818
+
+Innspruck--Tyrol and the Tyrolese--From Innspruck to Munich--Monuments and
+churches--Theatricals--Journey from Munich to Vienna on a floss--Trouble
+with a passport--Complicated system of Austrian money--Description of
+Vienna--The Prater--The theatres--Schiller's _Joan of Arc_--A
+_Kinderballet_--The young Napoleon at Schoenbrunn--Journey from Vienna to
+Prague.
+
+
+INNSPRUCK, 15th July.
+
+I had engaged with a _vetturino_ to convey me from Verona to Innspruck for
+four _louis d'or_ and to be _spesato_. A Roman gentleman and his lady were
+my fellow travellers; they were going to pass the summer months at a small
+_campagne_ they possess in the Tyrol. We stopped the first night at
+Roveredo. The road from Verona to Roveredo is on the banks of the Adige
+(called in German the Etsch) in a narrow and deep valley, shut up on both
+sides by mountains, almost immediately on leaving Verona. We found the
+weather extremely hot in this valley. Roveredo seems to be a very neat
+clean little city, and the Adige flows with astonishing rapidity along this
+narrow valley. The women of Roveredo have the reputation of being very
+beautiful; and I recollect having seen two Roveredo girls at Venice, who
+were models of female beauty. They have a happy mixture of German and
+Italian blood and manners, but Italian is the language of the country. The
+second morning of our journey we arrived and stopped to dinner at the
+venerable and celebrated city of Trent. The country we passed thro' is much
+the same as that between Verona and Roveredo, the Adige being on our left.
+Trent lies also in the valley of the Adige, shut up between the Alps. The
+whole valley appears in high cultivation. The streets of Trent are broad;
+the Cathedral is a remarkably fine Gothic building. In the church of Sta
+Maria Maggiore was held the famous council of Trent. There are a great many
+silk mills in Trent. German as well as Italian is spoken; indeed the two
+languages are equally familiar to most of the inhabitants. In the evening
+we arrived at Sabern after passing thro' Lavis. One description will serve
+for these towns and indeed for most of the towns in the Tyrol, viz., that
+of being neat, clean and solidly built. The inns are excellent and the
+inhabitants very civil. The Adige runs close to the road and parallel to
+it, nearly the whole way to Bolsano or Botzen, where Italian ceases to be
+spoken and German is the national tongue. Botzen is a large and flourishing
+place.
+
+One general description will serve for the Tyrol, regarding the towns,
+adjacent country, customs, inns, inhabitants, dress and manners.
+
+First the towns are fully as neat, clean and well built as those in
+Switzerland; the country too is very similar, tho' not quite on so grand a
+scale of sublimity; but you have fully as much variety in mountain and
+valley, glacier and cascade. The climate is exactly the same as that of
+Switzerland, being very hot in the valleys in summer. The inns are clean
+and good, the provisions excellent and well cooked, the wines much better
+than those of Switzerland; there is good attendance by females and all at a
+far cheaper rate than in Switzerland. The Tyroleans are much more courteous
+in their manners than the Swiss; they have not that boorishness and are of
+more elegant figure than their Helvetic neighbours. The women of the Tyrol
+are in general remarkably beautiful, exceedingly well shaped and of fine
+complexions.
+
+In the towns the bourgeoises dress well, something in the French style, and
+it is their custom to salute travellers who pass by kissing their hands to
+them. The dress of the female peasantry, however, is unpleasing to the eye
+and so uncouth, that it would make the most beautiful women appear homely.
+In the first place I will speak of their head dress, of which there are
+three different kinds, two of which are as _bizarre_ as can be imagined.
+The first sort is a cap of sheepskin, the fleece of which is as white as
+snow, and the cap is of conical shape, the base being exceeding large in
+proportion to its height, and resembles much the sugar loaves made in
+Egypt. The second is a black scull cap, with the three pieces of stiff
+black _gaze_, sticking out like the vanes of a windmill; so that when put
+on the head, one vane stands upright from the forehead and the other two
+from each ear. The third head dress is a broad straw hat, and I wish they
+would stick to this coiffure, and discard the two others. Then the waist of
+their dress is as long as
+
+ ...du pole antarctique an détroit de Davis.[121]
+
+Their petticoats are exceedingly short, scarcely reaching the calf of the
+legs, which are enveloped in a pair of flaming red stockings. Who the devil
+could invent such an ungraceful dress for a female?
+
+The costume of the men on the contrary is becoming and graceful. It
+resembles very much the costume of the Andalusians. The hat is exactly the
+same, the crown being small and the rim very broad.
+
+The Tyroleans are a fine gallant race of men and are excellent marksmen.
+They were formerly much attached to the House of Austria; but that
+attachment is now entirely changed to dislike, from the ingratitude they
+have met with, since they have been replaced under that scepter.
+
+The only fault I find in the Tyroleans, is that they are rather too devout
+and consequently too much under the influence of the clergy. Yet in their
+devotion there is not the smallest tinge of hypocrisy and they are esteemed
+a highly moral people.
+
+If you arrive at an inn in the evening, while the family are at prayer,
+neither master nor servants will come to wait on you, till prayers are
+over; and then you will be served with sufficient alacrity; but the prayers
+are rather long.
+
+I believe the priests extort a good deal of money from these good people.
+The road thro' the Tyrol was made by the Romans, in the time of Septimus
+Severus. An immense number of Crucifixes on the road attest and command the
+devotion of the people.
+
+How Kotzebue can call Innspruck a dirty town I am at a loss to conceive. He
+must have visited it during very rainy weather; for to me it appears one of
+the cleanest and most chearful towns I have ever seen. There are several
+very fine buildings, for instance the Jesuits' College, and the Franciscan
+monastery; Nothing can be more picturesque than the situation of this city
+in the valley of the Inn and its romantic windings. The suburbs are very
+extensive and can boast several fine houses. The cupola of the Government
+House is gilded, which gives it a splendid appearance. In the _Hofkirche_
+or church of the court there are a number of statues, large as life, in
+bronze; among which my guide pointed out to me those of Clovis, Godfrey of
+Bouillon, Albert the Wise, Charles V, Philip II of Spain, Rudolph of
+Hapsburgh, and to my great astonishment the British King Arthur; there were
+twenty-eight statues altogether. But on my return to my inn, I found that
+my guide had made a great error respecting King Arthur, and that the said
+statue represented Prince Arthur, son of Henry VII, King of England, and
+not the old Hero of Romance; and my hostess' book further informed me that
+these statues were those of the Kings and Princes belonging to families
+connected by descent and blood with Maximilian I. In the same _Hofkirche_
+is a fine monument erected to Maximilian and a statue of bronze of this
+Emperor is figured kneeling between four bronze figures representing four
+Virtues. In the gardens of the Palace of the Archduke Ferdinand in this
+city is a fine equestrian statue which rests entirely on the hind feet of
+the horse. From Innspruck there is a water passage by the river Inn all the
+way to Vienna, as the Inn flows into the Danube at Passau. The banks of the
+Inn are so romantic and picturesque that I would willingly prolong my
+_séjour_ at Innspruck, but as I mean to take the journey from Mittenwald to
+Munich by the river Isar, I must take advantage of the raft which starts
+from that place the day after to-morrow.
+
+
+MUNICH, 20th July.
+
+I left Innspruck in a _chaise de poste_ on the 16th, and arrived the same
+evening at five o'clock at Mittenwald. At a short distance before I arrived
+at Mittenwald, I entered the Bavarian territory, which announces itself by
+a turnpike gate painted white and blue, the colours and _Feldzeichen_ of
+Bavaria. In the Austrian territory the barriers are painted black and
+yellow, these being the characteristic colors of Austria.
+
+Mittenwald is a small neat town, offering nothing remarkable but a church
+yard or _Ruhe-garten_ (garden of repose) as it is called, where there are a
+number of quaint inscriptions on the tombstones. At Mittenwald I had some
+trouble about my passport, as it was not _visé_ by a Bavarian authority;
+but I explained to the officer that I had never fallen in with any Bavarian
+authority since I left Rome, and that, while at Rome, I had no intention of
+going thro' Bavaria; that at Milan the Austrian authorities had _visé_ my
+passport for Vienna and that I should only pass thro' Munich, without
+making a longer stay than one week. He acquiesced in my argument, but
+inserted my explanation on the passport. At half a quarter of a mile beyond
+Mittenwald I met the raft just about to get under weigh at eleven o'clock
+a.m. This raft is about as long as the length of a thirty-six gun frigate,
+and formed of spars fastened together; on this is a platform about one and
+a half feet high. The Isar begins its course close to Mittenwald, and the
+place on which the raft stood, previous to departure, was very shallow; but
+water was quickly let in from sluices to float the raft, and off we set
+with a cargo of peasants, male and female, and merchandise bound for
+Munich. As the river Isar rushes between immense mountains, and forms a
+continual descent until the plains of Bavaria open to view, you may
+conceive with what rapidity we went. We encountered several falls of water
+of two, three, four and sometimes five feet which we had to _shoot_, which
+no boat could possibly do without being upset. The lower part of the raft
+was frequently under water in making these _shoots_ and we were obliged to
+hold on fast to our seats to prevent being jerked off. Nothing can be more
+romantic and picturesque than this journey, and there is something aweful
+in _shooting_ these falls; these rafts are, however, so solidly constructed
+that there is no danger whatever. They can neither sink nor upset. We
+arrived and halted the evening at Tölz, a large village or town on the
+right bank of the Isar. What gives to Tölz a remarkably singular appearance
+is, that on a height at a short distance from the town, and hanging
+abruptly over the river, you perceive several figures in wood, larger than
+the life, which figures form groups, representing the whole history of the
+passion of Jesus Christ. At a short distance, if you are not prepared for
+this, you suppose that they are real men, and that a procession or
+execution is going forward. On landing I immediately ascended this hill in
+order to observe this curiosity, and there I beheld the following groups,
+first: Christ in the midst of his disciples preaching; secondly: the
+disciples asleep in a cave, and Christ watching and praying; next was Judas
+betraying Christ to the soldiery; then the judgment of Christ before
+Pilate; then Christ bearing his cross to the place of execution; and lastly
+the crucifixion on Mount Calvary. The ground is curiously laid out so as to
+represent, as much as possible, the ground in the environs of Jerusalem.
+Tölz is a pretty village, but contains nothing more remarkable than the
+above groups.
+
+The next day at twelve o'clock we perceived the spires of Munich, and at
+two anchored close to one of the bridges from whence, having hired a
+wheelbarrow to trundle my portmanteau, I repaired to the inn called the
+Golden Cross--_Zum goldenen Kreutz_. At Tölz the Rhetian Alps recede from
+the view; the landscape then presents a sloping plain which is perfectly
+level within four miles of Munich. The river widens immediately on issuing
+from the gorges of the Tyrol and for the last five miles we were followed
+by boys on the banks of the river, begging for wood, with which our raft
+was laden, and we threw to them many a faggot. Wood is the great export
+from the Tyrol to Bavaria, as the latter is a flat country and has not much
+wood, with which on the contrary the Tyrol abounds. A sensible difference
+of climate is now felt and the air is keener than in the Tyrol. The price
+of a place on the raft from Mittenwald to Munich cost only one florin, and
+at Tölz an excellent supper, bed and coffee in the morning cost me only one
+florin.
+
+
+MUNICH, 23rd July.
+
+Munich, the capital of Bavaria, is an ancient Gothic city of venerable
+appearance. The houses are very solid in structure, and the streets
+sufficiently broad to give to the city a cheerful appearance. There are
+some suburbs added to it, built in the modern taste, which embellish it
+greatly. A large Place outside the old town, called the _Carolinen-Platz,_
+presents a number of villas disposed in the form of a circus. In these
+suburbs the people assemble on holidays and Sundays, to smoke and drink
+beer, of which a great quantity is consumed, it being the favorite and
+national beverage. From the lively scene of the lower class of the
+bourgeoisie, male and female, meeting here in the _Biersschanks_ and
+_Tanzsaale_ I was reminded of the lines in Faust:
+
+ Gewiss man findet hier
+ Die schönsten Mädchen, und das beste Bier,
+
+which may be thus rendered:
+
+ Here let us halt! 'tis here we're sure to find
+ Beer of the best and maidens fair and kind!
+
+There are other very agreeable promenades outside the town, laid out as
+_jardins anglais,_ the garden of Ostenwald for instance; and should you
+wish to extend your walk further, there is Nymphenburg, a royal Palace and
+gardens, just one league distant from the city.
+
+The _Residenz-schloss_ or Palace of the King is a solid building. The
+interior is well worth seeing. There is a superb saloon with a vast number
+of valuable miniatures appended to the wainscoating. An enormously heavy
+bed, groaning with gold and silver embroidery and pearls and which is said
+to weigh a ton, is to be seen here. There is a very good collection of
+pictures, chiefly portraits, of the Electoral, now Royal family. There is a
+fine chapel too belonging to this palace; a superb staircase of marble, and
+some fine old tapestry representing the actions of Otto von Wittelsbach.
+There is likewise a curious miniature copy of Trajan's column in gold and
+incrusted with precious stones, besides a variety of other things of value.
+
+There are two theatres in Munich; one called the Hof or Court theatre,
+where there is a company of comedians for tragedy and comedy, the expences
+of which are defrayed principally by the King. The boxes are generally let
+to the nobility and the _parterre_ is open to every body on payment. I
+witnessed the representation of Mozart's _Nozze di Figaro._ The King was
+present and was greeted with much affection. He has a very benignant
+expression of countenance. He is much beloved by his subjects, for he has
+governed them paternally. He has given to them a constitution _unasked;_
+for they were so contented with the old Government, that they desired no
+change; but he, with his usual good sense, saw the propriety of consulting
+and complying with the spirit of the age. A German writer of some eminence
+at the time of the French Revolution, when the aristocrats and alarmists of
+all countries were crying out against it, and proposing harsh measures to
+arrest its progress, said: "Sovereigns of Europe, do you wish to set bounds
+to the progress of French principles? Nothing can be more simple; you have
+only to govern your people like Maximilian of Bavaria and Frederick of
+Saxony, and your subjects will never desire a change."
+
+At the German (national) theatre which is a fair sized one, I saw a tragedy
+performed called _Der Wald bey Herman-stadt_ (the Forest near
+Hermanstadt),[122] It was an interesting piece taken from a feudal legend.
+The part of Elisene was performed by Mlle Vohs, a very good actress. I
+missed very much one thing in Munich, and that is the want of _cafés_ like
+those in France and Italy, which have so brilliant an appearance. They make
+coffee here at the inns; and there are two or three dull places up one pair
+of stairs, where they play at billiards, and make as indifferent coffee as
+is made in England. The hour of dining at Munich is in general one o'clock.
+A slice of ham or sausage with beer form the _goûter,_ usually taken at
+five or six o'clock; and at nine follows a supper as solid as the dinner.
+The Germans are not loungers as the French and Italians, who, for the most
+part, spend all their spare time in coffee-houses. When I mentioned to a
+Bavarian that I could find no _cafés_ in Munich resembling those in France
+and Italy, he said with emphasis! _Gott bewahre_ (God forbid)! I could not
+help thinking he was in the right; for those splendid _cafés_ are very
+seducing to young people and tend to encourage a life of idleness and to
+keep them from their studies. The lower _bourgeoisie_ and _Stubenmädchen_
+(_maidservants_) wear a singular head dress. It is made of stuff worked
+with silver or gold and resembles two horns sticking out one at each ear.
+This head dress must be costly. This class of women wear also on _fête_
+days gold crosses, collars and earrings.
+
+The Bavarians seem a frank, honest set of people, tho' sometimes a little
+rough, in their exterior deportment. The character of Otto of Wittelsbach,
+in the tragedy of that name, gives the best idea of the Bavarian character.
+
+I have made acquaintance here with a Mr F-----, an Austrian gentleman, and
+two Polish gentlemen, the one an officer and the other a medical man. They
+are brothers and had both served in the French army. We have agreed to
+travel to Vienna together on board of the raft which starts every week from
+Munich to Vienna. This raft brings to every day between twelve o'clock and
+two near some town or village on the banks of the river, in order to allow
+the passengers to dine, and anchors every evening at seven o'clock near
+some town or village to sup and sleep. You have only to tell the
+_Flossmeister_, or Master of the Raft, at what inn you mean to put up, or
+if you have no preference, he will recommend you one; and at five the next
+morning he goes his rounds to the different inns to collect his passengers,
+and at six gets under weigh.
+
+
+VIENNA, 2nd August.
+
+I left Munich on the 25th July and arrived on the 6th day of our journey,
+30th July, at Vienna, The _Floss_, or raft, on board of which we embarked,
+is about as long as the main deck of an eighty-four gun ship and about
+forty feet in breadth. It is constructed of strong spars lashed together.
+On the spars is constructed a large platform and on the platform several
+cabins, containing tables and chairs. Mr F----, the Poles and myself hired
+a cabin to ourselves. On the raft was a great deal of merchandize going to
+Vienna. At Vienna the _Flossmeister_, after landing his passengers and
+merchandize, sells his raft and returns on horseback to Munich. A raft is
+constructed weekly at Munich from wood felled in the Tyrol and floated on
+the Isar down to Munich. We arrived the first evening at Freysingen, but it
+was nearly dark when we arrived; it seemed however as far as we could
+observe to be a neat village; at any rate, we met with a very comfortable
+inn there with good fare and good beds. We met with a very pleasant family
+on board the raft, bound to Landshut; M. and Mme S. were extremely
+well-informed people and their two daughters very fine girls.
+
+We arrived the following day at twelve o'clock at Landshut, which is a very
+fine town. There is an immense Gothic tower or steeple to the Church of St
+Martin, about 450 feet in height. At Deckendorf, where the Isar flows into
+the Danube, I saluted for the first time that noble river. We stopped the
+night at Pillshofen and arrived the following day at twelve o'clock at
+Passau. Passau is a large, well built and handsome city, and is situated on
+the confluent of three rivers, the Inn, the Illst and the Danube; for here
+the two former flow into the latter, one on each side. Each of these rivers
+just before the point of juncture seem to be of different colors; for
+example the Danube appears blue, the Inn white, and the Illst black. At
+Passau we put up at the Wild Man (_Zum Wilden Mann_), a favorite sign for
+inns in these parts.
+
+The Cathedral and _Residenz-Schloss_ are striking buildings, and the city
+has a lively and grand appearance. The women appear to be in general
+handsome and well dressed. We brought to the evening at Engelhardtzell,
+where the barrier, painted black and yellow, announced our return to the
+Austrian territory. We underwent at the Customs house a rigid search for
+tobacco: they even took away the tobacco that some passengers had in their
+pouches. They were likewise very rigid about our passports. The English
+passports do not please them at all, on account of the features of the
+bearer not being specified therein, and as I answered their questions in
+German, they supposed me to be a native of that country and asked me what
+business I had with a British passport. I replied: _Weil ich ein Engländer
+bin.--Sie ein Engländer? Sie 'sind gewiss aus Nord Deutschland. Sie
+sprechen recht gut Deutsch.--Meine Herren, ich bin ein Engländer: viele
+Engländer studieren und sprechen Deutsch, und wenn Sièmit mir eine
+langeUnterredung gehalten hätten, so hätten Sie bald ausgefunden durch
+meine Sprachfehler, dass ich kein geborner Deutscher bin.--Aber Sie haben
+unsere Fragen vollkommen gut beantwortet.--Warum nicht? man hat mir die
+nehmlichen Fragen so wiederholten Malen gestellt, dass ich die dazu
+gehörigen Antworte auswendig habe, wie em Katechismus_.[123] The officer
+laughed, took up a pen, _viséd_ and gave me back my passport.
+
+The whole of the country on the banks of this noble river the Danube is
+picturesque and presents much variety. There cannot be a more delightful
+summer tour than a descent down this river. The next town of consequence
+that we arrived at was Linz, a large, populous and beautifully built city
+and capital of Upper Austria. The circumjacent country is in part
+mountainous. The Danube is very broad here, and there is an immensely long
+wooden bridge. We put up at the inn _Zum goldenen Kreutz_ (golden cross).
+Here it became indispensably necessary to change our money for Austrian
+paper, for that sort of it called _Wiener Währung_ (Vienna security), since
+neither foreign coin nor another description of Austrian paper, called
+_Conventions-Münze_ (conventional currency), are current for ordinary
+purposes; and it is necessary to get them changed for the current paper
+_Wiener Währung._To explain this matter more fully and clearly: there are
+two sorts of paper money in the Austrian Dominions. One is called
+_Conventions-Münze_ (conventional currency), which is fully equivalent to
+gold and sliver and cannot be refused as such throughout the whole of the
+Austrian dominions; the other, called _Wiener Währung_ (Vienna security) is
+current and payable in Austria proper only, and bears a loss, out of the
+Archduchy. The value of the _Wiener Währung_ fluctuates considerably, but
+the usual par of exchange is as 2 to 1: that means, two hundred florins
+_Wiener Währung_ are equal to one hundred _Convenzions-Münze_ or gold and
+silver money. Even the _Convenzions-Münze_ bears a loss, tho' trifling, out
+of the Imperial Dominions. The exchange has been known to have been at 400
+per cent; that is, four hundred florins _Wiener Währung_ were only worth
+one hundred florins gold and silver; but just now it may be reckoned a
+little beyond par, fluctuating from 200 to 220. In fact, the value of a
+florin _Wiener Währung_ may be calculated at a frank in French money. All
+this is exceedingly troublesome to travellers, particularly to those who do
+not understand the German language; for as they cannot read the
+inscription, it would be difficult for them to know the difference between
+one sort of paper money and the other and they might be seriously imposed
+upon. I advise therefore all travellers, before they arrive at the Austrian
+frontier, whether coming from Bavaria, Saxony, or Italy, to buy up the
+_Wiener Währung_ notes they may meet with, and which may be purchased at
+great profit, probably, beyond the frontier, whereas if they defer
+purchasing till they arrive within the Austrian frontier, they can only
+procure the _Wiener Währung_ at the common rate of exchange current.
+
+At Linz we find ourselves again in a wine country. Linz is renowned for the
+beauty of its women, and we had a most favorable specimen in our landlord's
+daughter, one of the most beautiful girls I ever beheld. We talked to her a
+great deal, and a scene ridiculous enough occurred. She has very beautiful
+arms which we all seemed to admire; and all at once, by instinct as it
+were, the two Poles lifted up one arm and I the other, and our respective
+lips were fastened on either arm at the same moment as if by word of
+command. We apologized for the liberty we took, saying that her arms were
+perfectly irresistible and that we had never seen such fine ones before.
+She accepted our excuse with the utmost good nature, and laughed very
+heartily. Her father is a man of information and a good classical scholar,
+a thing which is by no means uncommon among the inn-keepers of Germany. We
+stopped here that night, and the ensuing forenoon. We had an excellent
+supper, very good wine, and we drank to the health of the fair Amalia, the
+host's daughter. Our host, who was a friend of Mr F----'s, gave us the
+best of every thing, and our expences did not amount to more than seven
+florins _Wiener Währung_, for supper, bed, breakfast and dinner. We passed
+the forenoon in visiting the different parts of the city and we were struck
+with the appearance of opulence and industry that prevails.
+
+Before we arrived at Mölk, which is the next important place, we passed the
+town of Ens and beyond that the famous _Strudel_ or Whirlpool which is
+dangerous at times for boats. Our raft was completely whirled round. This
+whirlpool is caused by rocks rising abruptly out of the water. The popular
+tradition is that this whirlpool is the abode of a very malicious and
+spiteful _Wassernixe_, Undine or Water Goblin, who delighted in drowning
+passengers. The scenery hereabouts is more wild and romantic than what we
+have hitherto passed and bears a great resemblance to the landscape on the
+Rhine between Mayence and Coblentz. Mölk is an Abbey and a very magnificent
+edifice it is, situated on an eminence which forms the angle with the river
+and rises quite _à pio_ from the water's edge; it lies quite _en face_ to
+those who approach it, descending the stream, so that the river seems to be
+terminated by it. It commands a noble prospect. I had only time to inspect
+hastily the church. Beyond Mölk is a range of rocks that bear a great
+resemblance to a wall, and jut out a great deal towards the river. It is
+called the _Devil's wall_ from the tradition of the Devil having
+endeavoured to make a wall to dam up the river. Above this wall is the
+famous castle and vineyard called _Spitz am Platz_, and further on is the
+castle of Dierenstein, situated on a mountain on the left bank of the
+Danube. The ascent is very steep; this castle, now in ruins, was the place
+where Richard Coeur de Lion was confined. The walls only of the castle and
+part of the chapel are all that remain; we did not fail to visit a place of
+such celebrity. A convent lies below it.
+
+We brought to the night at a large village where there is an excellent inn;
+and the next day, the Leopoldsberg, bursting forth to view, announced to us
+the approach to Vienna. We anchored at Nussdorf, where there is a Custom
+house, and from whence the distance to Vienna is about one and half mile
+English. After having my trunk examined, I hired a hackney coach and drove
+into Vienna. The barriers beyond the suburb are called _Lines_, and between
+the Suburbs and the old town is an Esplanade. We entered the Suburbs by the
+_Währinger Linie_, and the old town by the _Rothes Thor_ (Red gate); and
+from thence I repaired to the inn _Zum weissen Wolf_ (white Wolf) in the
+_Altem Fleischmarkt_ (old meat-market).
+
+
+VIENNA, Augt. 4.
+
+The old town of Vienna is not very large, since you can walk round its
+circumference on the ramparts in two hours. It was formerly fortified, but
+the French blew up the fortifications, leaving only the rampart; and by so
+doing they did a thing of great utility for the Viennese, and gave to the
+Austrian government an excellent opportunity of joining the old town to the
+magnificent faubourgs, by filling up the esplanade which separates them
+with streets and squares, which would prevent the unpleasant effects of
+dust in dry, and the mud in wet weather, for this dust and mud renders the
+esplanade almost at all times a disagreeable promenade, there being a sharp
+wind prevalent almost the whole year at Vienna, which blows about the dust
+_en tourbillons_. Here then was an excellent opportunity, afforded by the
+blowing up of the fortifications, of paving the whole of the esplanade and
+filling it up with streets. But no! the Austrian government seem determined
+upon restoring the fortifications, and a considerable number of workmen are
+employed. This is very silly, for these fortifications are not of the least
+use against a foreign enemy, inasmuch as the enemy can always erect his
+batteries among the faubourgs and need only make one parallel, the
+protection and cover afforded to him by the faubourgs rendering the other
+two superfluous. The faubourgs are by far the finest part of the city, and
+the garrison of the old town, in endeavouring to defend it, would destroy
+by every shot they should fire the fine buildings on the faubourgs. Of the
+folly of making such a defence they were made fully sensible in 1809. One
+of the Archdukes threw himself into the old town of Vienna, with an
+intention of defending it to the last and refused to surrender. Napoleon
+caused batteries to be erected on the _Rennweg_ or _Corso_ covered by the
+church of St Charles, the Manege and Palace of the Hungarian noble guard,
+all magnificent buildings in the faubourgs. He then summoned the garrison
+of the old town again to surrender saying: "Every shot fired against the
+besiegers destroys your own most valuable property and finest edifices."
+This argument, backed by the entreaties of the citizens, had its effect and
+the capitulation was signed. This shows the perfect inutility of fortifying
+the old town of Vienna against a foreign enemy. Indeed a capital city
+should never be fortified; it generally contains too many things of value,
+ever to be exposed to the risk of a bombardment. It would seem, however,
+that the object of the Austrian government in reconstructing these works
+were to keep its own subjects at Vienna in check. But in this case it would
+be much more advisable to construct a fortress on the heights of Kahlenberg
+or of Leopoldsberg, both of which command the city and the whole expanse
+below. The Turks were encamped on the Kahlenberg at the famous siege of
+Vienna.
+
+Vienna proper, the old town, is a Gothic city, but a very handsome one. The
+streets are in general broad and well paved; but the _Places_ or Squares
+are small. With the exception of the _Herrengasse_, where the nobility
+reside, the rest of Vienna is inhabited by shopkeepers and wholesale
+dealers; and the shops are brilliant and well fitted up. The _Kärnthner
+Strasse_, a long and tolerably broad street, and the _Kohlmarkt_ present
+the greatest display of wealth. Indeed the _Kärnthner Strasse_ may be
+considered as the principal street; this street and the _Kohlmarkt_ have a
+great resemblance to the finest parts of Holborn. The _Graben_ also present
+a fine display of shops and may be termed the Bond Street of Vienna. The
+_Sanct Stephans Platz_ where the Cathedral church of Vienna, called _St
+Stephans Kirche_, stands, is the largest _Place_ in Vienna. The Cathedral
+is a very ancient and curious Gothic edifice, and the steeple is nearly 450
+feet high. I happened to enter the Cathedral one day on the occasion of a
+solemn requiem celebrated for the soul of Prince Metternich's father. Had
+it been for the son, instead of the father, many an honorable man
+persecuted at the instigation of that most machiavelic of all ministers,
+might exclaim in making a slight alteration in a well known epitaph:
+
+ Cy-gît M---- ah! qu'il est bien
+ Pour son repos et pour le mien!
+
+Among the other striking buildings in the old town is the _Hofburg_ or
+Imperial Palace, a very extensive quadrangular building, with a large court
+in its centre. A Guard mounts here every day at eleven o'clock. It was in
+one of the saloons of this palace that the celebrated Congress of Vienna
+was held; a Congress whose labours will be long and severely felt by Europe
+and duly appreciated by posterity, who will feel any other sentiment but
+that of gratitude for the arrangements entered into there. The _Hofburg_
+was built by Leopold VII in 1200. This building, from its being extremely
+irregular and from its having received additions at intervals in the
+different styles of architecture, has been aptly enough considered as the
+type of the Austrian monarchy, and of its growth from a Markgraviate to an
+Empire; in _this_, by the continued acquisition of foreign territories
+differing from each other in manners and hi speech; in _that_, by the
+continued addition of various specimens of architecture and style of
+building in its augmentation.
+
+
+VIENNA, Aug. 8th.
+
+I am very well content with my abode at the _Weisser Wolf_, tho' it is not
+a first-rate hotel. They are very civil people, and I have an excellent and
+spacious room for two florins _Wiener Whärung_ per diem. Lodgings are the
+only things that are dear in Vienna, every other article is, however,
+cheaper than in any other city I have yet been in. All kinds of Hungarian
+wine may be had at the most reasonable prices. I generally breakfast at a
+neighbouring _Café_ in the _Fleischmarkt_ for the sake of reading the
+_Allgemeine Zeitung_ which is taken in there, and which is the only journal
+having a shade of liberality which is permitted in the Austrian dominions.
+From the hours of twelve to three, dinners _à la carte_ are served at the
+_Weisser Wolf_. For two and half florins _W.W._, I get an excellent dinner
+with a bottle of Offener wine. The wine of Offen resembles much that of
+Bordeaux in its quality and flavor. The tariff however of the dinners and
+wines varies daily a few kreutzers, in consequence of the eternal
+fluctuation of the _W.W._, so that every morning a fresh tariff is affixed
+to the wainscot of the saloon where the dinners are served. Supper, served
+likewise _à la carte_, is at its full tide between the hours of eight and
+ten o'clock; and as Vienna is renowned for the celebrity of its beefsteaks
+and cutlets, called here _Rostbraten_, these and a salad seem to be the
+favourite dish for supper. My mornings I have hitherto passed in lounging
+about the _Kärnthner Gasse, St Stephen's Platz, Kohlmarkt_, etc. For an
+hour before dinner the fashionable promenade is on the rampart in front of
+the palace of Duke Albert of Saxe-Teschen; in the evening on the _Prater_,
+in a carriage, on horseback, or on foot. The _Prater_ is of immense extent
+and offers a great variety of amusements and sights. I generally return
+home at night pretty well fatigued from my rambles.
+
+There is another great inconvenience at Vienna, resulting from the
+fluctuation of the current money, and this is that a stranger, dwelling at
+an inn, is sure to be disturbed five or six times in the morning, sometimes
+as early as five or six o'clock, by Jews who rap at his door to enquire if
+he wants to exchange gold and silver against currency or _vice versâ_. I
+used to lose all patience at being so disturbed in the morning, and was
+obliged in self-defence to put an affiche on the door of my room to this
+effect: "_Man kauft und verkauft hier nichts; kein Wechsler darf
+hereintreten_." "Here there is no buying and selling; no money changer is
+allowed to come in," and I hereby recommend to all strangers not to treat
+with these Jews, but on their arrival, or at any time they think fit, to go
+to a banking establishment in this city, where every day after eleven
+o'clock you can exchange your gold and silver for paper at the just rate of
+exchange, as published at the Bourse, paying only a very slight premium,
+and on leaving Vienna to go to the same establishment to change your
+superfluous _Wiener Währung_ for _Convenzions Münze_ or gold and silver
+money. For when the Jews tell you the rate of exchange is so and so, you
+conclude probably your bargain with them, and on enquiring at the Bourse
+you find that the Jew has made a percentage of six or eight per cent, out
+of you. _Louis d'or_ are the best foreign coin to bring into the Austrian
+Dominions. Next to them in utility are the Dutch ducats, or _Geharnischte
+Männer_ as they are termed, from the figure of the man in armour upon them.
+All other corns suffer a loss in proportion. The bankers in Vienna pay the
+foreign bill of exchange in _Convenzions Münze_, which you must afterwards
+change for _Wiener Währung_, the only current money in Vienna and Austria.
+But what makes it additionally troublesome is that here in Vienna there are
+particular payments, which must absolutely be paid in gold or silver or
+_Convenzions Münze_, and _not Wiener Währung_; for instance the franking of
+foreign letters at the post office, where they do not take the _Wiener
+Währung_. In vain you may intreat them to take the _Wiener Währung_ at any
+rate they please; no! you must go elsewhere and buy from the first person
+you can meet with as much gold and silver as is required for the franking
+of the letters; so bigotted are they in the Austrian dominions to the
+letter of the law! This happened to me: I wanted to frank three letters for
+England and I went to the post office with _Wiener Währung_ paper, not
+being aware of this regulation, and I was obliged to return to my Hotel, to
+lay hold of a Jew, and to buy from him as much gold and silver as was
+requisite for the franking of the letters.
+
+At the _Wechselbank_ or Bank of Exchange I have before mentioned, the crowd
+that attends daily is immense; but the business is carried on without hurry
+or confusion. You hand in your paper or your gold and silver coin, the
+clerk who receives it gives you an order on paper for the amount specified,
+which paper you take into another room and therein receive the amount. This
+establishment, however, remains open only two hours every day, between
+eleven and one I believe; so if you are too late for this interval of time,
+you must apply to the brokers, Christian or Israelite.
+
+
+VIENNA, August 11th.
+
+We left the old town by the _Burg-thor,_ and crossing the Esplanade,
+directed our course to the _Rennweg,_ one of the suburbs, in order to view
+the majestic edifice of St Charles, which is equal in the beauty of its
+architecture to many of the finest churches in Rome. Its façade and cupola
+render it one of the most striking buildings belonging to Vienna. We next
+visited the _Manège_ and the Palace called the palace of the Hungarian
+Noble Guard. They are both beautiful edifices. The faubourgs of Vienna are
+built in the modern style and their buildings, both public and private,
+excellent in their way and in the best state. The streets of the faubourgs
+are broad but not paved. The most celebrated of these faubourgs are _Maria
+Hülf_, _Leopold-stadt_, _Landstrasse_, the _Rennweg_, the _Wühringer
+Gasse_; and I am persuaded that if the old town were united to the faubourg
+by means of streets and squares and the esplanade filled up with buildings,
+Vienna would perhaps be the handsomest city in Europe and the fourth in
+size, for the best buildings and palaces are in the faubourgs, viz., the
+Military College, the Polytechnic School, St Charles' Church, the Porcelain
+fabric, the Palaces of Esterhazy, Kaunitz, Stahremberg, Schwarzenberg,
+Palfy, and the beautiful Palace and ground of Belvedere in which last is a
+noble collection of pictures open to the public. At the Polytechnic school
+one of the principal professors is a friend of Mr F------'s, and he
+explained to us the nature of the establishment and the course of studies
+pursued. The apparatus for every branch of science is on the grandest
+scale. After dinner we repaired to the _Prater_, crossing a branch of the
+Danube which here forms several islands. The _Prater_ requires and deserves
+particular mention. Part of it is something in the style of the _Champs
+Elysées_ at Paris, and it is fully equal to it in the variety of amusements
+and enjoyments to be met with there; but it is far larger and more
+beautiful on account of its landscape and the diversified manner in which
+the grounds are laid out. The _Prater_, then, is an immense park, laid out
+on an island of considerable extent on the Danube. The nearest faubourg to
+it is the _Leopoldstadt_, which is also the most fashionable one, and a
+bridge conducts you from that faubourg direct into the _Prater_. The
+_Prater_ presents a mixture of garden, meadow, upland and forest; the lofty
+trees arranged in avenues or in clumps give a delightful protecting shade.
+On the road destined for the carriages there is every afternoon a most
+brilliant display of carriages. Another avenue is destined for equestrians,
+and two avenues, one on each side of these two, for pedestrians. There are
+besides winding footpaths, that conduct you all over this vast extent of
+ground, and circular grass plots surrounded by trees where the pedestrian
+may repose and eat and drink if he will. Here are _restaurants_ in plenty,
+_cafés_, Panoramas, exhibitions of wild beasts, swings, tennis courts,
+places for running at the ring, do for burlesque dramatic performances,
+_farceurs_, jugglers, De Bach's Equestrian Amphitheatre in the style of
+Franconi, _Salles de Danse_, baths, billiard rooms, gaming tables, and even
+houses appropriated to gallantry. In fact, the _Prater_ is quite the
+Paradise of the bourgeoisie of Vienna, who are fond of the pleasures of the
+table and take every opportunity of making dinner and supper parties. The
+bourgeois of Vienna are far more sensual than spiritual and not at all
+disposed to self-denial.
+
+Excellent hams and sausages are to be had here; and the Viennese who dines
+and sups heartily at his own house never fails, during his evening
+promenade, to take a tolerable good portion of ham or sausage, with a
+proportion of Offen wine or Maylander Beer, by way of staying his stomach
+during the tedious interval between dinner and supper. I need scarce add
+that smoking is universal, as indeed it is all over Germany, for I scarcely
+ever see a German without a pipe either in his mouth or fastened to his
+coat and a bag or pouch of tobacco either in his pocket or attached to his
+button hole. In the _Prater_ dances often take place in the open air
+between the grisettes of Vienna, who are in general handsome and well made,
+and who dress well, and their lovers and admirers. The _Prater_ was first
+opened to the public by the Emperor Joseph II. The _Au-garten_ is another
+place of recreation and amusement, but on a smaller and much more tranquil
+and sober scale, than the _Prater_. None of the lower classes think of
+coming here, tho' it is open to every body decently dressed: there is not
+that profuse eating and drinking going forward. It is more properly
+speaking a promenade, and forms a garden with alleys of trees where music
+is often performed and there is a superb saloon where refreshments may be
+had. The _Au-garten_ is frequented chiefly by the _Noblesse_ and _Haute
+Bourgeoisie_. In the morning likewise it is a fashionable resort to drink
+the mineral waters. It adjoins the _Prater_, being on the same island. It
+was the favourite lounge of Joseph II, who opened it to the public by
+affixing this inscription on one of the gates:
+
+ Allen Menschen gewidmete Erlustigung von ihrem Schätzer
+
+ "Place of recreation open to all Men by their esteemer."
+
+
+VIENNA, Aug. 13th.
+
+There are a great number of theatres at Vienna. Two are situated in the old
+town, viz., the _Hof-theater_ and the _Burg-theater_. The _Hof-theater_ is
+only open when the Court are at Vienna, and they are now at Baden, ten
+leagues distant. The _Burg-theater_ is open all the year round, and may be
+considered as the national theatre. It is much frequented by the
+bourgeoisie and inhabitants of the old town, who do not chuse to take the
+trouble to go to the _Wieden-theater_, which is situated in the faubourgs,
+and which is more of a classical and fashionable theatre than the other,
+inasmuch as it is more elegantly and classically built, better fitted up,
+and has a far better company of comedians. At the _Burgtheater_ I saw
+Kotzebue's _Edelsinn und Armuth_ performed. The Wieden theatre which is, as
+I have said, in the faubourgs, is the handsomest theatre perhaps in Europe
+for its size. It is not large, but it is fitted up with so much taste and
+you see and hear so well; every ornament is so chaste and there is nothing
+at all tawdry or superfluous. It is, I really think, a model of what every
+theatre ought to be. There is a good deal of bronze about it which gives it
+a classical appearance, and the boxes are supported by Caryatides in
+bronze. There is a peculiarity in all the theatres at Vienna, which is,
+that in the _parterre_ you must sit in the place the number of which is
+marked on your ticket. These places are called _Gesperrte Sitze,_ and each
+seat resembles an armchair. When not occupied, the seat is folded up and
+locked to the back of the chair, until the person who holds the ticket
+corresponding to its number comes to take it; so that no other but the
+person holding the ticket corresponding to the number can take it, and you
+are thus never likely to be shoved out of your place, as you are at most of
+the theatres in Europe. There are men stationed at the doors who follow you
+into the _parterre_ to unlock and let down a seat for you, and to them you
+give your ticket with a slight gratification, which is however quite
+optional; your ticket you previously pay for at the door.
+
+
+VIENNA, Augt. 20th.
+
+I have been to see Schönbrunn, the usual residence of the young Napoleon;
+but he is now at Baden with the Imperial family, where his mother, who is
+lately arrived from Italy, is also on a visit. The young Napoleon is said
+to be a remarkable fine boy, and a great favorite with his grandfather the
+Emperor. Many are the anecdotes related of him. I shall mention one. He had
+heard so often talk of his father, that shortly after the arrival of his
+mother, he wished to see his father also and asked his attendants
+repeatedly and not in a very patient tone: _Wo ist denn mein Vater?_[124]
+This was told to his grandfather the Emperor; and he gave directions that
+the child should be brought to him, the very next time he should put the
+question. He then said to him: _Du möchtestwissen wo dein Vater ist? Er ist
+in Verhaft. Man hat es mit ihm gut gemeint; weil er aber unruhig war, so
+hat man ihn in Verhaft gestellt, und Dich wird man auch verhaften, wenn Du
+unruhig bist._[125]
+
+So much for this anecdote; but I did not hear what was the answer of the
+young prince. The young Napoleon is, it appears, a great favorite of the
+soldiers, who quite adore him, and he will sometimes go into the kitchen to
+get bread and meat to give to the soldiers on Guard at the Palace. A
+singular event happened lately to Maria Louisa. During her stay at
+Schõnbrunn, her _chatouille,_ with several things of value in it,
+_bijouterie,_ etc., was stolen from her. She caused enquiries to be made,
+and researches to be set on foot. Nobody has been able to find out who took
+it; but it was put back in the precise place from whence it was taken, and
+not a single article of the _bijouterie_ or things of value was missing. It
+is supposed this theft was made for political purposes, in order to
+discover the nature of her epistolary correspondence, if any existed. Had
+it been taken by a vulgar thief, it is not probable that the articles of
+value would have been restored. Such is the unhappy condition of that
+Princess to be always an object of suspicion and espionnage.
+
+
+_Journey to Prague_.
+
+
+I left Vienna on the 28th August in a _Landkutsche_ and arrived at Prague
+on the first of September.
+
+These _Landkutsche_ are on the same plan and footing with the _vetture_ in
+Italy, and travel in the same manner, with this difference, however; that
+the _Landkutscher_ do not usually, as the _vetturini_ do, undertake to
+provide for the supper and bed of their passengers. In a word, you are not
+_spesato;_ and in Germany there is not the least necessity for it, for
+there is no such thing as extortion on the part of the German innkeepers,
+who are by far the most respectable of that profession. Besides, in most
+places, everything is _tariffed,_ and where it is not, the landlord never
+makes an unreasonable demand, or attempts to make foreigners pay more than
+natives; whereas in Italy if you are not _spesato_ there are no bounds to
+the rapacity of the innkeepers, witness mine host of Terracina. Both Italy
+and Germany present the greatest convenience for travellers, as the
+_Landkutsche_ or _vetture_ are continually passing from town to town. There
+is however this difference between them, that the Italian _vetturini_ will
+abate their price, if their carriage is full excepting one place, and that
+they must start, whereas the German _Landkutscher_ never abate their price.
+
+I paid for my journey from Vienna to Prague thirty-five florins _Wiener
+Währung,_ and we made the journey in five days. Our first day's journey
+brought us to Höllabrunn, having stoppd to dinner at Stockeran. The road is
+excellent and the several towns and villages we past thro' clean and well
+built. The landscape was either a plain, or gently undulating and extremely
+well cultivated.
+
+Bohemia resembles Moravia, being an exceedingly rich corn country,
+generally open; not many trees about the country near the road side, except
+at the _Chateau_ and farm houses. The language is a dialect of the
+Sclavonic, mixed with some German; but at the inns there is always one or
+two servants who speak German. In Bohemia a traveller not speaking German,
+and who has no interpreter with him, would find himself greatly
+embarrassed. The Bohemians call themselves in their own language
+_Cherschky_, and the Hungarians call themselves _Magyar_.
+
+
+[117] Tasso, _Gerusalemme liberata_, canto XV, ottave 31, 32:
+
+ Un uom della Liguria avrà ardimento
+ All' incognito corao esporsi in prima...
+ Tu spiegherai, Colombo, a un nuovo polo
+ Lontane si le fortunate antenne...--ED.
+
+
+[118] Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, XL, 31, 1.--ED.
+
+[119] See reference to Eustace p. 131.
+
+[120] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, XXVIII, 38, 7.--ED.
+
+[121] Boileau, _Satires_, XI, v. 117.
+
+[122] The drama, _Der Wold bei Hermannstadt,_ is the work of Johanna
+ Fraenul von Weissenthurn (1773-1847), a celebrated Viennese actress
+ and authoress. An opera was written on the same text by W. Westmeyer,
+ --ED.
+
+[123] Because I am an Englishman--You are an Englishman? you are certainly
+ a North-German; you speak very correct German.--Gentlemen, I tell you
+ I am an Englishman; many English study and speak the German language
+ and if you had held a long conversation with me, you would soon have
+ perceived from my faults in speaking, that I am not a German.--But you
+ have answered our questions so correctly.--Why not, the same questions
+ have been put to me so often that I have all the necessary answers by
+ heart like a catechism.
+
+[124] Where is my father?
+
+[125] "You wish to know where your father is? He is under arrest; people
+ were well disposed to him; but he is placed under arrest, because he
+ was unruly, and if you are unruly you will be placed under arrest
+ likewise."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+SEPTEMBER 1818-MARCH 1819
+
+The splendid city of Prague--The German expression, "To give the
+basket"--Journey from Prague to Dresden--Journey from Dresden to Berlin--A
+description of Berlin--The Prussian Army--Theatricals--Peasants talk about
+Napoleon--Prussians and French should be allies--Absurd policy of the
+English Tories--Journey from Berlin to Dresden--A description of
+Dresden--The battle of Dresden in 1813--Clubs at Dresden--Theatricals--
+German beds--Saxon scholars--The picture gallery--Tobacco an ally of
+Legitimacy--Saxon women--Meissen--Unjust policy of Europe towards the King
+of Saxony.
+
+
+PRAGUE, 4 Sept.
+
+Prague is a far more striking and splendid city than Vienna, without its
+faubourgs. The streets are broader; and it has a more cheerful and less
+confined appearance than the old town of Vienna. The position of Prague too
+is very romantic and picturesque, part of it lying on a mountain and part
+on a plain; and it stands on the confluent of two rivers, the Mulda and the
+Braun. The upper part of the city, called Oberburg, stands on a height
+called Ratschin, and on this height stands a most magnificent palace and
+other stately buildings. There is a beautiful panoramic view from this part
+of Prague. In this part of the city too is the cathedral of St Wenzel or
+Wenceslaus, who was its founder. His tomb and that of St John Nepomucene, a
+favorite saint of the Bohemians, is in this church. The Cathedral is of
+extreme solidity, but little ornamented, having been plundered by the
+Swedes in 1648. The canopy over the shrine of St John Nepomucene has a
+profusion of votive offerings appended to it. The lower part of Prague is
+divided into two parts by the Mulda. The bridge across the Mulda is one of
+the finest in Europe. It has twenty-four arches, its length is 1700 feet
+and its breadth 35. Among several statues on this bridge is a very
+remarkable one of Jesus Christ, made of bronze gilt, which cost a large sum
+of money to its founder, a Jew! There is a Latin inscription on it which
+explains the paradox. There stood on the same spot a wooden statue of
+Christ in the XVI century. One day an opulent Jew, on passing by, made some
+scoffing or contemptuous remark on it. He was overheard by some of the
+people, accused of blasphemy and condemned to die; but on expressing great
+contrition and offering to pay a fine to any amount, he was pardoned, on
+the condition of his promising to erect a bronze statue gilt of Jesus
+Christ on the same spot, at his own expense, with an inscription explaining
+the reason of its construction; which promise he punctually performed.
+Prague abounds in Jews. Two-thirds at least of its population are of that
+persuasion. In the lower town the most striking edifices are the palace of
+the Wallenstein family, descendants of the famous Wallenstein, so
+distinguished in the Thirty Years war. Annexed to this Palace is a spacious
+garden, which is open to the public as a promenade. It is well laid out.
+There is a large aviary. This Palace covers a vast extent of ground. The
+Colloredo family, who are descended from Wenceslaus, have a superb Palace
+in this city; and there is a stable belonging to it, partly in marble and
+of rich architecture, capable of containing thirty-six horses. No traveller
+who comes to Prague should omit visiting these two Palaces of Wallenstein
+and Colloredo. On the bridge over the Mulda before mentioned, is the statue
+in bronze of St John Nepomucene, on the spot from whence he was thrown into
+the river by his brother saint, King Wenceslaus, for refusing to divulge
+the gallantries of his (Wenceslaus') wife, to whom he was confessor. A
+favorite promenade on Sundays is on the _Färber Insel_ or Dyers island,
+which is a small island on the Mulda. Here the young men of the town come
+to dance with the _grisettes_ and milliner girls of Prague, who are
+renowned for their beauty and complaisance.
+
+The Jewish burying ground is a curiosity for a person who has never visited
+the Oriental countries. The tombstones are stowed thick together. Everybody
+recollects the anecdote of the ingenious method adopted by Joseph II for
+squeezing a large sum of money from the Jews of Prague, by giving out that
+he intended to claim this cemetery, in order to build therein a Palace. The
+Jews who, like all the Orientals, have the most profound veneration for the
+spot where their ancestors are buried, presented a large sum of money to
+the Emperor, to induce him to renounce his design.
+
+The _Stadt-Haus_ (Hotel de Ville) is a fine building; and the _Marktplatz_
+(market square) is very spacious, and contributes much to the beauty of the
+town. In the centre of it stands an ancient fountain of a dodecagonal form.
+The basin is of red marble, and near it stands a large stone column, with a
+statue of the Virgin, bronze gilt, on its summit. A well supplied market,
+or rather fair, is carried on here every day in the week. The Theatre is a
+fine building and is of immense size. I witnessd the representation of a
+burlesque tragedy called _Die Belagerung von Ypsilon_ (the siege of
+Ypsilon), but I could not at all comprehend the cream of the jest. Madame
+Catalani, who is here, sang at this theatre one night. The theatre was
+completely filled and the price of admission to the boxes and _parterre_ a
+ducat. The street adjoining to the theatre was crowded by people
+endeavoring to catch the sweet sounds. Immense hommage has been paid to
+Catalani by the authorities here.
+
+The balls of the _bourgeoisie_ of Prague are splendid and well attended.
+The _bourgeoisie_ is very opulent in this city. There are but few residents
+_Noblesse_. The expences at the inns here are rather greater than those at
+Vienna, wine being a foreign commodity and beer the national beverage. My
+daily expences here for lodging, dinner, supper and breakfast amounted to
+four florins _Convenzions Münze_, about nine franks nearly, French money.
+The country environing Prague is rich and abounding in corn; there are
+likewise hops. The walls of Prague still bear the marks made by Frederic's
+shot when he blockaded Prague.
+
+
+PRAGUE, 7th Sept.
+
+To-morrow I shall start for Dresden, The diligence goes off only once a
+week, but I have engaged a car or rather light basket waggon drawn by two
+horses (a vehicle very common in Germany) to convey me to Dresden in two
+days and half. I am to pay for half of the waggon, and another traveller
+will pay for the remaining half.
+
+Before I leave Prague I must tell you that I have found out the origin of
+the German phrases _Jemand den Korb zu geben (to give the basket)_, which
+means a refusal of marriage. Thus when a young lady refuses an offer of
+marriage on the part of her admirer, the phrase is: _Sie hat ihm den Korb
+gegeben_ (_She has given him the basket_). Hitherto I have not met with any
+one who could explain to me satisfactorily the origin of so singular a
+phrase; but on reading lately a volume of the _Volksmährchen_ (_Popular
+tales_) I found not only the derivation of this phrase, but also that of
+the name of the city of Prague. Both are connected in the same story, and
+both concern the history of Prague. The story is as follows.
+
+Libussa, Duchess of Bohemia, had three lovers, two of whom were not
+remarkably intelligent, but the third possessed a great deal of talent and
+was her favorite. She was much importuned by the rival suitors. She
+appeared before them one day with a basket filled with plums in her hand;
+and said she would give her hand in marriage to whoever of them should
+guess the following arithmetical riddle. She said: "One of you shall take
+half the plums that are in this basket, and one over: another shall take
+half of what remains, and one over: the third shall take half of what still
+remains and three over, and then all the plums will have been taken. Now
+tell me how many plums there are in the basket." Her favorite was the only
+one who could guess the number of plums which was _thirty_. To him
+therefore she gave her hand and the plums, and to the other suitors the
+empty basket. Hence the phrase. The solution of the question is as follows:
+
+ A takes half of the plums in the basket (30) and one
+ over . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 + 1 = 16
+ B half of what remained (14) and one over . . . . . 7 + 1 = 8
+ C half of what remained (6) and three over . . . . . 3 + 3 = 6
+ ---
+ Total 30
+
+Now with regard to the origin of the city of Prague. The former residence
+was much too small, and Libussa directed her workmen to build a town on the
+spot, where they should find at midday a man making the _best use of his
+teeth_. They began their research and one day at that hour discovered a
+carpenter sawing a block of wood. It struck them that this laborious man
+was making a better use of his teeth (viz., teeth of his saw) than the mere
+feeder and they judged that this ought to be the place where the town
+should be built. They therefore proceeded to trace with a plough the
+circumference of the town. On asking the carpenter what he was about to
+make with the block he was sawing, he said " A threshold for a door," which
+is called _Prah_ or _Praha_ in the Bohemian language and Libussa gave to
+the city the name of _Praha_ or _Prag_.
+
+
+BERLIN, 24th Sept.
+
+Berlin has a splendid and cheerful appearance, with fine broad streets,
+superb white buildings and Palaces, for the most part in the Grecian taste;
+it has quite the appearance in short of an Italian city. Nearly all the
+streets are at right angles; they are kept very clean and the shops make a
+brilliant display. I felt so much pain in my legs, from the effect of my
+pedestrian journey, that I was obliged to remain in my chamber one entire
+day. There is a very good _table d'hôte_ at my bin for twelve _Groschen_.
+Wine is paid for extra, and at the rate of from 12 to 18 _Groschen_ the
+bottle. The sort usually drunk here is the Medoc. The prices of articles of
+prune necessity are dearer in Berlin than either at Dresden or Vienna;
+particularly the article of washing, which is dearer than in any country I
+have yet visited.
+
+The next morning I began my rambles, and directed my course to the favorite
+and fashionable promenade of the _beau monde_, at all hours of the day, I
+mean in the fine street or alley _Unter den Linden_, so called from it
+being planted with lime trees. There is a range of elegant buildings on
+each side, and at the end, near the _Thier Garten_ (Park), is a superb gate
+called the _Brandenburger Thor_ in the shape of a triumphal arch ornamented
+with a statue of Peace, with an olive branch in her hand, standing on a car
+drawn by four horses abreast, the whole groupe being of bronze and of
+exquisite workmanship. The four horses are imitated from the Corinthian
+horses at Venice and yield to them in nothing but antiquity. Indeed they
+have a much more pleasing and striking effect, in being thus attached to a
+car, than standing by themselves, as the Venetian ones do, on the top of
+the façade of a church. This _Brandenburger Thor_ is constructed after the
+model of the Propylaeum of Athens.
+
+The Opera House, a building in the Grecian taste erected by Frederic the
+Great with the inscription _Apollini et Musis_, and after that the Academy
+of the Fine Arts engaged my attention. Both these buildings are remarkable,
+and they are near the _Linden_. The old town is much intersected by canals
+communicating with the Spree which divides it. I call it the old town, to
+distinguish it from the quarter composed of streets of recent construction
+between the former _enceinte_ of the town and the Brandenburger Thor. The
+Hotel of the Invalides, a ponderous building, bears the following
+inscription: _Laesis non victis_. The Bank and the Arsenal next engaged my
+attention, as also a Guard House of recent construction in the shape of a
+Doric temple. The Royal Palace is an immense building, partly in the Gothic
+and partly in the Grecian style. It is very heavy but imposing. The
+interior of this Palace is royally fitted up, except the little room
+occupied by the great Frederic, which is left in the same state as when he
+occupied it; and you know he was not fond of superfluous ornament. In the
+green before the Palace stands the statue of the Prince of Anhalt Dessau,
+the founder of the Prussian Infantry system, and at a short distance from
+this, on the _Lange Brücke,_ stands the colossal equestrian statue in
+bronze of the Great Elector.
+
+The _Königstrasse_ is the principal street and a very fine one it is; next
+to it in point of beauty is the _Französische_ _Strasse_. The _Wilhelm
+Platz_ is adorned with the statues in marble of Schwerin, Seidlitz, Keith,
+Winterfeld, and Ziethen. But I cannot enumerate all the splendid public
+establishments and fine things to be seen in this beautiful city. The most
+striking church is that of St Hedwig. I call it the most striking from its
+resemblance to the Pantheon at Rome. The Cathedral is perhaps a finer
+building. 'Tis in this last that the Electoral and Royal remains are
+deposited.
+
+The streets 'here swarm with military, and indeed the profession of arms
+seems to have too much sway in the Prussian dominions. The subalterns and
+young men of the Prussian Army are said to have republican sentiments, and
+they, in common with all the burghers, desire a constitution. It galls them
+to see one enjoyed by the Bavarians, whom they affect to look upon as
+inferior to them in intelligence, and that it should be refused to them.
+Most of the nobility and the greater part of the General and field officers
+are however inveterate aristocrats.
+
+You have heard, I dare say, of the attempt made by some officers among the
+nobility to exclude from the service, after the peace, those officers who
+were not noble. When it is considered that their best and most zealous
+officers sprung from the burghers, and that Prussia, when abandoned by her
+King and nobles, was saved from permanent subjection only by the
+unparalleled exertions of her burghers and peasantry, one is shocked at
+such ingratitude and absurdity. But the officers of the Royal Guard went so
+far as to draw up a petition to the King, requesting him to dismiss all the
+officers of the corps who were not noble, and Blucher was applied to to
+present this petition to the King. Blucher read the paper and ordered all
+the officers to assemble on the parade and thus addressed them: "Gentlemen,
+I have received your paper and read its contents with the utmost
+astonishment. All the remarks that I shall permit myself to make on the
+subject of this petition, are, that it makes me ashamed of being myself a
+noble." He then tore the petition in pieces and dismissed them.
+
+I have been once at the theatre. _Lodoiska_ was performed. I saw a number
+of fine women in the boxes. Formerly gallantry and pleasure were the order
+of the day at Berlin; but now, the Court assuming the exterior of rigid
+morality and strictly exercised religious devotion, mystic cant and
+dullness is the order of the day. The death of the Queen of Prussia threw a
+great damp over the amusements of the Court. At Charlottenburg, which is a
+short distance from Berlin, in the grounds there, they point out to you her
+favourite spots. She was a most amiable Princess, and united to great
+personal beauty so much grace and fascination and so many good qualities
+that she was beloved by all, and the breath of calumny never ventured to
+assail her.
+
+The alley _Unter den Linden_ in the evening presents a great assemblage of
+Cyprian nymphs, who promenade up and down; they dress well and are
+perfectly well behaved. There is a superb establishment of this kind at
+Berlin, which all strangers should visit out of curiosity. It is not
+indispensably necessary to sacrifice to the Goddess whose worship is
+carried on there; but you may limit yourself to admire the temple, call for
+refreshments and contemplate the priestesses.
+
+There is the utmost moral and political freedom at Berlin, and tho' the
+Government is despotic in form, freedom of speech is allowed. An army of
+200,000 men admirably disciplined and armed, of these a garrison of 15,000
+men in Berlin and as many at Potsdam, are quite sufficient to keep in check
+all attempts to put political theories and speculations into practice.
+Indeed, it would be very difficult to excite a revolt; the various German
+governments are carried on very paternally and the government is scarcely
+felt; habits of obedience have taken deep root among the people, and a
+German peasant as long as he gets enough to eat and drink, does not
+conceive himself unhappy, or thinks of a change. I could not help laughing
+the other day, at a little village near Berlin, when I heard some peasants
+talking of Napoleon; one of them, who seemed to have some partiality for
+him, exclaimed, meaning to blame him for leaving Elba: _Aber warum verliess
+er seine Insel? Er hatte doch zu essen und trinken so viel er wolte_ (Why
+did he leave Elba? He had surely plenty to eat and drink). This good
+peasant could not conceive that a man blessed with these comforts should
+like to change his situation or run any risks to do so.
+
+French as well as German is commonly spoken in Berlin, and I am glad to see
+that the prejudice against the French is wearing off. If the French and
+Prussians could understand one another, and knew their own interests, or if
+the French had a liberal national Government, I mean, one more identified
+with the interests of the people than the present one is, what advantage
+might not rise therefrom? They are natural allies, and united they might be
+able effectually to humble the overbearing insolence and political
+coxcombry of the Czar, shake to its centre the systematic despotism and
+light-fearing leader of Austria, and keep in check the commercial
+greediness, monopolizing spirit and Tory arrogance of England. The German
+political writers duly appreciate the illiberal policy of England towards
+the continental nations, by which she invariably helps to crush liberty on
+the Continent in the hopes of paralysing their energies and industry, in
+order to compel them to buy English manufactures, and in fine to make them
+dependent on England for every article of consumption. England, ever since
+the beginning of the reign of George III to the present day, has been
+always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to perpetuate abuses and to
+rivet the fetters of monarchial, feudal and ecclesiastical tyranny.
+
+These are facts and cannot be denied. The English people have been taxed to
+the last farthing to support a war of privileges against Freedom; and
+Europe is in consequence prostrate at the feet of an unprincipled
+coalition, thro' England's arms and England's gold; and then an English
+minister, and his vile hireling journals, tell you that the continental
+nations are not ripe for and do not deserve liberty. Even the Pope and
+Grand Turk, both so much dreaded by our pious ancestors, have been
+supported, caressed and subsidized, in order to help to put down all
+efforts made to obtain rational liberty, which the courtiers always affect
+to stigmatize with the name of "Jacobinism," while a number of needy
+individual have enriched themselves by the public plunder and byaiding and
+abetting the system, all _novi homines_, men who, had there been more to
+gain on the other side than by espousing Toryism, would not have been
+backward; men who are Jacobins in the real sense of the word, however they
+cloak themselves under the specious names of Church and King men; upholders
+of Pitt and his system, for which they affect a veneration they are far
+from really feeling; men, in fact, whose political scruples of whatever
+nature they be, would soon melt away.
+
+
+DRESDEN, 5th October.
+
+I have been fortunate in getting into very comfortable lodgings, having two
+rooms and as much firing as I chuse for eight _Reichsthalers_ per month.
+Coffee is made for me at home in the morning, and I generally dine and sup
+at a _restaurant_ close by near the bridge. The _Platz_ in the Neustadt is
+close to my lodgings, and being very large and well paved and lined with
+trees, it affords a very agreeable promenade. Rows of elegant houses line
+the sides of this Plata, among which the _Stadthaus_ is particularly
+remarkable. The famous _Japan Palace_, as it is called, is also in the
+_Neustadt_, and but a short distance from the _Platz_. The gardens of Count
+Marcolini afford also a pleasant promenade; but by far the most agreeable
+walk, in my opinion, is on the _Zwinger_, a sort of terrace on the left
+bank of the Elbe in the old town, adjoining the palace and gardens of Count
+Bruhl. From this place you have a noble view of a long reach of the Elbe.
+It is besides the favorite promenade of the ladies. On the _Zwinger_ too is
+a building containing a fine collection of paintings. Here are _cafés_
+likewise and a _restaurant_. The evening promenades are in the gardens of
+the _Linkischer Bad_ (Bath of Link) on the banks of the Elbe, where there
+is a summer theatre. This is the favourite resort of the _bourgeoisie_ on
+Sundays and _jours de fête; goûters_ and supper parties are formed here and
+very good music is heard. The Elbe bridge is of beautiful structure, and
+there is a good regulation with respect to those who pass over this bridge;
+which is that one side of the bridge is reserved for those going from the
+new to the old town, and the other side for those going from the old to the
+new town, and if you attempt to go on the wrong side you are stopped by a
+sentry, so that there is no jostling nor lounging on this bridge. An arch
+of this bridge was blown up by Marshal Davoust in order to arrest the
+progress of the Russians, and a great deal of management was necessary to
+effectuate it, for the worthy Saxons have a great veneration for this
+bridge, and in order to inforce the execution of this resolution on the
+part of the Marshal, the personal order of the King and the employment of
+Saxon troops were necessary. It has been rebuilt since, and no one would
+know that the arch had ever been blown up, but from the extreme whiteness
+of the new arch, contrasting with the darker color of the old ones.
+
+In the old town or Dresden proper, the finest buildings are: the Catholic
+church, standing near the bridge, an edifice yielding in beauty but to few
+in Italy and to none in other countries. Here you hear excellent music
+during the church service; and the King and Royal family, all of whom are
+Catholics, attend constantly. The Royal Palace is very near the church and
+not far from it is the theatre. Saxony being a Lutheran country, the public
+exercise of the Catholic religion was not permitted until Napoleon's time,
+when he proposed an arrangement to permit to the King and all other
+Catholics the public celebration of their religion, which proposition was
+acceded to with universal approbation on the part of the Protestants, and
+now the Host is frequently displayed in the streets. There are however but
+few Catholics in Dresden among the natives. So great is the respect for
+usages and customs in Germany, that the Electors of Saxony, on going over
+to Catholicism, never thought even of requesting the indulgence of
+exercising their religion publicly, and the granting it has produced no
+evil consequence, liberalism and the most unreserved toleration in matters
+of religion being the order of the day.
+
+The Royal Palace is a very fine and extensive building and the interior is
+well worth seeing, particularly the superb _Riesen-Saal_ where Augustus II
+used to give his magnificent _fêtes_. One of the last and most brilliant
+_fêtes_ given here was that given by the King of Saxony to the Emperor
+Napoleon just before the Russian campaign, at which the Emperor and Empress
+of Austria and most of the Sovereigns of Germany assisted, to do hommage to
+the great Conqueror.
+
+The _Schloss-gasse_ or Castle Street leads from the Palace into the _Markt
+Platz_ where the markets and fairs are held. In this place, in the
+_Schloss-gasse_ and in another street parallel to it, that leads from the
+porcelain Manufactory to the _Grosser Platz_ (_Grande Place_), are the
+finest shops and greatest display of wealth. On the _Grosser Platz_ stands
+the _Frauen-Kirche_, a superb Protestant church, and which may be
+considered as the cathedral church of Dresden. The _Platz_ is large. There
+is great cleanliness in all the streets of Dresden, and the houses are well
+built and uniform; but there are few other very prominent edifices except
+those I have mentioned. On going outside the town by the gate of Pirna
+stands, almost immediately on the right, on turning down a road, the
+Gardens and Palace of Prince Anthony. Leaving this on your right and
+proceeding along the _chaussée_ or high road which is nearly parallel to
+the river, at the distance of three-quarters mile from the Gate, stands the
+Palace and Gardens called _Der Grosse Garten_ (grand garden), which you
+leave on your right, if you continue your route on the _chaussée_ towards
+Pirna. I have not yet visited the _Grosse Garten_. There is likewise a fine
+promenade on the banks of the Elbe, but quite in an opposite direction to
+the Pirna gate, for to arrive at it from this gate, you must traverse the
+Pirna street and _Grosser Platz_; and on arrival near the bridge direct
+your course to the left, which will lead you out of one of the gates into
+an immensely long avenue of elm trees parallel to the river which forms the
+promenade.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Oct. 10th.
+
+I have been to see the Palace and grounds of the _Grosser Garten_. The
+garden and park, for it unites both, is of great extent, and beautifully
+laid out; but a number of fine trees have been knocked down and mutilated
+by cannon shot during the battle of Dresden in 1818, when this garden was
+occupied by the Allied troops and exposed to a heavy fire of fifty pieces
+of cannon, from a battery erected by Napoleon on the opposite side of the
+river, which completely commanded and enfiladed the whole range of the
+garden. How the Palace itself escaped being knocked to pieces is wonderful;
+but I suppose Napoleon must have given orders to spare it as much as
+possible. This Palace is of beautiful structure and in the style of an
+Italian villa; statues of the twelve Caesars and bas-reliefs adorn the
+exterior. The columns and pilasters are of the Corinthian order. As for the
+interior, it is unfurnished, and has been so since the Seven Years' war,
+when it was plundered by the enemy, and has never since been inhabited by
+the Electoral family. There is a superb rectangular basin of water in this
+garden. These gardens are delightfully laid out; why they are not more
+frequented I cannot conceive, but I have hitherto met with very few people
+there, tho' they are open to all the world. They will form my morning's
+promenade, for I prefer solitude to a crowd in a morning walk. But one of
+the gardeners here tells me that on Sunday evening there is generally a
+good deal of company, who come to listen to the music which is played in a
+building fitted up for the purpose at one side of the garden. Wine, coffee,
+beer and other refreshments are to be had; but beer is the favorite
+beverage. Smoking is universal among the young men; the most ardent
+admirers of the fair sex never forget their pipe. During the courtship the
+surest sign that the fair one does not intend to _give_ her lover _the
+basket_ is when she presents him with a bag to hold his tobacco. Her
+consent is implied thereby.
+
+During the battle of Dresden, the slaughter in this garden was immense, and
+the Allies were finally driven out of it. The gardener related to me an
+affecting story of a young lady of Dresden, whose lover was killed in this
+battle and buried in the _Grosser Garten_. She has taken it so much to
+heart that she comes here three or four times in the week to visit this
+grave and strew flowers over it. She remains for some time absorbed in
+silent meditation and then withdraws. She has a settled melancholy, but it
+has not yet affected her understanding.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Oct. 15th.
+
+I met with my old friend, Sir W.I., who was travelling to Berlin, with the
+idea of passing the winter there and of proceeding in the summer to Moscow.
+Thro' the interests of my friends, Col. D------ and Baron de F------ I have
+been ballotted for and admitted a member of a club or society here called
+the _Ressource_. It is held in a large house on the _Markt Platz_, and is
+indeed a most agreeable resource to all foreigners; for 'tis in this
+society that they are likely to meet and form acquaintance with the
+_noblesse_, principal _bourgeoisie_ and _litterati_. It is conducted on the
+most liberal scale and not confined to those of birth and fortune. Good
+character, polite behaviour and litterary requirements will ensure
+admittance to a candidate. This society consists of members and honorary
+members; among the honorary members are foreigners and others whose stay in
+Dresden is short; but whoever remains for more than one year must cease to
+be an honorary member and must be ballotted for in order to become a
+permanent member, and should he be blackballed he ceases to belong to the
+society altogether. This is a very good regulation. A year is a sufficient
+time of proof for the character and conduct of a person, and should he
+during this interval prove himself obnoxious to the members of the society,
+they can at its expiration exclude him for ever afterwards.
+
+No enquiry is made as to the character and conduct of a person who is
+admitted as an honorary member: it is sufficient that he be recommended by
+a permanent member, which is deemed a sufficient guarantee for his
+respectability. In this society there are dining rooms, billiard rooms,
+card rooms, a large reading room. Here too is a small but well chosen
+library and three or four newspapers in every European language; all the
+German newspapers and reviews and the principal periodical works in the
+German, French, English and Italian languages. The English papers taken in
+here are the _Times, Courier_ and _Chronicle_. Of the French, the
+_Moniteur, Journal des Débats, Constitutionel, Journal du Commerce, Gazette
+de France_ and _Gazette de Lausanne_, and of the Italian the _Gazette di
+Milano, di Venezia, di Firenze_ and _di Lugano_. Every German newspaper is,
+I believe, to be found here. The Society lay in their stock of wine, which
+is of the best quality; good cooks and servants are kept. Dinners go
+forward from one to three. You dine _à la carte_ and pay the amount of what
+you call for to the waiters. Coffee, liqueurs and all sorts of refreshments
+are likewise to be had. Supper, likewise _à la carte_, goes forward between
+nine and eleven. The evening before supper may be employed, if you chuse,
+in cards, billiards, or reading. Very pleasant and useful acquaintances are
+made at the _Ressource_, since if a foreigner renders himself agreeable to
+the gentlemen who frequent this society, they generally propose taking him
+to their houses and introducing him to their families. After an
+introduction, you may go at any hour of the evening you please: but morning
+visits are not much in fashion, since the _toilette_ is seldom made till
+after dinner, which is always early in Germany. There is no getting dinner
+after three o'clock in any part of Dresden. Besides the _Ressource_ there
+are several other Clubs here, such as the _Harmonic_ and others. The public
+balls are given at the _Hôtel de Pologne_ twice a week, viz., one for the
+_Noblesse_ and one for the _Bourgeoisie_. None of the female _Bourgeoisie_
+are admitted to the balls and societies of the _Noblesse_, and only such of
+the males as occupy posts or employments at Court or under Government such
+as _Königs-rath_, _Hof-rath_, or officers of the Army. It is therefore
+usual, when the Sovereign wishes to introduce a person of merit among the
+_Bourgeoisie_ into the upper circles, that he gives him the title of _Rath_
+or Counsellor; but this priviledge of being presentable at Court does not
+extend to their wives and daughters. All the Military officers, from
+whatever class of life they spring, have introduction _de jure_ into the
+balls and societies of the _Noblesse_, and are always in uniform. But when
+they attend the balls of the _Bourgeoisie_, it is the etiquette for them to
+wear plain clothes: at the balls of the _Bourgeoisie_, therefore, not an
+uniform is to be seen. I observed by far the prettiest women at the balls
+of the _Bourgeoisie_, and very many are to be found there who in education
+and accomplishments fully equal those of the _Noblesse_, and this is no
+small merit, for the women in Saxony of the higher classes are extremely
+well educated; most of them are proficient in music and are versed in
+French and Italian litterature. They seem amiable and goodnatured and by no
+means _minaudières_, as Lady Mary Wortley Montague has rather unjustly
+termed them; for they appear to me to be the most frank, artless creatures
+I ever beheld, and to have no sort of _minauderie_ or _coquetterie_ about
+them. Beauty is the appanage of the Saxon women, hence the proverb in
+rhyme:
+
+ Darauf bin ich gegangen nach Sachsen,
+ Wo die schönen Mädchen auf den Baümen wachsen.
+
+In English:
+
+ Behold me landed now on Saxon ground,
+ Where lovely damsels on the trees are found.
+
+A taste for litterature is indeed general throughout the whole nation; and
+this city is considered as the Athens of Germany.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Nov. 8th.
+
+I have been at the theatre and witnessed the representation of a tragedy
+called _Die Schuld_, written by Adolphus Müllner. It is a most interesting
+piece, and the novelty of it has made a striking impression on me. It is
+written in the eight-footed trochaic metre, similar to that in which the
+Spanish tragedies are written. It hinges on a prophecy made by a Gipsey, in
+which the person to whom the prophecy is made, in endeavoring to avert it,
+hastens its accomplishment. The piece is full of interest and the
+versification harmonious. I have been twice at the Italian opera, where I
+saw the _Gazza Ladra_ and _Il Matrimonio secreto_. I came here with the
+idea of giving myself up entirely to the study of the German language; but
+such is the beauty of the country environing Dresden that, though winter
+has commenced I employ the greatest part of the day in long walks. For
+instance I have been to Pillnitz, which is on the right bank of the Elbe
+about seven miles from Dresden, ascending the river. The road is on the
+bank of the river the whole way. The Palace at Pillnitz is vast and well
+built. During a part of the year the Royal family reside there. Pillnitz
+will remain "damn'd to everlasting fame" as the place where the famous
+treaty was signed, the object of which was to put down the French
+Revolution, which Mr Pitt and the British ministry knew of and sanctioned,
+tho' they pretended ignorance of it and professed to have no desire to
+interfere with the affairs of France.
+
+Every thing pleases me at Dresden except the beds. I wish it were the
+fashion to use blankets and _édredons_ for the upper covering instead of
+the _lits de plumes_; for they are too heavy and promote rather too intense
+a perspiration, and if you become impatient of the heat, and throw them off
+you catch an intense cold. You know how partial I am to the Germans, and
+can even put up with their eternal smoking, tho' no smoker myself, but to
+their beds I shall never be reconciled. A German bed is as follows: a
+_paillasse_, over that a mattress, then a featherbed with a sheet fastened
+to it, and over that again another featherbed with a sheet fastened to it;
+and thus you lie between two featherbeds; but these are not always of
+sufficient length, and you are often obliged to coil up your legs or be
+exposed to have them frozen by their extending beyond the featherbeds; for
+the cold is very great during the winter.
+
+The more I see of the people here, the more I like them. The national
+character of the Germans is integrity, tho' sometimes cloaked under a rough
+exterior as in Bavaria and Austria; but here in Saxony it is combined with
+a suavity of manners that is very striking, for the Saxons are the Tuscans
+of Germany in point of politeness, and they are far more accomplished
+because they take more pains in cultivating their minds.
+
+A savant in Italy is a man who writes a volume about a coin, filled with
+hypotheses, when, with all his learning forced into the service, he proves
+nothing; and this very man is probably ignorant in the extreme of modern
+political history, and that of his own times, and has more pedantry than
+taste. Such a man is often however in Italy termed a _Portento_, but in
+Dresden and in most of the capitals of Germany where there are so many of
+science and deep research, a man must not only be well read in antiquities,
+but also well versed in political economy and in analysis before he can
+venture to give a work to the public. Latin quotations, unsupported by
+reason and philosophical argument will avail him nothing, for the German is
+a terrible _Erforscher_ and wishes to know the _what_, the _how_ and the
+_when_ of every thing; besides an Italian _savant_ is seldom versed in any
+other tongue than his own and the Latin, with perhaps a slight knowledge of
+French; whereas in Germany it is not only very common to find a knowledge
+of French, English, Italian, Latin and Greek united in the same person, but
+very many add Hebrew, Arabic and even Sanscrit to their stock of Philology.
+As a specimen for instance of German industry, I have seen, at the club of
+the _Ressource_, odes on the Peace in thirty-six different languages, and
+all of them written by native Saxons. This shows to what an extent
+philology is cultivated in Germany; indeed, it is quite a passion and a
+very useful one it is. I know that many people regard it as a loss of time,
+and say that you acquire only new words, and no new ideas; but I deny this.
+I maintain that every new language learned gives you new ideas, as it puts
+you at once more _au fait_ of the manners and customs of the people, which
+can only be thoroughly learned by reading popular authors in their original
+language: for there are several authors of the merit of whose style it is
+impossible to form an adequate idea in a translation, however correct and
+excellent it be. Indeed I wonder that the study of the German language is
+not more attended to in England, France, and Italy; but to the English,
+methinks, it is indispensable. All the customs and manners of Europe are
+taken from the German; all modern Europe bears the Teutonic stamp. We are
+all the descendants of the Teutonic hordes who subjugated the Roman Empire
+and changed the face of Europe; 'tis they who have given and laid down the
+grand and distinguishing feature between modern Europe and ancient Europe
+and Asia: I mean the respect paid to women. To what nation, I say, is due
+the chivalrous respect to women which is the surest sign of civilization,
+and which was unknown to the ancient Greeks and Romans, except to the
+Germans, who even in their most uncivilized state paid such veneration to
+their women as to consult them as oracles on all occasions and to admit
+them to their councils? Tacitus particularly mentions this; and speaking of
+the Germans of his time, he says, "They have an idea that there is
+something divine about a woman."[126] It is this feeling, handed down to us
+from our Teutonic ancestors, that contributes mainly to make the European
+so superior to all the Asiatic nations, where woman still remains a
+degraded being, and 'tis this feeling that gives to us the palm above all
+Greek and Roman glory. What are the modern European nations, the English,
+French, Italians, Switzers, even Spanish and Portuguese, but the
+descendants of these warlike Teutonic tribes who swept away the effeminate
+Romans from the face of the earth? and do we not see the Teutonic policy
+and usages, defective and degenerated as they sometimes are, the best
+safeguard of liberty against the insidious interpretation of the Roman law,
+which is founded on the pretended superiority of one nation, the inferred
+inferiority of all the rest?
+
+With regard to theatricals, I have witnessed the representation of a
+tragedy, lately published, called _Sappho_, by a young poet of the name of
+Grillparzer. This tragedy is strictly on the Greek model. Its versification
+in iambics is so beautiful that it is regarded as the triumph of the
+_Classics_ over the _Romantics_; and by this piece Grillparzer has proved
+the universality of his genius; for he wrote a short time ago a dramatic
+piece in the _romantic_ style and in the eight rhymed trochaic metre called
+_die Anhfrau_ (the ancestress) where supernatural agency is introduced.
+This I have read; it is a piece full of interest; still it was thought too
+_outré_ by the _Classiker_. It was supposed that this was the peculiar
+style of the author, and that he adopted it from inability to compose in
+the classic taste, when behold! by way of proving the contrary, he has
+given us a drama simple in its plot, where all the unities are preserved,
+and where the subject one would think was too well known to produce much
+interest; he has given, I say, to this piece (Sappho), from the extreme
+harmony of its versification and the pathos of the sentiments expressed
+therein, an effect which I doubt any tragedy of Euripides or Sophocles
+surpasses. The character of Sappho and her passion for Phaon; his
+indifference to her and attachment to the young Melitta, an attendant and
+slave of Sappho's, and Sappho throwing herself into the sea after uniting
+Phaon and Melitta, constitute the plot of the drama. But simple as the
+plot, and old as the story is, it excites the greatest interest, and never
+fails to draw tears from the audience. What can be more artless and
+pathetic, for instance, than these lines of the young Melitta when she
+regrets her expatriatioa:
+
+ Kein Busen schlägt mlr bier in diesem Lande,
+ Und meine Freunden wohnen weit von hier.
+
+In English:
+
+ No bosom beats for me in this strange land,
+ And far from here my friends and parents dwell.
+
+I have no doubt that some of these days _Sappho_ will be translated into
+the idiom of modern Greece and acted in that country. The actress, who did
+the part of Sappho, gave it full effect, and the part of the young Melitta
+was fairly performed; but I did not approve of the acting of the performer
+who played Phaon. He overstepped the modesty of nature and the intention of
+the author; for he was in his gesture and manner grossly rude and insolent
+to poor Sappho, whereas, tho' his love to Melitta was paramount, he ought
+to have shown no ordinary struggle in stifling his gratitude to his
+benefactress Sappho.
+
+I admire the German word _Gebieterinn_ (mistress). It is majestic and
+harmonious, and the only word, in any modern language that I know of,
+poetic enough to render aptly the Greek word [Greek: Despoina].
+
+
+DRESDEN, Decr. 1st.
+
+I have been to visit the famous Gallery of paintings here; but you must not
+expect from me a description. I shall send you a catalogue. It would be
+endless to describe the various _chefs-d'oeuvre_ which are contained in
+this valuable collection. Dresden has always been considered as the
+Florence of Germany and has always been renowned for its Gallery of
+paintings; hence the almost innate taste of the Saxons for the _Beaux Arts_
+and the great encouragement given to them at all tunes by this Government.
+It is here and at Meissen that the best German is thought to be spoken,
+tho' Hanover disputes this prerogative with Dresden.
+
+I have been to see the antiquities and curiosities of the _Japanischer
+Palast_ (Palace of Japan), as it is called. In this Palace is a quantity of
+ancient armour and the most superb collection of porcelain I believe in
+Europe. The collection of precious stones is also immense; and I never in
+my life saw such a profusion of diamonds, emeralds, turquoises, sapphirs,
+amethysts and topazes. In this Museum are three statues found in
+Herculaneum on its first discovery or excavation, viz., an Athlete, an
+Esculapius, and a Venus. Here too, and from this circumstance, the Palace
+takes its name, is a collection of Japanese antiquities and ornaments,
+lacker work in gold and silver, which is unique in the world. From the
+Royal Library, a foreigner, on being recommended, may have at his own house
+all such books to read as can be replaced if lost or spoiled; but the
+manuscripts and scarce and valuable editions are not permitted to be taken
+out of the Library. Any person once admitted on recommendation may go to
+read in this Library at stated hours and may consult any book or manuscript
+he pleases on applying to the librarian.
+
+A person fond of music will be in a continual state of enjoyment at
+Dresden. Besides the fine music in the Royal Chapel, the band of the King's
+Guard is composed of first rate musicians, who attend regularly at Guard
+mounting and play for an hour together. There is also a band of music every
+evening during the summer months that plays in the gardens of the
+_Linkischer Bad_. Then there are various other places of recreation and
+amusement, at all of which musicians are in attendance; for a Saxon cannot
+enjoy his repast or his pipe without music and good music too to facilitate
+his digestion. There is a custom in Dresden that on the occasion of the
+death of a person the young choristers of the Cathedral are sent for to
+sing hymns, standing in a semi-circle round the door of the house of the
+defunct. These choristers are all dressed in black and their style of
+singing is melodious, solemn and impressive.
+
+Smoking is so prevalent here and in all parts of Germany that if you wish
+to denote one of the male sex, _smoker_ would be quite a synonymous word.
+Such is the passion for this enjoyment that even at the balls the young
+men, the moment they have finished the waltz, quit the hands of their
+partners and rush into another room in order to smoke; nor would the beauty
+of Venus nor the wit of Minerva be powerful enough to restrain the young
+German from giving way to his darling practise. Smoking tobacco has I think
+this visible effect, that it serves to calm all tumultuous passions, and
+what confirms me in this idea is, that most young Germans, in commencing
+life as adults, are full of enthusiastic and even exaggerated notions of
+liberty and equality. They are romantic to a degree that is difficult to be
+conceived, and seem to be restrained by no selfish or worldly ideas. This
+you would suppose would tend to render them rather turbulent subjects,
+under an autocratical government; but all this _Schwärmerey_ evaporates
+literally in smoke: they take to their pipe, and by degrees the fumes of
+tobacco cause all these lofty ideas to dissipate: the pipe becomes more and
+more necessary to their existence, and consoles them for their wrongs real
+or imaginary; and in three or four years they sit down contentedly to their
+several occupations, as strait-forward, painstaking, plodding men, quite
+satisfied to follow the routine chalked out for them, and either totally
+forget all ambitious views, or become too indolent to make any sacrifice to
+obtain them, and this _virtue comes from tobacco_!! The German Hippogriff
+becomes an Ox, dull and domestic, and treads out the corn placed before
+him, content to have his share thereof in peace and quietness.
+
+The German Governments, which are mild and paternal, are fully aware of
+this and allow the utmost liberty of speech; well knowing that, thanks to
+that friend and ally of Legitimacy, tobacco, the romantic visionary and
+somewhat refractory youth will subside into a tranquil _ganz alltäglicher
+Mann_ and become totally averse to any innovation which demands the
+sacrifice of repose.
+
+The pipe which has this sedative effect on political effervescence, has a
+still stronger similar effect, it is said, on the passion of love; hence
+the German husbands are proverbially sluggish. But the ladies, none of whom
+smoke, preserve their romanticity during their whole lives, and would, if
+they had their choice, give their hands to foreigners, who are more
+attentive to them than their own countrymen.
+
+The young ladies here are, 'tis said, extremely romantic in their ideas of
+love and capable of the strongest attachment. They think that any thing
+should be pardoned to sincere passion. It has been related to me that some
+time ago a young man, who was devotedly attached to a girl, on the father
+refusing his consent to the marriage, stabbed the girl and then himself. An
+immense number of young ladies attended their funeral, to throw flowers
+over the grave of the two lovers. Assuredly the young man was only a
+noviciate in smoking.
+
+Everybody must, I think, admire the Saxon women. They are in general
+handsome and have fine shapes; they are warm hearted and affectionate; and
+they are almost universally well educated. Indeed the whole Saxon people
+are so amiable that foreigners find themselves so happy here that they are
+unwilling to quit the country. Very many form matrimonial attachments. In
+short, this people fully merit the epithet a celebrated English traveller
+(Sherlock)[127] has bestowed on them when he called them a _herrliches
+Volk_.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Jan. 8d, 1819.
+
+I have made an excursion to Meissen which lies on the same bank of the
+river with the old town of Dresden at a distance of twelve miles. As there
+is no road on the left bank of the river to Meissen, you must cross the
+river twice to arrive at it, viz., once at Neustadt and once at Meissen,
+the road being on the right bank. I put up at the _Hirsch_ (Stag), a very
+comfortable inn. I went to Meissen with a view of seeing the Russian
+contingent pass the Elbe on their return from France, which has been
+evacuated in consequence of the arrangement at Aix-la-Chapelle. They
+appeared a fine body of men, clothed _à la française_ and seemed in high
+spirits. They seem to have imbibed liberal ideas during their residence in
+France, for some of the officers who dined at the inn at Meissen spoke very
+freely on passing events.
+
+The return of the Saxon contingent is expected in Dresden in a day or two,
+and there will no doubt be a great deal of rejoicing among the military and
+their relations to meet their old comrades and friends; and potent
+libations of _Doppel Bier_ will no doubt be made. Meissen is said to be
+famous for the beauty of its women and the few that I saw in the streets
+did not contradict this reputation.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Jany. 5th, 1819.
+
+We have had several balls here. Waltzing is the only sort of dance in
+fashion at Dresden, excepting now and then a Polonaise.
+
+I have witnessed an interesting spectacle in the _Grosser Garten_. The pond
+or basin is completely frozen over, and a Russian Prince, Gallitzin, who is
+here, has fitted up a sort of _Montagnes Russes_ as they are called. Blocks
+of ice are placed on an inclined plane to the top of which you mount by
+means of a staircase; and then, seating yourself in a sort of sledge, you
+slide down the inclined plane with immense velocity. The Prince often
+persuades a lady to sit on this sleigh on his lap and descend together; and
+this no doubt serves to _break the ice_ of many an amorous intrigue. This
+construction of the Prince Gallitzin has contributed to fill the _Grosser
+Garten_ with the _beau monde_, every day from twelve to two o'clock; so
+that you see we are in no want of amusements at Dresden.
+
+The King frequently attends the theatre; he is a tall, fine looking man,
+and is usually dressed in the uniform of his Foot-Guards, which is scarlet
+faced with yellow. The poor King has taken much to heart the injustice with
+which he has been treated by the coalition, and no doubt will not easily
+forget the ill-bred and insolent letter of Castlereagh to the Congress,
+wherein he said that the King of Saxony deserved to lose his dominions for
+adhering to Napoleon. But how the King of Saxony could act otherwise I am
+at a loss to find: so little could he possibly deserve this treatment for
+adhering to Napoleon, that had his advice been taken in the year 1805, the
+French would never have been able to extend their conquests so far, nor to
+dictate laws to Germany. But Lord Castlereagh seems to have either never
+known or wilfully forgotten the anterior political conduct of Saxony. Had
+he been more versed in German affairs, or had studied with more accuracy
+the events passing before his eyes, it would have been a check upon his
+arrogance; but here was a genuine disciple of the Pitt school (that school
+of ignorance and insolence), who sets himself up as the moral regenerator
+of nations and as a distributor of provinces, while he is grossly ignorant
+of the political system of the country on whose destinies he pretends to
+decide so peremptorily. Had Castlereagh paid attention to what was going
+forward in Germany in 1805, he would have seen too that of all powers
+Prussia was the very _last_ who with any _shadow of justice_ could pretend
+to an indemnification at the expense of Saxony. In the year 1805, the King,
+then Elector of Saxony, strongly advised the Prussian Cabinet to forget its
+ancient rivalry and jealousy of Austria and to coalesce with the latter
+power, in resisting the encroachments of Napoleon, in order to prevent the
+latter from attempting the overthrow of the whole fabric of the
+constitution of the Holy Roman Empire, with the intricacy and fragility of
+which no prince in Germany was better acquainted than the Elector of
+Saxony. Prussia however was still reluctant to engage in the contest and
+gave no support whatever to Austria. Napoleon defeats the Austrians at
+Austerlitz and dictates peace. Six months after the Prussian Cabinet,
+excited by a patriotic but rash and ill-calculating party, has recourse to
+arms, not from any generous policy, but because she sees herself outwitted
+by Napoleon, who refuses to cede to her Hanover in perpetuity. Prussia
+begins the war and calls on Saxony, who always moved in her orbit, to join
+her. To the Elector of Saxony this war (in 1806) appeared then ill-timed
+and too late; but with that good faith, nevertheless, which invariably
+characterized him, he remained faithful to his engagement and furnished his
+quota of troops to Prussia. The Saxon troops fought nobly at the battle of
+Jena. This battle annihilates all the power of Prussia, and lays Saxony
+entirely at the mercy of the Conqueror; but Napoleon not only treats Saxony
+with moderation, but with rare generosity; he does not take from her a
+single village, but aggrandizes her and gives to her the Duchy of Warsaw
+and to her Sovereign the title of King. Saxony becomes in consequence a
+member of the confederation of the Rhine and is bound to support the
+Protector in all his wars offensive and defensive. The Russian war in 1812
+begins: every German state, Austria and Prussia in the number, furnishes
+its contingent of troops. The campaign is unsuccessful, the climate of
+Russia having annihilated the French Army, and Napoleon returns to Paris.
+Saxony is now exposed to invasion and harassed by the incursions of the
+Cossacks. The King of Saxony is perplexed in what manner to act, so as to
+ensure to his subjects that protection which was ever uppermost in his
+thoughts; feeling however with his usual sagacity that every thing would
+ultimately depend on the dispositions of Austria, he repairs himself to
+Prague, in order to have an interview with one of the Austrian ministers,
+and to sound that Cabinet. Austria however still vacillates and declines
+stating what her intentions are. Napoleon returns from Paris, defeats the
+Prussians and Russians at Bautzen and re-occupies all Saxony. He then
+writes to the King of Saxony to desire him to return immediately to his
+dominions and to fulfil his engagements. What was the King to do? Austria
+still refusing to declare herself, was he to sacrifice his crown and
+dominions uselessly to the vengeance of Napoleon, to please the Emperor of
+Russia and King of Prussia, who for aught he knew might patch up a peace
+the next day? and this was the more probable from their having been beaten
+at Bautzen, which circumstance also might with equal probability induce
+Austria to coalesce with, instead of against France. All the other members
+of the Confederation of the Rhine remained staunch to Napoleon and poured
+their contingents into Saxony; was he to be the only unfaithful ally and
+towards a Monarch who had always treated him with the strongest marks of
+attachment and regard? and when neither Russia nor Prussia were likely to
+give him the least assistance? He therefore returned to Dresden; and
+Napoleon took up his grand position the whole length of the Elbe, from the
+mountains of Bohemia to Hamburgh, thus covering the whole of Saxony with
+his army. Austria however at last comes forward to join the coalition.
+Fortune changes; the Saxon troops, tired of beholding their country the
+perpetual theatre of war and trusting to the generosity of the Allies, go
+over to them in the middle of a battle, and decide, thereby, the fate of
+the day at Leipzig. The King of Saxony is made a prisoner, and then he is
+punished for what he could not help. Why was he to be punished more than
+any other member of the Confederation of the Rhine? One would think that
+the seasonable defection of his troops at Leipzig should have induced the
+Allies to treat him with moderation. The other States of the Confederation
+did not abandon Napoleon until after he was completely beaten at Leipzig;
+and Austria refused to accede to the coalition until a _carte blanche_ was
+given her to help herself in Italy.
+
+Let every impartial man therefore review the whole of this proceeding and
+then say whether the King of Saxony, so proverbial for his probity, so
+adored by his subjects, deserved to be insulted by such an unfeeling letter
+as that of Castlereagh. No! the King of Saxony better deserves to reign
+than any King of them all. Would they had even a small share of his
+virtues! Another proof and a still stronger one of the great integrity and
+honor of this excellent Prince, is, that when Napoleon offered to mediatize
+in his favor the various ducal Houses in Saxony, such as Weimar, Gotha,
+Cobourg, etc., and to annex these countries to his dominions, he declined
+the offer. Would Prussia, Austria, or Hanover have been so scrupulous?
+
+The young ladies here, tho' well versed and delighting in various branches
+of litterature, cannot overcome that strong national propensity to tales
+and romances wherein the _terrific and supernatural_ abounds; in all their
+romances accordingly this taste prevails strongly; nay, even in some of the
+romances, where the scene is laid in later times, there is some such
+anachronism as the story of a spectre.
+
+I recollect reading a novel, the scene of which is laid in Italy about the
+time of the battle of Marengo, wherein a ghost is introduced who
+contributes mainly to the unravelling of the piece. A young lady here of
+considerable talent and of general information confessed to me, when I
+asked her, what subjects pleased her most in the way of reading, that
+nothing gave her so much delight as "_Geistergeschichten_." Lewis' romance
+of "_The Monk_" is a great favorite in Germany.[128] By the bye, his
+poetical tale of _Alonzo and Imogen_ is evidently taken from a similar
+subject in the _Volks-mährchen_.
+
+The weather has set in very cold and the Elbe is nearly frozen over. It is
+impossible to go out of the house without a _Pelz_ or cloak lined with fur;
+for otherwise, on leaving a room heated by a stove, the effect of the cold
+is almost instantaneous and brings on an ague fit. This I attribute to the
+excessive heat kept up in the rooms and houses by the stoves. As smoking is
+so prevalent here, this contributes much also to keeping the body in a
+praeternatural heat and rendering it still more obnoxious to cold on
+removal from a room to the open air. It has been remarked by a medical
+author, in the Russian campaign in 1812, that the soldiers of the southern
+nations and provinces, viz., Provençaux, Gascons, Italians, Spaniards, and
+Portuguese, endured the cold much better and suffered less from it than the
+Germans and Hollanders. The reason is sufficiently obvious: the former live
+in the open air even in the middle of winter and seldom make use of a fire
+to warm themselves; whereas the Germans and Dutch live in an atmosphere of
+stove-heat and smoke and seldom like to stir abroad in the open air during
+winter, unless necessity obliges them. Hence they become half-baked, as it
+were; their nerves are unstrung, their flesh flabby and they become so
+chilly, as to suffer from the smallest exposure to the atmosphere. In the
+houses in Germany, on account of the stoves, the cold is never felt,
+whereas it is very severely in Italy and Spain where many of the houses
+have no fireplaces. On this account I prefer Germany as a winter residence,
+for I think there is no sensation so disagreeable as to feel cold in the
+house. In the open air I do not care a fig for it, for my cloak lined with
+bearskin protects me amply. The climate here in winter is a dry cold, which
+is much more salubrious and agreeable to me than the changeable, humid
+climate of Great Britain, where, though the cold is not so great, it is
+much more severely felt.
+
+
+[126] Tacitus, _Germania_, C, VIII.--ED.
+
+[127] Martin Sherlock (d. 1797), author of _Lettres d'un voyageur anglais_,
+ which were published in Paris 1779 and, the year after, in London.
+
+[128] Matthew Gregory Lewis, 1775-1818, published _Ambrosio or the Monk_ in
+ 1795.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+MARCH-APRIL 1819
+
+Journey from Dresden to Leipzig--The University of Leipzig--Liberal
+spirit--The English disliked in Saxony--The English Government hostile to
+liberty--Journey to Frankfort--From Frankfort to Metz and Paris--A.F.
+Lemaître--_Bon voyage_ to the Allies--Return to England.
+
+I left Dresden on the 2nd March, 1819. A _Landkutsche_ conveyed me as far
+as Leipzig in a day and half, stopping the first night at Oschaly, where
+there is a good inn. At Leipzig I put up at the _Hôtel de Bavière_ and
+remained five days. Leipzig is a fine old Gothic city. It is, as everybody
+knows, famous for its University and its Fair, which is held twice a year,
+in spring and in autumn, and which is the greatest mart for books perhaps
+in the world. The University of Leipzig and indeed all the Universities of
+Germany are in bad repute among the _Obscuranten_ and _éteignoirs_ of the
+day, on account of the liberal ideas professed by the teachers and
+scholars. In the University of Leipzig every thing may be learned by those
+who chuse to apply, but those who prefer remaining idle may do so, as there
+is less compulsion than at the English Universities. There is however such
+a national enthusiasm for learning, in all parts of Germany, that the most
+careless and ill-disposed youth would never be about to support the
+ridicule of his fellow students were he backward in obtaining prizes, but
+after all I have heard of the dissipation, lawlessness, and want of
+discipline at Leipzig, I can safely affirm that all these stories are
+grossly exaggerated: and I fancy there is little other dissipation going
+forward than amours with _Stubenmädchen_. I do not hear of any drunkenness,
+gaming or horse racing; nor do the professors themselves, who ought to be
+the best judges of what is going on, complain of the insubordination of
+their pupils. But what I principally admire in this, and indeed in other
+German Universities, is that there are no distinctions of rank, such as
+gold tassels, etc., no servile attention paid to sprigs of nobility, as in
+the Universities in England, where the Heads of Colleges and Fellows are
+singularly condescending to the son of a Peer, a Minister, or a Bishop.
+Perfect equality prevails in Leipzig and the son of the proudest
+_Reichsgraf_ is allowed no more priviledges than the son of a barber; nor
+do the professors make the least difference between them. In fact, in spite
+of the vulgar belief in England respecting the _hauteur_ of the German
+_noblesse_ and the vassalage of the other classes, I must say, from
+experience, that the German nobility show far less _hauteur_ and have in
+general more really liberal ideas than most part of our English
+aristocracy, and a German burgher or shop-keeper would disdain to cringe
+before a nobleman as many shopkeepers, aye, and even gentry, are sometimes
+known to do in England. Another circumstance too proves on how much more
+liberal a footing Leipzig and other German Universities are than our
+English ones, which is, that in England none but those who profess the
+religion of the Church of England, or conform to its ritual, are admitted;
+but here all sects are tolerated and admitted, and all live in perfect
+harmony with each other. The students are at liberty to chuse their place
+of worship and the sermons that are preached in the Catholic as well as the
+Protestant churches are such as sensible men of whatever opinion might
+listen to with profit, and without being shocked by absurdities or
+intolerant ideas.
+
+Mysteries, theologic sophistry and politics are carefully avoided, and a
+pure morality, a simple theosophy, comprehensible to the meanest
+understanding, pervades these simple discourses. The consequence of this
+toleration and liberal spirit is that an union between the Lutheran and
+Calvinistic churches has been effected.
+
+I met a number of mercantile people at the _table d'hôte_ at Leipzig in the
+_Hôtel de Bavière_, and I entered a good deal into conversation with them;
+but when they discovered I was an Englishman, I could see a sudden coldness
+and restraint in their demeanour, for we are very unpopular in Germany,
+owing to the conduct of our Cabinet, and they have a great distrust of us.
+The Saxons complain terribly of our Government for sanctioning the
+dismemberment of their country and of the insolent letter of Castlereagh.
+It is singular enough that Saxony is the only country where English goods
+are allowed to be imported free of duty; but our great and good ally the
+King of Prussia (as these goods must pass thro' his territory) has imposed
+a tolerably heavy transit duty. I am glad of it; this is as it should be. I
+rejoice at any obstacles that are put to British commerce; I rejoice when I
+hear of our merchants suffering and I quite delight to hear of a
+bankruptcy. They, the English merchants, contributed with their gold to
+uphold the corrupt system of Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and
+liberticide wars. Yes! it is perfectly fit and proper that the despotic
+governments they have contributed to restore should make them feel their
+gratitude. If the French since their Revolution have not always fought for
+liberty, they have done so invariably for science; and wherever they
+carried their victorious arms, abuses were abolished, ameliorations of all
+kinds followed, and the arts of life were improved. Our Government since
+the accession of George III has never raised its arm except in favor of old
+abuses, to uphold despotism and unfair privileges, or to establish
+commercial monopoly. Our victories so far from being of beneficial effect
+to the countries wherein we gained them, have been their curse. We can
+interfere and be prodigal of money and blood to crush any attempt of the
+continental nations towards obtaining their liberty; but when it is
+necessary to intercede in favour of oppressed patriots, then we are told
+that we have no right to interfere with the domestic policy of other
+nations. We can send ships to protect and carry off in safety a worthless
+Royal family, as at Naples in 1799, but we can view with heartless
+indifference, and even complacency, the murders committed in Spain by the
+infamous Ferdinand and his severities against those to whom he owes his
+crown, all of whom had the strongest daim to our protection as having
+fought with us in the same cause and contributed to our success.
+
+The _Platz_ at Leipzig is large and here it is that the fair is held. The
+theatre is an elegant building and lies just outside one of the gates of
+the city. Innumerable shops of booksellers are here and it is astonishing
+at how cheap a rate printing in all languages is carried forward.
+
+There are some pleasant promenades in the environs of Leipzig; but this is
+not a time of the year to judge of the beauty of the country. I went,
+however, to view the house occupied by Napoleon on the eve of the battle of
+Leipzig. A monument is to be erected to the memory of Poniatowsky in the
+spot where he perished.
+
+I started from Leipzig on 7th March at eleven o'clock. I was five days en
+route from Leipzig to Frankfort, tho' the distance does not exceed
+forty-five German miles. I travelled in the diligence, but had I known that
+the arrangements were so uncomfortable, I should have preferred going in a
+_Landkutsche_, which would have made the journey in seven days and afforded
+me an opportunity of stopping every night to repose; whereas in the
+diligence, tho' they go _en poste_, they travel exceedingly slow and it is
+impossible to persuade the postillion to accelerate his usual pace. He is
+far more careful of his horses than of his passengers. This I however
+excuse; but it is of the frequent stoppages and bad arrangement of them
+that I complain. Instead of stopping at some town for one whole night or
+two whole nights out of the five, they stop almost at every town for three,
+four and five hours; so that these short stoppages do not give you time
+enough to go to bed and they are besides generally made in the day time or
+early in the morning and evening. We passed thro' the following cities and
+places of eminence, viz., Lutzen; the spot where Gustavus Adolphus was
+killed is close to the road on the left hand with a plain stone and the
+initials G.A. inscribed on it. Weimar is a very neat city and where I
+should like much to have staid; but I had only time to view the outside of
+the Palace and the _Stadthaus_. Erfurt and Gotha are both fine looking
+cities. In Gotha I had only time to see the outside of the _Residenz
+Schloss_ or Ducal Palace, which is agreeably situated on an eminence, and
+to remark in the _Neumarkt Kirche_ the portrait of Duke Bernard of Saxe
+Weimar and the monuments of the princes of that family. At Erfurt there is
+the tomb of a Count Gleichen who was made prisoner in the Holy Land, in the
+time of the Crusades, and was released by a Mahometan Princess on condition
+of his espousing her. The Count was already married in Germany and there he
+had left his wife; but such was his gratitude to the fair Musulmane, that
+he married her with the full consent of his German wife and they all three
+lived happily together. Fulda, where we stopped four hours, appears a fine
+city, and is situated on an eminence commanding a noble view of a very
+fertile and extensive plain. The Episcopal Palace and the churches are
+magnificent, and the general appearance of the town is striking. The
+Bishopric of Fulda was formerly an independent ecclesiastical state, but
+was secularised at the treaty of Lunéville and now forms part of the
+territory of Hesse-Cassel.
+
+The _Feld-zeichen_ of Hesse-Cassel is green and red. After passing thro'
+Hanau, where we halted three hours, which gave me an opportunity of viewing
+the field of battle there, we proceeded to Frankfort and arrived there at
+twelve o'clock the 12th of March. I put up at the _Swan_ inn. In summer
+time the country about Fulda and in general between Fulda and Frankfort
+must be very pleasing from the variety of the features of the ground. We
+lived very well and very cheap on the road. The price of the diligence from
+Leipzig to Frankfort was eleven _Reichsthaler_.
+
+After remaining three days to repose at Frankfort I took my place to
+Mayence and from thence to Metz and Paris. In the diligence from Mayence
+and indeed all the way to Paris I found a very amusing society. There were
+two physicians and M. L[emaître], a most entertaining man and of
+inexhaustible colloquial talent; for, except when he slept, he never ceased
+to talk. His conversation was however always interesting and entertaining,
+for he had figured in the early part of the French Revolution and was well
+known in the political and litterary world as the editor of a famous
+journal called _Le Bonhomme Richard_.[129]
+
+Metz is a large, well built and strongly fortified city. Verdun, thro'
+which we passed, became quite an English colony during the war from the
+number of _detenus_ of that nation who were compelled to reside there. At
+Epernay we drank a few bottles of Champagne and a toast was given by one of
+the company, which met with general applause. It was _Bon voyage_ to the
+Allies who have now finally evacuated France to the great joy of the whole
+nation, except of the towns where they were cantoned, where they
+contributed much towards enriching the shopkeepers and inhabitants.
+
+I remained in Paris six days and then proceeded to England.
+
+
+[129] _Le bonhomme Richard aux bonnes gens_ was not a "famous journal," as
+ only two numbers appeared in 1790 (M. Tourneux, _Bibliographie de
+ l'histoire de Paris pendant la Révolution_, vol. 11, p. 585, n. 10,
+ 511). The publisher, Antoine-François Lemaître, whom Major Erye
+ mentions in this passage, was the author of some other revolutionary
+ pamphlets, e.g., _Lettres bougrement patriotiques_, etc.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Acheron, Lake.
+Adam, Major-General commands Light Brigade of General
+ Sir H. Clinton's division.
+Aix-la-Chapelle:
+ Hotel-de-Ville;
+ Cathedral;
+ relics of Charlemagne;
+ Napoleon's benefactions;
+ overbearing demeanour of Prussian soldiers;
+ Faro bank;
+ interesting Tyrolese girl;
+ baths.
+Albanot Villa Doria,
+ ancient monument.
+Albany, Countess of,
+ her claim to be the legitimate Queen of England;
+ Alfieri's attachment to.
+Alexandria: Austrian Government destroys fortifications of
+Alfieri: compared with Shakespeare, Schiller, and Voltaire,
+ monument erected to, by Canova;
+ his sonnet to Countess of Albany.
+Alsace-Lorraine: severance of, from France anticipated by Prussian
+ officers.
+Andernach: ruins of palace of Kings of Austrasia,
+ church containing embalmed body of Emperor Valentinian;
+ crossing of Rhine by Julius Caesar at.
+Angoulême, Duchesse d': temperament and religious fanaticism of.
+Antwerp: English families fly from Brussels to.
+Archenholz: historian of the Seven Years' War.
+Army of the Loire: exemplary conduct of, when disbanded.
+Arona: colossal statue of St Charles Borromeus at.
+Austria: fluctuations in the value of the paper currency of
+ Napoleon's policy as regarded.
+Avernus, Lake.
+
+Baciocchi, Princess Elise: sister of Napoleon and Sovereign of Lucca.
+Baffo, Venetian poet.
+Baiae: baths of Nero,
+ ruins of temples;
+ the Styx;
+ Elysian Fields.
+Belgium:
+ dislike to severance from France;
+ feeling towards Holland;
+ attachment to Napoleon;
+ preparations for the Campaign;
+ all inhabitants requisitioned for the repair of fortifications.
+Berlin: occupation of, after Jena,
+ excellent conduct of French troops of occupation;
+ excesses committed by troops of Rhenish Confederation;
+ insolent conduct of troops raised by Prince of Isenburg;
+ art treasures of, respected by French Republican Armies;
+ Unter den Linden;
+ Brandenburger Thor;
+ public buildings;
+ streets;
+ statues of great men in the Wilhelm Platz;
+ Churches;
+ the officers of the Army;
+ anecdote of Blucher.
+Bern: attempts in 1815 to regain possession of the Canton de Vaud.
+Bigottini: fine performance at the Grand Opera, Paris.
+Bingen: Mausethurm,
+ Bishop Hatto.
+Blacas, Vicomte de: at Court of Louis XVIII at Ghent.
+Blucher: popularity of, in London,
+ encourages the excesses of his soldiery;
+ nicknames of;
+ narrowly escapes capture at Ligny;
+ saves English at Hougoumont;
+ anecdote related of.
+Bohemia: dialect of.
+Bologna: arcades,
+ remarkable picture in gallery of Count Marescalchi;
+ leaning tower;
+ lady-professor of Greek;
+ Carbonari;
+ theatre;
+ women;
+ barbarous dialect.
+Bonn:
+ Electoral palace;
+ Roman antiquity;
+ legends of the Sieben Gebirge;
+ Das Heimliche Gericht.
+Bordas, M, politics of.
+Borgo San Donino, remarkable highway robbery at.
+Borromean Islands, splendid villa in Isola Bella.
+Bourbons, the: want of patriotism of the Duc de Berri,
+ their injudicious conduct;
+ Louis XVIII and Monsieur at Ghent;
+ amusing nickname of Louis XVIII;
+ dislike of the French people to;
+ their atrocious policy;
+ send emissaries to South of France from Coblentz;
+ unpopularity of;
+ fulsome adulation of;
+ cause removal of Sismondi from Geneva;
+ character of royal families of France, Spain, and Naples.
+Brussels: description of,
+ historical associations;
+ Place du Sablon, celebrated fountain;
+ theatres;
+ humanity of inhabitants of, to the wounded after Waterloo.
+
+Caffarelli, Statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Canova, works of, in St Peter's,
+ master-pieces in his atelier in Rome;
+ character of his genius.
+Capellen, Baron de,
+ proclamation of, to the inhabitants of Brussels.
+Capua,
+ thievishness of lower classes of.
+Carbonari, degrees and initiation,
+ object;
+ meaning of name.
+Castlereagh, Lord: insolent letter of, respecting King of Saxony.
+Catalani: singing of.
+Ceylon: Frye's travels in.
+Chalon: affection felt for Napoleon in,
+ Austrian officers in.
+Charleroy: defeat of Prussian army at.
+Chateaubriand: at the Court of Louis XVIII at Ghent.
+Chatham, Earl of: indignation of, at employment of Indians in the War
+ of Independence.
+Clermont: Peter the Hermit preaches First Crusade in,
+ petrifying well;
+ Swiss regiment;
+ anonymous denunciations;
+ method of cleansing town.
+Coblentz: monument to Marceau,
+ Bourbon intrigues with Jacobins and Brissotins.
+Code Napoléon: simplicity and advantages of, as compared with
+ English criminal law.
+Cologne: Cathedral,
+ the three kings;
+ the eleven thousand virgins;
+ etymology of the name;
+ Jean-Marie Farina.
+Cremona: Gothic buildings,
+ Campanile of Cathedral.
+Consalvi, Cardinal: character and abilities of.
+Campagna: limbs of quartered malefactors hung up on roadsides,
+ armed peasants;
+ the malaria.
+
+David: pictures by, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+De l'Epée, Abbé: founder of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_.
+Dessaix: Statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+De Watteville: disbands his army.
+Delille, Abbé, his poetry.
+De Boigne, General: his great services to Scindiah,
+ unjustly accused of treachery towards Tippoo Sahb.
+Didier: handed over by the Sardinian Government to the French,
+ his execution at Grenoble.
+Dijon: the town,
+ manufactories of.
+Dionigi, Mme: literary and artistic attainments of.
+D'Orfei, Mme.
+Dresden: The Japanischer Palast,
+ music in;
+ Prince Galhitzin;
+ the King;
+ bridge over the Elbe;
+ Marshal Davoust;
+ Grosser Garten;
+ Ressource Club;
+ etiquette;
+ title of "Rath";
+ theatres;
+ beds;
+ scholars.
+Duchesnois, Mlle: fine acting of.
+
+Egypt: striking testimony to the good done by the French in.
+Ehrenbreitstein: flying bridge,
+ great natural strength;
+ beauty of women of.
+Ellis, Col. Sir H.: perishes at Waterloo.
+Emigrés, the:
+ incorrigibility of;
+ ingratitude to Napoleon;
+ their foolish expectations;
+ efforts to cause restoration of lands formerly theirs.
+Ens:
+ whirlpool;
+ the Waternixie.
+Erfurt: legend of Count Gleichen.
+Espinassy, General: republican principles of.
+Eton: principles instilled into boys at.
+Eustace, Mr: examples of his credulity and bigotry.
+
+Ferrara:
+ Hugo and Parisina;
+ the Po;
+ relics of Ariosto;
+ MSS of Ariosto, Tasso, Guarini;
+ Hospital of St Anna.
+Firmin: acting of.
+Fleurus: Prussian army defeated at.
+Florence:
+ the Duomo;
+ Battisterio;
+ il Sasso di Dante;
+ theatres;
+ public buildings;
+ statues;
+ Gallery;
+ Venus;
+ de Medici;
+ paintings and sculpture;
+ portraits of sovereigns;
+ Roman antiquities;
+ remarkable imitations in wax of human anatomy;
+ Ponte Vecchio;
+ street paving;
+ thickness of walls of houses;
+ Palazzo Pitti;
+ Canova's Venus;
+ Boboli Gardens;
+ Cascino;
+ beauty of the women;
+ Pegasus;
+ Italian fondness for gaudy colours;
+ Canova's monument to Alfieri;
+ Church of Santa Croce;
+ the Florentine Westminster Abbey;
+ academies;
+ La Crusca;
+ English travellers;
+ Lord Dillon;
+ story illustrating Florentine life.
+Fouché: complains of the conduct of the Allies.
+Frankfort:
+ Venus Vulgivaga;
+ Jews;
+ cathedral;
+ inauguration of Roman Caesars in the Römer;
+ the Golden Bull;
+ portraits of the Emperors;
+ theatre;
+ adaptation of German language to music;
+ political opinion in;
+ dislike to Austria.
+French Revolution: worst excesses of, surpassed.
+
+Galileo: monument erected to, in church of Santa Croce.
+Gauthier, M.: exiled to Lausanne.
+Geneva: scenery,
+ Fort de l'Écluse;
+ arcades;
+ J.J. Rousseau;
+ Calvin;
+ Servetus;
+ sentiments of Genevese towards Napoleon and the Revolution;
+ literary aptitude of Genevese;
+ attachment to their country;
+ the women;
+ French refugees refused an asylum in;
+ admitted into Helvetic Confederation.
+Genoa: the women of,
+ peculiarities of the streets;
+ ducal palace;
+ Columbus;
+ bridge of Carignano;
+ churches.
+Georges, Mlle: fine acting of,
+ her rendering of "Agrippina";
+ plays the part of "Clytemnestra," supported by her sister as "Iphigénie".
+Ghent: Court of Louis XVIII at.
+Girolamo, Signor: anecdote of.
+Godesberg: interesting ruins near.
+Granet: remarkable pictures by.
+Grassini: singing of.
+Grillparzer, author of the tragedy "Sappho".
+Grotto of Pausilippo.
+Grotto del Cane.
+Guérin: pictures by, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Guillotine, the.
+
+Helvetic Confederation: guaranteed by the Allied Powers in 1814,
+ Geneva admitted into.
+Herculaneum.
+Hockheim; Rhenish wines.
+Holland: feeling towards the House of Orange,
+ regret at loss of Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon.
+Hougoumont: Bulow and Blucher march to the assistance of the English at
+ devastation of.
+Hulin, General: cashiers a Prussian officer in the French service.
+
+India: Frye's travels in.
+Innspruck: the Hofkirche,
+ statues of kings and princes connected with Maximilian I.
+
+Kléber: statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Klingmann, Philipp: plot of his tragedy "Faust".
+
+Labédoyère: execution of.
+Lacoste: acts as Napoleon's guide at Waterloo.
+Lafayette: rebukes British Commissioner at the Conference.
+Lafond: acting of.
+Lafontaine, Augustus: comparison of works of, with the "Nouvelle Heloise"
+ of Rousseau.
+La Harpe, General: influences Emperor of Russia in favour of the Vaudois.
+Lamarque: sent by the Convention to arrest Dumouriez,
+ delivered over to the Austrians;
+ votes for Napoleon.
+Landshut: Church of St Martin at.
+Language: influence of, upon the poetry and plays of Italy, France,
+ England and Germany.
+Lausanne: steep ascents,
+ beauty of environs;
+ Republican principles of;
+ intolerant discourse of minister.
+Leipzig: Saxon troops go over to the Mies during the battle of,
+ the University;
+ unpopularity of the English in.
+Leghorn: Hebrew families in,
+ Don Felipe III;
+ Smollett's tomb.
+Liége: situation of,
+ coal-pits near;
+ commerce with Holland;
+ fortifications;
+ destroyed by Joseph II.
+Linz: beauty of the women,
+ curious incident;
+ learned innkeepers.
+Lodi: interesting model in the Hôtel des Invalides of battle of.
+Louvre: works of art in,
+ stripping of, by the Allies.
+Lucca: female servants,
+ the amoroso;
+ Dante's mountain.
+Lyons: buildings,
+ scenery;
+ feelings towards Napoleon;
+ character of inhabitants;
+ manufactures.
+
+Maastricht: situation,
+ Montagne de St Pierre.
+Machiavelli: entombed in church of Santa Croce.
+Mâcon: quai,
+ wine;
+ grisettes.
+Maffei: his "Polyphonte" compared with that of Voltaire.
+Maitland, Captain: Napolean surrenders to.
+Mantua: situation,
+ Cathedral;
+ monuments of the Gonzagas;
+ the T palace and gardens.
+Marengo: the Battle of,
+ Commemoration column thrown down.
+Maria Louisa: ordered to quit papal territory,
+ enthusiastic reception of, at Bologna;
+ victim of a strange theft.
+Mars, Mlle: graceful acting of.
+Massieu: pupil of the Abbé Sicard.
+Mayence: Cathedral,
+ Citadel.
+Michel Angelo: anecdote of.
+Milan: _Teatro della Scala_,
+ the _Duomo_;
+ the women of;
+ dialect;
+ the _Zecca_;
+ palace;
+ Ambrosian Library;
+ hospital;
+ _Teatro Olimpico_;
+ Porta del Sempione;
+ Italian comedy and audiences;
+ Teatro Girolamo;
+ Milanese twang;
+ ballet;
+ acting of La Pallerini.
+Mittenwald: great raft,
+ interesting journey.
+Mölk: tradition of the Devil's Wall,
+ ruins of Castle of Dierenstein;
+ Richard Coeur de Lion.
+Mont Cenis: description of the Chaussée.
+Mont St. Jean: dreadful sight on plateau of.
+Montefiascone: story of the _Vino d'Est_.
+Morice, Colonel: death at Waterloo.
+Munich: the King,
+ national theatre;
+ social life in;
+ female head-dress.
+Murat: Italian opinion of.
+
+Namur: situation of,
+ Citadel demolished by Joseph II;
+ complaints against.
+Prussian soldiery.
+Napoleon: takes tribute of works of art from vanquished Governments,
+ calumniated by the _émigrés_;
+ unjust aspersions on;
+ narrow escape from capture;
+ confident of success before Waterloo;
+ constructs Chaussée of Mont Cenis.
+Naples:
+ life of a man of fashion in;
+ Etruscan vases and papyri in museum;
+ theatres;
+ _Pulcinello_;
+ social advantages;
+ lazzaroni;
+ dialect;
+ effect of general ignorance.
+Nelson, Lord: conduct towards Caraccioli,
+Neuwied: University of.
+Ney, Marshall: Wellington and Emperor of Russia refuse to interfere
+ in favour of
+
+Padua:
+ University;
+ Church of St Anthony;
+ Palazzo della Giustizia;
+ tomb of Livy.
+Paris: Louis XVIII in,
+ Kotzebue on the _Palais Royal_;
+ Café Montausier;
+ the Louvre;
+ statues and paintings collected by the French Government;
+ productions at the Grand Opera;
+ Column of the _Place Vendôme_;
+ Gardens of the Tuileries;
+ Chamber of Deputies;
+ the _Invalides_;
+ models of the fortresses of France;
+ Picture Gallery of the Palais du Luxembourg;
+ frequency of quarrels between French and Prussian officers in the;
+ _Palais Royal_;
+ behaviour of English officers in;
+ masterpieces performed in the _Théâtre français_;
+ Ney shot in the Gardens of the Luxembourg.
+Parma: "L'Amfiteatro Farnese",
+ paintings;
+ birthplace of Cassius.
+Passau: junction of the Danube, Inn and Illst.
+Perugia.
+Pescia,
+ advantages of living in.
+Picton, Lieut-Genl Sir T.: perishes at Waterloo.
+Piedmont: character of the lower classes of.
+Pillnitz:
+ the palace;
+ Treaty of.
+Pisa.
+Pitt: credited with the invention of the sinking fund.
+Pius VII: character and virtues of.
+Pompeii:
+ amphitheatre;
+ houses;
+ Temple of Isis;
+ Praetorium;
+ antiquities removed to Museum of Portici.
+Pontine Marshes.
+Prague: situation,
+ bridge over the Mulda;
+ remarkable statue;
+ Jews;
+ palaces of the Wallensteins and Colloredos;
+ St John Nepomucene;
+ Joseph II's ingenious method of extorting money from the Jews;
+ Catalani;
+ story of the Duchess Libussa.
+
+Rafaelli: mosaic work of.
+Rho: ancient tree.
+Rome: censorship of books at the Dogana,
+ Coliseum;
+ Arch of Constantine;
+ _Via Sacra_--excavations;
+ Tarpeian Rock;
+ Capitol;
+ St Peter's;
+ anecdote of Michel Angelo;
+ statue of St Peter;
+ masterpieces of sculpture in Capitoline Museum;
+ Transteverini;
+ effect of the settling of foreign artists in;
+ Santa Maria Maggiore;
+ Church of St John Lateran;
+ Egyptian obelisk;
+ La Scala Santa;
+ Quirinal;
+ fountains;
+ Column of Trajan;
+ baths of Diocletian;
+ theatres;
+ masterpieces of art in the Vatican Museum;
+ statue of Jupiter Capitolinus;
+ stanze di Rafaello;
+ Appian Road;
+ social life in;
+ the _Avvocati_;
+ Papal Government;
+ post office defalcations;
+ the Carnival;
+ races in the Corso;
+ masquerades;
+ Sovereigns and persons of distinction living in Rome in 1818;
+ Easter in;
+ Swiss Guard;
+ Noble Guard;
+ papal benediction;
+ illumination of St Peter's;
+ fireworks from Castle of St Angelo;
+ the brigand Barbone;
+ his wife.
+
+Savoy: character of inhabitants of.
+Schönbrunn: anecdote of Napoleon's son.
+Schuyler, General: his reproof of General Burgoyne.
+Scindiah: career of.
+Sgricci, Signor: his genius for improvisation.
+Sicard, Abbeé; director of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_,
+eulogises Sir Sidney Smith.
+Sienna: cathedral,
+ Piccolomini monument;
+ dialect.
+Simplon: road over the,
+ Chaussée;
+ _maisons de refuge_.
+Sismondi,
+ the historian banished from Geneva.
+Smith, Lucius F.: friend of De Boigne.
+Smith, Sir Sidney: his eulogy of the Abbé Sicard.
+Spoleto: ruins of ancient buildings.
+St Cloud: favourite residence of Napoleon.
+St Eustatius: pillaged by Admiral Rodney.
+St Germain: depôt for articles plundered by Prussian officers.
+St Helena: injustice of Napoleon's banishment to.
+Stewart, Lord: conduct of, at Conference of French Commissioners
+ with the Allies.
+
+Taddei, Rosa: her talent for improvisation.
+Talma, his ailing at the Théâtre Français.
+Thorwaldsen: character of his genius.
+Tivoli: the Villa d'Este,
+ Adrian's Villa.
+Tölz: remarkable groups of figures in wood, representing
+ history of Christ.
+Tournay,
+ citadel of.
+Trévoux: scenery on the road between Mâcon and,
+ hotel-keeper's beautiful daughter.
+Turin: Chapelle du Saint Suaire,
+ remarkable works of art in;
+ the King of Sardinia.
+Tuscany: contrast with papal dominions,
+ pronunciation;
+ peasantry;
+ fondness of Tuscan women for dress;
+ feeling towards Napoleon in;
+ character of the people;
+ house of Americo Vespucci.
+Tyrol, the: general description of,
+ dress of the peasant women.
+
+Valais: crétins of.
+Vaud, Canton de: character of inhabitants of,
+ gratitude to France;
+ democratic spirit;
+ La Harpe;
+ defends its independence;
+ hatred of French Royalists to.
+Velino: remarkable cascade.
+Venice: Canale Grande,
+ Rialto;
+ palaces of great families;
+ the Merceria;
+ water-fête;
+ Piazza di San Marco;
+ Church of St Mark;
+ Campanile;
+ variety of costumes in;
+ dialect;
+ social life in;
+ Doge's palace;
+ theatres;
+ gondolas.
+Verbruggen, H.: work of, in church of St Gudule, Brussels.
+Verona: amphitheatre,
+ Palladio;
+ Scala family;
+ social advantages in.
+Versailles: magnificence of.
+"Vertraute Briefe" the.
+Vesuvius: eruptions,
+ lava.
+Vicenza.
+Vienna: Art treasures of, respected by French Republican armies,
+ great raft;
+ streets;
+ Cathedral;
+ Hofburg;
+ Congress of;
+ Wechselbank;
+ Belvedere Palace;
+ Prater;
+ theatres.
+Visconte, Galeazzo: builds church of the Certosa.
+Volnais, Mlle: Acting of.
+Voltaire: his play, "Mérope",
+ his benefactions to Ferney;
+ relics of;
+ portraits of contemporaries in his château.
+
+Walker, Adam: his lectures to Etonians stopped.
+Wardle, Col.: republican principles of,
+ anonymous denunciation of.
+Waterloo: French officer's remarks on.
+Wellington: his confidence in the result of the campaign,
+ gallantry of;
+ checks frequency of corporal punishment in the army.
+Wilson, Maj.-Genl: accompanies Frye on a tour through the theatre of War.
+Wilson, Sir R.: his charges against Napoleon.
+Wirion: removed from office by Napoleon.
+
+York, Duke of,
+ opposes frequent corporal punishment in the Army.
+
+Zedera, Chevalier: political dispute with Genevese,
+ his journey with Frye to Italy;
+ his parting with Frye.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo: Reminiscences of
+European Travel 1815-1819, by Major W. E Frye
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10939 ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #10939 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10939)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European
+Travel 1815-1819, by Major W. E Frye
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819
+
+Author: Major W. E Frye
+
+Release Date: February 4, 2004 [EBook #10939]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AFTER WATERLOO ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team from images generously made available by gallica
+(Bibliotheque nationale de France) at http://gallica.bnf.fr.
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER WATERLOO
+
+Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819
+
+By
+
+MAJOR W.E. FRYE
+
+EDITED WITH A PREFACE AND NOTES
+
+By SALOMON REINACH
+
+Member of the Institute of France
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+1908
+
+
+
+
+To
+
+ V.A.M.
+ S.R.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The knowledge of Major Frye's manuscript and the privilege of publishing it
+for the first time I owe to the kindness of two French ladies, the Misses
+G----. Their father, a well known artist and critic, used to spend the
+summer months at Saint Germain-en-Laye together with his wife, who was an
+English woman by birth. They had been for a long time intimately acquainted
+with Major Frye, who lived and ended his life in that quiet town. The
+Major's hostess, Mme. de W----, after his death in 1858, brought the
+manuscript to Mrs. G---- and gave it to her in memory of her friend. It was
+duly preserved in the G---- family, but remained unnoticed. The Misses
+G---- rediscovered it in 1907, when it had been lying in a cupboard for
+upwards of half a century. On their showing it to me I thought it was
+interesting for many reasons, and worthy of introduction to the public. I
+hope the reader will share my opinion, which is also that of several
+English scholars and men of letters, to whom I communicated extracts from
+the manuscript.
+
+The reminiscences are in the form of letters addressed to a correspondent
+who, however, is never named and of whose health, family and private
+circumstances not the slightest mention is to be found. So I am inclined to
+believe that he never existed, and that Major Frye chose to imitate
+President de Brosses and others who thus recorded their travelling
+experiences in epistolary form.
+
+The manuscript--which will eventually be deposited in a public library--is
+entirely in Major Frye's large and legible hand; at some later time it was
+evidently revised by himself, but many names which I have endeavoured to
+complete were left in blank or only indicated by initials. There are three
+folio volumes, bound in paper boards. In this edition it has been thought
+advisable to leave out a certain number of pages devoted to theatricals, of
+which Major Frye was a great votary, and also some lengthy descriptions of
+landscapes, museums and churches, the interest of which to modern readers
+does not correspond to the space occupied by them. For the information
+contained in the footnotes I am indebted to many correspondents, English,
+French, Swiss, Belgian and Italian, to whom I here express my hearty
+thanks. I am under special obligation to Sir Charles Dilke, Mr Oscar
+Browning, Professor Novati, Professor Corrado Ricci, Commandant
+Espérandieu, Professor Cumont, Professor Stilling and Mr Höchberg.
+
+Major Frye's tombstone is in the cemetery of Saint Germain, and reads thus:
+"To the memory of Major William Edward Frye, who departed this life the 9th
+day of October, 1858." On the same stone has been added in French:
+"Perceval Edmond Litchfield, décédé le 15 Avril, 1888." About P.E.
+Litchfield I know nothing; he must have been the Major's intimate friend
+during the last period of his life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+W.E. Frye was born Oct. 29, 1784, and received his education at Eton
+(1797-9) in the time of the French Revolution. "The system was," he says,
+"to drill into the heads of the boys strong aristocratic principles and
+hatred of democracy and of the French in particular." The effect produced
+on the youth was the reverse of that intended. From 1799 to 1822 he
+belonged to the British army: here is an abstract of his services:
+
+ Ensign, 2nd Foot, 5th August, 1799.
+ Lieutenant, 2nd Foot, 7th March, 1800.
+ Half-pay, 4th Foot, 14th April, 1808.
+ Lieutenant, 24th Foot, 8th December, 1804.
+ Captain, 56th Foot, 18th April, 1805.
+ 3rd Ceylon Regt., 15th Feb., 1810.
+ Half-pay, 3rd Foot, 7th March, 1816.
+ 4th Foot, 24th Feb., 1820.
+ Brevet-Major, 12th August, 1819.
+ Sold out, 15th August, 1822.
+
+In 1799, Frye took a part in the British Expedition to Holland. In 1801 he
+was in Egypt with Lord Abercrombie's army and received the medal for war
+service. His career in India lasted six years and gave him occasion to
+visit the three presidencies and Ceylon. In 1814 he returned on furlough to
+Europe and was in Brussels during the Waterloo campaign. The subsequent
+years--1815 to 1819--he employed visiting Western Europe, as appears from
+his reminiscences. I have read letters of his which prove that he lived in
+Paris from 1830 to 1832. Later, about 1848, he took an apartment in Saint
+Germain, and died there in 1858.
+
+Major Frye was a very distinguished linguist; besides knowing Greek and
+Latin, he understood almost all European languages, and was capable of
+writing correctly in French, Italian and German. The Misses G---- have
+shown me a rare book published by him at Paris in 1844 under the following
+title:
+
+"Trois chants de l'Edda. Vaftrudnismal, Thrymsquidal, Skirnisfor, traduits
+en vers français, accompagnés de notes explicatives des mythes et
+allégories, et suivis d'autres poèmes par W.E. Frye, ancien major
+d'infanterie au service d'Angleterre, membre de l'Académie des Arcadiens de
+Rome. Se vend à Paris, pour l'auteur, chez Heideloff & Cie, Libraires, 18
+Rue des Filles St. Thomas. 1844" (In 8vo, xii, 115 pp.)
+
+At the end of that volume are translations by Major Frye of several
+Northern poems--in German, Italian and English verse--from the Danish and
+the Swedish; then come two sonnets in French verse, the one in honour of
+Lafayette, the other about the Duke of Orléans, whose premature death he
+compares with that of the Northern hero of the Edda, Balder. A part of
+Frye's translation of the Edda, before appearing in book form, had been
+published in _l'Echo de la Littérature et des Beaux Arts_, a periodical
+edited by the Major's friend, M. de Belenet.
+
+Frye loved poetry, though his ideas on the subject were rather those of the
+eighteenth century than our own. It is interesting to find an English
+officer reading Voltaire, Gessner, Ariosto, and quoting them from memory
+(which explains that some of his quotations had to be corrected). The
+sentimental vein of Rousseau's generation still flows and vibrates in him,
+as when he says that he has never been able to read the letters of Wolmar
+to St Preux in Rousseau's _Nouvelle Héloïse_ without shedding tears. German
+minor poetry, now quite forgotten, attracted him almost as much as the
+great pages of Schiller, Bürger, and Goethe. The Misses G. possess a
+manuscript translation in three volumes, in the Major's own hand, of
+Wieland's _Agathodemon_ done into English. This he evidently intended to
+publish, as he had written the title-page which is worded as follows:
+
+"Agathodemon, a philosophical romance translated from the German of Wieland
+by W.E. Frye, member of the Academy degli Arcadi in Rome, and of the Royal
+Society of Northern Antiquarians of Copenhagen, ex-major of infantry in His
+British Majesty's service."
+
+Frye describes with accuracy, and shows much appreciation of fine scenery
+and architecture. His judgements in painting and sculpture are sincere,
+though often betraying the autodidact and amateur. He loved music,
+especially Rossini's operas which were then beginning their long career of
+triumph. Theatricals of all sorts, especially ballets, had a great
+attraction for him and elicited his enthusiastic comments. In comparing
+tragedies and comedies which he had seen performed in different countries,
+he gave repeated proofs of his knowledge and critical insight. We can take
+him as a good example of that intelligent class of English travellers whose
+intercourse with the Continental _litterati_ has so well contributed to
+establish the good reputation of British culture and refined appreciation
+of the arts.
+
+The chief interest of Frye's reminiscences lies, however, in quite another
+direction. He was a friend of liberty, a friend of France, an admirer of
+Napoleon, and a hater of the Tory régime which brought about Napoleon's
+downfall. "France's attempts at European domination, in the Napoleonic era,
+are graciously described as but so many efforts towards spreading the light
+of civilization over Europe." These words, written about a quite recent
+work and à propos of the "Entente cordiale," apply perfectly to Frye's
+reminiscences. Travelling immediately before and after the Emperor's
+collapse, he found that everywhere, excepting in Tuscany, the French
+domination was regretted, because the ideals of liberty and equality had
+shone and vanished with the tricolour flag. He admires the French people,
+though not the _Ultras_ and bigots, and has fine words of praise for the
+French army: "Yes, the French soldier is a fine fellow. I have served
+against them in Holland and in Egypt, and I will never flinch from
+rendering justice to their exemplary conduct and lofty valour." He takes
+trouble to refute the exaggerated reports which were then circulated all
+over Europe about the cruelties and vandalism practised by the French: "If
+the French since the Revolution have not always fought for liberty, they
+have done so invariably for science; and wherever they carried their
+victorious arms abuses were abolished, ameliorations of all kinds followed
+and the arts of life were improved. Our government, since the accession of
+George III, has never raised its arm except in favour of old abuses, to
+uphold despotism and unfair privileges or to establish commercial
+monopoly."
+
+Sometimes, indeed, speaking of his own country and its government, Major
+Frye uses very hard words, which might seem unpatriotic if we did not know,
+from many other memoirs and letters, to what a terrible strain orthodox
+Toryism, coupled with bigotry and hypocrisy, had put the patience of
+liberal Englishmen at that period. He called the British government "the
+most dangerous, artful, and determined enemy of all liberty,"--"England,"
+he says, "has been always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to
+perpetuate abuses and to rivet the fetters of monarchical, feudal and
+ecclesiastical tyranny." And later on he inveighs against the English
+merchants, who "contributed with their gold to uphold the corrupt system of
+Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and liberticide wars."
+
+Whatever may be the final judgement of history on the Tory principles in
+politics in the days of the Congress of Vienna, Major Frye's love of
+liberty and intellectual progress entitle him to the sympathy of those who
+share his generous feelings and do not consider that personal freedom and
+individual rights are articles for home use only. Since Frye wrote, the
+whole of Europe, excepting perhaps Russia, has reaped the benefits of the
+French Revolution, and reduced, if not suppressed, what the Major called
+"kingcraft and priestcraft." He did not attempt to divine the future, but
+the history of Europe in the nineteenth century has been largely in
+accordance with his desires and hopes. It is not a small merit for a
+writer, in the midst of one of the most rabid reactions that the world has
+known, to have clung with such tenacity to ideals, the complete victory of
+which may now be contemplated in the near future.
+
+S.R.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MAY-JUNE, 1815
+
+Passage from Ceylon to England--Napoleon's return--Ostend--Bruges
+--Ghent--The King of France at Mass--Alost--Bruxelles--The Duke of
+Wellington very confident--Feelings of the Belgians--Good conduct of
+British troops--Monuments in Bruxelles--Theatricals--Genappe and
+Namur--Complaints against the Prussian troops--Mons--Major-General
+Adam--Tournay--A French deserter--General Clinton's division--Cavalry
+review--The Duke de Berri--Back to Bruxelles--Unjust opinions about
+Napoleon and the French--Battle at Ligny--The day of Waterloo in
+Bruxelles--Visit to the battlefield--Terrible condition of the
+wounded--Kindness of the Bruxellois.
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+From Bruxelles to Liége--A priest's declamation against the French
+Revolution--Maastricht--Aix-la-Chapelle--Imperial relics--Napoleon
+regretted--Klingmann's "Faust"--A Tyrolese beauty--Cologne--Difficulties
+about a passport--The Cathedral--King-craft and priest-craft--The
+Rhine--Bonn and Godesberg--Goethe's "Götz von Berlichingen"--The Seven
+Mountains--German women--Andernach--Ehrenbreitstein--German hatred against
+France--Coblentz--Intrigues of the Bourbon princes in Coblentz--Mayence--
+Bieberich--Conduct of the Allies towards Napoleon--Frankfort on the
+Mayn--An anecdote about Lord Stewart and Lafayette--German poetry--The
+question of Alsace and Lorraine--Return to Bruxelles--Napoleon's surrender.
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+From Bruxelles to Paris--Restoration of Louis XVIII--The officers of the
+allied armies--The Palais Royal--The Louvre--Protest of the author against
+the proposed despoiling of the French Museums--Unjust strictures against
+Napoleon's military policy--The _cant_ about revolutionary robberies--The
+Grand Opera--Monuments in Paris--The Champs Elysées--Saint-Cloud--The
+Hôtel des Invalides--The Luxembourg--General Labédoyère--Priests and
+emigrants--Prussian Plunder--Handsome behaviour of the English
+officers--Reminiscences of Eton--Versailles.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+From Paris to Bruxelles--Visiting the plains of Waterloo--The Duke de Berri
+at Lille--Beauvais--Return to Paris--Remarks on the French theatre
+--Talma--Mlle Duchesnois--Mlle Georges--French alexandrine verse--The Abbé
+Delille--The Opéra Comique.
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+From Paris to Milan through Dijon, Chalon-sur-Saone, Lyons, Geneva and the
+Simplon--Auxerre--Dijon--Napoleon at Chalon-sur-Saone--The army of the
+Loire--Mâcon--French _grisettes_--Lyons--Monuments and theatricals--
+Geneva--Character and opinions of the Genevois--Voltaire's chateau at
+Ferney--The chevalier Zadera--From Geneva to Milan--Crossing the
+Simplon--Arona--The theatres in Milan--Rossini--Monuments in Milan--Art
+encouraged by the French--Mr Eustace's bigotry--Return to Switzerland
+--Clarens and Vevey--Lausanne--Society in Lausanne--Return to Paris--The
+Louvre stripped--Death of Marshal Ney.
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MARCH-JUNE, 1816
+
+Ball at Cambray, attended by the Duke of Wellington--An Adventure between
+Saint Quentin and Compiègne--Paris revisited--Colonel Wardle and Mrs
+Wallis--Society in Paris--The Sourds-Muets--The Cemetery of Père La
+Chaise--Apathy of the French people--The priests--Marriage of the Duke de
+Berri.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Journey from Paris to Lausanne--Besançon--French refugees in Lausanne
+--Francois Lamarque--General Espinassy--Bordas--Gautier--Michau--M. de
+Laharpe--Mlle Michaud--Levade, a Protestant minister--Chambéry--Aix
+--Details about M. de Boigne's career in India--English Toryism and
+intolerance--Valley of Maurienne--Passage across Mont Cenis and arrival at
+Suza--Turin.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Journey from Turin to Bologna--Asti--Schiller and Alfieri--Italian
+_cuisine_--The _vetturini_--Marengo--Piacenza--The Trebbia--Parma--The
+Empress Maria Louisa--Modena--Bologna--The University--The Marescalchi
+Gallery--Character of the Bolognese.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Journey across the Appennines to Florence--Tuscan idioms and
+customs--Monuments and galleries at Florence--The Cascino--Churches--
+Theatres--Popularity of the Grand Duke--Napoleon's downfall not
+regretted--Academies in Florence.
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Journey from Florence to Rome--Sienna--Radicofani--Bolsena--Montefiascone
+wine--Viterbo--Baccano--The Roman Campagna--The papal _douans_--Monuments
+and Museums in Rome--Intolerance of the Catholic Christians--The Tiber and
+the bridges--Character of the Romans--The _Palazzi_ and _Ville_--Canova's
+atelier--Theatricals--An execution in Rome.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+From Rome to Naples--Albano--Velletri--The Marshes--Terracina--Mola di
+Gaeta--Capua--The streets of Naples--Monuments and Museums--Visit to
+Pompeii and ascent to Vesuvius--Dangerous ventures--Puzzuoli and
+Baiae--Theatres at Naples--Pulcinello--Return to Rome--Tivoli.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1816
+
+From Rome to Florence--Sismondi the historian--Reminiscences of
+India--Lucca--Princess Elisa Baciqochi--Pisa--The Campo Santo--Leghorn--
+Hebrews in Leghorn--Lord Dillon--The story of a lost glove--From Florence
+to Lausanne by Milan, Turin and across Mont Cenis--Lombardy in winter--The
+Hospice of Mont Cenis.
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MARCH-SEPTEMBER, 1817
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Clermont-Ferrand--A wretched conveyance--The
+first dish of frogs--Society in Clermont-Ferrand--General de Vergennes--
+Cleansing the town--Return to Lausanne--A zealous priest--Journey to Bern
+and back to Lausanne--Avenches--Lake Morat--Lake Neufchatel--The Diet in
+Bern--Character of the Bernois--A beautiful Milanese lady.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEPTEMBER, 1817-APRIL, 1818
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Milan, Florence, Rome and Naples--Residence at
+Naples--The theatre of San Carlo--Rossini's operas--Gaming in Naples--The
+_Lazzaroni_--Public writers--Carbonarism--Return to Rome--Christmas eve at
+Santa Maria Maggiore--Mme Dionigi--Theatricals--Society in Rome--The papal
+government--Lucien Bonaparte, prince of Canino--Louis Napoleon, ex-King of
+Holland--Pope Pius VII--Thorwaldsen--Granet--The Holy Week in Rome--The
+Duchess of Devonshire--From Rome to Florence by the Perugia road.
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+APRIL-JULY, 1818
+
+Journey from Florence to Pisa and from thence by the Appennines to
+Genoa--Massa--Carrara--Genoa--Monuments and works of art--The
+Genoese--Return to Florence--Journey from Florence through Bologna and
+Ferrara to Venice--Monument to Ariosto in Ferrara--A description of
+Venice--Padua--Vicenza--Verona--Cremona--Return to Milan--The Scala
+theatre--Verona again--From Verona to Innspruck.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1818
+
+Innspruck--Tyrol and the Tyrolese--From Innspruck to Munich--Monuments and
+churches--Theatricals--Journey from Munich to Vienna on a floss--Trouble
+with a passport--Complicated system of Austrian money--Description of
+Vienna--The Prater--The theatres--Schiller's _Joan of Arc_--A
+_Kinderballet_--The young Napoleon at Schoenbrunn--Journey from Vienna to
+Prague.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+SEPTEMBER, 1818-MARCH, 1819
+
+The splendid city of Prague--The German expression, "To give the basket"--
+Journey from Prague to Dresden--Journey from Dresden to Berlin--A
+description of Berlin--The Prussian Army--Theatricals--Peasants talk about
+Napoleon--Prussians and French should be allies--Absurd policy of the
+English Tories--Journey from Berlin to Dresden--A description of
+Dresden--The battle of Dresden in 1813--Clubs at Dresden--Theatricals--
+German beds--Saxon scholars--The picture gallery--Tobacco an ally of
+Legitimacy--Saxon women--Meissen--Unjust policy of Europe towards the King
+of Saxony.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+MARCH-APRIL, 1819
+
+Journey from Dresden to Leipzig--The University of Leipzig--Liberal
+spirit--The English disliked in Saxony--The English Government hostile to
+liberty--Journey to Frankfort--From Frankfort to Metz and Paris--A.F.
+Lemaître--_Bon voyage_ to the Allies--Return to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MAY-JUNE, 1815
+
+Passage from Ceylon to England--Napoleon's return--Ostend--Bruges--Ghent--
+The King of France at Mass--Alost--Bruxelles--The Duke of Wellington very
+confident--Feelings of the Belgians--Good conduct of British
+troops--Monuments in Bruxelles--Theatricals--Genappe and Namur--Complaints
+against the Prussian troops--Mons--Major-General Adam--Tournay--A French
+deserter--General Clinton's division--Cavalry review--The Duke de
+Berri--Back to Bruxelles--Unjust opinions about Napoleon and the
+French--Battle at Ligny--The day of Waterloo in Bruxelles--Visit to the
+battlefield--Terrible condition of the wounded--Kindness of the Bruxellois.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, May 1, 1815.
+
+I proceed to the fulfilment of my promise, to give you from time to time
+the details of my tour, and my reflections on the circumstances that occur
+at this momentous crisis.
+
+To me, who have spent the greatest part of my life out of Europe, the whole
+scene is so new that I am quite bewildered with it; and you will, I am
+afraid, as I write on the impulse of the moment, find my ideas at times
+rather incoherently put together. What changes have taken place in Europe
+within the last two years! and how great were those which occurred during
+the interval of my passage from Ceylon last year, which island I quitted
+about the time that we received in that part of the world intelligence of
+the battle of Leipsic! Having had a long passage from distant Taprobane, it
+was only on my arrival at the Cape of Good Hope, that I learned, to my
+utter astonishment, the news of the capitulation of Paris to the allied
+powers, and of the overthrow of the power and dynasty of Napoleon. I
+recollect that at the Cape there was great rejoicing and jubilee on this
+occasion; but I confess, as to myself, I did not see any reason for giving
+vent to this extravagant joy; and I must have had even at that time somehow
+or other a presentiment of what would soon happen, as in communicating this
+intelligence to a friend in India I made use of these words: "get a court
+dress made, my good friend, and a big wig, ruffled shirt, and hair-powder,
+and stick an old-fashioned sword by your side, for, depend on it, old
+fashions will come into play again; the most arbitrary and aristocratic
+notions will be revived and terrible machinations will be framed against
+the liberties of Europe."
+
+Of course at the Cape we only heard one side of the question; and I began
+to be almost convinced that it was as necessary for humanity, as for the
+repose of Europe, that the giant should be put down; and I was consoled
+when it was effected, ostensibly, at least, by the voice of the people.
+
+I had scarcely been three months in England, when the return of Napoleon
+from Elba, and the extraordinary dislocation of the Bourbons from the
+throne of France, summoned Europe again to arms; the crusade is preached at
+Vienna, and behold! his Grace of Wellington appointed the Godfrey of the
+holy league. I had reason, about six weeks before the news of this event
+reached London, from some conversation I had with an intelligent friend,
+who had just returned from a tour on the Continent, to suppose that the
+slightest combination against the Bourbons would prove successful, from
+their injudicious conduct and from the temper of the people; but I never
+could have supposed that the return of the man of Elba would be hailed with
+such unparalleled and unanimous acclamation. As I had long ago wished for
+an opportunity of visiting the continent of Europe, which had never before
+occurred to me, I eagerly embraced the offer made to me by my friend
+Major-General Wilson, formerly Lieut.-Governor of Ceylon,[1] to accompany
+him on a military tour through the country about to be the theatre of war.
+Though I had never before visited the Continent (except with the British
+army in the invasion of Holland in 1799, when I began my military career),
+yet I was not wholly unprepared for travelling, having united to a
+classical, as well as military education, a tolerable knowledge of history,
+and a partial acquirement of the principal modern European languages, which
+I had begun to learn when very young and which I kept up during my leisure
+hours in India, which, like those of Don Quixote, were many. I preferred
+this study infinitely to that of the Asiatic languages, for which I never
+felt any taste, as I dislike bombast, hyperbole and exaggeration; and
+though an ardent admirer of the Muses, I never could find pleasure in what
+Voltaire terms "le bon style oriental, ou l'on fait danser les montagnes et
+les collines," and I prefer the amatory effusions of Ovid to those of the
+great King Solomon himself.
+
+The war will no doubt commence in Belgium, and of course the Emperor
+Napoleon will be the assailant, for it cannot be supposed that after the
+act of ban passed against him by the Amphictyons of Vienna he will remain
+tranquil, and not strike the first blow, which may render him master of
+Belgium and its resources.
+
+We embarked at Ramsgate on the first of May for Ostend on board of a small
+vessel bound thither. Our fellow passengers were two officers of dragoons,
+several commissaries with their servants, horses, etc. After a passage of
+twenty-four hours, we entered the harbour of Ostend at one o'clock the
+following day. Ostend, once so flourishing and opulent, has long since
+fallen into decay; its usual dullness is however just now interrupted by
+the bustle of troops landing to join the allied army. Cavalry, infantry,
+artillery, horses, guns, stores, etc., are landed every minute. The quays
+are the only parts of this city which can boast of handsome buildings; the
+fortifications seem to be much out of repair; in fact, the aggrandizement
+of Antwerp occasioned necessarily the deterioration of Ostend.
+
+The General and myself went to put up at the _Tête d'Or_, the only inn
+where we could procure beds; and we embarked early next morning at the
+embouchure of the canal on board of a _treckschuyt_ which conveyed us in
+three hours to Bruges.
+
+The landscape between Ostend and Bruges is extremely monotonous, it being a
+uniformly flat country; yet it is pleasing to the eye at this season of the
+year from the verdure of the plains, which are all appropriated to
+pasturage, and from the appearance of the different villages and towns, of
+which the eye can embrace a considerable number. There is a good road on
+the banks of the canal, and the troops, on their line of march, enlivened
+much the scene. Bruges, formerly the grand mart and emporium of the
+commerce of the East, not only for the Low Countries, but for all the North
+of Europe, seems, if we may judge from the state of the buildings and the
+stillness that prevails, to be also in a state of decline. We however had
+only time to visit the _Hotel de Ville_ and to remark the immense height of
+the steeple on the _Grande Place_. We observed a number of pretty women in
+the streets and in the shops employed in lace making. Bruges has been at
+all times renowned for the beauty of the female sex, and this brought to my
+recollection a passage in Schiller's tragedy of the _Maid of Orleans_,
+wherein the Duke of Burgundy says that the greatest boast of Bruges is the
+beauty of its women.
+
+Another _treckschuyt_ was to start at twelve o'clock for Ghent; but we
+preferred going by land and General Wilson hired a carriage for that
+purpose. The distance is about thirty miles. The road from Bruges to Ghent
+or Gand is perfectly straight, lined with trees and paved like a street.
+The country is quite flat, and though there is nothing to bound the
+horizon, the trees on each side of the road intercept the view.
+
+We arrived at Ghent about six in the afternoon of the 4th and had some
+difficulty in finding room, as the different hotels were filled with
+officers of the allied army; but at length, after many ineffectual
+applications at several, we obtained admission at the _Hotel de Flandre_,
+where we took possession of a double-bedded room, the only one unoccupied.
+
+Gand seems to be a very neat, clean and handsome city, with an air of
+magnificence about it. The _Grande Place_ is very striking, and the
+promenades are aligned with trees. We inspected the exterior of several
+public buildings and visited the interior of several churches. In the
+cathedral we had the honour of seeing at High Mass his most Christian
+Majesty, Monsieur and the Comte de Blacas, Vicomte de Chateaubriand and
+others, composing the Court of _notre Père de Gand_, as Louis XVIII is
+humorously termed by the French, from his having fixed his head-quarters
+here. A great many French officers who have followed his fortunes are also
+here, but they seem principally to belong to the Gardes du Corps. A number
+of military attended the service in the cathedral in order to witness the
+devotions of the Bourbon family. Monsieur has all the appearance of a worn
+out debauchee, and to see him with a missal in his hand and the strange
+contrite face he assumes, is truly ridiculous. These princes, instigated no
+doubt by the priests, make a great parade of their sanctity, for which
+however those who are acquainted with their character will not give them
+much credit. But religious cant is the order of the day _intra et extra
+Iliacos muros_, abroad as well as in England. The King of France takes the
+lead, having in view no doubt the advice of Buckingham to Richard III:
+
+ A pray'r book in your hand, my Lord, were well,
+ For on that ground I'll make an holy descant.
+
+and M. de Chateaubriand will no doubt trumpet forth the devotion and
+Christian humility of his master. Those, however, who are at all acquainted
+with this prince's habits, and are not interested in palliating or
+concealing them, insinuate that his devotions at the table are more sincere
+than at the altar and that, like the Giant Margutte in the Morgante
+Maggiore of Pulci, he places more faith and reliance on a cappone lesso
+ossia arrosto than on the consecrated but less substantial wafer.[2]
+
+After contemplating this edifying spectacle, we returned to our inn, and
+the next morning after breakfast we set out on our journey to Bruxelles.
+The road is exactly similar to that between Bruges and Gand, but the
+country appears to be richer and more diversified, and many country houses
+were observable on the road side. We passed thus several neat villages. At
+one o'clock we stopped at Alost to refresh our horses and dine. At the
+table d'hôte were a number of French officers belonging to the Gardes du
+Corps. On entering into conversation with one of them, I found that he as
+well as several others of them had served under Napoleon, and had even been
+patronised and promoted by him; but I suppose that being the sons of the
+ancient _noblesse_ they thought that gratitude to a _parvenu_ like him was
+rather too plebeian a virtue. Some of them, however, with whom I conversed
+after dinner seemed to regret the step they had taken. "If we are
+successful," said they, "it can only be by means of the Allied Armies, and
+who knows what conditions they may impose on France? If we should be
+unsuccessful, we are exiled probably for life from our country." During
+dinner, two pretty looking girls with musical instruments entered the hall,
+and regaled our ears with singing some romances, among which were _Dunois
+le Troubadour_ and _La Sentinelle_. They sang with much taste and feeling.
+I surmise this is not the only profession they exercise, if I might judge
+from the _doux yeux_ they occasionally directed to some of the officers.
+These girls did not at least seem by their demeanour as if likely to incur
+the anathema of Rinaldo in the _Orlando Furioso_:
+
+ meritamente muoro Una crudele,
+
+but rather more disposed to
+
+ dar vita all'amator fidele.[3]
+
+Alost is a neat, clean town or large village, and the same description will
+serve for all the towns and villages in Brabant and Flanders, as they are
+built on the same plan. We arrived at Bruxelles late in the evening and put
+up at the _Hotel d'Angleterre_.
+
+This morning, the General and myself went to pay our respects to the _Gran
+Capitano_ of the _Holy League_, and we left our cards. He is, I hear, very
+confident of the result of the campaign, and no doubt he has for him the
+prayers of all the pious in England against those atheistical fellows the
+French; and these prayers will surely elicit a "host of angels" to come
+down to aid in the destruction of the Pandemonium of Paris where Satan's
+lieutenant sits enthroned. The reflecting people here are astonished that
+Napoleon does not begin the attack. The inhabitants of Belgium are in
+general, from all that I can hear or see, not at all pleased with the
+present order of things, and they much lament the being severed from
+France. The two people, the Belgians and Hollanders, do not seem to
+amalgamate; and the former, though they render ample justice to the
+moderation, good sense, and beneficent intentions of the present monarch,
+who is personally respected by every one, yet do not disguise their wish to
+be reunited to France and do not hesitate to avow their attachment to the
+Emperor Napoleon. This union does not please the Hollanders either, on
+other grounds. They complain that their interests have been sacrificed
+entirely to those of the house of Orange, and they say that from the
+readiness they displayed in shaking off the yoke of France, and the great
+weight they thereby threw into the scale, they were entitled to the
+restitution of all their colonies in Asia, Africa, and America. The
+colonies of the Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon are what they most regret; for
+these colonies in particular furnished ample employment and the means of
+provision for the cadets of patrician families. If you tell them they have
+acquired the Belgic provinces as an indemnification, they answer: "So much
+the worse for us, for now the patronage of the colonial offices must be
+divided between us and the Belgians."
+
+The preparations for the grand conflict about to take place are carried on
+with unabating activity; the conscription is rigorously enforced and every
+youth capable of bearing arms is enrolled. Almost all the officers of the
+Belgian army and a great proportion of the soldiery have served with the
+French and have been participators of their laurels; one cannot therefore
+suppose that they are actuated by any very devouring zeal against their
+former commander; nor have I found amongst the shop-keepers or respectable
+people with whom I have conversed, and who have been falsely represented as
+having suffered much from the tyranny of Napoleon, any who dislike either
+his person or government, and certainly none either high or low express the
+cannibal wish that I heard some English country gentlemen and London
+merchants utter for the destruction of Paris and of the French people, nor
+would it be easy to find here men of the _humane_ and _generous_ sentiments
+professed by some of our aldermen and contractors when they welcomed with
+ferocious acclamations of joy and were ready to embrace the Baschkir or
+Cossack who told them that he had slaughtered so many French with his own
+hand; nor would the ladies here be so eager to kiss old Blucher as was the
+case in London.
+
+This city is filled with British and Hanoverian troops. Their conduct is
+exemplary, nor is any complaint made against them. The Highland regiments
+are however the favourites of the Bruxellois, and the inhabitants give them
+the preference as lodgers. They are extremely well behaved (they say, when
+speaking of the Highlanders) and they cheerfully assist the different
+families on whom they are quartered in their household labour. This
+reflects a good deal of credit on the gallant sons of Caledonia. Their
+superior morality to those of the same class either in England or in
+Ireland must strike every observer, and must, in spite of all that the
+_Obscuranten_ or _Chevaliers de l'Eteignoir_ and others who wish to check
+the progress of the human mind may urge to the contrary, be mainly
+attributed to the general prevalence of education _a la portée de tout le
+monde_. Wherever the people are enlightened there is less crime; ignorance
+was never yet the safeguard of virtue. As for myself I honour and esteem
+the Scottish nation and I must say that I have found more liberal ideas and
+more sound philosophy among individuals of that nation than among those of
+any other, and it is a tribute I owe to them loudly to proclaim my
+sentiments; for though personal gratitude may seem to influence me a little
+on this subject, yet I should never think of putting forth my opinion in
+public, were it not founded on an impartial observation of the character of
+this enterprising and persevering people. A woman who had some Highlanders
+quartered in her house told me in speaking of them: "Monsieur, ce sont de
+si bonnes gens; ils sont doux comme des agneaux." "Ils n'en seront pas
+moins des lions an jour du combat," was my reply.
+
+I have amused myself with visiting most of the remarkable objects here, but
+you must not expect from me a detail of what you will find in every
+description book. You wish to have my ideas on the subjects that most
+strike me individually, and those you shall have; but it would be very
+absurd and presumptuous in me to attempt to give a _catalogue raisonné_ of
+buildings and pictures and statues, or to set up as a connoisseur when I
+know nothing either of sculpture, of architecture or painting; nor am I
+desirous of imitating the young Englishman, who, in writing to his father
+from Italy, described so much in detail, and so scientifically, every
+production, or staple, peculiar to the cities which he happened to visit,
+that he wrote like a cheese-monger from Parma, like a silk mercer from
+Leghorn, like an olive and oil merchant from Lucca, like a picture dealer
+from Florence, and like an antiquarian from Rome.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, May 10.
+
+The _Hôtel d'Angleterre_ where we are lodged is within four minutes walk
+from the finest part of the city, where the Parc and Royal Palace is
+situated. The Parc is not large, but is tastefully laid out in the Dutch
+style, and is the fashionable promenade for the _beau monde_ of Bruxelles.
+The women, without being strikingly handsome, have much grace; their air,
+manner and dress are perfectly _à la francaise_. A good café and restaurant
+is in the centre of one of the sides, and the buildings on the quadrangle
+environing the Parc, which form the palace and other tenements are superb.
+The next place I went to see was the _Hôtel de Ville_ and its tower of
+immense height. It is a fine Gothic building, but that which should be the
+central entrance is not directly in the centre of the edifice, so that one
+wing of it appears considerably larger than the other, which gives it an
+awkward and irregular appearance. On the Place or Square as we should call
+it, where the _Hôtel de Ville_ stands, is held the fruit and vegetable
+market, and a finer one or more plentifully supplied I never beheld. This
+_Place_ is interesting to the historian as being the spot where Counts
+Egmont and Hoorn suffered decapitation in the reign of Philip II of Spain,
+by order of the Duke of Alva, who witnessed the execution from a window of
+one of the houses. The conduct of these noblemen at the place of execution
+was so dignified that even the ferocious duke could not avoid wiping his
+eyes, hardened as his heart was by religious and political fanaticism; and
+though he held them in abhorrence as rebels and traitors a tear did fall
+for them down his iron cheek. How fortunate for the liberties of Holland
+that William the Taciturn did not also fall into the claws of that Moloch
+Philip! I next visited the museum and picture gallery, where I witnessed
+the annual exposition of the modern school of painting. The specimens I saw
+pleased me much, particularly because the subjects were well chosen from
+history and the mythology, which to me is far more agreeable than the
+subjects of the paintings of the old Flemish school; but I am told often
+that I know nothing about painting, so I shall make no further remarks but
+content myself with sending you a catalogue, with the pictures marked
+therein which made most impression on me. With respect to the churches of
+Brussels those of Ste. Gudule and of the Capuchins are the finest and most
+remarkable. In the former is the Temptation of Adam by the Serpent, richly
+carved in wood in figures as large as life grouped round the pulpit.[4]
+
+The _Place du Sablon_ is very striking from the space it occupies, and on
+it is a fountain erected by Lord Bruce.[5] The fountains which are to be
+met with in various parts of the city are highly ornamental, and among them
+I must not omit to mention a singularly grotesque one which is held in
+great veneration by the lower orders of the Bruxellois and is by them
+regarded as a sort of Palladium to the city. It is the figure of a little
+boy who is at _peace_, according to the late Lord Melville's[6]
+pronunciation of the words, and who spouts out his water incessantly,
+reckless of decorum and putting modesty to the blush. What would our
+vice-hunters say to this? He is a Sabbath breaker in the bargain and
+continues his occupation on Sundays as well as other days and _in fine_ he
+rejoices in the name of _Mannekenpis_.
+
+The ramparts, or rather site of the ramparts (for the fortifications of
+Bruxelles no longer exist), form an agreeable promenade; but the favourite
+resort of all the world at Bruxelles in the afternoon is the _Attee verte_.
+Here all classes meet; here the rich display their equipages and horses;
+and the lower orders assemble at the innumerable _guinguettes_ which are to
+be met with here, in order to play at bowls, dominoes, smoke and drink
+beer, of which there is an excellent sort called _Bitterman._ The avenues
+on each side of the carriage road are occupied by pedestrians, and on one
+side of the road is the canal, covered at all times with barges and boats
+decked with flags and streamers. At the cabarets are benches and tables in
+the open air under the trees; and here are to be seen the artisan, the
+bargeman and the peasant taking their afternoon _délassement_, and groups
+of men, women and children drinking beer and smoking. These groups reminded
+me much of those one sees so often in the old Flemish pictures, with this
+difference, that the old costume of the people is almost entirely left off.
+Female minstrels with guitars stroll about singing French romances and
+collecting contributions from this cheerful, laughter-loving people. The
+dark walk, as it is called, near the park is a favourite walk of the upper
+classes in the evening. There his Grace of Wellington is sometimes to be
+seen with a fair lady under his arm. He generally dresses in plain clothes,
+to the astonishment of all the foreign officers. He is said to be as
+successful in the fields of Idalia as in those of Bellona, and the ladies
+whom he honours with his attentions suffer not a little in their
+reputations in the opinion of the _compères_ and _commères_ of Bruxelles.
+
+I have only been twice to the theatre since I have been here. The _Salle de
+Spectacle_ is indifferent, but they have an excellent company of comedians.
+The representations are in French. I saw the _Festin de Pierre_ of
+Corneille exceedingly well performed. The actors who did the parts of Don
+Juan and Sganarelle were excellent, and the scene with M. Dimanche, wherein
+he demands payment of his bill, was admirably given. I have also seen the
+_Plaideurs_ of Racine, a very favourite piece of mine; every actor played
+his part most correctly, and the scene between the Comtesse de Pimbeche and
+Chicaneau and L'Intimé wherein the latter, disguised as a _Bailli_, offers
+himself to be kicked by the former, was given in very superior style. The
+scene of the trial of the dog, with the orations of Petit Jean as
+_demandeur_ and L'Intimé as _défenseur_, were played with good effect. I
+never recollect having witnessed a theatrical piece which afforded me
+greater amusement.
+
+
+NAMUR, May 12.
+
+We left Brussels yesterday afternoon, and having obtained passports to
+visit the military posts we went to Genappe, a small village half-way
+between Bruxelles and Namur, where we brought to for the night at a small
+but comfortable inn called _Le Roi d'Espagne_. Two battalions of the
+regiment Nassau-Usingen are quartered in Genappe. We arrived at Namur this
+morning at nine o'clock and put up at the _Hôtel d'Arenberg_. On the road
+we stopped at a peasant's house to drink coffee; and we were entertained by
+our hostess with complaints against the Prussians, who commit, as she said,
+all sorts of exactions on the peasantry on whom they are quartered. Not
+content with exacting three meals a day, when they were only entitled to
+two, and for which they are bound to give their rations, they sell these,
+and appropriate the money to their own use; then the demand for brandy and
+_schnapps_ is increasing. But what can be expected from an army whose
+leader encourages them in all their excesses? Blucher by all accounts is a
+vandal and is actuated by a most vindictive spirit. The Prussians reproach
+the Belgians with being in the French interest; how can they expect it to
+be otherwise? They have prospered under French domination, and certainly
+the conduct of the Prussians is not calculated to inspire them with any
+love towards themselves nor veneration for the Sovereign who has such
+all-devouring allies. I asked this woman why she did not complain to the
+officers. She answered! "Hélas, Monsieur, c'est inutile; on donne toujours
+la même réponse: '_Nichts verstehn_,'" for it appears when these complaints
+are made the Prussian officers pretend not to understand French.
+
+Namur is now the head-quarters of Marshal Blucher, who is in the enjoyment
+of divers _noms de guerre_, such as "Marshall Vorwärts," "Der alte Teufel."
+On the high road, about two miles and a half before we reached Namur, we
+met with a party of Prussian lancers, who were returning from a foraging
+excursion. They were singing some warlike song or hymn, which was
+singularly impressive. It brought to my recollection the description of the
+Rhenish bands in the _Lay of the Last Minstrel_:
+
+ Who as they move, in rugged verse
+ Songs of Teutonic feuds rehearse.
+
+The Prussian cavalry seem to be composed of fine-looking young men, and I
+admire the genuine military simplicity of their dress, to which might be
+most aptly applied the words of Xenophon when describing the costume of the
+younger Cyrus: [Greek: _En tae Persikae stolae ouden ti hubrsmenae_][7] in
+substituting merely the word [Greek: _Prussikae_] for [Greek: _Persikae_].
+One sees in it none of those absurd ornaments and meretricious foppery
+which give to our cavalry officers the appearance of Astley's men.[8]
+
+The situation of Namur is exceedingly picturesque, particularly when viewed
+from the heights which tower above the town, whereon stood the citadel
+which was demolished by order of Joseph II, as were the fortifications of
+all the frontier fortresses. The present Belgian Government however mean to
+reconstruct them, and Namur in particular, the citadel of which, from the
+natural strength of its position, is too important a post to be neglected.
+The town itself is situated on the confluent of the Sambre and Meuse and
+lies in a valley completely commanded and protected by the citadel. The
+churches are splendid, and there is an appearance of opulence in the shops.
+The inhabitants, from its being a frontier town, are of course much alarmed
+at the approaching contest, for they will probably suffer from both
+parties. We heard at the inn and in the shops which we visited the same
+complaints against the Prussians. The country in the environs of this place
+is exceedingly diversified, and it presents the first mountain scenery we
+have yet met with. The banks of the Meuse hereabouts present either an
+abrupt precipice or coteaux covered with vines gently sloping to the
+water's edge. Namur is distant thirty-four miles from Brussels, and there
+is water conveyance on the Meuse from here to Liége and Maastricht.
+
+
+MONS, May 14.
+
+We started yesterday morning at four o'clock from Namur. The whole road
+between Namur and Mons presents a fine, rich open country abounding in
+wheat, but not many trees. We stopped to breakfast at Fleurus, at an inn
+where there were some Prussian officers. One of them, a lieutenant in the
+2nd West Prussian Regiment, had the kindness to conduct us to see the field
+of battle where the French under Jourdan defeated the Austrians in 1794. It
+is at a very short distance from the town; he explained the position of the
+two armies in a manner perfectly clear and satisfactory to us. The Prussian
+officers all seem very eager for the commencement of hostilities, and their
+only fear is now that all these mighty preparations will end in nothing;
+viz., either that the French people, alarmed at the magnitude of the
+preparations against them, will compel the Emperor Napoleon to abdicate, or
+that the Allies will grow cool and, under the influence of Austria, bring
+about a negotiation which may end in a recognition of the Imperial title
+and dynasty. They would compound for a defeat at first, provided the war
+were likely to be prolonged. In the meantime, reinforcements continue to
+arrive daily for their army. We hear but little news of the intentions or
+movements of the other Allies; it being forbidden to enter into political
+discussions, it is difficult to ascertain the true state of affairs.
+
+We continued our journey through Charleroy and Binch to this place. At a
+small village between Binch and Mons we were stopped by a sentinel at a
+Prussian outpost and our passports demanded. Neither the sentinel, however,
+nor the sergeant, nor any of the soldiers present, could read or understand
+French, in which language the passport was drawn up; but the sergeant told
+me that the officers were in a house about a quarter of a mile distant and
+that he would conduct me thither, but that he himself could not presume to
+let us pass, from not knowing the tenor of our passport. I went accordingly
+with the sergeant to this house, There I found the officer commanding the
+piquet and several others sitting at table, carousing with beer and tobacco
+and nearly invisible from the clouds of smoke which pervaded the room. I
+explained to the officer who we were and requested him to put on the
+passport his _visa_ in the German language, so that the non-commissioned
+officers at the various posts through which we might pass would be able to
+understand it and let us pass without hindrance. This he did accordingly
+and we proceeded on our journey.
+
+We arrived here in the evening and put up at the _Hôtel Royal_. We found at
+Charleroy, Binch and here, a number of people employed in repairing and
+reconstructing the fortifications. Men, women and boys are all put in
+requisition to accelerate this object, as it is the intention of the
+Belgian Government to put all the frontier fortresses in the most complete
+state of defence. On ascending one of the steeples this morning we had a
+fine view of the surrounding country and of the height of Genappe, which
+are close to Mons and memorable for the brilliant victory gained by
+Dumouriez over the Austrians in 1792. The landscape presents an undulating
+campaign country, gentle slopes and alternate plains covered with corn, as
+far as the eye can reach, and interspersed with villages and farmhouses. In
+Mons is a very large splendid shop or warehouse of millinery, perfumery,
+jewellery, etc. It is called _La Toilette de Vénus_, and is served by a
+very pretty girl, who, I have no doubt from her simpering look and eloquent
+eyes, would have no objection to be a sedulous priestess at the altar of
+the Goddess of Amathus. A battalion of Hollanders--a very fine body of
+men--marched into this place yesterday evening; the rest of the garrison is
+composed of Belgians, chiefly conscripts.
+
+
+LEUZE, May 15.
+
+Yesterday morning we left Mons and proceeded to Ath to breakfast. A
+multitude of people were employed there also at the fortifications. The
+garrison of Ath is composed of Hanoverians. Ath reminded me of the wars of
+King William III and my Uncle Toby's sieges.[9] There was so little
+remarkable to be seen at Ath that we proceeded to this place shortly after
+breakfast and arrived at one o'clock, it being only ten miles distance
+between Ath and Leuze. We took up our quarters with Major-General Adam, who
+commands the Light Brigade of General Sir H. Clinton's division. This
+brigade is quartered here and in the adjacent farmhouses. General Adam,
+though he has attained his rank at a very early age, is far more fitted for
+it than many of our older generals, some of whom (I speak from experience)
+have few ideas beyond the fixing of a button or lappel, or polishing a
+belt, and who place the whole _Ars recondita_ of military discipline in
+pipe-clay, heel-ball and the goose step. Fortunately for this army, the
+Duke of Wellington has too much good sense to be a martinet and the good
+old times are gone by, thank God, when a soldier used to be sentenced to
+two or three hundred lashes for having a dirty belt or being without a
+_queue_. To the Duke of York also is humanity much indebted for his
+endeavours to check the frequency of corporal punishment. The Duke of York,
+with all his zeal for the service, never loses sight of the comfort of the
+soldier and is indefatigable in his exertions to ameliorate his conditions.
+We had a pleasant dinner party at General Adam's, and at night I went to
+sleep at the house occupied by Captain C., one of the aides-de-camp of the
+General,[10] an active, intelligent officer who had formerly served in the
+marines, which service he had quitted in order to enter the regular army.
+
+
+May 16.
+
+Yesterday morning we paid a visit to Tournay, which is distant from Leuze
+about ten miles, and we breakfasted at the _Signe d'Or_. We then proceeded
+to pay our respects to the Commandant General V.[11] The garrison consists
+of Belgians. General V. had been some time in England as a prisoner of war.
+He was made prisoner, I think he said, at Batavia. He received us very
+politely, and not only gave us permission to visit the works of the
+citadel, but sent a sergeant to accompany us. The new citadel is building
+on the site of the old one, and, like it, is to be a regular pentagon. The
+fortifications of the city itself are not to be reconstructed; these of the
+citadel, which will be very strong, rendering them superfluous. The
+sergeant was a native of Würtemberg and had served in the army of his own
+country and in that of France in most of the campaigns under Napoleon. He
+was a fine old veteran, and very intelligent, for he explained to us the
+nature of the works with great perspicuity. With true Suabian dignity he
+refused a five franc piece which I offered him as a slight remuneration for
+the trouble he had taken, and as he seemed, I thought, rather offended at
+the offer, I felt myself bound to apologize. From the number of workmen
+employed in repairing the citadel, it will not be long before it is placed
+in a respectable state of defence. Tournay is a large handsome city and the
+spacious quais on the banks of the Scheld which runs through it add much to
+the neatness of its appearance. It is only ten miles distant from Lille,
+but all communication from France is stopped. We learned that some of the
+Hanoverians had been deserting. In return we met with a young French hussar
+who had come over to the Allies. He seemed to be an impudent sort of
+fellow, and said, with the utmost _sang-froid_, that the reason he deserted
+was that he had not been made an officer as he was promised, and he hoped
+that Louis XVIII would be more sensible of his merits than the Emperor
+Napoleon. We returned to Leuze to dinner in the afternoon. This morning we
+went to assist at a review of General Clinton's division, on a plain called
+_Le Paturage_, about seven miles distant from Leuze. The Light Brigade and
+the Hanoverian Brigades form this division. The manoeuvres were performed
+with tolerable precision, but they were chiefly confined to advancing in
+line, retiring by alternate companies covered by light infantry and change
+of position on one of the flanks by _échelon_. The British troops were
+perfect; the Hanoverians not so, they being for the most part new levies.
+In one of the _échelon_ movements, when the line was to be formed on the
+left company of the left battalion, a Hanoverian battalion, instead of
+preserving its parallelism, was making a terrible diversion to its right,
+when a thundering voice from the commander of the brigade to the commandant
+of the battalion: "_Mein Gott, Herr Major, wo gehn Sie hin?_" roused him
+from his reverie; when he must have perceived, had he wheeled up into line,
+the fearful interval he had left between his own and the next battalion on
+the left.
+
+After the review had finished we repaired to the château of the Prince de
+Ligne, then occupied by Lieut.-General Sir H. Clinton, to partake of a
+breakfast given by him and his lady. On the breaking up of the breakfast
+party, General Wilson and myself remained at the château to dine with
+General Adam _al fresco_ in the garden under the trees. The palace and
+garden of the Prince de Ligne are both very magnificent. The latter is of
+great extent, but too regular, too much in the Dutch taste to please me.
+Little or no furniture is in the palace; but there are some family pictures
+and a theatre fitted up in one of the halls for the purpose of private
+theatricals. In the garden is a monument erected by the late Prince de
+Ligne to one of his sons, Charles by name, who was killed in the Russian
+service at the siege of Ismail. The present prince is a minor and resides
+at Bruxelles.
+
+
+GRAMMONT, May 18.
+
+We left Leuze yesterday afternoon and arrived here at seven in the evening
+in order to be present at the cavalry review the next morning. We partook
+of an elegant supper given to us by our friend, Major Grant of the 18th
+Hussars, and we were much entertained and enlivened by the effusions of his
+brilliant genius and inexhaustible wit. The whole cavalry of the British
+army passed in review this morning before the Duke of Wellington, who was
+there with all his staff and received the salutes of all the corps like
+Godfrey, _con volto placido e composto_. It was a very brilliant spectacle.
+The Duke de Berri was present. I think I never beheld so ignoble and
+disagreeable a countenance as this prince possesses. I thought to myself
+that he had much better have stayed away from this review; for he must be
+insensible to all patriotism who could take pleasure in contemplating a
+foreign force about to enter and ravage his own country. We learn that the
+Duchess d'Angoulême is to have a review of the _fidèles_ very shortly. She
+is certainly much more warlike than the males of that family; this
+disposition is increased by her religious fanaticism. This renders her, of
+course, a most dangerous person to meddle with politics; but great
+allowances must be made for her feelings, which must naturally be
+embittered by the recollection of so much suffering during the Revolution
+and of the barbarous and inhuman treatment experienced by her father and
+mother.
+
+I observed a peculiarity in this part of the country, viz., that there are
+villages lying close to each other in some of which French is spoken, in
+others Flemish; and that, with some few exceptions, the inhabitants of
+neighbouring villages are reciprocally unintelligible. General Wilson does
+not intend to return to Bruxelles. I shall accompany him as far as Gand and
+then return to Bruxelles to await the issue of the contest.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, June 11.
+
+I took leave of General Wilson at Gand on the 22nd of last month and
+immediately returned here, where I have been ever since. I have shifted my
+quarters to a less expensive hotel and am now lodged at the _Hôtel de la
+Paix_. We get an excellent dinner at the table d'hôte for one and a half
+francs, wine not included; this is paid for extra, and is generally at the
+price of three francs per bottle. This hotel is very neatly fitted up and
+is very near the _Hôtel de Ville_. At the table d'hôte I frequently meet
+Prussian officers who on coming in to visit Bruxelles put up here. We have
+just learned the proceedings of the _Champ de Mai_ at Paris, by which it
+appears that Napoleon is solemnly recognized and confirmed as Emperor of
+the French. This intelligence sent a young Prussian officer, who sat next
+to me, in a transport of joy, for this makes the war certain. The Prussians
+seem determined to revenge themselves for the humiliation they suffered
+from the French during the time they occupied their country, and I
+sincerely pity by anticipation the fate of the French peasants upon whom
+these gentlemen may chance to be quartered. Terrible will be the first
+shock of battle, and it may be daily expected, and dreadful will be the
+consequences to the poor inhabitants of the seat of war. Cannot this war be
+avoided? I am not politician enough to foresee the consequences of allowing
+Napoleon to keep quiet and undisturbed possession of the throne of France;
+but the consequences of a defeat on the part of the Allies will be the loss
+of Belgium and the probable annihilation of the British army; certainly the
+dissolution of the coalition, for the minor German powers, and very likely
+Austria also, would be induced to make a separate peace. We can clearly see
+that Napoleon has not now the power he formerly possessed and that the
+Republican party, into whose hands he has thrown himself, seem disposed not
+only to remain at peace, but to shackle him in every possible manner. It is
+evident, too, that his last success was owing to the dislike of the people
+to the Bourbons from their injudicious and treacherous conduct; and the
+threats and impossible language held by the priests and emigrants towards
+the holders of property paved the way for the success of his enterprise and
+enabled him to achieve a triumph unparalleled in history.
+
+On the contrary, by forcing him to go to war, should he gain the first
+victory, Belgium will be re-united to France, all the resources of that
+country brought into the scale against the Allies; Napoleon will be more
+popular than ever, the Republican party will be put to silence, the
+enthusiasm of the army will rise beyond all restraint, and, in a word,
+Napoleon will be himself again. The other Allies can do little without the
+assistance of England, and our finances are by no means in a state to bear
+such intolerable drains.
+
+As to the Prussians, on minute enquiry I do not find that they were so
+ill-treated by the French as is generally believed, and that, except the
+burden of having troops quartered on them (no small annoyance, I allow),
+they had not much reason to complain. The quartering of the troops on them
+and the payment of the war contributions was the necessary consequence of
+the occupation of their country by an enemy; but I have just been reading a
+German work, written by a native of Berlin, shortly after the entry of the
+French troops in that city after the battle of Jena in 1806. This work is
+entitled _Vertraute Briefe aus Berlin_, and in it the author distinctly
+declares that the discipline observed by the French troops during the
+occupation of Berlin was highly strict and praiseworthy, and that the few
+excesses that took place were committed by the troops of the Rhenish
+Confederation; and he adds that the inhabitants preferred having a French
+soldier quartered on them to a Westphalian, Bavarian or Würtembergher.
+Further, the troops that behaved with the greatest oppression and insolence
+towards the burghers were those belonging to a corps composed of native
+Prussians, raised for the service of Napoleon by the Prince of
+Isenburg.[12] In his recruiting address the prince invites the Prussian
+youth to enter into the service of the invincible Napoleon, and tells him
+that to the soldier of Napoleon everything is permitted. The regiment was
+soon fitted up and the soldiers began to put in practice in good earnest
+the theory of the _affiche_. They committed excesses of all sorts; and one
+officer in particular behaved so brutally and infamously to a poor tailor
+on whom he was quartered, and to whom, before he entered the French
+service, he was under the greatest obligations, that General Hulin, the
+commandant of the place at Berlin during the French occupation, was obliged
+to cashier him publicly on the parade and to cause his epaulettes to be
+torn from his coat in order to mark the disgust and indignation that he and
+all the French officers felt at the base ingratitude of this man.
+
+This work, "Vertraute Briefe" (confidential letters), contains much curious
+matter and very interesting anecdotes respecting the corruption, venality
+and depravation that prevailed in the Prussian Court and army previous to
+the war in 1806. Let this suffice to show that the Prussians have not so
+much reason to complain against the French as they pretend to have;
+besides, the conduct of the Prussian Government itself was so vacillating
+and contradictory that they had themselves only to blame for what they
+suffered. They should have supported Austria in 1805. But the fact is that
+the vanity and the _amour propre_ of the Prussian military were so hurt at
+the humiliation they experienced at and after the battle of Jena that it
+was this that has embittered them so much against the French.
+
+Let it not, however, be supposed for a moment that I seek to excuse or
+palliate the conduct of Napoleon towards Prussia. I have always thought it
+not only unjust but impolitic. Impolitic, because Prussia was, and ought
+always to be, the obvious and natural ally of France, and Napoleon, instead
+of endeavouring to crush that power, should have aggrandized her and made
+her the paramount power in Germany. It was in fact his obvious policy to
+cede Hanover in perpetuity to Prussia, and have rendered thereby the breach
+between the Houses of Brandenburgh and Hanover irreparable and
+irreconcilable. This would have thrown Prussia necessarily into the arms
+of France, in whose system she must then have moved, and all British
+influence on the Continent would have been effectually put an end to.
+Another prime fault of Napoleon was that he did not crush and dismember
+Austria in 1809 as he had it in his power to do; and by so doing he would
+have merited and obtained the thanks and good will of all Germany for
+having overturned so despotic and light-fearing a Government. But he has
+paid dearly for these errors. Instead of destroying a despotic power
+(Austria), he chose rather to crush an enlightened and liberal nation, for
+such I esteem the Prussian nation, and I always separate the Prussian
+people from their Government. The latter fell, and fell unpitied, after one
+battle; but it has been almost miraculously restored by the unparalleled
+exertions and energies of the burghers and people. May this be a lesson to
+the Government! and may the King of Prussia not prove ungrateful!
+
+Troops continue to arrive here daily, and now that the ceremony of the
+_Champ de Mai_ is over, we may expect that Napoleon will repair to his army
+and commence operations.
+
+
+June 17.
+
+Napoleon arrived at Maubeuge on the 18th and the grand conflict has begun.
+The Prussians were attacked on the 14th and 15th at Ligny and driven from
+their position.[13] They are said to have suffered immense loss and to be
+retreating with the utmost confusion. Our turn comes next. The thunder of
+the cannon was heard here distinctly the most part of yesterday and some
+part of our army must have been engaged. Our troops have all marched out of
+Bruxelles in the direction of the frontier. In the affair with the
+Prussians we learn that the Duke of Brunswick was killed and that Blucher
+narrowly escaped being made prisoner.
+
+
+June 18.
+
+The grand conflict has begun with us. It is now four o'clock p.m. The issue
+is not known. The roar of the cannon continues unabated. All is bustle,
+confusion and uncertainty in this city. Cars with wounded are coming in
+continually. The general opinion is that our army will be compelled to
+retreat to Antwerp, and it is even expected that the French will be in
+Bruxelles to-night. All the towns-people are on the ramparts listening to
+the sound of the cannon. This city has been in the greatest alarm and
+agitation since the 16th, when a violent cannonade was heard during the
+afternoon. From what I have been able to collect, the French attacked the
+Prussians on the 14th, and a desperate conflict took place on that day, and
+the whole of the 15th,[14] when the whole of the Prussian army at Ligny,
+Fleurus and Charleroy was totally defeated and driven from its position; a
+dislocation of our troops took place early in the morning of the 16th, and
+our advanced guard, consisting of the Highland Brigade and two Battalions
+of Nassau-Usingen, fell in with the advanced guard of the French Army
+commanded by Marshal Ney near Quatre-Bras, and made such a gallant defence
+against his corps d'armée as to keep it in check the whole day and enable
+itself to fall back in good order to its present position with the rest of
+the army, about ten miles in front of Bruxelles. Indeed, I am informed that
+nothing could exceed the admirable conduct of the corps above mentioned.
+Yesterday we heard no cannonade, but this afternoon it has been unceasing
+and still continues. All the caricatures and satires against Napoleon have
+disappeared from the windows and stalls. The shops are all shut, the
+English families flying to Antwerp; and the proclamation of the Baron de
+Capellen[15] to the inhabitants, wherein he exhorts them to be tranquil and
+assures them that the Bureaux of Government have not yet quitted Bruxelles,
+only serves to increase the confusion and consternation. The inhabitants in
+general wish well to the arms of Napoleon, but they know that the retreat
+of the English Army must necessarily take place through their town; that
+our troops will perhaps endeavour to make a stand, and that the
+consequences will be terrible to the inhabitants, from the houses being
+liable to be burned or pillaged by friend or foe. All the baggage of our
+Army and all the military Bureaux have received orders to repair and are
+now on their march to Antwerp, and the road thither is so covered and
+blocked up by waggons that the retreat of our Army will be much impeded
+thereby. Probably my next letter may be dated from a French prison.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, June 21.
+
+Judge, my friend, of my astonishment and that of almost everybody in this
+city, at the news which was circulated here early on the morning of the
+19th, and has been daily confirmed, viz., that the French Army had been
+completely defeated and was in full flight, leaving behind it 220 pieces of
+cannon and all its baggage, waggons and _munitions de guerre_. I have not
+been able to collect all the particulars, but you will no doubt hear enough
+of it, for I am sure it will be _said_ or _sung_ by all the partisans of
+the British ministry and all the Tories of the United Kingdom for months
+and years to come; for further details, therefore, I shall refer you to the
+Gazette. The following, however, you may consider as a tolerably fair
+précis of what took place. The attack began on the 18th about ten
+o'clock[16] and raged furiously along the whole line, but principally at
+Hougoumont, a large _Métairie_ on the right of our position, which was
+occupied by our troops, and from which all the efforts of the enemy could
+not dislodge them. The slaughter was terrible in this quarter. From twelve
+o'clock till evening several desperate charges of cavalry and infantry were
+made on the rest of our line. Both sides fought with the utmost courage and
+obstinacy, and were prodigal of life in the extreme. But it is generally
+supposed that our army must have succumbed towards the evening had it not
+been for the arrival of Bulow's division of Prussians, followed closely by
+Blucher and the rest of the army, which had rallied with uncommon celerity.
+These moved on the right flank of the French, and decided the fortune of
+the day by a charge which was seconded by a general charge from the whole
+of the English line on the centre and left of the French. Seeing themselves
+thus turned, a panic, it is said, spread among the young Guard of the
+French army, and a cry of "_Sauve qui peut! nous sommes trahis!_" spread
+like wildfire. The flight became universal; the old Guard alone remained,
+refused quarter and perished like Leonidas and his Spartans. The Prussian
+cavalry being fresh pursued the enemy all night, _l'épée dans les reins_,
+and it may be conceived from their previous disposition that they would not
+be very merciful to the vanquished. Indeed, on the 15th, it is said that
+the French were not very merciful to them. It was like the combat of
+Achilles and Hector.
+
+ No thought but rage and never ceasing strife
+ Till death extinguish rage and thought and life.
+
+France will now call out to Napoleon as Augustus did to Varus, "Give me
+back my legions!" The loss on both sides was very great, but it must have
+been prodigious on the side of the French. The whole Allied Army is in full
+pursuit. Several friends and acquaintances of mine perished in this battle,
+viz., Lieut.-General Sir T. Picton, Colonel Sir H. Ellis and Colonel
+Morice.
+
+
+June 22.
+
+This morning I went to visit the field of battle, which is a little beyond
+the village of Waterloo, on the plateau of Mont St Jean; but on arrival
+there the sight was too horrible to behold. I felt sick in the stomach and
+was obliged to return. The multitude of carcases, the heaps of wounded men
+with mangled limbs unable to move, and perishing from not having their
+wounds dressed or from hunger, as the Allies were, of course, obliged to
+take their surgeons and waggons with them, formed a spectacle I shall never
+forget. The wounded, both of the Allies and the French, remain in an
+equally deplorable state.
+
+At Hougoumont, where there is an orchard, every tree is pierced with
+bullets. The barns are all burned down, and in the court-yard it is said
+they have been obliged to burn upwards of a thousand carcases, an awful
+holocaust to the War-Demon.
+
+As nothing is more distressing than the sight of human misery when we are
+unable to silence it, I returned as speedily as possible to Bruxelles with
+Cowper's lines in my head:
+
+ War is a game, which, were their subjects wise,
+ Kings should not play at.
+
+I hope this battle will, at any rate, lead to a speedy peace.
+
+
+June 28.
+
+We have no other news from the Allied Army, except that they are moving
+forward with all possible celerity in the direction of Paris. You may form
+a guess of the slaughter and of the misery that the wounded must have
+suffered, and the many that must have perished from hunger and thirst, when
+I tell you that all the carriages in Bruxelles, even elegant private
+equipages, landaulets, barouches and berlines, have been put in requisition
+to remove the wounded men from the field of battle to the hospitals, and
+that they are yet far from being all brought in. The medical practitioners
+of the city have been put in requisition, and are ordered to make
+domiciliary visits at every house (for each habitation has three or four
+soldiers in it) in order to dress the wounds of the patients. The
+Bruxellois, the women in particular, have testified the utmost humanity
+towards the poor sufferers. It was suggested by some humane person that
+they who went to see the field of battle from motives of curiosity would do
+well to take with them bread, wine and other refreshments to distribute
+among the wounded, and most people did so. For my part I shall not go a
+second time. Napoleon, it is said, narrowly escaped being taken. His
+carriage fell into the hands of the Allies, and was escorted in triumph
+into Bruxelles by a detachment of dragoons. So confident was Napoleon of
+success that printed proclamations were found in the carriage dated from
+"Our Imperial Palace at Laecken," announcing his victory and the liberation
+of Belgium from the insatiable coalition, and wherein he calls on the
+Belgians to re-unite with their old companions in arms in order to reap the
+fruits of their victory. This was certainly rather premature, and reminds
+me of an anecdote of a Spanish officer at the siege of Gibraltar, related
+by Drinkwater in his narrative of that siege.[17] When the British garrison
+made a sortie, they carried the advanced Spanish lines and destroyed all
+their preparations; the Spanish officer on guard at the outermost post was
+killed, but on the table of his guard room was found his guard report
+filled up and signed, stating that "nothing extraordinary had happened
+since guard-mounting."
+
+Mr L. of Northumberland, having proposed to me to make a tour with him to
+Aix-la-Chapelle and the banks of the Rhine, I shall start with him in a day
+or two.
+
+
+[1] Sir Wiltshire Wilson (1762-1842), Commander of the Royal Artillery in
+ Ceylon, 1810-1815.--Ed.
+
+[2] Pulci, _Morgante_, canto XVIII, ottava 114-115. The Giant Morgante
+ meets the villain Margutte and asks him if he be a Christian or a
+ Saracen. Margutte answers that he cares not, but only believes in
+ boiled or in roasted capon:
+
+ Rispose allor Margutte: A dirtel tosto
+ Io non credo pio al nero ch'all' azzurro.
+ Ma nel cappone, o lesso, o vuogll arrosto....
+
+[3] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, iv, 63, f.--ED.
+
+[4] A work of H, Verbruggen of Antwerp (1677).--ED.
+
+[5] Lord Bruce, Earl of Ailesbury, caused this fountain to be erected in
+ 1751, as a token of gratitude to the town of Bruxelles where he had
+ lived in exile.--E.D.
+
+[6] Henry Dundas, Viscount Melville (1741-1811), elevated to the peerage in
+ 1802.--ED.
+
+[7] Xenophon, _Education of Cyrus_, II, 4, 4.--ED.
+
+[8] Astley's Amphitheatre, near Westminster Bridge.--ED.
+
+[9] Uncle Toby, in Laurence Sterne's _Tristram Shandy_.--ED.
+
+[10] Lieutenant R.P. Campbell, aide-de-camp to Major-General Adam.--ED.
+
+[11] In May, 1815, the officer commanding-in-chief at Tournai was
+ General-Major A.C. Van Diermen.--ED.
+
+[12] Karl Friedrich Ludwig Moritz, Fürst zu Ysenburg-Bierstein (1766-1820),
+ took service with Austria (1784), with Prussia (1804), and later with
+ Napoleon (1806), who commissioned him as brigadier-general. The
+ shameless conduct of this officer is exposed by B. Poten, _Allgemeine
+ Deutsche Biographie_, vol. XLIV, p. 611.--ED.
+
+[13] The battle at Ligny was fought on June 16.--ED.
+
+[14] The facts and dates here given are of course inaccurate; but this
+ proves that Major Frye wrote his text in the very midst of the crisis,
+ and that his manuscript has not been tampered with.--ED.
+
+[15] Baron van Capellen, a Dutch statesman, was governor-general of the
+ Belgian provinces, residing at Bruxelles. He was afterwards
+ governor-general of Dutch India. Born in 1778, he died in 1848. His
+ memoirs have been published in French by Baron Sirtema de Grovestins
+ (1852), and contain an interesting passage on that momentous day,
+ 18th June, 1815.--ED.
+
+[16] Not before half past eleven.--ED.
+
+[17] John Drinkwater, also called Bethune (1762-1844), published a
+ well-known _History of the Siege of Gibraltar, 1779-1783_.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+From Bruxelles to Liége--A priest's declamation against the French
+Revolution--Maastricht--Aix-la-Chapelle--Imperial relics--Napoleon
+regretted--Klingmann's "Faust"--A Tyrolese beauty--Cologne--Difficulties
+about a passport--The Cathedral--King-craft and priest-craft--The
+Rhine--Bonn and Godesberg--Goethe's "Götz von Berlichingen"--The Seven
+Mountains--German women--Andernach--Ehrenbreitstein--German hatred against
+France--Coblentz--Intrigues of the Bourbon princes in Coblentz--Mayence--
+Bieberich--Conduct of the Allies towards Napoleon--Frankfort on the
+Mayn--An anecdote about Lord Stewart and Lafayette--German poetry--The
+question of Alsace and Lorraine--Return to Bruxelles--Napoleon's surrender.
+
+
+LIÉGE, June 26.
+
+Mr L. and myself started together in the diligence from Bruxelles at seven
+o'clock in the evening of the 24th inst. and arrived here yesterday morning
+at twelve o'clock. I experienced considerable difficulty in procuring a
+passport to quit Bruxelles, my name having been included in that of General
+Wilson, which he carried back with him to England. Our Ambassador was
+absent, and I was bandied about from bureau to bureau without success; so
+that I began at last to think that I should be necessitated to remain at
+Bruxelles all my life, when fortunately it occurred to Mr L. that he was
+intimately acquainted with the English Consul, and he kindly undertook to
+procure me one and succeeded. On arrival here we put up at the _Pommelette
+d'Or_. The price of a place in the diligence from Bruxelles to Liége is
+fifteen franks. We passed thro' Louvain, but too late to see anything. The
+country about Liége is extremely striking and picturesque; the river Meuse
+flows thro' the city, and the banks of the river outside the town are very
+_riants_ and agreeable. Liége is a large, well-built city, but rather
+gloomy as to its appearance, and lies in a hollow completely surrounded by
+lofty hills. The remains of its ancient citadel stand on a height which
+completely commands the city; on another height stands a monastery, a
+magnificent building. There are a great many coal-pits in the vicinity of
+Liége, and a great commerce of coals is carried on between this city and
+Holland by the _treckschuyte_ on the Meuse. We visited the ancient
+Episcopal palace and the Churches. The Palace is completely dismantled.
+This city suffered much during the revolt of the Belgian provinces against
+the Emperor Joseph II, and having distinguished itself by the obstinacy of
+its defence, it was treated with great rigour by the Austrian Government.
+The fortifications were blown up, and nothing now remains on the site of
+the old citadel but a large barrack. I remained two whole hours on this
+height to contemplate the beauties of the expanse below. The banks of the
+river, which meanders much in these parts, and the numerous _maisons de
+campagne_ with the public promenades and allées lined with trees,
+exhilarate the scene of the environs, for the city itself is dull enough.
+Several pretty villas are situated also on the heights, and were I to dwell
+here I should choose one of them and seldom descend into the valley and
+city below,
+
+ Where narrow cares and strife and envy dwell.
+
+Liége, however sombre in its appearance, is a place of much opulence and
+commerce. A Belgian garrison does duty here. At the inn, after dinner, I
+fell into conversation with a Belgian priest, and as I was dressed in black
+he fancied I was one of the cloth, and he asked me if I were a Belgian, for
+that I spoke French with a Belgian accent; "Apparemment Monsieur est
+ecclésiastique?--Monsieur, je suis né Anglais et protestant." He then began
+to talk about and declaim against the French Revolution, for that is the
+doctrine now constantly dinned into the ears of all those who take orders;
+and he concluded by saying that things would never go on well in Europe
+until they restored to God the things they had taken from Him. I told him
+that I differed from him very much, for that the sale of the Church domains
+and of the lands and funds belonging to the suppressed ecclesiastical
+establishments had contributed much to the improvement of agriculture and
+to the comfort of the peasantry, whose situation was thereby much
+ameliorated; and that they were now in a state of affluence compared with
+what they were before the French Revolution. I added: "Enfin, Monsieur,
+Dieu n'a pas besoin des choses terrestres." On my saying this he did not
+chuse to continue the conversation, but calling for a bottle of wine drank
+it all himself with the zest of a Tartuffe. I believe that he was surprised
+to find that an Englishman should not coincide with his sentiments, for I
+observe all the adherents of the ancient régime of feudality and
+superstition have an idea that we are anxious for the re-establishment of
+all those abuses as they themselves are, and it must be confessed that the
+conduct of our Government has been such as to authorize them fully in
+forming such conjectures, and that we shall be their staunch auxiliaries in
+endeavouring to arrest and retrograde the progress of the human mind. In
+fact, I soon perceived that my friend was not overloaded with wit and that
+he was one of those priests so well described by Metastasio:
+
+ Il di cui sapere
+ Sta nel nostro ignorar....
+
+
+MAASTRICHT, 27th June.
+
+This morning, after a promenade on the banks of the Meuse--for I am fond of
+rivers and woods (_flumina amo silvasque inglorius_)--we embarked on a
+_treckschuyt_ and arrived here after a passage of four hours. The scenery
+on the banks of the Meuse all the way from Liége to Maastricht is highly
+diversified and extremely romantic; but here at Maastricht this ceases and
+the dull uniformity of the Dutch landscape begins. When on the ramparts of
+the city to the North and West an immense plain as far as the eye can reach
+presents itself to view; a few trees and sandhills form the only relief to
+the picture. The town itself is neat, clean and dull, like all Dutch towns.
+The fortifications are strong and well worth inspection. The most
+remarkable thing in the neighbourhood of Maastricht is the Montagne de St
+Pierre, which from having been much excavated for the purpose of procuring
+stone, forms a labyrinth of a most intricate nature. I advise every
+traveller to visit it, and if he has a classical imagination he may fancy
+himself in the labyrinth of Crete.
+
+
+AIX-LA-CHAPELLE, 29th June.
+
+We started in the morning of the 28th from Maastricht in the diligence for
+Aix-la-Chapelle and arrived here at twelve o'clock, putting up at Van
+Gülpen's Hotel, _Zum Pfälzischen Hofe_ (à la Cour palatine), which I
+recommend as an excellent inn and the hosts as very good people. The price
+of our journey from Liége to Maastricht in the water-diligence was 2-1/2
+franks, and from Maastricht to Aix-la-Chapelle by land was 7 franks the
+person. The road from Maastricht to this place is not very good, but the
+country at a short distance from Maastricht becomes picturesque, much
+diversified by hill and dale and well wooded. As the Meuse forms the
+boundary between the Belgic and Prussian territory, we enter the latter
+sooner after leaving Maastricht. I find my friend L. a most agreeable
+travelling companion; travelling seems to be his passion, as it is mine;
+and fortune has so far favoured me in this particular, that my professional
+duties and private affairs have led me to visit the four quarters of the
+globe. After dinner, on the first day of our arrival here, we went to visit
+the _Hôtel de Ville_, before which stands on a pedestal in a bason an
+ancient bronze statue of Charlemagne. It has nothing to recommend it but
+its antiquity. The _Hôtel de Ville_ is similar to other Gothic buildings
+used for the same purpose. In the great hall thereof there is a large
+picture representing the ambassadors of all the powers who assisted at the
+signing of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1742; and a full length
+portrait of the present King of Prussia, as master of the city, occupies
+the place where once stood that of Napoleon, its late lord. We next went to
+see the Cathedral and sat down on the throne on which the German Caesars
+used to be crowned. We viewed likewise the various costly articles of
+plate, the gifts of pious princes. The most remarkable things among them
+are several superb dresses of gold and silver embroidery, so thickly laid
+on that they are of exceeding weight. These dresses form part of the
+wardrobe of the Virgin Mary. Next to be seen is a case or chest of massy
+silver, adorned with innumerable precious stones of great value; which case
+contains the bones or ashes of Charlemagne. His right arm bone is however
+preserved separate in a glass case. The sword of this prince too, and the
+Imperial crown is to be seen here. The sacristan next proceeded to show to
+us the other relics, but having begun with the exhibition of a rag dipped
+in the sweat of Jesus Christ and a nail of the Holy Cross, we began to
+think we had seen enough and went away perfectly satisfied. There is no
+other monument in honour of Charlemagne, but a plain stone on the floor of
+the Church with the simple inscription "Carolo Magno." On going out of the
+city thro' one of the gates, and at a short distance from it, we ascended
+the mountain or rather hill called the Louisberg on which are built a
+Ridotto and Café, as also a Column erected in honour of Napoleon with a
+suitable inscription; the inscription is effaced and is about to be
+replaced by another in the German language in commemoration of the downfall
+of the _Tyrant_, as the Coalition are pleased to call him. This Tyrant is
+however extremely regretted by the inhabitants of Aix-la-Chapelle and not
+without reason, for he was a great benefactor to them and continually
+embellished the city, confirming and increasing its privileges. The
+inhabitants are not at all pleased with their new masters; for the
+behaviour of the Prussian military has been so insulting and overbearing
+towards the burghers and students that it is, I am told, a common
+exclamation among the latter, alluding to the Prussians having stiled
+themselves their deliverers: _De nostris liberatoribus, Domine, libera
+nos_. Indeed, I can evidently discern that they are not particularly
+pleased at the result of the battle of Waterloo.
+
+In the evening I went to the theatre, which has the most inconvenient form
+imaginable, being a rectangle. As anti-Gallicanism is the order of the day,
+only German dramas are allowed to be performed and this night it was the
+tragedy of Faust, or Dr Faustus as we term him in England, not the Faust of
+Goethe, which is not meant for nor at all adapted to the stage, but a drama
+of that name written by Klingmann.[18] It is a strange wild piece, quite in
+the German style and full of horrors and diableries. In this piece the
+sublime and terrible border close on the ridiculous; for instance the Devil
+and Faust come to drink in a beer-schenk or ale-house. 'Tis true the Devil
+is incognito at the time and is called "der Fremde" or "the Stranger"; it
+is only towards the conclusion of the piece that he discovers himself to be
+Satan.... The actor who played the part of the Stranger had something in
+his physiognomy very terrific and awe-inspiring. In another scene, which to
+us would appear laughable and absurd, but which pleases a German audience,
+three women in masks come on the stage to meet Faust, in a churchyard, and
+on unmasking display three skeleton heads.
+
+Poor Faust had stipulated to give his soul to the Devil for aiding him in
+the attainment of his desires; the Devil on his part agrees to allow him to
+commit four deadly sins before he shall call on him to fulfil his contract.
+Faust, in the sequel, kills his wife and his father-in-law. Satan then
+claims him. Faust pleads in arrest of judgement, that he has only committed
+two crimes out of the four for which he had agreed; and that there
+consequently remained two others for him to commit before he could be
+claimed. The Devil in rejoinder informs him that his wife was with child at
+the time he killed her, which constituted the third crime, and that the
+very act of making a contract with the Devil for his soul forms the fourth.
+Faust, overwhelmed with confusion, has not a word to say; and Satan seizing
+him by the hair of his head, carries him off in triumph. This piece is
+written in iambics of ten syllables and the versification appeared to me
+correct and harmonious, and the sentiments forcible and poetical; this
+fully compensated for the bizarrerie of the story itself, which, by the
+bye, with all the reproach thrown by the adherents of the classic taste on
+those of the romantic, is scarcely more _outré_ than the introduction of
+Death ([Greek: _thanatos_]) as a dramatic personage in the _Alcestis_ of
+Euripides.
+
+There is at Aix-la-Chapelle at one of the hotels a Faro Bank; it is open
+like the gates of Hell _noctes atque dies_ and gaming goes forward without
+intermission; this seems, indeed, to be the only occupation of the
+strangers who visit these baths. There is near this hotel a sort of Place
+or Quadrangle with arcades under which are shops and stalls. At one of
+these shops I met with the most beautiful girl I ever beheld, a Tyrolese by
+birth and the daughter of a print-seller. She was from the Italian Tyrol;
+Roveredo, I think she said, was her birthplace. She united much grace and
+manner with her beauty, on account of which I could not avoid complimenting
+her in her native tongue, which she seemed pleased to hear. Her eyes and
+eyebrows brought to my recollection the description of those of Alcina:
+
+ Sotto due negri e sottilissimi archi,
+ Son due neri occhi, anzi, due chiari soli,
+ Pietosi a riguardare, a mover parchi,
+ Intorno a cui par che Amor scherzi e volí.[19]
+
+ Two black and slender arches rise above
+ Two clear black eyes, say suns of radiant light;
+ Which ever softly beam and slowly move;
+ Round these appears to sport in frolic flight,
+ Hence scattering all his shafts, the little Love.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+We then proceeded to look at the suburb of this city called Bortscheid, by
+far the finest part of the city and at some elevation above it. It commands
+an extensive view. We also visited the various bath establishments; the
+taste of the water had some resemblance to that of Harrogate, and is good
+in bilious, scrofulous and cutaneous complaints. On our return to the hotel
+we learned the news of the capitulation of Paris to the Allied powers. It
+is said to be purely a military convention by which the French army is to
+evacuate Paris and retire behind the Loire. There is no talk and no other
+intelligence about Napoleon, except that he had been compelled by the two
+Houses of Legislature to abdicate the throne. We are still in the dark as
+to the intentions of the Allies. I regret much that my friend and fellow
+traveller L. is obliged to return to Bruxelles and cannot accompany me to
+Cologne, to which place I am impatient to go and to pay my respects to old
+father Rhine, so renowned in history.
+
+
+COLOGNE.
+
+I left Aix-la-Chapelle on the morning of the 2nd of July and arrived at
+Cologne about six o'clock in the evening, putting up at the Inn _Zum
+heiligen Geist_ (Holy Ghost), which is situated on the banks of the river.
+The price of the journey in the diligence is 18 franks. On the road hither
+lies Juliers, a large and strongly fortified town surrounded by a marsh. It
+must be very important as a military post. The road after quitting Juliers
+runs for the most part thro' a forest, and has been much improved and
+enlarged by the French; before they improved it, it was almost impassable
+in wet weather. We met on the road several Prussian waggons and
+reinforcements on their march to Bruxelles. Two of my fellow travellers in
+the diligence were very intelligent young men belonging to respectable
+families in Cologne and were returning thither; they likewise complained
+much of the overbearing demeanour of the Prussian military towards the
+burghers.
+
+Cologne is a large, but very dull looking city, as dull as Liége; it would
+seem as if all towns and cities under ecclesiastical domination were dull
+or rendered so by the prohibition of the most innocent amusements. The
+fortifications are out of repair; but the Prussian Government intend to
+make Cologne a place of great strength. The name of the village on the
+opposite of the river is Deutz, and in the time of the French occupation
+there was a _tête-de-pont_. The next morning I was obliged to appear before
+the police, and afterwards before the _Commandant de la Place_, in order to
+have my passport examined and _visé_. At the bureau of the police it was
+remarked to me that my passport was not _en règle_, the features of the
+bearer not being therein specified. I replied that it was not my fault;
+that it was given to me in that shape by the English Consul at Bruxelles
+and that it was not my province to give to the Consul any directions as to
+its form and tenor. The Commissary of Police then asked me what business I
+was about in travelling, and the following conversation took place: "Was
+haben Sie für Geschäfte?"--"Keine; ich reise nur um Vergnügen's Willen."--"
+Sonderbar!"--"Worin liegt das Sonderbare, dass man reist um ein schönes
+Land zu sehen?"[20]--He made no answer to this, but one of his coadjutors
+standing by him said in a loud whisper, "Ein Herumreiser," which means an
+adventurer or person who travels about for no good,--in a word, a
+suspicious character. I then said with the utmost calm and indifference:
+"Gentlemen, as soon as you shall have finished all your commentaries on the
+subject of my passport, pray be so good as to inform me what I am to do,
+whether I may go on to Mayence and Frankfort as is my intention, or return
+to Bruxelles." The Commissary, after a slight hesitation, signed the _visa_
+and I then carried it to the bureau of the Commandant, whose secretary
+signed it without hesitation, merely asking me if I were a military man.
+
+In the afternoon I went to visit the Dome or Cathedral. It is a fine
+specimen of Gothic architecture, but singular enough the steeple is not yet
+finished. In this Cathedral the most remarkable thing is the Chapel of the
+Three Kings, wherein is deposited a massy gold chest inlaid with precious
+stones of all sorts and of great value, containing the bones of the
+identical three Kings (it is said) who came from the East to worship the
+infant Jesus at Bethlehem. The Scriptures say it was three wise men or
+Magi. The legend however calls them Kings and gives them Gothic names. Let
+schoolmen and theologians reconcile this difference: _ce n'est point notre
+affaire_. To me it appears that when the German tribes embraced
+Christianity and enrolled themselves under the banner of St Peter, it was
+thought but fair to allow them to give vent to a little nationality and to
+blend their old traditions with the new-fangled doctrine, and no doubt the
+Sovereign Pontiffs thought that the people could never be made to believe
+too much; the same policy is practised by the Jesuit missionaries in China,
+where in order to flatter the national vanity and bend it to their purposes
+they represent Jesus Christ as being a great personal friend and
+correspondent of Confucius.
+
+To return to these monarchs, wise men or Magi: their _sculls_ are kept
+separate to the rest of the bones and each _scull_ bears a crown of gold.
+But if you are fond of miracles, legends, and details of relics, come with
+me to the Church of St Ursula in this city, and see the proof positive of
+the miraculous legend of the eleven thousand Virgins who suffered martyrdom
+in this city, in the time of Attila; the bones of all of whom are carefully
+preserved here and adorn the interior walls of the Church in the guise of
+arms arranged in an armoury. Eleven thousand sculls, each bearing a golden
+or gilt crown, grin horribly on the spectator from the upper part of the
+interior walls of the church, where they are placed in a row. What a fine
+subject this would make for a ballad in the style of Bürger to suppose that
+on a particular night in the year, at the midnight hour when mortals in
+slumbers are bound, the bones all descending from the walls where they are
+arranged, forming themselves into bodies, clapping on their heads and
+dancing a skeleton dance round the Ghost of Attila! The people of Cologne,
+in the time of the ecclesiastical Electorate, had the reputation of being
+extremely superstitious, and no doubt there were many who implicitly
+believe this pious tale; indeed, who could refuse their assent to its
+authenticity, on beholding the proof positive in the sculls and bones?
+
+I recollect that in the History of the Compère Mathiew[21] the Père Jean
+rates mightily the natives of Cologne for their bigotry and superstition
+and for the bad reception they gave to him and to his philosophy. That
+people are happier from a blind belief, as some pretend, appears to me
+extremely problematical. For my part, under no circumstances can I think
+bliss to consist in ignorance; nor have I felt any particular discomfort in
+having learned at a very early age to put under my feet, as Lucretius
+expresses it, the _strepitum Acherontis avari_. On the contrary, it has
+made me a perfect cosmopolitan, extinguished all absurd national and
+religious prejudices, and rendered me at home wherever I travel; and I meet
+the Catholic, the Lutheran, the Moslem, the Jew, the Hindou and the Guebre
+as a brother. _Quo me cunque ferat tempestas, deferor hospes_.[22] Let me
+add one word more to obviate any misrepresentation of my sentiments from
+some malignant Pharisee, that tho' I am no friend to King-craft and
+Priest-craft, and cannot endure that religion should ever be blended with
+politics, yet I am a great admirer of the beautiful and consoling
+philosophy or theosophy of Jesus Christ which inculcates the equality of
+Mankind, and represents the Creator of the universe, the Author of all
+being, as the universal Father of the human race.
+
+Cologne derives its name from _Colonia_, as it was a Roman Colony planted
+here to protect the left bank of the Rhine from the incursions of the
+German hordes. It is here that the grand and original manufactory of the
+far-famed _Eau de Cologne_ is to be seen. The _Eau de Cologne_ is a
+sovereign remedy for all kinds of disorders, and if the _affiches_ of the
+proprietor, Jean-Marie Farina, be worthy of credit, he is as formidable a
+check to old Pluto as ever Aesculapius was. The sale of this water is
+immense.
+
+On my return to the inn, I met with a Dutch clergyman who was travelling
+with his pupils, three very fine boys, the sons of a Dutch lady of rank. He
+was to conduct them to the University of Neuwied, on the right bank of the
+Rhine, in order to place them there for their education. The young men seem
+to have profited much from their studies. Their tutor seemed to be a
+well-informed man and of liberal ideas; he preferred speaking German to
+French, as he said he had not much facility in expressing himself in the
+latter language. He said if I were going his way he would be happy to have
+the pleasure of my company, to which I very willingly acceded, and we
+agreed to start the next morning early so as to arrive at Bonn to
+breakfast, and then to go on to Godesberg, where he proposed to remain a
+few days.
+
+From the windows of our inn we have a fine view of the river, and I have
+not omitted doing hommage to old Father Rhine by taking up some of his
+water in the hollow of my hand to drink. The Rhine of later years has been
+considered the guardian of Germany against the hostile incursions of the
+French, and Schiller represents this river as a Swiss vigilant on his post,
+yet in spite of his vigilance and fidelity unable to prevent his restless
+neighbour from forcing his safeguard. The following are the lines of
+Schiller where the river speaks in a distich:
+
+ Treu wie dem Schwfeizer gebührt bewach'ich Germaniens Grenze,
+ Aber der Gallier hüpft über den duldenden Strom.
+
+ In vain my stream I interpose
+ To guard Germania's realm from foes;
+ The nimble Gauls my cares deride
+ And often leap on t'other side.
+
+
+GODESBERG, 4th July.
+
+The distance from Cologne to Bonn is 18 miles and Godesberg is three miles
+further. We stopped to breakfast at Bonn and after breakfast made a
+promenade thro' the city. Bonn is a handsome, clean, well-built and
+cheerful looking city and the houses are good and solid.
+
+The Electoral Palace is a superb building, but is not occupied and is
+falling rapidly to decay. From the terrace in the garden belonging to this
+Palace, which impends over the Rhine, you have a fine view of this noble
+river. This Palace was at one time made use of as a barrack by the French,
+and since the secularization of the Ecclesiastical Electorates it has not
+been thought worth while to embellish or even repair it. There is a Roman
+antiquity in this town called the _Altar of Victory_, erected on the Place
+St Remi, but remarkable for nothing but its antiquity; it seems to be a
+common Roman altar.[23] The road from Bonn to Godesberg is three miles in
+length and thro' a superb avenue of horse-chesnut trees; but before you
+arrive at Godesberg, there is on the left side of the road a curious
+specimen of Gothic architecture called _Hochkreutz_, very like Waltham
+cross in appearance, but much higher and in better preservation; it was
+erected by some feudal Baron to expiate a homicide. The castle of Godesberg
+is situated on an eminence and commands a fine prospect; it is now a mass
+of rums and the walls only remain. It derives its name of Godesberg or
+Götzenberg from the circumstance of its having been formerly the site of a
+temple of Minerva built in the time of the Romans, and thence called
+Götzenberg by the Christians, _Götze_ in German signifying an idol.
+
+On the plain at the foot of the hill of Godesberg and at the distance of an
+eighth of a mile from the river, a shelving cornfield intervening, stand
+three large hotels and a ridotto, all striking edifices. To the south of
+these is situated a large wood. These hotels are always full of company in
+the summer and autumn: they come here to drink the mineral waters, a
+species of Seltzer, the spring of which is about a quarter of a mile
+distant from the hotels. The hotel at which we put up bears the name of
+_Die schöne Aussicht_ (la Belle Vue) and well does it deserve the name; for
+it commands a fine view of the reaches of the river, north and south.
+Directly on the opposite bank, abruptly rising, is the superb and
+magnificent chain of mountains called the _Sieben Gebirge_ or Seven
+Mountains. On the summit of these mountains tower the remains of Gothic
+castles or keeps, still majestic, tho' in ruins, and frowning on the plains
+below; they bring to one's recollection the legends and chronicles of the
+Middle Ages. They bear terrible awe-inspiring names such as Drachenfels,
+Löwenberg; the highest of them is called Drachenfels or the Rock of Dragons
+and on it stood the Burg or Chateau of a Feudal Count or _Raubgraf_, who
+was the terror of the surrounding country, and has given rise to a very
+interesting romance called _The Knights of the Seven Mountains_. This
+feudal tyrant used to commit all sorts of depredations and descend into the
+plains below, in order to intercept the convoys of merchandize passing
+between Aix-la-Chapelle and Frankfort. It was to check these abuses and
+oppressions that was instituted the famous Secret Tribunal _Das heimliche
+Gericht_, the various Governments in Germany being then too weak to protect
+their subjects or to punish these depredations. This secret tribunal, from
+the summary punishments it inflicted, the mysterious obscurity in which it
+was enveloped, and the impossibility of escaping from its pursuit, became
+the terror of all Germany. They had agents and combinations everywhere, and
+exercised such a system of espionage as to give to their proceedings an
+appearance of supernatural agency. A simple accusation was sufficient for
+them to act upon, provided the accuser solemnly swore to the truth of it
+without reserve, and consented to undergo the same punishment as the
+accused was subjected to, in case the accusation should be false; till this
+solemnity was gone through, no pursuit was instituted against the offender.
+There was scarcely ever an instance of a false accusation, for it was well
+known that no power could screen the delator from the exemplary punishment
+that awaited him; and there were no means of escaping from the omniscience
+and omnipotence of the secret tribunal.
+
+To return to Godesberg, it is a most beautiful spot and much agreeable
+society is here to be met with. The families of distinction of the
+environing country come here for the purpose of recreation and drinking the
+mineral waters. We sit down usually sixty to dinner, and I observe some
+very fine women among them. On Sunday there is a ball at the ridotto. The
+promenades in the environs are exceedingly romantic, and this place is the
+favourite resort of many new married couples who come here to pass the
+honeymoon. The scenery of the surrounding country is so picturesque and
+beautiful as to require the pencil of an Ariosto or Wieland to do justice
+to it:
+
+ Ne se tutto cercato avessi il mondo
+ Vedria di questo un pin gen til paese.[24]
+
+ And, had he ranged the universal world,
+ Would not have seen a lovelier in his round.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+To the researches of the naturalist and mineralogist the Seven Mountains
+offer inexhaustible resources. The living and accommodation of the three
+hotels are very reasonable. For one and a half florins you have an
+excellent and plentiful dinner at the table d'hôte, including a bottle of
+Moselle wine and Seltzer water at discretion; by paying extra you can have
+the Rhine wines of different growths and crops and French wines of all
+sorts.
+
+I am much pleased with the little I have seen of the German women. They
+appear to be extremely well educated. I observe many of them in their
+morning walks with a book in their hand either of poetry or a novel.
+Schiller is the favourite poet among them and Augustus Lafontaine the
+favourite novel writer.[25] He is a very agreeable author were he not so
+prolix; yet we English have no right to complain of this fault, since there
+is no novel in all Germany to compare in point of prolixity with Clarissa,
+Sit Charles Grandison, or Tom Jones. The great fault of Augustus Lafontaine
+is that of including in one novel the history of two or three generations.
+A beautiful and very interesting tale of his, however, is entirely free
+from this defect and is founded on a fact. It is called _Dankbarkeit und
+Liebe_ (Gratitude and Love). There is more real pathos in this novelette
+than in the _Nouvelle Héloïse_ of Rousseau.
+
+
+EHRENBREITSTEIN, 8 July.
+
+After a _sèjour_ of three days at Godesberg, we left that delightful
+residence and proceeded to Neuwied to deposit the boys. We stopped,
+however, for an hour or two at Andernach, which is situated in a beautiful
+valley on the left bank. We viewed the remains of the palace of the Kings
+of Austrasia and the church where the body of the Emperor Valentinian is
+preserved embalmed.
+
+Andernach is remarkable for being the exact spot where Julius Caesar first
+crossed the Rhine to make war on the German nations. Directly opposite
+Neuwied, which is on the right bank, stands close to the village of
+Weissenthurm the monument erected to the French General Hoche. We crossed
+over to Neuwied in a boat. Neuwied is a regular, well-built town, but
+rather of a sombre melancholy appearance and is only remarkable for its
+university. Science could not chuse a more tranquil abode. This University
+has been ameliorated lately by its present sovereign the King of Prussia.
+It was not the interest of Napoleon to favour any establishment on the
+right bank at the expence of those on the left, the former being out of his
+territory. At Neuwied I took leave of my agreeable fellow travellers, as
+they intended to remain there and I to go on to Ehrenbreitstein. An
+opportunity presented itself the same afternoon of which I profited. I met
+with an Austrian Captain of Infantry and his lady at the inn where I
+stopped who were going to Ehrenbreitstein in their _calèche_, and they were
+so kind as to offer me a place in it. I found them both extremely
+agreeable; both were from Austria proper. He had left the Austrian service
+some time ago and had since entered into the Russian service; from that he
+was lately transferred, together with the battalion to which he belonged,
+into the service of Prussia and placed on the retired list of the latter
+with a very small pension. He did not seem at all satisfied with this
+arrangement. He had served in several campaigns against the French in
+Germany, Italy and France, and was well conversant in French and Italian
+litterature.
+
+We stopped _en passant_ at a _maison de plaisance_ and superb English
+garden belonging to the Duke of Nassau-Weilburg. The house is in the style
+of a cottage _orné_, but very roomy and tastefully fitted up; but nothing
+can be more diversified and picturesque than the manner in which the garden
+is laid out. The ground being much broken favours this; and in one part of
+it is a ravine or valley so romantic and savage, that you would fancy
+yourself in Tinian or Juan Fernandez. We arrived late in the evening in the
+Thal Ehrenbreitstein, which lies at the foot of the gigantic hill fortress
+of that name, which frowns over it and seems as if it threatened to fall
+and crush it. My friends landed me at the inn _Zum weissen Pferd_ (the
+White Horse), where there is most excellent accommodation. Just opposite
+Ehrenbreitstein, on the left bank, is Coblentz; a superb flying bridge,
+which passes in three minutes, keeps up the communication between the two
+towns.
+
+Early the next morning, I ascended the stupendous rock of Ehrenbreitstein,
+which has a great resemblance to the hill forts in India, such as Gooty,
+Nundydroog, etc. It is a place of immense natural strength, but the
+fortifications were destroyed by the French, who did not chuse to have so
+formidable a neighbour so close to their frontier, as the Rhine then was.
+The Prussian Government, however, to whom it now belongs, seem too fully
+aware of its importance not to reconstruct the fortifications with as
+little delay as possible. Ehrenbreitstein completely commands all the
+adjacent country and enfilades the embouchure of the Moselle which flows
+into the Rhine at Coblentz, where there is an elegant stone bridge across
+the Moselle. Troops without intermission continue to pass over the flying
+bridge bound to France, from the different German states, viz., Saxons,
+Hessians, Prussians, etc., so that one might apply to this scene Anna
+Comnena's expression relative to the Crusades, and say that all Germany is
+torn up from its foundation and precipitated upon France. I suppose no less
+than 70,000 men have passed within these few days. The German papers,
+particularly the _Rheinische Mercur_, continue to fulminate against France
+and the war yell resounds with as much fury as ever. From the number of
+troops that continue to pass it would seem as if the Allies did not mean to
+content themselves with the abdication of Napoleon, but will endeavour to
+dismember France. The Prussian officers seem to speak very confidently that
+Alsace and Lorraine will be severed from France and reunited to the
+Germanic body, to which, they say, every country ought to belong where the
+German language is spoken, and they are continually citing the words of an
+old song:
+
+
+ Wo ist das deutsche Vaterland?....
+ Wo man die deutsche Zunge spricht,
+ Da ist das deutsche Vaterland.[26]
+
+In English: "Where is the country of the Germans? Where the German language
+is spoken, there is the country of the Germans!"
+
+Coblentz is a clean handsome city, but there is nothing very remarkable in
+it except a fine and spacious "Place." But in the neighbourhood stands the
+_Chartreuse_, situated on an eminence commanding a fine view of the whole
+_Thalweg_. This _Chartreuse_ is one English mile distant from the town and
+my friend the Austrian Captain had the goodness to conduct me thither. It
+is a fine large building, but is falling rapidly to decay, being
+appropriated to no purpose whatever. The country is beautiful in the
+environs of this place, and has repeatedly called forth the admiration and
+delight of all travellers. Near Coblentz is the monument erected to the
+French General Marceau, who fell gloriously fighting for the cause of
+liberty, respected by friend and foe.
+
+
+July 10th.
+
+We had a large society this day at the table d'hôte. The conversation
+turned on the restoration of the Bourbons, which nobody at table seemed to
+desire. Several anecdotes were related of the conduct of the Bourbon
+princes and of the emigration, who held their court at Coblentz when they
+first emigrated; these anecdotes did not redound much to their honor or
+credit, and I remark that they are held in great disgust and abhorrence by
+the inhabitants of these towns, on account of their treacherous and
+unprincipled conduct. It was from here that "La Cour de Coblentz," as it
+was called, intrigued by turns with the Jacobins and the Brissotins and, by
+betraying the latter to the former, were in part the cause of the
+sanguinary measures adopted by Robespierre.[27] The object of this
+atrocious policy was that the French people would, by witnessing so many
+executions, become disgusted at the sanguinary tyranny of Robespierre and
+recall the Bourbons unconditionally; which, fortunately for France and
+thanks to the heroism and bravery of the republican armies, did not take
+place; for had the restoration taken place at that time, a dreadful
+reaction would have been encouraged and the cruelties of the reign of
+Terror surpassed. With the same view, emissaries were dispatched from the
+Court of Coblentz to the South of France in order, under the disguise of
+patriots, to preach up the most exaggerated corollaries to the theories of
+liberty and equality.
+
+Among other things at Ehrenbreitstein is a superb pleasure barge belonging
+to the Dukes of Nassau for water excursions up and down the Rhine. A _coche
+d'eau_ starts from here daily to Mayence and another to Cologne. The price
+is ten franks the person. The superb _chaussée on_ the left bank of the
+Rhine, which extends all the way from Cologne to Mayence, was constructed
+by the direction of Napoleon. In the evening I went to the theatre at
+Coblentz, where Mozart's opera of Don Giovanni was represented. I
+recollected my old acquaintance "La ci darem la mano," which I had often
+heard in England.
+
+
+MAYENCE, 12th July.
+
+I embarked in the afternoon of the 11th in the _coche d'eau_ bound to
+Mayence. Except an old "Schiffer," I was the only passenger on board, as
+few chuse to go up stream on account of the delay. I, however, being master
+of my own time, and wishing to view the lovely scenery on the banks of the
+river, preferred this conveyance, and I was highly gratified. After
+Boppart, the bed of the river narrows much. High rocks on each bank hem in
+the stream and render it more rapid. Nothing can be more sublime and
+magnificent than the scenery; at every turn of the river you would suppose
+its course blocked up by rocks, perceiving no visible outlet. Remains of
+Gothic castles are to be seen on their summits at a short distance from
+each other, and where the banks are not abrupt and _escarpés_ there are
+_coteaux_ covered with vines down to the water's edge. The tolling of the
+bells at the different villages on the banks gives a most aweful solemn
+religious sound, and the reverberation is prolonged by the high rocks,
+which seem to shut you out from the rest of the world. There are the walls
+nearly entire of two castles of the Middle Ages, the one called "Die Katze"
+(the cat); the other "Die Maus" (the Mouse); each has its tradition, for
+which and for many other interesting particulars I refer you to Klebe's and
+Schreiber's description of the banks of the Rhine.
+
+We arrived early in the evening at St Goar, where we stopped and slept. St
+Goar is a fine old Gothic town, romantically situated, and is famous from
+having two whirlpools in its neighbourhood. It is completely commanded and
+protected by Rheinfels, an ancient hill fortress, but the fortification of
+which no longer exist. It requires half an hour's walk to ascend to the
+summit of Rheinfels, but the traveller is well repaid for the fatigue of
+the ascent by the fine view enjoyed from the top. I remained at Rheinfels
+nearly an hour. What a solemn stillness seems to pervade this part of the
+river, only interrupted by the occasional splash of the oar, and the
+tolling of the steeple bell! Bingen on the right bank is the next place of
+interest, and on an island in the centre of the river facing Bingen stand
+the ruins of a celebrated tower call'd the "Maüsethurm" (mouse tower), so
+named from the circumstance of Bishop Hatto having been devoured therein by
+rats according to the tradition. This was represented as a punishment from
+Heaven on the said bishop for his tyranny and oppression towards the poor;
+but the story was invented by the monks in order to vilify his memory, for
+it appears he was obnoxious to them on account of his attempts to enforce a
+rigid discipline among them and to check their licentiousness.
+
+Bieberich, a superb palace belonging to the Dukes of Nassau on the right
+bank, next presents itself to view on your left ascending; to your right,
+at a short distance from Bieberich, you catch the first view of Mayence on
+the left bank, with its towers and steeples rising from the glade. We
+reached Mayence at 4 o'clock p.m., and I went to put up at the three Crowns
+(_Drei-Kronen_). The first news I learned on arriving at Mayence was that
+Napoleon had surrendered himself to the Captain of an English frigate at
+Oléron; but though particulars are not given, Louis XVIII is said to be
+restored, which I am very sorry to hear. The Allies then have been guilty
+of the most scandalous infraction of their most solemn promise, since they
+declared that they made war on Napoleon alone and that they never meant to
+dictate to the French people the form of government they were to adopt.
+Napoleon having surrendered and Louis being restored, the war may be
+considered as ended for the present, unless the Allies should attempt to
+wrest any provinces from France, and in this case there is no saying what
+may happen. This has finally ended the career of Napoleon.
+
+There is in Mayence a remarkably fine broad spacious street called "die
+grosse Bleiche" and in general the buildings are striking and solid, but
+too much crowded together as is the case in all ancient fortified cities.
+The Cathedral is well worth seeing and contains many things of value and
+costly relics. When one views the things of value in the churches here, at
+Aix-la-Chapelle and at Cologne, what a contradiction does it give to the
+calumnies spread against the French republicans that they plundered the
+churches of the towns they occupied! There is an agreeable promenade lined
+with trees on the banks of the river called _L'Allée du Rhin._ Mayence is
+strongly fortified and has besides a citadel (a pentagon) of great
+strength, which is separated from the town by an esplanade. The _Place du
+Marché_ is striking and in the _Place Verte_ I saw for the first time in my
+life the Austrian uniform, there being an Austrian garrison as well as
+troops belonging to the other Germanic states, such as Prussians,
+Bavarians, Saxons, Hessians, and troops of the Duchy of Berg. This City
+belongs to the Germanic Confederation and is to be always occupied by a
+mixed garrison. The Archduke Charles has his head-quarters here at present.
+I attended an inspection of a battalion of Berg troops on the _Place
+Verte_; they had a very military appearance and went thro' their manoeuvres
+with great precision. From the top of the steeple of the Church of Sanct
+Stephen you have a fine view of the whole Rheingau. Opposite to Mayence, on
+the right bank, communicating by an immensely long bridge of boats, is the
+small town and fort of Castel, which forms a sort of _tête-de-pont_ to
+Mayence. The works of Castel take in flank and enfilade the embouchure of
+the river Mayn which flows into the Rhine. One of the redoubts of Castel is
+called the redoubt of Montebello, thus named after Marshal Lannes, Duke of
+Montebello.
+
+The German papers continue their invectives against France. In one of them
+I read a patriotic song recommending the youth of Germany to go into France
+to revenge themselves, to drink the wine and live at the cost of the
+inhabitants, and then is about to recommend their making love to the wives
+and daughters of the French, when a sudden flash of patriotism comes across
+him, and he says: "No! for that a German warrior makes love to German girls
+and German women only!" (_Und küsst nur Deutsche Mädchen._) With regard to
+the women here, those that I have hitherto met with, and those I saw at
+Ehrenbreitstein, were exceedingly handsome, so that the German warriors, if
+love is their object, will do well to remain here, as they may go further
+and fare worse, for I understand the women of Lorraine and Champagne are
+not very striking for personal beauty. There were some good paintings in
+the picture gallery here and this and the fortifications are nearly all
+that need call forth the attention of a traveller who makes but a fleeting
+visit.
+
+
+FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MAYN, 14th July.
+
+I arrived here the day before yesterday in the diligence from Mayence, the
+price of which is two and a half florins the person, and the distance
+twenty-five English miles; there is likewise a water conveyance by the Mayn
+for half the money. The road runs thro' the village of Hockheim, which in
+England gives the name of _Hock_ to all the wines of Rhenish growth. The
+country is undulating in gentle declivities and vales and is highly
+cultivated in vines and corn. I put up here at the _Hotel Zum Schwan_ (The
+Swan), which is a very large and spacious hotel and has excellent
+accommodation. There is a very excellent table d'hôte at one o'clock at
+this hotel, for which the price is one and a half florins the person,
+including a pint of Moselle wine and a _krug_ or jar of Seltzer water.
+About four or five o'clock in the afternoon it is the fashion to come and
+drink old Rhine wine _à l'Anglaise_. That sort called _Rudesheimer_ I
+recommend as delicious. There is also a very pleasant wine called the
+_Ingelheimer_, which is in fact the "red Hock." At one of these afternoon
+meetings a gentleman who had just returned from Paris related to us some
+anecdotes of what passed at the Conference between the French commissioners
+who were sent after the abdication of Napoleon, by the provisional
+government, to treat with the Allies; in which it appeared that the British
+commissioner, Lord S[tewart],[28] brother to the Secretary of State for
+Foreign Affairs, made rather a simple figure by his want of historical
+knowledge or recollection. He began, it seems, in rather a bullying manner,
+in the presence of the commissioners, to declaim against what he called the
+perfidy and mutiny of the French army against their lawful Sovereign; when
+the venerable Lafayette, who was one of the commissioners and who is ever
+foremost when his country has need of his assistance, remarked to him that
+the English revolution in 1688, which the English were accustomed always to
+stile glorious, and which he (Lafayette) stiled glorious also, was
+effectuated in a similar manner by the British army abandoning King James
+and ranging themselves under the standard of the Prince of Orange; that if
+it was a crime on the part of the French army to join Napoleon, their
+ancient leader who had led them so often to victory, it was a still greater
+crime on the part of the English army to go over to the Prince of Orange
+who was unknown to them and a foreigner in the bargain; and that therefore
+this blame of the French army, coming from the mouth of an Englishman,
+surprised him, the more so as the Duke of Marlborough, the boast and pride
+of the English, set the example of defection from his Sovereign, who had
+been his greatest benefactor. Lord S[tewart], who did not appear to be at
+all conscious of this part of our history, was staggered, a smile was
+visible on the countenances of all the foreign diplomatists assembled
+there, and Lord S[tewart], to hide his confusion, and with an ill-disguised
+anger, turned to Lafayette and said that the Allies would not treat until
+Napoleon should be delivered to them. "Je m'étonne, my lord, qu'en faisant
+une proposition si infâme et si deshonorante, vous vous plaisez de vous
+adresser au prisonnier d'Olmütz," was the dignified answer of that virtuous
+patriot and ever ardent veteran of liberty.[29]
+
+The main street in Frankfort called the _Zeil_ is very broad and spacious,
+and can boast of a number of splendid houses belonging to individuals,
+particularly the house of Schweitzer[30]; and on the Quai, on the banks of
+the Mayn, there is a noble range of buildings. The bridge across the Mayn
+is very fine and on the other side of the river is the suburb of
+Sachsenhansen, which is famous for being the head-quarters of the
+priestesses of the Venus vulgivaga who abound in this city. There are in
+Frankfort an immense number of Jews, who have a quarter of the city
+allotted to them. The gardens that environ the town are very tastefully
+laid out, and serve as the favourite promenade of the _beau monde_ of
+Frankfort. The Cathedral will always be a place of interest as the temple
+wherein in later times the German Caesars were crowned and inaugurated. At
+the _Hôtel de Ville_ called the _Römer_, which is an ugly Gothic building,
+but interesting from its being in this edifice that the Emperors were
+chosen, is to be seen the celebrated Golden Bull which is written on
+parchment in the Latin language with a golden seal attached to it. In the
+Hall where the Electors used to sit on the election of an Emperor of the
+Romans, are to be seen the portraits of several of the Emperors, and a very
+striking one in particular of the Emperor Joseph II, in full length, in his
+Imperial robes. There is no table d'hôte at the _Swan_ for supper, but this
+meal is served up _à la carte_, which is very convenient for those who do
+not require copious meals. At the same table with me at supper sat a very
+agreeable man with whom I entered into conversation. He was a Hessian and
+had served in a Hessian battalion in the English service during the
+American war. He was so kind as to procure me admission to the Casino at
+the Hotel Rumpf,[31] where there is a literary institution and where they
+receive newspapers, pamphlets and reviews in the German, French, English
+and Italian languages. In Frankfort there are several houses of individuals
+which merit the name of palaces, and there is a great display of opulence
+and industry in this city. In the environs there is abundance of _maisons
+de plaisance_. For commerce it is the most bustling city (inland) in all
+Germany, besides it being the seat of the present German Diet; and from
+here, as from a centre, diverge the high roads to all parts of the Empire.
+
+I have been once at the theatre, which is very near the _Swan_. A German
+opera, the scene whereof was in India, was given. The scenery and
+decorations were good, appropriate, and the singing very fair. The theatre
+itself is dirty and gloomy. The German language appears to me to be better
+adapted to music than either the French or English. The number of dactylic
+terminations in the language give to it all the variety that the
+_sdruccioli_ give to the Italian. As to poetry, no language in the world
+suits itself better to all the vagaries and phantasies of the Muse, since
+it possesses so much natural rythm and allows, like the Greek, the
+combination of compound words and a redundancy of epithets, and it is
+besides so flexible that it lends itself to all the ancient as well as the
+modern metres with complete success: indeed it is the only modern language
+that I know of which does so.
+
+As for political opinions here, the Germans seem neither to wish nor to
+care about the restoration of the Bourbons; but they talk loudly of the
+necessity of tearing Alsace and Lorraine from France. In fact, they wish to
+put it out of the power of the French ever to invade Germany again; a thing
+however little to be hoped for. For the minor and weaker Germanic states
+have always hitherto (and will probably again at some future day) invoked
+the assistance of France against the greater and stronger. I observe that
+the Austrian Government is not at all popular here, and that its bad faith
+in financial matters is so notorious and has been so severely felt here,
+that a merchant told me, alluding to the bankruptcy of the Austrian
+Government on two occasions when there was no absolute necessity for the
+measure, that Frankfort had suffered more from the bad faith of the
+Austrian Government than from all the war contributions levied by the
+French.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, 28th July.
+
+On arrival at Coblentz we heard that Napoleon had surrendered himself
+unconditionally to Capt. Maitland of the _Bellerophon_. He never should
+have humiliated himself so far as to surrender himself to the British
+ministry. He owed to himself, to his brave fellow soldiers, to the French
+nation whose Sovereign he had been, not to take such a step, but rather die
+in the field like our Richard III, a glorious death which cast a lustre
+around his memory in spite of the darker shades of his character; or if he
+could not fall in the field, he should have died like Hannibal, rather than
+commit himself into the hands of a government in which generosity is by no
+means a distinguishing feature, and which on many occasions has shown a
+petty persecuting and vindictive spirit, and thus I have no hesitation in
+portraying the characteristics of our Tory party, which, unfortunately for
+the cause of liberty, rules with undivided sway over England. He will now
+end his days in captivity, for his destination appears to be already fixed,
+and St Helena is named as the intended residence; he will, I say, be
+exposed to all the taunts and persecutions that petty malice can suggest;
+and this with the most uncomfortable reflections: for had he been more
+considerate of the spirit of the age, he might have set all the Monarchs,
+Ultras and Oligarchs and their ministers at defiance. But he wished to ape
+Charlemagne and the Caesars and to establish an universal Empire: a thing
+totally impossible in our days and much to be deprecated were it possible.
+
+Consigned to St Helena, Napoleon will furnish to posterity a proverb like
+that of Dionysius at Corinth. This banishment to St Helena will be very
+ungenerous and unjust on the part of the English Government, but I suppose
+their satellites and adherents will term it an act of clemency, and some
+_Church and Kingmen_ would no doubt recommend hewing him in pieces, as
+Samuel did to Agag.
+
+I stopped three days at Aix-la-Chapelle to drink the waters and then came
+straight to this place stopping half a day in Liége. I shall start for
+Paris in a couple of days, as the communication is now open and the public
+conveyances re-established. My passport is _visé_ in the following terms:
+"Bon pour aller à Paris en suivant la route des armées alliées." I am quite
+impatient to visit that celebrated city.
+
+
+[18] Philipp Klingmann (1762-1824) was better known as an actor than as an
+ author.--ED.
+
+[19] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, VII, 12, 1.--ED.
+
+[20] "What business have you? None, I travel for amusement. Strange! What
+ is there strange in travelling to see a fine country?"
+
+[21] _Le Compère Mathieu_, a satirical novel by the Abbé Henri Joseph
+ Dulaurens, published 1765 and sometimes (though wrongly) attributed to
+ Voltaire. One of the prominent talkers in the dialogues is Père Jean
+ de Domfront.--ED.
+
+[22] Horace, _Epist_., I, i, 15.--ED.
+
+[23] This altar, inscribed _Deae Victoriae Sacrum (Corpus inscr. lat_.
+ XIII, 8252), was erected by the Roman fleet on the Rhine at the place
+ now called _Altsburg_ near Cologne and, after its discovery, taken to
+ Bonn, where it was set up on the _Remigius-Platz_ (now called
+ _Roemer-Platz_) on Dec, 3, 1809. It is now in the Provincial
+ Museum.--ED.
+
+[24] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, vi, 20, 3.--ED.
+
+[25] August Lafontaine (1758-1831), born in Brunswick of a family of French
+ protestants, was the very prolific and now quite forgotten author of
+ many novels and novelettes.--ED.
+
+[26] From Ernst Moritz Arndt's (1779-1860) celebrated poem, _Des Deutschen
+ Vaterland_.--ED.
+
+[27] There seems to be much truth in this opinion, though the question of
+ the intrigues of Louis XVIII with Robespierre is still shrouded in
+ obscurity. Some pages of General Thiébault's memoirs might have
+ cleared it up, but they have been torn out from the manuscript
+ (_Mémoires du Général Baron Thiébault_, vol. I, p. 273). Louis XVIII
+ paid a pension to Robespierre's sister, Charlotte.--ED.
+
+[28] Sir Charles Stewart, created Lord Stewart In 1814; he was a
+ half-brother of Lord Castlereagh.--ED.
+
+[29] The same story is given, with slight differences, by Lafayette himself
+ (_Mémoires_, vol. V, p. 472-3; Paris and Leipzig, 1838). See also
+ _Souvenirs historiques et parlementaires du Comte de Pontécoulant_,
+ vol. III, p. 428 (Paris, 1863). Major Frye's narrative is by far the
+ oldest and seems the most trustworthy.--ED.
+
+[30] The house in question was built about 1780 by Nicolas de Pigage for
+ the rich merchant, Franz von Schweizer; Pigage was the son of the
+ architect of King Stanislas at Nancy. The Schweizer palace became
+ later on the _Hôtel de Russie_ and was demolished about 1890, the
+ Imperial Post Office having been erected in its place. The Schweizer
+ family is now extinct.--ED.
+
+[31] A _Casinogesellschaft_, still in existence (1908), was founded at
+ Frankfort in 1805, with the object of uniting the aristocratic
+ elements of the city, admittance being freely allowed to distinguished
+ strangers, in particular to the envoys of the _Bundestag_. The
+ _Gesellschaft_ or club occupied spacious rooms in the house of the
+ once famous _tapissier_ and decorator Major Rumpf, grandfather of the
+ German sculptor of the same name. That building, situated at the
+ corner of the _Rossmarkt_, was demolished about 1880.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+From Bruxelles to Paris--Restoration of Louis XVIII--The officers of the
+allied armies--The Palais Royal--The Louvre--Protest of the author against
+the proposed despoiling of the French Museums--Unjust strictures against
+Napoleon's military policy--The _cant_ about revolutionary robberies--The
+Grand Opera--Monuments in Paris--The Champs Elysées--Saint-Cloud--The Hôtel
+des Invalides--The Luxembourg--General Labédoyère--Priests and
+emigrants--Prussian Plunder--Handsome behaviour of the English officers--
+Reminiscences of Eton--Versailles.
+
+
+PARIS, August 3rd.
+
+Here I am in Paris. I left Bruxelles the 29th July, stopped one night at
+Mons and passing thro' Valenciennes, Péronne and St Quentin arrived here on
+the third day. The villages and towns on the road had been pretty well
+stripped of eatables by the Allied army, as well as by the French, so that
+we did not meet with the best fare. In every village the white flag was
+displayed by way of propitiating the clemency of the Allies and averting
+plunder.
+
+
+August 7th.
+
+I have put up at the _Hôtel de Cahors_, Rue de Richelieu, where I pay five
+francs per diem for a single room; such is the dearness of lodgings at this
+moment. It is well furnished, however, with sofas, commodes, mirrors and a
+handsome clock and is very spacious withal, there being an alcove for the
+bed. This situation is extremely convenient, being close to the Palais
+Royal, Rue St Honoré, Théâtre Français, Louvre and the Tuileries on one
+side, and to the Grand Opera, the Théâtre Feydeau, the Italian Opera and
+the Boulevards on the other. The National Library is not many yards distant
+from my hotel, and a few yards from that _en face_ is the Grand Opera house
+or _Académie Royale de Musique_.
+
+This city is filled with officers and travellers of all kinds who have
+followed the army. The House of Legislature of the Hundred Days,--as it is
+the fashion to style Napoleon's last reign--dissolved themselves on the
+demand of a million of francs as a war contribution made by Marshall
+Blucher. Louis XVIII has been hustled into Paris, and now occupies the
+throne of his ancestors under the protection of a million of foreign
+bayonets, and the _bannière des Lis_ has replaced the tricolor on the
+castle of the Tuileries. A detachment of the British army occupies
+Montmartre, where the British flag is flying, and in the Champs Elysées and
+Bois de Boulogne are encamped several brigades of English and Hanoverians.
+The Sovereigns of Russia, Austria and Prussia are expected and then it is
+said that the fate of France will be decided. The Army of the Loire has at
+length made its submission to the King, after stipulating but in vain for
+the beloved tricolor. Report says it is to be immediately dissolved and a
+new army raised with more legitimate inclinations. Should the King accede
+to this, France will be completely disarmed and at the mercy of the Allies,
+and the King himself a state prisoner. The entrance into Paris, thro' the
+Faubourg St Denis, does not give to the stranger who arrives there for the
+first time a great idea of the magnificence of Paris; he should enter by
+the Avenue de Neuilly or by the Porte St Antoine, both of which are very
+striking and superb.
+
+Now you must not expect that I shall or can give you a description of all
+the fine things that I have seen or am about to see, for they have been so
+often described before that it would be a perfect waste of time, and I can
+do better in referring you at once to the _Guide des Voyageurs à Paris_; so
+that I shall content myself with merely indicating these objects which make
+the most impression on me.
+
+My first visit was, as you will have no doubt guessed, to the Palais Royal:
+there I breakfasted, there I dined, and there I passed the whole day
+without the least _ennui_. It is a world in itself. It swarms at present
+with officers of the Allied army. The variety of uniforms adds to the
+splendour and novelty of the scene. The restaurants and cafés are filled
+with them. The Palais Royal is certainly the temple of animal
+gratification, the paradise of gastronomes. The officers are indulging in
+all sorts of luxury, revelling in Champaign and Burgundy, in all the
+pleasures of the belly, as well as _in iis quae sub ventre sunt_. 'Twill be
+a famous harvest for the restaurateurs and for the Cyprians who parade up
+and down the Arcades, sure of a constant succession of suitors. In fact,
+whatever be the taste of a man, whether sensual or intellectual or both, he
+can gratify himself here without moving out of the precincts of the Palais
+Royal. Here are cafés, restaurants, shops of all kinds whose display of
+clocks, jewellery, stuffs, silks, merchandize from all parts of the world,
+is most brilliant and dazzling; here you find reading-rooms where
+newspapers, reviews and pamphlets of all tongues, nations and languages are
+to be met with; here are museums of paintings, statues, plans in relief,
+cosmoramas; here are libraries, gaming houses, houses of fair reception;
+cellars where music, dancing and all kinds of orgies are carried on;
+exhibitions of all sorts, learned pigs, dancing dogs, military canary
+birds, hermaphrodites, giants, dwarf jugglers from Hindostan, catawbas from
+America, serpents from Java, and crocodiles from the Nile. Here, so
+Kotzebue has calculated, you may go through all the functions of life in
+one day and end it afterwards should you be so inclined. You may eat,
+drink, sleep, bathe, go to the _Cabinet d'aisance_, walk, read, make love,
+game and, should you be tired of life, you may buy powder and ball or opium
+to hasten your journey across Styx; or should you desire a more classic
+_exit_, you may die like Seneca opening your veins in a bath. Deep play
+goes forward day and night, and I verily believe there are some persons in
+Paris who never quit these precincts. The restaurants and cafés are most
+brilliantly fitted up. One, _Le Café des Mille Colonnes_, so called from
+the reflection of the columns in the mirrors with which the wainscoat is
+lined, boasts of a _limonadière_ of great beauty. She is certainly a fine
+woman, dresses very well, as indeed most French women do, and has a
+remarkably fine turned arm which she takes care to display on all
+occasions. I do not, however, perceive much animation in her; she always
+appears the same, nor has she made any more impression on me--tho' I am of
+a very susceptible nature in this particular--than a fine statue or picture
+would do. There she sits on a throne and receives the hommage and
+compliments of most of the visitors and the money of all, which seems to
+please her most, for she receives the compliments which are paid her with
+the utmost _sang-froid_ and indifference, and the money she takes especial
+care to count. English troops, conjointly with the National Guard, do duty
+at the entrance of the Palais Royal from the Rue St Honoré; and it became
+necessary to have a strong guard to keep the peace, as frequent disputes
+take place between the young men of the Capital and the Prussian officers,
+against whom the French are singularly inveterate.
+
+The French, when left to themselves, are very peaceable in their pleasures
+and the utmost public decorum is observed; their sobriety contributes much
+to this; but if there were in London an establishment similar to that of
+the Palais Royal, it would become a perfect pandemonium and would require
+an army to keep the peace. The French police keep a very sharp look-out on
+all political offences, but are more indulgent towards all moral ones, as
+long as public decorum is not infringed, and then it is severely punished.
+But they have none of that censoriousness or prying spirit in France which
+is so common in England to hunt out and criticise the private vices of
+their neighbours, which, in my opinion, does not proceed from any real
+regard for virtue, but from a fanatical, jealous, envious, and malignant
+spirit. Those vice-hunters never have the courage to attack a man of wealth
+and power; but a poor artisan or labourer, who buys a piece of meat after
+twelve o'clock on Saturday night, or a glass of spirits during church-time
+on Sunday, is termed a Sabbath-breaker and imprisoned without mercy.
+
+In the Palais Royal the three most remarkable temples of dissipation are
+Very's for gastronomes, Robert's faro bank for gamesters, and the Café
+Montausier for those devoted to the fair sex. The Café Montausier is fitted
+up in the guise of a theatre where music, singing and theatrical pieces are
+given; you pay nothing for admission, but are expected to call for some
+refreshment. It is splendidly illuminated, and is the Café _par
+excellence_, frequented by those ladies who have made the opposite choice
+to that of Hercules, and who, taking into consideration the shortness and
+uncertainty of life, dedicate it entirely to pleasure, reflecting that
+
+ Laggiù nell' Inferno,
+ Nell' obblio sempiterno,
+ In sempiterno orrore,
+ Non si parla d'amore.
+
+Of course, this saloon is crowded with amateurs, and the Prussians and
+English are not the least ardent votaries of the Goddess of Paphos; many a
+vanquished victor sinks oppressed with wine and love on the breast of a
+Dalilah: this last comparison suggests itself to me from the immense
+quantity of hair worn by the Prussians, as if their strength, like that of
+Samson's, depended on their _chevelure_. There is a very pretty graceful
+girl who attends here and at the different restaurants and cafés with an
+assortment of bijouterie and other knick-knacks to sell. She is full of wit
+and repartee; but her answer to all those who attempt to squeeze her hand
+and make love to her is always: "_Achetez quelque chose._" Her name is
+Céline and she has a great flow of conversation on all subjects but that of
+love, which she invariably cuts short by "_Achetez quelque chose._"
+
+
+
+10th August.
+
+I have been to see the Museum of sculpture and painting in the Louvre, but
+what is to be seen there baffles all description:
+
+ Se tante lingue avessi e tante voci
+ Quanti occhi il cielo o quante arene il mare
+ Non basterian a dir le lodi immense.
+
+The _Apollo Belvedere_, the _Venus de Medici_ and the _Laocoon_ first
+claimed my attention, and engaged me for at least an hour and a half before
+I could direct my attention to the other masterpieces. I admire indeed the
+_Laocoon_, still more the _Venus_, but the _Apollo_ certainly bears away
+the palm and I fully participate of all Winkelmann's enthusiasm for that
+celebrated statue. The _Venus_ is a very beautiful woman, but the _Apollo_
+is a god. One is lost, and one's imagination is bewildered when one enters
+into the halls of sculpture of this unparalleled collection, amidst the
+statues of Gods, Demi-Gods, Heroes, Philosophers, Poets, Roman Emperors,
+Statesmen and all the illustrious worthies that adorned the Greek and Roman
+page. What subjects for contemplation! A chill of awe and veneration
+pervaded my whole frame when I first entered into that glorious temple of
+the Arts. I felt as I should were I admitted among supernatural beings, or
+as if I had "shuffled off this mortal coil" and were suddenly ushered into
+the presence of the illustrious tenants of another world; in fact, I felt
+as if Olympus and the whole Court of Immortals were open to my view. No! I
+cannot describe these things, I can only feel them; I throw down the pen
+and call upon expressive silence to muse their praise.
+
+Of the Picture Gallery too what can I say that can possibly give you an
+idea of its variety and extent? Here are the finest works of the Italian,
+Flemish, and French schools, and you are as much embarrassed to single out
+the favourite object, as the Grand Signor would be, among six or seven
+hundred of the most beautiful women in the world, to make his choice. The
+only fault I find in this collection is that there were rather too many
+Scripture pieces, Crucifixions, Martyrdoms and allegorical pictures, and
+too few from historical or mythological subjects. Yet perhaps I am wrong in
+classing the Scripture pieces with Martyrdoms, Crucifixions, Grillings of
+Saints and Madonnas; there are very many beautiful episodes in the
+Scriptures which would furnish admirable subjects for painters. Why then
+have they chosen disgusting subjects such as Judith sawing off Holofernes'
+head, Siserah's head nailed to the bedpost, John the Baptist's on a
+trencher, etc.? But the pictures representing Martyrdoms are too revolting
+to the eye and should not be placed in this Museum.
+
+It is reported that the Allies mean to strip this Museum [of sculpture and
+painting]. No! it cannot be, they never surely can be guilty of such an act
+of Vandalism and contemptible spite. I am aware that there is a great
+clamour amongst a certain description of English for restoring these
+statues and pictures to the countries from whence they came, and that it is
+the fashion to term the translation of them to Paris a revolutionary
+robbery; but let us bring these gentlemen to a calm reasoning on the
+subject.
+
+The statues and paintings in question belonged either to Governments at war
+with France, or to individuals inhabiting those countries; now, with
+respect to individuals, I will venture to affirm, on the best authority,
+that the property of no individual was taken from him without an
+equivalent. Those who had statues and pictures of value and wished to sell
+them, received their full value from the French Government, but there was
+no force used on the occasion; in fact, many who were in want of money were
+rejoiced at the opportunity of selling, as they could never have otherwise
+disposed of those valuable articles to individuals at the same price that
+the French Government gave. I recollect a day or two ago being in
+conversation with a Milanese on this subject and others connected with the
+occupation of Italy by the French. I happened to mention that the conquest
+of Italy by the Republican armies must have been attended with confiscation
+of property; he assured me that no such thing as confiscation of property
+took place; that so far from being the losers by the French invasion and
+the establishment of their system, they had on the contrary been
+considerable gainers, for that the country flourished under their
+domination in a manner before unknown, and that one of the greatest
+advantages attendant on the occupation was the establishment of an equality
+of weight and measures, the decimal division of the coin, the introduction
+of an admirable code of laws free'd from all barbarisms--legal, political
+and theological--and intelligible to all classes, so that there was no
+occasion to cite old authors and go back for three or four hundred years to
+hunt out authorities and precedents for what men of sense could determine
+at once by following the dictates of their own judgment.
+
+With respect to the statues and pictures belonging to the different
+governments of Italy, it must never be forgotten that these governments
+made war against the French Revolution either openly or insidiously, and
+did their utmost to aid the coalition to crush the infant liberties of
+France. Those who did not act openly did so covertly and indirectly; in
+short, from their tergiversations and intrigues, they had no claim whatever
+on the mercy of the conquerors, who treated them with a great deal of
+clemency. The destruction of these governments was loudly called for by the
+people themselves, who looked on the French as their deliverers.
+
+It will be admitted, I believe, that it is and has been the custom on the
+continent, in all wars, for all parties to levy war contributions on the
+conquered or occupied countries; but Buonoparte thought it more glorious
+for the French name to take works of art instead of money; and not a statue
+or picture was taken from the vanquished governments except by a solemn
+treaty of cession, or given in lieu of contributions at the option of the
+owners, and the Princes were very glad to give up their pictures and
+statues, which the most of them did not know how to appreciate, in lieu of
+money which they were all anxious to keep; and on these articles a fair
+value was fixed by competent judges. In this manner did the French become
+the possessors of these valuable objects of art, and in this manner was the
+noble Museum in Paris filled up, and surely nothing could be more generous
+and liberal than the use made of the Museum by the French Government;
+foreigners were indeed more favoured than the inhabitants themselves. To
+the inhabitants of Paris this Museum is open twice a week; but to
+foreigners on producing their passports, it is open every day in the week
+all the year round; artists of all nations are allowed, during a certain
+number of hours each day, to come to copy the statues and pictures which
+suit their taste; and stoves are lighted for their accommodation during
+winter, and all this gratis.--Now, before these objects of art were
+collected here, they were distributed, some in churches, and some in
+Government palaces. To see the first, required a specific introduction to
+the owner; to see the second, application to the attendants of the churches
+became necessary, and for both these you were required to pay fees to the
+servants and church-attendants, who are always impatient to take your fee
+and hurry you through the apartments or chapels, scarcely giving you time
+to examine anything. To be admitted into the Government palaces was a
+matter of favour, and here also fees were required.[32] Here in the Louvre
+there is no introduction required; no court to be paid to _major-domos_, no
+favour; it is open to all classes, high and low, without exception, and no
+money is allowed to be given.
+
+But there are some people, in their ridiculous fury against the French
+Revolution, who would fain persuade us that before that epoch there was a
+golden age on the earth, that there were no acts of violence committed, no
+frauds practised, no property injured, no individuals ill-used; that every
+Prince governed like Numa; that every noble was a Bayard, and every priest
+like a primitive apostle. Why I need go no further than the Seven Years'
+war to show that in that war, during the height of European civilisation,
+and carried on between the most polished nations in Europe, there were much
+more acts of violence and rapine carried on than ever were done by the
+French republicans. I by no means wish to excuse or even palliate the acts
+of ferocity which took place at that epoch of the French Revolution called
+the reign of Terror, which were executed by a people wrought up to frenzy
+by a recollection of their wrongs; and I know too well that many virtuous
+individuals fell victims to their indiscriminating fury; but I do believe
+and aver that much more clamour was made at the execution of a handful of
+corrupt courtiers, intriguing and profligate women of quality and worthless
+priests, than all the rest put together.
+
+To return to the Seven Years' war (I may be permitted to take this
+retrospect, I hope, since it is the fashion, and those who differ with me
+in opinions go much farther back than I do), let the French royalists and
+emigrants recollect the confiscation of property and barbarity exercised by
+Marshall Richelieu in Hanover, where many families were reduced to beggary.
+They may not chuse to recollect this; but the Hanoverians do and they have
+not forgotten the _Pavillon de Hanovre_, so called by the wits of the time
+from its having been built by the Marshall with money arising from the
+spoils of Hanover; will they recollect also the harsh treatment inflicted
+on the burghers and citizens of a town in Germany, who were shut up in a
+room and kept without food or drink for nearly three days because they
+would not consent to fix a heavy and unwarrantable contribution on their
+fellow citizens; when these unhappy but virtuous men were only allowed to
+go out for the necessities of nature attended by sentries, and on the third
+day, when fainting with hunger, a little bread and water was given to them,
+with an assurance that in future they were not to expect such luxuries.
+Have they forgot the devastation committed in Berlin by the Austrians in
+the Seven Years' war, when they pillaged, burned or destroyed all the
+valuable property of the royal Palaces, the most valuable works of art,
+vases, statues of antiquity, the loss of which could never be replaced;
+when they lopped off the heads, arms and legs of the statues? Have they
+forgot the conduct of the belligerent powers at the siege of Dresden at the
+same epoch, when whole families, among whom were helpless old men and women
+with children at the breast, were compelled to leave Dresden in the middle
+of a most rigorous winter and were driven to take refuge in the fields
+where the most of them perished with hunger and cold; and where many
+individuals lost their reason and became insane from the treatment they
+received? Have they forgotten the merciless barbarities inflicted by the
+Russians in the same war on the inhabitants of the Prussian territory?
+their ripping up and burning men, women, and children? and the dreadful
+retaliation inflicted on them at the battle of Zorndorff, when the
+Prussians, exasperated at the idea of those horrors so fresh in their
+memory, on being ordered to bury the Russian dead, threw the wounded men
+also belonging to that nation into the graves dug for the dead, to be thus
+buried alive, and hastily filled them up with earth, as if fearful that
+they might relent, did they give themselves time for reflection? These are
+not exaggerations; they are given by an author celebrated for his
+impartiality and deep research and who was an eye-witness of many of these
+proceedings; I mean Archenholz in his admirable history of the Seven Years'
+war.[33]
+
+Then again in the war of American Independence (and here my countrymen must
+excuse me if I point out the acts of injustice committed by them, when
+acting in obedience to an unprincipled and arbitrary government and in a
+cause hostile to freedom), who does not recollect the private property
+wantonly destroyed and confiscated by the English? their employing the
+Indian tribes, those merciless savages of the forest, to scalp, etc., which
+called forth the indignation of a Chatham? and the grossly unjust pillage
+and confiscation of property which took place at St Eustatius by the
+commanders of a _religious and gracious King_?[34] Again, who does not
+recollect the gentle but deep reproof given by the American General
+Schuyler to the English General Burgoyne, when the latter was made prisoner
+by the Americans under Gates? General Schuyler's valuable house, barns,
+etc., had been burned by the express order of Burgoyne. Nevertheless,
+Schuyler received him with dignified politeness, magnanimously stifled the
+recollection of the injury he had received, and obtained for him a good
+quarter, merely remarking, "General, had my house and farms not been
+burned, I could have offered you a more comfortable abode." How Burgoyne
+must have felt this reproof! yet he was not by nature a harsh man, but he
+had the orders of his government to exercise severities; he was educated in
+Tory principles, and passive obedience is their motto.
+
+Can one forget likewise even, in the late war, Nelson's conduct to
+Caraccioli at Naples, whom he caused to be hanged on board of an English
+ship of war, together with a number of other patriots, in violation of a
+solemn capitulation, by which it had been stipulated that they should be
+considered as prisoners of war and sent to France? Then again the wanton
+destruction of the Capitol and other public buildings at Washington not
+devoted to military purposes, which it is not usual to destroy or deface;
+and the valuable public library too which was burned? What excuse can be
+offered for this? Were the times of Omar returned? It is fair and allowed
+by the laws of war to blow up and destroy arsenals, magazines, containing
+warlike stores and engines of destruction, but to destroy with Gothic
+barbarity buildings of great symmetry and beauty, and a library too--O fie!
+
+Why I will defy any man to point out a single instance where the French
+republican armies or Napoleon ever injured or wantonly destroyed a single
+national edifice, a single work of art, a single book belonging to any
+other country! On the contrary, they invariably extended their protection
+to the Arts and Sciences. Why at Vienna, where there is, I understand, a
+most splendid museum, and many most valuable works of art and antiquity,
+tho' this city fell twice into their possession, they never destroyed or
+took away a single article; but, on the contrary, there, as well as in
+Berlin, they invited the inhabitants to form a civic guard for the
+protection of their property. As to the Vandalism shewn during the reign of
+Terror, and I by no means seek to palliate it, that was of short duration,
+it was madness, if you will, but it was disinterested--and other nations
+who talk a great deal about their superior morality would do well to look
+at home. They would there observe, in their own historic page, that the
+atrocities of the French Revolution have not only been equalled but
+surpassed perhaps by more dreadful scenes committed at Wexford in 1798,
+under the auspices of the Government then ruling Ireland and which the
+noble and virtuous ----[35] disdained to serve.
+
+Excuse this long digression, but I feel it my duty to open the eyes of my
+countrymen and prevent them from supporting on all occasions the unjust
+acts of their Government, which reflect dishonour on a great and
+enlightened nation; which can boast, among its annals, of some of the most
+heroic, splendid, and disinterested characters that ever the world
+produced.
+
+All that I need add on the subject of the statues and pictures is, that
+putting out of the question the justice or injustice of the restitution, it
+will be a great loss to England and to English artists in particular,
+should they be removed: many an artist can afford to make a trip to Paris,
+who would find it beyond his means to make a journey to Florence or Rome.
+
+If these objects of art are to be taken away, it should be stipulated so in
+the treaty of peace; and then everybody would understand it. This would be
+putting it on the fairest footing. You then say to France: "You gained
+these things by conquest; you lose them by defeat"; but for God's sake let
+us have no more of that _cant_ about revolutionary robberies!
+
+
+PARIS, ----
+
+I went for the first time to the Grand Opera, or, as it is here called, the
+Académie Royale de Musique, which is in the Rue de Richelieu. _Armida_ was
+the piece performed, the music by Glück. The decorations were splendid and
+the dancing beyond all praise. The scenes representing the garden of Armida
+and the nymphs dancing fully expressed in the mimic art those beautiful
+lines of Tasso:
+
+ Cogliam d'amor la rosa! amiamo or, quando
+ Esser si puote riamato amando![36]
+
+The effect of the dissolution of the palace and gardens by the waving of
+Armida's wand is astonishing; it appears completely to be the work of
+inchantment, from the rapidity of execution which follows the _potentissime
+parole_. The French recitative however does not please me. The serious
+opera is an exotic and does not seem to thrive on the soil of France. The
+language does not possess sufficient intonation to give effect to the
+recitative.
+
+On the contrary, the comic operas are excellent; and here the national
+music and singing appear to great advantage. It never degenerates to the
+grotesque or absurd _buffo_ of the Italians, but is always exquisitely
+graceful, simple, touching and natural.
+
+Among the ballets, I have seen perhaps three of the best, viz., _Achille à
+Scyros, Flore et Zéphire_ and _La folle par amour_. In the ballet of Flore
+and Zéphire, the dancers who did these two parts appeared more aerian than
+earthly. To use a phrase of Burke's, I never beheld so _beautiful a vision.
+Nina_, or _la folle par amour_, is a ballet from private life. The title
+sufficiently explains its purport; it is exquisitely touching and pathetic.
+O what a divine creature is Bigottini! what symmetry of form! what innate
+grace, what a captivating expression of countenance; and then the manner in
+which she did the mad scenes and her return to reason! Oh! I was moved even
+to tears. Never had any performance such an effect upon me. What a
+magnificent _tout ensemble_ is the Grand Opera at Paris! Whenever I feel
+chagrined or melancholy I shall come here; I feel as if I were in a new
+world; the fiction appears reality; my senses are ravished, and I forget
+all my cares.
+
+I have very little pleasure in visiting royal Palaces, unless they have
+been the residence of some transcendent, person like Napoleon or Frederick
+II of Prussia, as the sight of splendid furniture and royal pomp affords me
+no gratification; and I would rather visit Washington's or Lafayette's
+farms in company with these distinguished men than dine with all the
+monarchs of Europe. After a hasty glance at the furniture of the Tuileries,
+what fixed my attention for a considerable time was "La Salle des
+Maréchaux," where are the portraits of all the modern French Marshalls.
+They are all full length portraits and are striking resemblances; some are
+in the Marshall's undress uniform and others in the full court costume
+which is very elegant, being the costume of the time of Francis I with the
+Spanish hat and plumes. I did not observe Ney's or Soult's portraits among
+them.
+
+In front of the great square of the Tuileries where the troops exercise,
+stands the Arch of Triumph erected by Napoleon, commonly called _l'Arc du
+Carrousel_. It is a beautiful piece of architecture, but is far too small
+to tally with such a vast mass of buildings as the Palace and offices of
+the Tuileries. By the side of them it appears almost Lilliputian. It would
+have been better to have made it in the style of the triumphal arch of the
+Porte St Denis. On this arc of the Carrousel are _bas-reliefs_ both outside
+and inside, representing various actions of Napoleon's life. He is always
+represented in the Roman costume, with the imperial laurel on his brows,
+with kings kneeling, and presenting the keys of conquered cities. On the
+outside are statues, large as life, in modern military costume,
+representing the different _armes_ which compose the French army.[37] On
+the top of this Arc du Carrousel is an antique car of triumph, to which are
+harnessed the four bronze horses which were taken from the façade of the
+Church of San Marco in Venice. They are of beautiful workmanship and of
+great antiquity. What various and mighty revolutions have these horses
+witnessed! Cast in Corinth in the time of the glories of the Grecian
+commonwealths and removed by conquest to Rome, they witnessed the
+successive fall of the Grecian and Roman states; transferred to
+Constantinople in the time of Constantine, and from thence removed to
+Venice when Constantinople fell into the hands of the French and Venetians;
+transferred from thence to Paris in 1798, they have witnessed the
+successive falls of the Eastern and Western Empires, of the Republic of
+Venice and the Napoleonic dynasty and Empire. Report says they are to be
+restored to Venice; and who knows whether they may not be destined one day
+to return to their original country, Greece, under perhaps Russian
+auspices?
+
+The Gardens of the Tuileries which lie at the back part of the palace are
+very spacious, well laid out in walks and lined with trees. Large basins
+inlaid with stone, fountains and statues add to the grandeur of these
+gardens; they extend from the Tuileries as far as the Place Louis XV
+parallel to the Seine, and are separated by a wall and parapet and a
+beautiful cast iron railing from the Quai, and on the other side from the
+Rue de Rivoli, one of the new streets, and the best in Paris for
+pedestrians. On the side opposite the palace itself is the _Place Louis
+XV_, called in the time of the republic _Place de la Révolution_, and where
+the unfortunate Louis XVI suffered decapitation. The _Place Louis XV_ is by
+far the most magnificent thing of the kind I have ever seen and far exceeds
+the handsomest of our squares in London. On one side of it is the _Hótel du
+Garde Meuble_, a superb edifice. On the other the Quai, the river; and on
+the other side of the river is the _Palais du Corps législatif_, now the
+place where the Chamber of Deputies hold their sitting, and which has a
+magnificent façade. In front of this place are the Champs Elysées and
+avenue of Neuilly and behind the gardens and palace of the Tuileries.
+
+My next visit was to the _Place Vendôme_, where stands the majestic column
+of the Grand Army. To me this column is the most striking thing of its kind
+that I have hitherto seen. It is of bronze and of the most beautiful
+workmanship, cast from the cannon taken from the Austrians in the war of
+1805, and on it are figured in bas-relief the various battles and
+achievements, winding round and round from the base to the capital. It is
+constructed after the model of the Column of Trajan in Rome.
+
+The next place I visited was the Chamber of Deputies. It is a fine building
+with a Doric façade and columns; it is peculiarly striking from its noble
+simplicity. On the façade are bas-reliefs representing actions in
+Napoleon's life. The flight of steps leading to the façade is very grand,
+and there are colossal figures representing Prudence, Justice, Fortitude
+and other legislative virtues. The Chamber itself where the Deputies hold
+their sittings is in the form of a Greek theatre; the arch of the
+semi-circle forms the gallery appropriated to the audience, and comprehends
+in its enclosure the seats of the deputies like the seats in a Greek
+theatre; on the chord of the semi-circle where the _proscenium_ should be,
+is the tribune and President's seat. The whole is exceedingly elegant. The
+Orator whose turn it is to speak leaves his seat, ascends the tribune and
+faces the Deputies. The anti-rooms adjoining this Chamber are fitted up
+with long tables and fauteuils and are appropriated to the sittings of the
+various committees. These antichambers are hung round with pictures
+representing the victories of the French armies; but they are covered with
+green baize and carefully concealed from the public eye in order to stifle
+recollections and prevent comparisons.
+
+
+PARIS, August.
+
+I mounted on horseback and rode out to St Cloud to breakfast, passing
+through the Champs Elysées, the Bois de Boulogne and the little town of
+Passy, and returned by the Quai, as far as the bridge of Jéna, which I
+passed and went to visit the _Hôtel des Invalides, le Champ de Mars_, the
+_Pantheon_ or Church of St Geneviève and the Palace of the Luxembourg. This
+was pretty good work for one day; and as you will expect some little
+account of my ideas thereon, I shall give you a _précis_ of what most
+interested me.
+
+In the Champs Elysées are quartered several English regiments who are
+encamped there, and this adds to the liveliness of the scene; our soldiers
+seem to enjoy themselves very much. They are in the midst of places of
+recreation of all kinds, such as guinguettes, tennis-courts, dancing salons
+and cafés, and besides these (places of Elysium for English soldiers), wine
+and brandy shops innumerable; our soldiers seem to agree very well with the
+inhabitants. In the Bois de Boulogne are Hanoverian troops as well as
+English. At Passy I stopped at the house occupied by my friend, Major C. of
+the 33rd Regt.,[38] who was to accompany me to St Cloud. St Cloud is an
+exceedingly neat pretty town, well and solidly built, and tolerably large.
+There are a great many good restaurants and cafes, as St Cloud with its
+Palace, promenades and gardens forms one of the most favourite resorts of
+the Parisians on Sundays and _jours de fête_. Diners _de société_ and
+_noces et festins_ are often made here; and there is both land and water
+conveyance during the whole day. There are two roads by land from Paris:
+the one on the Quai the whole way; the other through the Bois de Boulogne
+and Champs Elysées. The gardens of St Cloud are laid out something in the
+style of a _jardin anglais_, but mixed with the regular old fashioned
+garden; it abounds in lofty trees, beautiful sites and well arranged vistas
+commanding extensive views of Paris and the country environing. St Cloud
+was the favourite residence of Napoleon; and the furniture in the palace
+here shows him to be a man of the most refined taste. All is elegant and
+classic; there is nothing superfluous; the furniture is modern, but in
+strict imitation of the furniture of the ancients and chiefly in bronze.
+There are superb vases and candelabras in marble, magnificent clocks of
+various kinds, marble busts, and busts in bronze of great men, and bronze
+statues large as life holding lamps. The chairs and sofas too are in a
+classic taste, as are the beds and baths. We were informed here that
+Blucher, who passed one night here, tore with his spur the satin covering
+of one of the sofas and that he did it wilfully; but I never can believe
+that the old man would be so silly, and I rather think that this story is
+an invention of the keeper of the Palace, or that if it was done, it was
+done by an accident merely. But the fact is that Blucher has a contempt for
+and hates the Parisians and likes to mortify them on all occasions; he
+threatens to do a number of things which he never seriously intends, merely
+for the sake of teasing them; and it must be owned that they deserve a
+little contempt from the want of _caractère_ they showed on the entrance of
+the Allies. Be it as it may, Blucher is the _bête noire_ of the Parisians
+and they are as much afraid of him as the children are of _Monsieur
+Croque-mitaine_.
+
+We returned from St Cloud by the Quai, crossed the bridge of Jéna,
+galloped along the _Champs de Mars_, took a hasty glance at the _Hôtel des
+Invalides_, a magnificent edifice and which may be distinguished from all
+other buildings by its gilded cupola. It is a superb establishment in every
+respect, and is furnished with an excellent library. A great many old
+soldiers are to be seen in this library occupied in reading; they are very
+polite to all visitors, particularly to ladies. Nothing can better
+demonstrate the superior character, intelligence and deportment of the
+French soldiers over those of all other countries than the way in which
+they employ their time in literary pursuits, their dignified politeness to
+visitors and the intelligent answers they give to questions. I am afraid
+our British veterans, brave as they are in the field, occupy themselves,
+when laid up as invalids, more in destroying their bodies by spirituous
+liquors than in improving their minds by reading. The Chapel of this
+establishment where were displayed the banners and trophies taken at
+different epochs from the enemies of France, and which were much mutilated
+by the wars since the Revolution, is now stripped of all the ensigns of
+glory. They were all burned by the French themselves previous to the
+capitulation of Paris in 1814, in order to prevent their falling into the
+hands of the enemy. An old soldier who was my guide related this with tears
+in his eyes, but suddenly checking himself said: "_Mais telle est
+l'histoire_."
+
+The only things now in this Chapel that interest the eye of the traveller
+are the monuments of Vauban and Turenne. Of the rest nought remains but the
+brilliant souvenirs.
+
+ Fuit Ilium, et ingens
+ Gloria Teucrorum!...[39]
+
+I had a great deal of difficulty in inducing this old soldier to accept of
+three franks; I told him at last that, as he did not want it himself, to
+take it and give it to somebody that did. I then visited the rest of the
+establishment. There is a whole range of rooms which contains models or
+plans in relief of all the fortresses of France; they are admirably and
+most minutely executed; not only the fortifications and public buildings,
+but the private houses, the gardens, orchards, meadows, mountains, hill and
+dale, bridges, trees, every feature of the ground in fine and of the
+surrounding country are given in miniature. In fact it gives you the same
+idea of the places themselves and of the environing country as if you were
+held up in the air over them to inspect them; or as if you viewed them from
+a balloon at the distance of 800 yards from the earth. The models of
+Strassburg, Lille and three or four others have been taken away by the
+Austrians and Prussians, but I have seen those of Calais, Dunkirk,
+Villefranche, Toulon, and Brest, and in fact almost every other French
+fortress. This is one of the most interesting sights in Paris, and for this
+we are certainly indebted to the occupation; for I question much if
+travellers were ever permitted to see these models until Paris fell into
+the hands of the Allies. Prussian sentries do duty at the doors; how
+grating this must be to the old invalids! Among the models I must not omit
+to mention a very curious one which represents the battle of Lodi. The town
+of Lodi, the bridge and river are admirably executed. The soldiers are
+represented by little figures about a quarter of an inch in height and
+cobwebs are disposed so as to represent the smoke of the firearms,
+Buonaparte and his staff are on horseback on one side of the bridge. There
+is also a very fine model of the _Hôtel des Invalides_ itself.
+
+From hence we went to the garden and palace of the Luxembourg. These
+gardens form the midday and afternoon promenade of that part of the city.
+In one wing of the Palace is the Chamber of Peers, elegantly fitted up and
+in some respect resembling a Greek theatre. The busts of Cicero, Brutus,
+Demosthenes, Phocion and other great men of antiquity adorn the niches of
+this chamber and on the grand _escalier_ are the statues in natural size of
+Kleber, Dessaix, Caffarelli and other French generals. Report says that
+these statues will be removed.
+
+In the picture gallery at the Luxembourg is a choice collection of pictures
+of the modern French school such as Guérin, David, etc. The subjects are
+extremely well chosen, being taken from the mythology or from ancient and
+modern history. I was too glad to find no crucifixions, martyrdoms, nor
+eternal Madonnas. I distinguished in particular the _Judgment of Brutus_
+and the _Serment des Horaces et des Curiaces_. Connoisseurs find the
+attitudes too stiff and talk to you of the Italian school; but I prefer
+these; yet I had better hold my tongue on this subject, for I am told I
+know nothing about painting.
+
+Poor Labédoyère[40] is sentenced to be shot by the Court Martial which
+tried him, and the sentence will be carried immediately into execution. His
+fate excites universal sympathy, and I have seen many people shed tears
+when talking on this subject. He certainly ought to be protected by the
+12th Article of the Capitulation. The French are very uneasy; the Allies
+have begun to strip the Louvre and there is no talk of what the terms of
+peace are to be, or what is the determination of the Allies. This is a
+dreadful state of uncertainty for the French people and may lead to a
+general insurrection. The Allies continue pouring troops into France and
+levying contributions. "_Vae victis_" seems their motto. France is now a
+disarmed nation, and no French uniform is to be seen except that of the
+National Guard and the "Garde Royale." France is at the mercy of her
+enemies and prostrate at their feet; a melancholy prospect for European
+liberty!
+
+The Allies have parades and reviews two or three times a week and the
+Sovereigns of Russia, Austria and Prussia constantly attend; Wellington is
+their showman. These crowned Heads like mightily playing at soldiers; I
+should think His Grace must be heartily tired of them. Massacres and
+persecutions of the Protestants have begun to take place in the South of
+France, and the priests are at work again threatening with excommunication
+and hell the purchasers and inheritors of emigrant estates and church
+lands. These priests and emigrants are incorrigible. Frequent quarrels take
+place almost every evening in the Palais Royal between the Prussian
+officers and the French, particularly some of the officers from the army of
+the Loire. I rather suspect these latter are the aggressors. The Prussians
+being gorged with plunder come there to eat, drink and amuse themselves and
+have as little stomach for fighting as the soldier of Lucullus had after
+having enriched himself; but the officers of the army of the Loire are,
+poor fellows, in a very different predicament; they have not even been paid
+what is due to them, and they, having none of those nice felicities (to use
+an expression of Charlotte Smith's)[41] which make life agreeable, are
+ready for any combat, to set their life on any cast, "to mend it, or to be
+rid of 't." The Prussians indulge in every sort of dissipation, which they
+are enabled to do by the plunder which they have accumulated, and of which
+they have formed, I understand, a _dépôt_ at St Germain. They send these
+articles of plunder to town every day to be sold, and then divide the
+profits, which are sure to be spent in the Palais Royal, and other places
+of revel and debauchery.
+
+They sometimes affect a fastidiousness of stomach which is quite laughable,
+and not at all peculiar to the Germans, who are in general blessed by
+nature with especial good appetites; and they spend so much money that the
+English officers who have not had the advantages of plunder that these
+Prussians have had must appear by the side of them stingy and niggardly.
+
+I was witness one day to a whimsical scene, which will serve to give you an
+idea of the airs of importance these gentlemen give themselves. I was one
+day at Versailles and after having visited the palace and gardens I entered
+the Salon of a restaurateur and called for a veal cutlet and _vin
+ordinaire_. There was a fat Prussian Major with two or three of his
+companions at one of the tables, who had been making copious libations to
+Bacchus in Burgundy and Champaign. He heard me call for _vin ordinaire_,
+and whether it was to show his own magnificence I know not, but he called
+out to the _cafetière_: "Madame, votre vin ordinaire est il buvable? car
+j'en veux donner a mon trompette, et s'il n'est pas bon, il n'en boira pas.
+Faites venir mon trompette." Now I dare say in his own country this Major
+would not have disdained even the "schwarze Bier" of Brandenburgh.
+
+Scarcely any quarrels, I believe, take place between the English and
+French, nor did I hear of any violent fracas but one. In this instance, the
+English officers concerned must have been sad, brutal, vulgar fellows.
+They, however, after behaving in a most gross insulting manner, were
+compelled by some Frenchmen not to eat but to drink their words, and that
+out of a vessel not usually employed in drinking. I shall not repeat the
+contemptible affair, but it furnished the subject of a caricature.
+
+The English officers in general behave in a handsome and liberal manner,
+and their conduct was spoken of in high terms of encomium by very many of
+the French themselves. I regret however exceedingly that any of the British
+officers should have imbibed the low prejudices and vulgar hatred against
+the French, which certain people preach up in England to cover their own
+peculations and interested views. A young friend of mine, with whom I was
+one day talking on political subjects, said to me: "I cannot help agreeing
+with you in many things, but I am staggered when I think that your ideas
+and reasoning are so contrary to the ideas in which I have been brought up;
+so that I rather avoid entering at all on political questions."
+
+I do not wonder at all at this, for I recollect when I was at school at
+Eton, the system was to drill into the heads of the boys strong
+aristocratic principles and hatred of Democracy and of the French in
+particular; we were ordered to write themes against the French Revolution
+and verses of triumph over their defeats, with now and then a sly theme on
+the great advantage of hereditary nobility; in these verses God Almighty
+was to be represented as closely allied to the British Government and a
+_sleeping partner_ of the Administration. One of the fellows of Eton
+College actually told the late Mr Adam Walker, the celebrated lecturer on
+natural and experimental philosophy, who was accustomed to give lectures
+annually to the Etonians, that his visits were no longer agreeable and
+would be dispensed with in future; as "Philosophy had done a great deal of
+harm and had caused the French Revolution."
+
+With respect to my visit to Versailles, I was much struck with the vast
+size and magnificence of the buildings and with the ingenuity displayed in
+the arrangement of the grounds and the numerous groups of statues,
+grottos, aqueducts, fountains and ruins. Still it pleases me less than St
+Cloud, for I prefer the taste of the present day in gardening and the
+arrangement of ground, to the ponderous and tawdry taste of the time of
+Louis XIV, and I prefer St Cloud to Versailles, just as I should prefer a
+Grecian Nymph in the simple costume of Arcadia to a fine court lady rouged
+and dressed out with hoops, diamonds, and headdress of the tune of Queen
+Anne. Napoleon must have had an exquisite taste.
+
+
+[32] Exceptions to this are, I understand, the Gallery at Florence, and the
+ Museo Vaticano at Rome, which are both open to all and no fees allowed.
+
+[33] Johann Wilhelm Archenholz (1743-1812), author of the _Geschichte des
+ Siebenjährigen Krieges_, 1789.--ED.
+
+[34] In February, 1781, before the declaration of war was generally known
+ in the West Indies, Rodney's fleet surrounded the Dutch island of
+ Eustatius, which had become a sort of entrepôt for supplying America
+ with British goods; two hundred and fifty ships, together with several
+ millions worth of merchandise, were seized and sold at a military
+ auction. The plunder of Eustatius was bitterly commented upon In the
+ British House of Commons.--Lee Richard Hildreth, _The History of the
+ United States_, vol. III, p. 335.--ED.
+
+[35] The name is in blank. Major Frye may have meant Beauchamp Bagenal
+ Harvey (1762-1798), the squire of Wexford who deserted to the Irish
+ rebels.--ED.
+
+[36] Tasso, _Jerusalemme liberata_, canto XVI, ottava 15.--ED.
+
+[37] For instance, a Cuirassier, a Dragoon, a Grenadier, a Tirailleur, an
+ Artilleryman.
+
+[38] Major G. Colclough, senior major of the 33rd Regt.--ED.
+
+[39] Virgil, _Aen_., II. 325.--ED.
+
+[40] La Bédoyere (Charles Huchet, Comte de) distinguished himself in
+ several of the Napoleonic wars, in particular at Ratisbonne and
+ Borodino. Being a colonel at Grenoble, in March, 1815, he deserted to
+ Napoleon's cause and was nominated by him general and _pair de
+ France_. In July, 1815, he was arrested in Paris, tried for high
+ treason and shot, August 19, in spite of Benj. Constant's efforts to
+ save him.--ED.
+
+[41] Charlotte Smith (1749-1806), author of _Emmeline, or the Orphan of the
+ Castle_ (1788), _Celestina_ (1792), _The Old Manor House_ (1793),
+ etc.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+From Paris to Bruxelles--Visiting the plains of Waterloo--The Duke de Berri
+at Lille--Beauvais--Return to Paris--Remarks on the French theatre--
+Talma--Mlle Duchesnois--Mlle Georges-French alexandrine verse--The Abbé
+Delille--The Opéra Comique.
+
+I met with my brother-in-law and his nephew at Paris, and hearing from them
+that they had an intention of returning to England by the way of Bruxelles,
+with the idea of visiting the plains of Waterloo, I was induced to
+accompany them. We started on the 18th August, taking the exact route from
+Paris that was taken by Napoleon. Passed the first night at St Quentin; the
+second at a small village on the line between Mons and Charleroy in the
+Belgian territory. The next morning, after breakfasting at Nivelles, we
+proceeded to Quatre Bras and Mont St Jean. At the little cabaret called _à
+la belle Alliance_ we met a host of Englishmen who had been to behold the
+field of battle; Lacoste, the peasant who was Napoleon's guide on the day
+of battle, was about to conduct them across the fields to Hougoumont. We
+followed them. The devastation of the place, every tree being pierced with
+bullets, and the whole premises being nearly burned to the ground, seemed
+to astonish their _weak minds_; one of them was not contented till he had
+measured the length and breadth of the garden and orchards.
+
+Cuirasses, helmets, swords and various other spoils of war found on the
+spot, were offered for sale by some boys and eagerly bought up as relics.
+My brother-in-law made a purchase of a helmet, sword and cuirass, intending
+to hang it up in his hall. For my part I have seen, and can see no reason
+whatever to rejoice at this event. I fear it is pregnant with infinite
+mischief.
+
+We arrived at Bruxelles on the afternoon of the 20th August and after
+visiting thePark, _Alée verte_ and Palace of Laeken, we proceeded the next
+morning on our journey to Lille.
+
+The Duke of Berri was at Lille and a grand _fête_ was given in the evening
+to celebrate the second restoration of the Bourbons. Fireworks were let
+off, the city was brilliantly illuminated and boys (hired of course) went
+about the streets singing the following refrain
+
+ À bas, à bas Napoléon!
+ Vivent, vivent les Bourbons!
+
+A number of beautiful women elegantly attired paraded up and down the
+public promenades, which are exceedingly well and tastefully laid out. This
+city is built with great regularity, and the streets are broad, neat, and
+clean. It is by far the handsomest city I have ever seen either in France
+or Belgium. The _Hôtel de Ville_ and the theatre both are on the _Grande
+Place_ and are well worth seeing. Lille is renowned for its fortifications;
+I much wished to visit the citadel but I was not permitted. At dinner at
+the table d'hôte at the _Hôtel du Commerce_, I remarked a French officer
+declaiming violently against Napoleon; but I heard afterwards that he was
+the son of an Emigrant; the rest of the company did not seem to approve his
+discourse and shewed visible impatience at it.
+
+Lille may be easily recognised at its approach from the immense quantity of
+wind-mills that are in the vicinity of this city, some of which are used
+for grinding of wheat and others for the expression of oil. A great deal of
+flax from whence the oil is made, grows in the country.
+
+I left Lille on the morning of the 24th inst., with the courier for Amiens.
+From Amiens I took the diligence to Beauvais and on arrival there I put up
+under the hospitable roof of my friend Major G., of the 18th Light
+Dragoons, lately made Lt.-Colonel for his gallantry at Waterloo.[42] I did
+not want for amusement here, for the next day a _fête champêtre_ was given
+just outside the walls of the town, and I admired the grace and tournure of
+the female peasantry and their good dancing. How much more creditable are
+these innocent and agreeable _fêtes_ to the fairs and meetings in England,
+which are generally signalized in drunkenness! The next afternoon presented
+a novel sight to the inhabitants of Beauvais, it being a grand cricket
+match played between the officers of the 10th and 18th Dragoons. It was won
+by the latter, mainly owing to the superior play of Colonel G. of the 18th,
+who never touched a bat since he was at Burney's school. The Officers
+afterwards dined _al fresco_ and many toasts accompanied by the huzzas were
+given, to the astonishment of the bystanders, who seemed to consider us as
+little better than barbarians. One of the officers wishing to pay a
+compliment to the inhabitants of Beauvais proposed the health of Louis
+XVIII, but they seemed to take it coldly and not at all to be flattered by
+the compliment.
+
+After five days very agreeable residence at Beauvais, I put myself in the
+diligence to return to Paris. During the journey an ardent political
+altercation arose between a young lady, who appeared to be a warm partisan
+of Napoleon, on the one side, and a Garde du Corps on the other. The lady
+was seconded by a young gentleman, of whom it was difficult to say, whether
+he sustained her argument from a dislike to the present order of things, or
+from a wish to ingratiate himself in her favour. The argument of the Garde
+du Corps was espoused, but soberly, by one of the passengers who was a
+mathematical professor at one of the Lyceums; he was not by any means an
+Ultra, but he supported the Bourbons, with moderate, gentlemanly and I
+therefore believe sincere attachment. This professor seemed a well informed
+sort of man; he told me that he was acquainted with Sir James M., formerly
+recorder at Bombay. On our arrival at the _Bureau des Messageries_, the
+whole company forgot their disputes and parted good friends; and the young
+man who was partisan of the young lady in the political dispute took care
+to
+inform himself of her abode in Paris.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Remarks on the various dramatic performances which I witnessed at Paris,
+with opinions on the French theatre in general.
+
+In my ideas of dramatic works I am neither rigidly classic nor romantic,
+and I think both styles may be good if properly managed and the interest
+well kept up; in a word I am pleased with all genres _hors le genre
+ennuyux_,[43] and tho' a great admirer of Shakespeare and Schiller, I am
+equally so of Voltaire, Racine and Corneille; I take equal delight in the
+pathos of the sentimental dramas of Kotzebue as in the admirable satire and
+_vis comica_ of the unrivalled Molière, so that on my arrival at Paris I
+was not violently prejudiced either for or against the French stage, but
+rather pre-occupied, to use a gentler term, in its favour; and I have not
+been at all disappointed, for I think I can pronounce it with safety the
+first, perhaps the only stage in Europe.
+
+I now mean to speak not of Operas, nor of Operas-comiques, nor of
+melodrames, nor of vaudevilles; all these have their respective merits; but
+when I speak of the French stage, I confine myself to the regular theatre
+of tragedy and comedy, of their classical pieces; in a word, to the
+dramatic performances usually given at the _Théâtre Français_.
+
+The first piece I saw performed was _Manlius_;[44] but I was too far off
+from the stage to judge of the acting, and could do little more than catch
+the sounds. The parterre and the whole house was full. I was in the fourth
+tier of boxes, yet I could distinguish at intervals the finest and most
+prominent traits, of Talma's acting, particularly in that scene where he
+upbraids his friend with having betrayed him. This he gave with uncommon
+energy and effect. The plot of this piece is very similar to that of
+_Venice preserved_.[45]
+
+The next piece I saw represented was the _Avare_ of Molière, which to me
+was one of the greatest dramatic treats I had ever witnessed. Every part
+was well supported. The next was _Athalie_ of Racine. Here too I was highly
+gratified. Mlle Georges performed the part of Athalie and gave me the
+perfect ideal of the haughty Queen. Her narration of the dream was given
+with the happiest effect, and in her attempt to conceal her uneasiness and
+her affected contempt of the dream in these lines:
+
+ Un songe, me devrois--je inquiéter d'un songe?
+
+she seemed in reality to labour under all the anxiety and fatigue arising
+from it. That fine scene between Joad and Joas was well given, and the
+little girl who did the part of Joas performed with a good deal of spirit.
+The actor who played Joad recited in a most impressive manner the advice to
+the young prince terminating in these lines:
+
+ Vous souvenant, mon fils, que caché sous ce lin,
+ Comme eux vous fûtes pauvre et comme eux orphelin.
+
+The interrogating scene between Athalie and Joad was given spiritedly, but
+the rather abrupt and uncourtierlike reply to the Queen's remark, "Ils sont
+deux puissans dieux"--"Lui seul est dieu, Madame, et le vôtre n'est rien"--
+excited a laugh and I fancy never fails to do so, every time the piece is
+performed.
+
+Racine has several passages in his tragedies which perhaps have rather too
+much _naiveté_ for the dignity of the cothurnus; for instance in the answer
+of Agamemnon to Achille in the tragedy of _Iphigénie_:
+
+ Puisque vous le savez, pourquoi le demander?
+
+A poet of to-day would be quizzed for a line like the above, but who dare
+venture to point out any defect in an author of whom Voltaire has said and
+with justice too, that the only criticism to be made of him (Racine) would
+be to write under every page: "Admirable, harmonieux, sublime!"
+
+The costume and the decorations at the _Théâtre français_ are so strictly
+classical and appropriate in every respect, that it is to me a source of
+high delight to witness the representation of the favourite pieces of
+Racine, Corneille, Molière and Voltaire, which I have so often read with so
+much pleasure in the closet and no small quantity of which I have by heart.
+
+The next piece I saw was the _Cinnna_ of Corneille; and here it was that I
+beheld Talma for the second time. I was of course highly pleased, tho' I
+was rather far off to hear very distinctly; this was, however, no very
+great loss, as I was perfectly well acquainted with the tragedy. Talma's
+gestures, his pause's, his natural mode of acting gave a great relief to
+the long declamation with which this tragedy abounds. When this tragedy was
+given it was during the time that poor Labédoyère's trial was going on, and
+the allusions to Augustus' clemency were eagerly seized and applauded. It
+was hoped that Louis XVIII would imitate Augustus. Vain hope!
+
+I have seen _Phèdre_; the part of Phèdre by that admirable actress Mlle
+Duchesnois, who performs the part so naturally and with so much passion
+that we entirely forget the extreme plainness of the person. She acts with
+far more feeling and pathos than Mlle Georges. I shall never be able to
+forget Mlle Duchesnois in _Phèdre_. She gave me a full idea of the
+impassioned Queen, nor were it possible to depict with greater fidelity the
+"Vénus toute entière à sa proie attachée," as in that beautiful speech of
+Phèdre to Oenone wherein she reveals her passion for Hippolyte and
+pourtrays the terrible struggle between duty and female delicacy on the one
+hand, and on the other a flame that could not be overcome, convinced as it
+were of the complete inutility of further efforts of resistance and
+invoking death as her only refuge. I was moved even to tears. I am so great
+an admirer of the whole of this speech beginning "Mon mal vient de plus
+lorn" etc., and ending "Un reste de chaleur tout prêt à s'exhaler," that I
+think in it Racine has not only united the excellencies of Euripides,
+Sappho and Theocritus in describing the passion of love, but has far
+surpassed them all; that speech is certainly the masterpiece of French
+versification and scarcely inferior to it is that beautiful and ingenuous
+confession of love by Hippolyte to Aricie. What an admirable _pendant_ to
+the love of Phèdre! In Hippolyte you behold the innocence, simplicity and
+ingenuousness of a first and pure attachment: in Phèdre the _embrasement_,
+the ungovernable delirium of a criminal passion.
+
+I have seen Mlle Duchesnois again in the _Mérope_ of Voltaire and admire
+her more and more. This is an admirable play. The dialogue is so spirited;
+the agitation of maternal tenderness, and the occasional bursts of feelings
+impossible to be restrained, render this play one of the most interesting
+perhaps on the French stage, and Mlle Duchesnois gave with the happiest
+effect her part in those two scenes; the first wherein she supposes Egisthe
+to be the person who has killed her son; in the other where having
+discovered the reality of his person, she is obliged to dissemble the
+discovery, but on Egisthe being about to be sacrificed she exclaims
+"Barbare, c'est mon fils!" The part of Egisthe was given by a young actor
+who made his appearance at this theatre for the first tune, and he executed
+his part with complete success (Firmin, I think, was his name). Lafond did
+the part of Polyphonte and did it well. At this tragedy many allusions were
+caught hold of by the audience according as they were Bourbonically or
+Napoleonically inclined; at that part of Polyphonte's speech wherein he
+says:
+
+ Le premier qui fut Roi fut un soldat heureux.
+ Qui sert bien son pays n'a pas besoin d'ayeux.
+
+Thunders of applause proceeded from those who applied it to Napoleon. At
+the line:
+
+ Est il d'autre parti que celui de nos rois?
+
+a loud shout and clapping proceeded from the Royalists; but I fancy if
+hands had been shown these last would have been in a sad minority. I have
+often amused myself with comparing the _Mérope_ of Voltaire with that of
+Maffei and am puzzled to which to give the preference. Maffei has made
+Polyphonte a more odious and perhaps on that account a more theatrical
+character, while Voltaire's Polyphonte is more in real life. In the play of
+Voltaire he is a rough brutal soldier, void of delicacy of feeling and not
+very scrupulous, but not that praeternatural deep designing villain that he
+is represented in the piece of Maffei. In fact Maffei's Polyphonte appears
+too _outré_; but then on the stage may not a little exaggeration be
+allowed, just as statues which are destined to be placed in the open air or
+on columns appear with greater effect when larger than the natural size?
+Alfleri seems to have given the preference to the Mérope of Voltaire.
+
+I have seen Talma a second time in the part of Nero in the Britannicus of
+Racine; Mlle Georges played the part of Agrippina. Talma was Nero from head
+to foot; his very entry on the stage gave an idea of the fiery and
+impatient character of the tyrant, and in the scene between him and his
+mother Agrippina nothing could be better delineated. The forced calm of
+Agrippina, while reproaching her son with his ingratitude, and the
+impatience of Nero to get rid of such an importunate monitress, were given
+in a style impossible to be surpassed. Talma's dumb show during this scene
+was a masterpiece of the mimic art. If Talma gives such effects to his
+rôles in a French drama, where he is shackled by rules, how much greater
+would he give on the English or German stages in a tragedy of Shakespeare
+or Schiller!
+
+Blank verse is certainly better adapted to tragedy than rhymed
+alexandrines, but then the French language does not admit of blank verse,
+and to write tragedies in prose, unless they be tragedies in modern life,
+would deprive them of all charm; but after all I find the harmonious pomp
+and to use a phrase of Pope's "The long majestic march and energy divine"
+of the French alexandrine, very pleasing to the ear. I am sure that the
+French poets deserve a great deal of credit for producing such masterpieces
+of versification from a language, which, however elegant, is the least
+poetical in Europe; which allows little or no inversion, scarce any poetic
+license, no _enjambement_, compels a fixed caesura; has in horror the
+hiatus; and in fine is subject to the most rigorous rules, which can on no
+account be infringed; which rejects hyperbole; which is measured by
+syllables, the pronunciation of which is not felt in prose; compels the
+alternative termination of a masculine or feminine rhyme; and with all this
+requires more perhaps than any other language that cacophony be sedulously
+avoided. Such are the difficulties a French poet has to struggle with; he
+must unite the most harmonious sound with the finest thought. In Italian
+very often the natural harmony of the language and the music of the sound
+conceal the poverty of the thought; besides Italian poetry has innumerable
+licenses which make it easy to figure in the Tuscan Parnassus, and where
+anyone who can string together _rime_ or _versi sciolti_ is dignified with
+the appellation of a poet; whereas from French poetry, a mediocrity is and
+must be of necessity banished. Neither is it sufficient for an author to
+have sublime ideas; these must be filed and pruned. Inspiration can make a
+poet of a German, an Italian or an Englishman, because he may revel in
+unbounded license of metre and language, but in French poetry inspiration
+is by no means sufficient; severe study and constant practise are as
+indispensable as poetic verve to constitute a French poet. The French poets
+are sensible of this and on this account they prefer imitating the
+ancients, polishing their rough marble and fitting it to the national
+taste, to striking out a new path.
+
+The Abbé Delille, the best poet of our day that France has produced, has
+gone further; he had read and admired the best English poets such as
+Milton, Pope, Collins and Goldsmith, and has not disdained to imitate them;
+yet he has imitated them with such elegance and judgment that he has left
+nothing to regret on the part of those of his countrymen who are not
+acquainted with English, and he has rendered their beauties with such a
+force that a foreigner Versed in both languages who did not previously know
+which was the original, and which the translation, might take up passages
+in Pope, Thomson, Collins and Goldsmith and read parallel passages in
+Delille and be extremely puzzled to distinguish the original: for none of
+the beauties are lost in these imitations. And yet, in preferring to
+imitate, it must not be inferred that he was deficient in original
+thoughts.
+
+To return to the theatre, I have seen Mlle Mars in the _rôle_ of Henriette
+in the _Femmes Savantes_ of Molière. Oh! how admirable she is! She realizes
+completely the conception of a graceful and elegant Frenchwoman of the
+first society. She does not act; she is at home as it were in her own
+salon, smiling at the silly pretensions of her sister and at the ridiculous
+pedantry of Trissotin; her refusing the kiss because she does not
+understand Greek was given with the greatest _naiveté_. In a word Mlle Mars
+reigns unrivalled as the first comic actress in Europe.
+
+I have seen too, _Les Plaideurs_ of Racine and _Les fourberies de Scapin_
+of Molière, both exceedingly well given; particularly the scene in the
+latter wherein it is announced to Géronte that his son had fallen into the
+hands of a Turkish corsair, and his answer "Que diable allait-il faire dans
+la galère?"
+
+I have seen also _Andromaque_, _Iphigénie_ and _Zaïre_. Mlle Volnais did
+the part of Andromaque; but the monotonous plaintiveness of her voice,
+which never changes, wearies me. In _Iphigénie_ I was more gratified; for
+Mlle Georges did the part of Clytemnestre, and her sister, a young girl of
+seventeen, made her début in the part of Iphigénie with great effect. The
+two sisters supported each other wonderfully well, and Lafond did Agamemnon
+very respectably.
+
+Mlle Georges the younger, having succeeded in _Iphigénie_, appeared in the
+part of Zaïre, a bold attempt, and tho' she did it well and with much
+grace, yet it was evidently too arduous a task for her. The whole onus of
+this affecting piece rests on the _rôle_ of Zaïre. In the part where
+_naiveté_ was required she succeeded perfectly and her burst: "Mais
+Orosmane m'aime et j'ai tout oublie" was most happy; but she was too faint
+and betrayed too little emotion in portraying the struggle between her love
+for Orosmane and the unsubdued symptoms of attachment to her father and
+brother and to the religion of her ancestors. In short, where much passion
+and pathos was required, there she proved unequal to the task; but she has
+evidently all the qualities and dispositions towards becoming a good
+actress, and with more study and practise I have no doubt that three or
+four years hence, she will be fully equal to the difficult task of giving
+effect to and portraying to life, the exquisitely touching and highly
+interesting _rôle_ of Zaïre. She was not called for to appear on the stage
+after the termination of the performance, tho' frequently applauded during
+it. The actor who did the part of Orosmane, in that scene wherein he
+discovers he has killed Zaïre unjustly, gave a groan which had an unhappy
+effect; it was such an awkward one, that it made all the audience laugh; no
+people catch ridicule so soon as the French.
+
+What I principally admire on the French stage is that the actors are always
+perfect in their parts and all the characters are well sustained; the
+performance never flags for a moment; and I have experienced infinitely
+more pleasure in beholding the dramas of Racine and Voltaire than those of
+Shakespeare, and for this reason that, on our stage, for one good actor you
+have the many who are exceedingly bad and who do not comprehend their
+author: you feel consequently a _hiatus valde deflendus_ when the principal
+actor or actress are not on the stage. I have been delighted to see Kemble,
+and Mrs Siddons and Miss O'Neil, and while they were on the stage I was all
+eyes and ears; but the other actors were always so inferior that the
+contrast was too obvious and it only served to make more conspicuous the
+flagging of interest that pervades the tragedies of Shakespeare, _Macbeth_
+alone perhaps excepted. I speak only of Shakespeare's faults as a
+dramaturgus and they are rather the faults of his age than his own; for in
+everything else I think him the greatest litterary genius that the world
+ever produced, and I place him far above any poet, ancient or modern; yet
+in allowing all this, I do not at all wonder that his dramatic pieces do
+not in general please foreigners and that they are disgusted with the low
+buffoonery, interruption of interest and want of arrangement that ought of
+necessity to constitute a drama; for I feel the same objections myself when
+reading Shakespeare, and often lose patience; but then when I come to some
+sublime passage, I become wrapt up in it alone and totally forget the piece
+itself. In order to inspire a foreigner with admiration for Shakespeare, I
+would not give him his plays to read entire, but I would present him with a
+_recueil_ of the most beautiful passages of that great poet; and I am sure
+he would be so delighted with them that he would readily join in the "All
+Hail" that the British nation awards him. Thus you may perceive the
+distinction I make between the creative genius who designs, and the artist
+who fills up the canvas; between the Poet and the Dramaturgus. I am
+probably singular in my taste as an Englishman, when I tell you that I
+prefer Shakespeare for the closet and Racine or Voltaire or Corneille for
+the stage: and with regard to English tragedies, I prefer as an acting
+drama Home's _Douglas_[46] to any of Shakespeare's, _Macbeth_ alone
+excepted; and for this plain reason that the interest in _Douglas_ never
+flags, nor is diverted.
+
+In giving my mite of admiration to the French stage, I am fully aware of
+its faults, of the long declamation and the _fade galanterie_ that
+prevailed before Voltaire made the grand reform in that particular: and on
+this account I prefer Voltaire as a tragedian to Racine and Corneille. The
+_Phédre_ and _Athalie_ of Racine are certainly masterpieces, and little
+inferior to them are _Iphigénie, Andromaque_ and _Britannicus_, but in the
+others I think he must be pronounced inferior to Voltaire; as a proof of my
+argument I need only cite _Zaïre, Alzire, Mahomet, Sémiramis, l'Orphelin de
+la Chine, Brutus_. Voltaire has, I think, united in his dramatic writings
+the beauties of Corneille, Racine and Crébillon and has avoided their
+faults; this however is not, I believe, the opinion of the French in
+general, but I follow my own judgment in affairs of taste, and if anything
+pleases me I wait not to ascertain whether the "master hath said so."
+
+It shows a delicate attention on the part of the directors of the _Théâtre
+Français_, now that so many foreigners of all nations are here, to cause to
+be represented every night the masterpieces of the French classical
+dramatic authors, since these are pieces that every foreigner of education
+has read and admired; and he would much rather go to see acted a play with
+which he was thoroughly acquainted than a new piece of one which he has not
+read; for as the recitation is extremely rapid it would not be so easy for
+him to seize and follow it without previous reading.
+
+Of Molière I had already seen the _Avare_, the _Femmes savantes_ and the
+_Fourberies de Scapin_. Since these I have seen the _Tartuffe_ and _George
+Dandin_ both inimitably performed; how I enjoyed the scene of the _Pauvre
+homme!_ in the _Tartuffe_ and the lecture given to George Dandin by M. and
+Mme de Sotenville wherein they recount the virtues and merits of their
+respective ancestors. Of Molière indeed there is but one opinion throughout
+Europe; in the comic line he bears away the palm unrivalled and here I
+fully agree with the "general."
+
+I must not quit the subject of French theatricals without speaking of the
+_Opéra comique_ at the _Théâtre Faydeau_. It is to the sort of light pieces
+that are given here, that the French music is peculiarly appropriate, and
+it is here that you seize and feel the beauty and melody of the national
+music; these little _chansons_, _romances_ and _ariettas_ are so pleasing
+to the ear that they imprint themselves durably on the memory, which is no
+equivocal proof of their merit. I cannot say as much for the tragic singing
+in the _Opéra seria_ at the Grand French Opera, which to my ear sounds a
+perfect psalmody. There is but one language in the world for tragic
+recitative and that is Italian. On the other hand, in the _genre_ of the
+_Opéra comique_, the French stage is far superior to the Italian. In the
+French comedy everything is graceful and natural; the Italians cannot catch
+this happy medium, so that their comedies and comic operas are mostly
+_outré_, and degenerate into downright farce and buffoonery.
+
+
+[42] Major James Grant, of the 18th Light Dragoons, was made a Brevet
+ Lieutenant Colonel on 18th June, 1815.--ED.
+
+[43] A phrase in prose, often quoted as a verse, from Voltaire's preface to
+ the _Enfant Prodigue: Tous les genres sont bons, hors le genre
+ ennuyeux_.--ED.
+
+[44] A tragedy often acted by Talma, the work of Antoine d'Aubigny de
+ Lafosse (1653-1708).--ED.
+
+[45] Thomas Otway's once celebrated tragedy, 1682.--ED.
+
+[46] _The Tragedy of Douglas_, by John Home (1722-1808).--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+From Paris to Milan through Dijon, Chalon-sur-Saône, Lyons, Geneva and the
+Simplon--Auxerre--Dijon--Napoleon at Chalon-sur-Saône--The army of the
+Loire--Mâcon--French _grisettes_--Lyons--Monuments and theatricals--
+Geneva--Character and opinions of the Genevois--Voltaire's chateau at
+Ferney--The chevalier Zadera--From Geneva to Milan--Crossing the
+Simplon--Arona--The theatres in Milan--Rossini--Monuments in Milan--Art
+encouraged by the French--Mr Eustace's bigotry--Return to Switzerland--
+Clarens and Vevey--Lausanne--Society in Lausanne--Return to Paris--The
+Louvre stripped--Death of Marshal Ney.
+
+I left Paris on the 17th Sept., in the diligence of Auxerre, The company
+was as follows: a young Genevois who had served in the National Guard at
+Paris, and had been wounded in a skirmish against the Prussians near that
+city; a young Irish Templar; a fat citizen of Dijon and an equally fat
+woman going to Dole. We arrived the following day at 11 o'clock at Auxerre,
+a town situated on the banks of the Seine. Water conveyance may be had from
+Paris to Auxerre, price 12 francs the person: the price in the diligence is
+28 francs. We had during our journey much political conversation; the
+Bourbons and the English government were the objects of attack, and neither
+my friend the barrister nor myself felt the least inclined to take up their
+cause. The Genevois had with him Fouché's exposé of the state of the
+nation, wherein he complains bitterly of the conduct of the Allies. All
+France is now disarmed and no troops are to be seen but those in foreign
+uniform. The face of the country between Paris and Auxerre is not
+peculiarly striking; but the soil appears fertile and the road excellent.
+After breakfast we started from Auxerre and stopped to sup and sleep the
+same night at Avallon. At Semur, which we passed on the following day,
+there is a one arched bridge of great boldness across the river Armançon.
+We arrived in the evening at Dijon. The country between Auxerre and Dijon
+is very undulating in gentle hill and dale, but for the want of trees and
+inclosures it has a bleak appearance. As you leave Avallon and approach
+Dijon, the hills covered with vines indicate your arrival in a wine
+country. I put up at the _Chapeau rouge_ at Dijon and remained there one
+day, in order to visit the _Chartreuse_ which is at a short distance from
+the town and commands an extensive view. It was devastated during the
+Revolution. The view from it is fine and extensive and that is all that is
+worth notice. The country about it is rich and cultivated, and the
+following lines of Ariosto might serve for its description:
+
+ Culte pianure e delicati colli,
+ Chiare acque, ombrose ripe e prati molli.[47]
+
+ 'Mid cultivated plain, delicious hill,
+ Moist meadow, shady bank, and crystal rill.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+The city of Dijon is large, handsome and well built. It has an appearance
+of industry, comfort and airiness. There are several mustard manufactories
+in this town. A dinner was given yesterday by the municipality to the
+National Guard, and an immense quantity of mustard was devoured on the
+occasion in honor of the staple manufactory of Dijon. From Dijon I put
+myself in the diligence to go to Chalon and after stopping two hours at
+Beaune, arrived at Chalon at 5 o'clock p.m. The country between Dijon and
+Chalon is flat, but cultivated like a garden. It is likewise the wine
+country _par excellence_. I do not know a wine more agreeable to palate
+than the wine of Beaune.
+
+At Chalon I put up at the _Hôtel du Parc_. Chalon is beautifully situated
+on the banks of the Saône. The Quai is well constructed and forms an
+agreeable promenade. There is an Austrian garrison in Chalon. The hostess
+of the inn told me that Napoleon stopped at her house on his way from Lyons
+to Paris, when he returned from Elba, and she related to me with great
+eagerness many anecdotes of that extraordinary man: she said that such was
+the _empressement_ on the part of the inhabitants to see him, and embrace
+him by way of testifying their affection, that the Emperor was obliged to
+say: "Mais vous m'étouffez, mes enfans!" In fact, had the army remained
+neutral, the peasantry alone would have carried the Emperor on their
+shoulders to Paris. It is quite absurd to say that a faction did this and
+that it was effectuated merely by the disaffection of the Army. The Army
+did its duty in the noblest manner, for it is the duty of every army to
+support the national cause and the voice of the people, and by no means to
+become the blind tools of the Prince; for it is absurd, as it is degrading
+to humanity, it is impious to consider the Prince as the proprietor of the
+country and the master of the people; he is, or ought to be, the principal
+magistrate, the principal soldier paid by the people, like any other
+magistrate or soldier, and like them liable to be cashiered for misconduct
+or breach of faith. This is not a very fashionable doctrine nowadays, and
+there is danger of it being forgotten altogether in the rage for what is
+falsely termed legitimacy; it becomes therefore the bounden duty of every
+friend of freedom to din this unfashionable doctrine into the ears of
+Princes and unceasingly to exclaim to them and to their ministers:
+
+ Discite justitiam moniti et non temnere gentes.[48]
+
+In their conduct on this occasion the French soldiers proved themselves far
+more constitutional than those of any other army in Europe; let despots,
+priests and weak-headed Tories say what they please to the contrary.
+
+I embarked the following morning at 12 o'clock in the _coche d'eau_ for
+Lyons. There was a very numerous and motley company on board: there were
+three bourgeois belonging to Lyons returning thither from Paris; a quiet
+good-humoured sort of woman not remarkable either for her beauty nor
+vivacity; a young Spaniard, an adherent of King Joseph Napoleon, very
+taciturn and wrapped up in his cloak tho' the weather was exceeding hot; he
+seemed to do nothing else but smoke _cigarros_ and drink wine, of which he
+emptied three or four bottles in a very short time--a young Piedmontese
+officer, disbanded from the army of the Loire, who no sooner sat down on
+deck than he began to chaunt Filicaja's beautiful sonnet, "_Italia, Italia,
+O tu cui feo la sorte_," etc.--a merchant of Lyons who had been some time
+in England, and spoke English well--a Lyonnese Major of Infantry, also of
+the army of the Loire, who had served in Egypt in the 32nd Demi-brigade;
+three Austrian officers of Artillery with their servants. A large barge
+which followed and was towed by the _coche d'eau_ was filled with Austrian
+soldiers, and on the banks of the river were a number of soldiers of the
+Army of the Loire returning to their families and homes.
+
+The peaceable demeanour and honourable conduct of this army is worthy of
+admiration, and can never be sufficiently praised: not a single act of
+brigandage has taken place. The Austrian officers expressed to me their
+astonishment at this, and said they doubted whether any other army in
+Europe, disbanded and under the same circumstances, would behave so well. I
+told them the French soldier was a free-man and a citizen and drawn from a
+respectable class of people, which was not the case in most other
+countries. Yes, these gallant fellows who had been calumniated by furious
+Ultras, by the base ministerial prints of England, and the venal satellites
+of Toryism, who had been represented as brigands or as infuriated Jacobins
+with red caps and poignards, these men, in spite, of the contumely and
+insult they met with from servile prefects, and from those who never dared
+to face them in the field, are a model of good conduct and they preserve
+the utmost subordination, tho' disbanded: they respect scrupulously the
+property of the inhabitants and pay for everything. Mr. L., the young Irish
+barrister, told me at Dijon that he left his purse by mistake in a shop
+there in which were 20 napoleons in gold, when a soldier of the army of the
+Loire, who happened to be in the shop, perceived it and came running after
+him with it, but refused to accept of anything, tho' much pressed by Mr.
+L., who wished to reward him handsomely for his disinterested conduct. Yes,
+the French soldier is a fine fellow. I have served against them in Holland
+and in Egypt and I will never flinch from rendering justice to their
+exemplary conduct and lofty valour. No! it is not the French soldiery who
+can be accused of plundering and exaction, but what brought the French name
+in disrepute was the conduct of certain _prefects_ and _administrators_ in
+Germany who were promoted to these posts for no other reason than because
+they were of the old _noblesse_ or returned _Emigrants_, whom Napoleon
+favoured in preference to the Republicans whom he feared. These emigrants
+repaid his favours with the basest ingratitude; after being guilty of the
+grossest and most infamous _concussions_ on the inhabitants of those parts
+of Germany where their jurisdiction extended, they had the hypocrisy after
+the restoration to declaim against the oppression of the _Usurper's_
+government and its system: but Napoleon richly deserved to meet with this
+ingratitude for employing such unprincipled fellows. I believe he was never
+aware of the villany they carried on, or they would have met with his
+severest displeasure in being removed from office, as was the case with
+Wirion at Verdun.[49]
+
+I do not find that the French soldiers with whom I have conversed are so
+much attached to the person of the Emperor as I was led to believe; but
+they are attached to their country and liberty; and in serving him, they
+conceived they were serving the man _par excellence_ of the People.
+
+The French army too was beloved by the people, instead of being dreaded by
+them as the armies of most other European nations are. In short, whenever I
+met with and held conversation with soldiers of this army, I was always
+tempted to address them in the words of Elvira to Pizarro when she seeks to
+console him for his defeat:
+
+ Yet think another morning shall arise,
+ Nor fear the future, nor lament the past.[50]
+
+The French Major was very much inclined to take up a quarrel with an
+Austrian officer, on my account, but I dissuaded him. The cause was as
+follows. A young Austrian boy, servant to one of the officers of Artillery,
+had entered the _coche d'eau_ at Chalon, some minutes before his master,
+and began to avail himself of the right of conquest by taking possession of
+the totality of one of the cabins and endeavouring to exclude the other
+passengers; among other things he was going to thrust my portmanteau out of
+its place. I called to him to let it alone, when the French Major stepped
+forward and said that if he dared to touch any of the baggage belonging to
+the passengers, he would punish him on the spot and his master also, for
+that he longed to measure swords with those "Jean F---- d'Autrichiens."
+Fearful of a serious quarrel between them and being unwilling that any
+dispute should occur on my account, I requested the Major not to meddle
+with the business, for that I was sure the Austrian officer would check the
+impertinence of his servant when he came on board; and that if he did not,
+I was perfectly able and willing to defend my own cause. The Austrian
+officers came on board a few minutes after, when I addressed them in
+German, and explained to them the behaviour of the boy; they scolded him
+severely for his impertinence to us and threatened him with the _Schlag_,
+should it occur again. The rest of the journey passed without any incident.
+I found that my friend the Major had served in the French army in Egypt in
+the division Lanusse in the battle of the 21st March, 1801, (30 Ventose)
+and that consequently we were opposed to each other in that battle, as I
+was then serving as a Lieutenant in the Queen's Regiment, commanded by that
+excellent and amiable officer the Earl of D[alhousie] in General Doyle's
+brigade.
+
+The voyage on the Saône presents some pleasing and picturesque points of
+view; the _coteaux_ on the banks of the river are covered with vines. We
+arrived at 8 o'clock in the evening to sup and sleep at Mâcon and put up at
+the _Hôtel des Sauvages_. We had a most sumptuous repast, fish, flesh,
+fowls, game, fruit and wine in profusion, for all which, including our
+beds, we had only to pay 2-1/2 francs the person.
+
+There is a spacious Quai at Mâcon, which always adds to the beauty of a
+city, and there are some fine buildings, public and private. I need not
+enlarge on the excellence of the Mâcon wine. The country girls we observed
+on the banks of the river as we floated along, and the _grisettes_ of the
+town who were promenading on the Quai when we arrived, wore a peculiarly
+elegant _costume_ and their headdress appeared to me to be something
+Asiatic.
+
+The voyage on the subsequent day was more agreeable than the preceding one.
+The country between Mâcon and Lyons is much more beautiful and diversified
+than that which we have hitherto seen and resembles much the picturesque
+scenery of the West-Indian landscape. One part between Mâcon and Trévoux
+resembles exactly the island of Montserrat.
+
+Within two miles of Trévoux we were hailed by some _grisettes_ belonging to
+the inns at that place, in order to invite us to dine at their respective
+inns. There was one girl exceedingly beautiful whose name was Sophie,
+daughter of the proprietor of the _Hôtel des Sauvages_ at Trévoux. She, by
+her grace and coquetry, obtained the most recruits and when we disembarked
+from the boat, she led us in triumph to her hotel. From her beauty and
+graceful manner, Sophie, in a country where so much hommage is paid to
+beauty, must be a most valuable acquisition to the interests of the inn,
+and tho' she smiles on all, she takes care not to make herself cheap, and
+like Corisca in the _Pastor Fido_ she holds put hopes which she does not at
+all intend to gratify. After passing by the superb scenery on the banks of
+the river (which increases in interest as you approach Lyons), the _Isle
+Barbe_ and _la Tour de la belle Allemande_, we arrived at Lyons at 5 p.m.
+and debarked on the _Quai de la Saône_. A _fiacre_ took me up and deposited
+me safe at the _Hôtel du Nord_ situated on the _Place St Claire_ and not
+many yards distant of the _Quai du Rhône_.
+
+
+LYONS, 26th Sept.
+
+Lyons is situated on a tongue of land at the junction of the Saône and
+Rhône, and there is a fine bridge on the spot where the streams unite,
+called _le pont du Confluent_, which joins the extremity of the tongue of
+land with the right bank of the Saône. There is besides a large bridge
+across the Rhône, higher up, before it joins the Saône, leading in a right
+line from the _Hôtel de Ville_; and two other bridges across the Saône. The
+_Quai du Rhône_ is by far the finest and most agreeable part of the city.
+It is spacious, well paved, aligned with trees, and boast the finest
+edifices public and private in the whole city; it is the favourite
+promenade of the _beaux_ and _belles_ of Lyons. The sight of the broad and
+majestic Rhône itself is a grand object, and on a fine day the prospect is
+augmented by the distant view of the fleecy head of Mont Blanc. On this
+Quai and within a 100 yards of the bridge on the Rhône are the justly
+celebrated _bains du Rhône_, fitted up in a style of elegance even superior
+to those called _les Bains Vigier_ on the Seine at Paris. The grand
+Hospital is also on the Quai; the facade is beautiful; its architecture is
+of the Ionic order and the building itself as well as its interior economy
+has frequently elicited the admiration of travellers. Among the Places in
+this city the finest is that of Bellecour.
+
+The scenery is extremely diversified in the environs of Lyons, and in the
+city there is great appearance of wealth and splendour. Lyons flourished
+greatly during the time of the continental blockade, as it was the central
+depôt of the commerce between France and Italy. Napoleon is much respected
+and regretted here, and with reason, as he was a great benefactor to this
+city. The Lyonnese are too frank, too open in their sentiments and too
+grateful not to render justice to his great talents and good qualities,
+while they blame and deplore his ambition. In fact an experience of a few
+days and some acquaintance I made here has given me a very favourable
+impression of the inhabitants of this city. The men are frank in their
+manners, polite, well informed, and free from all frivolity. The women are
+in general handsome, well shaped, and have much grace and are exceedingly
+well educated; they seem totally free from the _Petite-maîtressism_ of the
+Parisian women, and both sexes seem to possess a good deal of what the
+French term _caractère_. Had the Parisians resembled the Lyonnese, Paris
+would never have fallen twice into the hands of the enemy, nor would the
+Lyonnese women have welcomed the entry of the invaders into their city with
+waving handkerchiefs, etc. These qualities of the inhabitants, the beauty
+of the country, and the cheapness of all the comforts and luxuries of life,
+would make Lyons one of the most agreeable places of residence to a
+foreigner of liberal sentiments and principles.
+
+Cloth and silk are the staple manufactures of Lyons, particularly the
+latter; I accompanied my friend Mr M---- to see his fabrique of silk which
+is of considerable extent and importance, and everything appeared to me, as
+far as one totally ignorant of the business and its process could judge,
+admirably regulated and rapid in its execution. The _tournure_ of the
+_grisettes_ of Lyons is very striking and they possess completely the
+_grata protervitas_, the _vultus nimium lubricus aspici_ which Horace so
+much admires in Glycera.
+
+I visited both the theatres here, viz.: the _Grand Théâtre_, situated near
+the _Hôtel de Ville_, and the smaller one called the _Théâtre des
+Célestins_. At the former was some good dancing, and at the latter I was
+engaged in a conversation which I cannot forbear citing as it will serve to
+show the dislike the people have to the feudal system and the dread they
+have of its re-establishment, tho' they can know nothing about it except by
+tradition. The piece performed was called _Le petit Poucet_ (Tom Thumb and
+the Ogre); but I missed my old acquaintance the Ogre and his seven-league
+boots of Mother Goose, and found that in this melodrama he was transformed
+into a tyrannical and capricious _Seigneur Féodal_. There was a very pretty
+young lady about 16 years of age accompanied by her father in the same box
+with me, and I observed to her, "Où est donc l'Ogre? il parait que l'on en
+a fait un Seigneur féodal." "Oui, monsieur (she replied), et avec raison,
+car ils étaient bien les Ogres de ce temps là." I entered into a long
+conversation with my fair neighbour and found her well informed and well
+educated, with great good sense and knowledge of the world far beyond her
+years. She told me that she had begun to study English and that her father
+was a miniature painter. I took leave of her not without feeling much
+affected and my heart not a little "percosso dall' amoroso strale."
+
+I must not forget to mention that there is a most spacious and magnificent
+building on the _Quai du Rhône_ to the North of the bridge, which serves as
+a café and ridotto or assembly room for balls, etc. I am afraid to say how
+many feet it has in length; but it is the most superb establishment of the
+kind I have ever met with.
+
+Fortunately for the city of Lyons, the famous decree of Robespierre for
+its destruction, and the column with the inscription, "Lyon a porté les
+armes contre la liberté; Lyon n'est plus," which was to occupy its place,
+was never put in execution and tho' this city suffered much from
+revolutionary vandalism yet it soon recovered and has flourished ever since
+in a manner unheard of at any former period. No people are more sensible
+than the Lyonnese of the great benefits produced by the Revolution, and no
+people more deprecate a return to the _ancien régime_.
+
+
+Oct. 2nd, GENEVA.
+
+I started in the diligence for Geneva on the 28th Sept. and found it
+exceedingly cold on ascending the mountain called the _Cerdon_; the scenery
+is savage and wild, and the road in many parts is on the brink of
+precipices. We stopped at Nantua for supper and partook of some excellent
+trout. There is a large lake near the town, and 'tis here that the Swiss
+landscape begins. Commanding a narrow pass stands the fort of L'Ecluse. The
+Austrians lost a great many men in attempting to force it. From this place
+you have a noble view of the Alps and Mont-Blanc towering above them. As
+this was the first time I beheld these celebrated mountains I was
+transported with delight and my mind was filled with a thousand classical
+and historical recollections! The scenery, the whole way from Fort l'Ecluse
+to Geneva, is most magnificent and uncommonly varied. Mountain and valley,
+winter and summer, on the same territory. Descending, the city of Geneva
+opens gradually; you behold the lake Leman and the Rhône issuing from it.
+We entered the city, which is fortified, and after crossing the double
+bridge across the Rhône, we arrived at the _Hôtel de l'Eau de Genève_ at 12
+o'clock. The most striking thing in the city of Geneva to the traveller's
+eye as he enters it, is the view of the arcades on each side of the street,
+excellent for pedestrians and for protection against sun and rain, but
+which give a heavy and gloomy appearance to the city. An immense number of
+watch-makers is another distinguishing feature in this city. The first
+thing shewn to me by my _valet de place_ was the house where Jean Jacques
+Rousseau was born; I then desired him to shew me the spot where that
+barbarian Calvin caused to be burnt the unhappy Servetus for not having the
+same religious opinions as himself.
+
+The most agreeable promenades of the city are on the bastions and ramparts,
+a place called _La Treille_ and a garden or park of small extent called
+_Plain Palais_. In this park stands on a column the bust of J.J. Rousseau.
+This park was the scene of a great deal of bloodshed in 1791 on account of
+political disputes between the aristocratic and democratic parties, or
+rather between the admirers and imitators of the French Revolution and
+those who dreaded such innovations. This affair excited so much horror, and
+the recollection of it operated so powerfully on the imagination of the
+inhabitants, that the place became entirely abandoned as a public
+promenade, and avoided as a polluted spot for many years. Very likely
+however a sort of lustration has taken place; an oration was pronounced and
+the place again declared worthy of contributing to the recreation of the
+inhabitants. It is now become the favourite promenade of the citizens of
+Geneva, tho' there are still some who cannot get over their old prejudices
+and never set their foot in it. There is likewise a pleasant walk as far as
+the town of Carrouge in Savoy, which town has been lately ceded by the King
+of Sardinia to the republic of Geneva. In Geneva the sentiments of the
+inhabitants do not seem to be favourable either to the French Revolution,
+or to Napoleon. Their political ideas accord very much with those professed
+by the government party in England, and they make a great parade of them
+just now, as a means of courting the favour of England and of the Allied
+Sovereigns. The government here have shewn a great disposition to second
+the views of the Allied Powers in persecuting those Frenchmen who have been
+proscribed by the Bourbon government.
+
+This state lost its independence during the revolutionary wars and was
+incorporated with France. As the citizens were suspected of being more
+favourable to the English than suited the policy of the French government
+of that time, they were viewed with a jealous eye and I believe some
+individuals were harshly treated; but what most vexed and displeased them
+was the enforcement of the conscription among them, for the Genevois do not
+like compulsion; they are besides more pacific than war-like and tho' like
+the Dutch they have displayed great valour where their interest is at
+stake, yet Mercury is a deity far more in veneration among them than
+Bellona. The natural talent of this people is great, and it has been
+favoured and developed by the freedom of their institutions; and this
+republic has produced too many eminent men for that talent to be called in
+question; they seem to have decided talents and dispositions for financial
+operations. A Genevois has the aptitude of great application united to a
+very discerning, natural genius, and he generally succeeds in everything he
+undertakes. Literature is much cultivated here, and the females, who are
+in general handsome and graceful, excel not only in the various feminine
+accomplishments, such as music, dancing and drawing, but they carry their
+researches into the higher branches of litterature and science and acquire
+with great facility foreign languages. It is true that you now and then
+meet with a little pedantry on the part of the young men and some of the
+young women are _tant soit feu précieuses_; and you may guess from their
+conversation, which is sometimes forced, that the person who speaks has
+been learning his discourse by heart from some book in the morning, with
+the intention of sporting it as a natural conversation in the evening. In
+short, one does not meet with that _abandon_ in society that is to be met
+with in Paris; you must measure your words well to shine in a Genevese
+society. This, however, is a very pardonable sort of coxcombry; and tho' it
+appear sometimes pedantic, and occasionally laughable, yet it tends to
+encourage learning and science, and compels the young men to read in order
+to shine and captivate the fair.
+
+The Genevese women make excellent wives and mothers; and many strangers,
+struck with their beauty and talent, as well as with the _agrémens_ of the
+country in general, marry at Geneva and settle themselves there for life.
+It is observed that the Genevoises are so attached to their country that on
+forming a matrimonial connection with foreigners, they always stipulate
+that they shall not be removed from it. On the dismemberment of the Empire
+of Napoleon, Geneva was _agregé_ to the Helvetic Confederation, as an
+independent Canton of which there are now twenty-two. Three, viz. Geneva,
+Vaud, and Neufchatel, are French in language and manners. One, the Tessino,
+is Italian, and the remaining eighteen are all German. It is a great
+advantage to Geneva to belong to the Helvetic Confederacy, as formerly,
+when she was an isolated independent state, she was in continual dread of
+being swallowed up by one or other of her two powerful neighbours, France
+and the King of Sardinia, and only existed by their forbearance and mutual
+jealousy.
+
+I walked out one morning to Ferney in order to visit the chateau of
+Voltaire and to do hommage to the memory of that great man, the benefactor
+of the human race. It was he who gave the mortal blow to superstition and
+to the power of the clergy. It is the fashion for priests, Ultras and
+Tories to rail against him, but I judge him by his works and the effect of
+his works. His memory is held in reverence by the inhabitants of Ferney as
+their father and benefactor. He spent his whole fortune in acts of the most
+disinterested charity; he saved entire families from ruin and portioned off
+many a young woman who was deprived of the gifts of fortune and enabled
+them to form happy matrimonial connections; in short, doing good seems to
+have been one of the most ardent passions of his soul. In three memorable
+instances he shewed his hatred of cruelty and injustice, and unmasked
+triumphantly ecclesiastical imposture and fanaticism. He has been
+reproached with vanity, but surely that may be pardoned in a man who
+received the hommage of the whole literary world, who was considered as an
+oracle, and whose every sentence was recorded; whose talent was so
+universal, that he excelled in every branch of litterature that he
+undertook.
+
+Ferney, which was only a miserable village when Voltaire first took up his
+residence there, is now a large flourishing and opulent town.
+
+I found Voltaire's Chateau occupied by a fat heavy Swiss Officer who was on
+duty there, Ferney being at this moment occupied by the troops of the Swiss
+confederation. He was at breakfast, but on my stating to him that I was
+come to see the apartments of Voltaire he directed the housekeeper to shew
+them to me. On the left hand side after ascending a flight of steps, before
+you come into the Château, is a Chapel built by Voltaire with this simple
+inscription: "_Deo erexit Voltaire_." In the apartment usually occupied by
+him for the purpose of composition, are preserved his chair, table,
+inkstand and bed as sacred relics; and in the Salon are to be seen the
+portraits of several public characters, his contemporaries, and which were
+constantly appended there in his life time. Among these portraits I
+distinguished those of Frederick the Great of Prussia, Catherine II of
+Russia, Lekain, Diderot, Alembert, Franklin, Helvetius, Marmontel and
+Washington, besides many others. There is nothing remarkable either in the
+Château, or in the gardens appertaining to it; but as it stands on an
+elevation, it commands a fine view, which is so well described in that ode
+which begins:
+
+ Ô maison d'Aristippe, ô jardins d'Epicure!
+
+I returned to Geneva and dined with my friend M. Picot the banker, who
+presented me to his brother's family, which I found a very amiable one, and
+I was particularly delighted with his father, a fine venerable old man, who
+is a pastor of the Church of Geneva and a great admirer of our poets
+Thomson and Milton.
+
+I have made acquaintance at the _Ecu de Genève_ with a very gallant and
+accomplished officer, the Chevalier Zadera, a Pole by birth and a Colonel
+in the French army.[51] He had been on the staff of the Prince d'Eckmühl at
+Hamburgh and had served previously in St Domingo, in Germany and in Italy.
+He had just quitted the French service, having a great repugnance to serve
+under the Bourbon dynasty, and he is about to go to Italy on private
+business. He seems a very well informed man and well versed in French,
+Italian and German litterature. He also understands well to read and write
+English and speaks it, but not at all fluently. He acquired his English in
+the United States of America, whither he went when he escaped from the
+horrors of St Domingo. By the Americans he was received with open arms and
+unbounded hospitality as the compatriot of Pulaski who fell gloriously
+fighting in their cause, the cause of liberty, at the battle of Savannah.
+He was liberally supplied with money by several individuals without the
+smallest expectation or chance of repayment at the time, and was forwarded
+in this manner from town to town and from state to state throughout the
+whole Union; so that the tour he made and the time he passed in that land
+of liberty, he reckons as far the most agreeable epoch of his life. One
+evening at the _Ecu de Genève_ I found Zadera in altercation on political
+subjects with two French Ultras who had been emigrants, a Genevois and a
+Bernois, both anti-liberal. This was fearful odds for poor Zadera to be
+alone against four _acharnés_. I sat down and espoused his cause and we
+maintained our argument gloriously. The dispute began on the occasion of
+Zadera condemning the harshness shewn by the government of Geneva towards
+the _Conventionnels_ and others who were banished from France on the second
+restoration of Louis XVIII by a vote of the _Chambre introuvable_ in
+refusing them an asylum in the Republic and compelling them to depart
+immediately in a very contumelious manner. I said it was inconsistent and
+unworthy of the Genevese who called themselves republicans to persecute or
+join in the persecution of the republicans of France in order to please
+foreign despots. The others then began to be very violent with me. I
+replied, "Messieurs, vous avez beau parler; les Genevois sont de très bons
+cambistes et les meilleurs banquiers de l'Europe, mais il ne sont pas bons
+républicains."
+
+Geneva has been so often described by tourists that I shall not attempt any
+description except to remark that there are several good Cabinets and
+collections of pictures belonging to individuals. There is a magnificent
+public library. The manufactures are those of watches and models of the
+Alps which are exceedingly ingenious. There are no theatrical amusements
+here; and during divine service on Sunday the gates of the city are shut,
+and neither ingress nor egress permitted; fortunately their liturgy (the
+Calvinistic) is at least one hour shorter than the Anglican. Balls and
+concerts take place here very often and the young Genevois of both sexes
+are generally proficient in music. They amuse themselves too in summer with
+the "tir de l'arc" in common with all the Swiss Cantons.
+
+
+October 3rd.
+
+I have been in doubt whether I should go to Lausanne, return to Paris or
+extend my journey into Italy; but I have at length decided for the latter,
+as Zadera, who intends to start immediately for Milan, has offered me a
+place in his carriage _à frais communs_. I found him so agreeable a man and
+possessing sentiments so analogous to my own that I eagerly embraced the
+offer, and we are to cross the Simplon, so that I shall behold a travel
+over that magnificent _chausée_ made by Napoleon's orders, which I have so
+much desired to see and which everybody tells me is a most stupendous work
+and exceeding anything ever made by the Romans. As the Chevalier has served
+in Italy and was much _répandu_ in society there, I could not possibly have
+a pleasanter companion. He has with him Dante and Alfieri, and I have
+Gessner's _Idylls_ and my constant travelling companion Ariosto, so that we
+shall have no loss for conversation, for when our native wits are
+exhausted, a page or two from any of the above authors will suggest
+innumerable ideas, anecdotes, and subjects of discourse.
+
+
+MILAN, 10th Oct.
+
+We started from Geneva at seven in the morning of the 4th October, and in
+half an hour entered the Savoyard territory, of which _douaniers_ with blue
+cockades (the cockade of the King of Sardinia) gave us intimation. The road
+is on the South side of the lake Leman. In Evian and Thonon, the two first
+villages we passed thro', we do not find that _aisance_, comfort and
+cleanliness that is perceivable on the other side of the lake, in the
+delightful Canton de Vaud. The double yoke of priestcraft and military
+despotism presses hard upon the unhappy Savoyard and wrings from him his
+hard-earned pittance, while no people are better off than the Vaudois; yet
+the Savoyards are to the full as deserving of liberty as the Swiss. The
+Savoyard possesses honesty, fidelity and industry in a superior degree, and
+these qualities he seldom or ever loses, even when exposed to the
+temptations of a great metropolis like Paris, to which they are compelled
+to emigrate, as their own country is too poor to furnish the means of
+subsistence to all its population. When in Paris and other large cities,
+the Savoyards contrive, by the most indefatigable industry and incredible
+frugality, to return to their native village after a certain lapse of time,
+with a little fortune that is amply sufficient for their comfort. The
+poorest Savoyard in Paris never fails to remit something for the support of
+his parents. Both Voltaire and Rousseau have rendered justice to the good
+qualities of this honest people. It is a thousand pities that this country
+(Savoy) is not either incorporated with France, or made to form part of the
+Helvetic confederacy.
+
+On passing by La Meillerie we were reminded of "La nouvelle Héloise" and
+the words of St Preux: "Le rocher est escarpé: l'eau est profonde et je
+suis au désespoir." On the opposite side of the lake is to be seen the
+little white town of Clarens, the supposed residence of the divine Julie. A
+little beyond St Gingolph, which lies at the eastern extremity of the lake,
+we quit Savoy and enter into the Valais, which now forms, a component part
+of the Helvetic confederacy. German is the language spoken in the Valais.
+As the high road into Italy passes thro' the whole length of this Canton,
+Napoleon caused it to be separated from the Helvetic union and to form a
+Republic apart, with the ulterior view and which he afterwards carried into
+execution of annexing it to the French Empire. The Valais forms a long and
+exceedingly narrow valley, thro' the whole length of which the Rhône flows
+and falls into the lake Leman at St Gingolph. The breadth of this valley in
+its widest part is not more probably than 1,000 yards, and in most places
+considerably narrower, and it is enclosed on each side, or rather walled up
+by the immense mountains of the higher Alps which rise here very abruptly
+and seem to shut out this valley from the rest of the world. The high road
+runs nearly parallel to the course of the Rhône and is sometimes on one
+side of the river and sometimes on the other, communicating by bridges;
+from the sinuosity of the road and the different points of view presented
+by the salient and re-entering angles, of the mountains the scenery is
+extremely picturesque, grand and striking, and as sometimes no outlet
+presents itself to view, you do not perceive how you are ever to get out of
+this valley but by a stratagem similar to that of Sindbad in the Valley of
+Diamonds. At St Maurice is a remarkable one-arched bridge built by the
+Romans. We stopped at Martigny to pass the night; within one mile of
+Martigny and before arriving at it, we perceived the celebrated waterfall
+called the _Pissevache_; and the appellation, though coarse, is perfectly
+applicable. From Martigny a bridle road branches off which leads across the
+Grand St Bernard to Aoste. The next morning we arrived at Sion, called in
+the language of the country Sitten, the metropolis of the Valais; it is a
+neat-looking and tolerably large town, and which from its position might be
+made a most formidable military post, as there is a steep hill close to it
+which rises abruptly from the centre of the valley, and commands an
+extensive view east and west. Works erected on this height would enfilade
+the whole road either way and totally obstruct the approach of an enemy.
+There is besides a large castle on the southern _paroi_ of mountains which
+hem in this valley, which would expose to a most galling fire and take in
+flank completely those who should attempt to force the passage whether
+coming from St Maurice or Brieg. We stopped two hours at Sion to mend a
+wheel and this gave me time to ascend the mountain on which the castle
+stands. There were several masons and workmen employed in the construction
+of a church which they are erecting at the request and entire expense of
+His Sardinian Majesty. I could not ascertain what were the reasons that
+induced the King to build a church in a foreign territory. I did not
+observe either on the road or in any of the village thro' which we passed
+any striking specimen of Valaisan female beauty; but I often remarked the
+prominent bosom that Rousseau describes as frequent among them. We met with
+several _crétins_ or idiots, all of whom had _goitres_ in a greater or less
+degree. These _souls of God without sin_, as the crétins are called, are
+very merry souls; they always appear to be laughing. They seem to have
+adopted and united three systems of philosophy: they are Diogenes as to
+independence and neglect of decency and cleanliness; Democriti as to their
+disposition to laugh perpetually; and Aristippi inasmuch as they seem to be
+perfectly contented with their state. They are in general fat and well fed,
+for the poorest inhabitants give them something. They have a good deal of
+cunning, and many curious anecdotes are related of them which shews that
+they are endowed with a sort of sagacity resembling the instinct of
+animals. I recollect one myself mentioned by Zimmermann in his Essay on
+Solitude, of a crétin who was accustomed to imitate with his voice the
+sound of the village clock whenever it struck the hours and quarters; one
+day, by some accident, the clock stopped; yet the cretin went through the
+chimes of the hours and quarters with the same regularity as the clock
+would have done had it been going.
+
+We arrived at night at the village of Brieg at the foot of the Simplon and
+put up at a very comfortable inn. Brieg and Glisse are two small villages
+lying within a quarter of a mile distance from each other. The direct road
+runs thro' Brieg and is a great advantage to this town; while Glisse lost
+this benefit from the opposition shewn by its inhabitants to the annexation
+of the Valais to the French Empire. They now deeply regret this refusal as
+few travellers chuse to stop at Glisse.
+
+_Passage of the Simplon_.
+
+ Chi mi darà la voce e le parole
+ Convenienti a si nobil soggetto?[52]
+
+ Who will vouchsafe me voice that shall ascend
+ As high as I would raise my noble theme?
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+How shall I describe the Simplon and the impressions that magnificent piece
+of work, the _chaussée_ across it, made on my mind? On arrival at the
+village of the Simplon, which lies at nearly the greatest elevation off the
+road and is more than half-way across, I wrote in my enthusiasm for the
+author of this gigantic work, the following lines:
+
+ O viaggiator, se avessi tu veduto
+ Quel monte, pria che fosse il cammin fatto,
+ Leveresti le mani, e stupefatto
+ Diresti, "chi l'avrebbe mai creduto?
+ Son come quel d'Alcide i tuoi miracoli!
+ Vincesti, Napoleon', più grandi ostacoli!"
+
+Imagine a fine road or causeway broad enough for three carriages to go
+abreast, cut in the flanks of the mountains, winding along their contours,
+sometimes zigzag on the flank of one ravine, and sometimes turning off
+nearly at right angles to the flank of another; separated from each other
+by precipices of tremendous depth, and communicating by one-arched bridges
+of surprising boldness; besides stone bridges at each re-entering angle, to
+let pass off the water which flows from the innumerable cascades, which
+fall from the summits of the mountains. Ice and snow eternal on the various
+_pics_ or _aiguilles_ (as the summits are here called) which tower above
+your head, and yet in the midst of these _belles horreurs_ the road is so
+well constructed, so smooth, and the slope so gentle that when there are
+fogs, which often happen here and prevent you from beholding the
+surrounding scenery, you would suppose you were travelling on a plain the
+whole time. Balustrades are affixed on the sides of the most abrupt
+precipices and buttresses also in order to secure the exterior part of the
+_chaussèe_. On the whole length of the _chaussèe_ on the exterior side are
+conical stones of four feet in height at ten paces distant from each other,
+in order to mark the road in case of its being covered with snow. There are
+besides _maisons de refuge_ or cottages, at a distance of one league from
+each other, wherein are stationed persons to give assistance and food to
+travellers, or passengers who may be detained by the snow storms. There is
+always in these cabins a plentiful supply of biscuit, cheese, salt and
+smoked meats, wine, brandy and fire-wood. In those parts of the road where
+the sides of the ravines are not sloping enough to admit of the road being
+cut along them, subterraneous galleries have been pierced through the rock,
+some of fifty, some of a hundred and more yards in length, and nearly as
+broad as the rest of the road. In a word it appears to me the grandest work
+imagined or made by man, and when combined with its extreme utility, far
+surpasses what is related of the Seven Wonders of the world. There are
+fifty-two bridges throughout the whole of this route, which begins at the
+distance of three miles from Geneva, skirts the southern shore of the lake,
+runs thro' the whole Valais, traverses the Simplon and issuing from the
+gorges of the mountains at Domo d'Ossola terminates at Rho in the Milanese.
+From Brieg to the toll-house, the highest part of the road, the distance is
+about 18 miles. It made me dreadfully giddy to look down the various
+precipices; and what adds to the vertigo one feels is the deafening noise
+of the various waterfalls. As the road is cut zigzag, in many parts, you
+appear to preserve nearly the same distance from Brieg after three hours'
+march, as after half an hour only, since you have that village continually
+under your eyes, nor do you lose sight of it till near the toll-house.
+Brieg appears when viewed from various points of the road like the
+card-houses of children, the Valais like a slip of green baize, and the
+Rhône like a very narrow light blue ribband; and when at Brieg before you
+ascend you look up at the toll-house, you would suppose it impossible for
+any human being to arrive at such a height without the help of a balloon.
+It reminded me of the castle of the enchanter in the _Orlando Furioso_, who
+keeps Ruggiero confined and who rides on the Hippogriff.
+
+The village of the Simplon is a mile beyond the toll-house, descending. We
+stopped there for two hours to dine. A snow storm had fallen and the
+weather was exceedingly cold; the mountain air had sharpened our appetite,
+but we could get nothing but fish and eggs as it was a _jour maigre_, and
+the Valaisans are rigid observers of the ordinances of the Catholic church.
+We however, on assuring the landlord that we were _militaires_, prevailed
+on him to let us have some ham and sausages. German is the language here.
+The road from the toll-house to Domo d'Ossola (the first town at the foot
+of the mountain on the Italian side) is a descent, but the slope is as
+gentle as on the rest of the road. Fifteen miles beyond the village of the
+Simplon stands the village of Isella, which is the frontier town of the
+King of Sardinia, and where there is a rigorous _douane_, and ten miles
+further is Domo d'Ossola, where we arrived at seven in the evening. Between
+Isella and Domo d'Ossola the scenery becomes more and more romantic,
+varying at every step, cataracts falling on all sides, and three more
+galleries to pass. Domo d'Ossola appears a large and neat clean town, and
+we put up at a very good inn. At Isella begins the Italian language, or
+rather Piedmontese.
+
+The next morning we proceeded on our journey till we reached Fariolo, which
+is on the northern extremity of the _Lago Maggiore_. The road from Domo
+d'Ossola thro' the villages of Ornavasso and Vagogna is thro' a fertile and
+picturesque valley, or rather gorge, of the mountain, narrow at first, but
+which gradually widens as you approach to the lake. The river Toso runs
+nearly in a parallel direction with the road. The air is much milder than
+in Switzerland, and you soon perceive the change of climate from its
+temperature, as well as from the appearance of the vines and mulberry trees
+and Indian corn called in this country _grano turco_.
+
+At Fariolo, after breakfast, my friend Zadera took leave of me and embarked
+his carriage on the lake in order to proceed to Lugano; and I who was bound
+to Milan, having hired a cabriolet, proceeded to Arona, after stopping one
+hour to refresh the horses at Belgirate. The whole road from Fariolo to
+Arona is on the bank of the _Lago Maggiore_, and nothing can be more neat
+than the appearance of all these little towns which are solidly and
+handsomely built in the Italian taste.
+
+Before I arrived at Arona, and at a distance of two miles from it, I
+stopped in order to ascend a height at a distance of one-eighth of a mile
+from the road to view the celebrated colossal statue in bronze of St
+Charles Borromaeus, which may be seen at a great distance. It is seventy
+cubits high, situated on a pedestal of twenty feet, to ascend which
+requires a ladder. You then enter between his legs, or rather the folds of
+his gown, and ascend a sort of staircase till you reach his head. There is
+something so striking in the appearance of this black gigantic figure when
+viewed from afar, and still more when you are at the foot of it, that you
+would suppose yourself living in the time of fairies and enchanters, and it
+strongly reminded me of the Arabian Nights, as if the statue were the work
+of some Génie or Peri; or as if it were some rebel Genius transformed into
+black marble by Solomon the great Prophet. I am not very well acquainted
+with the life and adventures of this Saint, but he was of the Borromean
+family, who are the most opulent proprietors of the Milanese. Every tract
+of land, palace, castle, farm in the environs of Arona seem to belong to
+them. If you ask whose estate is that? whose villa is that? whose castle is
+that? the answer is, to the Count Borromeo, who seems to be as universal a
+proprietor here as _Nong-tong-paw_ at Paris or _Monsieur Kaniferstane_ at
+Amsterdam.[53] Arona is a large, straggling but solidly built town, and
+presents nothing worth notice.
+
+We proceeded on our journey the next morning. Shortly after leaving Arona,
+the road diverges from the lake and traverses a thick wood until it reaches
+the banks of the Tessino; on the other bank of which, communicating by
+means of a flying bridge, stands the town of Sesto Calende. The Tessino
+divides and forms the boundary between the Sardinian and Austrian
+territory, and Sesto Calende is the frontier of His Imperial, Royal and
+Apostolic Majesty. After a rigorous search of my portmanteau at the
+_Douane_, and exhibiting my passport, I was allowed to proceed on my
+journey to Milan.
+
+At Rho, where I stopped to dine, stands a remarkably ancient tree said to
+have been planted in the time of Augustus. The country presents a perfect
+plain, highly cultivated, all the way from Sesto to Milan. The _chaussée_
+is broad and admirably well kept up and lined on both sides with poplars.
+The roads in Lombardy are certainly the finest in Europe. I entered Milan
+by the gate which leads direct to the esplanade between the citadel and the
+city, and drove to the _Pension Suisse_, which is in a street close to the
+Cathedral and Ducal palace.
+
+
+MILAN, 12 October.
+
+I am just returned from the _Teatro della Scala_, renowned for its immense
+size: it certainly is the most stupendous theatre I ever beheld and even
+surpassed the expectation I had formed of it, so much so that I remained
+for some minutes lost in astonishment. I was much struck with the
+magnificence of the scenery and decorations. An _Opera_ and _Ballo_ are
+given every night, and the same are repeated for a month, when they are
+replaced by new ones. The boxes are all hired by the year by the different
+noble and opulent families, and in the _Parterre_ the price is only thirty
+soldi or sous, about fifteen pence English, for which you are fully as well
+regaled as at the _Grand Opéra_ at Paris for three and a half francs and
+far better than at the Italian theatre in London for half a guinea. The
+opera I saw represented is called _L'Italiana in Algieri_, opera buffa, by
+Rossini.
+
+The _Ballo_ was one of the most magnificent spectacles I ever beheld. The
+scenery and decorations are of the first class and superior even to those
+of the _Grand Opéra_ at Paris. The _Ballo_ was called _Il Cavaliere del
+Tempio_. The story is taken from an occurrence that formed an episode in
+the history of the Crusades and which has already furnished to Walter Scott
+the subject of a very pleasing ballad entitled the _Fire-King_, or _Count
+Albert and Fair Rosalie_. Battles of foot and horse with real horses,
+Christians and Moslems, dancing, incantations, excellent and very
+appropriate music leave nothing to be desired to the ravished spectator. In
+the _Ballo_ all is done in pantomime and the acting is perfect. The
+Italians seem to inherit from their ancestors the faculty of representing
+by dumb show the emotions of the mind as well as the gestures of the body,
+and in this they excel all other modern nations. The dancing is not quite
+so good as what one sees at the Paris theatre, and besides that sort of
+dancing they are very fond in Italy of grotesque dances which appear to me
+to be mere _tours de force_. But the decorations are magnificent, and the
+cost must be great.
+
+It was a fine moonlight night on my return from the _Scala_, which gave a
+very pleasing effect to the _Duomo_ or Cathedral as I passed by it. The
+innumerable aiguilles or spires of the most exquisite and delicate
+workmanship, tapering and terminating in points all newly whitened, gave
+such an appearance of airiness and lightness to this beautiful building
+that it looked more visionary than substantial, and as if a strong puff of
+wind would blow it away. The next morning I went to visit the Cathedral in
+detail. It stands in the place called _Piazza del Duomo_. On this _piazza_
+stands also the Ducal Palace; the principal cafés and the most splendid
+shops are in the same _piazza_, which forms the morning lounge of Milan.
+Parallel to one side of the _Duomo_ runs the _Corsia de' Servi_, the widest
+and most fashionable street in Milan, the resort of the _beau monde_ in the
+evening, and leading directly out to the _Porta Orientale_. The Cathedral
+appears to me certainly the most striking Gothic edifice I ever beheld. It
+is as large as the Cathedral of Notre Dame at Paris, and the architecture
+of the interior is very massive. There is little internal ornament,
+however, except the tomb or mausoleum of St Charles Borromeo, round which
+is a magnificent railing; there are also the statues of this Saint and of
+St Ambrogio. There are several well-executed bas-reliefs on the outside of
+the Church, from Scripture subjects, and the view from any of the balconies
+of the spires is very extensive. On the North the Alps, covered with snow
+and appearing to rise abruptly within a very short horizon, tho' their
+distance from Milan is at least sixty or seventy miles; and on all the
+other sides a vast and well-cultivated plain as far as the eye can reach,
+thickly studded with towns and villages, and the immense city of Milan nine
+miles in circumference at your feet. The streets in general in Milan are
+well paved; there is a line of trottoir on each side of the street
+equi-distant from the line of houses; so that these trottoirs seem to be
+made for the carriage wheels to roll on, and not for the foot passengers,
+who must keep within the space that lies between the trottoirs and line of
+houses. With the exception of the _Piazza del Duomo_ there is scarcely
+anything that can be called a _piazza_ in all Milan, unless irregular and
+small open places may be dignified with that name; the houses and buildings
+are extremely solid in their construction and handsome in their appearance.
+A canal runs thro' the city and leads to Pavia; on this canal are stone
+bridges of a very solid construction. The shops in Milan are well stored
+with merchandize, and make a very brilliant display. The finest street,
+without doubt, is the _Corsia de' Servi_. In the part of it that lies
+parallel to the Cathedral, it is about as broad as the _Rue St Honoré_ at
+Paris; but two hundred yards beyond it, it suddenly widens and is then
+broader than Portland Place the whole way to the _Porta Orientale_. On the
+left hand of this street, on proceeding from the Cathedral to the _Porta
+Orientale_, is a beautiful and extensive garden; an ornamental iron railing
+separates it from the street. From the number of fine trees here there is
+so much shade therefrom that it forms a very agreeable promenade during the
+heat of the day. On the right hand side of the _Corsia de' Servi_,
+proceeding from the Cathedral, are the finest buildings (houses of
+individuals) in Milan, among which I particularly distinguished a superb
+palace built in the best Grecian taste with a colonnaded portico,
+surmounted by eight columns. Just outside the _Porta Orientale_ is the
+_Corso_, with a fine spacious road with _Allées_ on each side lined with
+trees. The _Corso_ forms the evening drive and _promenade à cheval_ of the
+_beau monde_. I have seen nowhere, except in Hyde Park, such a brilliant
+show of equipages as on the Corso of Milan. I observe that the women
+display a great _luxe de parure_ at this promenade.
+
+The women here appear to me in general handsome, and report says not at all
+cruel. They have quite a _fureur_ for dress and ornaments, hi the adapting
+of which, however, they have not so much taste as the French women have.
+The Milanese women do not understand the _simplicité recherchée_ in their
+attire, and are too fond of glaring colours. The Milanese women are accused
+of being too fond of wine, and a calculation has been made that two bottles
+_per diem_ are drank by each female in Milan; but, supposing this
+calculation were true, let not the English be startled, for the wine of
+this, country is exceedingly light, lighter indeed than the weakest
+Burgundy wine; indeed, I conceive that two bottles of Lombard wine are
+scarce equivalent in strength to four wine glasses of Port wine. The
+Lombards for this reason never drink water with their wine; and indeed it
+is not necessary, for I am afraid that all the wine drank in Milan is
+already baptised before it leaves the hands of the vendor, except that
+reserved for the priesthood; such, at any rate, was the case before the
+French Revolution, and no doubt the wine sellers would oppose the abolition
+of so _ancient_ and _sacred_ a custom. The Milanese are a gay people,
+hospitable and fond of pleasure: they are more addicted to the pleasures of
+the table than the other people of Italy, and dinner parties are in
+consequence much more frequent here than in other Italian towns. The women
+here are said to be much better educated than in the rest of Italy, for
+Napoleon took great pains to promote and encourage female instruction, well
+knowing that to be the best means of regenerating a country.
+
+The dialect spoken in the Milanese has a harsh nasal accent, to my ear
+peculiarly disagreeable. Pure Italian or Tuscan is little spoken here, and
+that only to foreigners. French, on the contrary, is spoken a good deal;
+but the Milanese, male and female, among one another, speak invariably the
+_patois_ of the country, which has more analogy to the French than to the
+Italian, but without the grace or euphony of either.
+
+I have visited likewise the _Zecca_, or Mint, where I observed the whole
+process of coining. They still continue to coin here Napoleons of gold and
+silver, with the date of 1814, and they coin likewise crowns or dollars
+with Maria Theresa's head, with the date of the last year of her reign. The
+double Napoleon of forty _franchi_ of the Kingdom of Italy is a beautiful
+coin; on the run are the words, _Dio protegge l'Italia_. It may not be
+unnecessary to remark that in Italy by the word _Napoleone_, as a coin, is
+meant the five franc piece with the head of Napoleon, and a twenty franc
+gold piece is called _Napoleone d'oro_.
+
+At the _Zecca_ I was shown some gold, silver and bronze medals, struck in
+commemoration of the formation of the Lombardo-Venetian Kingdom, under the
+sceptre of Austria. They bear the following inscription, which, if I
+recollect aright, is from Horace:
+
+ Redeunt in aurum
+ Tempora priscum,[54]
+
+but this golden age is considered by the Italians as a very leaden one; and
+it seems to bear as much analogy to the golden age, as the base Austrian
+copper coin, daubed over with silver, and made to pass for fifteen and
+thirty soldi, has to the real gold and silver _Napoleoni_, which by the way
+are said to be fast disappearing; they are sent to Vienna, and Milan will
+probably be in time blessed with a similar paper currency to that of
+Vienna.
+
+Napoleon seems to be as much regretted by the Milanese as the Austrian
+Government is abhorred; in fact, everybody speaks with horror and disgust
+of the _aspro boreal scettro_ and of the _aquila che mangia doppio_, an
+allusion taken from the arms of Austria, the double-headed Eagle.
+
+I have visited the ancient Ducal, now the Royal, Palace; it is a spacious
+building, chaste in its external appearance, but its ulterior very
+magnificent; its chiefest treasures are the various costly columns and
+pilasters of marble and of _jaune antique_ which are to be met with. The
+_salle de danse_ is peculiarly elegant, and in one of the apartments is a
+fine painting on the plafond representing Jupiter hurling thunderbolts on
+the Giants. Jupiter bears the head of Napoleon. Good God! how this man was
+spoiled by adulation!
+
+The staircase of the Palace is superb, and the furniture is of the most
+elegant description, being faithfully and classically modelled after the
+antique Roman and Grecian. After visiting the Ambrosian library (by the
+way, it is quite absurd to visit a library unless you employ whole days to
+inspect the various editions), I went to the Hospital, which is a
+stupendous building, and makes up 8,000 beds. The arrangement of this
+hospital merits the greatest praise. I then peeped into several churches,
+and I verily believe my conductor would have made me visit every church in
+Milan, if I had not lost all patience, and cried out: _perche sempre
+chiese? sempre chiese? andiamo a vedere altra cosa_. He conducted me then
+to the citadel, or rather place where the citadel stood, and which now
+forms a vast barrack for the Austrian troops. We then went to visit the
+_Teatro Olimpico_, which was built by Napoleon. It is built in the style of
+the Roman amphitheatres, but much more of an oval form than the Roman
+amphitheatres were in general; that is to say, the transverse axis is much
+longer in proportion to the conjugate diameter than is the case in the
+Roman amphitheatres, and it is by no means so high. In the time of
+Napoleon, games were executed in this circus in imitation of the games of
+the ancients, for Napoleon had a great hankering to ape the Roman Caesars
+in everything. There were, for instance, gymnastic exercises, races on
+foot, horse races, chariot races like those of the Romans, combats of wild
+beasts, and as water can be introduced into the arena, there were sometimes
+exhibited _naumachiae_ or naval fights. These exhibitions were extremely
+frequent at Milan during the vice-regency of Prince Eugène Napoleon; during
+this Government, indeed, Milan flourished in the highest degree of opulence
+and splendour and profited much by being one of the principal depôts of the
+inland trade between France and Italy, during the continental blockade,
+besides enjoying the advantage of being the seat of Government during the
+existence of the _Regno d'Italia_. Even now, tho' groaning under the leaden
+sceptre of Austria, it is one of the most lively and splendid cities I ever
+beheld; and I made this remark to a Milanese. He answered with a deep sigh:
+"Ah! Monsieur, si vous aviez été ici dans le temps du Prince Eugène! Mais
+aujourd'hui nous sommes ruinés."
+
+My next visit was to the _Porta del Sempione_, which is at a short distance
+from the amphitheatre, and which, were it finished, would be the finest
+thing of the kind in Europe; it was designed, and would have been completed
+by Napoleon, had he remained on the throne. Figures representing France,
+Italy, Fortitude and Wisdom adorn the façade and there are several
+bas-reliefs, among which is one representing Napoleon receiving the keys of
+Milan after the battle of Marengo. All is yet unfinished; columns,
+pedestals, friezes, capitals and various other architectural ornaments,
+besides several unhewn blocks of marble, lie on the ground; and probably
+this magnificent design will never be completed for no other reason than
+because it was imagined by Napoleon and might recall his glories. Verily,
+Legitimacy is childishly spiteful!
+
+Yesterday morning I went to see an Italian comedy represented at the
+_Teatro Re_. The piece was _l'Ajo nell' imbarazzo_--a very droll and
+humorous piece--but it was not well acted, from the simple circumstance of
+the actors not having their parts by heart, and the illusion of the stage
+is destroyed by hearing the prompter's voice full as loud as that of the
+actors, who follow his promptings something in the same way that the clerk
+follows the clergyman in that prayer of the Anglican liturgy which says "we
+have erred and strayed from our ways like lost sheep." An Italian audience
+is certainly very indulgent and good-natured, as they never hiss, however
+miserable the performance.
+
+But in speaking of theatrical performances, no person should leave Milan
+without going to see the _Teatro Girolamo_, which is one of the
+"curiosities" of the place, peculiar to Milan, and more frequented,
+perhaps, than any other. This is a puppet theatre, but puppets so well
+contrived and so well worked as to make the spectacle well worth the
+attention of the traveller. It is the _Nec plus ultra of Marionettism_, in
+which Signer Girolamo, the proprietor, has made a revolution, which will
+form an epoch in the annals of puppetry; having driven from the stage
+entirely the _graziosissima maschera d'Arlecchino_, who used to be the hero
+of all the pieces represented by the puppets and substituted himself, or
+rather a puppet bearing his name, in the place of Harlequin, as the
+principal _farceur_ of the performance. He has contrived to make the puppet
+Girolamo a little like himself, but so much caricatured and so monstrously
+ugly a likeness that the bare sight of it raises immediate laughter. The
+theatre itself is small, being something under the size of our old
+Haymarket little theatre, but is very neatly and tastefully fitted up. The
+puppets are about half of the natural size of man, and Girolamo, aided by
+one or two others, works them and gives them gesture, by means of strings,
+which are, however, so well contrived as to be scarcely visible; and
+Girolamo himself speaks for all, as, besides being a ventriloquist, he has
+a most astonishing faculty of varying his voice, and adapting it to the
+_rôle_ of each puppet, so that the illusion is complete. The scenery and
+decorations are excellent. Sometimes he gives operas as well as dramas, and
+there is always a _ballo_, with transformation of one figure into another,
+which forms part of the performance. These transformations are really very
+curious and extremely well executed. Almost all the pieces acted on the
+theatre are of Girolamo's own composition, and he sometimes chooses a
+classical or mythological subject, in which the puppet Girolamo is sure to
+be introduced and charged with all the wit of the piece. He speaks
+invariably with the accent and _patois_ of the country, and his jokes never
+fail to keep the audience in a roar of laughter; his mode of speech and
+slang phrases form an absurd contrast to the other figures, who speak in
+pure Italian and pompous _versi sciolti_. For instance, the piece I saw
+represented was the story of Alcestis and was entitled _La scesa d'Ercole
+nell Inferno_, to redeem the wife of Admetus. Hercules, before he commences
+this undertaking, wishes to hire a valet for the journey, has an interview
+with Girolamo, and engages him. Hercules speaks in blank verse and in a
+phrase, full of _sesquipedalia verba_, demands his country and lineage.
+Girolamo replies in the Piedmontese dialect and with a strong nasal accent:
+"_De mi pais, de Piemong_." Girolamo, however, though he professes to be as
+brave as Mars himself has a great repugnance to accompanying his master to
+the shades below, or to the "_casa del diavolo_," as he calls it; and while
+Hercules fights with Cerberus, he shakes and trembles all over, as he does
+likewise when he meets _Madonna Morte_.
+
+All this is very absurd and ridiculous, but it is impossible not to laugh
+and be amused at it. An anecdote is related of the _flesh and blood_
+Girolamo, that he had a very pretty wife, who took it into her head one day
+to elope with a French officer; and that to revenge himself he dramatized
+the event and produced it on his own theatre under the title of _Colombina
+scampata coll'uffiziale_, having filled the piece with severe satire and
+sarcastic remarks against women in general and Colombina in particular.
+
+The atelier of the famous artist in mosaic Rafaelli is well worth
+inspecting; and here I had an opportunity of beholding a copy in mosaic and
+nearly finished of the celebrated picture of Leonardo da Vinci representing
+the _Caena Domini_. What a useful as well as admirable art is the mosaic to
+perpetuate the paintings of the greatest masters! I recollected on
+beholding this work that Eustace, in his _Tour thro' Italy_,[55] relates
+with a pious horror that the French soldiers used the original picture as a
+target to practise at with ball cartridge, and that Christ's head was
+singled out as the mark. This absurd tale, which had not the least shadow
+of truth in it, has, it appears, gained some credit among weak-minded
+people; and I therefore beg leave to contradict it in the most formal
+manner. It was Buonaparte who, the moment the picture was discovered,
+ordered it to be put in mosaic. No! the French were the protectors and
+encouragers, and by no means the destroyers of the works of art; and this
+ridiculous story of the picture being used as a target was probably
+invented by the priesthood, who seemed to have taken great delight in
+imposing on poor Eustace's credulity. To me it seems that such a story
+could only have been invented by a monk, and believed and repeated by an
+old woman or a bigot. The priests and French emigrants have invented and
+spread the most shameful and improbable calumnies against the French
+republicans and against Napoleon, and that credulous gull John Bull has
+been silly enough to give full credence to all these tales, and stand
+staring with his eyes and mouth open at the recital, while a vulgar jobbing
+ministry (as Cobbet would say) _picked his pockets_.
+
+Quite of a piece with this is the said Mr Eustace's bigotry, in not chusing
+to call Lombardy by its usual appellation "Lombardy," and affectedly
+terming it "the plain of the Po." Why so, will be asked? Why because Mr
+Eustace hates the ancient Lombards, and holds them very nearly in as much
+horror as he does the modern French; because, as he says, they were the
+enemies of the Church and made war on and despoiled the Holy See. The fact
+is that the Lombard princes were the most enlightened of all the monarchs
+of their time; they were the first who began to resist the encroachments of
+the clergy and to shake off that abject submission to the Holy See which
+was the characteristic of the age. The Lombards were a fine gallant race of
+men and not so bigoted as the other nations of Europe. Where has there ever
+reigned a better and more enlightened and more just and humane prince than
+Theodoric?[56] But Theodoric was an Arian, hence Mr Eustace's aversion, for
+he, with the most servile devotion, rejects, condemns and anathematizes
+whatever the Church rejects, condemns and anathematizes. For myself I look
+on the extinction of the Lombard power by Charlemagne to have been a great
+calamity; had it lasted, the reformation and deliverance of Europe from
+Papal and ecclesiastical tyranny would have happened probably three hundred
+years sooner and the Inquisition never have been planted in Spain. I have
+made this digression from a love of justice and from a wish to vindicate
+the French Republic and Napoleon from one at least of the many unjust
+aspersions cast on them. I feel it also my duty to state on every occasion
+that I, belonging to an army sent to Egypt in order to expel them from that
+country, have been an eyewitness of the good and beneficial reforms and
+improvements that the French made in Egypt during a period of only three
+years. They did more for the good of that country in this short period,
+than we have done for India in fifty years.
+
+Being obliged to be in London on the 24th December I took leave of the
+agreeable city of Milan with much regret on the 19th of October and engaged
+a place in a Swiss _voiture_ going to Lausanne. My fellow travellers were
+two Brunswick officers in the service of the Princess of Wales, who were
+returning to their native country; and a Hungarian and his son settled in
+Domo d'Ossola. Nothing occurred till we arrived at Arona, where we were
+detained a whole day, in consequence of some informality in the passport of
+the two Germans, viz., that of its not having been _visé_ by the Sardinian
+Chargé d'Affaires at Milan.
+
+During our detention at Arona, I fell in with a young Frenchman who was
+going to Milan in company of some Swiss friends. The Swiss were permitted
+to proceed, but the other was not, for no other reason than because he was
+a Frenchman; so that he took a place in our carriage in order to return to
+Switzerland. I found him a very agreeable companion, for tho' much
+chagrined and vexed at this harsh and ungenerous treatment on the part of
+the Piedmontese authorities, he soon recovered his good humour, and
+contributed much to the pleasure of our journey. The Germans came back to
+Arona very late at night, and during the rest of the journey gave vent to
+their feelings with many an execration such as _verfluchter Spitzbube,
+Hundsfott_, on the heads of the inexorable police officers of Arona. The
+next day, on passing by Belgirate, we took a boat to visit the Borromean
+islands, and afterwards returned to rejoin our carriage at Fariolo. The
+first of these islands that we visited was the _Isola Bella_, where there
+is a large and splendid villa, belonging to the Borromean family. The rooms
+are of excellent and solid structure, and there are some good family
+pictures. The furniture is ancient, but costly. The _rez de chaussée_ or
+lower part of the house, which is completely _à fleur d'eau_ with the lake,
+is tastefully paved, and the walls decorated with a mosaic of shells. One
+would imagine it the abode of a sea nymph. I thought of Calypso and
+Galatea. There are in these apartments _à fleur d'eau_ two or three
+exquisite statues.
+
+
+LAUSANNE, 11th November.
+
+I have been now nearly three weeks at Lausanne and am much pleased both
+with the inhabitants, who are extremely affable and well-informed, and with
+the beautiful sites that environ this city, the capital of the Canton de
+Vaud. The sentiments of the Vaudois, with the exception of a few absurd
+families among the _noblesse_, who from ignorance or prejudice are
+sticklers for the old times, are highly liberal; and as they acquired their
+freedom and emancipated themselves from the yoke of the Bernois, thro' the
+means of the French Revolution, they are grateful to that nation and
+receive with hospitality those who are proscribed by the present French
+Government; their behaviour thus forming a noble contrast to the servility
+of the Genevese. The Government of the Canton de Vaud is wholly democratic
+and is composed of a Landamman and grand and petty council, all
+_bourgeois_, or of the most intelligent among the agricultural class, who
+know the interests of their country right well, and are not likely to
+betray them, as the _noblesse_ are but too often induced to do, for the
+sake of some foolish ribband, rank, or title. The _noblesse_ are in a
+manner self-exiled (so they say) from all participation in the legislative
+and executive power; for they have too much _morgue_ to endure to share the
+government with those whom they regard as _roturiers_; but the real state
+of the case is that the people will not elect them, and the people are
+perfectly in the right, for at the glorious epoch when, without bloodshed,
+the burghers and plebeians upset the despotism of Bern, the conduct of the
+_noblesse_ was very equivocal. La Harpe was the leader of this beneficial
+Revolution, for which, however, the public mind was fully prepared and
+disposed; and La Harpe was a virtuous, ardent and incorruptible patriot.
+
+This canton had been for a long period of years in a state of vassalage to
+that of Bern; all the posts and offices of Government were filled by
+Bernois and the Vaudois were excluded from all share in the government, and
+from all public employments of consequence. When the Sun of Revolution,
+after gloriously rising in America, had shone in splendour on France, and
+had successfully dissipated the mists of tyranny, feudality, priestcraft
+and prejudice, it was natural that those states which had languished for so
+many years in a humiliating situation should begin to look about them and
+enquire into the origin of all the shackles and restraints imposed on them;
+and no doubt the Vaudois soon discovered that it was an anomaly in politics
+as well as in reason that two states of such different origin, the one
+being a Latin and the other a Teutonic people, with language, customs, and
+manners so different, should be blended together in a system in which all
+the advantages were on the side of Bern, and nought but vassalage on the
+part of Vaud. A chief was alone wanting to give the impulse; he was soon
+found; the business was settled in forty-eight hours; and by the mediation
+of the French Government, Vaud was declared and acknowledged an independent
+state and for ever released from the dominion of Bern. The federative
+constitution was then abolished throughout the union, and a general
+Government, called the Helvetic Republic, substituted in its place; but
+this constitution not suiting the genius and habits of the people, nor the
+locality of the country, was not of long duration; troubles broke out and
+insurrections, which were fomented and encouraged by the adherents of the
+old régime. But Napoleon, by a wise and salutary mediation, stepped in
+between them, and prevented the effusion of blood, by restoring the old
+confederation, modified by a variety of ameliorations. In the act of
+mediation, Napoleon contented himself with separating the Valais entirely
+from the confederation, and shortly after annexing it to France, on account
+of the high road into Italy across the Simplon running thro' that
+territory, and which it became of the utmost importance to him to be master
+of. The new Helvetic Confederation was inviolably respected and protected
+by Napoleon; for never after the act of mediation did any French troops
+enter in the Canton de Vaud, or any part of the Union to pass into Italy.
+They always moved on the Savoy side of the Lake to enter into the Valais.
+This act of mediation saved probably a good deal of bloodshed and in a very
+short time gave such general satisfaction, and was in every respect so
+useful and beneficial to the Helvetic Union, that in spite of the intrigues
+of the Senate of Bern, who have never been able to digest the loss of Vaud,
+the Allied Powers in the year 1814 solemnly guaranteed the Helvetic
+Confederation as established by the Act of Mediation, merely restoring the
+Valais to its independence and aggregating it as an independent Canton to
+the general Union. Geneva, on its being severed from the French Empire, and
+recovering its independence, solicited the Helvetic Union to be admitted as
+a member and component part of that Confederacy; which was agreed to, and
+it was and remains aggregated to it also.
+
+In 1815, on the return of Napoleon from Elba and on the renewal of the war,
+the Bern Government made a most barefaced attempt to regain possession of
+the Canton de Vaud; to this they were no doubt secretly encouraged by the
+Allies, and principally it is said by the British Government, the most
+dangerous, artful and determined enemy of all liberty; but this project was
+completely foiled, by the penetration, energy and firmness of the
+inhabitants of the Canton de Vaud and of its Government in particular. The
+central Government of the Union was at that time held at Bern and it was
+agreed upon in the Diet that Switzerland should remain perfectly neutral
+during the approaching conflict; an army of observation of 80,000 men was
+voted and levied to enforce this neutrality, but the command of it was
+given to De Watteville, who had been a colonel in the English service, and
+was a determined enemy of the French Revolution and of everything connected
+with or arising out of it. On the approach of the Austrian army, De
+Watteville, instead of defending the frontier and repelling the invasion,
+disbanded his army and allowed the Austrians to enter. No doubt he was
+encouraged, if not positively ordered to do this, by the Government of
+Bern, many members of which are supposed to have received bribes from the
+British Government to render the decreed neutrality null and void. At the
+same moment that this army was disbanded, the directoral Canton (Bern)
+caused to be intimated to the Canton de Valid that it was the wish and
+intention of the High Allies to replace Switzerland in the exact state it
+was in, previous to the French Revolution; and that, in consequence, two
+Commissioners would be sent from Bern to Lausanne, to take charge of the
+Bureaux, Archives and _insignia_ of Government, etc., and to act as a
+provisional Government under the direction of Bern. The Landamman and the
+grand and petty council at Lausanne, on learning this intelligence,
+immediately saw thro' the scheme that was planned to deprive them of their
+independence; they, therefore, passed a decree, threatening to arrest and
+punish as conspirators the Commissioners, should they dare to set their
+foot in the Canton, and declaring such of their countrymen who should aid
+or abet this scheme, or deliver up a single document to the Commissioners,
+traitors and rebels; they likewise called on the whole Canton to arm in
+defence of its independence and proclaimed at the same time that should
+this plan be attempted to be carried into execution, they would join their
+forces to those of Napoleon and thus endanger the position of the Allies.
+They took their measures accordingly; the whole Canton Sew to arms; the
+Bernois and the Allies were alarmed and consultations held; the Count de
+Bubna, the Austrian General, being consulted, thought the attempt so
+hazardous and so pregnant with mischief that he had the good sense to
+recommend to the Allied Powers and to the Canton of Bern to desist from
+their project and not to make or propose any alteration in the Helvetic
+Constitution, as guaranteed in 1814. His advice was of great weight and was
+adopted, and thus the Vaudois by their firmness preserved their
+independence. They met with great support likewise on this trying occasion
+from General La Harpe, preceptor to the Emperor of Russia, and a relation
+to the gentleman of the same name who was so instrumental in the
+emancipation of Vaud. La Harpe, who enjoyed the confidence of his pupil,
+exerted himself greatly in procuring his good offices in favour of the
+Vaudois his countrymen, and this was no small weight in the scale.
+
+Lausanne is an irregularly built city, and not very agreeable to
+pedestrians, for its continual steep ascents and descents make it extremely
+fatiguing, and there is a part of the town to which you ascend by a flight
+of stairs; the houses in Lausanne have been humorously enough compared to
+musical notes. The country in the environs is beautiful beyond description
+and has at all times elicited the admiration of travellers. There is an
+agreeable promenade just outside the town, on the left hand side of the
+road which leads to Geneva, called _Montbenon_, which is the fashionable
+promenade and commands a fine view of the lake. On the left hand side is a
+Casino and garden used for the _tir de l'arc_, of which the Vaudois, in
+common with the other Helvetic people, are extremely fond. On the right
+hand side of the road is a deep ravine planted in the style of an English
+garden, with serpentine gravel walks, and on the other side of the ravine
+stands the upper part of the city, the Cathedral, _Hôtel de Ville_, and the
+_Chateau du Bailli_, which is the seat of Government. From the terrace of
+the Cathedral you enjoy a fine view, but a still finer and far more
+comprehensive one is from the Signal house, or _Belvédère_ near the forest
+of Sauvabelin (_Silva Bellonae_ in Pagan times)[57]. In this wood fairs,
+dances and other public festivals are held, and it is the favourite spot
+for parties of pleasure to dine _al fresco_; it is a pity, however, that
+the edifice called the _Belvédère_ was not conceived in a better taste; it
+has an uncouth and barbarous appearance.
+
+Lausanne is situated about a quarter of a mile (in a right line) from the
+lake, and you descend continually in going from the city to the Lake Leman
+by a good carriage road, until you arrive on the borders of the lake, where
+stands a neat little town called Ouchy, or as it is sometimes termed _le
+port de Lausanne_. There is a good quai and pier. The passage across the
+lake from Ouchy to the Savoy side requires four hours with oars.
+
+I have made several pleasant acquaintances here, viz., M. Pidon the
+Landamman, a litterato of the first order; Genl La Harpe, the tutor of the
+Emperor of Russia; but the most agreeable of all is the Baron de
+F[alkenskiold], an old gentleman of whose talents, merits and delightful
+disposition I cannot speak too highly. He has the most liberal and
+enlightened views and opinions, and is extremely well versed in English,
+French and German litterature. He is a Dane by birth and was exiled early
+in life from his own country, on account of an accusation of being
+implicated in the affair of Struensee; and it is generally supposed that he
+was one of Queen Matilda's favoured lovers, which supposition is not
+improbable, as in his youth, to judge from his present dignified and
+majestic appearance, he must have been an uncommonly handsome man. He has
+lived ever since at Lausanne, and tho' near seventy-four years of age and
+tormented with the gout, he never loses his cheerfulness, and passes his
+time mostly with his books. He gives dinner parties two or three times a
+week, which are exceedingly pleasant, and one is sure to meet there a
+small, but well informed society of natives and foreigners. Most German
+travellers of rank and litterary attainments, who pass thro' Lausanne,
+bring letters of introduction and recommendation to the Baron and are sure
+to meet with the utmost hospitality and attention.
+
+The women of the Canton de Vaud are in general very handsome, well shaped
+and graceful; litterature, music, dancing and drawing are cultivated by
+them with success; and among the men, tho' one does not meet perhaps with
+quite as much instruction as at Geneva (I mean that it is not so general),
+yet no pedantry whatever prevails as in Geneva. At Lausanne they have
+sincere and solid republican principles and they do not pay that servile
+court to the English that the Genevese do; nor have they as yet adopted the
+phrase "_Dieu me damne_."
+
+
+PARIS, Dec. 5th.
+
+I returned to Paris by Geneva and crossing the Jura chain of mountains
+passed thro' Dole, Auxonne and Dijon. At Geneva, where I stopped three
+days, I met, at a musical party given by M. Picot the banker, the
+celebrated cantatrice Grassini, who looked as beautiful as ever, and sung
+in the most fascinating style several airs, particularly "_Quelle pupille
+tenere_" in the opera of the _Orazj e Curiazi_. To my taste her style of
+singing is far preferable to that of Catalani; there is much more pathos
+and feeling in the singing of Grassini; it is completely and truly the
+"_cantar che nell'anima si sente_." Catalani is very powerful, wonderful,
+if you will, in execution; but she does not touch my heart as Grassini
+does.
+
+On my return to Paris from Geneva I found that the conditions of peace had
+been made public. They are certainly hard, not so much on account of the
+cession of territory, which is trifling, as on account of the vast sums of
+money that Prance is obliged to pay, and the still more galling condition
+of having to pay and feed at her expense an army of occupation of 150,000
+men, of the Allied troops, for a term of three or five years, and to cede
+during that period several important fortresses. The inhabitants of Paris
+look very gloomy and nobody seems to think that the peace will last half as
+long. Prussia and Austria strove hard to wrest Alsace and German Lorraine
+from France; hosts of German publicists had accompanied their armies into
+France and had written pamphlet upon pamphlet to prove that mountains and
+not rivers were the proper boundaries of nations and that wherever the
+German language prevails, the country ought to belong to the Germanic body.
+Ergo, the Vosges mountains were the natural boundaries of France, and
+Alsace and German Lorraine should revert to Germany. Russia and England,
+however, opposed this, and insisted that these two provinces should remain
+with France; but I have no doubt that the first movements that may occur in
+France (and they will perhaps be secretly encouraged) will serve as a
+pretext for the Allies to separate these countries definitively from
+France.
+
+The Louvre has been stripped of the principal statues and pictures which
+have been sent back to the places from whence they were taken, to the great
+mortification of the Parisians, most of whom would have consented to the
+cession of Alsace and Lorraine and half of France to boot on condition of
+keeping the statues and pictures. The English Bureaux are preparing to
+leave Paris and the troops will soon follow; a new French army is
+organizing and several Swiss battalions are raised. It is generally
+supposed that by the end of December France, with the exception of the
+fortresses and districts to be occupied by the Allied Powers, will be freed
+from the pressure of foreign troops.
+
+The Chamber of Peers is occupied with the trial of Marshall Ney, the
+Conseil de Guerre, which was ordered to assemble for that purpose having
+declared itself incompetent. The friends of Ney advised him to claim the
+protection of the 12th Article of the Capitulation of Paris, and Madame
+Ney, it is said, applied both to the Duke of Wellington and to the Emperor
+of Russia; both ungenerously refused; to the former Nature has not given a
+heart with much sensibility, and the latter bears a petty spite against Ney
+on account of his title, _Prince de la Moskowa_. It is pretty generally
+anticipated that poor Ney will be condemned and executed; for tho' at the
+representation of _Cinna_ a few nights ago, at the Théâtre Français, the
+allusions to clemency were loudly caught hold of and applauded by the
+audience, yet I suspect Louis XVIII is by no means of a relenting nature,
+and that he is as little inclined to pardon political trespasses as his
+ancestor Louis IX was disposed to pardon those against religion; for,
+according to Gibbon, his recommendation to his followers was: _"Si
+quelqu'un parle contre la foi chrétienne dans votre présence, donnez lui
+l'épée ventre-dedans_."
+
+
+December 18th.
+
+I met with an emigrant this day at the Palais Royal who was acquainted with
+my family in London. It was the Vicomte de B*****ye.[58] He had resided
+some time in England and also in Switzerland. He is an amiable man, but a
+most incorrigible Ultra. He displayed at once the ideas that prevail among
+the Ultras, which must render them eternally at variance with the mass of
+the French nation. In speaking of the state of France, he said: "_Je n'ai
+jamais cessé et jamais je ne cesserai de regarder comme voleurs tous les
+acquéreurs des biens des émigrés. Il faudroit, pour le bonheur de la
+France, qu'elle fût placés dans le même état ou elle était avant la
+Révolution._" He would not listen to my reasons against the possibility of
+effecting such a plan, even were the plan just and reasonable in itself. I
+told him that for the emigrants to expect to get back their property was
+just as absurd as for the descendants of those Saxon families in England,
+whose ancestors were dispossessed of their estates by William the
+Conqueror, to think of regaining them, and to call upon the Duke of
+Northumberland, for instance, as a descendant of a Norman invader, to give
+up his property as unjustly acquired by his progenitors. We did not hold
+long converse after this; his ideas and mine diverged too much from each
+other.
+
+The English are very much out of favour with the emigrants, as well on
+account of the stripping of the Louvre as on account of not having shot all
+the _libéraux_. They had the folly to believe that the Allied troops would
+merely make war for the emigrants' interests, and after having put to death
+a considerable quantity of those who should be designated as rebels and
+Jacobins by them (the emigrants), would replace France in the exact
+position she was in 1789, and then depart.
+
+Poor Marshall Ney's fate is decided. He was sentenced to death, and the
+sentence was carried into execution not on the _Place de Grenelle_ as was
+given out, but in the gardens of Luxemburgh at a very early hour. He met
+his fate with great firmness and composure. I leave Paris to-morrow for
+London.
+
+
+[47] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, VI, 20, 7.
+
+[48] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 620 (temnere _divos_).--ED.
+
+[49] Louis Wirion (1764-1810), an officer of _gendarmerie_,
+ commander-general of the _place_ de Verdun since 1804, was accused in
+ 1808 of having extorted money from certain English prisoners quartered
+ in Verdun (Estwick, Morshead, Garland, etc.). Wirion shot himself
+ before the end of the long proceedings, which do not seem to have
+ established his guilt, but had reduced him to misery and despair.--ED.
+
+[50] Richard Brinsley Sheridan's (1751-1816) _Pizarro_, produced at Drury
+ Lane in 1799.--ED.
+
+[51] Three brothers Zadera, all born in Warsaw, served in the Imperial
+ army.--ED.
+
+[52] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_ III, 2, i.--ED.
+
+[53] These words mean, or are supposed to mean, in French and in Dutch: "I
+ don't understand" (_je n'entends pas_).--ED.
+
+[54] Horace, _Carm._, IV, 2,39.--ED.
+
+[55]John Chetwode Eustace (1762-1815), author of _A Tour through Italy_
+ (2 vol., London, 1813), the eighth edition of which appeared in
+ 1841.--ED.
+
+[56] Theodoric was a Goth, not a Lombard.--ED.
+
+[57] Of course, _Silva Beleni_.--ED.
+
+[58] Perhaps Clement François Philippe de Laâge Bellefaye, mentioned in the
+ _Souvenirs_ of Baron de Frénilly, p. 94. His large estates had been
+ confiscated in the Revolution.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER
+WATERLOO
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MARCH-JUNE,1816
+
+Ball at Cambray, attended by the Duke of Wellington--An Adventure between
+Saint Quentin and Compiègne--Paris revisited--Colonel Wardle and Mrs
+Wallis--Society in Paris--The Sourds-Muets--The Cemetery of Père La
+Chaise--Apathy of the French people--The priests--Marriage of the Duke de
+Berri.
+
+
+March, 1816.
+
+This time I varied my route to Paris, by passing thro' St Omer, Douay and
+Cambray. At Cambray I was present at a ball given by the municipality. The
+Duke of Wellington was there. He had in his hand an extraordinary sort of
+hat which had something of a shape of a folding cocked hat, with divers red
+crosses and figures on it, so that it resembled a conjurer's cap. I
+understand it is a hat given to his Grace by magnanimous Alexander; St
+Nicholas perhaps commissioned the Emperor to present it to Wellington, for
+his Grace is entitled to the eternal gratitude of the different Saints, as
+well as of the different sovereigns, for having maintained them
+respectively in their celestial and terrestrial dominions; and it is to be
+hoped, after his death, that the latter will celebrate for him a brilliant
+apotheosis, and the former be as complaisant to him and make room for him
+in the Empyreum as Virgil requests the Scorpion to do for Augustus:
+
+ ...Ipse tibi jam brachia contrahit ardens
+ Scorpios, et coeli jusiâ plus parts reliquit.[59]
+
+I met with an adventure in my journey from St Quentin to Compiègne, which,
+had it happened a hundred years ago in France, would have alarmed me much
+for my personal safety. It was as follows. I had taken my place at St
+Quentin to go to Paris; but all the diligences being filled, the _bureau_
+expedited a _calèche_ to convey me as far as Compiègne, there to meet the
+Paris diligence at nine the next morning. It was a very dark cold night,
+and snowed very hard.
+
+Between eleven and twelve o'clock at night, half way between St Quentin and
+Compiègne, the axle tree of the carriage broke; we were at least two miles
+from any village one way and three the other; but a lone house was close to
+the spot where the accident happened. We had, therefore, the choice of
+going forward or backward, the postillion and myself helping the carriage
+on with our hands, or to take refuge at the lone house till dawn of day. I
+preferred the latter; we knocked several times at the door of the lone
+house, but the owner refused to admit us, saying that he was sure we were
+_gens de mauvaise vie_, and that he would shoot us if we did not go away.
+The postillion and I then determined on retrograding two miles, the
+distance of the nearest village, and remaining there till morning. We
+arrived there with no small difficulty and labour, for it snowed very fast
+and heavily, and it required a good deal of bodily exertion to push on the
+carriage. Arrived at the village, we knocked at the door of a small
+cottage, the owner of which sold some brandy. He received me very civilly,
+gave me some eggs and bacon for supper, and a very fair bed.
+
+The next morning, after having the axle tree repaired, we proceeded on our
+journey to Compiègne. I suffered much from the cold during this adventure,
+and did not sleep well, having fallen into a train of thought which
+prevented me from so doing; and I could not help bringing to my
+recollection the adventure of Raymond in the forest near Strassburg, in the
+romance of _The Monk_. Nothing worthy of note occurred during the rest of
+the journey; but this adventure obliged me to remain one day at Compiègne
+to wait for the next diligence.
+
+
+PARIS, April 8th, 1816.
+
+I delivered my letters to the Wardle family and am very much pleased with
+them. I meet a very agreeable society at their house. Col Wardle is quite a
+republican and very rigid in his principles.[60] His daughter is a young
+lady of first rate talents and has already distinguished herself by some
+poetical compositions. I met at their house Mrs Wallis, the sister of Sir
+R. Wilson.[61] She is an enthusiastic Napoleonist, and wears at times a
+tricolored scarf and a gold chain with a medal of Napoleon's head attached
+to it; this head she sometimes, to amuse herself, compels the old emigrants
+she meets with in society to kiss. The trial of her brother is now going on
+for aiding and abetting the escape of Lavalette. I sincerely hope he will
+escape any severity of punishment, but I more fear the effects of Tory
+vengeance against him in England, in the shape of depriving him of his
+commission, than I do the sentence of any French court. Yet tho' I wish him
+well, I cannot help feeling the remains of a little grudge against him for
+his calumny against Napoleon in accusing him of poisoning the sick of his
+own army before the walls of St Jean d'Acre. I have always vindicated the
+character of Napoleon from this most unjust and unfounded aspersion,
+because having been in Egypt with Abercrombie's army and having had daily
+intercourse with Belliard's division of the French army, after the
+capitulation of Cairo, and during our joint march on the left bank of the
+Nile to Rosetta, I knew that there was not a syllable of truth in the
+story. Mrs Wallis, however, tells me that her brother has expressed deep
+regret that he ever gave credence and currency to such a report; and that
+he acknowledges that he was himself deceived. But he did Napoleon an
+irreparable injury, and his work on the Egyptian campaign contributed in a
+very great degree to excite the hatred of the English people against
+Napoleon, as well as to flatter the passions and prejudices of the Tories.
+
+In the affair however of Lavalette Wilson has nobly retrieved his character
+and obliterated all recollection of his former error. It is amazing the
+popularity he and his two gallant associates have acquired in France by
+this generous and chevaleresque enterprise.
+
+I meet at Col Wardle's a very pleasant French society: conversation, music
+and singing fill up the evening.
+
+
+April 15th.
+
+I have been presented to a very agreeable lady, Madame Esther Fournier, who
+holds a _conversazione_ at her house in the Rue St Honoré every Wednesday
+evening. Here there is either a concert, a ball or private theatricals;
+while in a separate room play goes forward and _crebs_, a game of dice
+similar to hazard, is the fashionable game. Refreshments are handed round
+and at twelve o'clock the company break up. Mme Fournier is a lady of very
+distinguished talent and always acts a principal rôle herself in the
+dramatic performances given at her private theatricals.
+
+I have become acquainted too with a very pleasant family, M. and Mme
+Vanderberg, who are the proprietors of a large house and magnificent garden
+in the Faubourg du Roule. M. Vanderberg is a man of very large fortune.[62]
+He has three daughters, handsome and highly accomplished, and one son; one
+of them was married to General R----, but is since divorced; the second is
+married to a young colonel of Hussars, and the third is still unmarried;
+but being very young, handsome, accomplished and rich, there will be no
+lack of suitors whenever she is disposed to accept the connubial chain. I
+have dined several times with this family. There is an excellent table. The
+choicest old wines are handed about during dinner, and afterwards we
+adjourn to another room to take coffee and liqueurs.
+
+If there is no evening party, the company retire, some for the theatre,
+some for other houses, where they have to pass the evening; if the family
+remain at home you have the option of retiring or remaining with them, and
+the evening is filled up with music or _petits jeux_. I meet with several
+agreeable and distinguished people at this house, among whom are M. Anglas,
+Mme Duthon from the Canton de Vaud, a lady of great vivacity and talent,
+and General Guilleminot and his lady. Col. Paulet, who married M.
+Vanderberg's second daughter, was on the staff of General Guilleminot at
+the battle of Waterloo and suffered much from a fever and ague that he
+caught on the night bivouacs.
+
+I have attended a séance of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_ founded
+by the famous Abbé de l'Epée, and continued with equal success by his
+successor the Abbé S[icard],[63] who delivered the lecture and exhibited
+the talent and proficiency of his pupils. The eldest pupil, Massieu,
+himself deaf and dumb, is an extraordinary genius and he may be said in
+some measure to direct all the others. Massieu, who has a very interesting
+and even handsome countenance, and manners extremely prepossessing,
+conducts the examination of the pupils by means of signs, and writing on a
+slate or paper; and it is wonderful to observe the progress made by these
+interesting young persons, who have been so harshly treated by Nature. The
+definitions they give of substances and qualities are so just and happy;
+and in their situation, definition is everything, for they cannot learn by
+rote, as other boys often do, who, in the study of philology, acquire only
+words and not things or meanings. The deaf and dumb persons, on the
+contrary, acquire at once by this method of instruction the philosophy of
+grammar; and then it is far from being the dry study that many people
+suppose. A German princess who was present exclaimed in a transport of
+admiration at some of the specimens of definitions and inferences given by
+the pupils; " Oh! I wish that I were born deaf and dumb, were it only to
+learn grammar properly!" Sir Sidney Smith was present at this lecture and
+seemed inclined to make himself a little too conspicuous. For instance,
+before the examination began, he seated himself close by the Abbé S[icard]
+and pulling a paper out of his pocket said that he had found it on the
+ground on his way hither; and that it was part of a leaf from an edition of
+Cicero which contained a sentence so applicable to the character and
+talents of his friend the Abbé, that he requested permission to read it
+aloud and translate it into French for the benefit of those who did not
+understand Latin. He then read the sentence. The Abbé, not to be out-done
+in compliments, then rose and made a most flaming speech in eulogium of his
+friend "the heroic defender of St John d'Acre" and pointed him out to the
+audience as the first person who had foiled the arms of the "Usurper."
+
+Now this word "Usurper" applied to Napoleon did not at all please the
+audience, and it shewed a great deal of servility on the part of the Abbé
+to insult fallen greatness, and in the person too of a man who had rendered
+such vast services to science. In fact this episode was received coldly,
+and somewhat impatiently by the audience; and many thought it was a thing
+_got up_ between the Admiral and the Abbé to flatter each other's vanity;
+indeed my friend Mrs Wallis, next to whom I was placed, and who does not at
+all agree with the gallant Admiral in politics, intimated this in a
+whisper, loud enough to be heard by all the audience and added: "Such a
+humbug is enough to make one sick." Sir Sidney Smith heard all this and
+seemed a good deal abashed and disconcerted; he, however, had the good
+sense to say nothing, and the examination began.
+
+
+PARIS, May 5th.
+
+I formed a party with some friends to visit the cemetery of Père la Chaise.
+We remarked in particular the places where poor Labédoyère and Marshal Ney
+are buried. There is no tombstone on the former, but some shrubs have been
+planted, and a black wooden cross fixed to denote the spot where he lies.
+
+To Marshal Ney there is a stone sepulchre with this inscription: "_Cy-gît
+le Maréchal Ney, Prince de la Moskowa_." This cemetery is most beautifully
+laid out. The multitude of tombs, the variety of inscriptions in prose and
+verse, some of which are very affecting, the yews, the willows, all render
+this a delightful spot for contemplation; it commands an extensive view of
+Paris and the surrounding country. Foreigners of distinction who die in
+Paris are generally buried here; but it would require a volume to describe
+to you in detail this interesting cemetery. I think the practice of
+strewing flowers over the grave is very touching and classic; it reminded
+me of the description of Marcellus's death in Virgil:
+
+ ... Manibus date lilia plenis.
+
+We however strewed over the tombs of Labédoyère and Ney not lilies, but
+violets, for my friend Mrs W[allis], who was of our party, has a great
+aversion to the lily.
+
+We have just heard of Didier's capture and execution at Grenoble.[64] There
+are continual reports of insurrections and plots, but it is now well known
+that the most of them are _got up_ by the Ultras to entrap the unwary. The
+French people seem sunk in apathy and to wish for peace at any rate;
+nothing but the most extreme provocation will induce them to take up arms;
+but then, if they once do so, woe to the _Chambre Introuvable_, as the
+present Chamber of Deputies is called; certainly such a set of venal,
+merciless and ignorant bigots and blockheads never were collected in any
+assembly. There have occurred several scandalous scenes at Nîmes and other
+places. The Protestants are openly insulted and threatened, and the
+government is either too weak to prevent it, or, as is supposed, secretly
+encourages those excesses. In fact in Paris there are two polices; the one,
+that of the Government, the other, and by far the most troublesome, that of
+_Monsieur_[65] and the violent Ultra party, or as they are collectively
+called the _Pavilion Marsan_.[66] The priests are at work everywhere
+trumping up old legends, forging communications from the Holy Ghost,
+receiving letters dropped from heaven by Jesus Christ, and all this is done
+with the idea of working on fanatical minds, to induce them to commit acts
+of outrage and violence on those whom the priests designate as enemies to
+the faith, and on weak ones, with the idea of frightening them into
+restoring the lands and property which they have purchased or inherited and
+which formerly belonged to emigrants or to the Church.
+
+A lady of my acquaintance (to give you an idea of the arts of these holy
+hypocrites) sent for a priest to confess and to receive absolution, not
+from any faith in the efficacy of the business, but merely from a desire of
+conforming to the ceremonies of the national worship. The priest arrived,
+but began by apologizing to her that he was sorry he could not administer
+to her the sacrament of absolution; she, surprized, asked the reason; he
+answered that it was because her uncle had purchased Church lands, which
+she inherited, and that unless she could resolve to restore them to the
+church, he could not think of giving her absolution. The lady was at a loss
+whether to be indignant at his impudence or to laugh outright at his folly.
+She however assumed a becoming gravity and _sang-froid_, and told him that
+he was very much mistaken if he thought he had got hold of a simpleton or a
+bigot in her; that she had sent for him merely with the idea of conforming
+to the national worship, and not with the most remote persuasion of the
+necessity or efficacy of his or any other priest's absolution; she added:
+"Your conduct has opened my eyes as to the views of all your cloth; I see
+you are incurable. I shall never send for any of you again; and be assured
+this anecdote shall not be forgotten. You may retire." The priest, abashed
+and mortified in finding himself mistaken in his supposed prey, stammered
+an excuse and retired.
+
+I intend to remain at Paris until after the marriage ceremony of the Duke
+and Duchess of Berri, and I shall then proceed to Lausanne. It is expected
+there will be some disturbance on the occasion of this marriage.
+
+I have witnessed an execution by the guillotine on the Place de Grève near
+the _Hôtel de Ville_. The criminal was guilty of a burglary and murder. It
+is the only execution (except political ones) that has taken place at Paris
+for the last six months, whereas in England they are strung up by dozens
+every fortnight. Independent of there being far less crimes committed in
+France than in England, the French code punishes but few offences with
+death.
+
+Why is not the sanguinary English criminal code with death in every
+line--why is it not reformed, I say? 'Twould be well if our legislators,
+instead of their puerile and frothy declamations against revolutionary
+principles and the ambition of Napoleon, would occupy themselves seriously
+with this subject. But then the lawyers would all oppose the simplification
+of our Code. They find by experience that a complicated one, obstructed by
+customs, statutes and acts of Parliament, difficult to be correctly
+interpreted, and frequently at variance with each other, is a much more
+profitable thing, a much wider and more lucrative field for the exercise of
+their profession, than the simplicity of the Code Napoléon; and they would
+die of rage and despair at the thought of anybody not a lawyer being able
+to interpret the laws himself. Now as our country gentlemen and members of
+Parliament are always much inclined to take lawyer's advice, and are
+besides fully persuaded and convinced that there are no abuses whatever in
+England and that everything is as it should be, there is no hope of any
+amelioration in this particular. All reasoning and argument is lost on such
+political optimists.
+
+The punishment of the guillotine certainly appears to be the most humane
+mode of terminating the existence of a man that could possibly be invented.
+The apparatus is preserved in the _Hôtel de Ville_, and is never exposed to
+view or erected on the place of execution, till about an hour before the
+execution itself takes place. At the hour appointed the criminal is brought
+to the scaffold, fastened to the board, placed at right angles with the
+fatal instrument, the head protruding thro' the groove, which embraces the
+neck; the executioner pulls a cord, the axe descends and the head of the
+criminal falls into a basket. The whole ceremony of the execution does not
+take three minutes when the criminal once arrives at the foot of the
+guillotine. There is none of that horrible struggling that takes place in
+the operation of hanging.
+
+June 21st, 1816.
+
+The ceremony of the marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Berri passed off
+quietly enough. Several people, it is true, were arrested for seditious
+expressions, but no tumult occurred. A great apprehension seemed to prevail
+lest something should occur, but the gendarmerie and police were so
+vigilant that all projects, had there been any, would have proved abortive.
+
+
+[59] Virgil, _Georg._, I, 35.--ED.
+
+[60] Colonel Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle was the celebrated exposer of the scandal
+ in 1808-9, when the mistress of the Duke of York was found to be
+ trafficking in Commissions. He had retired from active service in
+ 1802, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Financial reasons obliged
+ him, after 1815, to live on the Continent; he died in Florence,
+ 1833.--ED.
+
+[61] Sir Robert Thomas Wilson (1779-1849), author of _The History of the
+ British Expedition to Egypt_, 1802; a French translation of that work
+ elicited a protest from Napoleon.--ED.
+
+[62] Vanderberg had made a fortune as a contractor to the French army; he
+ is mentioned in Ida Saint Elme's _Mémoires d'une contemporaine_ and
+ elsewhere.--ED.
+
+[63] Abbé Sicard (Rooh Ambroise) was director of the Institution of
+ Sourds-Muets from 1790 to 1797 and from 1800 to 1822.--ED.
+
+[64] Paul Didier (1758-1816) took part in a Bonapartist conspiracy at Lyons
+ in 1816, raised an insurrection in the Isère and fled to Piedmont,
+ whence he was surrendered to the French authorities, condemned to
+ death and executed at Grenoble.--ED.
+
+[65] The King's brother, afterwards Charles X.--ED.
+
+[66] The N.E. pavilion of the Tuileries.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Journey from Paris to Lausanne--Besançon--French refugees in
+Lausanne--François Lamarque--General Espinassy--Bordas--Gautier--Michau--
+M. de Laharpe--Mlle Michaud--Levade, a Protestant minister--Chambéry--Aix--
+Details about M. de Boigne's career in India--English Toryism and
+intolerance--Valley of Maurienne--Passage across Mont Cenis and arrival at
+Suza--Turin.
+
+
+LAUSANNE, July 8th.
+
+Departing from Paris on the 24th June, 1816, I varied my journey into
+Switzerland this time, for instead of travelling thro' Lyons or Dole, I
+took the route of Besangon, Pontarlier, Jougne and Orbe. The country
+between Dijon and Besançon is a rich and fertile plain. At Besançon the
+mountainous country begins; it is a strong fortress, and the last
+considerable town of the French frontier. It lies in a very picturesque
+situation, being nearly environed by the Doubs, which meanders under its
+walls, and by very lofty mountains; on the other side of the Doubs stands
+the citadel, its chief strength. The town of Besangon is exceedingly
+handsome and well built, and there are several agreeable promenades, two of
+which I must particularize, viz., the promenade de Chamarre and the garden
+of the Palace of Granvelle. There are besides several Roman antiquities and
+the remains of a large amphitheatre. I amused myself very well for a couple
+of days at Besançon, and met with some agreeable society at the _Hôtel de
+France_ where I lodged. I left Besançon at eight in the morning of the 30th
+June, and arrived at Pontarlier at six the same evening. Pontarlier is a
+dreary, melancholy looking place, consisting of a very long street and
+several offsets of streets, situated in the midst of mountains, eternally
+covered with snow. Winter reigns here during nine months of the year. At
+Pontarlier the whole garrison were under arms, when I arrived, to pay the
+last duties to a most respectable and respected officer, whose death was
+occasioned by falling into the river, while at the _necessary_, by the
+under board giving way. This officer had served in almost all the campaigns
+of Napoleon and had greatly distinguished himself. What a cruel death for a
+warrior who had been in fifty battles! That death should have shunned him
+in the field of battle, to make him fall in a manner at once inglorious and
+ridiculous! yet such is destiny. Pyrrhus fell by a tile flung from a house
+by an old woman, and I am acquainted with a gallant captain in the British
+Navy who lost his leg by amputation, having broken it (oh horror!) by a
+fall from the top of a stage coach.
+
+I left Pontarlier on the 2d July, and arrived at Lausanne the same evening
+at five o'clock. On my return to Lausanne I had the pleasure to form an
+acquaintance with several eminent Frenchmen proscribed and banished from
+France, on account of having voted the death of Louis XVI, as members of
+the National Convention, which tried him, and for having voted, after the
+return of Napoleon from Elba, the _Acte additionnel_, which excluded the
+Bourbons for ever from the throne of France, Among them are, 1st, Monsieur
+Lamarque, who was one of the commissioners sent by the Convention to arrest
+Dumouriez, but being seized by him, and delivered over to the Austrians, he
+passed some time in captivity and was at length released, by being
+exchanged with some others against the Duchess d'Angoulême.[67] He is a
+very able man and seems to have far more political talent than any of the
+other _Conventionnels_ who are here. On Napoleon's return from Elba he
+voted for him, but made strong objections against the formation of a
+peerage, which he said was perfectly useless in France, and pregnant with
+mischief to boot, as it would only serve as an _appui_ to despotism. He
+wrote a pamphlet with some excellent remarks on this, subject. He therein
+points out the evils of an hereditary Chamber, and of a priviledged
+aristocracy, who have nothing to expect from the people, but all from the
+Prince; and in its stead he proposes an additional elective Chamber,
+something on the plan of the Senate in America, but he decidedly reprobates
+an hereditary peerage.
+
+The next is General Espinassy, a very good classical scholar and a most
+upright and amiable man.[68] In his vote he was solely influenced by strong
+but conscienscious republican principles; he resides here with his wife and
+two sons; he was considered as one of the best engineer officers in France
+and he opposed the nomination of Napoleon to the Imperial dignity in 1804.
+
+Another, M. Bordas,[69] opposed Napoleon's assumption of the Consulship on
+the 18th Brumaire, and was proscribed by him for a short time, but
+afterwards amnestied and received into favour. He gave his vote for
+Napoleon on the _Champ de Mai_ in 1815, but accompanied this vote by a bold
+speech towards Napoleon wherein he found fault with his former despotic
+practises, and reminded him of the solemnity of his promise to govern in
+future paternally and nationally, as became the sovereign of a free people.
+M. Bordas is a very cheerful, lively, companionable man and tho' seventy
+years of age, he has an uncommon share of vivacity, with something of the
+_ci-devant jeune homme_ about him, and He is pleased to be considered still
+as a man _à bonnes fortunes_.
+
+The next to him is M. Gauthier, who had been a lawyer, and held a
+considerable post as a magistrate in the time of the Republic and under the
+Empire.[70] He possesses a good deal of talent, close logical reasoning,
+and has determined public principle.
+
+The next, M. Michaud, had been also an advocate, and is possessor of
+considerable property in the department of the Doubs;[71] he is a most
+rigid unbending republican, something in the style of Verrina in Schiller's
+_Fiesco_; he opposed the assumption of the supreme power by Buonaparte on
+the 18th Brumaire; he voted against the Consulship for life, as well as
+against the assumption of the Imperial dignity. He is a very good classical
+scholar. He is a widower and has with him here Mlle Elisa, his only
+daughter, who follows her father's fortunes. She is a very amiable and
+accomplished young lady; she has a thorough knowledge of music and of
+painting in oils, and is classically versed in the Italian language. I soon
+became acquainted with the whole of these illustrious exiles, and I find
+great delight and instruction from their conversation; and this is a great
+relief to me, for the life one leads in a Swiss town is rather monotonous.
+
+
+LAUSANNE.
+
+I dine very often with my neighbour the Baron de Falkenskioeld, and at his
+house I became acquainted with M. de Laharpe, who was preceptor to the
+present Emperor of Russia. He is a native of this Canton, and has returned
+here to pass the remainder of his life. He is married to a very amiable
+Russian lady, and having acquired a pretty good fortune in Russia, he lives
+here very happily and comfortably; but notwithstanding this, he is often
+tempted to visit Paris, Milan and other great cities, and when there, sighs
+to return to his native mountains.
+
+As the Ultras of France bear a great hatred towards the inhabitants of the
+Canton de Vaud, on account of the asylum given and sympathy shown to the
+_proscrits_, they have been at the pains of trumping up and printing a
+pretended petition from the inhabitants of the department of the Doubs,
+praying that the French Government would endeavor to obtain the removal of
+these _proscrits_ from the Canton de Vaud, and stating that the said Canton
+was the _foyer_ of Jacobinical principles, and the place where Napoleon's
+return from Elba was planned and accelerated, and thro' which the
+conveyance of intelligence backwards and forwards was conducted. I have no
+doubt that in this petition more is meant than meets the ear; that the
+Oligarchs of Bern, as well as the Ultras of France, have a share in it, and
+that it may be considered not so much as an attempt to compel the Canton to
+refuse asylum to these exiles, as to excite the Great Powers to enforce the
+abolition of the independence of Vaud, and to replace it under the dominion
+and authority of the Canton of Bern.
+
+Everybody here, however, sees thro' the drift of this petition, and many
+persons whose names are put down as having signed it, have written to their
+friends at Lausanne, to declare not only that they never signed such a
+petition, but their entire ignorance even of the agitation of the question
+till they saw the petition itself in print. The French government, however,
+has not ventured to act any further upon it, than to make a pompous display
+of the royalist zeal and _bon esprit_ that pervades the Department of the
+Doubs.
+
+I see a good deal of Mlle Michaud. I find her conversation extremely
+agreeable. She had lent to me an Italian work by Verri entitled _Le notti
+Romane al sepolcro di Stipione_. She is a very rigid Catholic, having been
+educated by a priest of very strict ideas. Her devotion however does not
+render her less cheerful or less amiable. She having expressed a wish to
+hear the Protestant church service, I offered to accompany her and we went
+together one Sunday to the Cathedral Church at Lausanne. But it
+unfortunately happened that on that day a sermon was preached which must
+have given a great deal of pain to her filial feelings. Mr Levade, the
+minister, took it into his head to give a political sermon, in which, after
+a great deal of commonplace abuse of Voltaire, Rousseau and the French
+Revolution, and very fulsome adulation towards the English government (a
+subject which was brought in by the head and shoulders), of that _island_
+(as he termed it) _surrounded by the Ocean_, he lavished a great deal of
+still more fulsome adulation on the Bourbons; and then most wantonly and
+unnecessarily began a furious declamation against the _régicides_ as he
+termed them, who had taken refuge in the Canton, and intimated pretty
+plainly how pleasing it would be to God Almighty that they should be
+expelled from it. This intolerant discourse, more worthy of a raving Jesuit
+than of a Protestant minister, was deservedly scouted by the inhabitants of
+Lausanne; but this did not hinder poor Mlle Michaud from being much
+affected at the opprobrious tirade directed against a set of men, among
+whom her father bore a conspicuous part, and who acted from patriotic
+motives. I must not omit to state that in this discourse M. Levade
+interwove some hyperbolical compliments towards the young Prince of Sweden,
+who attended the service that morning. He told him that the eyes of all
+Europe were fixed upon him, and that Providence had him under his especial
+care.
+
+Now the following is the character of M. Levade.[72] He is a time-serving,
+meddling priest, and a most flagrant adulator of the powers that be. He
+thinks that by declaiming against the French Revolution, and against
+Voltaire and Rousseau, that he will get into favor with the great people
+who pass thro' Lausanne, with the French and English Government adherents,
+and with the great Tory families of England. No considerable personage ever
+passes through Lausanne, but Mr Levade is the first to make him a visit;
+and no rich or noble English family arrives with whom he does not
+ingratiate himself, and he is not sparing of his adulations. This mode of
+procedure has been a very profitable concern to him, as he has received a
+vast number of presents, and several valuable legacies, besides securing a
+number of pupils among the English families, that come or that have been
+here. He is in short a thorough parasite and time server, in every sense of
+the word. This adulation of the Bourbon family in his sermon, besides the
+meanness of it, was highly misplaced, coming from the mouth of a Protestant
+minister, and somebody exclaimed on leaving the Church: "_Que doit-on
+penser d'un ministre protestant du Canton de Vaud, qui prodigue des
+louanges à une famille qui a été l'ennemie acharnée de l'Elise reformée, et
+qui a persécuté les protestants d'une manière si atroce?_" But Mr Levade
+(tho' to the honor of the clergymen of the Canton de Vaud he is singular
+among _them_), yet he has many persons who perfectly resemble him among the
+members of the Church of England, and who are as eager to support despotism
+and to crush liberty as any disciple of Loyola or any Janissary of the
+Grand Signor. The other Protestant ministers of this Canton were highly
+indignant at this sermon; in fact, it was the first time in this city that
+the House of God had been profaned by the introduction of political
+subjects into a religious discourse. This sermon was the common topic of
+conversation for many days after.
+
+
+CHAMBÉRY, 2d August.
+
+I left Lausanne for Geneva on 28 July. I stopped at Nyon to pay a visit to
+Mme Duthon, with whom I became acquainted at Paris. I dined with her and
+passed a most agreeable day. Her talents are of the first order, and she is
+as great an enthusiast for the German language and litterature as myself,
+besides being well versed in Italian. She had a female relation with her.
+We took a boat after dinner to navigate the lake, and we visited the
+Château and domains of Joseph Napoleon. The next day I proceeded to Geneva.
+
+I determined on making the journey into Italy this time by Mont-Cenis, and
+to make it on foot as far as the foot of Mont-Cenis on the Italian side,
+intending to profit of the opportunity of the first conveyance I should
+meet with at Suza to proceed to Turin. I accordingly forwarded my
+portmanteau to Turin to the care of a banker there, and sallied forth from
+Geneva at six o'clock on the morning of 1st August.
+
+I stopped to dine at Frangy and reached Romilly at seven in the evening.
+There is nothing worthy of remark at Romilly. The next morning I stopped at
+Aix to breakfast, and visited the bath establishment. The scenery is
+picturesque on this route, and the whole road from Aix to Chambéry is
+aligned with remarkably fine large trees. At three in the afternoon I
+arrived at Chambéry, the capital of Savoy. It is a large handsome city,
+situated in a fruitful valley, with a great many gardens and orchards
+surrounding it. There is a strong garrison here. Among the many _maisons de
+plaisance_ in the environs of this city, the most distinguishable is the
+villa of General De Boigne, who has passed the greatest part of his life in
+India, in the service of Scindiah, one of the Mahratta chiefs;[73] and it
+was by De Boigne's assistance that Scindiah, from being a petty chief, with
+not more than three or four hundred horse, became the founder of a powerful
+kingdom, comprized chiefly of the provinces of the Ganges and Jumna, torn
+from the Mogol Empire, whose Sovereign fell into the hands of Scindiah.
+Scindiah caused the Mogol Emperor's eyes to be put out, and kept him as a
+state prisoner in Delhi, till the year 1805, when on the Mahrattas engaging
+in war with the English, Scindiah was defeated by Lake and lost the greater
+part of his conquests. De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, long before
+this rupture took place, and at that time Scindiah had a fine regular army
+of thirty battalions of 1,000 men, each disciplined, armed and equipped in
+the European manner. He had likewise sixty squadrons of regular cavalry and
+a formidable train of artillery. At Chambéry I met with two French
+_voyageurs de commerce_, who with that positiveness, which is often the
+national characteristic, insisted that De Boigne owed his riches and
+fortune to his treachery, in having betrayed and sold Tippoo Saib to the
+English, when he was in Tippoo's service; and I find this is the current
+report all over Savoy.
+
+Now it is an accusation totally devoid of foundation, as I shall presently
+show; and I took this opportunity of vindicating the reputation of De
+Boigne, by simply stating that De Boigne could never have betrayd Tippoo,
+since he was never in his service; 2dly, that he had, when in the service
+of Scindiah, fought against Tippoo, when the Mahrattas coalesced with the
+English against that Prince in 1792; and that had it not been for the
+assistance given by the Mahrattas to the English (a most impolitic
+coalition on the part of the Mahrattas, as it turned out afterwards),
+Tippoo would not have been compelled to conclude so humiliating a treaty of
+peace; 3dly, that De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, three years before
+the second war and death of Tippoo in 1799. I stated, too, that I was
+perfectly well acquainted with these particulars of De Boigne's career,
+from having served six years in India, and from having been personally
+acquainted with a gentleman of the name of Lucius Ferdinand Smith, who was
+the ultimate friend of De Boigne and his lieutenant general in the service
+of Scindiah; I added that I could not conceive how so unjust and unfounded
+an aspersion on De Boigne's character could find currency.
+
+I hope that what I said will be effectual towards doing away this injurious
+report; but very probably it will not, for when the vulgar once imbibe an
+opinion, it is difficult to eradicate it from their minds, and they are not
+at all obliged to the person who endeavors to undeceive them, so that
+General De Boigne's treachery and sale of Tippoo to the English will be
+handed down to posterity among the Savoyards, as a fact of which it will be
+as little permitted to doubt as of the treachery of Judas.
+
+
+CHAMBÉRY, August 3d.
+
+At the _table d'hôte_ this day I nearly lost all patience on hearing an
+elderly English gentleman extolling the English Ministry to the skies, and
+abusing the army of the Loire, calling them rebels and traitors. I stood up
+in defence of these gallant men, and stated that the French Army in the
+time of the Republic and of the Empire were the most constitutional of all
+the European armies, since they were taken from and identified with the
+people; and that it was this brotherly feeling for their fellow citizens
+that induced them to join the standards of Napoleon, on his return from
+Elba; that they only followed the voice of the nation; that all France was
+indignant at the tergiversation and breach of faith on the part of the
+restored Government, in a variety of instances; and that, had Napoleon and
+the army been out of the question, the Bourbons would not have failed to be
+upset, from the indignation their measures had excited among the people. He
+then said that the Army of the Loire was a most dangerous body of men, and
+that that was the reason why the Allies insisted on their being disbanded.
+I replied that this was the highest compliment he could pay them, and the
+greatest feather in their cap, since it went to prove, that as long as this
+Army was in existence, neither the crowned despots, nor the Ultras thought
+themselves safe; and that they could not venture to pursue their
+anti-national projects, which were all directed towards depriving the
+French people of all they had gained by the Revolution and bringing them
+back to the _blessings_ of the ancient _régime_. He could say nothing in
+reply, but that he feared I had Jacobin principles, to which I made
+rejoinder: "If these be Jacobin principles, I glory in them." Some
+Sardinian officers, who were present, seemed to enjoy my argument, tho'
+they said nothing; and one took me aside, when we quitted the table, and
+said he rejoiced to see me take the old man in hand, as he disgusted them
+every day by his tirades against the liberal party, and by his fulsome
+adulations of the British Government. The old gentleman held forth likewise
+in a long speech respecting the finances of England, in praise of the
+sinking fund, and when it was suggested to him that England from the
+immense national debt must one day become bankrupt: "_Non, Monsieur_," (he
+said),"_la Caisse d'Amortissement empêchera cela_." In fine, the _Caisse
+d'Amortissement_ was to work miracles. I replied that the principle of the
+_Caisse d'Amortissement_ was good, provided a constant and consistent
+economy were practised; but that at present and during the whole time from
+its establishment, it had been a mockery on the understanding of the
+Nation, when we reflected on the profligate expenditure of public money,
+occasioned by the ruinous, unjust and liberticide wars, which were entered
+into and fomented by the British Government. Indeed, I said it was like the
+conduct of a man who possessing an income of 200£ per annum, should set
+apart, in a box as a _Caisse d'épargne_, 20£ annually, and at the same time
+continue a style of living, the annual expence of which would so far exceed
+his income, as to oblige him to borrow 7 or 800£ every year. The old
+gentleman was all amort at this comparison, which must be obvious to every
+one. Nothing shows in a more glaring light the blind and superstitious
+reverence paid to great names; for because this sinking fund was proposed
+by Pitt, all his adherents extol it to the skies, without analysing it, and
+give him besides the credit of an invention to which he had no right
+whatever.
+
+
+ST JEAN DE MAURIENNE.
+
+I started from Chambéry on the morning of the fourth of August, and stopped
+at Montmélian to breakfast. Here begins the valley of Maurienne, and as
+this valley, along which the road is cut, is extremely narrow, being hemmed
+in on each side by the High Alps, Montmélian, which stands on an eminence
+in the centre of the valley (the road running thro' the town), must be a
+post of the utmost importance towards the defence of this pass. It was a
+fortified place of great consideration in the former wars, and if the
+fortifications were repaired and improved, it might be made almost
+impregnable, as it would enfilade the road on each side. From the
+above-mentioned features of the ground, the valley narrowing more and more
+as you proceed, from the high mountains that align it and from its
+sinuosities, it follows that at every angle or curve caused by these
+sinuosities, you appear as if you were shut out from all the rest of the
+world and could proceed no further. The river Isère runs thro' and parallel
+with this valley. It rises in the mountains of Savoy and falls into the
+Rhône in Dauphiné. I passed the night at Aiguebelle.
+
+From Aiguebelle to St Jean de Maurienne is twelve leagues, and I found
+myself so tired with walking, and my legs from being swelled gave me so
+much pain, that I determined to give up the _gloriole_ of making the whole
+journey on foot as I intended and to remain here for two days to repose and
+then profit by the first conveyance that might pass to conduct me to Turin.
+
+From Aiguebelle the valley becomes still more narrow, and there is a
+continual ascent, tho' it is so gentle as scarcely to be perceptible. Every
+spot of ground in this valley, which will admit of cultivation, is put to
+profit by the industry of the inhabitants. Here one sees beans, indian
+corn, and even wines; for the heat is very great indeed in summer and
+autumn, owing to the rays of the sun being concentrated, as it were, into a
+focus, in this narrow valley, and were the bed of the Isère to be deepened,
+or were it less liable to overflow, from the melting of the snow in spring
+and summer, much land, which is now a marsh, might be applied to
+agricultural purposes. The inhabitants of this valley regret very much the
+separation of Savoy from France, as during the time that Duchy was annexed
+to the French Empire, each peasant possessing an ass could earn three
+franks per diem in transporting merchandise across Mont-Cenis. St Jean de
+Maurienne is a neat little town. I put up at the same inn, and slept in the
+same bedroom which was occupied by poor Didier who was put to death at
+Grenoble for having raised the standard of liberty. He was surprized here
+in bed by the _Carabiniere Reali_ of the Sardinian government, those
+satellites of despotism; and according to the barbarous principles laid
+down by the crowned heads, delivered over to the French authorities. I
+observed a great many _crétins_ in this valley.
+
+
+SUZA, 10th August.
+
+On the morning of the 8th August two _vetturini_ passed by the inn at St
+Jean de Maurienne, and I engaged a place in one of them, as far as Turin.
+We arrived at the village of Modena in the evening. The landscape is much
+the same as what we have hitherto passed, but the climate is considerably
+colder, from the land being more elevated. Hitherto I had suffered much
+inconvenience from the heat. The next morning we reached Lans-le-Bourg, the
+last town of Savoy lying at the foot of Mount Cenis.
+
+After breakfast we began the ascent of Mont Cenis, and I made the whole way
+from Lans-le-Bourg to the _Hospice_ of Mont Cenis, that is, the whole
+ascent, a distance of twenty-five Italian miles, on foot. This _chaussée_
+is another wonderful piece of work of Napoleon; a broad carriage road, wide
+enough for three carriages to go abreast, and cut zig-zag with so gentle a
+slope as to allow a heavy French diligence to pass, with the utmost ease,
+across a mountain where it was formerly thought impossible a wheel could
+ever run. This _chaussée_ is passable at all seasons of the year; the
+mountain is not so high as that of the Simplon and is less liable to
+impediments from the snow; the obstacles from nature are less, and you can
+descend in a sledge from the _Hospice_ by gliding down the side of the
+cone, and thus descending in nine or ten minutes, whereas the ascent
+requires four hours' time. From Lans-le-Bourg to the _Hospice_ on
+Mont-Cenis the road is on the flank of an immense mountain and you have no
+ravines to cross; the road is cut zig-zag on the flank of the mountain and
+forms a considerable number of very acute angles, as it is made with so
+gentle a slope that you scarcely feel the difficulty of the ascent. These
+repeated zig-zags and acute angles formed by the road, and the very slight
+slope given to the ascent, make the different branches appear to be almost
+parallel to each other, and it is a very curious and novel sight when a
+number of carriages are travelling together on this road to see them with
+their horses' heads turned different ways, yet all following the same
+course, just like ships on different tacks beating against the wind to
+arrive at the same port, a comparison that could not fail immediately to
+occur to a sailor. There is scarcely ever any detention on this road from
+the fall of snow, as there are a considerable number of persons employed to
+_deblay_ it as soon as it falls; but here, as well as on the Simplon, there
+are _maisons de refuge_ at a short distance from each other. We stopped for
+two hours at the inn at Mont-Cenis, which is about one hundred yards from
+the _Hospice_. It was a remarkable fine day, and I enjoyed my walk very
+much. The mountain air was keen and bracing and particularly delightful
+after being shut up for some many days in the close valley. We had some
+excellent trout for dinner. At Mont-Cenis, near the _Hospice_, is a large
+lake which is frozen during eight months of the year. Here reigns eternal
+winter and the mountains are covered with snows that never melt. From
+Mont-Cenis to Suza the descent is very grand and striking, and the scenery
+resembles that of the Simplon; there are more obstacles of nature than on
+the former part of the road, and here ravines are connected by the means of
+bridges, and there are subterraneous galleries to pass thro. Several
+_chutes d'eau_ are here observable; one of them I cannot avoid mentioning,
+as being very magnificent. It is formed by the Cenischia[74] which divides
+Savoy from Piedmont and runs into the Dora at Suza. We were highly
+gratified at the sight of the sublime scenery on all sides, and at the
+magnificent _chaussée_, and we all (I mean the passengers in the two
+coaches and myself) did hommage to the mighty genius who conceived and
+caused to be executed such a stupendous work. We arrived at Suza at six
+o'clock p.m.
+
+
+TURIN, 18th August.
+
+Suza is a tolerably large town and has a neat appearance. It is commanded
+and defended by the fort of Brunetti, now dismantled, but which is to be
+repaired according to the treaty of 1815. It will then be a very important
+post and completely barr the pass of Suza. The road from Suza to Rivoli is
+thro' a valley widening at every step; at Rivoli you _débouche_ at once
+from the gorge of the mountain into a boundless plain. The road is then on
+a magnificent _chaussée_ the whole way to Turin, and every vegetable
+production announces a change of climate to those coming from Savoy. Here
+are fields of wheat, indian corn, mulberry and elm trees and vines hung in
+festoons from tree to tree, which give a most picturesque appearance to the
+landscape, and, together with the country houses, serve as a relief to the
+boundless plain. The _chaussée_ is lined with trees on each side the whole
+way from Rivoli to Turin; I observed among carriages of all sorts small
+cars, like those used by children, drawn by dogs. These cars contain one
+person each. They are frequent in this part of the country, and such a
+conveyance is called a _cagnolino_. The Convent of St Michael, situated on
+an immense height to the right of the road between Suza and Rivoli, is a
+very striking object. The mountain forms a single cone and it appears
+impossible to reach the summit except on the back of a Hippogriff:
+
+ E ben appar che d'animal ch'abbia ale
+ Sia questa stanza nido o tana propria.[75]
+
+ The castle seemed the very neat and lair
+ Of animal, supplied with plume and quill.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+
+TURIN, 14 August.
+
+Turin is a large, extremely fine and regular city, with all the streets
+built at right angles. The shops are very brilliant; the two _Places_, the
+_Piazza del Castello_ and the _Piazza di San Carlo_, are very spacious and
+striking, and there are arcades on each side of the quadrangle formed by
+them. The _Contrada del Po_ (for in Turin the streets are called
+_Contrade_) leads down to the Po, and is one of the best streets in Turin.
+Over the Po is a superb bridge built by Napoleon. In the centre of the
+_Piazza del Castello_ stands the Royal Palace, and on one side of the
+_Piazza_ the Grand Opera house. The streets in Turin are kept clean by
+sluices. The favorite promenades are, during the day, under the arcades of
+the _Piazza del Castello_ and those of the _Contrada del Po_; and in the
+evening round the ramparts of the city, or rather on the site where the
+ramparts stood. The French, on blowing up the ramparts, laid out the space
+occupied by them in walks aligned by trees. The fortifications of the
+citadel were likewise destroyed.
+
+In the Cathedral Church here the most remarkable thing is the _Chapelle du
+Saint Suaire_ (holy winding sheet). It is of a circular form, is inlaid
+with black marble and admits scarce any light; so that it has more the
+appearance of a Mausoleum than of a Chapel. It reminded me of the _Palace
+of Tears_ in the Arabian Nights.
+
+In the environs of Turin, the most remarkable buildings are a villa
+belonging to the King called _La Venezia_, and the _Superga_, a magnificent
+church built on an eminence, five miles distant from Turin. In the Royal
+Palace, on the _Piazza del Castello_, there is some superb furniture, but
+the exterior is simple enough. The country environing Turin forms a plain
+with gentle undulations, increasing in elevation towards the Alps, which
+are forty miles distant, and is so stocked with villas, gardens and
+orchards as to form a very agreeable landscape. From the steeple of the
+_Superga_ the view is very fine.
+
+In the University of Turin is a very good _Cabinet d'Histoire naturelle_,
+containing a great variety of beasts, birds and fishes stuffed and
+preserved; there is also a Cabinet of Comparative Anatomy, and various
+imitations in wax of anatomical dissections. Among the antiquities, of
+which there is a most valuable collection, are two very remarkable ones:
+the one a beautiful bronze shield, found in the Po, called the shield of
+Marius; it represents, in figures in bas-relief, the history of the
+Jugurthine war.[76] This shield is of the most exquisite workmanship. The
+other is a table of the most beautiful black marble incrusted and inlaid
+with figures and hieroglyphics of silver. It is called the _Table of Isis_,
+was brought from Egypt and is supposed to be of the most remote antiquity.
+It is always kept polished. Among the many valuable pieces of sculpture to
+be met with here is a most lovely Cupid in Parian marble. He is represented
+sleeping on a lion's skin. It is the most beautiful piece of sculpture I
+have ever seen next to the Apollo Belvédère and the Venus dei Medici; it
+appears alive, and as if the least noise would awake it.[77]
+
+Turin used to be in the olden time one of the most brilliant Courts and
+cities in Europe, and the most abounding in splendid equipages; now very
+few are to be seen. When Piedmont was torn from the domination of the House
+of Savoy and annexed to France, Turin, ceasing to be the capital of a
+Kingdom, necessarily decayed in splendor, nor did its being made the _Chef
+lieu_ of a _Préfecture_ of the French Empire make amends for what it once
+was. The Restoration arrived, but has not been able to reanimate it; an air
+of dullness pervades the whole city. Obscurantism and anti-liberal ideas
+are the order of the day.
+
+I witnessed a military review at which the King of Sardinia assisted. The
+troops made a very brilliant appearance and manoeuvred well. His Majesty
+has a very good seat on horseback and a distinguished military air. He is a
+man of honor tho' he has rather too high notions of the royal dignity and
+authority, and is too much of a bigot in religion; but his word can be
+depended on, a great point in a King; there are so many of them that break
+theirs and falsify all their promises. He will not hear of a constitution,
+and endeavors to abolish or discountenance all that has been effected
+during his absence. The priests are caressed and restored to their
+privileges, so that the inhabitants of Piedmont are exposed to a double
+despotism, a military and a sacerdotal one; the last is ten times more
+ruinous and fatal to liberty and improvement than the former.
+
+I have put up in Turin in the _Pension Suisse_, where for seven franks per
+diem I have breakfast, dinner, supper and a princely bed room. The houses
+are in general lofty, spacious and on a grand scale.
+
+
+[67] Francois Lamarque, born 1756, a member of the Convention, ambassador
+ in Sweden, prefect of the Tarn and member of the Cour de Cassation
+ (1804). He was exiled in 1816.--ED.
+
+[68] Major Frye (who wrote the name Despinassy) certainly means
+ Antoine-Joseph Marie Espinassy de Fontanelle's (1787-1829), who was a
+ member of the Convention, voted the King's death and served in the
+ Republican army of the Alps. In 1816, he was banished and went to
+ Lausanne, where he died 1829.--ED.
+
+[69] Pardoux Bordas (1748-1842) was a member of the Convention. Though he
+ had not voted the death of Louis XVI, he was banished from France in
+ 1816 and did not return there before 1828.--ED.
+
+[70] Antoine Francis Gauthier des Orcières (1752-1838) was elected to the
+ Etats Généraux in 1789, and, in 1792, to the Convention, where he
+ voted the death of Louis XVI. Later on, he was member of the Conseil
+ des Anoiena, juge au tribunal de la Seine and conseiller à la cour
+ impériale de Paris (1815). Banished in 1816, he returned to France in
+ 1828.
+
+[71] Jean Baptists Michaud, a member of the Directoire du département du
+ Doubs, and a member of the National Convention, voted the death of
+ Louis XVI and against the proposed appeal to the people.--ED.
+
+[72] Jean Daniel Paul Etienne Levade (1750-1834), Protestant minister first
+ in England, then in Amsterdam, finally minister at Lausanne and
+ professor of theology at the _Académie_ of the same town.--ED.
+
+[73] Countess de Boigne, in her interesting _Memoirs_ (of which there is an
+ English translation) abstained from describing her husband's career in
+ India; this lends additional interest to the information collected by
+ Major Frye,--ED.
+
+[74] The manuscript has _Sennar_, a name quite unknown at Suza.--ED.
+
+[75] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, iv, 13, 5.--ED.
+
+[76] This shield, now at the _Armoria Reale_, is not antique, but is
+ ascribed to Benvenuto Cellini.--ED.
+
+[77] This statue of Cupid is not antique, and has been recently ascribed to
+ Michelangelo (Knapp, _Michelangelo_, p. 155.)--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Journey from Turin to Bologna--Asti--Schiller and Alfieri--Italian
+_cuisíne_--The _vetturini_--Marengo--Piacenza--The Trebbia--Parma--The
+Empress Maria Louisa--Modena--Bologna--The University--The Marescalchi
+Gallery--Character of the Bolognese.
+
+
+August ---- 1816
+
+'Twas on a fine morning the 16th August that I took my departure from Turin
+with a _vetturino_ bound to Bologna. I agreed to pay him sixty francs for
+my place in the coach, supper and bed. When this stipulation for supper and
+bed is included in the price fixed for your place with the _vetturino_, you
+are said to be _spesato_, and then you have nothing extra to pay for but
+your breakfast. There were two other travellers in the _vettura_, both
+Frenchmen; the one about forty years of age was a Captain of cavalry _en
+retraite_, married to a Hungarian lady and settled at Florence, to which
+place he was returning; the other, a young man of very agreeable manners,
+settled likewise at Florence, as chief of a manufactory there, returning
+from Lyons, his native city, whither he had been to see his relations. I
+never in my life met with two characters so diametrically opposite. The
+Captain was quite a _bourru_ in his manners, yet he had a sort of dry,
+sarcastic, satirical humour that was very diverting to those who escaped
+his lash. Whether he really felt the sentiments he professed, or whether he
+assumed them for the purpose of chiming in with the times, I cannot say,
+but he said he rejoiced at the fall of Napoleon. My other companion,
+however, expressed great regret as his downfall, not so much from a regard
+for the person of Napoleon, as for the concomitant degradation and conquest
+of his country, and he spoke of the affairs of France with a great deal of
+feeling and patriotism.
+
+The Captain seemed to have little or no feeling for anybody but himself;
+indeed, he laughed at all sentiment and said he did not believe in virtue
+or disinterestedness. When, among other topics of conversation, the loss
+the French Army sustained at Waterloo was brought on the _tapis_, he said,
+"_Eh bien! qu 'importe? dans une seule nuit à Paris on en fabriquera assez
+pour les remplacer!_" A similar sentiment has been attributed to the great
+Condé.[78] We had a variety of amusing arguments and disputes on the road;
+the Captain railed at merchants, and said that he did not believe that
+honor or virtue existed among mercantile people (no compliment, by the bye,
+to the young fabricant, who bore it, however, with great good humour,
+contenting himself with now and then giving a few slaps at the military for
+their rapacity, which mercantile people on the Continent have now and then
+felt, before the French Revolution, as well as after). The whole road from
+Turin to Alexandria della Paglia is a fine broad _chausée_. The first day's
+journey brought us to Asti. A rich plain on each side of the road, the
+horizon on our right bounded by the Appennines, on our left by the Alps,
+both diverging, formed the landscape. Asti is an ancient, well and solidly
+built city, but rather gloomy in its appearance. It is remarkable for being
+the birthplace of Vittorio Alfieri, the celebrated tragic poet, who has
+excelled all other dramatic poets in the general _dénouement_ of his
+pieces, except, perhaps, Voltaire alone. I do not speak of Alfleri so much
+as a poet as a _dramaturgus_. I may be mistaken, and it is, perhaps,
+presumptuous in me to attempt to judge, but it has always appeared to me
+that Voltaire and Alfieri have managed dramatic effect and the intrigue and
+catastrophe of their tragedies better than any other authors. Shakespeare,
+God as he is in genius, is in this particular very deficient. Schiller,
+too, the greatest modern poetic genius perhaps and the Shakespeare of
+Germany, has here failed also, and nothing can be more correct than the
+estimate of Alfieri made by Forsyth[79] when, after speaking of his
+defects, he says: "Yet where lives the tragic poet equal to Alfieri?
+Schiller (then living also) may perhaps excel him in those peals of terror
+which flash thro' his gloomy and tempestuous scene, but he is far inferior
+in the mechanism of his drama."
+
+To return to my first day's journey from Turin. It was a very long day's
+work, and we did not arrive at Asti till very late, after having performed
+the last hour, half in the dark, on a road which is by no means in good
+repute. The character of the lower class of Piedmontese is not good. They
+are ferocious, vindictive and great marauders. They make excellent soldiers
+during war and they not unfrequently, on being disbanded after peace, by
+way of keeping their hand in practise and of having the image of war before
+their eyes, ease the traveller of his coin and sometimes of his life. Our
+conversation partook of these reminiscences, and during the latter part of
+our journey turned entirely on bandits "force and guile," so that we were
+quite rejoiced at seeing the smoke and light of the town of Asti and
+hearing the dogs bark, which reminded me of Ariosto's lines:
+
+ Non molto va che dalle vie supreme
+ De' tetti uscir vede il vapor del fuoco
+ Sente cani abbajar, muggire armento,
+ Viene alla villa, e piglia alloggiamenti.[80]
+
+ Nor far the warrior had pursued his best,
+ Ere, eddying from a roof, he saw the smoke,
+ Heard noise of dog and kine, a farm espied,
+ And thitherward in quest of lodging hied.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+We met on alighting at the door of a large spacious inn, two ladies who had
+very much the appearance of the two damsels at the inn where Don Quixote
+alighted and received his order of knighthood; but, in spite of their
+amorous glances and a decided leer of invitation, I had like Sacripante's
+steed more need of "_riposo e d'esca che di nuova giostra_." The usual
+Italian supper was put before us, and very good it was, viz., _Imprimis: A
+minestra_ (soup), generally made of beef or veal with vermicelli or
+macaroni in it and its never failing accompaniment in Italy, grated
+Parmesan cheese. Then a _lesso_ (bouilli) of beef, veal or mutton, or all
+three; next an _umido_ (fricassée) of cocks' combs and livers, a favourite
+Italian dish; then a _frittura_ of chickens' livers, fish or vegetables
+fried. Then an _umido_ or ragout of veal, fish with sauce; and lastly, an
+arrosto (roast) of fowls, veal, game, or all three. The _arrosto_ is
+generally very dry and done to cinders almost. Vegetables are served up
+With the _umidi_, but plain boiled, leaving it optional to you to use
+melted butter or oil with them. A salad is a constant concomitant of the
+_arrosto_. A desert or fruit concludes the repast. Wine is drank at
+discretion. The wine of Lombardy is light and not ill flavored; it is far
+weaker than any wine I know of, but it has an excellent quality, that of
+facilitating digestion. A cup of strong coffee is generally made for you in
+the morning, for which you pay three or four _soldi_ (sous), and in giving
+five or six _soldi_ to the waiter, all your expenses are paid supposing you
+are _spesato_, i.e., that the _vetturino_ pays for your supper and bed; if
+not, your charges are left to the conscience of the aubergiste, which in
+Italy is in general of prodigious width. I therefore advise every traveller
+who goes with a _vetturino_ to be a spesato, otherwise he will have to pay
+four or five times as much and not be a whit better regaled. The
+_vetturini_ generally pay from three to three and a half francs for the
+supper and bed of their passengers. As the _vetturini_ invariably make a
+halt of an hour and half or two hours at mid-day in some town or village,
+this halt enables you to take your _déjeuner à la fourchette_, which you
+pay for yourself, unless you stipulate for the payment of that also with
+the _vetturino_ by paying something more, say one a half franc per diem for
+that. In this part, and indeed in the whole of the north of Italy not a
+female servant is to be seen at the inns and men make the beds. It is
+otherwise, I understand, in Tuscany.
+
+The whole appearance of the country from Asti to Alexandria presents an
+immense plain extremely fertile, but the crops of corn being off the
+ground, the landscape would not be pleasing to the eye, were it not
+relieved by the frequency of mulberry trees and the vines hung in festoons
+from tree to tree. The villages and farmhouses on this road are extremely
+solid and well built. We arrived at Alexandria about twelve o'clock, and
+after breakfast I hired a horse to visit the field of battle of Marengo,
+which is in the neighbourhood of this city, Marengo itself being a village
+five miles distant from Alexandria. Arrived on the plain, I was conducted
+to the spot where the first Consul stood at the time that he perceived the
+approach of Desaix's division. I figured to myself the first Consul on his
+white charger, halting his army, then in some confusion, riding along the
+line exposed to a heavy fire from the Austrians, who cannonaded the whole
+length of the line; aides-de-camp and orderlies falling around him, himself
+calm and collected, "spying 'vantage," and observing that the Austrian
+deployment was too extended, and their centre thereby weakened, suddenly
+profiting of this circumstance to order Desaix's division to advance and
+lead the charge which decided the victory on that memorable day, which,
+according to Mascheroni:
+
+ _splende
+ Nell' abisso de' secoli, qual Sole_.
+
+The whole field of battle is an extensive plain, with but few trees, and to
+use Campbell's lines:
+
+ every turf beneath the feet
+ Marks out a soldier's sepulchre.
+
+The Column, erected to commemorate this glorious victory, has been thrown
+down by order of the Austrian government--a poor piece of puerile spite,
+but worthy of legitimacy. Alexandria is, or rather _was_, for the
+fortifications no longer exist, more remarkable for being an important
+military post than for the beauty of the city itself. There is, however, a
+fine and spacious _Place_, which serves as a parade for the garrison, and
+being planted with trees by the French when they held it, forms an
+agreeable promenade. The fortifications were blown up by the Austrians
+before the place was given over to the Sardinian authorities, a flagrant
+breach of faith and contract, since by the treaty of 1814 they were bound
+to give up all the fortified places that were restored or ceded to the King
+of Sardinia in the same state in which they were found when the French
+evacuated them, and the Austrians took possession provisorily. The French
+regarding (and with reason) this fortress as the key of Lombardy always
+kept the fortifications in good repair and well provided with cannon. But
+the Austrian government, knowing itself to be unpopular in Italy and
+trembling for the safety of her dominions, being always fearful that the
+Piedmontese Government might one day be induced to favour an
+insurrectionary or national movement in the north of Italy, determined,
+finding that it could not keep the fortress for itself, which it strove
+hard to do under divers pretexts, to render it of as little use as they
+possibly could do to the King of Sardinia; so they blew up the
+fortifications and carried off the cannon, leaving the King without a
+single fortified place in the whole of his Italian dominions to defend
+himself, in case of attack, against an Austrian invasion.
+
+On the morning of the 15th August we passed thro' Tortona, now no longer a
+fortress of consequence. All this country may be considered as classic
+ground, immortalized by the campaigns of Napoleon, when commander in chief
+of the army of the French Republic in Italy, a far greater and more
+illustrious _rôle_ than when he assumed the Imperial bauble and
+condescended to mix with the vulgar herd of Kings.
+
+We arrived at Voghera to breakfast and at Casteggio at night. The country
+is much the same as that which we have already passed thro', being a plain,
+with a rich alluvial soil, mulberry trees and a number of solidly built
+stone farmhouses. The next morning at eleven o'clock we arrived at Piacenza
+on the Po, and were detained a quarter of an hour at the _Douane_ of Her
+Majesty the Archduchess, as Maria Louisa, the present Duchess of Parma, is
+stiled, we being now arrived in her dominions. We drove to the _Hôtel di
+San Marco_, which is close to the _Piazza Grande_, and alighted there. On
+the Piazza stands the _Hôtel de Ville_, and in front of it are two
+equestrian statues in bronze of the Princes Farnesi; the statues, however,
+of the riders appear much too small in proportion with the horses, and they
+resemble two little boys mounted on Lincolnshire carthorses.
+
+I did not visit the churches and palaces in this city from not having time
+and, besides, I did not feel myself inclined or _bound_ (as some travellers
+think themselves) to visit every church and every town in Italy. I really
+believe the _ciceroni_ think that we _Ultramontani_ live in mud hovels in
+our own country, and that we have never seen a stone edifice, till our
+arrival in Italy, for every town house which is not a shop is termed a
+_palazzo_, and they would conduct you to see all of them if you would be
+guided by them. I had an opportunity, during the two hours we halted here,
+of walking over the greater part of the city, after a hasty breakfast.
+Piacenza is a large handsome city; among the females that I saw in the
+streets the Spanish costume seems very prevalent, no doubt from being so
+long governed by a Spanish family.
+
+On leaving Piacenza we passed thro' a rich meadow country and met with an
+immense quantity of cattle grazing. The road is a fine broad _chaussée_
+considerably elevated above the level of the fields and is lined with
+poplars. Where this land is not in pasture, cornfields and mulberry trees,
+with vines in festoons, vary the landscape, which is additionally enlivened
+by frequent _maisons de plaisance_ and excellently built farmhouses. We
+passed thro' Firenzuola, a long well-built village, or rather _bourg_, and
+we brought to the night at Borgo San Donino. At this place I found the
+first bad inn I have met with in Italy, that is, the house, tho' large, was
+so out of repair as to be almost a _masure_; we however met with tolerably
+good fare for supper. We fell in with a traveller at Borgo San Donino, who
+related to us an account of an extraordinary robbery that had been
+committed a few months before near this place, in which the _then_ host was
+implicated, or rather was the author and planner of the robbery. It
+happened as follows. A Swiss merchant, one of those men who cannot keep
+their own counsel, a _bavard_ in short, was travelling from Milan to
+Bologna with his cabriolet, horse and a large portmanteau. He put up at
+this inn. At supper he entered into conversation with mine host, and asked
+if there was any danger of robbers on the road, for that he should be sorry
+(he said) to fall into their hands, inasmuch as he had with him in his
+portmanteau 24,000 franks in gold and several valuable articles of
+jewellery. Mine host assured him that there was not the slightest danger.
+The merchant went to bed, directing that he should be awakened at daybreak
+in order to proceed on his journey. Mine host, however, took care to have
+him called full an hour and half before daybreak, assuring him that light
+would soon dawn. The merchant set out, but he had hardly journeyed two
+miles when a shot from behind a hedge by the road side brought his horse to
+the ground. Four men in masks rushed up, seized him and bound him to a
+tree; they then rifled his portmanteau, took out his money and jewels and
+wished him good morning.
+
+Before we arrived at Borgo San Donino we crossed the Trebbia, one of the
+many tributary streams of the Po, and which is famous for two celebrated
+battles, one in ancient, the other in modern tunes (and probably many
+others which I do not recollect); but here it was that Hannibal gained his
+second victory over the Romans; and here, in 1799, the Russians under
+Souvoroff defeated the French under Macdonald after an obstinate and
+sanguinary conflict; but they could not prevent Macdonald from effecting
+his junction with Massena, to hinder which was Souvoroff's object. In fact,
+in this country, to what reflections doth every spot of ground we pass,
+over, give rise! Every field, every river has been the theatre of some
+battle or other memorable event either in ancient or modern times.
+
+ _Quis gurges aut quae flumina lugubris
+ Ignara belli?[81]_
+
+We started from Borgo San Donino next morning; about ten miles further on
+the right hand side of the road stands an ancient Gothic fortress called
+Castel Guelfo. Between this place and Parma there is a very troublesome
+river to pass called the Taro, which at times is nearly dry and at other
+times, so deep as to render it hazardous for a carriage to pass, and it is
+at all times requisite to send on a man to ford and sound it before a
+carriage passes. This river fills a variety of separate beds, as it
+meanders very much, and it extends to such a breadth in its _débordements_,
+as to render it impossible to construct a bridge long enough to be of any
+use.
+
+This, however, being the dry season, we passed it without difficulty. Two
+or three other streams on this route, _seguaci del Po_, are crossed in the
+same manner.
+
+The road to Parma, after passing the Taro, lies nearly in a right line and
+is bordered with poplars. If I am not mistaken, it was somewhere in this
+neighbourhood that the Carthaginians under Hannibal suffered a great loss
+in elephants, who died from cold, being incamped during the winter. I am
+told there is not a colder country in Europe than Lombardy during the
+winter season, which arises no doubt from its vicinity to the Alps.
+
+Opulence seems to prevail in all the villages in the vicinity of Parma, and
+an immense quantity of cattle is seen grazing in the meadows on each side
+of the road. The female peasantry wear the Spanish costume and are
+remarkably well dressed.
+
+We arrived at Parma at twelve o'clock and stopped there three hours.
+
+
+PARMA.
+
+After a hasty breakfast, Mr G-- and myself sallied forth to see what was
+possible during the time we stopped in this city, leaving the Captain, who
+refused to accompany us, to smoke his pipe. This city is very large and
+there is a very fine _Piazza._ The streets are broad, the buildings
+handsome and imposing, and there is a general appearance of opulence. We
+first proceeded to visit the celebrated amphitheatre, called _l'Amfiteatro
+Farnese_ in honour of the former sovereigns of the Duchy. It is a vast
+building and unites the conveniences both of the ancient and modern
+theatres. It has a roof like a modern theatre, and the seats in the
+_parterre_ are arranged like the seats in an ancient Greek theatre. Above
+this are what we should call boxes, and above them again what we usually
+term a gallery. A vast and deep arena lies between the _parterre_ and the
+orchestra and fills up the space between the audience and the _proscenium_.
+It is admirably adapted both for spectators and hearers; when a tragedy,
+comedy or opera is acted, a scaffolding is erected and seats placed in the
+arena. At other times the arena is made use of for equestrian exercises and
+chariot races in the style of the ancients, combats with wild beasts, etc.,
+or it may be filled with water for the representation of naval fights
+(_naumachia_); in this case you have a vast oval lake between the
+spectators and the stage. It is a great pity that this superb and
+interesting building is not kept in good repair; the fact is it is seldom
+or ever made use of except on very particular occasions: it is almost
+useless in a place like Parma, "so fallen from its high estate," but were
+such an amphitheatre in Paris, London, or any great city, it might be used
+for all kinds of _spectacles_ and amusements. A small theatre from the
+design of Bernino stands close to this amphitheatre, and is built in a
+light tasteful manner. If fresh painted and lighted up it would make a very
+brilliant appearance. This may be considered as the Court theatre. At a
+short distance from the theatres is the Museum of Parma, in which there is
+a well chosen gallery of pictures. Among the most striking pictures of the
+old school is without doubt that of St Jerôme by Correggio; but I was full
+as much, dare I be so heretical as to say more pleased, with the
+productions of the modern school of Parma. A distribution of prizes had
+lately been made by the Empress Maria Louisa, and there were many
+paintings, models of sculpture and architectural designs, that did infinite
+credit to the young artists. I remarked one painting in particular which is
+worthy of a Fuseli. It represented the battle of the river God Scamander
+with Achilles. The subjects of most of the paintings I saw here were taken
+from the mythology or from ancient and modern history; and this is perhaps
+the reason that they pleased me more than those of the ancient masters. Why
+in the name of the [Greek: to kalon] did these painters confine
+themselves so much to Madonnas, Crucifixions, and Martyrdoms, when their
+own poets, Ariosto and Tasso, present so many subjects infinitely more
+pleasing? Then, again, in many of these crucifixions and martyrdoms, the
+gross anachronisms, such as introducing monks and soldiers with match-locks
+and women in Gothic costume at the crucifixion, totally destroy the
+seriousness and interest of the subject by annihilating all illusion and
+exciting risibility.
+
+Parma will ever be renowned in history as the birthplace of Caius Cassius,
+the Mend and colleague of Brutus.
+
+The Empress Maria Louisa lives here in the Ducal Palace, which is a
+spacious but ornamental edifice. She lives, 'tis said, without any
+ostentation. Out of her own states, her presence in Italy would be attended
+with unpleasant consequences to the powers that be, on account of the
+attachment borne to Napoleon by all classes of society; and it is on this
+account that on her last visit to Bologna she received an intimation from
+the papal authorities to quit the Roman territory in twenty-four hours. We
+next passed thro' St Hilario and Reggio and brought to the evening at the
+village of Rubbiera. At St Hilario is the entrance into the Duke of
+Modena's territory, and here we underwent again &n examination of trunks,
+as we did both on entering and leaving the territory of Maria Louisa.
+
+Reggio is a large walled city, but I had only time to visit the Cathedral
+and to remark therein a fine picture of the Virgin and the Chapel called
+"Capella della Morte." Reggio pretends to the honour of having given birth
+to the Divine Ariosto:
+
+ Quel grande che cantò l'armi e gli amorl,
+
+as Guarini describes him, I believe. The face of the country from Parma to
+Reggio is exactly the same as what we have passed thro' already.
+
+The next day (20 August) we passed thro' Modena, where we stopped to
+breakfast and refresh horses. It is a large and handsome city, the Ducal
+Palace is striking and in the Cathedral is presented the famous bucket
+which gave rise to the poem of Tassoni called _La Secchia rapita._ An air
+of opulence and grandeur seems to prevail in Modena.
+
+At Samoggia we entered the Papal territory and again underwent a search of
+trunks. Within three miles of Bologna a number of villas and several
+tanneries, which send forth a most intolerable odour, announce the approach
+to that celebrated and venerable city. On the left hand side, before
+entering the town, is a superb portico with arcades, about one and a half
+miles in length, which leads from the city to the church of San Luca. On
+the right are the Appennines, towering gradually above you. Bologna lies at
+the foot of these mountains on the eastern side and here the plain ends for
+those who are bound to Florence, which lies on the western side of the vast
+ridge which divides Italy. We arrived at Bologna at half-past seven in the
+evening, and here we intend to repose a day or two; I shall then cross the
+Appennines for the first time in my life. A reinforcement of mules or oxen
+is required for every carriage; from the ascent the whole way you can
+travel, I understand, very little quicker _en poste_ than with a
+_vetturino_. We are lodged at Bologna in a very comfortable inn called
+_Locanda d'Inghilterra_.
+
+
+BOLOGNA, 22d August.
+
+The great popularity of Bologna, which is a very large and handsomely built
+city, lies in the colonnaded porticos and arcades on each side of the
+streets throughout the whole city. These arcades are mightily convenient
+against sun and rain, and contradict the assertion of Rousseau, who
+asserted that England was the only country in the world where the safety of
+foot passengers is consulted, whereas here in Bologna not only are
+_trottoirs_ broader than those of London in general, but you are
+effectually protected against sun and rain, and are not obliged to carry an
+umbrella about with you perpetually as in London. This arcade system, is,
+however, rather a take off from the beauty of the city, and gives it a
+gloomy heavy appearance, which is not diminished by the sight of friars and
+mendicants with which this place swarms, and announce to you that you are
+in the holy land. At Bologna it is necessary to have a sharp eye on your
+baggage, on account of the crowds of ragged _fainéans_ that surround your
+carriage while it is unloading.
+
+The first thing that the _ciceroni_ generally take you to see in Italy are
+the churches, and mine would not probably have spared me one, but I was
+more anxious to see the University. I however allowed him to lead me into
+two of the principal churches, viz., the _Duomo_ or Cathedral, and the
+church of San Petronio, both magnificent Gothic temples and worth the
+attention of the traveller. On the _Piazza del Gigante_ is a fine bronze
+statue of Neptune. The _Piazza_ takes its name from this statue, as at one
+time in Italy, after the introduction of Christianity and when the ancient
+mythology was totally forgotten, the statues of the Gods were called Giants
+or named after Devils and their prototypes believed to be such.
+
+In the Museum at the University is an admirable collection of fossils,
+minerals, and machines in every branch of science. There are some excellent
+pictures also; the University of Bologna was, you know, at all times famous
+and its celebrity, is not at all diminished, for I believe Bologna boasts
+more scientific men, and particularly in the sciences _positives_, than any
+other city in Italy.
+
+In the _Palazzo pubblico_ (_Hôtel de Ville_) is a Christ and a Samson by
+Guido Reni; but what pleased me most in the way of painting was the
+collection in the gallery of Count Marescalchi. The Count has been at great
+pains to form it and has shown great taste and discernment. It is a small
+but unique collection. Here is to be seen a head of Christ, the colouring
+of which is so brilliant as to illuminate the room in which it is appended,
+when the shutters are closed, and in the absence of all other light except
+what appears thro' the crevices of the window shutters. This head, however,
+does not seem characteristic of Christ; it wants the gravity, the soft
+melancholy and unassuming meekness of the _great Reformer_: in short, from
+the vivid fire of the eyes and the too great self-complacency of the
+countenance, it gave me rather the idea
+
+ Del biondo Dio che in Tessalia si adorá.
+
+I passed two hours in this cabinet. I next repaired to the centre of the
+city with the intention of ascending one at least of the two square towers
+or _campanili_ which stand close together, one of which is _strait_, the
+other a leaning one. _Garisendi_ is the name of the leaning tower, and it
+forms a parallelipipedon of 140 feet in height and about twenty feet in
+breath and length. It leans so much as to form an angle of seventy-five
+degrees with the ground on which it stands. The other tower, the strait
+one, is called _Asinelli_ and is a parallelipipedon of 310 feet in height
+and about twenty-five feet in length and breadth. I ascended the leaning
+tower, but I found the fatigue so great that I was scarcely repaid by the
+fine view of the surrounding country, which presents on one side an immense
+plain covered with towns, villages and villas, and on the other the
+Appennines towering one above another. When on the top of _Garisendi_,
+_Asinelli_ appears to be four times higher than its neighbour, and the bare
+aspect of its enormous height deterred me from even making the attempt of
+ascending it. When viewed or rather looked down upon from _Garisendi_,
+Bologna, from its being of an elliptical form and surrounded by a wall and
+from having these two enormous towers in the centre, resembles a boat with
+masts.
+
+From the great celebrity of its University and the eminent men it has
+produced, Bologna is considered as the most litterary city of Italy.
+Galvani was born in Bologna and studied at this University, and among the
+modern prodigies is a young lady who is professor of Greek and who is by
+all accounts the most amiable _Bas bleu_ that ever existed.[82] The
+Bolognese are a remarkably fine, intelligent and robust race of people, and
+are renowned for their republican spirit, and the energy with which they at
+all times resisted the encroachments of the Holy See. Bologna was at one
+time a Republic, and on their coins is the word Libertas. The Bolognese
+never liked the Papal government and were much exasperated at returning
+under the domination of the Holy Father. In the time of Napoleon, Bologna
+formed part of the _Regno d'ltalia_ and partook of all its advantages.
+Napoleon is much regretted by them; and so impatiently did the inhabitants
+bear the change, on the dismemberment of the kingdom of Italy, and their
+transfer to the pontifical sceptre, that on Murat's entry in their city in
+1815 the students and other young men of the town flew to arms and in a few
+hours organised three battalions. Had the other cities shown equal energy
+and republican spirit, the revolution would have been completed and Italy
+free; but the fact is that the Italians in general, tho' discontented, had
+no very high opinion of Murat's talents as a political character, and he
+besides _committed_ a great fault in not entering Rome on his march and
+revolutionising it. Murat, like most men, was ruined by half-measures. The
+last tune that Maria Louisa was here the people surrounded the inn where
+she resided and hailed her with cries of _Viva I'Imperatrice!_ The Pope's
+legate in consequence intimated to her the expediency of her immediate
+departure from the city, with a request that she would not repeat her
+visit. Bologna is considered by the Ultras, _Obscuranten,_ and _Éteignoirs_
+as the focus and headquarters of Carbonarism.
+
+In the evening I visited the theatre built by Bibbiena and had the pleasure
+of hearing for the first time an Italian tragedy, which, however, are now
+rarely represented and scarcely ever well acted. This night's performance
+formed an exception and was satisfactory. The piece was _Romeo and
+Giulietta_. The actress who did the part of Giulietta performed it with
+great effect, particularly in the tomb scene. In this scene she reminded me
+forcibly of our own excellent actress, Miss O'Neill. This was the only part
+of the play that had any resemblance to the tragedy of Shakespeare. All the
+rest was on the French model. I saw a number of beautiful women in the
+boxes. The Bolognese women are remarkable for their fine complexions; those
+that I saw were much inclined to _embonpoint_.
+
+
+[79] And also to Napoleon, after the battle at Eylau.--ED.
+
+[80] Joseph Forsyth (1763-1815), author of _Remarks on antiquities, arts
+ and letters in Italy_, London, 1813.--ED.
+
+[81] Horace, _Carm._, II, I, 33.--ED.
+
+[82] The young woman in question was Clotilda Tambroni (1768-1818). She
+ taught Greek at the University of Bologna and was in correspondence
+ with the great French scholar Ansse de Villoison.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Journey across the Appennines to Florence--Tuscan idioms and
+customs--Monuments and galleries at Florence--The Cascino--Churches--
+Theatres--Popularity of the Grand Duke--Napoleon's downfall not
+regretted--Academies in Florence.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 26th August.
+
+The moment you leave Bologna to go to Florence you enter the gorges of the
+Appennines, and after journeying seven miles, begin to ascend the ridge.
+The ascent begins at Pianoro. Among these mountains the scenery is wild and
+romantic, and tho' not so grandiose and sublime as that of the Alps, is
+nevertheless extremely picturesque. One meets occasionally with the ruins
+of old castles on some of the heights, and I was strongly reminded, at the
+sight of these antique edifices, of the mysteries of Udolpho and the times
+of the Condottieri. The silence that reigns here is only interrupted by the
+noise of the waterfall and the occasional scream of the eagle. The wild
+abrupt transition of landscape would suggest the idea of haunting places
+for robbers, yet one seldom or never hears of any, on this road. In Tuscany
+there is, I understand, so much industry and morality, that a robbery is a
+thing unknown; but in his Holiness's dominions, from the idleness and
+poverty that prevails, they are said to be frequent. Why it does not occur
+in these mountains, in that part of them, at least, which belongs to the
+Papal Government, I am at a loss to conceive.
+
+Here the chesnut and olive trees salute the Ultramontane traveller for the
+first time. The olive tree, tho' a most useful, is not an ornamental one,
+as it resembles a willow or osier in its trunk and in the colour of its
+leaves. The chesnut tree is a glorious plant for an indolent people, since
+it furnishes food without labour, as the Xaca or Jack fruit tree does
+to the Cingalese in Ceylon. On one of the heights between Pianoro and
+Lojano you have in very clear weather a view of both the Adriatic and
+Tyrrhene seas. We brought to the night at Scarica l'Asino and the next
+morning early we entered the Tuscan territory at Pietra Mala, where there
+is a _Douane_ and consequently an examination of trunks. At one o'clock we
+arrived at an inn called _Le Maschere_, about fifteen miles distance from
+Florence; it is a large mansion and being situated on an eminence commands
+an extensive view. One becomes soon aware of being in the Tuscan territory
+from the number of cultivated spots to be seen in this part of the
+Appennines: for such is the industry of the inhabitants that they do
+wonders on their naturally sterile soil. One sees a number of farms. Every
+spot of ground is in cultivation, between _Le Maschere_ and Florence in
+particular; these spots of ground, gardens, orchards and villas forming a
+striking and pleasing contrast with the wild and dreary scenery of the
+Appennines. Another thing that indicates one's arrival among the Tuscans is
+their aspiration of the letter _c_ before _a_, _o_ and _u_, which is at
+first extremely puzzling to a foreigner accustomed only to the Roman
+pronunciation. For instance, instead of _camera_, _cotto_, _curvo_, they
+pronounce these words _hamera_, _hotto_, and _hurvo_ with an exceeding
+strong aspiration of the _h_. It is the same too with the _ch_ which they
+aspirate, _ex gr._ instead of _pochino_, _chiave_, they say _pohino_,
+_hiave_. The language however which is spoken is the most classical and
+pure Italian and except the above mentioned aspiration it is delightful to
+the ear; peculiarly so to those who come from the north of Italy, and have
+only hitherto heard the unpleasing nasal twang of the Milanese and the
+exceeding uncouth barbarous dialect of Bologna. Another striking
+peculiarity is the smart appearance of the Tuscan peasantry. They are a
+remarkably handsome race of men; the females unite with their natural
+beauty a grace and elegance that one is quite astonished to find among
+peasants. They express themselves in the most correct and classical
+language and they have a great deal of repartee. As the peasantry of
+Tuscany enjoy a greater share of _aisance_ than falls to the lot of those
+of any other country, and as the females dress with taste and take great
+pains to appear smart on all occasions, they resemble rather the
+shepherdesses on the Opera stage or those of the fabled Arcadia than
+anything in real life. The females too are remarkably industrious and will
+work like horses all the week to gain wherewithal to appear smart on
+holidays. Their dress is very becoming, and they wear sometimes jewellery
+to a large amount on their persons; a very common ornament among them is a
+collar of gold around their necks. Their usual head-dress is either a white
+straw hat, or a black round beaver hat, with black ostrich feathers. I
+prefer the straw hat; it is more tasteful than the round hat which always
+seems to me too masculine for a woman. At the inn at _Le Maschere_ we were
+waited on by three smart females. The whole road from _Le Maschere_ to
+Florence is very beautiful and diversified. Vineyards, gardens, farm houses
+and villas thicken as one approaches and when arrived within three miles of
+Florence, which lies in a basin surrounded by mountains, one is quite
+bewildered at the sight of the quantity of beautiful villas and _maisons de
+plaisance_ in every direction.
+
+Every thing indicates life, industry and comfort in this charming country.
+We stopped at a villa belonging to the Grand Duke called _II Pratolino_,
+seven miles distant from Florence. Here is to be seen the famous statue
+representing the genius of the Appennines. The Villa is unfurnished and out
+of repair and the garden and grounds are neglected: it is a great pity, for
+it is a fine building and in a beautiful position. The celebrated Bianca
+Capello, a Venetian by birth, and mistress of Francesco II de' Medici,
+Grand Duke of Tuscany, used to reside here.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 27th August.
+
+I am extremely well pleased with my accommodations at the hotel where I am
+lodged. Mme Hembert, the proprietor, was once _femme de chambre_ to the
+Empress Joséphine; she is an excellent woman and a very attentive hostess,
+and I recommend her hotel to all those travellers who visit Florence and do
+not care to incur the expence of Schneider's. There is an excellent and
+well served _table d'hôte_ at two o'clock, wine at discretion, for which,
+and for my bedroom, I pay seven _paoli_ per day. This hotel has the
+advantage of being in a very central situation. It is close to the _Piazza
+del Gran Duca_, the post-office, the _Palazzo Vecchio_, the Bureaux of
+Government, the celebrated Gallery of Sculpture and Painting and to the
+Arno. It is only 300 yards from the _Piazza del Duomo_, where the Cathedral
+stands, and 600 yards from the principal theatre _Della Pergola_ on the one
+side; while on the other side, after crossing the _Ponte Vecchio_, stands
+the _Palazzo Pitti_, the residence of the Grand Duke, at a distance of
+seven or 800 yards.
+
+The _Piazza del Gran Duca_ is very striking to the eye of the northern
+traveller; the statues of the Gods in white marble in the open air would
+make him fancy himself in Athens in the olden time. The following statues
+in bronze and white marble are to be seen on this _Piazza_. In bronze are:
+a statue of Perseus by Cellini; Judith with the head of Holofernes by
+Donatello; David and Goliath; Samson. In white marble are the following
+beautiful statues: a group representing Hercules and Cacus; another
+representing a Roman carrying off a Sabine woman. The Hercules, who is in
+the act of strangling Cacus, rests on one leg. Nearly in the centre of the
+_Piazza_, opposite to the post office and in front of the _Palazzo
+Vecchio_, is the principal ornament of the _Piazza_, which consists of a
+group representing Neptune in his car or conch (or shell) drawn by
+sea-horses and accompanied by Tritons. The statue of Neptune is of colossal
+size, the whole group is in marble and the conch of Egyptian granite. This
+group forms a fountain. There is likewise on this _Piazza_ an immense
+equestrian statue in bronze of Cosmo the First by John of Bologna. The
+_Palazzo Vecchio_ is a large Gothic building by Arnulpho and has a very
+lofty square tower or _campanile_.
+
+The Gallery of Florence being so close to my abode demanded next my
+attention. The building in which this invaluable Museum is preserved forms
+three sides of a parallelogram, two long ones and one short one, of which
+the side towards the south of the quai of the Arno is the short one.
+
+On the north is an open space communicating with the _Piazza del Gran
+Duca_. The Gallery occupies the whole first floor of this vast building.
+The _rez de chaussée_ is occupied, on the west side, by the bureaux of
+Government, and on the south and east sides by shopkeepers, in whose shops
+is always to be seen a brilliant display of merchandize. As there are
+arcades on the three sides of this parallelogram, they form the favorite
+meridian promenade of the _belles_ and _beaux_ of Florence, particularly on
+Sundays and holidays, after coming out of Church. I ascended the steps from
+a door on the east side of the building, to visit the Gallery.
+
+The quantity and variety of objects of art, of the greatest value, baffle
+all description, and it would require months and years to attempt an
+analysis of all it contains. I shall therefore content myself with pointing
+out those objects which imprinted themselves the most forcibly on my
+imagination and recollection. In a chamber on the left hand of one wing of
+the Gallery stands the Venus de' Medici, sent back last year from France.
+In the same chamber with her are the following statues: the extremely
+beautiful _Apollino_; the spotted Faun; the _Rémouleur_ or figure which is
+in the act of whetting a sickle. All these were in Paris, and are now
+restored to this Gallery. In this chamber two pictures struck me in
+particular: the one the Venus of Titian, a most voluptuous figure; the
+other a portrait of the mistress of Rafaello, called "_La Fornarina_," from
+her being a baker's daughter.
+
+Returning to the Gallery I was quite bewildered at the immense number of
+statues, pictures, sarcophagi, busts, altars, etc. Among the pieces of
+sculpture those that most caught my attention were: the _Venus genetrix_
+(which I had seen before at Paris); the _Venus victrix_; the _Venus
+Anadyomene_; Hercules and Nessus, a superb groupe; a young Bacchus; and an
+exquisitely chiselled group representing Pan teaching Olympus to play the
+syrinx, tho' the attitude of the former is rather indecorous from not being
+in a very quiescent state; a fine statue of Leda with the swan; a Mercury,
+both worthy of great attention. I remarked also in particular a statue of
+Marsyas attached to a tree and flayed. It is of a pale reddish marble, and
+tho' I perfectly agree with Forsyth, that colored marble is not at all
+adapted to statuary, yet in this instance it gives a wonderful effect and
+is strikingly suitable, as the slight reddish colour gives a full idea of
+the flesh after the skin is torn off. It makes one shudder to look at it.
+In one of the halls are the statues of Niobe and her daughters, a beautiful
+group. Then there is the celebrated copy of the group of the Laocoon by
+Bandinelli, which none but the most perfect and skilful connoisseur could
+distinguish from the original. But it is totally impossible for me to
+describe the immense variety of paintings, historical, portrait and
+landscape; the statues single or in groups; the sarcophagi, altars,
+bas-reliefs, inscriptions, bronzes, medals, vases, baths, candelabra,
+cameos, Etruscan and Egyptian idols with which this admirable Museum is
+filled. In a line on each side of the Gallery near the ceiling is a
+succession of portraits in chronological order of the Grand Dukes of
+Tuscany, the Germanic Emperors, the Kings of France, of England, of Spain,
+of Portugal, of the Popes and of the Ottoman Emperors. Among the
+antiquities I particularly noticed a large steel mirror and a Roman Eagle
+in bronze of the 24th Legion.
+
+Having passed full four hours in this Museum, I descended the steps,
+crossed the Arno and repaired to the building in which is preserved the
+_Cabinet d'Histoire Naturelle_. In this Museum what is most remarkable are
+the imitations in wax of the whole anatomy of the human body. It is the
+first collection of its kind; indeed it is unique in Europe. These
+imitations are kept in glass cases and are so true and so perfectly correct
+as to leave nothing to desire to the student in anatomy. These imitations
+in wax not only include all the details of anatomy, but also the progress
+of generation, gestation, and of almost every malady to which the human
+body is liable. They are of a frightful exactitude. There are likewise in
+this Museum imitations in wax of various plants and shrubs exotic as well
+as indigenous and the collection of stuffed birds, beasts and fishes and
+that of insects, mineralogy and conchology scarcely yields to the
+collection at the _Jardin des Plantes_ at Paris. Neither here nor at the
+Florentine gallery are fees allowed to be taken; on the contrary a strict
+prohibition of them is posted up in the French, Italian, German and English
+languages.
+
+On the _Ponte Vecchio_ on each side are jewellers' shops, who sell besides
+jewellery, cameos and works in mosaic. The Quais on each side of the Arno
+are very broad and spacious and form agreeable promenades in the winter
+season. The buildings on the banks of the Arno are magnificent. The streets
+of Florence have this peculiarity that they are all paved with large flag
+stones, which makes them mightily pleasant for pedestrians, but dangerous
+at times for horses who are apt to slip. Most of the houses in Florence
+have walls of prodigious thickness; one would suppose each house was meant
+to be a fortress in case of necessity.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 29th August.
+
+On the other side of the Arno, a little beyond the _Cabinet Physique_ and
+Museum of Natural History stands the _Palazzo Pitti_, the residence of the
+Grand Duke. It is a vast building and has a large and choice collection of
+pictures; but its finest ornament in my opinion is the statue of Venus by
+Canova, which to me at least appears to equal the Medicean Venus in beauty
+and in grace. The magnificent and spacious garden belonging to the Palace
+is called the garden of Boboli. These gardens form the grand promenade of
+the Florentines on Sundays and holidays. The alleys are well shaded by
+trees, which effectually protect the promenaders from the rays of the sun.
+There are a great many statues in this garden, but the most striking is a
+group which lies nearly in the centre of the garden. It is environed by a
+large circular basin or lake lined with stone and planted with orange trees
+on the whole circumference. In the centre of the lake is a rock and on this
+rock is a colossal statue in white marble of Neptune in his car. The car is
+in the shape of a marine conch and serves as a basin and fountain at the
+same time. There are several other fountains and _jets d'eau_, among which
+is a group representing Adam and Eve and the statue of a man pouring out
+water from a vase which he has on his shoulder.
+
+The _Corso_ or grand evening promenade for carriages and equestrians is on
+a place called the Cascino, pronounced by the Florentines _Hascino_. The
+Cascino consists of pleasure grounds on the banks of the Arno outside the
+town, laid out in roads, alleys and walks for carriages, equestrians and
+pedestrians. There is a very brilliant display of carriages every evening.
+There are _restaurants_ on the Cascino and supper parties are often formed
+here. This place is often the scene of curious adventures. Cicisbeism is
+universal at Florence, tho' far from being always criminal, as is generally
+supposed by foreigners. I find the Florentine women very graceful and many
+very handsome; but in point of beauty the female peasantry far exceed the
+_noblesse_ and burghers. All of them however dress with taste. The
+handsomest woman in Florence is the wife of an apothecary who lives in the
+_Piazza del Duomo_ and she has a host of admirers.
+
+On the promenade _lungo l'Arno_ near the Cascino is a fountain with a
+statue of Pegasus, with an inscription in Italian verse purporting that
+Pegasus having stopped there one day to refresh himself at this fountain,
+found the place so pleasant that he remained there ever since. This is a
+poetic nation _par excellence_. _Affiches_ are announced in sonnets and
+other metres; and tho' in other countries the votaries of the Muses are but
+too apt to neglect the ordinary and vulgar concerns of life, yet here it by
+no means diminishes industry, and the nine Ladies are on the best possible
+terms with Mr Mercury.
+
+I shall not attempt a description of the various _palazzi_ and churches of
+Florence, tho' I have visited, thanks to the zeal and importunity of my
+_cicerone_, nearly all, except to remark that no one church in Florence,
+the Cathedral and Baptistery on the _Piazza del Duomo_ excepted, has its
+façade finished, and they will remain probably for ever unfinished, as the
+completion of them would cost very large sums of money, and the restored
+Government, however anxious to resuscitate the _ancient faith_, are not
+inclined to make large disbursements from their own resources for that
+purpose. I wish however they would finish the façade of two of these
+churches, viz., that of _Santa Maria Novella_ and that of _Santa Croce_.
+_Santa Maria Novella_ stands in the Piazza of that name which is very
+large. It is a beautiful edifice, and can boast in the interior of it
+several columns and pilasters of _jaune antique_ and of white marble. But
+they have a most barbarous custom in Florence of covering these columns
+with red cloth on _jours de Fête_, which spoils the elegant simplicity of
+the columns and makes the church itself resemble a _théâtre des
+Marionnettes_. But the Italians are dreadfully fond of gaudy colours. In
+the church of _Santa Croce_ what most engaged my attention was the monument
+erected to Vittorio Alfieri, sculptured by Canova. It is a most beautiful
+piece of sculpture. A figure of Italy crowned with turrets seems fully
+sensible of the great loss she has sustained in one who was so ardent a
+patriot, as well as an excellent tragic poet. This monument was erected at
+the expence of the Countess of Albany (Queen of England, had _legitimacy_
+always prevailed, or been as much in fashion as it now is) as a mark of
+esteem and affection towards one who was so tenderly attached to her, and
+of whom in his writings Alfieri speaks with the endearing and affectionate
+appellation of _mia Donna_. The beautiful sonnet to her, which accompanies
+the dedication of his tragedy of _Mirra_, well deserves the monument; there
+is so much feeling in it that I cannot retrain from transcribing it:
+
+ Vergognando talor, che ancor si taccia,
+ Donna, per me l'almo tuo nome in fronte
+ Di queste omai glà troppe a te ben conte
+ Tragedie, ond'io di folle avrommi taccia;
+
+ Or vo' qual d'esse meno a te dispiaccia
+ Di te fregiar; benchè di tutte il fonte
+ Tu sola fosti, e'l viver mio non conte
+ Se non dal Di, ch'al viver tuo si allaccia.
+
+ Della figlia di Ciniro infelice
+ L'orrendo a un tempo ed innocente amore
+ Sempre da' tuoi begli occhi il planto elice;
+
+ Prova emmi questo, ch'al mio dubbio core
+ Tacitamente imperiosa dice,
+ Ch'io di Mirra consacri a te il dolore.
+
+In this sanctuary (church of the _Santa Croce_) are likewise the tombs and
+monuments of other great men which Italy has produced. There is the
+monument erected to Galileo which represents the earth turning round the
+sun with the emphatic words: _Eppur si muove._ Here too repose the ashes of
+Machiavelli and Michel Angelo. This church is in fact the Westminster Abbey
+of Florence.
+
+To go from the _Piazza del gran Duca_ to the _Piazza del Duomo_, where
+stands the Cathedral, you have only to pass thro' a long narrow street or
+rather alley (for it is impervious to carriages) with shops on each side
+and always filled with people going to or returning from the Duomo. This
+Cathedral is of immense size. The architecture is singular from its being a
+mixture of the Gothic and Greek. It appears the most ponderous load that
+ever was laid on the shoulders of poor mother earth. There is nothing light
+in its structure to relieve the massiveness of the building, and in this
+respect it forms a striking contrast to the Cathedral of Milan which
+appears the work of Sylphs. The outside of this Duomo of Florence is
+decorated and incrusted with black and white marble, which increases the
+massiveness of its appearance. The steeple or Campanile stands by itself,
+altogether separate from the Cathedral, and this is the case with most of
+the Churches in Italy that are not of pure Gothic architecture. This
+_Campanile_ is curiously inlaid and incrusted on its outside with red,
+white and black marble. The Baptistery is another building on the same
+_Piazza_. It is in the same stile of building as the Duomo, but incloses
+much less space, and was formerly a separate church, called the church of
+St John the Baptist. The immense bronze doors or rather gates, both of the
+Duomo and Battisterio, attracted my peculiar notice. On them are figured
+bas-reliefs of exquisite and admirable workmanship, representing Scripture
+histories. It was the symmetry and perfection of these gates that induced
+Michel Angelo to call them in a fit of enthusiasm _The Gates of Paradise_.
+At the door of the Battisterio are the columns in red granite, which once
+adorned the gates of the city at Pisa, and were carried off by the
+Florentines in one of their wars. Chains are fastened round these columns,
+as a memorial of the conquest. The cupolas both of the Duomo and
+Battisterio are octangular. There is a stone seat on the _Piazza del Duomo_
+where they pretend that Dante used occasionally to sit; hence it is called
+to this day _Il Sasso di Dante_.
+
+You will now no doubt expect me to give some account of the theatres. At
+the _Pergola_, which is a large and splendid theatre, I have seen two
+operas; the one, _L'Italiana in Algieri_, which I saw before at Milan last
+year; the other, the _Barbieri di Seviglia_ by Rossini, which afforded to
+my ears the most delightful musical feast they ever enjoyed. The cavatina
+_Una voce poco fa_ gave me inconceivable delight. The _Ballo_ was of a very
+splendid description and from a subject taken from the Oriental history
+entitled _Macbet Sultan of Delhi_. How the Mogul Sultan came to have the
+name of Macbet I know not. On the _plafond_ of the _Pergola_ is an
+allegorical painting representing the restored Kings of Europe replaced on
+their thrones by Valor and Justice. The decorations at this theatre are not
+quite so splendid as those of the _Scala_ at Milan, but living horses and
+military evolutions seem to be annexed to every historical _Ballo_. Horses
+indeed appear to be an indispensable ingredient in the _Balli_ in the large
+cities of Italy.
+
+In the _Teatro Cocomera_, comedies are performed, and very generally those
+of the inexhaustible Goldoni. I saw the _Bugiardo_ very fairly performed at
+this theatre. The story is nearly the same as that of our piece, _The
+Liar_, which is I believe imitated from _Le Menteur_ of Corneille. The
+actor who did the Liar was a very good one. The actresses screamed too much
+and were rather coarse. Another night at the theatre I saw a piece call'd
+_II furioso_, a _comédie larmoyante_ which was interesting and well given;
+but the voice of the prompter was occasionally too loud. Tragedies are very
+seldom played; the language of Alfieri could never, I will not say be given
+with effect, but even conceived by the modern actors. It would be like a
+tragedy of Sophocles performed by boys at school. There is another reason
+too why these tragedies are not given; they abound too much in republican
+and patriotic sentiments to be grateful to the ears of the Princes who
+reign in Italy, all of whom being of foreign extraction and unshackled by
+constitutions, come under the denomination of those beings called by Greeks
+[Greek: Turannoi], I use this word in its Greek sense. Of the Tuscan
+Government it is but justice to say that from the days of Leopold to the
+present day it was and is a mild, just and paternal government, more so
+perhaps than any in Europe; and the only one that can any way reconcile one
+altogether to those lines of Pope:
+
+ For forms of Government let fools contest;
+ Whate'er is best administer'd is best.[83]
+
+In the time of Leopold the factious nobility were kept in check, and the
+industrious classes, mercantile and agricultural, encouraged. The peasantry
+were, and are, the most affluent in Europe; and this is no small incitement
+to the industry that prevails. On the elevation of Leopold to the throne of
+the Caesars, the present Grand Duke succeeded in Tuscany; and he followed
+the same system that Leopold did, and was equally beloved by his subjects.
+Tuscany was the only country in Italy that did not desire a change at the
+period of the French conquest, and the only state wherein the French were
+not hailed as deliverers. The Tuscans exhibited a very honorable spirit on
+the occasion of Buonaparte's visit to the Grand Duke in 1797. They went
+together to the Theatre della Pergola, and on their entering into the Grand
+Ducal box, the Grand Duke was hailed with cries of _Viva il Nostro
+Sovrano_: now this proof of attachment at a period when Buonaparte was
+all-mighty in Italy, when the Grand Duke was but an inferior personage, at
+a time too when it was doubtful whether or not he would be dethroned, and
+in the very presence of the mighty conqueror, reflects great honor and
+credit on the Tuscan character. Buonaparte was much struck at this proof of
+disinterested attachment on the part of the Florentines towards their
+Sovereign, and told the Grand Duke very ingenuously that he had received
+orders to revolutionize the country, from the French Directory; but that as
+he perceived the people were so happy, and the Prince so beloved, he could
+not and would not attempt to make any change.
+
+The applause given to the Grand Duke at this critical period is so much the
+more creditable to the Florentines as they in general receive their Prince,
+on his presenting himself at the theatre, with no other ceremonial than
+rising once and bowing. There is no fulsome _God save the King_ repeated
+even to nausea, as at the English theatres. In fact none of the Italians
+pay that servile adulation to their Sovereigns that the French and English
+do.
+
+The changes projected in Italy at the treaty of Lunéville by Napoleon then
+first Consul, and his further views on Italy, induced him at length to
+eject an Austrian Prince from the sovereignty of a country which he
+intended to annex to the French Empire. The Grand Duke was indemnified with
+a principality in Germany, where he remained until the downfall of Napoleon
+in 1814; subsequent arrangements again restored him to the sway of the land
+he loved so well, and he returned to Florence as if he had only been absent
+on a tour, finding scarcely any change in the laws and customs and habits
+of the country; for tho' Tuscany was first erected into a Kingdom by the
+title of Etruria, and afterwards annexed to the French Empire, the
+institutions and laws laid down by Leopold and followed strictly by his
+successor were preserved; very little innovation took place, and the few
+innovations that were effected were decided ameliorations; for the Emperor
+Napoleon had too much tact not to preserve and protect the good he found,
+tho' he abolished all old abuses. The improvements introduced by the French
+have been preserved and confirmed by the Grand Duke on his return, for he
+is a man of too much good sense, and has too much love of justice, to think
+of abolishing the good that has been done, merely because it was done by
+the French. Tuscany has now a respectable military force of 8,000 men well
+armed, clothed and equipped in the French manner.
+
+Tuscany is the only part of Italy where the downfall of Napoleon was not
+regretted; the inhabitants of Leghorn indeed rejoiced at it, for the
+commerce of Tuscany being chiefly maritime, Leghorn suffered a good deal
+from the continental system. Leghorn in fact decayed in the same proportion
+that Milan and other inland cities rose into opulence.
+
+The character of the Tuscan people is so amiable and pacific that crime is
+very rare indeed. Murder is almost unknown and the punishment of death is
+banished from the penal code. Where the government is good, the people are
+or soon become good. I know of no country in the world more agreeable for a
+foreigner to settle in than Tuscany.
+
+I omitted to remark that in the street called _Borgo d'Ognissanti_ is a
+large house or _palazzo_ which belonged to Americo Vespucci. His bust is to
+be seen in the Florentine Gallery. It is curious to remark the different
+appellations given to the word _street_ in the different cities of Italy.
+In Milan a street is called _vico_ and in Turin, _contrada_; in Florence
+_strada_ and in Rome, I understand, _via_.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 1st Sept.
+
+I shall start in a day or two for Rome, being very impatient to behold the
+Eternal City, a plan which I have had in view from my earliest days and
+which I have not been able hitherto to effect; for like the Abbé Delille I
+had sworn to visit the sacred spot where so many illustrious men had spoke
+and acted, and to do hommage in person to their Manes. I was always a great
+admirer of the "_Popolo Re_."
+
+In Florence there are a great many literary societies such as the
+_Infuocati, Immobili_, and the far renowned _La Crusca_.
+
+Frequent _Academies_, for so a sitting of a litterary society in Italy is
+termed, are held in Florence. There are likewise two Casinos, one for the
+nobility and the other for the merchants and burghers; the wives and
+daughters of the members attend occasionally; and cards, music and dancing
+are the amusements. Florence abounds in artists in alabaster whose
+workmanship is beautiful. They make models in alabaster of the most
+celebrated pieces of sculpture and architecture, on any scale you chuse:
+they fabricate busts too and vases in alabaster. The vases made in
+imitation of the ancient Greek vases are magnificent, and some of them are
+of immense size. Foreigners generally chuse to have their busts taken; for
+almost all foreigners who arrive here are or pretend to be smitten with an
+ardent love for the fine arts, and every one wishes to take with him models
+of the fine things he has seen in Italy, on his return to his native
+country. Here are English travellers who at home would scarcely be able to
+distinguish the finest piece of ancient sculpture--the Mercury, for
+instance, in the Florentine Gallery, from a Mercury in a citizen's garden
+at Highgate--who here affect to be in extacies at the sight of the Venus,
+Apollino, &c., and they are fond of retailing on all occasions the terms of
+art and connoisseurship they have learned by rote, in the use of which they
+make sometimes ridiculous mistakes. For instance I heard an Englishman one
+day holding forth on the merits of the Vierge _quisouse_, as he called it.
+I could not for some time divine what he meant by the word _quisouse_, but
+after some explanation I found that he meant the celebrated painting of the
+_Vierge qui coud_, or _Vierge couseuse_, as it is sometimes called, which
+latter word he had transformed into _quisouse_. This affectation, however,
+of passion for the _belle arti_, tho' sometimes open to ridicule, is very
+useful. It generates taste, encourages artists, and is surely a more
+innocent as well as more rational mode of spending money and passing time
+than in encouraging pugilism or in racing, coach driving and cock fighting.
+
+
+[83] Pope, _Essay on Man_, ep. III, 303-4.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Journey from Florence to Rome--Sienna--Radicofani--Bolsena--Montefiascone
+wine--Viterbo--Baccano--The Roman Campagna--The papal _douane_--Monuments
+and Museums in Rome--Intolerance of the Catholic Christians--The Tiber and
+the bridges--Character of the Romans--The _Palassi_ and _Ville_--Canova's
+atelier--Theatricals--An execution in Rome.
+
+
+September----, 1816.
+
+I made an agreement with a _vetturino_ to take me to Rome for three _louis
+d'or_ and to be _spesato_. In the carriage were two other passengers, viz.,
+a Neapolitan lady, the wife of a Colonel in the Neapolitan service, and a
+young Roman, the son of the _Barigello_ or _Capo degli Sbirri_ at Rome. We
+issued from the _Porta Romana_ at 6 o'clock a.m. the 3d September.
+
+The road winds thro' a valley, and has a gentle ascent nearly the whole way
+to Poggibonsi, where we brought to the first night. The soil hereabouts is
+far from fertile, but every inch of it is put to profit. The olive tree is
+very frequent and several farms and villages are to be met with. The next
+day we arrived at 12 o'clock at Sienna. The approach to Sienna is announced
+by a quantity of olive trees. The situation of this city being on an
+elevation, makes it cold and bleak. We remained here three hours, so that I
+had time to visit some of the places worthy of remark in this venerable
+city, which is handsome and very solidly built, but has rather a sombre
+appearance. The _Piazza Grande_ lies in a bottom to which you descend from
+the environing streets. It is in the shape of a mussel shell and of very
+large size. The Cathedral is Gothic and is a very majestic and venerable
+building. Inside it is of black and yellow marble. The pavement of this
+church contains Scripture histories in mosaic. A library is annexed to the
+church. The librarian pointed out to me 80 folio volumes of church music
+with illuminated plates; likewise an ancient piece of sculpture much
+mutilated, viz., a group of the three Graces. In one of the chapels of this
+Cathedral are eight columns of _verd-antique_. I observed a monument of the
+Piccolomini family who belong to this city; one of which family figured a
+good deal in the Thirty Years' War in Germany. I saw several women in the
+Cathedral and at the windows of the houses. The greater part of them were
+handsome. The Italian language is spoken here in its greatest purity; it is
+the pure Tuscan dialect without the Tuscan aspiration. The Siennese
+language is in fact the identical _lingua Toscana in bocca Romana_.
+
+We arrived the same evening at Buon Convento, an old dismal dirty-looking
+town formerly fortified; but the country in the environs is pleasing
+enough. The inn here is very bad. On the road between Sienna and this place
+I observed a number of mulberry trees.
+
+The next morning, the 5th Sept., we arrived at Radicofani or rather at an
+inn or post house facing Radicofani. This is a very ancient city, and from
+its being on an eminence it has an imposing appearance. Above it towers an
+immense conical shaped mountain, evidently a volcano in former times. In
+fact, the whole country hereabouts is volcanic, which is plainly seen from
+the immense masses of calcined stones, the exhalations of sulphur and the
+dreary wild appearance of the country, where scarce a tree is to be seen. I
+never in my life saw so many calcined rocks and stones of great magnitude
+heaped together as at Radicofani. It gave the idea as if it were the
+identical field of battle between Jupiter and the Titans, and as if the
+masses of rock that everywhere meet the eye had been hurled at the Empyreum
+by the Titans and had fallen back on the spot from whence they were torn
+up. It is indeed very probable that this volcano which vomited forth rocks
+and stones in a very remote age, gave rise to the Fable of the war between
+Jupiter and the Giants; just as the volcanos in Sicily and Stromboli gave
+rise to the story of the Cyclops with one eye (the crater) in their
+forehead. But the mountain of Radicofani must have been a volcano anterior
+even to Aetna; it presents the image of an ancient world destroyed by fire.
+
+At Ponte Centino the next morning we took our leave of
+
+ _La patria bella
+ Di vaghe Donne e di dolce favella;_
+
+in plain prose, we left the Tuscan territory, and re-entered the dominions
+of His Holiness. After being detained half an hour at the _Douane_, we
+proceeded to Acquapendente to breakfast. The country between Radicofani and
+Acquapendente is dreary, thinly populated, little cultivated, and volcanic
+steams of sulphur assail the nostrils. Before we arrived at Acquapendente
+we had a troublesome river to cross, which at times is nearly dry, and at
+other times the water comes down in torrents from the surrounding mountains
+and precipices, so as to render its passage extremely dangerous. It is
+always necessary previous to the passage of a carriage, to send on a man to
+ford and sound it, from its meandering and forming different beds crossed
+seven times, twice less than Styx _novies interfusa_, and it is a very slow
+operation from the number of rocks and quicksands; so that, should the
+torrent come down while you are in the act of crossing, you and your whole
+equipage would be swept away by the stream and drowned or dashed to pieces.
+Travellers going to and returning from Rome are frequently detained for a
+day or two at Ponte Centino or Acquapendente during the rainy season; for
+immediately after heavy rains, there is always a great risk and it is
+better to halt for several hours to allow the waters to pass off. The
+extent of ground that this river covers by its meandering and forming so
+many beds nearly parallel to each other renders it impossible to construct
+a bridge long enough; and it would be always liable to be swept away by the
+torrent. Nobody ever thinks of crossing the river in the dark. There having
+no rain fallen for several days we passed it without difficulty.
+
+Within a mile of Acquapendente the landscape varies and the approach to
+this town is exceedingly picturesque. Acquapendente is situated on a lofty
+eminence from which several magnificent cascades descend into the ravine
+below and which give the name to the town. There are a great number of
+trees about this town and they afford a great relief to the eye of the
+traveller after so many hours' journey thro' volcanic wastes. The town of
+Acquapendente is very ancient; it is very large, but ill-paved and dirty;
+the best buildings in it are, however, modern. The inhabitants appear lazy
+and dirty. On entering into conversation with some soldiers belonging to
+the Papal army, who were stationed at this place, I found that most of them
+had served under Napoleon. They spoke of him with tears of affection in
+their eyes, and I pleased them much by reciprocating their opinions of that
+great man. To speak well of Napoleon is the surest passport to civility and
+good treatment on the part of the soldiers and _douaniers_.
+
+In the evening we arrived at Bolsena, the ancient Volsinium, a city of the
+Volscians. It is an ancient looking town, not very clean, and inhabited by
+indolent people. It is situated on the banks of a large lake, on which
+there are three small islands. It is very aguish and unhealthy, and the
+inhabitants appear sickly, with marvellous sallow complexions. The inn
+where we put up was a pretty good one, and as this lake abounds in fish, we
+had some excellent trout and pike for supper; among other dishes there was
+one that was very gratifying to me, an old East and West Indian; and that
+was the _Peveroni_ or large red and green peppers or capsicums fried in
+oil. Some excellent Orvieto wine crowned our repast, and helped to restore
+us from our fatigues.
+
+On leaving Bolsena the next morning, the 7th, and within a very short
+distance from that town we entered a thick and venerable forest, thro'
+which the road runs for several miles. Fine old trees of immense height
+covered with foliage and thickly studded together give to this forest an
+aweful and romantic appearance. It is quite a _lucus opaca ingens_. This
+forest has been held sacred since the earliest times and is even now held
+in such superstitious veneration by the people that they do not allow it to
+be cut. The Dryads and Hamadryads have no doubt long ago taken their
+flight, but the wood, from its length and opaqueness, inspired me with some
+apprehension lest it might be the abode of some modern votaries of Mercury,
+people having confused ideas of _meum_ and _tuum_, and the _appropriative
+faculty_ too strongly developed in their organization, and I expected every
+moment to hear a shot and the terrible cry of _ferma_; but we met with no
+accident nor did we fall in with a living soul. On issuing from this forest
+we perceived on an eminence before us, at a short distance, the town of
+Montefiascone. We stopped there as almost all travellers do to taste the
+famous Montefiascone wine or _Est_ wine, as it is frequently called. This
+wine is fine flavored, _pétillant_ and wonderfully exhilarating. It is
+renowned for having occasioned the death of a German prelate in the
+sixteenth century, who was travelling in Italy and who was remarkably fond
+of good wine. The story is as follows. He was accustomed to send on his
+servant to the different towns thro' which he was to pass with directions,
+to taste and report on the quality of the different wines to be found
+there, and if they were good to mark the word _Est_ on the casks from which
+he tasted them. The servant, on arrival at Montefiascone, was highly
+pleased with the flavour of the wine, of which there were three casks at
+the inn where they put up. He accordingly wrote the word _Est_ on each of
+the casks. The Bishop arrived soon after and took such a liking to this
+wine that he died in a few days of a fever brought on by continual
+intoxication. He was buried in one of the churches at Montefiascone and the
+monks of the Convent there, themselves _bons-vivans_, determined to give
+him a suitable epitaph. They accordingly caused to be engraved on his tomb
+the following Latin inscription commemorative of the event: _Est, Est, Est,
+propter nimium Est, Dominus Episcopus mortuus_ EST. From the above
+circumstance this wine is called _Vino d'Est_, and it affords no small
+revenue to the proprietor of the _cabaret_ on the road side who sells it.
+
+We arrived at Viterbo to breakfast and at Ronciglione in the evening.
+Viterbo is a large and handsome city and contains several striking
+buildings. It is paved with lava and contains a great variety of fountains.
+There is some appearance of commerce and industry in this town and there
+are several _maisons de plaisance_ in the neighbourhood. From Viterbo,
+thro' Monterosi, to Ronciglione the road lies over a mountain of steep
+ascent; here and there are patches of forest. There is not a house to be
+seen on this route and from there being a good deal of wood, and no
+appearance of cultivation, one fancies oneself rather in the wilds of a new
+country like America, than in so old a one as Italy.
+
+Ronciglione is an old rubbishing town half in ruins and contains no one
+thing remarkable.
+
+The next morning at four o'clock we started from Ronciglione and reached
+Baccano to breakfast.
+
+Baccano contains only two buildings; but they are both very large and
+roomy; the one is the inn, and the other serves as a barrack for the
+Military. There is always a strong military detachment here for the
+security of the road against robbers, who occasionally infest this
+neighbourhood. The inn is of immense size. Travellers, who arrive here
+late, would do well to halt here the whole night, as not only the road is
+dangerous on account of robbers, but because if they arrive at Rome after
+five o'clock p.m., they cannot release their baggage and carriage from the
+Custom house till next day. Every carriage public or private that arrives
+in Rome is bound, unless a special permission to the contrary be obtained
+from the Government, to drive direct to the Custom house (_Dogana_). In the
+like manner, on travelling from Rome to Florence, people generally prefer
+to start from Rome at twelve o'clock and bring to the night at Baccano, so
+as to avoid the bad inn at Ronciglione and sleep in preference at Viterbo.
+I here speak only of those who travel by short stages as the _vetturini_
+do.
+
+Ariosto has given a celebrity to this wretched place Baccano in his poem of
+the _Orlando Furioso_, in the story of Giocondo in the 28th Canto, as being
+the identical place where Fausto, the brother of Giocondo, remained to
+await the return of his brother from Rome, to which place he had gone back,
+when half way between Baccano and Rome, to fetch the _monile_ which he had
+left behind him, and found his wife not _alone_ and _dying with grief_ as
+he apprehended, but _sotto la coltre_ with a servant of the family.
+
+The country between Baccano and Rome is as unpleasing and even worse than
+that between the former place and Ronciglione. It is hilly, but not a tree,
+nor a house, nor a sign of cultivation to be seen except the two or three
+wretched hovels at La Storta. There is nothing at all that announces the
+approach to a capital city; and in addition to the dismal landscape there
+is a sight still more dismal that salutes the eye of the traveller at
+intervals of two or three miles and which does not tend to inspire pleasing
+ideas; and this is the sight of arms and legs of malefactors and murderers
+suspended on large poles on the road side; for it is the custom here to cut
+off the arms and legs of murderers after decapitation, and to suspend them
+_in terrorem_ on poles, erected on the very spot where they committed the
+murder. The sight of these limbs dangling in the wind is not a very
+comfortable one towards the close of the evening.
+
+We left the _Sepolero di Nerone_, an ancient tomb so called, on the right
+of our road and half a mile beyond it crossed the Tiber at the _Ponte Molle
+(Pons Milvius)_, where there is a gate, bridge and military post. From this
+post to the _Porta del Popolo_, the entrance into the city for those coming
+from the North, the distance is one mile; there is a white wall on each
+side of the road the whole way, and some farm houses and villas. Near the
+_Ponte Molle_ is the field of battle where Maxentius was defeated by
+Constantine.
+
+We entered the _Porta del Popolo_, crossed the _Piazza_ of the same name,
+where three streets present themselves to view. In the centre is the street
+called the _Corso_, running in a direct line from the _Porta_ across the
+_Piazza_. We drove along the _Corso_ till we arrived at a _Piazza_ on our
+right hand, which _Piazza_ is called _della Colonna_ from the Column of
+Antoninus, which stands on it. We then crossed the _Piazza_ which is very
+large and soon reached the _Dogana_ or Custom house, formerly the temple of
+Antoninus Pius, where vile modern walls are built to fill up the intervals
+between eleven columns of Grecian marble. Here our baggage underwent a
+rigorous research; this rigour is not so much directed against the
+fraudulent introduction of contraband or duty-bearing merchandise, as
+against _books_, which undergo a severe scrutiny. Against Voltaire and
+Rousseau implacable war is waged, and their works are immediately
+confiscated. Other authors too are sometimes examined, to see whether they
+contain anything against Mother Church. As the people employed in
+inspecting books are not much versed in any litterature or language but
+their own, except perhaps a little French, it is not easy for them to find
+out the contents of books in other languages. I had Schiller's works with
+me, a volume of which one of the _douaniers_ took up and looked at; on
+seeing the Gothic letter he seemed as much astonished as if he had got hold
+of a book of _Cabbala_ or _Magic_. He detained the whole work, but it was
+sent to me the next day, on my declaring that there was nothing damnable or
+heretical in it; for there was no person belonging to the department who
+could read German. When the _douaniers_ proceeded to the examination of the
+books belonging to one of my fellow travellers, the Neapolitan lady, she
+expressed great repugnance to the procedure; the _douaniers_ however
+insisted and, behold! there were several _livres galants_ with plates
+somewhat _lubriques_, the discovery of which excited blushes on her part
+and considerable laughter on the part of the byestanders. These books,
+however, not being contraband, were immediately returned to her, as was an
+edition of Baffo, belonging to my other fellow traveller, returned to him.
+Now this Baffo was a Venetian poet and his works are the most profligate
+that ever were penned or imagined by mortal man. Martial and Petronius
+Arbiter must hide their diminished heads before Baffo. The owner of this
+book chose to read out loud, quite unsolicited, several _choice_ sonnets of
+this poet for our edification during the journey; and this branch of
+litterature seemed to be the only one with which he was acquainted.
+
+When the examination was over I took leave of my fellow travellers, and
+repaired to the _German Hôtel_ in the _Via de' Condotti_, where I engaged
+an apartment, and sat down to dinner at an excellent _table d'hôte_ at five
+o'clock. There was a profusion of everything, particularly of fish and
+game. Mullets and wild boar are constant dishes at a Roman table. The
+mullets at Rome are small but delicious, and this was a fish highly prized
+by the ancient Romans. Game of all kinds is very cheap here, from the
+abundance of it that is to be met with in wild uninhabited wastes of Latium
+and in the Pontine marshes. Every peasant is a sportsman and goes
+constantly armed with fire-arms, not only to kill game, but to defend
+himself against robbers, who infest the environs of Rome, and who sometimes
+carry their audacity so far as to push their _reconnaissances_ close to the
+very walls of the city. At the _German Hôtel_ the price of the dinner at
+_table d'hôte_, including wine at discretion, is six _paoli_, about three
+franks. I pay for an excellent room about three _paoli_ per diem and my
+breakfast at a neighbouring _Caffé_ costs me one _paolo_. A _paolo_ is
+worth about five pence English. There are ten _paoli_ to a _scudo Romano_
+and ten _bafocchi_ to a _paolo_, The _bafocco_ is a copper coin.
+
+
+ROME, 12th Sept.
+
+A great number of Germans dine at the _table d'hôte_ of Franz's hotel.
+Among them I distinguished one day a very intelligent Bavarian Jew. I
+proposed to him a walk to the Coliseum the following morning, as
+independent of the benefit I derived from his conversation I was curious to
+see whether it was true or not that the Jews always avoided walking under
+the Arch of Titus, which was erected in commemoration of the capture of
+Jerusalem by the Romans under Titus, in the reign of Vespasian. On stepping
+out of the _Hôtel Allemand_, the first thing that met my eye was the
+identical beggar described by Kotzebue in his travels in Italy, and he
+gives the very same answer now as then to those who give him nothing, viz.,
+_Pazienza_.
+
+We crossed the _Piazza di Spagna_, ascended the superb flight of steps of
+the _Trinità de' Monti_, where there is a French church called the Church
+of St Louis: near it is the _Villa Medici_, which is the seat of the French
+Academy of the fine arts at Rome. We then filed along the _Strada Felice_
+till we arrived at the church of _Santa Maria maggiore_, a superb edifice,
+the third church in Rome in celebrity, and the second in magnificence. An
+immense Egyptian Obelisk stands before it. We then, turning a little to the
+right, made the best of our way to the Coliseum where we remained nearly
+two hours. I had figured to myself the grandest ideas of this stupendous
+building, but the aspect of it far exceeded the sketch even of my
+imagination. In Egypt I have seen the Pyramids, but even these vast masses
+did not make such an impression on me as the Coliseum has done. I am so
+unequal to the task of description that I shall not attempt it; I will give
+you however its dimensions which my friend the Jew measured. It is an
+ellipse of which the transverse axis is 580 feet in length and its
+conjugate diameter 480; but it is not so much the length and breadth as the
+solidity of this building that strikes the traveller with astonishment. The
+arcaded passage or gallery (on the _rez de chaussée_ between the interior
+and the exterior wall), which has a vaulted roof over which the seats are
+built, is broad enough to admit three carriages abreast: and the walls on
+each side of this gallery are at least twenty feet thick. What a
+magnificent spectacle it must have been in the time of the ancient Romans,
+when it was ornamented, gilded, and full of spectators, of which it could
+contain, it is said, 86,000! The Coliseum has been despoiled by various
+Popes and Cardinals to furnish stone and marble to build their palaces;
+otherwise, so solid is the building, Time alone would never suffice to
+destroy it. At present strict orders are given and sentries are posted to
+prevent all further dilapidations, and buttresses have been made to prop up
+those parts which had given way. What a pity it is that the Arena has not
+been left empty, instead of being fitted up with tawdry niches and images
+representing the different stations of the Crucifixion! In the centre is an
+immense Cross, which whoever kisses is entitled to one hundred days
+indulgence. To what reflections the sight of this vast edifice leads! What
+combats of gladiators and wild beasts! What blood has been spilled! Was it
+not here that the tyrannical and cowardly Domitian ordered Ulpius Glabrio,
+of consular dignity, to descend into the arena and fight with a lion? The
+Christian writers mention that many of their sect suffered martyrdom here
+by being compelled to fight with wild beasts; but even this was not half so
+bad as the conduct of the Christians, when they obtained possession of
+political power and dominion, in burning alive poor Jews, Moors and
+heretics some centuries afterwards. Indeed the cruelty of the Pagans was
+much exaggerated by the above writers and were it even true to its full
+extent, their severity was far more excusable than that of the Christians
+in later times, for the efforts of the Christian sect in the times of
+Paganism were unceasingly directed towards the destruction of the whole
+fabric of polytheism, on which was based the entire, social and political
+order of the Empire; and they thus brought on themselves perhaps merited
+persecution, by their own intolerance; whereas, when they got the upper
+hand, they showed no mercy to those of a different religion, and Orthodoxy
+has wallowed successively in the blood of Arians, Jews, Moors and
+Protestants.
+
+How many a poor Jew or Moor in Spain and Portugal has been burned alive for
+no other reason than
+
+ _Pour n'avoir point quitté la foi de leurs ancêtres._
+
+No, no; no sect or religion was ever so persecuting as the Catholic
+Christians! The Polytheists of all times, both ancient and modern, were
+tolerant to all religions and so far from striving to make proselytes,
+often adopted the ceremonies of other worships in addition to their own;
+witness the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans of old, and the Hindoos and
+Chinese of the present day. The Jews, ferocious and prejudiced as they
+were, never persecuted other nations on the ground of religion, and if they
+held these nations in abhorrence as idolaters, and considered themselves
+alone as the holy people, the people of God (Yahoudi), they never dreamed
+of making converts. The Mussulmans tho' they hold it as a sacred precept of
+their religion to endeavour to make converts to Islam, do not use violent
+means and only compel those of a different faith to pay a higher tribute.
+At any rate, they never have or do put people to death merely for the
+difference of religious opinions. Such were the reflections I made on
+walking about the Arena of this colossal edifice so worthy of the _popolo
+Re_.
+
+On leaving the Coliseum the first thing that meets the eye is the Arch of
+Constantine, under which the Roman triumphal and ovationary processions
+moved towards the Capitol. The Arch of Constantine stands just outside the
+Coliseum. It is of immense size and extremely well preserved. The ground on
+which it stands being much filled up and only half of the Arch appearing,
+the rest remaining buried in the earth, it was judged adviseable to
+excavate all around it in order to come to the pedestal; so that now there
+is a walled enclosure all around it and into this enclosure it is a descent
+of at least eighteen feet from the ground outside. Several statues of
+captive Kings and bas-reliefs representing the victories of Constantine
+adorn the facade of this triumphal arch. The inscriptions are perfect, and
+the letters were formerly filled up with bronze; but these have been taken
+out at the repeated sackings that poor Rome has undergone from friend and
+foe. At a short distance from the Arch of Constantine is the Arch of Titus,
+under which we moved along on our road towards the Capitol and my friend
+the Jew was too much of a cosmopolite to feel the smallest repugnance at
+walking under the Arch. Our conversation then turned on the absurd hatred
+and prejudice that existed between Christians and Jews; he was very liberal
+on this subject and in speaking of Jesus Christ he said: "Jesus Christ was
+a Jew and a real philosopher and was therefore persecuted, for his
+philosophy interfered too much with, and tended to shake the political
+fabric of the Jewish constitution and to subvert our old customs and
+usages: for this reason he was put to death. I seek not to defend or
+palliate the injustice of the act or the barbarity with which he was
+treated; but our nation did surely no more than any other nation ancient or
+modern has done or would still do against reformers and innovators."
+
+The Arch of Titus is completely defaced outside, but in the interior of the
+Arch, on each side, is a bas relief: the one representing Vespasian's
+triumph over the Jews, and the Emperor himself in a car drawn by six
+horses; the other represents the soldiers and followers of the triumph,
+bearing the spoils of the conquered nation, and among them the famous
+candlesticks that adorned the temple of Jerusalem are very conspicuous.
+These figures are in tolerable preservation, only that the Emperor has lost
+his head and one of the soldiers has absconded.
+
+On issuing from the Arch of Titus we found ourselves in the Forum, now the
+_Campo Vaccino_: so that cattle now low where statesmen and orators
+harangued, and lazy priests in procession tread on the sacred dust of
+heroes.
+
+ Où des prêtres heureux foulent d'un pied tranquille
+ Les tombeaux des Catons et les cendres d'Emile.
+
+So sings Voltaire, I believe, or if they are not his lines, they are the
+Abbé Delille's.[84]
+
+The imagination is quite bewildered here from the variety of ancient
+monuments that meet the eye in every direction. What vast souvenirs crowd
+all at once on the mind! Look all around! the _Via Sacra_, the Arch of
+Severus, and the Capitol in front; on one side of you, the temple of Peace,
+that of Faustina and that of the Sun and Moon: on the other the remaining
+three columns of the temple of Jupiter Stator; the three also of the temple
+of Jupiter Tonans; the eight columns of the temple of Concord; and the
+solitary column of Phocas. At a short distance the temple of Castor and
+Pollux and that of Romulus and Remus, which is a round building of great
+antiquity, whose rusticity forms a striking contrast with the elegance of
+the colonnaded temples, and which was evidently built before the conquest
+of Greece by the Romans and the consequent introduction of the fine arts
+and of the Grecian orders of architecture.
+
+You may wish to know my sensations on traversing this sacred ground. The
+_Via Sacra_ recalled to me Horace meeting the _bavard_ who addresses him:
+_Quid agis, dulcissime rerum_?[85] I then thought of the Sabine rape; of
+Brutus' speech over the body of Lucretia; then I almost fancied I could see
+the spot where stood the butcher's shop, from whence Virginius snatched the
+knife to immolate his daughter at the shrine of Honor; next the shade of
+Regulus flitted before my imagination, refusing to be exchanged; then I
+figured to myself Cicero thundering against Catiline; or the same with
+delicate irony ridiculing the ultra-rigor of the Stoics, so as to force
+even the gravity of Cato to relax into a smile; then the grand, the heroic
+act of Marcus Brutus in immolating the great Caesar at the altar of
+liberty. All these recollections and ideas crowded on my imagination
+without regard to order or chronology, and I remained for some time in a
+state of the most profound reverie, from which I was only roused by my
+friend the Jew reminding me that we had a quantity of other things to see.
+
+The first object that engaged my attention on being roused from my reverie,
+was the Arch of Severus at the foot of the Capitol which towers above it.
+Excavations have been made around this Arch (for otherwise only half of it
+could be seen) and a stone wall built around the excavated ground in the
+same manner as at the Arch of Constantine. Round several of the columns of
+the temples I have above enumerated, excavations have been also made;
+otherwise the lower half of them would remain buried in the earth and give
+to the monuments the appearance of a city which had been half swallowed up
+by an earthquake. By dint of digging round the column of Phocas, the
+ancient paved road which led to the Capitol has been discovered and is now
+open to view. This ancient road is at least thirty feet below the surface
+of the present road and the ground about it. This shows how the ground must
+have been filled up by the destruction of buildings at the different
+sackings of Rome and the consequent accumulation of rubbish. The French
+when they were here began these excavations and the Duchess of Devonshire
+continues them.[86] It is useful in every way; it employs a number of poor
+people and may be the means of discovering some valuable remains of
+antiquity and objects of art. At any rate it is highly gratifying to have
+discovered the identical road to the Capitol on which so many Consuls,
+Dictators and Emperors moved in triumph, and so many captive Kings wept in
+chains.
+
+We then ascended the steps that lead to the modern Capitol and mounted on
+the _Campanile_ of the same, from whence there is a superb panoramic view
+of Rome. On descending from the _Campanile_, we visited the Tarpeian rock,
+which is now of inconsiderable height, the ground about it and heaps of
+rubbish having filled up the abyss below. We then entered the court yard of
+the Capitol. The Capitol and building annexed to it form three sides of a
+rectangle, the centre or _corps de logis_ lying North and South, and the
+wings East and West, the whole inclosing a court yard open on the South
+side of the rectangle, from whence you descend into the street on the plain
+below, by a most magnificent escalier or flight of steps. Of the Capitol,
+the _corps de logis_ or central building to which the _Campanile_ belongs,
+is reserved for the occupation and habitation of the _Senator Romano_, a
+civil magistrate, corresponding something to the mayor in France or
+_Oberbürgermeister_ in the German towns, and who is chosen from among the
+nobility and nominated by the Pope. The wings contain the _Museum
+Capitolinum_ of painting and sculpture. There is a great deal to call forth
+the admiration of the traveller in the court yard of the Capitol. The most
+prominent object is the famous bronze equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius,
+which cannot fail to rivet the attention of the least enthusiastic
+spectator. I observed at each angle of the façade of the Capitol a colossal
+statue of a captive King in a Phrygian dress; but still more striking than
+these are the colossal statues of Castor and Pollux leading horses, which
+stand a little in front of the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius, and
+nearer the _escalier_, the one on the right the other on the left. Two
+lions in basalt on each side of the _escalier_ are very striking objects,
+and the _escalier_ itself is the most superb thing of the kind perhaps in
+the world. This _escalier_ and the Marcus Aurelius, unique also in its
+kind, are both the workmanship of Michael Angelo.[87] We descended this
+_escalier_ and then fronted it to take a view of the Capitol from the
+bottom; but the statue of Marcus Aurelius is so prominent and so grand that
+it absorbed all my attention.
+
+After dinner I walked a little in the gardens on the Pincian hill, and then
+visited some friends belonging to the French Academy of Painting and
+Sculpture, who were so good as to shew me their productions, and also a
+copy of the superb folio edition of Denon's work on Egypt which to me, who
+had been in that country, was highly gratifying. Oh! what a pity that the
+French could not keep that country! What a paradise they would have made of
+it! As it is (and to their credit be it said) they did more good for the
+country during three years only, than we have done for our possessions in
+India for fifty years.
+
+
+ROME, 15th Septr.
+
+The next morning, after an early breakfast, I repaired to the Pantheon, now
+called _Santa Maria della Rotonda_, and appropriated to the Catholic
+worship. It is easily recognizable by its rotundity and by the simple
+grandeur of its façade and portico. The bronze has been taken out of the
+letters of the inscription. This beautiful specimen of ancient architecture
+is situated in a small _piazza_ or square called _Piazza della Rotonda_,
+where a market of poultry, game, and vegetables is held. There are only now
+three or four steps on the _escalier_ to ascend, in order to enter into the
+portico; but as it is known that according to the descriptions of the
+Pantheon in ancient times there was an immense flight of steps to ascend,
+it is an additional proof how much the ground on which modern Rome stands
+has been filled up, and consequently it is evident that the greater part of
+this flight of steps remains still buried in the earth.
+
+If I was so struck with the appearance of this interesting edifice outside,
+how much more so should I have been on seeing the inside, were not the
+niches, where formerly stood the statues of the Gods, filled with tawdry
+dolls representing the Virgin Mary and _he_ and _she_ saints. The columns
+and pilasters in the interior of this temple are beautiful, all of _jaune
+antique_ and one entire stone each. How much better would it have been to
+replace the statues of the _Dii Majorum Gentium_ which occupied the niches,
+by statues in marble of the Apostles, instead of the dolls dressed in
+tawdry colors, and the frippery gilding of the altars on which they stand,
+which disfigure this noble building. The Pantheon was built by Agrippa as
+the inscription shews. In the interior are sixteen columns of _jaune
+antique_. The bronze that formerly ornamented this temple was made use of
+to fabricate the baldachin of St Peter's. Of late years it has been the
+fashion to erect monuments affixed to the walls of the interior of the
+Pantheon to the memory of the great men and heroes of poetry, painting,
+sculpture and music who were natives of Italy, or for foreigners,
+celebrated for their excellence in those arts, who have died in Rome. Here
+are for instance, tablets to the memory of Metastasio, Rafael Mengs,
+Sacchini, Poussin, Winckelmann; the Phidias of modern days, the illustrious
+Canova, has recommended the placing in the Pantheon of the busts in marble
+of all the great men who have flourished in Italy, as the most appropriate
+ornament to this temple. He himself with a princely liberality has made a
+present to it of the busts of Dante, Petrarca, Ariosto, Tasso, Guarini,
+Alfieri, Michel Angelo, Rafaello, Metastasio and various other worthies.
+These busts are all the production either of Canova himself, or made by his
+pupils under his direction; they are not the least remarkable ornament of
+the place. In the centre of the _Piazza della Rotonda_ stands an obelisk
+brought from Egypt, which belonged to a temple sacred to Isis in that
+country.
+
+I next repaired to the _Piazza di Navona_, a large and spacious square,
+where there is a superb fountain representing a vast rock with four
+colossal figures, one of which reclines at the foot of the rock, at each
+angle of the pedestal that supports it, and it is surmounted by an Obelisk
+which was brought from Egypt and was found in the gardens of Sallust. The
+four colossal figures represent the four river Gods of the four great
+rivers in Europe, Asia, Africa and America, viz., the Danube, the Ganges,
+the Nile, and the Plata. The statue of the Nile has his head half-concealed
+by a cloak, emblematical of the source of that river not being discovered.
+In the _Piazza_ are frequently held fairs, shews of wild beasts, theatrical
+exhibitions and sometimes combats of wild beasts.
+
+I crossed the Tiber on my way to St Peter's at the _Ponte di Sant' Angelo_;
+directly on the other side of the river stands the castle of that name, an
+immense edifice formerly the _Moles Adriana_ or Mausoleum of the Emperor
+Adrian. It is of a circular form and is a remarkably striking object. From
+here there is a spacious street as broad as Portland place, which leads to
+the magnificent _Piazza_, where stands the Metropolitan Church of the
+Christian world, the pride of Christendom, the triumph of modern
+architecture, flanked on each side by a semi-circular colonnaded portico,
+which constitutes one of its greatest beauties and distinguishes it from
+all the other temples in the world. On the Piazza, considerably in front of
+this wonderful edifice and nearly in the centre, stands an immense Egyptian
+Obelisk, and at a short distance on each side of the Obelisk two
+magnificent fountains which spout water to a great height and which
+contribute greatly to the ornament of the _Piazza_.
+
+Now you must not expect me to give you a description of this glorious
+temple. I never in my life possessed descriptive powers, even for objects
+of no great importance: how then could I attempt to delineate the
+innumerable beauties of this edifice? Yet, vast as it is, the proportions
+of the façade are so correct, that they, together with the semi-circular
+colonnaded portico, serve to diminish its apparent size and to render its
+mass less imposing, but perhaps more beautiful. On this account it appears
+at first sight of less size than the Church of St Paul's in London. The
+beauty of the architecture, viz., of the façade and of the colonnaded
+portico would require days to examine and admire. What shall I say then of
+the wonders of the interior, crowded and charged as it is with the finest
+pieces of sculpture, columns of the most beautiful _verd antique_ and of
+_jaune antique_; the masterpieces of painting copied in mosaic; the
+precious, stones and marbles of all sorts that adorn the variety of
+magnificent chapels and altars; the immense baldachin with its twisted
+columns of bronze (the spoils of the Pantheon and of the temple of
+Jerusalem); the profusion of gilding and ornament of all sorts and where in
+spite of this profusion there seems _rien de trop_. At first entrance the
+eye is so dazzled with the magnificent _tout ensemble_ as to be incapable
+for a long time of examining any thing in detail. Each chapel abounds in
+the choicest marbles and precious stones: in a word it would seem as if the
+whole wealth of the Earth were concentrated here. Without impiety or
+exaggeration, I felt on entering this majestic temple for the first time
+just as I conceive a resuscitated mortal would feel on being ushered into
+the scene of the glories of Heaven. The masterpieces of painting are here
+perpetuated in mosaic, and so correctly and beautifully done, that unless
+you approach exceedingly close indeed, it is impossible to distinguish them
+from paintings. What an useful as well as ornamental art is the mosaic!
+There are a great variety of confessionals where penitents and pilgrims may
+confess, each in his own tongue, for there is a confessional for the use of
+almost every native tongue and language in the Catholic world. The cupola!
+What an astonishing sight when you look up at it from below! How can I
+better describe it than by relating the anecdote of Michel Angelo its
+constructor, who when some one made a remark on the impossibility of making
+a finer Cupola than that of the Pantheon, burst out into the following
+exclamation: "Do you think so? Then I will throw it in the air," and he
+fulfilled his word; for the cupola of St Peter's is exactly of the size of
+that of the Pantheon, tho' at such an elevation as to give it only the
+appearance of one fourth of its real size, or even less. The sublimity of
+the design can only be equalled by the boldness and success of its
+execution. Till it was done, it was thought by every artist impossible to
+be done. What an extraordinary genius was this Michel Angelo! Ariosto has
+hot at all exaggerated in his praise when he speaks of him in punning on
+his name:
+
+ _Michel_ più che mortal, _Angel_ divino.[88]
+
+ Michael, less man than Angel and divine.
+
+ --Trans, W.S. ROSE.
+
+Among the various splendid marble monuments with which this temple abounds
+is one erected to the memory of Pope Rezzonico, constructed by Canova and
+reckoned one of his masterpieces. The Pope is represented in his
+canonicals. Behind and above him is a colossal statue of Religion with a
+cross in one hand and rays in form of spikes issuing from her head. I do
+not like these spikes. On the dexter side of this monument, is a beautiful
+male youthful figure representing a funereal genius with an inverted torch.
+The signal delicacy, beauty and symmetry of this statue forms a striking
+contrast with the figure of an immense lion sleeping on the sinister side;
+and this lion is an irrefragable proof that Canova excels in the
+delineation of the terrible as well as the beautiful, for it is admirably
+executed.
+
+At another monument is a superb female figure of colossal size representing
+Truth. It was formerly naked, but they have contrived to execute in
+coloured marble a vestment to cover her loins and veil her secret beauties.
+The reason of which is, that this beautiful statue made such an impression
+once upon a traveller (some say he was an Englishman, others a Spaniard)
+that it inspired him with a sort of Pygmalionic passion which he attempted
+to gratify one night; he was discovered in the attempt, and since that
+time, to prevent further scandal or attempts of the sort and to conceal
+from profane eyes the charms of the too alluring Goddess, this colored
+marble vestment was imagined and executed. This story is borrowed from
+Lucian.[89]
+
+There is also here a fine statue of Pope Gregory XIII and a magnificent
+bas-relief, the subject of which is the reform of the calendar by that
+Pope. Here too is a monument to Christina Queen of Sweden, and a bas-relief
+representing her abjuration of the Lutheran Faith.
+
+But why should I attempt to detail all these monuments, while it would
+require folios for the purpose; let me rather introduce you to the hero and
+tutelary saint of this sanctuary. St Peter, a superb bronze statue
+something above the usual size of men, is seated on a curule chair in the
+nave of the church on the right hand side as you approach the baldachin. He
+holds in his hands the keys of Heaven. He receives the adoration of all the
+faithful who enter into this temple, and this adoration is performed by
+kissing his foot which, from the repeated kissings, is become of a bright
+polish and is visibly wearing away. The statue was formerly a statue of
+Jupiter Capitolinus, but on the grand revolution among the inhabitants of
+Olympus and the downfall of Jupiter, it was broken to pieces, melted down
+and fabricated into an image of St Peter, so that this statue has lost
+little of its former sovereignty and still rules Heaven and Earth if not
+with regal, with at least vice-regal power, tho' under a different name.
+
+In the Sistine Chapel is the celebrated painting al fresco of the day of
+Judgment by Michel Angelo, an aweful subject and nobly and awefully
+executed.
+
+In the porch under the façade of St Peter's are two marble statues on
+horseback, one at each end of the porch: they represent Constantine the
+Great and Charlemagne, the two great benefactors of the holy Catholic
+Church; the one, in fact, its founder, the other its preserver.
+
+As the Palace of the Vatican stands close to the Church of St Peter's and
+communicates with it by an _escalier_, I ascended the _escalier_ in order
+to behold and examine the famous Museum of the Vatican, the first in the
+world, and unique for the vast treasures of the fine arts that it contains;
+treasures which the united wealth of all Europe and India to boot could not
+purchase at their just price. Here in fact it may be said are preserved the
+riches and plunder of the whole world, which was stripped of all its
+valuables by those illustrious brigands the ancient Romans. And mark in
+this point the good fortune of Rome; instead of losing them again as other
+nations have lost their trophies, Superstition came to her aid and caused
+them to be respected and preserved, 'till an enlightened age arose which
+guided by Philosophy, Humanity and Science will for ever preserve them
+secure against all attacks of barbarians in a sanctuary so worthy of them.
+
+
+_Museum Vaticanum_[90]
+
+A superb flight of steps leads into a hall of immense length filled on each
+side with statues, busts, sarcophagi, altars, urns, vases and candelabra,
+all monuments of antiquity and of the most exquisite workmanship. The walls
+on each side of this hall are inlaid with tablets bearing inscriptions in
+Greek, Latin and Etruscan. One is quite bewildered amongst such a profusion
+of Gods, Semi-Gods, Heroes. I must single out a few of the most remarkable
+for their workmanship. Here is a group representing the sacrifice of
+Mithras. On ascending a few steps at the other end of this hall, in a small
+octangular room, are the statue of Meleager; the famous Torso; the tomb of
+Scipio with bas-reliefs. On leaving the chamber you come into an octangular
+gallery, issuing from which are four circular chambers; each chamber
+contains a masterpiece of art. In one is the Apollo Belvedere, in another
+the Laocoon (both safely arrived from Paris); in the third Antinous; in the
+fourth the Perseus of Canova, with Medusa's head and his famous group of
+the two pugilists. Descriptions of the three first would be superfluous--
+for of them
+
+ Mills altri han detto e con via miglior plettro,
+
+and even with respect to the Perseus of Canova, I shall content myself with
+remarking that the sculptor had evidently the Apollo Belvedere in his
+ideal, and if he has not quite equalled that celebrated statue, it is
+because it is impossible; but he certainly has given the nearest possible
+approximation to its excellence.
+
+In another hall and just at its entrance are the statues of Menander and
+Posidippus in a sitting posture, one on either side. In this hall are
+innumerable fine statues, but the further end of it, fronting you as you
+enter, is a statue which at once engages and rivets your undivided
+attention; it at once induces you to approach and to take no notice of the
+statues on the right and left of the hall. And how should it be otherwise,
+since it is the identical statue of the father of the Gods and men, the
+famous Jupiter Capitolinus which adorned the Capitol in ancient Rome. He is
+sitting on a throne with a sceptre in one hand and the thunderbolts in the
+other, at his feet an eagle. It is a glorious statue and in every respect
+characteristic; such grandeur, such majesty in the countenance! It is
+impossible not to feel awe and reverence on beholding it. It was on
+contemplating this venerable statue that an Englishman who was at Rome some
+sixty years ago, stood wrapt for a time in silent veneration; then suddenly
+breaking silence he made a profound obeisance before the statue and
+exclaimed: "Recollect, O father of the Gods and men, that I have paid my
+hommage to you in your adversity and do not forget me, should you ever
+raise your head above water again!"
+
+In the hall of the Muses are the statues of the tuneful Nine which were
+found underground among the ruins of Hadrian's villa at Tivoli.
+
+In the centre of a circular chamber of vast dimensions, is an enormous
+circular basin of porphyry, of forty-one feet in diameter. A superb mosaic
+adorns the floor of the centre of this chamber, and is inclosed.
+Appropriate ornaments to this immense chamber are the colossal statues of
+the _Dii majorum Gentium_. Here are Juno, Minerva, Cybele, Jupiter,
+Serapis, Mars, Ceres, and others.
+
+In another hall are two enormous Egyptian Gods in yellow granite; two
+superb sarcophagi in red marble and two immense Sphinxes in granite. In
+another chamber is an antique car drawn by two horses: the near one is
+modern, the off one ancient. The wheels of this car are modern; both car
+and horses are of exquisite workmanship. Several fine statues adorn this
+chamber, among which the most remarkable are a Phocion, a Paris, an
+Antinous, and a Triton carrying off a Nereid.
+
+I must not omit to mention that in one of the halls is the famous group of
+the Nile, represented by an enormous colossal River God, surrounded by
+fourteen children playing with young crocodiles. Opposite to this group is
+another equally celebrated, viz., the colossal statue of the Tiber, with
+the she-wolf giving suck to Romulus and Remus by his side. The mosaic
+pavements in this Museum surpass in richness any in the world. In one of
+the halls, among the works of modern times, are two beautiful marble tables
+richly inlaid with all sorts of stones of value, with bas-reliefs on them;
+the one representing the visit of the Emperor Joseph II, and the other that
+of Gustavus III of Sweden to Rome, and their reception by the Pope.
+
+One of the halls of sculpture is appropriated to the figures of animals of
+all kinds, from the lion and eagle down to the rat and crawfish in marbles
+of all colors, and of all sizes; the best executed among them appeared to
+me a group representing a greyhound bitch giving suck to her young. As for
+the valuable cameos, coins, medals, and smaller remnants of antiquity in
+this Museum, they are innumerable.
+
+With regard to the paintings that belong to this Museum, there is only a
+small, collection but it is unique. Here is the Transfiguration and some
+other masterpieces of Rafaello.
+
+In the _Stanze di Rafaello_ (so they are called) are several large fresco
+paintings, viz., one representing the battle of Maxentius and Constantine;
+another, the school of Athens and Socrates sitting among the other
+philosophers; a third representing a fire; besides others.
+
+In one of these _stanze_ is a work in tapestry representing Jesus Christ
+bursting forth from the sepulchre, but he has a visage far too rubicund and
+wanting in dignity; he looks like a person flushed with wine issuing from a
+tavern; in the countenance there is depicted (so it appears to me) a
+vulgar, not a dignified triumph.
+
+The Palace of the Vatican is of immense size and is said to cover as much
+ground as the city of Turin; and I am inclined to think that there is not a
+great deal of exaggeration in this statement, for the vista along the
+corridors and galleries appears to be endless. The Library of the Vatican
+is of course very extensive and of immense value; but the books, as well as
+the manuscripts, are kept in presses which are locked, and it is rather
+awkward to be continually applying to the _custode_ to take out and put
+back a book.
+
+The Museum of the Vatican is open twice a week to the public, viz.
+Thursdays and Sundays; but foreigners, on shewing their passports, may
+obtain admission at any time.
+
+
+ROME, 17th Sept.
+
+My next visit was to the Capitol in order to inspect the _Museum
+Capitolinum_. This time I ascended the magnificent _escalier_ of Michel
+Angelo, having the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius in front. On
+arriving at the courtyard, I entered the building on my left (which is on
+the right of the façade). Under the colonnaded portico of this wing are the
+statues of Caesar and Augustus; here too is the naval column of the consul
+Duilius, in commemoration of the first naval victory gained over the
+Carthaginians; also a colossal statue of the Rhine called Marforio. In one
+of the halls two large statues of the Egyptian Goddess Isis and various
+other Egyptian divinities. In this Museum among other things is an altar
+representing Claudia drawing to the land the Ship of Cybele; a magnificent
+sarcophagus with a bas relief on its side representing the progress of
+life; Amalthea giving suck to Jupiter; the God Anubis found among the ruins
+of Adrian's palace at Tivoli. On ascending the staircase, I observed on the
+right hand fixed in the wall a tablet with a plan of ancient Rome carved on
+it. In one of the halls above stairs the most remarkable statue is that of
+the dying gladiator (brought back from Paris); this is certainly a noble
+piece of sculpture; the bodily pain and mental anguish are singularly well
+expressed in the countenance; a superb bronze statue of Hercules; a Centaur
+in black marble; a Faun in _rosso antico_; a group of Cupid and Psyche; a
+Venus in Parian marble rather larger than the common size. One of the halls
+in this museum contains the busts of all the philosophers; another those of
+all the Roman emperors; there is also a colossal statue of Pyrrhus; a
+superb Agrippina and the celebrated mosaic of the four pigeons. In
+enumerating the above I have only to observe that they only constitute a
+thousandth part of what is to be seen here. After passing three hours in
+this wing of the building, I went over across the courtyard to the other
+wing. Under the portico of this wing the following are the most remarkable
+among the statues: a Roman _triumphans_, two Phrygian kings in black
+marble. In one of the rooms above stairs is a very remarkable piece of
+antiquity, viz., the bronze wolf giving suck to Romulus and Remus, which
+was found in the temple of Romulus and which was struck by lightning during
+the consulate of Julius: the marks made by the lightning are quite
+distinct. There is in this wing a small but excellent collection of
+paintings, and a great variety of statues, busts, sarcophagi, candelabra,
+and antiquities of all sorts.
+
+The front part, or _corps de logis_ of the Capitol is called _Il Palazzo
+del Senato conservatore_, and is the residence of the _Senator Romano_ who
+is chosen by the Pope. By the bye, I understand this dignity is generally
+given to a foreigner, the Pontiffs being, rather jealous of the Roman
+nobility.
+
+This wing of the Capitol employed me two hours; but I must visit this
+Museum as well as that of the Vatican often again; for it would require
+months and years to examine them duly.
+
+
+ROME, 18th Sept.
+
+On this side of the river which is called _Transtevere_, I had an
+opportunity of observing the inhabitants, who are called _Transteverini_,
+the most of whom pretend to be the descendants of the ancient Romans,
+unmixed with any foreign blood. They certainly have very much of that
+physiognomy that is attributed to the ancient Romans, for they are a tall,
+very robust race of men having something of a ferocious dignity in their
+countenance which, however, is full of expression, and the aquiline nose is
+a prominent feature among them. They are exceedingly jealous of their
+women, whom they keep within doors as much as they can, and if a stranger
+on passing by their doors should chance to observe their wives or daughters
+who may be standing there and should stop to admire them (for many of them
+have an air of antique beauty and majesty of countenance which is
+remarkably striking), they will instantly order the females to retire, with
+an air of asperity.
+
+Whether they really be the pure descendants of the ancient Romans is
+difficult to say: but it is by no means improbable, since even to this day
+they intermarry solely with one another, and refuse to give their daughters
+in marriage to foreigners or to those of mixed blood.
+
+Instances have been known of these families, who are for the most part very
+poor, refusing the most advantageous offers of marriage made to their
+daughters by rich foreign merchants and artists, on the ground merely that
+the suitors were not _Romani_ but _Barbari._
+
+As for the _bourgeoisie_ of Rome in general, they _have been_ for some
+centuries back and _are_ a very mixed race, composed of all the nations of
+Europe. Most of the foreign artists who come here to study the fine arts,
+viz., Belgians, Dutch, German, French, English, Swedes, Danes, Poles and
+Russians, as well as those from other parts of Italy, struck with the
+beauty of the women, and pleased with the tranquility and agreeable society
+that prevails in this metropolis, and the total freedom from all _gêne_ and
+etiquette, marry Roman women and fix here for life: so that among this
+class you meet with more foreign names than Roman; and it is this sort of
+colonisation which keeps up the population of Rome, which would otherwise
+greatly decrease as well from the celibacy of the number that become
+priests, as from the malaria that prevails in and about the city in July
+and August.
+
+
+ROME, 19th Sept.
+
+I have been employed for the last two days in visiting some of the
+churches, _palazzi_ and villas of modern Rome; but the number is so
+prodigious and there are such a variety of things to be seen in each that I
+shall only make mention of a few; indeed there are many that I have not
+seen and probably shall not have time to see. As sacred things should
+precede profane, let us begin with the churches.
+
+The first that claims the attention of the traveller after St Peter's, is
+the church of St John Lateran which is the oldest church in Christendom,
+and was the metropolitan of Rome and of the Christian world before the
+building of St Peter's. It lies very nearly in a right line with the
+_Piazza di Spagna_, and on a prolonged line, forming an obtuse angle with
+the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, which, as I first visited, I shall
+first describe and afterwards resume what I have to remark on the subject
+of St John Lateran.
+
+Santa Maria Maggiore is the third church in importance, but the second in
+magnificence in Rome. Before its façade stands a single column of granite
+of the Corinthian order. The façade of this church is beautiful but it
+would be far better without the _campanile_, which I think always
+disfigures a church of Grecian architecture; besides it is not in the
+centre of the building. The church is richly adorned with mosaics and its
+several chapels are admirable from the execution of their architecture and
+sculpture and the value of the different rich marbles and precious stones
+with which the monuments therein are made and incrusted. Among these
+Chapels are those of Sixtus V, Paul V. The grand altar is of porphyry. But
+the most striking beauty of this church and which eclipses all its other
+ornaments, are the forty columns of beautiful Grecian marble on each side
+of the nave. The ceiling, too, is superb and richly gilt; the gilding must
+have cost an immense sum and was done, it is said, with the first gold that
+was brought from America. Nothing can be more rich than this plafond. The
+above forty columns belonged formerly to the temple of Juno Lucina. It is
+singular that the ceremony of the _accouchement_ of the Virgin and the
+birth of Christ should be performed here. On the 24th December this
+pantomime is regularly acted, and crowds of all sorts of people attend,
+particularly women. At the moment that the Virgin is supposed to be
+delivered a salve of artillery announces the good tidings. This is
+singular, I say, when one recollects the peculiar attributes of Juno Lucina
+and the assistance she was supposed to give to persons in the same
+situation.
+
+You cannot expect me to detail to you all the riches in precious stones and
+gifts of pious princes that adorn the several chapels of this and other
+churches; but they appear to contain every stone and jewel mentioned in the
+Arabian Nights as being to be found in the cave where Aladdin was left by
+the magician; and it must be allowed that the Popes have been remarkably
+adroit inchanters in conjuring to Rome all the riches of the Earth.
+
+The church of St John Lateran is larger and more striking as to its
+exterior and as to its architecture than that of Santa Maria Maggiore, but
+it is not so charged with ornament and there is scarce any gilding. There
+is a simple elegance about it that I think far more pleasing than the
+magnificence of Santa Maria.
+
+St John Lateran contains several beautiful pieces of sculpture in white
+marble, rather larger than the usual size of man, of the twelve Apostles,
+six on one side of the nave and six on the other; and above them are
+bas-reliefs, also in marble, representing the various scenes from the
+history of the Old and New Testament. These twelve statues are admirably
+well executed and they give to this temple an air of simple grandeur. In
+this church are very few paintings on mosaics, but little gilding and no
+superfluous ornaments. Sculpture is, in my opinion, far more appropriate to
+a place of worship than paintings or dazzling ornaments. Another very
+striking beauty of this noble and venerable temple are the columns it
+contains some of which are in granite and others of the most beautiful
+_verd-antique_. There are besides two superb Corinthian columns of bronze
+which adorn one of the altars. Among the chapels of this Cathedral is one
+belonging to the Corsini family, which is probably the richest in Europe,
+and contains more precious stones and marbles than any other. Yet as this
+and the other chapels are in recesses and separated from the aisles of the
+church by large bronze gates, you cannot see their contents till you enter
+the said chapels; and thus your attention is not diverted by them from the
+contemplation of the simple grandeur of the columns and statues which adorn
+the body of the temple.
+
+The bronze columns above mentioned were taken from the temple of Jupiter
+Capitolinus. On one side in front of the church of St John Lateran stands
+an immense Egyptian Obelisk 115 feet in height, brought from Egypt to Rome
+in the time of Constantine.
+
+I think the placing of these Obelisks in front of the façade of the most
+remarkable edifices is an excellent arrangement, as they are never-failing
+landmarks to distinguish from afar off the edifices to which they belong.
+This Obelisk was found in the _Circus Maximus_, from which it was removed
+and placed on this spot by Sixtus V. A large Orphan establishment is close
+to this church; and close to it also the _Battisterio_ of Constantine,
+which rests on forty-eight columns of porphyry, said to be the finest in
+Europe. Another church in the vicinity contains _La Scala Santa_ or holy
+staircase of marble which, according to the tradition, adorned Pontius
+Pilate's palace at Jerusalem, and on which identical staircase Jesus Christ
+ascended to be interrogated by Pilate. The tradition further says that it
+was transported to Rome by Angels. This staircase has twenty-eight steps,
+and no one is allowed to mount it except on his knees. Nobody ever descends
+it, but there are two other _escaliers_ parallel to it, one on the right
+hand, the other on the left, by which you descend in the usual manner. Not
+being aware of this ceremony, I, on entering the edifice, began to ascend
+the _escalier_ which was nearest to me, which proved to be the _Scala
+Santa_, for no sooner had I begun to ascend it as I would any other flight
+of steps than two or three voices screamed out: "_Signore! O signore! a
+ginocchia; o'è la scala santa_!" I asked what was meant and was then told
+the whole story, and that it was necessary to mount this staircase on one's
+knees or not at all. This I did not think worth the trouble, being quite
+contented with beholding it. The marble of this staircase is much worn by
+the number of devout people who ascend it in this manner, and this
+ceremony, aided by a _quantum suff_ of faith is no doubt of great efficacy.
+
+The fourth church in estimation, and I believe the next ancient in Rome to
+St John Lateran, is the church of _San Paolo fuor della mura_, so called
+from its being situated outside the gates of the city. It is of immense
+size, but out of repair and neglected. The most striking object of its
+architectural contents are the 120 columns of Parian marble which support
+its nave.
+
+_St Pietro in Vincoli_ is chiefly remarkable for its being built near the
+dungeon where, according to the tradition, St Peter was confined and from
+whence he was released by Angels; its chief ornament is the colossal statue
+of Moses. Somewhere close to this place are shewn the ruins of the
+Mamertine prison where Jugurtha was incarcerated and died.
+
+There are in Rome about three hundred other churches, all of which can
+boast of very interesting and valuable contents. One in particular called
+the Portuguese Church is uncommonly beautiful tho' small; another, that of
+St Ignazio, or the Jesuits' church, is vast and imposing, and very fine
+singing is occasionally to be heard there.
+
+
+ROME, 21st Sept.
+
+The Palace occupied by the Pope is that of the Quirinal, standing on the
+Quirinal Hill, which is commonly called _Monte Cavallo_ from the statues of
+the two _Hippodamoi_ or tamers of horses, thought to be meant for Castor
+and Pollux which stand on this hill; this group is surmounted by an
+Egyptian obelisk. These statues are said to be the work of Phidias; but
+there is a terrible disproportion between the men and the horses they are
+leading; they give you the idea of Brobdignagians leading Shetland ponies.
+The Quirinal palace is every way magnificent and worthy of the Sovereign
+Pontiff; there are large grounds annexed to it; it stands nearly in the
+centre of Rome and from this palace are dated the Papal edicts. The Pope
+resides here during the whole year, with the exception of three or four
+months in the hot season, when he repairs to Castel Gandolfo near la
+Riccia.
+
+Of the fountains the grandest and most striking is that of Trevi, which
+lies at the foot of Quirinal Hill. Here is a magnificent group in marble of
+Neptune, in his car in the shape of a mussel-shell drawn by Sea-horses and
+surrounded by Nymphs and Tritons. An immense basin of white marble, as
+large as a moderate sized pond, receives the water which gushes from the
+nostrils of the Sea-horses and from the mouths of the Tritons. There is a
+very good and just remark made on the subject of this group by Stolberg,
+viz. the attention of Neptune seems too much directed towards one of his
+horses, a piece of minutiae more worthy of a charioteer endeavouring to
+turn a difficult corner, than of the God who at a word could control the
+winds and tranquillize the Ocean.
+
+The fountain Termina, so called from its vicinity to the Thermes of
+Diocletian, is the next remarkable fountain. Here is a colossal statue of
+Moses striking the rock and causing the water to gush forth. The grandeur
+and majesty of this statue would be more striking but for the incongruity
+of the arcades on each side of the rock, and the two lions in black basalt
+who spout water. Moses and the rock would have been sufficient. Simplicity
+is, in my opinion, the soul of architecture, and where is there in all
+history a subject more peculiarly adapted to a fountain than this part of
+the history of Moses?
+
+The Fountain Paolina is a fountain that springs from under a beautiful
+arcade, but there are no statues nor bas-reliefs. It is a plain neat
+fountain and the water is esteemed the best in Rome. This fountain is
+situated on the Janicule Hill, from which you have perhaps the best view of
+Rome; as it re-unites more than any other position, at one _coup d'oeil_,
+both the modern and débris of the ancient city, without the view of the one
+interfering with or being intercepted by the other. From here you can
+distinguish rums of triumphal arches, broken columns, aqueducts, etc., as
+far as the eye can reach. It demonstrates what an immense extent of ground
+ancient Rome must have covered. Near the fountain is the church where St
+Peter is said to have suffered martyrdom with his head downwards.
+
+The Column of Trajan is near the fountain Trevi, and it stands in an
+inclosure, the pavement of which is seven feet lower than the _piazza_ on
+which it stands. The inclosure is walled round. Had not this excavation
+been made, one third of the column (lower part) would not be seen. The
+_Piazza_, on which this column stands is called _Il foro Trajano_. The
+column represents Trajan's triumphs over the Daci, Quadi and Marcomanni,
+and is the model from whence Napoleon's column of the Grand Army in the
+_Place Vendôme_ at Paris is taken. A statue of St Peter stands on this
+column.
+
+The Column of Antoninus stands on the _Piazza Colonna_; on it are
+sculptured the victories gained by that Emperor. Round this column it has
+not been necessary to make excavations. On this column stands the statue of
+St Paul.
+
+Amongst the immense variety of edifices and ruins of edifices which most
+interest the antiquarian are the Thermes of Diocletian. Here are four
+different semi-circular halls, two of which were destined for philosophers,
+one for poets and one for orators; baths; a building for tennis or rackets;
+three open courts, one for the exercise of the discus, one for athletes and
+one for hurling the javelin. Of this vast building part is now a
+manufactory, and the hall of the wrestlers is a Carthusian church.
+
+I have now, I believe, visited most, if not all that is to be seen in Rome.
+I have visited the Pyramid of Cestius, the tomb of Metella, I have
+consulted, the nymph Egeria, smelled at the _Cloaca Maxima_; in fine, I
+have given in to all the _singeries_ of _pedantry_ and _virtù_ with as much
+ardour as Martinus Scriblerus himself would have done. But it yet remains
+for me to speak of the most interesting exhibition that modern Rome can
+boast, and of the most interesting person in it and in all Italy, and that
+is the atelier of Canova and Canova himself, the greatest sculptor,
+perhaps, either of ancient or modern times, except the mighty unknown who
+conceived and executed the Apollo of the Vatican.
+
+In the atelier of Canova the most remarkable statues I observed are: a
+group of Hector and Ajax of colossal size, not quite finished; a Centaur,
+also colossal; a Hebe; two Ballerine or dancing girls, one of which
+rivetted my attention most particularly. She is reclining against a tree
+with her cheek _appuyéd_ on one hand; one of her feet is uplifted and laid
+along the other leg as if she were reposing from a dance. The extreme
+beauty of the leg and foot, the pulpiness of the arms, the expressive
+sweetness of the face, and the resemblance of the marble to wax in point of
+mellowness, gives to this beautiful statue the appearance of a living
+female _brunette_. It was a long time before I could withdraw my eyes from
+that lovely statue.
+
+The next object that engaged my attention was a group representing a Nymph
+reclining on a couch _semi-supine_, and a Cupid at her feet. The luxurious
+contour of the form of this Nymph is beyond expression and reminded me of
+the description of Olympia:
+
+ Le parti che solea coprir la stola
+ Fur di tanta eccellenza, ch'anteporse
+ A quante n'avea il mondo potean forse.[91]
+
+ Parts which are wont to be concealed by gown
+ Are such, as haply should be placed before
+ Whate'er this ample world contains in store.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE
+
+This group is destined for the Prince Regent of England. Another beautiful
+group represents the three Graces; this is intended for the Duke of
+Bedford. Were it given to me to chuse for myself among all the statues in
+the atelier of Canova, I should chuse these three, viz., the Ballerina, the
+Nymph reclining, and this group of the Graces.
+
+Canova certainly is inimitable in depicting feminine beauty, grace and
+delicacy. Among the other statues in this atelier the most prominent are: a
+statue of the Princess Leopoldina Esterhazy in the attitude of drawing on a
+tablet with this inscription:
+
+ _Anch'io voglio tentar l'arte del bello._
+
+This lady is, it seems, a great proficient in painting.
+
+Here too are the moulds of the different statues made by Canova, the
+statues themselves having been finished long ago and disposed of; viz., of
+the Empress Maria Louisa of France; of the mother of Napoleon (_Madame
+Mère_ as she is always called) in the costume and attitude of Agrippina; of
+a colossal statue of Napoleon (the statue itself is, I believe, in the
+possession of Wellington.[92]) Here too is the bust of Canova by Canova
+himself, besides a great variety of bas-reliefs and busts of individuals,
+models of monuments, etc.
+
+And now, my friend, I have given you a _précis_ not of all that I have
+seen, but of what has most interested me and made on my mind impressions
+that can never be effaced. I trust entirely to my memory, for I made no
+notes on the spot. Many of the things I have seen too much in a hurry to
+form accurate ideas and judgment thereon; most of what we see here is shewn
+to us like the figures in a _lanterna magica_, for in the various _palazzi_
+and villas the servants who exhibit them hurry you from room to room,
+impatient to receive your fee and to get rid of you. I am about to depart
+for Naples. On my return to Rome I shall not think of revisiting the
+greater number of the _palazzi_, villas and churches; but there are some
+things I shall very frequently revisit and these are the two Museums of the
+Vatican and of the Capitol, St Peter's, the Coliseum and antiquities in its
+neighbourhood, the Pantheon, and last but not least the atelier of the
+incomparable Canova.
+
+You may perhaps be unwilling to let me depart from Rome without some
+information as to theatricals. With regard to these, Rome must hang down
+her head, for the pettiest town in all the rest of Italy or France is
+better provided with this sort of amusement than Rome. There is a theatre
+called _Teatro della Valle_, where there is a very indifferent set of
+actors, and this is the only theatre which is open throughout the year.
+Comedies only and farces are given. The theatres Aliberti and Argentino are
+open during the Carnaval only. Operas are given at the Argentino, and
+masquerades at the Aliberti. But in fact the lovers of Operas and of the
+Drama must not come to Rome for gratification. It is not considered
+conformable to the dignity and sanctity of an ecclesiastical government to
+patronize them; and it is not the custom or etiquette for the Pope,
+Cardinals or higher Clergy ever to visit them. The consequence is that no
+performer of any consideration or talent is engaged to sing at Rome, except
+one or two by chance at the time of the Carnaval. In amends for this you
+have a good deal of music at the houses of individuals who hold
+_conversazioni_ or assemblies; in which society would flag very much but
+for the music, which prevents many a yawn, and which is useful and
+indispensable in Italy to make the evening pass, as cards are in England.
+
+I intend to stop several days here on my return from Naples, for which
+place I shall start the day after to-morrow having engaged a place in a
+_vettura_ for two and half _louis d'or_ and to be _spesato_. I am not to be
+deterred from my journey by the many stories of robberies and
+assassinations which are said to occur so frequently on that road.
+
+By the bye, talking of robberies and murders, a man was executed the day
+before yesterday on the _Piazza del Popolo_ for a triple murder. I saw the
+guillotine, which is now the usual mode of punishment, fixed on the centre
+of the _Piazza_ and the criminal escorted there by a body of troops; but I
+did not stop to witness the decapitation, having no taste for that sort of
+_pleasuring_. This man richly deserved his punishment.
+
+
+[84] These lines are from Voltaire's _Henriade_, a poem which no Frenchman
+ reads nowadays, but that Major Frye could quote from memory. The
+ correct reading of the first verse is: _Des prêtres fortunés_, etc.
+ (_Henriade_, canto iv. ed. Kehl, vol. x, p. 97.)--ED.
+
+[85] Horace, _Sat_., 1, 9, 4.--ED.
+
+[86] Lady Elizabeth Hervey, second wife of William, fifth Duke of
+ Devonshire (1809); died March, 1824.--ED.
+
+[87] A singular slip of the pen; Frye must have known that the equestrian
+ statue is a Roman work--ED.
+
+[88] Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, xxxiii, 2, 4.--ED.
+
+[89] See Lucian, _Imag._, iv; _Amores_, xv, xvi.--ED.
+
+[90] Major Frye's description is incorrect in many particulars, on which it
+ seemed unnecessary to draw attention.--ED.
+
+[91] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, XI, 67, 6.
+
+[92] That colossal marble statue was given to the Duke of Wellington by
+ Louis XVIII, and is still to be seen in London, at Apsley House.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+From Rome to Naples--Albano--Velletri--The Marshes--Terracina--Mola di
+Gaeta--Capua--The streets of Naples--Monuments and Museums--Visit to
+Pompeii and ascent to Vesuvius--Dangerous ventures--Puzzuoli and
+Baiae--Theatres at Naples--Pulcinello--Return to Rome--Tivoli.
+
+I started from Rome on the 26th September; in the same _vettura_ I found an
+intelligent young Frenchman of the name of R---- D----, a magistrate in
+Corsica, who was travelling in Italy for his amusement. There were besides
+a Roman lawyer and not a very bright one by the bye; and a fat woman who
+was going to Naples to visit her lover, a Captain in the Austrian service,
+a large body of Austrian troops being still at Naples. We issued from Rome
+by the _Porta Latina_ and reached Albano (the ancient Alba) sixteen miles
+distant at twelve o'clock. We reposed there two hours which gave me an
+opportunity of visiting the _Villa Doria_ where there are magnificent
+gardens. These gardens form the promenade of the families who come to
+Albano to pass the heat of the summer and to avoid the effect of the
+exhalations of the marshy country about Rome.
+
+As Albano is situated on an eminence, you have a fine view of the whole
+plain of Latium and Rome in perspective. The country of Latium however is
+flat, dreary and monotonous; it affords pasture to an immense quantity of
+black cattle, such as buffaloes, etc.
+
+Just outside of Albano, on the route to Naples, is a curious ancient
+monument called _Il sepolcro degli Orazj e Curiazj._ It is built of brick,
+is extremely solid, of singular appearance, from its being a square
+monument, flanked at each angle by a tower in the shape of a cone. It is of
+an uncouth rustic appearance and must certainly have been built before
+
+ _Grecia capia ferum victorem cepit et artes
+ Intulit agresti Latio....._[93]
+
+and I see no reason against its being the sepulchre of the Horatii and
+Curiatii, particularly as it stands so near Alba where the battle was
+fought; but be this as it may there is nothing like faith in matters of
+antiquity; the sceptic can have little pleasure.
+
+The country on leaving Albano becomes diversified, woody and picturesque.
+Near Gensano is the beautiful lake of Nemi, and it is the spot feigned by
+the poets as the scene of the amours of Mars and Rhea Silvia. Near Gensano
+also is the country residence of the Sovereign Pontiffs called Castel
+Gandolfo. La Riccia, the next place we passed thro', is the ancient Aricia,
+mentioned in Horace's journey to Brundusium. We arrived in the evening at
+Velletri.
+
+Velletri is a large town or rather city situated on a mountain, to which
+you ascend by a winding road skirting a beautiful forest. From the terrace
+of one of the _Palazzi_ here, you have a superb view of all the plain below
+as far as the rock of Circe, comprehending the Pontine marshes. There are
+several very fine buildings at Velletri, and it is remarkable as being the
+birthplace of Augustus Caesar. There is a spacious _Piazza_ too on which
+stands a bronze statue of Pope Urban VIII. Velletri is twenty-eight miles
+from Rome.
+
+The next morning, the 27th, we started early so as to arrive by six o'clock
+in the evening at Terracina. At Cisterna is a post-house and at Torre tre
+Ponti is a convent, a beautiful building, but now delapidated and
+neglected. Near it is a wretched inn, where however you are always sure to
+find plenty of game to eat. Here begin the Pontine marshes and the famous
+Appian road which runs in a right line for twenty-five miles across the
+marshes. It was repaired and perfectly reconstructed by Pius VI, and from
+him it bears its present appellation of _Linea Pia_. This convent and
+church were also constructed by Pius VI with a view to facilitate the
+draining and cultivating of the marshes by affording shelter to the
+workmen. The _Linea Pia_ is a very fine _chaussée_ considerably raised
+above the level of the marsh, well paved, lined with trees and a canal sunk
+on one side to carry off the waters. The Pontine marshes extend all the way
+from Torre tre Ponti to Terracina. On the left hand side, on travelling
+from Rome to Naples, you have two miles or thereabouts of plain bounded by
+lofty mountains; on the right a vast marshy plain bounded by the sea at a
+distance of seven or eight miles. Nothing can be more monotonous than this
+strait road twenty-five miles in length, and the same landscape the whole
+way. The air is extremely damp, aguish and unhealthy. Those who travel late
+in the evening or early in the morning are recommended not to let down the
+glasses of the carriage, in order to avoid inhaling the pestilential miasma
+from the marshes, which even the canal has not been able to drain
+sufficiently.
+
+No one can find amusement in this desolate region but the sportsman; and he
+may live in continual enjoyment, and slay wild ducks and snipes in
+abundance; a number of buffaloes are to be seen grazing on the marshes.
+They are not to be met with to the North of Rome. They resemble entirely
+the buffaloes of Egypt and India, being black, and they are very terrific
+looking animals to the northern traveller, who beholds them here for the
+first time.
+
+These marshes supply Rome abundantly with waterfowl and other game of all
+kinds. Every _vetturino_ who is returning to Rome, on passing by, buys a
+quantity, for a mere trifle, from the peasantry, who employ themselves much
+_à la chasse_, and he is certain to sell them again at Rome for three or
+four times the price he paid, and even then it appears marvellous cheap to
+an Englishman, accustomed as he is to pay a high price for game in his own
+country.
+
+We arrived a little before six at Terracina, which is on the banks of the
+Mediterranean and may be distinguished at a great distance by its white
+buildings. The chain of mountains on the left of our road hither form a
+sort of arch to the chord of the _linea Pia_ and terminates one end of the
+arch by meeting the _linea Pia_ at Terracina, which forms what the sailors
+call a bluff point. Terracina stands on the situation of the ancient Anxur
+and the description of it by Horace in his Brundusian journey;
+
+ Impositum saxis late candentibus Anxur[94]
+
+is perfectly applicable even now. It is a handsome looking city and is the
+last town in the Pope's territory: part of it is situated on the mountain
+and part on the plain at its foot close to the sea.
+
+The fine white buildings on the heights, the temple of Jupiter Anxurus (of
+which the façade and many columns remain entire) towering above them, the
+orange trees and the sea, afford a view doubly pleasing and grateful to the
+traveller after the dreary landscape of the Pontine Marshes. There is but
+one inn at Terracina but that is a very large one; there is, however, but
+very indifferent fare and bad attendance. The innkeeper is a sad
+over-reaching rascal, who fleeces in the most unmerciful manner the
+traveller who is not _spesato_. He is obliged to furnish those who are
+_spesati_ with supper and lodging at the _vetturino's_ price; but he always
+grumbles at it, gives the worst supper he can and bestows it as if he were
+giving alms. As the road between Terracina and Fondi (the first Neapolitan
+town) is said to be at times infested by robbers, few travellers care to
+start till broad daylight. We did so accordingly the following morning. On
+arriving at a place called the _Epitafio_, from there being an ancient tomb
+there, we took leave of the last Roman post. At one mile and half beyond
+the _Epitafio_ is the first Neapolitan post at a place called _Torre de'
+Confini_, where we were detained half an hour to have our passports
+examined and our portmanteaus searched. Three miles beyond this post is the
+miserable and dirty town of Fondi, wherein our baggage again underwent a
+strict search. On leaving Terracina the road strikes inland and has
+mountains covered with wood to the right and to the left, nor do we behold
+the sea again till just before we arrive at Mola di Gaeta, which is an
+exceeding long straggling town on its banks; several fishing vessels lie
+here and it is here that part of the Bay of Naples begins to open. The
+country from Terracina to Fondi is uncultivated and very mountainous;
+between Fondi and Mola di Gaeta it is pretty well cultivated; Itri, thro'
+which we passed, is a long, dirty, wretched looking village.
+
+The next day at twelve o'clock we arrived and stopped to dine at St Agatha,
+a miserable village, with a very bad tho' spacious inn the half of which is
+unroofed. We arrived at Capua the same evening having passed the rivers
+Garigliano and Volturno, and leaving the Falernian Hills on our left during
+part of the road. The landscape is very varied on this route, sometimes
+mountainous, sometimes thro' a rich plain in full cultivation.
+
+Capua is a fortified town situated in a flat country and marshy withal. It
+is a gloomy, dirty looking city and whatever may have been its splendour
+and allurements in ancient times, it at present offers nothing inviting or
+remarkable. The lower classes of the people of this town are such thieves
+that our _vetturino_ recommended us to remove every thing from the carriage
+into our bed rooms, so that we had the trouble of repacking every thing
+next morning. Capua is the only place on the whole route where it is
+necessary to take the trunks from the carriage. From Capua to Naples is
+twenty miles; a little beyond Capua are the remains of a large Amphitheatre
+and this is all that exists to attest the splendour of ancient Capua. The
+road between Capua and Naples presents on each side one of the richest and
+most fruitful countries I ever beheld. It is a perfect garden the whole
+way. The _chaussée_ is lined with fruit trees. Halfway is the town or
+_borgo_ of Aversa which is large, well-built, opulent and populous. We
+entered Naples at one o'clock, drove thro' the _strada di Toledo_ and from
+thence to the _largo di Medina_ where we put up at the inn called the
+_Aquila nera_. A cordon of Austrian troops lines the whole high road from
+Fondi to the gates of Naples; and there are double sentries at a distance
+of one mile from each other the whole way.
+
+
+NAPLES, Octr. 5th.
+
+In Naples the squares or _Piazze_ are called _Larghi_; they are exceedingly
+irregular as to shape; a trapezium would be the most appropriate
+denomination for them. The _Largo di Medina_ is situated close to the Mole
+and light house and is not far from the _Largo del Palazzo_ where the Royal
+Palace stands, nor from the _Strada di Toledo_, which is the most bustling
+part of the town. On the Mole and sometimes in the _Largo di Medini_
+Pulcinello holds forth all day long, quacks scream out the efficacy of
+their nostrums and _improvisatori_ recite battles of Paladins. Here and in
+the _Strada di Toledo_ the noise made by the vendors of vegetables, fruit,
+lemonade, iced water and water-melons, who on holding out their wares to
+view, scream out "_O che bella cosa_!"--the noise and bustle of the cooks'
+shops in the open air and the cries of "_Lavora_!" made by the drivers of
+_calessini_ (sort of carriage) makes such a deafening _tintamarre_ that you
+can scarcely hear the voice of your companion who walks by your side. In
+the _Largo del Palazzo_ there is always a large assembly of officers and
+others, besides a tolerable quantity of _ruffiani_, who fasten upon
+strangers in order to recommend to them their female acquaintances. A
+little further is the Quai of St Lucia, where the fish market is held, and
+here the cries increase. The quantity of fish of all sorts caught in the
+bay and exposed for sale in the market is immense and so much more than can
+be sold, that the rest is generally given away to the _Lazzaroni_. Here are
+delicious mullets, oysters, whitings, soles, prawns, etc. There is on the
+Quai of St Lucia a _restaurant_ where naught but fish is served, but that
+is so well dressed and in such variety that amateurs frequently come to
+dine here on _maigre_ days; for two _carlini_[95] you may eat fish of all
+sorts and bread at discretion. The wine is paid for extra. On the Quai of
+St Lucia is a fountain of mineral water which possesses the most admirable
+qualities for opening the _primae viae_ and purifying the blood. It is an
+excellent drink for bilious people or for those afflicted with abdominal
+obstructions and diseases of the liver. It has a slight sulfurous mixed
+with a ferruginous taste, and is impregnated with a good deal of fixed air,
+which makes it a pleasant beverage. It should be taken every morning
+fasting. The presidency over this fountain is generally monopolized by a
+piscatory nymph who expects a _grano_ for the trouble of filling you a
+glass or two. In reaching it to you she never fails to exclaim _"Buono per
+le natiche,"_ and it certainly has a very rapid effect; I look upon it as
+more efficacious than the Cheltenham waters and it is certainly much more
+agreeable in taste. At the end of the Quai of St Lucia is the _Castello
+dell 'Uovo,_ a Gothic fortress, before the inner gate of which hangs an
+immense stuffed crocodile. This crocodile is said to have been found alive
+in the _fossé_ of the castle, but how he came there has never been
+explained; there is an old woman's story that he came every day to the
+dungeon where prisoners were confined, and took out one for his dinner. The
+_Castello dell 'Uovo_ stands on the extremity of a tongue of land which
+runs into the sea. After passing the _Castello dell 'Uovo_ I came to the
+_Chiaia_ or Quai properly so called, which is the most agreeable part of
+Naples and the favorite promenade of the _beau-monde._ The finest buildings
+and _Palazzi_ line the _Chiaia_ on the land side and above them all tower
+the Castle of St Elmo and the _Chartreuse_ with several villas intervening.
+The garden of the _Chiaia_ contains gravel walks, grass plots, alleys of
+trees, fountains, plantations of orange, myrtle and laurel trees which give
+a delightful fragrance to the air; and besides several other statues, it
+boasts of one of the finest groups in Europe, called the _Toro Farnese._ It
+is a magnificent piece of sculpture and represents three men endeavouring
+to hold a ferocious bull. It is a pity, however, that so valuable a piece
+of sculpture should be exposed to the vicissitudes of the season in the
+open air. The marble has evidently suffered much by it. Why is such a
+valuable piece of sculpture not preserved in the Museum?
+
+On the _Chiaia_ are _restaurants_ and _cafés_. 'Tis here also that the
+nobility display their carriages and horses, it being the fashionable drive
+in the afternoon: and certainly, except in London, I have never seen such a
+brilliant display of carriages as at Naples.
+
+The principal street at Naples is the _Strada di Toledo_. It resembles the
+_Rue St Honoré_ and can boast of as much wealth in its shops. The houses
+are good, solid and extremely lofty, and the streets are paved with lava.
+There are two excellent _restaurants_ at Naples, one in the _Largo del
+Palazzo_, nearly opposite the Royal Palace, called the _Villa di Napoli_;
+the other not far from it in the _Strada di Toledo_, called _La Corona di
+Ferro_. Naples is renowned for the excellency of its ices. You have them in
+the shape of all kinds of fruit and wonderfully cheap. Many of the ice
+houses and _caffès_ remain open day and night; as do some of the gaming
+tables, which are much frequented by the upper classes. The theatre of St
+Carlo, which was consumed last year by fire, is rising rapidly from its
+ashes and will soon be finished. In the mean time Operas are performed at
+the _Teatro Fondi_, a moderate sized theatre. I here saw performed the
+opera of _Don Giovanni_ of Mozart, with the _ballo_ of _La pazza per
+amore_. Mme Colbran, a Spanish lady, is the _Prima Donna_ and an excellent
+singer.
+
+In all the private societies at Naples a great deal of gaming goes on, and
+at some houses those visitors, who do not play, are coolly received. The
+following may be considered as a very fair specimen of the life of a young
+man of rank and fashion at Naples. He rises about two p.m., takes his
+chocolate, saunters about in the _Strada di Toledo_ or in the _Largo del
+Palazzo_ for an hour or two, then takes a _promenade à cheval_ on the
+_Chiaia_; dines between six and seven; goes to the Opera where he remains
+till eleven or half-past eleven; he then saunters about in the different
+Cafés for an hour or two; and then repairs to the gaming table at the
+_Ridotto_, which he does not quit till broad daylight. The ladies find a
+great resource in going to church, which serves to pass away the time that
+is not spent in bed, or at the Opera, or at the _promenade en voiture_. The
+ladies seldom take exercise on foot at Naples. There being very little
+taste for litterature in this vast metropolis, the most pleasant society is
+among the foreign families who inhabit Naples or at the houses of the
+_Corps diplomatique_. There is, however, a good _cabinet littéraire_ and
+library in the _Strada di San Giacomo_, where various French and Italian
+newspapers may be read. The Austrians occupy the greater part of the
+military posts at Naples; at the Royal Palace however the Sicilian guards
+do duty; they are clothed in scarlet and _à anglaise_.
+
+
+NAPLES, 8th Octr.
+
+One day I went to visit the Museum or _Studii_, as it is called, which is
+situated at the extremity of the _Strada di Toledo_ on the land side. Here
+is a superb collection of sculpture and painting; and this building
+contains likewise the national library, and a choice and unique collection
+of Etruscan vases. A large hall contains these vases, which were found at
+Pompeii[96]; they are much admired for their beauty and simplicity; each
+vase has a mythological or historical painting on it. In this Museum I was
+shewn the rolls of papyrus found in Pompeii and Herculaneum and the method
+of unrolling them. The work to unroll which they are now employed at this
+Museum is a Greek treatise on philosophy by Epicurus. It is a most delicate
+operation to unroll these leaves, and with the utmost possible care it is
+impossible to avoid effacing many of the letters, and even sentences, in
+the act of unrolling. It must require also considerable learning and skill
+in the Greek language, combined with a good deal of practise, to supply the
+deficiency of the words effaced. When these manuscripts are put in print,
+the letters that remain on the papyrus are put in black type, and the words
+guessed at are supplied in red; so that you see at one glance what letters
+have been preserved, and what are supplied to replace those effaced by the
+operation of unrolling; and in this manner are all the papyrus manuscripts'
+printed.
+
+
+_Visit to Pompeii and Ascent of Vesuvius_.
+
+_11th Oct_.
+
+We returned, Mr R---- D---- and I, from our visit to Vesuvius, half dead
+with fatigue from having had little or no rest the whole night, about three
+o'clock to Naples.
+
+We left Naples in a _calèche_ yesterday after breakfast and drove to
+Portici. Portici, Resina, and Torre del Greco are beautiful little towns on
+the sea-shore of the bay of Naples or rather they may be termed a
+continuation of the city, as they are close together in succession, and the
+interval filled up with villas. The distance from the gates of Naples to
+Portici is three miles. The road runs through the court yard of the Royal
+Palace at Portici which has a large archway at its entrance and sortie. We
+proceeded to Resina and alighted in order to descend under ground to
+Herculaneum, Resina being built on the spot where Herculaneum stood. There
+are always guides on this road on the look out for travellers; one
+addressed us, and conducted us to a house where we alighted and entered.
+Our guide then prepared a flambeau, and having unlocked and lifted up a
+trap door invited us to descend. A winding _rampe_ under ground leads to
+Herculaneum. We discovered a large theatre with its proscenium, seats,
+corridors, vomitories, etc., and we were enabled, having two lighted
+torches with us, to read the inscriptions. Some statues that were found
+here have been removed to the Museum at Portici. This is the only part of
+Herculaneum that has been excavated; for if any further excavations were
+attempted, the whole town of Resina, which is built over it, would fall in.
+Herculaneum no doubt contains many things of value, but it would be rather
+too desperate a stake to expose the town of Resina to certain ruin, for the
+sake of what _might_ be found. At Pompeii the case is very different, there
+being nothing built over its site.
+
+After having satisfied our curiosity here, we regained the light of heaven
+in Resina, and proceeded to Pompeii, which is seven miles further, the
+total distance from Naples to Pompeii being ten miles. The part of Pompeii
+already discovered looks like a town with the houses unroofed situated in a
+deep gravel or sand pit, the depth of which is considerably greater than
+the height of the buildings standing in it. You descend into it from the
+brink, which is on a level with the rest of the country; Pompeii is
+consequently exposed to the open air, and you have neither to go under
+ground, nor to use _flambeaux_ as at Herculaneum, but simply to descend as
+into a pit. There is always a guard stationed at Pompeii to protect the
+place from delapidation and thefts of antiquarians. From its resembling, as
+I have already said, a town in the centre of a deep gravel pit, you come
+upon it abruptly and on looking down you are surprized to see a city newly
+brought to day. The streets and houses here remain entire, the roofs of the
+houses excepted, which fell in by the effect of the excavation; so that you
+here behold a Roman city nearly in the exact state it was hi when it was
+buried under the ashes of Vesuvius, during its first eruption in the year
+79 of the Christian era. It does not appear to me that the catastrophe of
+Pompeii could have been occasioned by an earthquake, for if so the streets
+and houses would not be found upright and entire: it appears rather to have
+been caused by the showers of ashes and _écroulement_ of the mountain,
+which covered it up and buried it for ever from the sight of day. The first
+place our guide took us to see was a superb Amphitheatre about half as
+large as the Coliseum: the arena and seats are perfect, and all the
+interior is perfectly cleared out: so are the dens where the wild beasts
+were kept; so that you look down into this amphitheatre as into a vast
+basin standing on its brink, which is on a level with the rest of the
+ground around it, and by means of the seats and passages you may descend
+into the _arena_. This Amphitheatre is at a short distance from the rest of
+the town. What is at present discovered of this city consists of a long
+street with several off-sets of streets issuing from it: a temple, two
+theatres, a praetorium, a large barrack, and a peculiarly large house or
+villa belonging probably to some eminent person, but no doubt when the
+excavation shall be recommenced many more streets will be discovered, as
+from the circumstance of there being an amphitheatre, two other theatres
+and a number of sepulchral monuments outside the gates, it must have been a
+city of great consequence. Most of the houses seem to have had two stories;
+the roofs fell in of course by the act of excavation, but the columns
+remain entire. I observe that the general style of building in Pompeii in
+most of the houses is as follows: that in each building there is a court
+yard in the centre, something like the court yard of a convent, which is
+sometimes paved in mosaic, and generally surrounded by columns; in the
+middle of this court is a fountain or basin: the court has no roof and the
+wings of the house form a quadrangle environing it. The windows and doors
+of the rooms are made in the interior sides of the quadrangle looking into
+the court yard; on the exterior there appears to be only a small latticed
+window near the top of the room to admit light. I have seen in Egypt and in
+India similarly built houses, and it is the general style of building in
+Andalusia and Barbary. In the rooms are niches in the walls for lamps,
+precisely in the style of the Moorish buildings in India.
+
+In many of the chambers of the houses at Pompeii are paintings _al fresco_
+and arabesques on the walls which on being washed with water appear
+perfectly fresh. The subjects of these paintings are generally from the
+mythology. In some of the rooms are paintings _al fresco_ of fish, flesh,
+fowl and fruit; in others Venus and the Graces at their toilette, from
+which we may infer that the former were dining rooms and the latter
+boudoirs. A large villa (so I deem it as it stands without the gates) has a
+number of rooms, two stories entire and three court yards with fountains,
+many beautiful fresco paintings on the walls of the chambers. Annexed to
+this villa is a garden arranged in terraces and a fish pond. A covered
+gallery supported by pillars on one of the sides of the garden served
+probably as a promenade in wet weather. In the cellars of this villa are a
+number of _amphorae_ with narrow necks. Had the ancients used corks instead
+of oil to stop their _amphorae_, wine eighteen hundred years old might have
+been found here. It is not the custom even of the modern Italians to use
+corks for the wine they keep for their own use: a spoonful of oil is poured
+on the top of the wine in the flask and when they mean to drink it they
+extract the oil by means of a lump of cotton fastened to a stick or long
+pin which enters the neck of the flask and absorbs and extracts the oil.
+
+Among the buildings discovered in Pompeii is a large Temple of Isis; here
+you behold the altar and the pillar to which the beasts of sacrifice were
+fastened. In this temple at the time of the first excavation were found all
+the instruments of sacrifice and other things appertaining to the worship
+of that Goddess. These and other valuables such as statues, coins, utensils
+of all sorts were removed to Portici, where they are now to be seen in the
+Museum of that place. The _Praetorium_ at Pompeii is the next remarkable
+thing; it is a vast enclosure: a great number of columns are standing
+upright here and the most of them entire; the steps forming the ascent to
+the elevated seat where the Praetor usually sat, remain entire. There is a
+large building and court yard near one of the gates of the city supposed to
+have been a barrack for soldiers; three skeletons were found here with
+their legs in a machine similar to our stocks. The scribbling and
+caricatures on the walls of this barrack are perfectly visible and legible.
+When one wanders thro' the streets of this singularly interesting city, one
+is tempted to think that the inhabitants have just walked out. What a
+dreadful lingering death must have befallen these inhabitants who could not
+escape from Pompeii at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius which covered
+it with ashes. The air could only be exhausted by degrees, so that a
+prolonged suffocation or a death by hunger must have been their lot.
+
+Four skeletons were found upright in the streets, having in their hands
+boxes containing jewellery and things of value, as if in the act of
+endeavouring to make their escape: these must soon have perished, but the
+skeleton of a woman found in one of the rooms of the houses close to a bath
+shews that her death must have been one of prolonged suffering.
+
+What a fine subject Pompeii would furnish for the pen of a Byron! As I have
+before remarked, all the valuables and utensils of all sorts found here
+have been removed to Portici; it is a great pity that everything could not
+be left in Pompeii in the exact situation in which it was found on its
+first discovery at the excavation. What a light it would have thrown (which
+no description can give) on the melancholy catastrophe as well as on the
+private life and manners of the ancients! But if they had been left here,
+they would, even tho' a guard of soldiers were stationed here to protect
+them, have been by degrees all stolen.
+
+There were some magnificent tombs just outside the gates which must have
+been no small ornament to the city.
+
+We returned to Resina to dinner at six o'clock.
+
+We had made an arrangement with one of the guides of Vesuvius called
+Salvatore that he should be ready for us at Resina at seven o'clock with a
+mule and driver for each of us to ascend the mountain, and we found him
+very punctual at the door of the inn at that hour. The terms of the journey
+were as follows. One _scudo_ for Salvatore and one _scudo_ for each mule
+and driver for which they were to forward us to the mountain, remain the
+whole night and reconduct us to Resina the following morning. The object in
+ascending at night and remaining until morning is to combine the night view
+of the eruption with the visit (if possible) to the crater, which cannot
+with safety be undertaken by night, and to enjoy likewise the noble view at
+sunrise of the whole bay and city of Naples and the adjacent islands. We
+started therefore at a quarter past seven and arrived at half past nine at
+a small house and chapel, called the hermitage of Vesuvius, which is
+generally considered as half-way up the mountain. In this house dwells an
+old ecclesiastic who receives travellers and furnishes them with a couch
+and frugal repast. We dismounted here and our worthy host provided us with
+some mortadella and an omelette; and we did not fail to do justice to his
+excellent _lacrima Christi_, of which he has always a large provision. We
+then betook ourselves to rest, leaving orders to be awakened at two o'clock
+in order to proceed further up the mountain. There was a pretty decent
+eruption of the mountain, which vomited fire, stones and ashes at an
+interval of twenty-five minutes, so that we enjoyed this spectacle during
+our ascent. A violent noise, like thunder, accompanies each eruption, which
+increases the awefulness and grandeur of the sight. At two o'clock our
+guide and muleteers being very punctual, we bade adieu to the hermit,
+promising him to come to breakfast with him the next morning; we then
+mounted our mules and after an hour's march arrived at the spot where the
+ashes and cinders, combined with the steepness of the mountain, prevent the
+possibility of going any further except on foot. We dismounted therefore at
+this place, and sent back our mules to the hermitage to wait for us there.
+We now began to climb among the ashes, and tho' the ascent to the position
+of the ancient crater is not more than probably eighty yards in height, we
+were at least one hour before we reached it, from its excessive steepness
+and from gliding back two feet out of three at every step we made. We at
+length reached the old crater and sat ourselves down to repose till
+day-break. Tho' it was exceeding cold, the exhalation from the veins of
+fire and hot ashes kept us as warm as we could wish: for here every step is
+literally
+
+ _per ignes
+ Suppositos cineri doloso_.[97]
+
+We remained on this spot till broad daylight and witnessed several
+eruptions at an interval of twenty or twenty-five minutes. I remarked that
+the mountain toward the summit forms two cones, one of which vomited fire
+and smoke, and the other calcined stones and ashes, accompanied by a
+rumbling noise like thunder. The stones came clattering down the flanks of
+the mountain and some of them rolled very near us; had we been within the
+radius formed by the erupted stones we probably should have been killed.
+
+At daylight Mr R---- D---- proposed to ascend the two cones in spite of the
+remonstrances of our guide Salvatore, who told us that no person had yet
+been there and that we must expect to be crushed to death by the stones,
+should an eruption take place, and that it was almost as much madness to
+attempt it, as it would be to walk before a battery of cannon in the act of
+being fired. Tho' I did not admit all the force of this comparison, yet I
+began to think there was a little too much risk in the attempt; my French
+friend however was deaf to all remonstrance and said to me, "_As-tu peur_?"
+I replied: "No! that I was at all times very indifferent as to life or
+death, but that I did not like pain, and was not at all desirous to have an
+arm or leg broken, the former accident having happened to a German a few
+days before; nevertheless, I added, if you persist in going, I will
+accompany you." We accordingly started to ascend the cone, which vomited
+fire and smoke, taking care to place ourselves on the windward side in
+ascending, and after much fatigue we arrived in about fifteen minutes close
+to the apex of the cone, after groping amidst the ashes and stumbling on a
+vein of red hot cinders. My shoes were sadly burnt, my stockings singed and
+my feet scorched; my friend was less fortunate, for he tumbled down with
+his hands on a vein of red hot cinders and burned them terribly. My great
+and principal apprehension in making this ascent was of stumbling upon
+holes slightly encrusted with ashes and that the whole might give way and
+precipitate me into some _gouffre._ On arrival at the summit of the cone we
+had just time to look down and perceive that there was a hole or _gouffre,_
+but whether it were very deep or not we could not ascertain, for a blast of
+fire and smoke issuing from it at this moment nearly suffocated us; we
+immediately lost no time in gliding down the ashes on the side of the cone
+on our breech, and reached its base in a few seconds, where we waited till
+an eruption took place from the other cone, in order to profit of the
+interval to ascend it also. It required four minutes' walk to reach the
+base of the other cone and about twelve to ascend to its apex; on arrival
+at the brink, where we remained about two minutes, we had just sufficient
+time to observe that there was no deep hole or bottomless _gouffre_ as we
+expected, but that it formed a crater with a sort of slant and not
+exceeding thirty feet in depth to the bottom, which looked exactly like a
+lime-kiln, being of a dirty white appearance, and in continual agitation,
+as it were of limestones boiling; so that a person descending to the bottom
+of this crater would probably be scorched to death or suffocated in a few
+minutes, but would infallibly be ejected and thrown into the air at the
+first eruption. I mean by this that he would not disappear or fall into a
+bottomless pit (as I should have supposed before I viewed the crater), but
+that his friends would be sure of finding his body either yet living or
+dead, outside the brink of the crater, within the radius made by the
+erupted stones and ashes.
+
+Our guide now begged us for God's sake to descend, as an eruption might be
+expected every minute. We accordingly glided down the exterior surface of
+the cone among the ashes, on our breech, for it is impossible to descend in
+any other way and in a few seconds we reached its base. Finding ourselves
+on a little level ground we began to run or rather wade thro' the ashes in
+order to get out of reach of the eruption, but we had not gone thirty yards
+when one took place. The stones clattered down with a frightful noise and
+we received a shower of ashes on our heads, the dust of which got into our
+eyes and nearly blinded us. On reaching the brink of the old crater we
+stopped half an hour to enjoy the fine view of Parthenope in all her glory
+at sunrise. We then descended rapidly, sometimes plunging down the ashes on
+our feet and sometimes gliding on our breech till we arrived at the place
+where we had descended from our mules, and this distance, which required
+one hour to ascend, cost us in its descent not more than seven minutes.
+
+We then walked to the hermitage in about an hour and a quarter, and arrived
+there with no other accident than having our shoes and stockings totally
+spoiled, our feet a little singed, the hands of Mr. R.D. severely burned
+and both begrimed with ashes like blacksmiths. The ecclesiastic gave us a
+breakfast of coffee and eggs and a glass of Maraschino, and we gave him two
+_scudi_ each. Before we departed he presented to us his Album, which he
+usually does to all travellers, inviting them to write something. I took up
+the pen and feeling a little inspiration wrote the following lines:
+
+ Anch'io salito son sul gran Vesuvio,
+ Mentre cadsa di cineri un diluvio;
+ Questo cammin mi piace d'aver fatto,
+ Ma plù mi piace il ritornare intatto.
+
+which pleased the old man very much to see a foreigner write Italian verse.
+I pleased him still more by letting him know that I was an enthusiastic
+admirer and humble cultivator of the Tuscan Muse, and that having read and
+studied most of their poets, particularly _il divino Ariosto_, I now and
+then caught a _scintilletta_ from his verse. We now took a cordial farewell
+of our worthy old host, mounted our mules and descended the mountain. On
+arrival at Portici we dismissed our guide Salvatore with a _scudo pour
+boire_, besides the stipulated price. Salvatore asked me to give him a
+written certificate of his services, which he generally sollicits from all
+those whom he conducts to the Volcano. I asked him for his certificate
+book, and begged to know whether he would have it in prose or verse. He
+laughed and said: _Vostra Excellenza è padrone_. I took out my pencil and
+wrote the following quatrain:
+
+ Dal monte ignivomo tornati siam stanchissimi,
+ E del buon Salvator siam tutti contentissimi;
+ Felice il pellogrin che a Salvator si fida,
+ Che di lui non si può trovare un miglior guida.
+
+I never saw any body so delighted as Salvatore appeared when I read to him
+what I had written in his book.
+
+I have another observation to make before I take leave of this celebrated
+mountain, which is, that the liquid lava which it ejects is far more
+dangerous and destructive than the eruption of stones and ashes; the lava
+flows from the flanks of the mountain in a liquid stream. Sometimes there
+will be an eruption and no lava flowing: at other tunes the lava flows from
+the flanks of the mountain, without any eruption from the crater; at other
+times, and then it is most alarming, the eruption takes place accompanied
+by the flowing of the lava. All this demonstrates that the volcano is the
+effect of the efforts of the subterraneous fire to get some vent and escape
+from its confinement. This time I did not observe any lava flowing, except
+a slight vein of it on the spot where Mr R.D. fell down and burned his
+hands; but it is easy to observe on the side of the mountain the course and
+route taken at different times by the lava, which has become hardened and
+is very plainly to be distinguished, as it resembles a _river_ (if I may
+use the word) of slate meandering between the green sward of the mountain
+and descending toward the sea. You can plainly distinguish the course and
+direction of the lava which destroyed part of Torre del Greco and swept it
+into the sea.
+
+At Portici, having washed ourselves at the inn from head to foot in order
+to get rid of our blacksmith's appearance, and having purchased a new pair
+of shoes and stockings each, we visited the Royal Palace and Museum with a
+view principally of examining the objects of art and valuables discovered
+in Pompeii. The Royal Palace is called _la Favorita_, its architecture is
+beautiful; the garden or rather lawn which is ornamented by statues and
+enriched by orange groves extends to the sea. The first thing that presents
+itself to the view of the visitor at the Museum of Portici are the two
+equestrian statues of Marcus Balbus proconsul and procurator and of his
+son, which statues were found in Herculaneum. I forgot to mention that
+there is an inscription with that name on the side of the proscenium of the
+theatre easily legible by the light of _flambeaux_.
+
+To return to the Museum at Portici, we were then shewn into a room
+containing curious _morceaux_ of antiquity discovered at Pompeii: a tripod
+in bronze and various other articles of the same metal; tables, various
+lamps in bronze, resembling exactly those used in Hindostan, wooden pens,
+dice, grains of corn quite black and scorched, a skeleton of a woman with
+the ashes incrusted round it (the form of her breast is seen on the crust
+of ashes; golden armlets were found on her which were shewn to us), steel
+mirrors, combs, utensils for culinary purposes, such as _casseroles_,
+frying pans, spoons, forks, pestles and mortars, instruments of sacrifice,
+weights and measures, coins, a _carcan_ or _stock_, &c.
+
+In the upper rooms are to be seen the paintings and _fresques_ found in the
+same place. The paintings are poor things, and in their landscapes the
+Romans seem to have had little more idea of perspective than the Chinese;
+but the _fresques_ are beautiful: the female figures belonging thereto are
+delineated with the utmost grace and delicacy. They consist of subjects
+chiefly from the mythology. I noticed the following in particular, viz.,
+Chiron teaching the young Achilles to draw the bow; the discovery of
+Orestes; Theseus and the Minotaur (he has just slain the Minotaur and a boy
+is in the act of kissing his hand as if to thank him for his deliverance;
+the Minotaur is here represented as a monster with the body of a man and
+the head of a bull); a Centaur carrying off a nymph; a car drawn by a
+parrot and driven by a cricket: a woman offering to another little Loves
+for sale (she is pulling out the little Cupids from a basket and holding
+them by their wings as if they were fowls); a beautiful female figure
+seated on a monster something like the Chimaera of the ancients and holding
+a cup before the monster's mouth (emblematical of Hope nourishing a
+Chimaera). The arabesques taken from Pompeii and preserved here are very
+beautiful. Here also are two statues found in Pompeii: the one representing
+a drunken Faun, the other a sitting Mercury. We met two Polish ladies here,
+who were amusing themselves in copying the _fresques_. We returned to
+Naples at five o'clock, and dined at the _Villa di Napoli_. In the evening
+we went to the _Teatro de' Fiorentini_. The piece performed was Pamela or
+_La virtû premiata,_ which I understand is quite a stock piece in Italy. It
+is written by Goldoni. It was very badly performed; the actors were not
+perfect in their parts, and the prompter's voice was as loud as usual. The
+costume was appropriate enough, which is far from being always the case at
+this theatre.
+
+
+NAPLES, 13 Octr.
+
+We started on the 12th at six o'clock in the morning (Mr R----- D. and
+myself) in a _calèche_ in order to visit Puzzuoli, Baii and all the
+classical ground in that direction. We of course passed through the grotto
+of Pausilippo. This grotto is thirty feet high and about five hundred feet
+long. In fact, it is a vast rock undermined and a high road running thro'
+it, the breadth of which is sufficient for three carriages to go abreast.
+From its great length it is of course exceeding dark; in order therefore to
+obviate this inconvenience lamps constantly lighted are suspended from the
+roof and on the sides of the grotto, and holes pierced towards the top to
+admit a little daylight. The road pierced thro' this rock and called the
+grotto of Pausilippo abridges the journey to Puzzuoli very considerably, as
+otherwise you would be obliged to go round by Cape Margelina, which would
+increase the distance ten miles. On issuing from the grotto on the other
+side, you arrive in a few minutes on the seashore, on the bay formed
+between Cape Margelina and Puzzuoli. We stopped at the lake Agnano which is
+strongly impregnated with sulfur. On the banks of this lake are the
+_Thermae_ or vapour baths, and here is also the famous _Grotto del Cane_,
+the pestilential vapour arising from which rises about three inches from
+the ground and has the appearance of a spider's web. An unfortunate dog
+performs the miracle of the resurrection to all those who visit this
+natural curiosity; and we also were curious to see its effect. The guardian
+of the Thermes seized the poor animal and held his nose close to the place
+from whence the vapour exhales. The dog was seized with strong convulsions
+and in two minutes he was perfectly senseless and to all appearance dead;
+but on being placed in the open air, he soon recovers. The poor beast shews
+evident repugnance to the experiment, and I wonder he does not endeavor to
+make his escape, for he has sometimes to perform this feat four or five
+times a day. I should suppose that he will not be very long lived, for the
+repeated doses of this mephitic vapour must surely accelerate his
+dissolution. The heat of the _Thermae_ and steam of the sulphur is almost
+insupportable; but it has a most beneficial effect on maladies of the
+nerves and cutaneous complaints.
+
+We then proceeded on our journey to Puzzuoli, the ancient Puteoli, where
+are the remains of the famous mole (or bridge as others call it) of
+Caligula, intended to embrace or unite the two extremes of the bay of Baiae
+formed on one side by Puzzuoli and on the other by cape Misenus. We
+alighted to take a _déjeuner à la fourchette_ at Puzzuoli, and then went to
+visit the temple of Jupiter Serapis, which is a vast edifice and tho' in
+ruins very imposing. On wandering thro' the enceinte of this famous temple,
+I thought of Apollonius of Tyana and his sudden appearance to his friend
+Damis at the porch of this very temple, when he escaped from the fangs of
+Domitian and when it was believed that, by means of magic art, he had been
+able at once to transport himself from the Praetorium at Rome to Puteoli.
+As I said before, the bay included by cape Misenus and Puzzuoli is what is
+called Baiae. The land is low and marshy from Puzzuoli to a little beyond
+the lake Avernus; but from Monte Nuovo it begins to rise and form high
+cliffs nearly all way to Cape Misenus. It was on these high cliffs that the
+opulent Romans built their villas and they must have been as much crowded
+together as the villas at Ramsgate and Broadstairs. We embarked in a boat
+at Puzzuoli to cross over to Baiae (i.e., the place where the villas
+begin), but we stopped on our way thither at a landing place nearly in the
+centre of the bay in order to visit the lake Avernus and the Cave of the
+Cumaean Sybil, described by Virgil, as the entrance into the realm of
+Pluto. The lake Avernus, in spite of its being invested by the poets with
+all that is terrible in the mythology as a river of Hell, looks very like
+any other lake, and tho' it is impregnated with sulphur, and emits a most
+unpleasant smell, birds do not drop down dead on flying over it as
+formerly. The ground about it is marshy and unwholesome. The silence and
+melancholy appearance of this lake and its environing groves of wood are
+not calculated to inspire exhilarating ideas. Full of classic souvenirs we
+went to descend into the Cave of the Sybil, and as we descended I could not
+refrain from repeating aloud Virgil's lines:
+
+ _Di quibus imperium est animarum umbrasque silentes_,[98] etc.
+
+This descent really is fitted to give one an idea of the descent to the
+shades below, and what added to the illusion was that when we arrived at
+the bottom of the descent and just at the entrance of the cave where the
+Sybil held her oracles, we discovered four fierce looking fellows with
+lighted torches in their hands standing at the entrance. My friend cried
+out _Voilà les Furies_, and these proved to be our boatmen who, while we
+were contemplating the _bolge d'Averno_, had run on before to provide
+torches to shew us the interior of the grotto of the Sybil. As this grotto
+is nearly knee-deep filled with water we got on the backs of the boatmen to
+enter it. It is about twenty-five feet long, fifteen broad and the height
+about thirteen feet. As we were neither devoured by Cerberus nor hustled by
+old Charon into his boat, we returned from the _Shades below_ to the light
+of heaven, triumphant like Ulysses or Aeneas, considering ourselves now
+among the _Pauci quos aequus amavit Jupiter_.[99]
+
+Acheron, the dreadful Acheron, is not far from Avernus and is likewise a
+lake, tho' call'd a river in the mythology. It is also sulfuric and the
+ground about it is woody, low, marshy and consequently aguish.
+
+We next ascended the cliffs of Baiae and we were shown the remains of the
+villas of Cicero, Caesar, Sylla and other great names. We then went to the
+baths of Nero (so called). Here it is the fashion to descend under ground
+in order to feel the effect of the sulfuric heat, which is intense, and my
+friend who descended soon returned dripping with perspiration and calling
+out: _Qui n'a pas vu cela n'a rien vu!_ but I did not chuse to descend, as
+I could feel no pleasure in being half stifled and the _grotto del Cane_
+had already given me a full idea of the force of the vapour of the
+_Thermes_.
+
+We then descended from the cliffs of Baiae on the other side, and visited
+the remains of three celebrated temples of antiquity situated on the beach
+nearly and very close to each other, viz., the temples of Diana, of Venus
+and of Mercury; all striking objects and majestic, tho' in a state of
+dilapidation. Each of these temples has cupolas. We then ascended the slope
+of ground leading towards cape Misensus, to visit the _Cento Camarelle_ and
+_Piscina mirabile_, both vast edifices under ground, serving as cellars or
+appendages to a Palace that stood on this spot. We then visited the lake
+called the _Mare Morto_ or Styx; and then went round to the other side of
+it, to visit those beautiful _coteaux_ planted in vines and their summits
+crowned with groves which have obtained the name of the Elysian fields.
+This Styx and these Elysian fields look like any other lake and _coteaux_
+and are entirely indebted to the lyre of Maro for their celebrity.
+
+From thence we went to the extremity of cape Misenus and embarked in our
+boat (which we had sent on there to wait for us) to return to Puzzuoli by
+crossing the bay at once. In this bay and near cape Misenus a Roman fleet
+was usually stationed and Pliny's uncle, I believe, commanded one there at
+the time of the first eruption of Vesuvius which cost him his life.
+
+There is a singular phenomenon in this bay of a mountain that in one of the
+later eruptions and earthquakes was formed in twenty-four hours near the
+seashore and was named _Monte Nuovo._
+
+The small salt water lake called _Lacus Lucrinus_ is also on this bay. It
+appears to me to be an artificial lake, made probably by the opulent Romans
+who resided at Baiae to hold their mullets and other sea fish which they
+wished to fatten.
+
+Near Puzzuoli likewise is the famous _Solfaterra,_ the bed of an ancient
+volcano. It is well worth examining. It has been long since extinguished,
+but you meet with vast beds of sulphur and calcined stones, and the smell
+is at times almost insupportable. We returned to Naples by half-past seven
+o'clock, not a little tired but highly gratified by our excursion.
+
+
+NAPLES, 14th Oct.
+
+At the _Teatro Nuovo_ I have seen another Italian tragedy performed. The
+piece was _Tito Manlio Torquato_, taken from the well known anecdote in the
+Roman history. The scenery, decorations and _costume_ were good and
+appropriate, not so the acting; for the actors as usual were imperfect in
+their parts. I fully agree with Alfieri that Italy must be united and enjoy
+a free popular government before one can expect to see tragedies well
+performed. It is very diverting to see the puppet shows at Naples and to
+hear the witticisms and various artifices of the showman of Pulcinello to
+secure payment in advance from his audience, who would otherwise go away
+without paying as soon as the performance was over.
+
+This performance is much attended by the _lazzaroni_ and _fainéans_ of the
+lower orders of Naples and the puppet showman is obliged to have recourse
+to various stratagems and ingenious sallies to induce a handsome
+contribution to be made. Sometimes he will say with a very grave face (the
+curtain being drawn up and no Pulcinello appearing) that he is very sorry
+there can be no performance this day; for that poor Signor Pulcinello is
+sick and has no money to pay the Doctor: but that if a _quête_ be made for
+him, he will get himself cured and make his appearance as usual. All the
+while that one of the showmen goes about collecting the _grani_, the other
+holds a dialogue with Pulcinello (still invisible). Pulcinello groans and
+is very miserable. At length the collection is made. Pulcinello takes
+medicine, says he is well again, makes his appearance and begins. At
+another time the audience is informed that there can be no performance as
+Pulcinello is arrested for debt and put in prison, where he must remain
+unless a subscription of money be made for him to pay his debts and take
+him out of gaol. Then follows an absurd dialogue between Pulcinello
+(supposed to answer from the prison) and the showman. The showman scolds
+him for being a spendthrift and leading a profligate life, calls him a
+_briccone_, a _birbante_, and Pulcinello only groans out in reply, _Povero
+me, Povero Pulcinello, che disgrazia! sventurato di me! di non aver
+denari!_ These strokes of wit never fail to bring in many a _grano_.
+
+At another time the curtain is drawn up and discovers a gibbet and
+Pulcinello standing on a ladder affixed to it with a rope round his neck.
+The showman with the utmost gravity and assumed melancholy informs the
+audience that a most serious calamity is about to happen to Naples: that
+Signor Pulcinello is condemned to be hanged for a robbery, and that unless
+he can procure _molti denari_ to bribe the officers of justice to let him
+escape, he will inevitably be hanged and the people will never more behold
+their unhappy friend Pulcinello. The showman now implores the commiseration
+of the audience, and now reproaches Pulcinello with his profligacy and
+nefarious pranks which have brought him to an untimely end. Pulcinello
+sobs, cries, promises to reform and to attend mass regularly in future.
+What Neapolitan heart can resist such an appeal? The _grani_ are collected.
+Pulcinello gives money to the puppet representing the executioner; down
+goes the gibbet, and Pulcinello is himself again.
+
+I shall return in a day or two to Rome, having seen nearly all that Naples
+affords. I have now full liberty to die when I chuse according to the
+proverb: _Veder Napoli e poí morire_.
+
+Naples certainly is, taking it all in all, the most interesting city in
+Europe, for it unites every thing that is conducive to the _agrémens_ of
+life. A beautiful city, a noble bay, a vast commerce, provisions of the
+best sort, abundant and cheap, a pleasant society, a delicious climate,
+music, Operas, _Balli,_ Libraries, Museums of Painting and Sculpture; in
+its neighbourhood two subterraneous cities, a volcano in full play, and
+every spot of ground conveying the most interesting _souvenirs_ and
+immortalized in prose and verse. Add thereto the vapour baths of sulphur
+for stringing anew the nerves of those debilitated by a too ardent pursuit
+of pleasure, and the Fountain of St Lucia for those suffering from a
+redundancy of bile. Now tell me of any other residence which can equal
+this? Adieu.
+
+
+ROME, 22nd Octr.
+
+Nothing material occurred on my return from Naples to Rome; but on the 2d
+day after my arrival I made an excursion to Tivoli, which is about eighteen
+miles distant from Rome. I passed the night at the only inn at Tivoli. The
+next morning I walked to the _Villa d'Este_ in this neighbourhood, which is
+a vast edifice with extensive grounds. Here on a terrace in front of the
+villa are models in marble of all the principal edifices and monuments,
+ancient and modern, of Rome, very ingeniously executed. From the _Villa
+d'Este_ is a noble view of the whole plain of Latium and of the "Eternal
+City."
+
+From hence I walked about two miles further to visit the greatest antiquity
+and curiosity of the place, which is the Villa or rather the ruins of the
+celebrated Villa built by Adrian, which must have been of immense size from
+the vast space of ground it occupies. It was intended to unite everything
+that the magnificent ideas of a Prince could devise who wished to combine
+every sort of recreation, sensual as well as intellectual, within the
+precincts of his Palace; columns, friezes, capitals, entablatures and
+various other spoils of rich architecture cover the ground in profusion:
+many of the walls and archways are entire and almost an entire cupola
+remains standing. Besides the buildings above ground, here are cellars
+under ground intended as quarters for the guards and capable of holding
+three thousand men, as well as stabling for horses. In the inclosure of and
+forming part of this Villa, which covers a circumference of seven miles,
+were a gymnasium, baths, temples, a school of philosophers, tanks, a
+theatre, &c. The greatest part of these buildings are choaked up and
+covered with earth, since it is by excavation alone that what does appear
+was brought to light. It was by excavation that a man discovered a large
+hall wherein he found the nine beautiful statues of the Muses, which now
+adorn the Museum of the Vatican; and no doubt if the Roman government would
+recommence the excavations many more valuables might be found. Hadrian's
+villa has already furnished many a statue, column and pilaster to the
+Museums, churches and Palaces of Rome.
+
+I was much more gratified in beholding the remains of this Villa than in
+visiting Tivoli and I remained here several hours. At four o'clock in the
+afternoon I started on my return to Rome; it was imprudent not to have
+started sooner, as it is always dangerous to be outside the walls of Rome
+after dark, in consequence of the brigands who infest the environs and
+sometimes come close to the walls of the city.
+
+I reached my hotel in Rome at nine o'clock, one hour and half after dark,
+but had the good fortune to meet nobody. The Roman peasantry generally go
+armed and those who feed cattle in the fields of the Campagna or have any
+labour to perform there never sleep there on account of the _mal'aria._
+
+
+[93] Horace, _Epist.,_ II, 1, 156.--ED.
+
+[94] Horace, Sat., i, 5, 26.--ED.
+
+[95] A _carlino_ is of the value of half a franc or five pence English. The
+ accounts in Naples are kept in _ducati_, _carlini_ and _grani_. Ten
+ _carlini_ make a ducat and ten _grani_ (a copper coin) make a carlino.
+ A grano is a _sou_ French in value. The _ducato_ is an imaginary coin.
+ The _soudo Napoletano_, a handsome silver coin of the size of an _écu
+ de six francs_, is equal to twelve carlini.
+
+[96] Not one of these vases was found at Pompeii.--ED.
+
+[97] Horace, _Carm_., II, 1, 7.--ED.
+
+[98] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 264.--ED.
+
+[99] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 129.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1816
+
+From Rome to Florence--Sismondi the historian--Reminiscences of
+India--Lucca--Princess Elisa Baciocchi--Pisa--The Campo Santo--Leghorn--
+Hebrews in Leghorn--Lord Dillon--The story of a lost glove--From Florence
+to Lausanne by Milan, Turin and across Mont Cenis--Lombardy in winter--The
+Hospice of Mont Cenis.
+
+
+FLORENCE, Novr. 20th.
+
+I bade adieu to Rome on the 28th October and returned here by the same road
+I went, viz., by Radicofani and Sienna. I arrived here after a journey of
+six days, having been detained one day at Aquapendente on account of the
+swelling of the waters. The day after my arrival here I despatched a letter
+to Pescia to Mr Sismondi de' Sismondi, the celebrated author of the history
+of the Italian Republics, to inform him of my intended visit to him, and I
+forwarded to him at the same time two letters of introduction, one from
+Colonel Wardle and the other from Mr Piton, banker at Geneva, who mentioned
+me in his letter to Sismondi as having _des idées parfaitement analogues
+aux siennes_. I received a most friendly answer inviting me to come to
+Pescia and to pass a few days with him at his villa. Pescia is thirty miles
+distant from Florence and the same from Leghorn. I was delighted with the
+opportunity of seeing a man whom I esteemed so much as an author and as a
+citizen, and of visiting at the same time the different cities of Tuscany,
+particularly Lucca and Pisa. I accordingly hired a cabriolet and on the
+morning of the 6th Novr drove to Prato, a good-sized handsome town, solidly
+built, ten miles distant from Florence. The country on each side of the
+road appears highly cultivated, and the road is lined with villas and farm
+houses with gardens nearly the whole way. Changing horses at Prato, I
+proceeded ten miles further to Pistoia, a large elegant and well-built town
+on the banks of the Ombrone.
+
+The streets in Pistoia are broad and well paved and the _Palazzo pubblico_
+is a striking building; so is the _Seminario_ or College. Here I changed
+horses again and proceeded to Pescia, where I alighted at the villa of M.
+Sismondi. The distance between Pistoia and Pescia is about ten or eleven
+miles.
+
+Pescia is a beautiful little town, very clean and solidly built, lying in a
+valley surrounded nearly on all sides by mountains. Its situation is
+extremely romantic and picturesque, and there are several handsome villas
+on the slopes and summits of these mountains. On market days Pescia is
+crowded with the country people who flock hither from all parts, and one is
+astonished to see such a number of beautiful and well dressed country
+girls. Industry and comfort are prevalent here, as is the case indeed all
+over Tuscany; I mean agricultural industry, for commerce is just now at a
+stand.
+
+I passed three most delightful days and which will live for ever in my
+recollection, with Mr Sismondi, in whom I found an inexhaustible fund of
+talent and information, combined with such an unassuming simplicity of
+character and manner that he appeared to me by far the most agreeable
+litterary man that I ever met with. His mother, who is a lady of great
+talent and perfectly conversant in English litterature, resides with him.
+His sister also is settled at Pescia, being married to a Tuscan gentleman
+of the name of Forti. The sister has a full share of the talents and
+amiable qualities of her mother and brother. With a family of such
+resources as this, you may suppose our conversation did not flag for a
+moment, nor do I recollect in the course of my whole life having passed
+such a pleasant time; and I only wished that the three days could be
+prolonged to three years. Politics, the occurrences of the day, living
+characters, classical reminiscences, French, English, Italian and German
+litterature, afforded us an inexhaustible variety of topics for
+conversation: and the profound local knowledge that Mr Sismondi possesses
+of Italy, of its history and antiquities, renders his communications of the
+utmost value to the traveller. Our supper was prolonged to a late hour and
+I question if the suppers and conversations of Scipio and Atticus, those
+_nodes caenaeque Deum_[100] were more piquant or afforded more variety than
+ours. Shakespeare, Schiller, Voltaire, Ariosto, Dante, Filangieri, Michel
+Angelo, Washington, Napoleon, all furnished anecdotes and reflexions in
+abundance.
+
+The last evening that I passed here, two families of Pescia came in. One of
+the gentlemen was a great reader of voyages and travels, and India suddenly
+became the subject of discourse. As I had passed six years in that country,
+during which time I had visited the three Presidencies of Calcutta, Madras,
+and Bombay, having ascended the Ganges as far as Benares, having visited
+the Mysore country and Nizam's territory, having sojourned three weeks
+among the splendid and magnificent ruins of Bijanagur or Bisnagar, having
+travelled thro' the whole of the Deccan from Pondicherry to cape Comorin,
+besides having traversed on horseback the whole circumference of Ceylon and
+across the whole island from East to West by the Wanny, I was enabled to
+furnish them with many an anecdote from the Eastern world, which to them
+was a great treat, and I dare say at times my narration appeared almost as
+marvellous as a story in the Arabian Nights, particularly when I related
+the various religious ceremonies, the grim Idol of Juggernaut, the swinging
+to _recover cast_, the exposure of old people to the holy death in the
+Ganges by stopping up their nose, mouth and ears with mud, and placing them
+on the water's edge at low tide in order that they should be swept off at
+the high water; the holy city of Benares; the magnificent remains of
+Bisnagar; the splendid Pagodas of Ramisseram; the policy of the Bramins;
+the appalling voluntary penances of the _Joguis_ or _Fakirs_ as the
+Europeans call them; the bed of spikes; the arm held up in the air for
+fifteen years; the tiger hunt; the method of catching the elephant in
+Ceylon; the pearl fishery; Sepoy establishment; in short I must have
+appeared to them a Ulysses or a Sindbad, and I dare say that they thought I
+added from time to time a little embellishment from my imagination, tho' I
+can safely and solemnly aver that I did not extenuate nor exaggerate any
+thing, but simply related what I had myself seen and witnessed.
+
+Mr Sismondi is under a sort of banishment from his native country Geneva in
+consequence of the side of the question he took in his writings on the
+return of the Emperor Napoleon from Elba. It was indeed natural for the
+restored government (the Bourbons) to desire the removal from France of a
+man of talent who had exposed their past and might scrutinize their future
+conduct and wilful faults; but why the Government of Geneva should espouse
+their quarrel and visit one of their most estimable citizens with
+banishment for opinions not at all connected with nor influential upon
+Geneva, appears to me not only absurd and anomalous, but unjust in the
+highest degree. But such is the state of degradation to which Europe is
+reduced by the triumph of the old _régime_; and the Swiss Governments are
+compelled to become the instruments of the vengeance of the coalition. But
+I shall dwell no more on this subject at present. Let us hope that in a
+short time a more liberal spirit will arise, and the Genevese will be eager
+to recall in triumph the illustrious citizen of whom they have so much
+reason to be proud.
+
+We spent our mornings, Mr Sismondi and I, in promenades towards the most
+striking points of the country immediately environing Pescia, and as I had
+at this time some idea of coming to settle in Tuscany, he was so kind as to
+conduct me to look at several villas that were to let; and I inspected
+three very beautiful ones well furnished and each capable of holding a
+large family, that were to be let for 18, 20, and 24 _louis d'or_ per
+annum.
+
+Wine and every article of life is of prodigious cheapness here, and the
+inhabitants are so respectable, and there is such an absence of all crime,
+that Pescia must be a very desirable and economical residence for any
+foreign family possessing a sufficient knowledge of Italian to mix with the
+society of the natives. There are several ancient and noble families in the
+neighbourhood, highly respectable in point of moral character and manners,
+but rather in _décadence_ in point of fortune.
+
+It was with the greatest regret that I bade adieu to the amiable Sismondi,
+his mother and sister; but I hope for a time only, as I have some idea of
+removing my domicile from Lausanne to this part of the world.
+
+I started at 10 o'clock a.m. on the 11th of November and after two hours'
+journey in a cabriolet arrived at Lucca, a distance of ten miles, and put
+up at the _Hôtel del Pelicano._ The road runs thro' a highly cultivated
+country.
+
+Lucca is a large fortified city, situated hi a beautifully luxuriant plain
+or basin surrounded on all sides by hills and mountains of various slopes,
+contours and heights, and abounding in villas, vineyards, mulberry and
+olive plantations. Every spot of ground is in cultivation and the industry
+of the inhabitants of Lucca is proverbial. Indeed the whole territory of
+this little _ci-devant_ Republic is a perfect paradise.
+
+The city itself, from the massiveness and solidity of the edifices, has
+more of a solemn than a lively appearance; but there is a delightful walk
+on the ramparts which are lined with trees. The streets are well paved. The
+extreme antiquity of the city and style of its edifices make it appear less
+_riani_ than the other cities in Tuscany. The Cathedral is Gothic and there
+are in it the statues of the four Evangelists. This and the _Palazzo
+Pubblico_ are the most conspicuous edifices. Tho' the Republic is
+annihilated, the word _Libertas_ still remains on an escutcheon on the
+gates of the city. Lucca, tho' no longer a Republic and enclavée in
+Tuscany, is for the present an independent state and belongs to an Infanta
+of Spain (formerly Princess of Parma) who takes the title of Duchess of
+Lucca. It is generally supposed however that on the demise of Maria Louisa,
+ex-Empress of the French and now Duchess of Parma, this family, viz., the
+Duchess of Lucca and her son will resume their ancient possessions in the
+Parmesan, and that Lucca will then be incorporated with Tuscany.
+
+Before the fall of Napoleon the Princess Elisa Baciocchi his sister was
+sovereign of Lucca, and she it was who has embellished the outside of the
+city with some beautiful promenades. She devoted her whole time, talents
+and resources to the good of her subjects and is highly esteemed and much
+regretted by them. The present Duchess of Lucca has no other character but
+that which seems common to the Royal families of France, Spain and Naples;
+viz., of being very weak and priest-ridden. Lucca furnishes excellent
+female servants who are remarkable for their industry and probity. Their
+only solace is their lover or _amoroso_, as they term him; and when they
+enter into the service of any family, they always stipulate for one day in
+the week on which they must have liberty to visit their _amoroso_, or the
+_amoroso_ must be allowed to come to the house to visit them. This is an
+ancient custom among them and has no pernicious consequences, nor does it
+interfere with their other good qualities. At the back of Lucca is an
+immense mountain which stands between it and Pisa, and intercepts the
+reciprocal view of the two cities which are only ten miles distant from
+each other. This mountain and its peculiarity is the very one mentioned by
+Dante in his _Inferno_ in the _episode_ of Ugolino:
+
+ _Cacciando il lupo e i lupicini_ AL MONTE,
+ PER CHE i Pisan veder Lucca NON ponno.[101]
+
+I started from Lucca in a cabriolet and in two hours arrived at Pisa,
+putting up at the _Tre Donzelle_ on the Quai of the Arno. Between Lucca and
+Pisa are the _Bagni di Lucca_, a favorite resort for the purpose of bathing
+and drinking the mineral waters.
+
+Pisa is one of the most beautiful cities I have seen in Italy. The extreme
+elegance and comfort of the houses, the spacious Quai on the Arno which
+furnishes a most agreeable promenade, the splendid style of architecture of
+the _Palazzi_ and public buildings, the cleanliness of the streets, the
+salubrity of the climate, the mildness of the winter, the profusion and
+cheapness of all the necessaries of life, and above all the amenity and
+simplicity of the inhabitants, combine to make Pisa an agreeable and
+favorite residence. Yet the population having much decreased there appears
+an air of melancholy stillness about the city and grass may be seen in some
+of the streets. This decay in population causes lodgings to be very cheap.
+
+The most striking object in Pisa is the leaning tower _(Torre cadente)_ and
+after that the Cathedral, Baptistery, and _Campo Santo_ which are all close
+to the tower and to each other. Imagine two fine Gothic Churches in a
+square or place like Lincoln's Inn Fields; a large oblong building nearly
+at right angles with the churches and inclosing a green grass plot in its
+quadrangle and a leaning tower of cylindrical form facing the churches: and
+then you will have a complete idea of this part of Pisa.
+
+I must not omit to mention that there is a breed of camels here belonging
+to the Grand Duke; I believe it is the only part of Europe except Turkey
+where the breed of camels is attempted to be propagated.
+
+
+LEGHORN, 17 Novr.
+
+I left Pisa for Leghorn on the morning of the 15th November, and after a
+drive of two hours in a cabriolet I arrived at the latter place and put up
+at the _Aquila Nera._ The distance between Pisa and Leghorn is only 10 or
+11 miles and a plain with few trees, either planted in corn or in
+pasturage, forms the landscape between the two cities.
+
+Leghorn (Livorno), being a modern city, does not offer anything remarkably
+interesting to the classical traveller either from its locality or its
+history. Founded under the auspices of the Medici it has risen rapidly to
+grandeur and opulence, and has eclipsed Genoa in commerce. It is a
+remarkably handsome city, the streets being all broad and at right angles;
+the _Piazze_ are large and the _Piazza Grande_ in particular is
+magnificent. There is a fine broad street leading from the _Piazza Grande_
+to the Port. The Port and Mole are striking objects and considerable
+commercial bustle prevails there.
+
+Among the few things worthy of particular notice is the Jewish Synagogue,
+decorated with costly lamps and inscriptions in gold in the Hebrew and
+Spanish languages, many of which allude to the hospitality and protection
+afforded to the Hebrew nation by the Sovereigns of Tuscany. There are a
+great number of Hebrew families here: they all speak Spanish, being the
+descendants of those unfortunate Jews who were expelled from Spain at the
+time of the expulsion of the Moors in the reign of Don Felipe III surnamed
+_el Discreto_, who was determined not to suffer either a Jew, Mahometan or
+heretic in all his dominions. This barbarous decree was the ruin and
+destruction of a number of industrious families, thousands of whom died of
+despair at being exiled from their native land. In return for this what has
+Spain gained? The Inquisition--despotism in its worst form--poverty--rags
+--lice--an overbearing insolent and sanguinary priesthood of whom the
+monarch is either the puppet or the slave; a degraded nobility; a half
+savage, grossly ignorant, lazy and brutal people. A proper judgment on the
+Spanish nation for its cruelty and fanaticism! My guide at Leghorn
+conducted me to see the burying ground belonging to the English factory,
+which is interesting enough from the variety of tombs, monuments and
+inscriptions. Here all Protestants, to whatever nation they belong, are
+buried. I noticed Smollett's tomb. It is on the whole an interesting spot,
+tho' not quite so much so as the cemetery of Père La Chaise at Paris.
+
+I returned to Florence from Leghorn _tout d'une traite_ in the diligence.
+We stopped at Fornacetti (half way) to dine. There is a good _table d'Hôte
+(ordinario)_ there.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 22nd Novr.
+
+I have become acquainted with Lord Dillon[102] and his family, who are
+residing here and from whom I have received much civility. I met at his
+house the Marchese Giuliani, one of the adherents of King Joachim, a very
+amiable and clever man who speaks English fluently. Lord Dillon is a man of
+much reading and information and his conversation is at all times a great
+treat. His lady too is very amiable and accomplished. I went one day with a
+friend of mine to a _pique-nique_ party at the Cascino, where a laughable
+adventure occurred perfectly in the stile of the _novelle_ of Boccacio. As
+it is not the custom in Florence that husbands and wives should go together
+to places of public amusement, the lady is generally accompanied by her
+_cavalier servente:_ but it by no means follows that the _cavalier
+servente_ is the favored lover: one is often adopted as a cover to another
+who enjoys the peculiar favors of the lady. A gentleman who arrived at the
+hall where the supper table was laid out, somewhat earlier than the rest of
+the company and before the chamber was lighted, observed a gentleman and
+lady ascend the staircase, turn aside by a corridor and enter a chamber
+together. It was dark and he could not distinguish their persons. He waited
+fifteen or twenty minutes and observed them leave the chamber together,
+pass along the corridor and disappear. He had the curiosity to go into the
+chamber they had just left and found on the bed a lady's glove. He took up
+the glove and put it in his pocket, determined that this incident should
+afford him some amusement at supper and the company also by putting some
+fair one to the blush. Accordingly, when the supper was nearly over, he
+held up the glove and asked with a loud voice if any lady had lost a glove;
+when his own wife who was sitting at the same table at some distance from
+him called out with the utmost _sangfroid: E il mio! dammelo: l'ho lasciato
+cadere._ You may conceive what a laugh there was against him, for he had
+related the circumstances of his finding it to several of the company
+before they sat down to supper. This reminded me of an anecdote mentioned
+by Brantôme as having occurred at Milan in his time, a glove being in this
+case also the cause of the _désagrément_. A married lady had been much
+courted by a Spanish Cavalier of the name of Leon: one day, thinking he had
+made sure of her, he followed her into her bedroom, but met with a severe
+and decided repulse and was compelled to leave her _re infectà_. In his
+confusion he left one of his gloves on the bed which remained there
+unperceived by the lady. The husband of the lady arrived shortly afterwards
+and as he was aware of the attentions of the Spaniard to his wife and had
+noticed his going into the house, he went directly to his wife's chamber,
+where the first thing that captivated his attention was a man's military
+glove on the bed. He, however, said nothing, but from that moment abstained
+from all conjugal duty. The lady finding herself thus neglected by a
+husband who had been formerly tender and attentive, was at a loss to know
+the reason, and determined to come to an _éclaircissement_ with him in as
+delicate a manner as she could. She therefore took a slip of paper, wrote
+the following lines thereon and placed it on his table:
+
+ _Vigna era, vigna son;
+ Era podada, or più non son;
+ E non sò per qual cagion
+ Non mi poda il mio patron._[103]
+
+The husband, on reading these lines, wrote the following in answer:
+
+ _Vigna eri, vigna sei;
+ Eri podada, e più non sei;
+ Per la gran fa del Leon
+ Non ti poda il tuo patron._
+
+The lady on reading these lines perceived at once the cause of her
+husband's estrangement and succeeded in explaining the matter
+satisfactorily to him, which was facilitated by the ingenuous declaration
+of Leon himself that he had tried to succeed but had been repulsed. The
+husband and wife being perfectly reconciled lived happily and no doubt the
+vine was cultivated as usual.
+
+I left Florence the 27th November, and arrived at Turin 5th December. In an
+evil hour I engaged myself to accompany an old Swiss Baroness with whom I
+became acquainted at the Hotel of Mine Hembert to accompany her to Turin.
+She had with her her son, a fine boy of thirteen years of age but very much
+spoiled. We engaged a _vetturino_ to conduct us to Turin, stopping one day
+at Milan. The Baroness did not speak Italian and generally sent for me to
+interpret for her when any disputes occurred between her and the people at
+the inns, and these disputes were tolerably frequent, as she always gave
+the servants wherever she stopped a good deal of trouble and on departing
+generally forgot to give them the _buona grazia._ I sometimes paid them for
+her myself in order to avoid noise and tumult; at other times we departed
+under vollies of abuse and imprecations such as _brutta vecchia, maladetta
+carogna,_ and so forth. The Baroness had strong aristocratic prejudices and
+was a bitter enemy of the French Revolution to which she attributed
+collectively all the _désagrémens_ she had experienced during life and all
+the inconveniences she met with during our present journey. The negligence
+and impertinence of the servants in Italy were invariably attributed by her
+to the revolutionary principle and she told me that the servants in her
+native canton Bern were the best in the world, but that even in them the
+French Revolution had made a great deal of difference and that they were
+not so submissive as they used to be. As she sent for me to be her dragoman
+in all her disputes on the road, you may conceive how glad I was to arrive
+at Turin to be rid of her. She put me in mind of Gabrina in the _Orlando
+Furioso._ We stopped one day at Milan but we were very near being detained
+two or three days at Fiacenza owing to an informality in the Baroness's
+passport, which had not been visé by the Austrian Legation at Florence. In
+vain she pleaded that she was told at the inn at Florence that such _visa_
+was not necessary; the police officer at the Austrian _Douane_, at a short
+distance beyond Piacenza, was inexorable and refused to _viser_ her
+passport to allow her to proceed. She was in a sad dilemma and it was
+thought we should be obliged to remain at Piacenza. I however recommended
+her to be guided by me and not to talk with or scold anybody, and that I
+would ensure her arrival at Milan without difficulty, for I had observed
+that her scolding the officer at the _Douane_ only served to make him more
+obstinate. I recommended her therefore that when we should arrive within
+sixty or seventy paces of the gate at Milan, she should get out of the
+carriage with her son and walk thro' the gate on foot with the utmost
+unconcern as if she belonged to the town and was returning from a
+promenade; and that while they stopped us who were in the carriage to
+examine our passports, she should walk direct to the inn where we were to
+lodge, then write to the Consul of her nation to explain the business. She
+followed my advice and passed unobserved and unmolested into Milan. On the
+preceding evening at Castel-puster-lengo at supper I asked whether she
+thought the rigour of the Austrian government was also the offspring of the
+French Revolution. The Baroness had brought up her son in all these
+feelings and particularly in a determined hatred of the Canton de Vaud; for
+in the evening when we arrived at the inn and were sitting round the fire,
+he would shake the burning faggots about and say: _Voilà la ville de
+Lausanne en cendres!_ If he grows up with these ideas and acts upon them,
+he stands a good chance of being shot in a duel by some Vaudois. It is a
+pity to see a child so spoiled, for he was a very fine boy, tho' very
+violent in his temper which probably he inherited from his mother. Somebody
+at the _pension Surpe_ at Milan who knew her told me that the Baroness was
+of an aristocratic family and had married a rich _bourgeois_ of Bern whom
+she treated rather too much _de haut en bas;_ in short that it was a
+marriage quite _à la George Dandin_, till the poor man took it into his
+head to die one day. At Turin we parted company, she for Genoa and I for
+Lausanne.
+
+
+_From Turin to Lausanne_.
+
+I felt the cold very sensibly in the journey from Florence to Milan and
+Turin. There is not a colder country in Europe than Lombardy in the winter.
+The vicinity of the Alps contributes much to this; and the houses being
+exceedingly large and having no stoves it is quite impossible that the
+fireplaces can give heat sufficient to warm the rooms. I started from Turin
+on the morning of the 9th December in the French diligence bound to Lyon,
+but taking my place only as far as Chambéry. In the diligence were a
+Piedmontese Colonel who had served under Napoleon, and a young Scotchman, a
+relation of Lord Minto. The latter was fond of excursions in ice and snow
+and on our arrival at Suza he proposed to me to start from there two or
+three hours before the diligence and to ascend Mont Cenis on foot as far as
+the _Hospice_ and I was mad enough to accede to the proposal, for it
+certainly was little less than madness in a person of my chilly habits and
+susceptibility of cold and who had passed several years within the tropics
+to scale the Alps on foot in the middle of December and to walk 24 miles in
+snow and ice at one o'clock in the morning, which was the hour at which we
+started. I was well clad in flannel and I went thro' the journey valiantly
+and in high spirits and without suffering much from the cold till within
+five miles of the Hospice, when a heavy snow storm came on; it then began
+to look a little ugly and but for Napoleon's grand _chaussès_ we were lost.
+We struggled on three miles further in the snow before we fell in with a
+_maison de refuge_. We knocked there and nobody answered. We then
+determined _coûte que coûte_ to push on to the _Hospice_ which we knew
+could not be more than two miles distant; indeed it was much more advisable
+so to do than to run the risk of being frozen by remaining two or three
+hours in the cold air till the diligence should come up. In standing still
+I began to feel the cold bitterly; so in spite of the snow storm, we pushed
+on and arrived at the inn at Mont-Cenis at five in the morning. We rubbed
+our hands and faces well with snow and took care not to approach the fire
+for several minutes, fortifying ourselves in the interim with a glass of
+brandy. We then had some coffee made and laid ourselves down to sleep by
+the side of an enormous fire until the diligence arrived, which made its
+appearance at eight o'clock. The passengers stopped to breakfast and the
+Scotchman proposed to me to make the descent of Lans-le-Bourg also on foot;
+but I was quite satisfied with the prowess I had already exhibited and
+declined the challenge. He however set off alone and thus performed the
+entire passage of Mont Cenis on foot. As for the rest of us we were carried
+down on a _traineau_; that is to say the diligence was unloaded and its
+wheels taken off; the baggage and wheels were put on one _traineau_ and the
+diligence with the passengers in it on another, and in this manner we
+descended to Lans-le-Bourg. Nothing remarkable occurred on this journey and
+we arrived at Chambéry in good case. I hired a _calèche_ to go to Geneva,
+remained there three days and arrived at Lausanne on the 18th December.
+
+
+[100] Horace, _Sat_., II, 6, 65.--ED.
+
+[101] Dante, _Inferno_, I, 33,29.--ED.
+
+[102] Henry Augustus, thirteenth Viscount Dillon (1777-1832), married
+ (1807) to Henrietta Browne (died 1862).--ED.
+
+[103] Quoted from memory, with mistakes. The text has been corrected as it
+ stands in Brantôme, _Les Dames galantes_, ed. Chasles, vol. I, p.
+ 351.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER
+WATERLOO
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MARCH-SEPTEMBER, 1817
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Clermont-Ferrand--A wretched conveyance--The
+first dish of frogs--Society in Clermont-Ferrand--General de
+Vergeunes--Cleansing the town--Return to Lausanne--A zealous
+priest--Journey to Bern and back to Lausanne--Avenches--Lake Morat--Lake
+Neufchatel--The Diet in Bern--Character of the Bernois--A beautiful
+Milanese lady.
+
+I started from Lausanne on the 4th March 1817, and arrived on the same day
+at 4 o'clock at Geneva. On my arrival at Geneva, my banker informed me that
+I had been denounced to the police, for some political opinions I had
+spoken at the _Hôtel de l'Ecu de Genéve_, previous to my journey into
+Italy, and that I had been traced as far as Turin. I went directly on
+hearing this to the police, and desired to know who my accusers were, and
+that the accusation against me might be investigated immediately. Both
+these propositions were however declined, and I was told it was an _affaire
+passeé_, and of no sort of consequence; so that from that day to this I
+have never been able to ascertain who my friends were.
+
+I left Lausanne with the intention of paying a visit to my friend Col.
+Wardle and his family at Clermont-Ferrand, in the Department of the Puy de
+Dôme, in Auvergne, where they are residing. I staid three days at Geneva,
+and then set off at 7 in the evening on the 8th March with the Courier for
+Lyons.
+
+I never regretted any thing so much, and was near paying severely for my
+rashness in putting myself into such a wretched conveyance, at such a
+season of the year; but I had made the agreement with the Courier without
+inspecting his carriage, and was obliged to adhere to the bargain. It was a
+vehicle entirely open before; it was a bitter cold, rainy, snowy night; and
+I had the rain and snow in my face the whole way, and on crossing the
+Cerdon I was seized with a violent ague fit, and suffered so much from it
+that on arrival at a village beyond Nantua where we stopped for supper, I
+determined to proceed no further, but to rest there that night; and I asked
+the innkeeper if he could furnish me with a bed for the night. He however
+made so many objections and seemed so unwilling that I should remain, that
+I was obliged to make up my mind to proceed. I allayed the _frissonnement_
+by a large glass of brandy and water, made fiery hot. At eight o'clock next
+morning I arrived at Lyons, more dead than alive. A warm bath, however,
+remaining in bed the whole day, buried in blankets, abstaining from all
+food, a few grains of calomel at night and copious libations of rice gruel
+the next day restored me completely to health; and after a _séjour_ of four
+days at Lyons, I was enabled to proceed on my journey to Clermont on the
+14th March. We arrived at Roanne in the evening and I stopped there the
+whole night.
+
+Between Lyons and Roanne is the mountain of Tarare where the road is cut
+right athwart the mountain and is consequently terribly steep; indeed it is
+the steepest ascent for a carriage I ever beheld. All the passengers were
+obliged to _bundle out_ and ascend on foot; and even then it is a most
+arduous _montée_ for such a cumbrous machine as a French diligence.
+
+The country between Lyons and Roanne appears diversified; but this is not
+the season for enjoying the beauties of nature. Roanne consists of one
+immensely long street, but it is broad, and contains excellently built
+houses and shops. There is a theatre also and baths. It is situated on the
+Loire which I now salute for the first time.
+
+The following morning at nine o'clock a _patache_ (a sort of two wheeled
+carriage) was in waiting to convey me the remainder of my journey; and I
+arrived at night at a large village or town called Thiers. Halfway between
+Roanne and Thiers, on stopping at a small village to dine, I observed a
+dish of frogs at the kitchen fire at the inn; and as it was the first time
+I had observed them as an article of food in France, I was desirous to
+taste them. They were dressed in a _fricassée_ of white sauce, and I found
+them excellent. The legs only are used. They would be delicious as a curry.
+The next morning we continued our journey; and crossing the river Allier at
+twelve o'clock, arrived at Clermont-Ferrand at 2 p.m., and dined with Col.
+Wardle. Clermont and Ferrand are two towns within a mile and half distant
+from each other and this Clermont is generally called Clermont-Ferrand to
+distinguish it from other towns of the same name.
+
+
+CLERMONT, March 26th.
+
+I have taken lodgings for a month, and board with a French family for 90
+franks per month. On the road hither the immense mountain called the Puy de
+Dôme is discernible at a great distance; it is said to have been a volcano.
+
+Clermont is a very ancient city and has an air of dullness; but the _Place_
+and promenades round the town are excellent. It is the capital of this
+department (Puy de Dôme). There is a terrible custom here of emptying the
+_aguas mayores y menores_ (as the Spaniards term those secretions) into the
+small streets that lie at the back of the houses. The consequence is that
+they are clogged up with filth and there is always a most abominable
+stench. One must be careful how one walks thro' these streets at night,
+from the liability of being saluted by a golden shower. The lower classes
+of the Auvergnats have the reputation of being dirty, slovenly and idle.
+
+Here is a church built by the English in the time of Edward III, when the
+Black Prince commanded in this country; and it was in a chapel in this
+city, the remains of which still exist, that Peter the Hermit preached the
+first crusade. These are almost the only things worthy of remark in the
+town itself, except that there is a good deal of commerce carried on,
+manufactures of crockery, cloth and silk stockings. But in the natural
+curiosities of the environs of Clermont there is a great deal to interest
+the botanist and mineralogist and above all there is a remarkable
+petrifying well, very near the town, where by leaving pieces of wood,
+shell-fish and other articles exposed to the dropping of the water, they
+become petrified in a short time. This water has the same effect on dead
+animals and rapidly converts them into stone. I have myself seen a small
+basket filled with plovers' eggs become in eight days a perfect
+petrifaction.
+
+
+CLERMONT, April 2d.
+
+I am arrived here at rather a dull season: the Carnaval is just over and
+all the young ladies are taking to their _Livres d'Heures_ to atone for any
+levity or indiscretion they may have been guilty of during the hey day of
+the Carnaval. The Wardle family have a very pleasant acquaintance here,
+chiefly among the _libéraux_, or moderate royalists, but there are some
+most inveterate _Ultras_ in this city, who keep aloof from any person of
+liberal principles, as they would of a person infected with the plague. The
+noblesse of Auvergne have the reputation of being in general ignorant and
+despotic. There is but little _agrément_ or instruction to be derived from
+their society, for they have not the ideas of the age. In general the
+nobles of Auvergne, tho' great sticklers for feudality and for their
+privileges, and tho' they disliked the Revolution, had the good sense not
+to emigrate.
+
+There is a Swiss regiment of two battalions quartered here. It bears the
+name of its Colonel, De Salis. As there are a number of officers of the old
+army here, on half pay, about three hundred in number, it is said, frequent
+disputes occur between them and the Swiss officers. The Swiss are looked
+upon by the people at large as the satellites of despotism and not without
+reason. It is, I think, degrading for any country to have foreign troops in
+pay in time of peace. Several attempts have been made in the Chamber of
+Deputies to obtain their removal or _licencíement_, but without success. As
+it is supposed that the song of the _Ranz des Vaches_ affects the
+sensibility of the Swiss very much, and makes them long to return to their
+native mountains, a wag has recommended to all the young ladies in France
+who are musicians to play and sing the _Ranz des Vaches_ with all their
+might, in order to induce the Swiss to betake themselves to their native
+country.
+
+There has been a great deal of denunciation going forward here; but the
+General de V----[104] who commands the troops in Clermont, determined to
+put a stop to it. He had the good sense to see that such a system, if
+encouraged, would be destructive of all society, prejudicial to the
+Government, and vexatious to himself; as he would be thereby kept
+continually in hot water. Accordingly, on a delator presenting himself and
+accusing another of not being well affected to the present order of things,
+and of having spoken disrespectfully of the King, M. de V---- said to him:
+"I have no doubt, Sir, that your denunciation proceeds from pure motives,
+and I give you full credit for your zeal and attachment to the royal cause;
+but I cannot take any steps against the person whom you accuse, unless you
+are willing to give me leave to publish your name and consent to be
+confronted with him, so that I may examine fairly the state of the case,
+and render justice to both parties." The accuser declined acceding to this
+proposition. The General desired him to withdraw, and shortly after
+intimated publicly that he would listen to no denunciation, unless the
+denouncer gave up his name and consented to be confronted with the accused.
+The consequence of this intimation was that all denunciations ceased. The
+late Prefect however was not so prudent, and chose rather to encourage
+delation; but mark the consequence! He arrested several persons wrongfully,
+was obliged to release them afterwards, was in continual hot water and it
+ended by the Government being obliged to displace him. To avoid the merited
+vengeance of many individuals whom he had ill-treated, he was obliged, on
+giving up his prefecture, to make a precipitate retreat from Clermont. The
+delators attempted the same system with the new Prefect and Col. Wardle,
+having invited some of the Swiss officers to a ball, to which were likewise
+invited people of all opinions, an information was lodged against him,
+purporting that he wanted to corrupt the Swiss officers from their
+allegiance. The Prefect sent the letter to Col. Wardle and said that it had
+not made the slightest impression on his mind, and that he treated it as a
+malicious report. The new Prefect adopted the same system as the General
+and tranquillity is since perfectly restored.
+
+Things have been taking a better turn since the dissolution of the _Chambre
+introuvable_. Decazes, the present minister, is an able man, and if he is
+not _contrarié_ by the _Libéraux_, he will keep the fanatical _Ultras_ in
+good order. The Bishop of Clermont is a liberal man also, and as it seems
+the wish of the present public functionaries here to conciliate, it is to
+be hoped that their example will not be lost on the _bons vieux
+gentilshommes_ of Auvergne.
+
+I find an inexhaustible fund of entertainment from the conversation of M.
+C----. He has so many interesting anecdotes to relate respecting the French
+Revolution. With regard to his present occupations, which are directed
+towards rural economy, he tells me that he has succeeded in a plan of
+cleansing the town from its Augean filth, and making it very profitable to
+himself; and that he calculates to obtain a revenue thereby of twenty
+thousand franks annually. He has, in short, undertaken to be the grand
+_scavenger_ of the town, and the Government, in addition to a salary of
+2,500 francs per annum, which they give him for his trouble, give to him
+the exclusive privilege of removing all the dung he can collect in the
+precincts of the city, and of converting it to his own advantage. He began
+by fitting up a large enclosure, walled on each side, and in which he
+deposits all the filth he can collect in the stables, yards and streets of
+Clermont. He sends his carts round the town every morning to get them
+loaded. All their contents are brought to this repository, and shot out
+there. Straw is then placed over this dung, and then earth or soil
+collected from gullies and ravines, and this arranged _stratum super
+stratum_, till it forms an immense compact cake of rich compost; and when
+it has filled one of the yards and has completed a thickness of five feet,
+he sells it to the farmers, who send their carts to carry it off. He has
+divided this enclosure or repository into three or four compartments. The
+compost therefore is prepared, and ready to be carried off in one yard,
+while the others are filling. In this he has rendered a great benefit to
+the public, for the Auvergnats are incurable in their custom of emptying
+their _pots de chambre_ out of the windows; so that the streets every
+morning are in a terrible state: but thanks to the industry of C---- his
+cars go round to collect the precious material, and all is cleared away by
+twelve o'clock. He collects bones too, and offal to add to the compost. He
+conducted me to see his premises; but the odour was too strong....
+
+I returned to Lausanne by the same route, leaving Clermont on the 6th
+April, staying four days at Lyons and as many at Geneva. Young Wardle
+accompanied me. We met with no other adventure on the road than having a
+young Catholic priest, fresh from the seminary, for our travelling
+companion, from Thiers to Roanne. This young man wished to convert Wardle
+and myself to Catholicism.
+
+Among many arguments that he made use of was that most silly one, which has
+been so often sported by the Catholic theologians, viz.: that it is much
+safer to be a Catholic than a Protestant, inasmuch as the Catholics do not
+allow that any person can be saved out of the pale of their church, whereas
+the Protestants do allow that a Catholic may be saved. I answered him that
+this very argument made more against Catholicism than any other, and that
+this intolerant spirit would ever prevent me (even had such an idea entered
+into my head) of embracing such a religion. I then told him that, once for
+all, I did not wish to enter into any theological disputes; that I had
+fully made up my mind on these subjects; and that I would rather take the
+opinion of a Voltaire or a Franklin on these matters than all the opinions
+of all the theologians and churchmen that ever sat in council from the
+Council of Nicsea to the present day. This silenced him effectually. Such
+is the absurd line of conduct pursued by the Catholic priests of the
+present day in France. Instead of reforming the discipline and dogmas of
+their church and adapting it to the enlightened ideas of the present age,
+they are sedulously employd in preaching intolerant doctrines, and reviving
+absurd legends, and pretended miracles, which have been long ago consigned
+to contempt and oblivion by all rational Catholics; and by this they hope
+to re-establish the ecclesiastical power in its former glory and
+preponderance. Vain hope! By the American and French Revolutions a great
+light is gone up to the _Gentiles_. Catholicism is on its last legs, and
+they might as soon attempt to replace our old friend and school
+acquaintance Jupiter on the throne of heaven, as to re-establish the Papal
+power in its pristine splendour; to borrow the language of the _Pilgrim's
+Progress_, the Giant _Pope_ will be soon as dead as the Giant _Pagan_.
+
+On arrival at Lyons we put up at the _Hôtel du Parc_, where I found cheaper
+and better entertainment than at the _Hôtel du Nord_.
+
+My friend young Wardle has fallen in love with a very beautiful _cafetière_
+at Lyons', and spends a great part of his time in the _café_, at which this
+nymph administers, and looks at her, _sighs, looks and sighs again_. It is
+not probable however that he will succeed in his suit, for she has been
+courted by very many others and no one has succeeded. She remains constant
+to her _good man_, and the breath of calumny has never ventured to assail
+her. I met one day at Lyons with my old friend W----s of Strassburg, who
+was a Lieutenant in the 25th Regiment in the French service and served in
+the battle of Waterloo.[105] He is now here and being on _demi-solde_,
+employs himself in a mercantile house here as principal commis. He dined
+with us and we passed a most pleasant day together.
+
+I arrived on the 20th April at Lausanne.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After remaining some weeks, at Lausanne on my return from Clermont, I
+determind on making a pedestrian trip as far as Bern and Neufchatel
+previous to returning into Italy, which it is my intention to do in
+September. I sent on my portmanteau accordingly to Payerne near Avenches,
+intending to pay a visit and pass three days with my friend, the Revd. Mr.
+J[omini],[106] the rector of the parish there, from whom I had received a
+pressing invitation. I was acquainted at Lausanne with his daughter, Mme
+C----, and was much pleased in her society. She had great talent of
+conversation, and I never in my life met with a lady possessed of so much
+historical knowledge. I started on the 27th June from Lausanne, passed the
+first night at Mondon and the next afternoon arrived at Avenches, the
+_Aventicum_ of the ancient Romans. Payerne is only a mile distant from
+Avenches, and I was received with the utmost cordiality by the worthy
+pastor and his daughter. The scenery on the road to Avenches is very like
+the scenery in all the rest of the Canton de Vaud, viz., alternate mountain
+and valley, lofty trees, and every spot capable of cultivation bearing some
+kind of produce; corn just ready for the sickle and fruit such as cherries
+and strawberries in full bloom. Avenches has an air of great antiquity and
+looks very gloomy withal, which forms a striking contrast to the neat, well
+built towns and villages of this Canton on the banks of the lake Leman
+where everything appears so stirring and cheerful. Avenches, on the
+contrary, is very dull, and there is little society.
+
+At Mr. J[omini] there were, besides his daughter, his son and his son's
+wife. All the _ministres_ (for such is the word in use to designate
+Protestant clergymen and you would give great offence were you to call them
+_prêtres_) have a fixed salary of 100£ sterling per annum, with a house and
+ground attached to the cure; so that by farming a little they can maintain
+then? families creditably. M. Jomini lost his wife some time ago, and still
+remains a widower.
+
+I left Payerne on the fifth of July and walked to the _campagne_ of M. de
+T[reytorre]us,[107] situated on the banks of the lake Morat. It is a very
+pretty country house, spacious and roomy, and I was received with the
+utmost cordiality by M. de T[reytorrens] and his amiable family. He is a
+very opulent proprietor in this part of the country, and has spent part of
+his life in England. He is a dignified looking man, a little too much
+perhaps of the old school and no friend to the innovations and changes
+arising from the French Revolution. Having lived much among the Tory
+nobility of England, he has imbibed their ideas and views of things. His
+son is now employed in one of the public offices in London. His wife and
+three daughters, one of whom is married to a _ministre_, dwell with him.
+With this family I passed three days in the most agreeable manner. I find
+the style and manner of living of the _noblesse_ (or country gentlemen, as
+we should style them) of Switzerland very comfortable, in every sense of
+the word. I wish my friends the French would take more to a country life,
+it would essentially benefit the nation. The way of living in M. de
+T[reytorre]us family is as follows. A breakfast of coffee and bread and
+butter is served up to each person separately in their own room, or in the
+_Salle à manger_, Before dinner every one follows his own avocation or
+amusement. At one, the family assemble to dinner which generally consist of
+soup, _bouilli, entrées_ of fish, flesh and fowl, _entremets_ of
+vegetables, a _rôti_ of butcher's meat, fowl or game, pastry and desert.
+The wine of the country is drunk at dinner as a table wine, and _old_ wines
+of the country or wines of foreign growth are handed round to each guest
+during the desert. After dinner coffee and liqueurs are served. After an
+hour's conversation or repose, promenades are proposed which occupy the
+time till dusk. Music, cards or reading plays fill up the rest of the
+evening, till supper is announced at nine o'clock, which is generally as
+substantial as the dinner.
+
+On taking leave of Mr. de T[reytorre]ns' family I walked to the banks of
+the lake Neufchâtel, having a stout fellow with me to carry my _sac-de
+nuit_. On arrival at the lake I crossed over in a boat to Neufchâtel, which
+lies on the other side. I remained there the whole of the day. It is a very
+pretty neat little city, in a romantic position. Its government is a
+complete anomaly. Neufchâtel forms a component part of the Helvetic
+confederacy, and yet the inhabitants are vassals of the King of Prussia,
+and the aristocracy are proud of this badge of servitude. The King of
+Prussia however does not at all interfere with its internal government, and
+his supremacy is in no other respects useful to him than in giving him a
+slight revenue. French is the language spoken in the canton. There is a
+marked distinction of rank all over Switzerland, except in Geneva, Vaud and
+the small democratic cantons such as Zug and Schwytz, where it is merely
+nominal. In short, tranquillity is the order of the day. Each rank respects
+the privileges of the other and the peasant, however rich, is not at all
+disposed to vary from his usual mode of life or to ape the noble; and
+hence, tho' sumptuary laws are no longer in force, they continue so
+virtually and the peasantry in all the German cantons adhere strictly to
+the national costume.
+
+
+BERN, 14 July.
+
+I put myself in the diligence that plies between Neufchatel and Bern at
+nine p.m., on the 12 July, and the following morning put up at the _Crown
+Inn_ in the city of Bern, in the _Pays Allemand_, whereas the French
+cantons are termed the _Pays Romand_. Bern is a remarkably elegant city as
+much so as any in Italy, and much cleaner withal. The streets are broad,
+and in most of them are _trottoirs_ under arcades. There are a great number
+of book-sellers here, and the best editions of the German authors are to be
+procured very cheap. Bern is situated on an eminence forming almost an
+island as it were in the middle of the river Aar; steep ravines are on all
+sides of it; and there is a bridge over the Aar to keep up the
+communication; and as the borders of the island, on which the city stands,
+are very steep, a zig-zag road, winding along the ravines, brings you to
+the city gates. These gates are very superb. On each side of the gates are
+two enormous white stone bears, the emblems of the tutelary genius of this
+city. The houses are very lofty and solidly built. The promenades in the
+environs of Bern are the finest I have seen anywhere, and the grounds
+allotted to this purpose are very tastefully laid out. These promenades are
+paved with gravel and cut thro' the forests, that lie on the _coteaux_ and
+ravines on the other side of the Aar. There are several neat villas in the
+neighbourhood of these promenades, and there are _cafés_ and _restaurants_
+for those who chuse to refresh themselves. Such is the beauty of these
+walks, that one feels inclined to pass the whole day among them. They are
+laid out in such variety, and are so multiplied, that you often lose your
+way; you are sure however to be brought up by a _point de vue_ at one or
+other of the angles of the zig-zag; and this serves as a guide _pour vous
+orienter_, as the French say. Another favorite promenade is a garden, in
+the town itself, that environs the whole city from which and from the
+superb terrace of the Cathedral you have a magnificent view of the glaciers
+that tower above the Grindelwald and Lauterbrunn. The immense forests that
+are in the neighbourhood of Bern form a striking contrast with the
+cornfields in the vallies and on the _coteaw._ There are but few vineyards
+in the neighbourhood of Bern.
+
+
+BERN, 16 July.
+
+The Diet is held this year in Bern and it is now sitting. I have met with
+the two Deputies of the Canton de Vaud, MM. P----- and M-----. I am glad to
+hear from them that the animosity existing between the two cantons of Bern
+and Vaud is beginning to subside. M. P------ has made a most able and
+conciliating speech at the Diet. Still there is a good deal of jealousy
+rankling in the breast of the Bern _noblesse_ and the _avulsumimperium_ is
+a very sore subject with them. I recollect once at Lausanne meeting with a
+young man of one of the principal families of Bern, who had been hi the
+English service. The conversation happened to turn on the emancipation of
+the Canton de Vaud from the domination of Bern, when the young man became
+perfectly furious and insisted that the Vaudois had no right whatever to
+their liberty, for that the Canton of Bern had purchased the province of
+Vaud from the Dukes of Savoy. _"En un mot" (said he), "ils sont nos
+esclaves, nos ilotes et ils sont aussi clairement notre propriété que les
+nègres de la Jamaïque le sont de leurs maîtres"_
+
+A very harsh measure has lately been passed in the Diet, evidently
+suggested by the aristocracy of Bern, which tended to fine and punish those
+Swiss officers who remained in Prance to serve under Napoleon after his
+return from Elba, and who did not obey the order of the Diet which recalled
+them. A very able objection has been made to this measure in a _brochure,_
+wherein it is stated that many of these officers had no means of living
+out of France and that, on a former occasion, when a number of Swiss
+officers were serving the English Government and were employed in America
+in the war against the United States in 1812 and 1818, the Diet, then under
+Napoleon's influence, issued a decree recalling them and commanding them to
+quit the English service forthwith. This they refused to do and continued
+to serve. No notice whatever was taken of this act of disobedience, when
+they returned to their native country on being disbanded in 1814, and they
+were very favourably received. Why then, says the author of this pamphlet,
+is a similar act of disobedience to pass unnoticed in one instance and to
+be so severely punished in another? Or do you wish to prove that your
+vengeance is directed only against those who remained in France, to fight
+for its liberties, when invaded by a foreign foe, while those who remained
+in America to fight against the liberties and existence of the American
+Republic you have received with applause and congratulation? Is such
+conduct worthy of Republicans? O, fie!
+
+Such an argument is in my opinion convincing for all the world except for
+an English Tory, a French _Ultra_ or a Bern Oligarch.
+
+The Arsenal here is well worth seeing; here is a superb collection of
+ancient armour, much of which were the spoils of the Austrian and
+Burgundian chivalry, who fell in their attempts to crush Helvetic liberty.
+
+By way of shewing how fond the Bernois are of old institutions and customs,
+they have been at the trouble to catch three or four bears and keep them in
+a walled pit in the city, where they are well fed and taken care of. The
+popular superstition is that the bears entertained in this manner
+contribute to the safety of the commonwealth; and this establishment
+continued ever in full force, until the dissolution of the old Confederacy
+took place and the establishment in its place of the Helvetic Republic
+under the influence of the French directorial government. The custom, then,
+appearing absurd and useless, was abolished, and the bears were sold. But
+since the peace of 1814 other bears have been caught and are nourishd, as
+the former ones were, at the expence of the state.
+
+Bern derives its name from _Büren_, the German word for _Bears_ (plural
+number). Only the French spell _Berne_, with an _e_ at the end of it.
+
+There are no theatrical amusements going forward here. Cards and now and
+then a little music form the evening recreations.
+
+In the inn at Bern I became acquainted with a most delightful Milanese lady
+and her son. Her name is L------; she is the widow of an opulent banker at
+Milan and has a large family of children. She was about thirty-eight years
+of age and is still a remarkably handsome woman. Time has made very little
+impression on her and she unites very pleasing manners with a great taste
+for litterature. She is greatly proficient in the English language and
+litterature, which she understands thoroughly, tho' she speaks it with
+difficulty. She is an enthusiastic admirer of Shakespeare, Milton and
+Byron. She had been to Zurich for her son, who was employed in a commercial
+house there, in order to take him back with her into Italy. She spoke
+French as well as Italian, and her son had a very good knowledge of German.
+She offered me a seat in her carriage, on the understanding that I was
+going to Lausanne, where she intended to stop a day or two. An offer of the
+kind made by so elegant and fascinating a woman you may be assured I did
+not scruple to accept, and I was in hopes of improving on this acquaintance
+and renewing it at Milan. Indeed, did not business oblige me to remain some
+weeks at Lausanne, I should certainly offer my services to escort her all
+the way to Milan. She had letters of introduction for Lausanne, and during
+her stay there I acted as her _cicerone_, to point out the most interesting
+objects and points of view, which the place affords.
+
+
+[104] Louis Charles Joseph Gravier, vicomte de Vergennes d'Alonné, was the
+ son of the Comte de Vergennes, who was minister under the reign of
+ Louisi XVI. Born at Constantinople in 1766, he took service at the
+ early age of thirteen, was promoted captain in 1782 and colonel in
+ 1788. Having emigrated in 1791, he served in Condé's army, then took
+ service in England from 1795 to 1797. On the 3rd March, 1815, he
+ re-entered the army as "maréchal de camp," and, on the 2nd November of
+ that same year, was promoted general commander of the department of
+ Puy de Dôme. He retired on the 8th March, 1817, and seems to have been
+ much regretted at Clermont. Died 1821.--ED.
+
+[105] Jean François Wlnkens, born at Aix-la-Chapelle In 1790, is mentioned
+ in the records of the French War Office as having served in the 25th
+ Regiment at Waterloo. His family may have belonged to Strassburg.--ED.
+
+[106] Pierre Jacques Jomini, Protestant minister at Avenches from 1808 to
+ 1819.--ED.
+
+[107] The Treytorrens family, of old nobility and fame, now extinct,
+ possessed a large estate at Guévaux, on the borders of the lake of
+ Morat.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEPTEMBER 1817-APRIL 1818
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Milan, Florence, Rome and Naples--Residence at
+Naples--The theatre of San Carlo--Rossini's operas--Gaming in Naples--The
+_Lazzaroni_--Public writers--Carbonarism--Return to Rome--Christmas eve at
+Santa Maria Maggiore--Mme Dionigi--Theatricals--Society in Rome--The papal
+government--Lucien Bonaparte, prince of Canino--Louis Napoleon, ex-King of
+Holland--Pope Pius VII--Thorwaldsen--Granet--The Holy Week in Rome--The
+Duchess of Devonshire--From Rome to Florence by the Perugia road.
+
+I started from Lausanne with a party of two ladies in a Milanese _vettura_
+on the morning of the 20th September. We arrived at Milan on the 25th late
+in the evening. On passing the Simplon we met with three or four men who
+had the appearance of soldiers, and asked for alms something in the style
+of the old Spanish soldier who accosted Gil Blas on his first journey. Our
+ladies were a little alarmed. On travelling over the plains of Lombardy,
+one of these ladies, who had never before been out of her country
+(Switzerland) and was consequently accustomed to see the horizon bounded at
+a very short distance by immense mountains on all sides, was much alarmed,
+on arrival at the plain, at seeing no bounds to the horizon; she was
+apprehensive of _falling down_ and _rolling over_. Her remark reminded me
+of one of the objections made to the project of Columbus's voyage in
+discovery of a western passage to India; it was said that in consequence of
+the rotundity of the earth they would roll down and never be able to get up
+again. The sensation experienced by my fellow traveller, however, may be
+well accounted for and explained by any one who from a plain surface
+situated on a great height looks down without a railing or balcony.
+
+These ladies were quite delighted with the splendour and bustle of Milan
+and particularly when I took them to the _Scala_ theatre, where a very
+splendid _Ballo_ was given, intitled _Sammi Ré d'Egitto_. The scenery and
+decorations were magnificent, being taken from Denon's drawings of Egyptian
+views, and the costume was exceedingly appropriate. My fellow travellers
+were much struck at the appearance of the horses on the stage and the
+grotesque dancing. The last scene was the most magnificent. It represented
+the great Pyramids, on the angles of which stood a line of soldiers from
+the _base_ to the _apex_ holding lighted torches. The _coup d'oeil_ was
+enchanting. I took the ladies to see my old friend Girolamo and in fine was
+their _cicerone_ every where. We remained only four days at Milan and then
+proceeded to Florence, where we arrived on the 7th October. We employed six
+days for our journey and one day we halted at Bologna. After remaining four
+days at Florence and taking the Radicofani road we arrived at Rome the 18th
+October.
+
+At Rome I met my friend P.G. and his wife who were travelling towards
+Naples and I likewise made two very pleasant acquaintances, the one a
+Portuguese, the other a Milanese. The Milanese is a cousin of the
+Neapolitan minister Di M------; and the Portuguese (M. de N------) had been
+employed by his Government in a diplomatic capacity at Vienna. At Rome I
+engaged appartments from the 20th of December for three months and then
+started for Naples, with the intention of passing two months there, and
+returning to Rome, to be in time to witness the fete at Christmas Eve. At
+Velletri I met with a Jamaica family, Mr and Mrs O------, with their
+daughter and daughter-in-law; and we were strongly advised to take an
+escort as far as _Torre tre ponti_, being obliged to start very early from
+Velletri in order to reach Terracina before night-fall. Nothing however
+occurred and we arrived at Terracina without accident. The rascally
+innkeeper there made Mr O------ pay forty franks for each miserable room
+that he occupied, and fifteen franks a head for his supper; he was very
+insolent with all. I was rejoiced to find that in one instance he failed in
+his hopes of extortion. As he is obliged by law to furnish supper and beds
+at a fixed price to those who travel with _vetturini_ and are _spesati_,
+he, whenever a _vetturino_ arrives locks up all his decent chambers and
+says that they are engaged, in order to keep them for those travellers who
+may arrive in their own carriages and whom he can fleece _ad libitum_. A
+friend of mine and his lady, who were travelling in their own carriage,
+had, in order to avoid this extortion, engaged with a _vetturino_ to
+conduct them from Naples to Rome with _his horses_, but their own carriage,
+and, had stipulated to be _spesati_. Mine host of Terracina, seeing a smart
+carriage drive up, ordered one of his best rooms to be got ready, ushered
+them in himself and returnd in half an hour to ask what they would have for
+supper; when to his great astonishment and mortification, they referred him
+for the arrangement of the supper to the _vetturino_, saying that they were
+_spesati_. He then began to curse and swear, said that they should not have
+that room, and wanted to turn them out of it forcibly; but my friend Major
+G---- took up one of his pistols, which were lying on the table, and told
+the innkeeper that if he did not cease to molest them and instantly quit
+the room, he would blow out his brains. This threat had the desired effect,
+and he withdrew. It appears that this fellow has in the end outwitted
+himself, for most people now, who travel on this road in their own
+carriage, chuse to travel with a _vetturino_ and his horses and are
+_spesati_, solely in order to avoid the extortion practised upon them.
+
+We arrived at Naples on the 29th October without accident. A _buona grazia_
+of a _scudo_ at the frontier obviated the delay which would otherwise have
+occurred in examining our baggage by the _douaniers_. I put up at No 1
+_Largo St Anna di Palazzo_, near the _Strada di Toledo_, at the house of
+one Berlier, who had been a domestic of poor Murat's. The Austrian troops
+being now withdrawn, the military cordon of sentinels from the frontier to
+Naples is kept up by the Neapolitan troops; but what a contrast between the
+vigilance of the Austrian sentinels, and the negligence of the Neapolitans!
+The last time I travelled on this road, I never failed, after dusk, to hear
+the shout of _Wer da?_ of the Austrian sentries, long before I came up to
+them, and I always found them alert. Now that the cordon was Neapolitan, I
+always found the sentries either asleep, or playing at cards with their
+companion (the sentries being double), both having left their arms at the
+place where they were posted. At night I have no doubt they all fall
+asleep, so that three or four active _banditti_ might come and cut the
+throats of the whole chain of sentries in detail.
+
+
+30th October, 1818.
+
+I have begun my course of water drinking at the fountain of Sta Lucia.
+Since I was here the last time, the theatre of St Carlo has been finished
+and I went to visit it the second night after my arrival. It is a noble
+theatre and of immense size, larger it is said than the _Scala_ at Milan,
+tho' it does not appear so. The profusion of ornament and gilding serves to
+diminish the appearance of its magnitude. It is probably now the most
+magnificent theatre in Europe. The performance was _Il Babiere di Siviglia_
+by Rossini, and afterwards a superb _Ballo_ taken closely from Coleman's
+_Blue-Beard_ and arranged as a _Ballo_ by Vestris. The only difference lies
+in the costume and the scenery; for here the _Barbe Bleue,_ instead of
+being a Turkish Pacha, as in Coleman's piece, is a Chinese Mandarin, and
+the decorations are all Chinese. A great deal of Scotch music is introduced
+in this _Ballo,_ and seems to give great satisfaction. At the little
+theatre of San Carlino I witnessed the representation of Rossini's
+_Cenerentola,_ a most delightful piece. The young actress who did the part
+of Cenerentola acted it to perfection and sung so sweetly and correctly,
+that it would seem as if the _rôle_ were composed on purpose for her. The
+part of Don Magnifico was extremely well played, and those of the sisters
+very fairly and appropriately. The three actresses who did the part of
+Cenerentola and her sisters, were all handsome, but she who did Cenerentola
+surpassed them all; she was a perfect beauty and a grace. I think the music
+of this opera would please the public taste in England. Rossini seems to
+have banished every other musical composer from the stage.
+
+I have seen, at the Theatre of San Carlo, the _Don Giovanni_ of Mozart; but
+certainly, after being accustomed to the extreme vivacity of Rossini's
+style, the music, even of the divine Mozart, appears to go off heavily.
+There is too much of what the French call _musique de fanfares_ in the
+opera of _Don Giovanni_ and I believe most of the Italians are of my way of
+thinking.
+
+We have just heard of the death of the poor Princess Charlotte. I am no
+great admirer of Kings and Queens; and yet I must own, I could not help
+feeling regret for the death of this princess. I had formed a very high
+opinion of her, from many traits in her character; and I fancied and hoped
+that she was destined to redeem England from the degradation and bad odour
+into which she had been plunged by the borough-mongers and bureaucrats,
+engendered by the Pitt system. She had liberal ideas and an independent
+spirit. I really almost caught myself shedding tears at this event, and had
+she been buried here, I should have gone to scatter flowers upon her tomb:
+
+ His saltem accumulem donis, et fungar inani
+ Munere.[108]
+
+Has no royalist or ministerial poet been found to do hommage to her
+_manes_? Had she lived to be Queen of England she would have found a
+thousand venal pens to give her every virtue under heaven.
+
+There is a professor of natural philosophy now at Naples, of the name of
+Amici, from Modena, who has invented a microscope of immense power. The
+circulation of the blood in the thigh of a frog (the coldest animal in
+nature), when viewed thro' this microscope, appears to take place with the
+rapidity of a Swiss torrent.
+
+Since I have been here, I have once more ascended Vesuvius; there was no
+eruption at all this time, but I witnessed the sight of a stream of red-hot
+liquid lava flowing slowly down the flank of the mountain. It was about two
+and a half feet broad.
+
+In my letters from Naples, the last time I was there, I gave you some idea
+of the state of society. Among the upper classes gaming is reduced to a
+science and is almost exclusively the order of the day. There is little or
+no taste for litterature among any part of the native society. The upper
+classes are sensualists; the middling ignorant and superstitious. With
+regard to the _Lazzaroni_, I do not think that they at all deserve the ill
+name that has been given to them. They always seem good humoured and
+willing to work, when employment is given to them; and they do not appear
+at all disposed to disturb the public peace, which, from their being so
+numerous and formidable a body, they could easily do. The Neapolitan
+dialect has a far greater affinity to the Spanish than to the Tuscan, and
+there are likewise, a great many Greek words in it. When one takes into
+consideration the extreme ignorance that prevails among the Neapolitans in
+general, one is astonished that such a prodigy of genius as Filangieri
+could have sprung up among them. What talent, application, deep research
+and judgment were united in that illustrious man! And yet there are many
+Neapolitans of rank who have never heard of him. Would you believe that on
+my asking one of the principal booksellers in Naples for Filangieri's work
+on legislation (an immortal work which has called forth the admiration and
+eulogy of the greatest geniuses of the age, of which Benjamin Franklin and
+Sir Wm Jones spoke in the most unqualified terms of approbation; a work
+which has been translated into all the languages of Europe), I was told by
+the bookseller that he had never heard either of the author or of his work.
+
+A very curious thing at Naples is the number of public writers; who compose
+letters and memorials in booths, fitted up in the streets. As the great
+majority of the people are so ignorant as to be unable to read or write, it
+follows that when they receive letters, they must find somebody to read
+them for them and to write the answers required. They accordingly, on the
+receipt of a letter, bring it to one of these public scribes, ask him to
+read it for them and to write an answer, for which trouble he receives a
+fixed pay. These writers are thus let into the secrets of family affairs of
+more than half of the city; and as some-of them are in the pay of the
+Government for communicating intelligence, you may guess how formidable
+they may become to liberty and how dangerous an engine in the hands of a
+despotic Government.
+
+It appears that the theatre of San Carlo is principally kept up by gaming;
+that is to say, the managers and proprietors would not undertake the
+direction of it without the Gaming Bank being annexed to it; for otherwise
+they would lose money, the expence of the Opera on account of the
+magnificent decorations of the Ballets being very great, which the receipts
+of the theatre are insufficient to meet; but the profits of the Casino
+cover all and amply reimburse the proprietors.
+
+With regard to political opinions here there is a great stagnation. It
+costs the Neapolitans too much trouble to think and reflect. M-----, the
+principal minister, is however no favourite; neither is N-----, who has
+quitted the Austrian service, and is nominated Captain-General of the
+Neapolitan army.[109]
+
+There is a great talk about the increase of Carbonarism. You will probably
+ask me what Carbonarism means. I am not initiated in the secret of the
+Carbonari; but as far as I can understand, this sect or secret society has
+its mysteries like modern Free-masonry or like the Orphics of old, and
+several progressive degrees of initiation are required. Its secret object
+is said to be the emancipation of Italy from a foreign despotism and the
+forming of a government purely national. This is the reason why this sect
+is regarded with as much jealousy by the different governments of Italy as
+the early Christians used to be by the Pagan Emperors. Great proofs of
+courage, constancy and self denial are required from the initiated; and
+very many fail, or do not rise beyond the lower degrees of initiation, for
+it is very difficult for an Italian to withstand sensuality. But the
+leaders of this sect are perfectly in the right to require such proofs, for
+no man is fit to be trusted with any political design whatever, who has not
+obtained the greatest mastery over his passions. The word _Carbonari_, I
+need not tell you, means _Coalmen_; the Italian history presents many
+examples of secret societies taking their appellation from some mechanical
+profession.
+
+I have now been nearly two months in Naples, and the _zampogne_ or
+bag-pipes, which play about the streets at night, announce the speedy
+approach of Christmas, so that I shall soon take my departure for Rome.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I left Naples on the 18th of December and arrived at Rome on the 22d. I am
+settled in my old lodgings, No. 29 _Piazza di Spagna_. Nothing worth
+mentioning occurred during the journey.
+
+The fete, of the birth of Christ held at Santa Maria Maggiore on the
+evening of the 24th December is of the most splendid description, and
+attended by an immense crowd of women. Guns are fired on the moment that
+the birth of the Saviour is announced, and this event occurs precisely at
+midnight. The Romans seem to rejoice as much at the anniversary of this
+event, as if it happened for the first time, and as if immediate temporal
+advantage were to be derived from it.
+
+I have mixed a good deal in society in Rome since my return from Naples.
+Among other acquaintance I must particularly distinguish Mme Dionigi, a
+very celebrated lady, possessing universality of talent.[110] She is well
+known all over Italy, for the extent of her litterary attainments, but more
+particularly for her proficiency in the fine arts, above all in painting,
+of which she is an adept. She also possesses the most amiable qualities of
+the heart, and is universally beloved and respected for the worth of her
+private character, and for her generous disposition. She has all the
+vivacity of intellect belonging to youth, tho' now nearly eighty-six years
+of age,[111] and of a very delicate physical constitution; in short she
+affords, and I often tell her so, the most striking proof of the
+immortality of the soul. There is a _conversazione_ at her house twice a
+week, where you meet with foreign as well as Italian _litterati_, and
+persons of distinction of all nations, tongues and languages. Her eldest
+daughter, Mme D'Orfei, is an excellent _improvisatrice_, and has frequently
+given us very favourable specimens of the inspiration which breathes itself
+in her soul. I have likewise witnessed the talent of two very extraordinary
+_improvisatori_, the one a young girl of eighteen years of age, by name
+Rosa Taddei. She is the daughter of the proprietor of the _Teatro della
+Valle_ at Rome, and sometimes performs herself in dramatic pieces; yet,
+strange to say, tho' she is an admirable _improvisatrice_ and possesses a
+thorough classic and historical knowledge, she is but an indifferent
+actress.
+
+It is a great shame that her father obliges her to act on the stage in very
+inferior parts, when she ought only to exhibit on the tripod. I assisted at
+an _Accademia_ given by her one evening at the _Teatro della Valle_, when
+she improvised on the following subjects, which were proposed by various
+members of the audience: 1st, _La morte d'Egeo_; 2dy, _La Madre Ebrea_;
+3rd, _Coriolano alle mura di Roma_; 4th, _Ugolino_; 5th, _Saffo e Faone_;
+6th, in the Carnaval with the following _intercalario: "Maschera ti
+conosco, tieni la benda al cor_!" which _intercalario_ compels a rhyme in
+_osco_, a most difficult one. The _Madre Ebrea_ and _Coriolano_ were given
+in _ottava rima_ with a _rima obbligata_ for each stanza. The _Morte
+d'Egeo_ was given in _terza rima_. Her versification appeared to be
+excellent, nor could I detect the absence or superabundance, of a single
+syllable. She requires the aid of music, chuses the melody; the audience
+propose the subject, and _rima obbligata_, and the _intercalario_, where it
+is required. In her gestures, particularly before she begins to recite, she
+reminded me of the description given of the priestess of. Delphi. She walks
+along the stage for four or five minutes in silent meditation on the
+subject proposed, then suddenly stops, calls to the musicians to play a
+certain symphony and then begins as if inspired. Among the different rhimes
+in _osco_, a gentleman who sat next to me proposed to her _Cimosco_. I
+asked him what _Cimosco_ he meant; he replied a Tuscan poet of that name.
+For my part, I had never heard of any other of that name than the King
+_Cimosco_ in the _Orlando Furioso_, who makes use of fire-arms; and Rosa
+Taddei was, it appears, of my opinion, since this was the _Cimosco_ she
+chose to characterise; and she made thereby a very neat and happy
+comparison between the gun of Cimosco and the arrow of Cupid. This talent
+of the _improvisatori_ is certainly wonderful, and one for which there is
+no accounting. It appears peculiar to the Italian nation alone among the
+moderns, but probably was in vogue among the ancient Greeks also. It is
+certain that Rosa Taddei gives as fine thoughts as are to be met with in
+most poets, and I am very much tempted to incline to Forsyth's opinion that
+Homer himself was neither more nor less than an _improvisatore_, the Greek
+language affording nearly as many poetic licences as the Italian, and the
+faculty of heaping epithet on epithet being common in both languages.
+
+The other genius in this wonderful art is Signer Sgricci. He is so far
+superior to Rosa Taddei in being five or six years older, in being a very
+good Latinist and hi _improvising_ whole tragedies on any subject, chosen
+by the audience. When the subject is chosen, he develops his plan, fixes
+his _dramatis personae_ and then strikes off in _versi sciolti_. He at
+times introduces a chorus with lyric poetry. I was present one evening at
+an _Accademia_ given by him in the Palazzo Chigi. The subject chosen was
+_Sophonisba_ and it was wonderful the manner in which he varied his plot
+from that of every other dramatic author on the same subject. He _acted_
+the drama, as well as composed it, and pourtrayed the different characters
+with the happiest effect. The ardent passion and impetuosity of Massinissa,
+the studied calm philosophy and stoicism of Scipio, the romantic yet
+dignified attachment of Sophonisba, and the plain soldierlike honorable
+behaviour of Syphax were given in a very superior style. I recollect
+particularly a line he puts in the mouth of Scipio, when he is endeavouring
+to persuade Massinissa to resist the allurements and blandishments of love:
+
+ Chè cor di donne è laberinto, in quale
+ Facil si perde l'intelletto umano.
+
+This drama he divided into three acts, and on its termination he improvised
+a poem in _terza rima_ on the subject of the contest of Ajax and Ulysses
+for the armour of Achilles.
+
+Wonderful, however, as this act of improvising may appear, it is not
+perhaps so much so as the mathematical faculty of a youth of eight years of
+age, Yorkshireman by birth, who has lately exhibited his talent for
+arithmetical calculation _improvised_ in England and who in a few seconds,
+from mental calculation, could give the cube root of a number containing
+fifteen or sixteen figures.
+
+Is not all this a confirmation of Doctor Gall's theory on craniology? viz.,
+that our faculties depend on the organisation of the scull. I think I have
+seen this frequently exemplified at Eton. I have known a boy who could not
+compose a verse, make a considerable figure in arithmetic and geometry; and
+another, who could write Latin verse with almost Ovidian elegance, and yet
+could not work the simplest question in vulgar fractions. Indeed, I think
+there seems little doubt that we are born with dispositions and
+propensities, which may be developed and encouraged, or damped and checked
+altogether by education.
+
+I have become acquainted with several families at Rome, so that I am at no
+loss where to spend my evenings. Music is the never failing resource for
+those with whom the spirit of conversation fails. The society at Rome is
+perfectly free from etiquette or _gêne_. When once presented to a family
+you may enter their house every evening without invitation, make your bow
+to the master and mistress of the house, enter into conversation or not as
+you please. You may absent yourself for weeks together from these
+_conversazioni_, and nobody will on your re-appearance enquire where you
+have been or what you have been doing. In short, in the intercourse with
+Roman society, you meet with great affability, sometimes a little _ennui_,
+but no _commérage_. The _avvocati_ may be said to form almost exclusively
+the middling class in Rome, and they educate their families very
+respectably. This class was much caressed by the French Government during
+the time that Rome was annexed to the French Empire, and most of the
+employés of the Government at that time were taken from this class. I have
+met with several sensible well-informed people, who have been accurate
+observers of the times, and had derived profit in point of instruction from
+the scenes they had witnessed.
+
+The Papal Government began, as most of the restored governments did, by
+displacing many of these gentlemen, for no other fault than because they
+had served under the Ex-government, and replaced them by ecclesiastics, as
+in the olden time. But the Papal Government very soon discovered that the
+whole political machine would be very soon at a stand, by such an
+_épuration_; and the most of them have been since reinstated. Consalvi, the
+Secretary of State, is a very sensible man; he has hard battles to fight
+with the _Ultras_ of Rome in order to maintain in force the useful
+regulations introduced by the French Government, particularly the
+organisation of a vigilant police, and the putting a stop to the murders
+and robberies, which used formerly to be committed with impunity. The
+French checked the system of granting asylum to these vagabonds altogether.
+But on the restoration of the Papal Government a strong interest was made
+to allow asylums, as formerly, to criminals. Many of these gentry began to
+think that the good old times were come again, wherein they could commit
+with impunity the most atrocious crimes; and no less than eighty persons
+were in prison at one time for murder. This opened the eyes of the
+Government, and Consalvi insisted on the execution of these men and carried
+his point of establishing a vigilant police. The Army too has been put on a
+better footing. The Papal troops are now clothed and disciplined in the
+French manner, and make a most respectable appearance. The infantry is
+clothed in white; the cavalry in green. The cockade is white and yellow. No
+greater proof can be given of the merit and utility of the French
+institutions in Italy, than the circumstance of all the restored
+Governments being obliged by their interests (tho' contrary to their wishes
+and prejudices), to adopt and enforce them. There is still required,
+however, a severer law for the punishment of post office defalcations.
+Simple dismissal is by no means adequate, when it is considered how much
+mischief may ensue from such offences. A very serious offence of this
+nature and which has made a great sensation, has lately occurred. As all
+foreign letters must be franked, and as the postage to England is very
+high, one of the clerks at the Post office had been in the habit of
+receiving money for the franking of letters, appropriated it to his own
+use, and never forwarded the letters. This created great inconvenience; a
+number of families having never received answers to their letters and being
+without the expected remittances, began to be uneasy and to complain. An
+enquiry was instituted, and it was discovered that the clerk above
+mentioned had been carrying on this game to a great extent. He used to tear
+the letters and throw the fragments into a closet. Several scraps of
+letters were thus discovered and, on being examined, he made an ample
+confession of his practises. He was merely discharged, and no other
+punishment was indicted on him. I am no advocate for the punishment of
+death for any other crime but wilful murder; but surely this fellow was
+worse than a robber, and deserved a greater severity of punishment.
+
+
+ROME, 10th February, 1818.
+
+The Carnaval has long since begun, and this is the heaven of the Roman
+ladies. On my remarking to a lady that I was soon tired of it and after a
+day or two found it very childish, she replied: "_Bisogna esser donna e
+donna Italiana per ben godere de' piaceri del Carnevale_."
+
+When I speak of the Carnaval, I speak of the last ten days of it which
+precede Lent. The following is the detail of the day's amusement during the
+season.
+
+After dinner, which is always early, the masks sally out and repair to the
+_Corso_. The windows and balconies of the houses are filled with
+spectators, in and out of masks. A scaffolding containing an immense number
+of seats is constructed in the shape of a rectangle, beginning at the
+_Piazza del Popolo_, running parallel to the _Corso_ on each side, and
+terminating near the _Piazza di Venezia_; close to which is the goal of the
+horse race that takes place in this enclosure. Carriages, with persons in
+them, generally masked, parade up and down this space in two currents, the
+one ascending, the other descending the _Corso_. They are saluted as they
+pass with showers of white comfits from the spectators on the seats of the
+scaffolding, or from the balconies and windows on each side of the street.
+These comfits break into a white powder and bespatter the clothes of the
+person on whom they fall as if hair-powder had been thrown on them. This
+seems to be the grand joke of this part of the Carnival. After the
+carriages have paraded about an hour, a signal is given by the firing of a
+gun that the horse race is about to begin. The carriages, on the gun being
+fired, must immediately evacuate the _Corso_ in order to leave it clear for
+the race; some move off and _rendezvous_ on the _Piazza del Popolo_ just
+behind the scaffolding, from the foot of which the horses start; others
+file off by the _Via Ripetta_ and take their stand on the _Piazza Colonna_.
+The horse-race is performed by horses without riders, generally five or six
+at a time. They are each held with a bridle or halter by a man who stands
+by them, in order to prevent their starting before the signal is given; and
+this requires no small degree of force and dexterity, as the horses are
+exceedingly impatient to set off. The manes of the horses are dressed in
+ribbands of different colours to distinguish them. Pieces of tin, small
+bells and other noisy materials are fastened to their manes and tails, in
+order by frightening the poor animals, to make them run the faster, and
+with this view also squibs and crackers are discharged at them as they pass
+along. A second gun is the signal for starting; the keepers loose their
+hold, and off go the horses. The horse that arrives the first at the goal
+wins the grand prize; and there are smaller ones for the two next. This
+race is repeated four or five times till dusk, and then the company
+separate and return home to dress. They then repair to the balls at the
+different casinos, and at the conclusion of the ball, supper parties are
+formed either at _restaurants_ or at each other's houses. During the time
+occupied in the balls and promenades, as every body goes masked either in
+character or in _domino_, there is a fine opportunity for pairing off, and
+it is no doubt turned to account. This is a pretty accurate account of a
+Roman Carnaval. A great deal of wit and repartee takes place among the
+masks and they are in general extremely well supported, and indeed they
+ought to be, for there is a great sameness of character assumed at every
+masquerade, and very little novelty is struck out, except perhaps by some
+foreigner, who chuses to introduce a national character of his own, which
+is probably but little, or not at all, understood by the natives, and very
+often not at all well supported by the foreigner himself. An American
+gentleman once made his appearance as an Indian warrior with his
+war-hatchet and calumet; he danced the war dance, which excited great
+astonishment. He then presented his calumet to a mask, who not knowing what
+the ceremony meant, declined it, when the Mohawk flourished his hatchet and
+gave such a dreadful shriek as to set the whole company in alarm.[112] On
+the whole this character was so little understood that it was looked upon
+as a _mauvaise plaisanterie_.
+
+The usual characters are Pulcinelli, Arlecchini, Spanish Grandees, Turks,
+fortune tellers, flower girls and Devils; sometimes too they go in the
+costume of the Gods and Goddesses of the ancient mythology. I observe that
+the English ladies here prefer to appear without masks in the costume of
+the Swiss and Italian peasantry.
+
+There is a very large English society at Rome, and at some of the parties
+here, you could suppose yourself in Grosvenor Square.
+
+The late political changes have brought together in Rome many persons of
+the most opposite parties and sentiments, who have fallen from the height
+of political power and influence into a private station, but who enjoy
+themselves here unmolested, and even protected by the Government, and are
+much courted by foreigners. I have seen at the same masquerade, in the
+_Teatro Aliberti_, in boxes close to each other, the Queen of Spam (mother
+of Ferdinand VII), and the Princess Borghese, Napoleon's sister. In a box
+at a short distance from them were Lucian Buonaparte, his wife and
+daughters. Besides these, the following ex-Sovereigns and persons of
+distinction, fallen from their high estate, reside in Rome, viz., King
+Charles IV of Spain; the ex-King of Holland, Louis Buonaparte; the
+abdicated King of Sardinia, Victor Emanuel; Don Manuel Godoy, the Prince of
+Peace; Cardinal Fesch, and Madame Letitia, the mother of Napoleon.
+
+I had an opportunity of being presented to Lucian, who bears the title of
+Prince of Canino, before I left Rome for Naples, as on leaving the Pays de
+Vaud I was charged by a Swiss gentleman to deliver a letter to him, the
+purport of which was to state that he had rendered services to Joseph
+Napoleon, when he was resident in that Canton, in consequence of which he
+had been persecuted and deprived of his employment at Lausanne, which was
+that of Captain of the Gendarmerie; and in the letter he sollicited
+pecuniary assistance from the Prince of Canino. I rode out one morning to
+the Villa of Ruffinella where the Prince resides and was very politely
+received; it appeared however that the Prince was totally unacquainted with
+the person who wrote the letter, nor was he at all aware of the
+circumstances therein mentioned. I told him that I was but little
+acquainted with the writer of the letter, but that he, on hearing of my
+intention of going to Rome, asked me to deliver it personally. The Prince
+told me he would write himself to the applicant on the subject. Here the
+negotiation ended; but on my taking leave the Prince said he should be
+happy to see me whenever I chose to call. The Prince has the character of
+being an excellent father and husband, and seems entirely and almost
+exclusively devoted to his family. He has a remarkably fine collection of
+pictures and statues in his house at Rome.
+
+I had an opportunity likewise of seeing the ex-King of Holland, Louis
+Napoleon, who seems to be a most excellent and amiable man, and in fact
+everybody agrees in speaking of him with eulogy.
+
+With regard to the present Pontiff Pius VII, from the excellence of his
+private character and virtues, and from his unassuming manners and goodness
+of heart, there is but one opinion respecting him. Even those who do not
+like the ecclesiastical Government, and behold in it the degradation of
+Italy, render justice to the good qualities of Pius VII. He always
+displayed the greatest moderation and humanity in prosperity, and in
+adversity he was firm and dignified. In his morals and habits he is quite a
+primitive Christian, and if he does not possess that great political talent
+which has distinguished some of his predecessors, he has been particularly
+fortunate and discriminating in the choice of his minister, in whom are
+united ability, firmness, suavity of manner and unimpeachable character. I
+think I have thus given a faithful delineation of Cardinal Consalvi.
+
+
+ROME, March 12th.
+
+I have made a very valuable acquaintance in M. K[ölle][113] the envoy of
+the King of Würtemberg, to the Holy See. He is an enthusiastic admirer of
+his countryman the poet Schiller, and thro' his means of procuring German
+books, I am enabled to prosecute my studies in that noble language. An
+Italian lady there having heard much of Schiller and Bürger, and not being
+acquainted with the German language, requested me to make an Italian
+translation of some of the pieces of those poets; chusing the _Leonora_ of
+Bürger as one, and leaving to myself the choice of one from Schiller, I
+represented the extreme difficulty of the task, but as she had read a
+sonnet of mine on Lord Guildford's project of establishing an University in
+the Italian language, she would not hear of any excuse. To work then I set,
+and completed the translation of _Leonora_, together with one of Schiller's
+_Feast of Eleusis_. These and my sonnet were the cause of my being
+recommended for admission as a member of the Academy _degli Arcadi_ in Rome
+and I received the pastoral name of _Galeso Itaoense_.
+
+The Carnaval is now over and the ladies are all at their _Livres d'Heures_,
+posting masses and prayers to the credit side, to counterbalance the sins
+and frailties committed during the carnaval in the account which they keep
+in the Ledger of Heaven. Dancing and masquerading are now over and
+_Requiems_ and the _Miserere_ the order of the day at the _conversazioni_.
+
+At Mr K[ölle]'s house I have become acquainted with Thorwaldsen, the famous
+Danish sculptor, who is by many considered as the successful rival of
+Canova; but their respective styles are so different, that a comparison can
+scarce be made between them. Canova excels in the soft and graceful, in the
+figures of youthful females and young men; Thorwaldsen in the grave, stern
+and terrible. In a word, did I wish to have made a Hebe, a Venus, an
+Antinoüs, an Apollo, I should charge Canova with their execution. Did I
+wish for an Ajax, an Hercules, a Neptune, a Jupiter, I should give the
+preference to Thorwaldsen.
+
+In their private characters they much resemble each other, being both
+honorable, generous, unassuming, and enthusiastic lovers of their
+profession and of the fine arts hi general.
+
+I have been to see a remarkably fine picture, by a modern French artist, of
+the name of Granet. It may be considered as the _chef d'oeuvre_ of the
+perspective or dioramic art. This picture represents the ulterior of the
+convent of the Capuchins, near the Barberini Palace. The picture is by no
+means a very large one; but the optical deception is astonishing. You fancy
+you are standing at the entrance of a long hall and ready to enter it; on
+looking at it, thro' a piece of paper rolled hi form of a speaking
+trumpet--which by hiding from the sight the frame of the picture, prevents
+the illusion from being dissipated--you suppose you could walk into the
+hall; and each figure of a monk therein appears a real human creature, seen
+from a long distance, so skilfully has the artist disposed his light and
+shade. This picture has excited the admiration of connoisseurs, as well as
+others, and it is universally proclaimed a masterpiece. M. Granet's house
+is filled every day with persons coming to see this picture, and many
+repeat their visits several tunes in the week. He has received several
+orders for copies of this picture, and I fancy he begins to be tired of
+eternally copying the same thing; for he told me that he wished that the
+gentlemen who employed him would vary their subjects, and either chuse some
+other themselves, or let him chuse for them. But no! such is the effect of
+vogue and fashion, and such the despotic influence they exercise even over
+the polite arts, that everybody must have a copy of Granet's picture of the
+interior of the Convent of Capuchins _coûte que coûte_; so that poor Granet
+seems bound to this Convent for life; except in the intervals of his
+labours, he should hit off another subject, with equal felicity, and this
+alone may perhaps serve to diminish the universal desire of possessing a
+copy of the Convent. The original picture is destined for the King of
+France.[114]
+
+I remarked, in the collection of the works of this artist, a small picture
+representing Galileo in prison, and a monk descending the steps of the
+dungeon bringing him his scanty meal. A lamp hangs suspended from the roof,
+in the centre of the dungeon, and the artist has made a very happy hit in
+throwing the whole glare of the lamp on the countenance of Galileo, who is
+seated reading a book, while the gaoler monk is left completely in the
+shade. On seeing this I exclaimed: _Veramente, Signor Granet, e buonissimo
+quel vostro concetto!_
+
+
+Easter Tuesday.
+
+I have at length seen all the fine sights that Rome affords during the Holy
+Week, and have witnessed most of the religious ceremonies, viz., the
+illuminated cross hi St Peter's on Good Friday; the high mass celebrated by
+the Pope in person on Easter Sunday; the Papal benediction from a window of
+the church above the façade on the same day; the illumination of the façade
+of St Peter's on Easter Monday, and the _Girandola_ or grand firework at
+the Castle of St Angelo on the same evening. The ceremony of the Pope
+washing the feet of twelve poor men I did not see, for I could not get into
+the Sistine Chapel, where the ceremony was performed: and at the mass
+performed by the Pope in the Sistine Chapel I did contrive to enter, but
+was so oppressed by the crowd and heat, that I almost fainted away, and was
+very glad to get out of the Chapel again, before the ceremony commenced.
+Why in the name of commonsense do they perform these ceremonies in the
+Sistine Chapel which is small, instead of doing them in the church of St
+Peter's, which would contain so many people and produce a much grander
+effect?
+
+A great many people are deprived of seeing the ceremonies in the Sistine
+Chapel from the difficulty of getting in. The Pope's Swiss Guard attend on
+that day in their ancient _costume_, with helmets, cuirasses and halberds;
+these guard the entrance of the staircase leading to the Chapel, and they
+have no small trouble and difficulty in maintaining order, as there is
+always a great scuffle to get in, and they are particularly importuned by
+German visitors, who thinking to be favored by them, in speaking to them in
+their own language, vociferate; _Ich bin Ihr Landsmann!_ and hope by this
+to obtain a preference.
+
+On Friday evening a large Cross is erected before the grand altar; every
+part of this Cross is filled with lamps, and at seven in the evening the
+whole is illuminated. It has a most brilliant appearance and gives the
+happiest _chiaro-oscuro_ effect to the statues, columns and pilasters which
+abound in this vast temple. There is no other light on this occasion than
+that reflected from the Cross. On Easter Sunday, when the Pope celebrates
+high mass in the church of St Peter's, the Papal noble Guard, composed of
+young men from the principal families in Rome, form a hedge on each side of
+the nave of the church, from the entrance of the facade to the grand altar.
+The street or interval formed between this double line may be about thirty
+feet broad, and behind this guard or in any other part of the church, the
+spectators may stand; but as these guards wear very large feathers in their
+hats, they intercept very much the sight of those who stand behind them.
+The uniform of the Papal Noble Guard is very splendid, being a scarlet
+coat, covered with gold lace, white feathers, white breeches and long
+military boots. The approach of the Pope is announced by the thunder of
+cannon, and he is brought into the Church dressed in full pontificals, with
+the triple Crown on his head, on a chair borne by men, _palanquin_ fashion;
+he is conducted thro' the lane formed by the Papal Guard, and as he passes
+he makes the sign of the cross several times with his finger, repeating the
+words: _Urbi et Orbi_. He is then set down, with his face fronting the
+baldachin, when he immediately takes off the tiara, and begins the
+ceremony. That ended, he leaves the church in the same state, and then
+ascends the staircase, in order to prepare to give the benediction, which
+is usually given from a window above the facade of the church. The Pope is
+there seated on a chair with the triple Crown on his head. Troops of
+cavalry and infantry are drawn up in a semi-circle before the façade of the
+church, and the whole vast _arena_ of the _Piazza di San Pietro_ is covered
+with spectators. On a sudden his Holiness rises, extends his hands towards
+heaven, then spreads them open, and seems as if he scattered something he
+held in them on the crowd below; a silly young Frenchman who was standing
+next to me said: _Le voilà! Le voilà qui arrache la bénédiction au ciel, et
+qui la répand sur tout le monde!_ I could not refrain from laughing at this
+sally, tho' I was much impressed with the solemnity of the scene, which I
+think one of the grandest and most sublime I ever beheld. This ceremony
+concluded, salves of ordnance were fired. The Pope retires amidst clouds of
+smoke, and seems to vanish from the Earth. The troops then fire a _feu de
+joie_ and move off, playing a march in quick time, and the company
+disperse.
+
+It is the étiquette on these occasions that no person be admitted either
+into the church of St Peter or into the Sistine Chapel except in full
+toilette. The ladies dress generally in black with caps and feathers; the
+gentlemen either in black full dress or in military uniform. From the
+variety of foreigners of all nations that are here, most of whom are
+military men, or intitled to wear military uniforms, much is added to the
+splendour of the spectacle.
+
+On the evening of Easter Monday, I was present at the illumination of the
+facade of St Peter's. Rows of lamps are suspended the whole length of the
+columns and pilasters and all over the cupola, so that, when illuminated,
+the style of the architecture is perceptible. The illumination takes place
+almost at once. How it is managed I cannot say; but a splendid illuminated
+temple seems at once to drop from the clouds, like the work of an
+enchanter; I say _drop from the clouds_, because the illumination begins
+from the cross and cupola and is communicated with the rapidity of
+lightning to every other part of the edifice. About ten o'clock the same
+evening the most magnificent firework perhaps in the world begins to play
+from the castle of St Angelo. All kinds of shapes are assumed by these
+fireworks: here are castles, pagodas, dragons, griffins, etc. These last
+about an hour and then conclude, and with them conclude all the ceremonies
+used in commemoration of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+
+Among the sights of Rome I must not omit that of a famous robber of the
+name of Barbone, who was the terror of the whole surrounding country from
+the depredations he committed. Having capitulated, and surrendered himself
+to the Papal Government, he is now confined in the Castle of St Angelo as a
+state prisoner. His wife, or a woman calling herself so, is confined there
+with him, and she is said to be a woman of uncommon beauty. It is quite the
+rage among the English here to go to see these _illustrious_ captives, and
+Madame Barbone, superbly dressed, receives the hommage of the visitors. The
+Duchess of D[evonshire] is said to have visited her, and made her a present
+of a pearl necklace. I hope this is not true. Surely the Duchess, who is a
+woman of talent and an encourager of the fine arts, might have found some
+other object worthier of her munificence. What claims the mistress, or even
+the wife, of a public robber can have on the generosity of travellers, I am
+at a loss to conceive; but such is the _bizarrerie_ and _inconsequence_ of
+the English, and no doubt, be this story of her Grace of D[evonshire]
+having given a present true or not, it will occasion many other presents
+being made to the captive Princess by a host of silly lord-aping English
+men and women. Barbone has, it is said, made an excellent capitulation. He
+has stipulated to be released from prison after a year and a day's
+confinement, and no doubt he will then resume his old trade of brigandage.
+In the meantime he has disbanded his troops, as he calls them; but will his
+troops obey him, now that he is a captive? will they not rather chuse
+another leader?
+
+In the time of the French occupation, nothing of this kind took place; but
+the present Government is weak and timid. I have not been myself to see
+either Barbone or his wife, but I have heard quite enough about them; they
+form one of the principal sights in Rome, and I am quite _unfashionable_ in
+not having gone to visit them; for according to the opinion of my English
+acquaintance, he who has not seen Barbone and his wife has seen nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I started from Rome on the second of April with a _vetturino_, and on
+arrival at Baccano, we struck off into a road on the right hand, and
+arrived at Cività Castellana at a late hour. Cività Castellana merits no
+further attention, except that it is supposed to stand on the site of the
+ancient city of Veii. The following day at ten o'clock we reached the small
+town of Narni. Here are the remains of a beautiful bridge, constructed over
+the ravine, thro' which flows the river Nera, and which was built in the
+time of Augustus. It affords a very favorable specimen of the Roman bridge
+architecture. There is a small chapel here, and it contains, engraved on a
+stone, a description of a miracle wrought here about four years ago by the
+Virgin Mary, who saved the life of a postillion. He went into the river to
+water his horses, when he was carried off by the torrent and would have
+been drowned, had not the Virgin, on her aid being invoked, dashed into the
+river and haled him out by the hair of his head. Of this story, to use a
+phrase of old Josephus,[115] every one may believe as much as he thinks
+proper; but certain it is that the postillion made oath (which oath is
+registered) that his life was saved by the Virgin Mary in this manner, and
+he has put up a votive tablet at her shrine, which remains to this day,
+commemorative of the event. There is also a Roman aqueduct in the
+neighbourhood, eleven Italian miles in length.
+
+We arrived at Terni at three o'clock and immediately hired a _calèche_ (the
+other travellers and myself) to visit the famous cascade of the Velino,
+about three miles distant from the town of Terni. The road thither is very
+rugged, and is a continual ascent on the flank of a ravine. For a long time
+before you arrive on the brink of the cascade, you hear the roaring of the
+waters; and it certainly is the most magnificent and awe-inspiring sight of
+the kind I ever beheld. It is far more stupendous than any cascade in
+Switzerland. That of Tivoli compared to it is as an infant six months old
+to a Goliath. The Velino forms three successive falls, and the last is
+tremendous, since it falls from a height of 1,068 feet into the abyss
+below. The foam and the froth it occasions is terrific; and the spray
+ascends so high that in standing at the distance of fifty yards from the
+fall you become as wet as if you had been standing in a shower of rain. The
+first fall it forms is of 800 feet; the second little less; the third I
+have stated already. No painting can possibly give a faithful delineation
+of this, and very possibly no poetic description can give an adequate idea
+thereof. We passed the whole night at Terni and the next morning we stopped
+to dine at Spoleto. The same evening we arrived at Foligno. Spoleto is a
+neat town and well paved. Several ruins of ancient buildings are in its
+vicinity. Before you arrive there, on the left of the road, is an immensely
+high two-arched bridge. There is an aqueduct likewise just outside the
+town. We did not omit to read the inscription on the gate of the town, in
+commemoration of the repulse of Hannibal, who failed in his attempt to make
+himself master of this city, after having beat the Romans near the lake
+Trasymene. The gate is called in consequence _Porta Fugae_, and this gate
+constitutes the principal glory of Spoleto. We were shown the rums of a
+Palace built by Theodoric. On leaving the town, just outside the gate, we
+were shewn a bridge which had laid underground for many centuries and had
+been lately discovered. A bridge was known to have been built here in the
+time of Augustus, and it is very probably the identical one; we could only
+see the top and part of the parapet.
+
+Foligno is a large, well built city, neatly paved, populous and commercial,
+renowned for manufactories of paper, wax, and confectionary.
+
+The whole road between Spoleto and Foligno is thro' a beautiful valley in
+high cultivation. There is a good deal of rich pasture ground, and it is
+watered by the river called in ancient tunes Clitumnus. Here are to be seen
+a fine breed of white cattle for which this part of the country has been
+long renowned, which cattle were used, in preference, for sacrifices
+(_Albi, Clitumne, greges_).[116] A similar breed is to be found in India
+and Egypt.
+
+The streets in Foligno are broad. I remarked the _Palazzo Pubblico_ and
+Cathedral as very fine buildings. Our next day's journey brought us to
+Perugia, after passing by Assisi, the birth place of the famous St Francis,
+founder of the order of Franciscans. It is situated on an eminence:
+convents and churches abound therein.
+
+Perugia is a large and opulent city, standing like a fortress on a
+mountain, and towering over the plain below. It is of steep ascent from the
+plain, and there are various terraces along the ramparts, commanding
+several fine points of view of the rich and fertile plains all round. These
+terraces are planted with trees and form the promenades appertaining to the
+city. The architecture of the various churches and Palaces is very
+superior. The streets are broad and every building has an air of
+magnificence. The Cathedral, dedicated to St Laurence, is well worth
+visiting; it stands on the _Piazza del Duomo_, where there is a fine
+fountain ornamented with statues. In the church of St Peter's there are
+some fine columns of marble and some pictures of Perugino and Raffaello.
+
+
+[108] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 886.--ED.
+
+[109] Of the two persons here mentioned, by their initials only, the first,
+ Luigi de' Medici, was chosen as Chancellor of the Exchequer by King
+ Ferdinando in June, 1815. The second was Nugent, an Austrian
+ _marescallo_, who became _capitano generale_ of the Neapolitan army,
+ August, 1816, and _capo del supremo comando_, February, 1817.--ED.
+
+[110] This most distinguished lady, Marianna Candidi, was born in Rome in
+ 1756; her mother, Magdalena Scilla, was the daughter of a well known
+ antiquary of Messina, Agostino Scilla. Marianna learned Latin, drawing
+ and music; she achieved a reputation as landscape painter, and was
+ elected a member of the Academies of St Luke in Rome, of Bologna, Pisa
+ and Philadelphia. She married the lawyer Domenico Dionigi, and gave him
+ seven children, one of whom, Henrietta, became Madame Orfei, and was
+ much esteemed as "improvisatrice." Madame Dionigi herself published
+ several works, among which a _Storia de' tempi presenti_, written in
+ view of the education of her children. Her _salon_ in Rome was
+ frequented by many men of distinction, such as Visconti, d'Agincourt,
+ Erskine, etc. She died on the 10th June, 1826, at the age of seventy.
+ --ED.
+
+[111] She was no more than sixty-two at that time.--ED.
+
+[112] To present the calumet is an offer of peace and amity among the
+ aborigines of North America and to refuse it is regarded as the
+ greatest insult.
+
+[113] Frye gives only the initial of the name, which I have completed from
+ the _Almanach de Gotha_, 1818.--ED.
+
+[114] The Interior of the Convent of the Capucini was first painted by
+ Granet in the year 1811. None of the numerous replicas are in the
+ Louvre, but there is one in London (Buckingham Palace) and one at
+ Chatsworth.--ED.
+
+[115] The author may have meant "old Herodotus."--ED.
+
+[116] Virgil, _Georg._, II, 146.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+APRIL-JULY, 1818
+
+Journey from Florence to Pisa and from thence by the Appennines to
+Genoa--Massa-Carrara--Genoa--Monuments and works of art--The
+Genoese--Return to Florence--Journey from Florence through Bologna and
+Ferrara to Venice--Monument to Ariosto in Ferrara--A description of
+Venice--Padua--Vicenza--Verona--Cremona--Return to Milan--The Scala
+theatre--Verona again--From Verona to Innspruck.
+
+It is the custom for most travellers going to Genoa to embark on board of a
+_felucca_ at Spezia, which lies on the sea coast, not far from Sarzana: but
+I preferred to go by land, and I cannot conceive why anyone should expose
+himself to the risks, inconveniences and delays of a sea passage, when it
+is so easy to go by land thro' the Appennines. I started accordingly the
+following morning, mounted on a mule, and attended by a muleteer with
+another mule to convey my portmanteau. I found this journey neither
+dangerous nor difficult, but on the contrary agreeable and romantic. The
+road is only a bridle road. I paid forty-eight franks for my two mules and
+driver, and started at seven in the morning from Sarzana. The wild
+appearance of the Appennines, the aweful solitudes and the highly
+picturesque points of view that present themselves at the various
+sinuosities of the mountains and valleys; the view of the sea from the
+heights that tower above the towns of Oneglia and Sestri Levante, rendered
+this journey one of the most interesting I have ever made. I stopped to
+dine at Borghetto and brought to the night at Sestri Levante, breakfasted
+the next morning at Rapallo, and arrived the same evening at four o'clock
+in Genoa. Borghetto is a little insignificant town situate in a narrow
+valley surrounded on all sides by the lofty crags of the Appennines. Sestri
+Levante is a long and very straggling town, part of it being situated on
+the sea shore, and the other part on the gorge of the mountain descending
+towards the sea beach; so that the former part of the town lies nearly at
+right angles with the latter, with a considerable space intervening. The
+road for the last four miles between Borghetto and Sestri Levante is a
+continual descent. The inn was very comfortable and good at Sestri Levante.
+The beginning of the road between Sestri and Rapallo is on the beach till
+near Rapallo, when it strikes again into the mountains and is of
+considerable ascent. Rapallo is a very neat pretty place, situate on an
+eminence commanding a fine view of the sea. The greater part of the road
+between Rapallo and Genoa is on the sea-coast, but cut along the mountains
+which here form a bluff with the sea. Villas, gardens and vineyards line
+the whole of this route and nothing can be more beautiful. The neatness of
+the villas and the abundance of the population form a striking contrast to
+the wild solitudes between Sarzana and Sesto, where (except at Borghetto)
+there is not a house to be seen and scarce a human creature to be met, and
+where the eagle seems to reign alone the uncontrolled lord of the creation.
+
+
+GENOA, 23rd April.
+
+The view of Genoa from the sea is indisputably the best; for on entering by
+land from the eastern side, the ramparts are so lofty as to intercept the
+fine view the city would otherwise afford. From the sea side it rises in
+the shape of an amphitheatre; a view therefore taken from the sea gives the
+best idea of its grandeur and of the magnificence of its buildings, for
+everybody on beholding this grand spectacle must allow that this city well
+deserves its epithet of _Superba_.
+
+I observe in my daily walks on the _Esplanade_ a number of beautiful women.
+The Genoese women are remarkable for their beauty and fine complexions.
+They dress generally in white, and their style of dress is Spanish; they
+wear the _mezzara_ or veil, in the management of which they display much
+grace and not a little coquetry. Instead of the fan exercise recommended to
+women by the _Spectator_, the art of handling the _mezzara_ might be
+reduced to a manual and taught to the ladies by word of command.
+
+I put up at the house of a Spanish lady on the _Piazza St Siro_, and here
+for four _livres_ a day I am sumptuously boarded and lodged. There are
+three principal streets in Genoa, viz., _Strada Nuova_, _Balbi_, and
+_Nuovissima_. Yet these three streets may be properly said to form but one,
+inasmuch as they lie very nearly in a right line. These streets are broad
+and aligned with the finest buildings in Genoa. This street or streets are
+the only ones that can be properly called so, according to the idea we
+usually attach to the word. The others deserve rather the names of lanes
+and alleys, tho' exceedingly well paved and aligned with excellent houses
+and shops. In fact the streets _Nuova_, _Nuovissima_ and _Balbi_ are the
+only ones thro' which carriages can pass. The others are far too narrow to
+admit of the passage of carriages. The houses on each side of them are of
+immense height, being of six or seven stories, which form such a shade as
+effectually to protect those who walk thro' these alleys from the rays of
+the sun. The houses diminish in height in proportion as they are built on
+the slant of the mountain from the bottom to the top, those at the bottom
+being the loftiest. Carriages are scarcely of any use in the city of Genoa,
+except to drive from one end of the town to another thro' the streets
+_Nuova_, _Balbi_ and _Nuovissima_; and accordingly a carriage with four
+wheels, or even with two, is a rare conveyance in Genoa. The general mode
+of conveyance is on a sedan chair, carried by porters, or on the backs of
+mules or asses. Genoa is distinguished by the beauty of the Palaces of its
+patricians, which are more numerous and more magnificent than those of any
+other city, probably, in the world.
+
+The Ducal Palace or Palace of Government, where the Doge used to reside,
+claimed my first attention; yet, tho' much larger, it is far less splendid
+than many of the Palaces of individual patricians. In fact, the Ducal
+Palace is built in the Gothic taste and resembles a Gothic fortress, having
+round towers at each angle. The Hall, where the Grand Council used to sit,
+is superb, and is adorned with columns of _jaune antique_. On the _plafond_
+is a painting representing the discovery of America by Columbus; for the
+Genoese duly appreciate, and never can forget their illustrious countryman.
+The lines of Tasso, "_Un uom della Liguria avrà ardimento_," etc., and the
+following stanza, _Tu spiegherai Colombo a urn nuovo polo_, etc. are in the
+mouth of everyone.[117] The Hall of the Petty Council is neat, but it is
+the recollection of the history of this once famous Republic that renders
+the examination of this Palace so interesting. But now Genoa's glory is
+gone; she has been basely betrayed into the hands of a Government she most
+detested. The King of Sardinia is nowhere; and he is not a little proud of
+being the possessor of such a noble sea port, which enables him to rank as
+a maritime power.
+
+The Genoese are laborious and make excellent sailors; but now there is
+nothing to animate them; and they will never exert themselves in the
+service of a domination which is so little congenial to them. They sigh for
+their ancient Government, of whose glories they had so often heard and
+whose brilliant exploits have been handed down to the present day not
+merely by historical writers and poets, but by _improvisatori_ from mouth
+to mouth. The Genoese nobles, those merchant Kings, whose riches exceeded
+at one time those of the most powerful monarchs of Europe, who were the
+pawn-brokers to those Sovereigns, are now in a state of decay. Commerce can
+only flourish on the soil of liberty, and takes wing at the sight of
+military and sacerdotal chains; and tho' the present Sovereign affects to
+caress the Genoese _noblesse_, they return his civilities with sullen
+indifference, and half concealed contempt and aversion. The commerce of
+Genoa is transferred to Leghorn, which increases in prosperity as the
+former decays.
+
+The climate of Genoa is said to be exceedingly mild during the winter,
+being protected on the north by the Appennines, which tower above it to an
+immense height. Beautiful villas and grounds tastefully laid out in
+plantations of orange trees, pomegranates, etc., abound in the environs of
+this city, and everything announces the extreme industry of the
+inhabitants, for the soil is proverbially barren. This shews what they have
+done and what they could still do were they free; but now they have nothing
+to animate their exertions. The public promenades are on the bastions and
+curtains of the fortifications, on the _Esplanade_ and in the streets
+_Balbi_, _Nuova_ and _Nuovissima_. There is also another very delightful
+promenade, tho' not much used by the ladies, viz., on the Mola or Pier
+enveloping the harbour.
+
+One of the most remarkable constructions in Genoa is the bridge of
+Carignano, which is built over an immense ravine and unites the hills
+Fengano and Carignano. It is so high that houses of six stories stand under
+its arches in the valley below. No water except in times of flood runs
+under this bridge and it much resembles, tho' somewhat larger, the bridge
+at Edinburgh which unites the old and new towns. The principal churches
+are: first, the Cathedral, which is not far from the Ducal Palace; it is
+richly ornamented and incrusted with black marble; the church of the
+Annunziata and that of St Sire. They are all in the Gothic style of
+architecture and loaded with that variety of ornament and diversity of
+beautiful marbles which distinguish the churches of Italy from those of any
+other country. Near the bridge of Carignano is a church of the same name,
+wherein are four marble colossal statues.
+
+On the west of the city and running two miles along the sea-beach is the
+_faubourg_ of St Pietro d'Arena, which presents a front of well built
+houses the whole way; these houses are principally used as magazines and
+store houses.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 5 May.
+
+I left Genoa on the 30th April, returned on mule-back from Genoa to
+Sarzana, stopping the first night at Sestri. The second evening when near
+Sarzana, it being very dark, I somehow or other got out of the road and my
+mule fell with me into a very deep ditch; but I was only slightly bruised
+by the fall; my clothes however were covered with dirt and wet. The road
+from Genoa to Sarzana might with very little expense be made fit for
+carriages by widening it. At present it is only a bridle road, and on some
+parts of it, on the sides of ravines, it is I think a little ticklish to
+trust entirely to the discretion of one's _monture_; at least I thought so
+and dismounted twice to pass such places on foot. A winding stream is to be
+forded in two or three places, but it is not deep except after rains; and
+then I think it must be sometimes dangerous to pass, till the waters run
+off. Those, who are fond of mountain scenery will, like myself, be highly
+gratified in making this journey; for it is thro' the loftiest, wildest and
+most romantic part of the Appennines. From Sarzana I hired a cabriolet to
+return to Pisa and from thence I took the diligence to Florence.
+
+
+FERRARA.
+
+On the 9th of May I set out from Florence on my journey hither. Two days'
+journey brought me to Bologna where I stopped one day; and the following
+day I reached this place (Ferrara), six miles distant from Bologna. The
+country between these two cities is a perfect plain and very fertile. At
+Malalbergo (half-way) We crossed the Reno in a boat. I put up at the _Tre
+Mori_ in Ferrara. Having remained two and half days here I have had time to
+inspect and examine almost everything of consequence that the city affords.
+The city itself has an imposing, venerable appearance and can boast of some
+fine buildings; yet with all this there is an air of melancholy about it.
+It is not peopled in proportion to its size and grass is seen growing in
+several of the streets. I believe the unhealthiness of the environing
+country is the cause of the decrease of population, for Ferrara lies on a
+marshy plain, very liable to inundation In the centre of the city stands
+the ancient Palace of the Dukes of Ferrara, a vast Gothic edifice, square,
+and flanked with round towers, and a large court-yard in the centre. It was
+in this court-yard that Hugo and Parisina were decapitated. From the top of
+this palace a noble view of the plain of the Po represents itself, and you
+see the meanderings of that King of Rivers, as the Italian poets term it.
+As the Po runs thro' a perfectly flat country, and is encreased and swollen
+by the torrents from the Alps and Appennines that fall into the smaller
+rivers, which unite their tributary streams with the Po and accompany him
+as his _seguaci_ to the Adriatic, this country is liable to the most
+dreadful inundations: flocks and herds, farm-houses and sometimes whole
+villages are swept away. Dykes, dams and canals innumerable are in
+consequence constructed throughout this part of the country, to preserve it
+as much as possible from such calamities. Ariosto's description of an
+over-flowing of this river is very striking, and I here transcribe it:
+
+ Con quel furor che il Re de' fiumi altero,
+ Quando rompe tal volta argine e sponda,
+ E che ne' campi Ocnei si apre il sentiero,
+ E i grassi solchi e le biade feconde,
+ E con le sue capanne il gregge intero,
+ E co' cani i pastor porta neil' onde, etc.[118]
+
+ Even with that rage wherewith the stream that reigns,
+ The king of rivers--when he breaks his mound.
+ And makes himself a way through Mantuan plains--
+ The greasy furrows and glad harvests, round,
+ And, with the sheepcotes, nock, and dogs and swains
+ Bears off, in his o'erwhelming waters drowned.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+The next place I went to see was the Lyceum or University, where there is a
+very fair cabinet of natural history in all its branches. The Library is
+very remarkable, and possesses a great number of valuable manuscripts. But
+my principal object in visiting this Museum was to see the monument erected
+in honour of Ariosto, which has been transferred here from the Benedictine
+church. The inkstand and chair of this illustrious bard are carefully
+preserved and exhibited. They exactly resemble the print of them that
+accompanies the first edition of Hoole's translation of the _Orlando
+Furioso_. Among the manuscripts what gratified me most was the manuscript
+of the _Gerusalemme liberata_ of Tasso. But few corrections appear in this
+manuscript; tho from the extreme polish and harmony of the versification
+one would expect a great many. It is written in an extremely legible hand.
+
+I also inspected the original manuscripts of the _Pastor Fido_ of Guarini
+and of the _Suppositi_ of Ariosto.
+
+I then went to visit the Hospital of St Anna, for the sake of seeing the
+dungeon where poor Tasso was confined and treated as mad for several years.
+When one beholds this wretched place, where a man can scarce stand upright,
+one only wonders how he could survive such treatment; or how he could
+escape becoming insane altogether. The old wooden door of this cell will
+soon be entirely cut away by amateurs, as almost everyone who visits the
+dungeon chops off a piece of wood from the door to keep as a relic. The
+door is in consequence pieced and repaired with new wood, and in a short
+time will be in the state of Sir John Cutter's worsted stockings which were
+darned so often with silk that they became finally all silk.
+
+Ferrara has a strong citadel which is still garrisoned by Austrian troops;
+and they will probably not easily be induced to evacuate it. The Austrian
+Eagle seldom looses his hold.
+
+
+VENICE, 18th May.
+
+On the 16th May at six o'clock in the morning I left Ferrara in a
+_cabriolet_ to go to the _Ponte di Lago oscuro_, which is a large village
+on the south bank of the Po, three miles distant from Ferrara. A flying
+bridge wafted me across the river, which is exceedingly broad and rapid to
+the north bank, where a barge was in waiting to receive passengers for
+Venice. This barge is well fitted up and supplied with _comestibles_ of all
+sorts and couches to recline on. The price is twelve francs for the
+passage, and you pay extra for refreshments. The bark got under weigh at
+seven o'clock and descended rapidly this majestic river, which however,
+from its great breadth, and from the country on each side of it being
+perfectly flat, did not offer any interesting points of view. Plains and
+cattle grazing thereon were the only objects, for they take care to build
+the farms and houses at a considerable distance from the banks, on account
+of the inundations. After having descended the Po for a considerable
+distance, we entered a canal which unites the Po with the Adige. We then
+descended the Adige for a short distance, and entered another canal which
+unites the Adige with the Brenta. Here we stopped to change barges, and it
+required an hour and half to unload and reload the baggage. We then entered
+the Brenta and from thence into the Lagoons, and passing by the islands of
+Malamocco and Chiozzo entered Venice by the _Canale grande_ at three
+o'clock in the morning. The whole night was so dark as totally to deprive
+us of the view of the approach of Venice. The barge anchored near the Post
+office and I hired a gondola to convey me to the inn called _Le Regina
+d'Ungheria_.
+
+
+VENICE, 26th May.
+
+I was much struck, as everyone must be who sees it for the first time, at
+the singular appearance of Venice. An immense city in the midst of the
+Ocean, five miles distant from any land; canals instead of streets;
+gondolas in lieu of carriages and horses! Yet it must not be inferred from
+this that you are necessarily obliged to use a gondola in order to visit
+the various parts of the city; for its structure is as follows. It is built
+in compartments on piles on various mud banks, always covered indeed by
+water, but very shallow and separated from each other (the mud banks I
+mean) by deep water. On each of these compartments are built rows of
+houses, each row giving front to a canal. The space between the backs of
+the rows of houses forms a narrow street or alley paved with flag stones,
+very like Cranborn Alley for instance; and these compartments are united to
+each other (at the crossings as we should say) by means of stone bridges;
+so that there is a series of alleys connected by a series of bridges which
+form the _tout ensemble_ of this city; and you may thus go on foot thro'
+every part of it. To go on horseback would be dangerous and almost
+impracticable, for each bridge has a flight of steps for ascent and
+descent. All this forms such a perfect labyrinth from the multiplicity and
+similarity of the alleys and bridges, that it is impossible for any
+stranger to find his way without a guide. I lost my way regularly every
+time that I went from my inn to the _Piazza di San Marco_, which forms the
+general rendezvous of the promenaders and is the fashionable lounge of
+Venice; and every time I was obliged to hire a boy to reconduct me to my
+inn. On this account, in order to avoid this perplexity and the expence of
+hiring a gondola every time I wished to go to the _Piazza di San Marco_ I
+removed to another inn, close to it, called _L'Osteria della Luna_, which
+stands on the banks of the _Canale grande_ and is not twenty yards from the
+_Piazza_.
+
+I then hired a gondola for four days successively and visited every canal
+and every part of the city. Almost every family of respectability keeps a
+gondola, which is anchored at the steps of the front door of the house.
+After the _Piazza di San Marco_, of which I shall speak presently, the
+finest buildings and Palaces of the nobility are on the banks of the
+_Canale grande_, which, from its winding in the shape of an S, has all the
+appearance of a river. The _Rialto_ is the only bridge which connects the
+opposite banks of the _Canale grande_; but there are four hundred smaller
+bridges in Venice to connect the other canals.
+
+The _Rialto_, the resort of the money changers and Jews, is a very singular
+and picturesque construction, being of one arch, a very bold one. On each
+side of this bridge is a range of jewellers' shops. A narrow Quai runs
+along the banks of the _Canale grande_.
+
+I have visited several of the _Palazzi_, particularly those of the families
+Morosini, Cornaro, Pisani, Grimani, which are very rich in marbles of
+_vert_ and _jaune antique_; but they are now nearly stripped of all their
+furniture, uninhabited by their owners, or let to individuals, mostly
+shopkeepers; for since the extinction of the Venetian Republic almost all
+the nobility have retired to their estates on the _terra firma_, or to
+their villas on the banks of the Brenta; so that Venice is now inhabited
+chiefly by merchants, shopkeepers, chiefly jewellers and silk mercers,
+seafaring people, the constituted authorities, and the garrison of the
+place.
+
+Tho' Venice has fallen very much into decay, since the subversion of the
+Republic, as might naturally be expected, and still more so since it has
+been under the Austrian domination, yet it is still a place of great
+wealth, particularly in jewellery, silks and all articles of dress and
+luxury. In the _Merceria_ you may see as much wealth displayed as in
+Cheapside or in the Rue St Honoré.
+
+I have had the pleasure of witnessing a superb regatta or water _féte_,
+given in honour of the visit of the Archduke Rainier to this city, in his
+quality of Viceroy of the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom. There were about one
+hundred and fifty barges, each fitted up by some department of trade and
+commerce, with allegorical devices and statues richly ornamented,
+emblematical of the trade or professions to which the barge belonged. Each
+barge bore an appropriate ensign, and the dresses of the crew were all
+tasteful, and thoroughly analogous to the profession they represented.
+These barges are richly gilded, and from the variety of the costumes and
+streamers, I thought it one of the most beautiful sights I ever beheld.
+Here were the bankers' barge, the jewellers', the mercers', the tailors',
+the shoe-makers', and, to crown all, the printers' barge, which showered
+down from the masthead sonnets in honor of the _féte_, printed on board of
+the barge itself. Every trade or profession, in short, had a barge and
+appropriate flag and costumes. A quantity of private barges and gondolas
+followed this procession. The Archduke and his staff occupied the
+Government barge, which is very magnificent and made in imitation of the
+Bucentaur. Musicians were on board of many of the barges, and the houses on
+both banks of the _Canale Grande_ were filled with beautiful women and
+other spectators waving their handkerchiefs. Guns were fired on the
+embarkation of the Viceroy from the _Piazzetta di San Marco_, and on his
+return. The _Piazza_ itself was splendidly illuminated, and the _cafés_
+which abound there, and which constitute one half of the whole quadrangle,
+were superbly and tastefully decorated.
+
+The _Piazza di San Marco_ is certainly the most beautiful thing of the kind
+in the world. It is a good deal in the style of the _Palais Royal_ at
+Paris, and tho' not so large, is far more striking, from the very tasteful
+and even sumptuous manner in which the _cafés_ are fitted up, both
+internally and externally; they have spacious rooms with mirrors on all
+sides, some in the shape of Turkish tents, others in that of Egyptian
+temples. The _Piazza_, forming an oblong rectangle, is arcaded on the two
+long sides, and of the two short ones, one presents a superb modern palace
+built by Napoleon, and richly adorned with the statues of all the heathen
+Gods on the top, which Palace was usually occupied by Eugene Napoléon; the
+other presents the church of St Marco and the old palace of Government,
+where in the time of the Republic the Doge used to reside. The church of St
+Mark is unique as a temple in Europe, for it is neither Grecian nor Gothic,
+but in a style completely Oriental, from the singularity of its structure,
+its many gilded cupolas and the variety of its exterior ornaments. At
+_first sight_ it appears a more striking object than either St Peter's in
+Rome or St Paul's in London. On the top of the façade, which is singularly
+picturesque, stand the four bronze horses which have been brought back from
+Paris to their old residence.
+
+I ascended the top of the façade in order to examine them. They are
+beautifully formed, in very good cast and have not at all been damaged by
+the journey. The _Piazza_ is paved with broad flagged stones. The Doge's
+palace is a vast building, very picturesque withal, and seems a _mélange_
+of Gothic and Moorish architecture. At right angles to it and facing the
+_Piazzetta_, which issues from the _Piazza_ and forms a quai to the _Canale
+Grande_, stands the famous state prison and _Ponte de 'Sospiri_. On the
+_Piazzetta_ and fronting the landing place stand two columns of white
+marble, on one of which stands the winged Lion of St Marco and on the other
+a crocodile, emblematical of the foreign commerce and possessions of the
+Republic. The space between these two columns was allotted for the
+execution of State criminals. Not far from the church of St Marco, and near
+to that angle of the _Piazza_ which connects it with the _Piazzetta_,
+stands the famous _Campanile_ or Steeple of San Marco. It is a square
+building 800 feet in height, from the top of which one has the best view of
+Venice and its adjacent isles, the distant Alps and the _marina dove il Po
+discende_. A Quai, if Quai it may be called, which has a row of houses on
+each side, one row of which is on the water's edge, leads from the
+_Piazzetta_ to some gardens, which terminate on a point of land. This Quai
+is very broad and well paved, and is the only thing that can be called a
+street in all Venice. The _Piazza di San Marco_, therefore, this Quai and
+the garden before mentioned form the only promenades in Venice. This garden
+moreover has trees, and these are the only trees that are to be met with in
+this city. In this garden are two _Cafés_.
+
+The variety of costume is another very agreeable spectacle at Venice. Here
+you meet with Albanians, Greeks, Turks, Moors, Sclavonians and Armenians,
+all in their respective national costumes. The first Armenian I met with
+here was sitting on a stone bench on the _Piazza di San Marco_, and this
+brought forcibly to my recollection the Armenian in Schiller's
+_Ghost-seer_.
+
+These _Cafés_ and _Casinos_ on the _Piazza_ are open day and night. Ices
+and coffee superiorly made and other refreshments of all kinds at very low
+prices are to be had. Some of these _casinos_ are devoted to gaming. The
+first families in Venice repair to the _Piazza_ in the evening after the
+Opera, female as well as male. They promenade up and down the _Piazza_ or
+sit down and converse in the _Cafés_ and _Casinos_ till a late hour. Few go
+to bed in Venice in the summer time before six In the morning, so that
+sleep seems for ever banished from the _Piazza_. Music and singing goes
+forward in these _casinos_, and the ear is often charmed with the sound of
+those delightful Venetian airs, whose simple melody ravishes the soul. The
+Venetian dialect is very pleasing, and scarcely yields in harmony to the
+Tuscan. It contains a great many Sclavonic words. It is the only dialect of
+Italy that is at all pleasing to my ear, for I do not at all relish the
+nasal twang and truncated terminations of the Piedmontese and Lombard
+dialects, nor the semi-barbarous jargon of the Genoese and the Neapolitan
+and, least of all, the execrable cacophony of the Bolognese.
+
+I visited of course the Arsenal and the Doge's Palace. The apartments in
+the latter are very spacious and ornamented in the Gothic taste of
+grandeur. The chamber of the Council is peculiarly magnificent. There is a
+good deal of tapestry and some fine paintings and statues: among the former
+I particularly noticed an allegorical picture, representing the triumph of
+Venice over the league of Cambray. Venice is represented by the winged
+Lion, and the powers of the Coalition are pourtrayed by various other
+beasts. Among the latter is a beautiful group in marble representing
+Ganymede and the Eagle. The terror depicted in the countenance of the
+beautiful boy, and the passion that seems to agitate the Eagle, are
+surprizingly well pourtrayed.
+
+The principal theatre at Venice, the _Teatro Fenice_, is not open; but I
+have visited the other theatres, and among other things witnessed the
+representation of a new opera, call'd _Il Lupo d'Ostende_. The piece itself
+was rather interesting; but the music was feeble and did not seem to give
+general satisfaction. The singing is in general very good at Venice, but in
+scenery, dresses and decorations the theatres here are far inferior to
+those of Milan and Naples.
+
+I find the air of Venice very hot and unpleasant, arising from the
+exhalation from the canals; and it appears to me as if I were on board of
+an enormous ship. I begin to pant for _terra firma_ and green fields.
+
+I have visited in a gondola some of the islands, viz., Malamocco and St
+Lazare, where there is a convent of Armenian monks.
+
+Why are the gondolas hung with black? it gives to them such a dismal
+funereal appearance. They always resemble the bodies of hearses placed on
+boats. I am not fond of gaudy colours in general, yet I do think a gondola
+should have a somewhat livelier color than black.
+
+
+PADUA, 8th June.
+
+Padua is not above ten miles distant from Fusina. As I started from Venice
+at six in the morning I had a fine receding view of the Ocean Queen, with
+her steeples and turrets rising from the sea. Venice has no fortifications
+and needs them not. Her insular position protects her from land attacks,
+and the shoals prevent the approach of ships of war. Floating batteries
+therefore and gunboats are her best defence. The road from Fusina to Padua
+is on the banks of the Brenta the whole way, and is lined with trees. There
+are a great number of villas on the banks of the Brenta, well built in the
+best style of architecture, the most of them after the designs of Palladio,
+the Prince of modern architects.
+
+Padua is an exceedingly large city: but its arcades and the narrowness of
+the streets give it a gloomy appearance. There are however some beautiful
+promenades in the suburbs. There are also the remains of an ancient Arena.
+Padua is famous for its Seminario or University, which is a superb edifice.
+The Church of St Anthony of Padua is of vast size, having six cupolas.
+There are four organs in this church. In the chapel of the Saint himself
+are a great many ornaments, among which are a crucifix in bronze and
+fresques representing the different actions and miracles of this patron
+Saint of the Padovani. Probably as this city was founded by the Trojan
+Antenor they have transformed his name into that of a Christian Saint and
+called him St Anthony, just as Virgil has been transformed into a magician
+at Naples. There is a fine view from the steeple of this immense edifice.
+There is another magnificent church also in this city, that of St Justine,
+built after the designs of Palladio, the principal ornament of which is a
+painting of the martyrdom of the Saint by Paul Veronese. But one of the
+greatest curiosities in this ancient city is the immense Saloon in the
+_Palazzo della Giustizia_. It is, I presume, the loftiest and largest hall
+in the world that is supported by nothing but its walls, it being three
+hundred feet long, one hundred feet broad and one hundred feet high. In
+the Saloon is the tomb of Livy, the Historian, who was a native of Padua.
+The inhabitants of Padua dress much in black, seem a quiet, staid sort of
+people, and are very industrious. I put up at the _Stella d'Oro_, a good
+inn.
+
+
+VICENZA, 10th June.
+
+I arrived at this beautiful _bijou_ of a town on the morning of the 9th
+June at eight o'clock. I call it a _bijou_ from its exceeding neatness, and
+the extreme beauty of the architecture of its edifices, which are almost
+all after the designs of Palladio, of white stone and in the Greek taste.
+Palladio was a native of Vicenza. The _Piazza_ and _Palazzo Pubblico_
+perfectly correspond with the beauty of the rest of the city, and the
+promenades about it are tastefully laid out. But the two most striking
+objects in point of edifices in Vicenza and both constructed by Palladio
+are the covered portico and the _Teatro Olimpico_. The covered portico is
+two miles in length and leads to the chapel of the _Madonna del Monte_,
+situated on an eminence, at that distance from the city. A magnificent
+triumphal arch stands before it, and there is an extensive view of the
+surrounding country. The _Teatro Olimpico_ is a small, but beautiful
+theatre, built strictly after the model of the ancient Greek theatres. It
+is peculiarly precious as being the only one of the kind in Europe. How
+admirably adapted both for seeing and hearing are such theatres! It has,
+for scenery, the model of a Palacé, curiously carved in wood, which
+represents a Royal Palace, for the ancients never shifted their scenes, and
+this may account for their adhering so strictly to the unities. Statues and
+bas-reliefs adorn this beautiful little theatre. Many years ago, on
+particular occasions, it was the custom to act plays here, either
+translated from the Greek, or taken strictly from the Greek model. This
+theatre is esteemed Palladio's _chef d'oeuvre_.
+
+The _Campo di Marie_ is a vast _Place_ outside the town. The Place and its
+gate are well worth inspecting, so is the famous villa with the Rotonda,
+belonging to the Marchese di Capra, the original after which the villa
+belonging to the Duke of Devonshire at Chiswick is built. The environs of
+this interesting city are very beautiful and present an exceeding rich
+soil, highly cultivated in corn, mulberry trees and vines hanging from them
+in festoons.
+
+
+VERONA, 12th June.
+
+I started yesterday morning from Vicenza and arrived here in about three
+hours, the distance being nearly the same as between Vicenza and Padua. We
+crossed the Adige which divides the city into two unequal parts and drove
+to the _Due Torri_, a large and comfortable inn with excellent rooms and
+accommodations. Verona is a very handsome city, for here also Palladio was
+the designer or builder of many edifices. It has a very cheerful and gay
+appearance, tho' not quite so much so as Vicenza. The reason of this
+difference is that in Verona the greater part of the buildings are in the
+Gothic style, which always appears heavy and melancholy, whereas in Vicenza
+all is Grecian. The Amphitheatre of course claimed my first notice. It
+yields only to the Coliseum in size and grandeur and is in much better
+preservation, the whole of the ellipse and its walls being entire, whereas
+in the Coliseum part of the walls have been pulled down. Indeed the
+Amphitheatre of Verona may be said to be almost perfectly entire. _Tempus
+edax rerum_ has been its only enemy; whereas avarice and religious
+fanaticism have contributed, much more than time, to the dilapidation of
+the Coliseum. The Amphitheatre of Verona can contain 24,000 persons. In it
+is constructed a temporary theatre of wood, where they perform plays and
+farces in the open air. Verona is much embellished by several _Palazzi_
+built by Palladio, which form a curious contrast with the other buildings
+and churches which are in the Gothic style. Verona can boast among its
+antiquities of three triumphal arches, the first, _Porta de' Bursari_,
+erected in the year 252 in the reign of the Emperor Gallienus; the second,
+called _Porta del Foro_; and the third, built by Vitruvius himself, in
+honour of the family Gavia.
+
+The churches here are richly ornamented and the _Palazzo del Consiglio_ has
+many fine marble and bronze statues. In this city also are the tombs and
+monuments of the Scala family, who were at one time Sovereigns of Verona.
+They are in the Gothic style and of curious execution. The Cathedral has an
+immense _campanile_ (steeple), from which is a fine view of the surrounding
+country, and the progressive risings of the Alps, the lower parts of which
+lie close upon Verona. Beautiful villas and farmhouses abound in the
+neighbourhood of this city. The favourite promenades are the _Corso_ and
+the _Bra_. On the _Bra_ I saw a very brilliant display of carriages, and
+some very pretty women in them. The theatre is by Palladio, is exquisitely
+beautiful, and very tastefully fitted up. I assisted at the representation
+of _La Gazza Ladra_, one of Rossini's best operas.
+
+I should think Verona would be a very delightful séjour; everything is very
+cheap; a fine country highly cultivated; a remarkably healthy climate; a
+society which unites much urbanity and a love of amusement with a taste for
+the fine arts and for the graver sciences, and a general appearance of
+opulence and comfort. The shops in Verona appear very splendid, and the
+_Bra_, when lighted up in the evening, is a very lively and animating
+scene.
+
+
+MANTUA, 15 June.
+
+I could not go to Milan without stepping a little out of my road to visit
+this ancient and redoubtable fortress, so celebrated in the early campaigns
+of Buonaparte, besides the other claims it has on the traveller's attention
+as the birth place of Virgil. This place is of immense strength, as a
+military post; being situated on a small isthmus of land, separating two
+lakes, and communicating with the rest of the country by an exceeding
+narrow causeway. This position, added to the strength of the
+fortifications, render the fortress impregnable, if well garrisoned and
+provisioned. The city is, however, unhealthy from the lake and marshy land
+about it, and there is but a scanty population. Grass grows in the streets
+and it is the dullest and indeed the only dull town in all Italy.
+Everything in this city announces decay and melancholy, and I met with
+several men looking full as halfstarved and deplorable as Shakespeare's
+Apothecary in Romeo and Juliet. Yet the city is by no means an ugly one.
+The buildings are imposing, the streets broad and well paved, and there is
+a fine circular promenade in the centre of which is a Monument erected in
+honor of Virgil by the French general Miollis, who had a great veneration
+for all poets. The _Palazzo pubblico_ and the Cathedral are the most
+striking buildings. The latter contains the tombs and monuments of the
+Gonzaga family, the whilom Sovereigns of Mantua. There are also several
+monuments in honor of some French officers, who were killed in the
+campaigns of Italy under Buonaparte and erected to their memory by his
+direction.
+
+Outside the town, at a short distance from the causeway and _tête de pont_,
+is the celebrated palace called the T, from its being in the form of that
+letter, which was the usual residence of the Dukes of Mantua. It is a noble
+edifice and its gardens are well laid out. These gardens have this
+peculiarity, that at the entrance of each of the grand avenues is a figure
+of a man on horseback caparizoned in armour, like the Knights of old. This
+is all I have to say about Mantua. The Mincio beset with "osiers dank"
+flows into the lake.
+
+
+CREMONA, 16th June.
+
+From Mantua I directed my course to this city, which is large and
+fortified, situated on the Po which forms many little islands in the
+environs. This city is of great antiquity, and has a number of Gothic
+buildings. You do not find here the specimens and imitations of Grecian
+architecture as at Vicenza and Verona. The _campanile_ of the Cathedral is
+of immense height, but one is repaid for the fatigue of ascending by the
+extensive view from its summit. There are 498 steps. I put up at the
+_Colombina_, a very good inn. The Cremonese seem to be an industrious
+people. There is a great deal of pasture land in the environs of this city
+and much cheese is made here and in the Lodesan. Several ricefields are
+also to be met with between this place and Lodi.
+
+
+MILAN, 25 June.
+
+I have been on a visit to the ancient and venerable city of Pavia, which is
+about eighteen miles distant from Milan, thro' a rich highly cultivated
+plain. The road lies in a right line the whole way. About three miles
+distant from Pavia on the Milan side stands the celebrated _Certosa_, which
+we stopped to visit. The church of the _Certosa_ contains the greatest
+quantity of riches in marbles, and precious stones, of any building in the
+world, probably. The architecture is Gothic, and the workmanship of the
+exterior exquisite; but the ulterior is most dazzling; and at the sight of
+the rich marbles and innumerable precious stones of all kinds with which it
+abounds, I was reminded of Aladdin and began to fancy myself in the cavern
+of the Wonderful Lamp. This church was built by Galeazzo Visconti, whose
+coffin is here, and his statue also, in white marble. There are several
+bas-reliefs of exquisite workmanship. There are no fewer than seventeen
+altars here and of the most beautiful structure you can conceive, being
+inlaid in mosaic with jasper, onyx and lapis-lazuli. Besides these precious
+marbles of every colour and quantity under heaven, here are abundance of
+rubies, emeralds, amethysts, aquamarines and topazes, incrusted in the
+different chapels and altars. Here again is a proof of the falsehood and
+injustice of the aspersions cast on the French army, as being the
+plunderers of churches; for if they were so, how comes it that the
+_Certosa_ the richest of all, was spared? Mr Eustace[119] in his admiration
+of Church splendour, should at least have given the French no small degree
+of credit for their abstinence from so rich a prize. A canal runs parallel
+to the road the whole way from Milan to Pavia, where it joins the Tessino.
+The banks of the Canal and each side of the road are lined with poplars.
+Pavia is one of the most ancient cities in Italy and has something very
+antique and solemn in its appearance. It is quite Gothic and was the
+capital city of the Lombard Kings. The streets are broad and the _Piazza_
+is large. I could not find any traces of the ancient palace of the Lombard
+Kings, which I should like much to have done; for then I should have
+endeavoured to make out the chamber into which Jocondo peeped and
+discovered what cured him of his melancholy, and where the impatient Queen
+received the petulant answer from her beloved Nano, conveyed by one of her
+waiting maids who told her:
+
+ E per non stare in perdita d'un soldo,
+ A voi nega venire fl manigoldo.[120]
+
+ Nor, lest he lose a doit, his paltry stake,
+ Will that discourteous churl his game forsake
+
+ --_Trans._ W.S. ROSE.
+
+
+MILAN, 28th June.
+
+I have been to the _Scala_ theatre, to see the _Ballet of the Vestal_, one
+of the most interesting Ballets I ever beheld. Oh! what a mighty magician
+is the ballet master Vigano, and as for the prima ballerina, Pallerini,
+what praises can equal her merit? then, the delightful soul soothing music,
+so harmonious, so pathetic, and the decorations so truly tasteful and
+classical! I can never forget the impression this fascinating Ballet made
+on me. It is called _La Vestale_. It opens with a view of the Circus in
+ancient Rome, and various gymnastic exercises, combats of gladiators, of
+athletes, and ends with a chariot race with real horses. The Roman Consuls
+are present in all their pomp, surrounded by Lictors with axes and fasces.
+The Vestal virgins assist at this spectacle, and from one of them the
+victor in the games receives a garland, as the recompense of his prowess.
+The victor is the son of one of the Consuls and the hero of the piece; the
+heroine is the Vestal Virgin who crowns him with the garland. The young
+victor becomes desperately enamored of the Vestale, and she appears also to
+feel an incipient flame. After the games are over, the victor returns to
+his father's house, and meeting there one of his friends, discloses to him
+his love for the Vestale and his idea of entering by stealth into the
+temple of Vesta, where his beloved was appointed to watch the sacred fire.
+His friend endeavors, but in vain, to dissuade him from so rash an attempt,
+which can only end in the destruction, both of his beloved and himself. All
+the remonstrances, however, of the friend are vain; and the hero fixed in
+his resolve watches for the opportunity, when it is the turn of his beloved
+to officiate in the temple of Vesta, and enters therein. The Vestale is
+terrified and supplicates him to retire: in vain; and after a long but
+ineffectual struggle she sinks into his arms at the foot of the altar.
+Suddenly the sacred flame becomes extinguished; a noise is heard; the
+Vestals enter; the unfortunate fair is roused from her stupor by the noise
+of footsteps and has just time to oblige her lover to retire, which he
+reluctantly does, but not unperceived by the Vestals. The Matron of the
+Vestals reproaches her with the crime she has committed and orders her to
+be placed in a dungeon. She is brought out to be examined by the High
+Priest, found guilty and condemned by him to the usual punishment of the
+Vestals for a breach of their vow, viz., the being buried alive outside the
+gates of Rome. The moment the sentence is pronounced a black veil is thrown
+over her. The scene then changes to the place of execution; the funeral
+procession takes place; the vault is dug and a man stands by with a pitcher
+of water and loaf of bread, to deliver to her when she should descend. The
+Consuls are present, attended by the Lictors and Aediles. All the other
+vestals are present, of whom the culprit takes an affectionate leave and is
+about to descend into the vault. Suddenly a noise of arms and shouts are
+heard. It is her lover who having collected a few followers come rushing
+forward with arms in their hands to arrest the execution. He forces his way
+into the presence of the Consuls, but the sight of his father inspires him
+with awe; he staggers back; at this moment a Lictor at the command of the
+other Consul plunges a spear into his breast. The Vestal is hurried to the
+brink of the vault, into which she is forced to descend to the
+accompaniment of mournful music, while her dying lover vainly endeavours to
+crawl towards her. The curtain falls.
+
+The exquisite acting of La Pallerini drew tears from my eyes: it was indeed
+too horrible a subject for a _Ballo_, which in my opinion ought to end
+happily. The scenery was the finest of the kind I think I ever witnessed.
+The first scene represents the _Circus maximus_; the interior of the temple
+of Vesta and the place of execution outside the walls of Rome were most
+classically correct and appropriate: the music was beyond all praise and
+singularly affecting. This Ballet has excited such an enthusiastic
+approbation that Vigano the Ballet master, Pallerini who acts the Vestal
+and the young man who performs the hero of the piece were summoned every
+evening after the termination of the Ballet, to appear on the stage, and
+receive applauses, which seemed to increase at every representation. I have
+been to see this ballet six or seven times, and always with increased
+delight. I was there on the last night of its representation, when some
+amateurs and people connected with the theatre put in practice what
+appeared to mean ill-judged _concetto_, however well merited the compliment
+it meant to convey. When the Vestal was about to descend into the vault, a
+genius with wings rose from it and repeated a few lines beginning _Tu non
+morrai_ and telling her that the suffrages of the Insubrian people had
+decreed to her immortality, and printed sonnets were showered down on the
+stage from all parts of the house. I think it would have been much better
+to let the piece finish in the usual way, and then at its termination call
+for La Pallerini to advance and receive the garlands and hommage so justly
+her due.
+
+I was in the _loge_ belonging to my friend Mme L-----; there were three or
+four _litterati_ with her, and they were all unanimous that it was an
+absurd and pedantic _concetto_.
+
+In a day or two I shall start from Milan for Munich thro' Brescia and
+Verona and the Tyrol.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+JULY-SEPTEMBER 1818
+
+Innspruck--Tyrol and the Tyrolese--From Innspruck to Munich--Monuments and
+churches--Theatricals--Journey from Munich to Vienna on a floss--Trouble
+with a passport--Complicated system of Austrian money--Description of
+Vienna--The Prater--The theatres--Schiller's _Joan of Arc_--A
+_Kinderballet_--The young Napoleon at Schoenbrunn--Journey from Vienna to
+Prague.
+
+
+INNSPRUCK, 15th July.
+
+I had engaged with a _vetturino_ to convey me from Verona to Innspruck for
+four _louis d'or_ and to be _spesato_. A Roman gentleman and his lady were
+my fellow travellers; they were going to pass the summer months at a small
+_campagne_ they possess in the Tyrol. We stopped the first night at
+Roveredo. The road from Verona to Roveredo is on the banks of the Adige
+(called in German the Etsch) in a narrow and deep valley, shut up on both
+sides by mountains, almost immediately on leaving Verona. We found the
+weather extremely hot in this valley. Roveredo seems to be a very neat
+clean little city, and the Adige flows with astonishing rapidity along this
+narrow valley. The women of Roveredo have the reputation of being very
+beautiful; and I recollect having seen two Roveredo girls at Venice, who
+were models of female beauty. They have a happy mixture of German and
+Italian blood and manners, but Italian is the language of the country. The
+second morning of our journey we arrived and stopped to dinner at the
+venerable and celebrated city of Trent. The country we passed thro' is much
+the same as that between Verona and Roveredo, the Adige being on our left.
+Trent lies also in the valley of the Adige, shut up between the Alps. The
+whole valley appears in high cultivation. The streets of Trent are broad;
+the Cathedral is a remarkably fine Gothic building. In the church of Sta
+Maria Maggiore was held the famous council of Trent. There are a great many
+silk mills in Trent. German as well as Italian is spoken; indeed the two
+languages are equally familiar to most of the inhabitants. In the evening
+we arrived at Sabern after passing thro' Lavis. One description will serve
+for these towns and indeed for most of the towns in the Tyrol, viz., that
+of being neat, clean and solidly built. The inns are excellent and the
+inhabitants very civil. The Adige runs close to the road and parallel to
+it, nearly the whole way to Bolsano or Botzen, where Italian ceases to be
+spoken and German is the national tongue. Botzen is a large and flourishing
+place.
+
+One general description will serve for the Tyrol, regarding the towns,
+adjacent country, customs, inns, inhabitants, dress and manners.
+
+First the towns are fully as neat, clean and well built as those in
+Switzerland; the country too is very similar, tho' not quite on so grand a
+scale of sublimity; but you have fully as much variety in mountain and
+valley, glacier and cascade. The climate is exactly the same as that of
+Switzerland, being very hot in the valleys in summer. The inns are clean
+and good, the provisions excellent and well cooked, the wines much better
+than those of Switzerland; there is good attendance by females and all at a
+far cheaper rate than in Switzerland. The Tyroleans are much more courteous
+in their manners than the Swiss; they have not that boorishness and are of
+more elegant figure than their Helvetic neighbours. The women of the Tyrol
+are in general remarkably beautiful, exceedingly well shaped and of fine
+complexions.
+
+In the towns the bourgeoises dress well, something in the French style, and
+it is their custom to salute travellers who pass by kissing their hands to
+them. The dress of the female peasantry, however, is unpleasing to the eye
+and so uncouth, that it would make the most beautiful women appear homely.
+In the first place I will speak of their head dress, of which there are
+three different kinds, two of which are as _bizarre_ as can be imagined.
+The first sort is a cap of sheepskin, the fleece of which is as white as
+snow, and the cap is of conical shape, the base being exceeding large in
+proportion to its height, and resembles much the sugar loaves made in
+Egypt. The second is a black scull cap, with the three pieces of stiff
+black _gaze_, sticking out like the vanes of a windmill; so that when put
+on the head, one vane stands upright from the forehead and the other two
+from each ear. The third head dress is a broad straw hat, and I wish they
+would stick to this coiffure, and discard the two others. Then the waist of
+their dress is as long as
+
+ ...du pole antarctique an détroit de Davis.[121]
+
+Their petticoats are exceedingly short, scarcely reaching the calf of the
+legs, which are enveloped in a pair of flaming red stockings. Who the devil
+could invent such an ungraceful dress for a female?
+
+The costume of the men on the contrary is becoming and graceful. It
+resembles very much the costume of the Andalusians. The hat is exactly the
+same, the crown being small and the rim very broad.
+
+The Tyroleans are a fine gallant race of men and are excellent marksmen.
+They were formerly much attached to the House of Austria; but that
+attachment is now entirely changed to dislike, from the ingratitude they
+have met with, since they have been replaced under that scepter.
+
+The only fault I find in the Tyroleans, is that they are rather too devout
+and consequently too much under the influence of the clergy. Yet in their
+devotion there is not the smallest tinge of hypocrisy and they are esteemed
+a highly moral people.
+
+If you arrive at an inn in the evening, while the family are at prayer,
+neither master nor servants will come to wait on you, till prayers are
+over; and then you will be served with sufficient alacrity; but the prayers
+are rather long.
+
+I believe the priests extort a good deal of money from these good people.
+The road thro' the Tyrol was made by the Romans, in the time of Septimus
+Severus. An immense number of Crucifixes on the road attest and command the
+devotion of the people.
+
+How Kotzebue can call Innspruck a dirty town I am at a loss to conceive. He
+must have visited it during very rainy weather; for to me it appears one of
+the cleanest and most chearful towns I have ever seen. There are several
+very fine buildings, for instance the Jesuits' College, and the Franciscan
+monastery; Nothing can be more picturesque than the situation of this city
+in the valley of the Inn and its romantic windings. The suburbs are very
+extensive and can boast several fine houses. The cupola of the Government
+House is gilded, which gives it a splendid appearance. In the _Hofkirche_
+or church of the court there are a number of statues, large as life, in
+bronze; among which my guide pointed out to me those of Clovis, Godfrey of
+Bouillon, Albert the Wise, Charles V, Philip II of Spain, Rudolph of
+Hapsburgh, and to my great astonishment the British King Arthur; there were
+twenty-eight statues altogether. But on my return to my inn, I found that
+my guide had made a great error respecting King Arthur, and that the said
+statue represented Prince Arthur, son of Henry VII, King of England, and
+not the old Hero of Romance; and my hostess' book further informed me that
+these statues were those of the Kings and Princes belonging to families
+connected by descent and blood with Maximilian I. In the same _Hofkirche_
+is a fine monument erected to Maximilian and a statue of bronze of this
+Emperor is figured kneeling between four bronze figures representing four
+Virtues. In the gardens of the Palace of the Archduke Ferdinand in this
+city is a fine equestrian statue which rests entirely on the hind feet of
+the horse. From Innspruck there is a water passage by the river Inn all the
+way to Vienna, as the Inn flows into the Danube at Passau. The banks of the
+Inn are so romantic and picturesque that I would willingly prolong my
+_séjour_ at Innspruck, but as I mean to take the journey from Mittenwald to
+Munich by the river Isar, I must take advantage of the raft which starts
+from that place the day after to-morrow.
+
+
+MUNICH, 20th July.
+
+I left Innspruck in a _chaise de poste_ on the 16th, and arrived the same
+evening at five o'clock at Mittenwald. At a short distance before I arrived
+at Mittenwald, I entered the Bavarian territory, which announces itself by
+a turnpike gate painted white and blue, the colours and _Feldzeichen_ of
+Bavaria. In the Austrian territory the barriers are painted black and
+yellow, these being the characteristic colors of Austria.
+
+Mittenwald is a small neat town, offering nothing remarkable but a church
+yard or _Ruhe-garten_ (garden of repose) as it is called, where there are a
+number of quaint inscriptions on the tombstones. At Mittenwald I had some
+trouble about my passport, as it was not _visé_ by a Bavarian authority;
+but I explained to the officer that I had never fallen in with any Bavarian
+authority since I left Rome, and that, while at Rome, I had no intention of
+going thro' Bavaria; that at Milan the Austrian authorities had _visé_ my
+passport for Vienna and that I should only pass thro' Munich, without
+making a longer stay than one week. He acquiesced in my argument, but
+inserted my explanation on the passport. At half a quarter of a mile beyond
+Mittenwald I met the raft just about to get under weigh at eleven o'clock
+a.m. This raft is about as long as the length of a thirty-six gun frigate,
+and formed of spars fastened together; on this is a platform about one and
+a half feet high. The Isar begins its course close to Mittenwald, and the
+place on which the raft stood, previous to departure, was very shallow; but
+water was quickly let in from sluices to float the raft, and off we set
+with a cargo of peasants, male and female, and merchandise bound for
+Munich. As the river Isar rushes between immense mountains, and forms a
+continual descent until the plains of Bavaria open to view, you may
+conceive with what rapidity we went. We encountered several falls of water
+of two, three, four and sometimes five feet which we had to _shoot_, which
+no boat could possibly do without being upset. The lower part of the raft
+was frequently under water in making these _shoots_ and we were obliged to
+hold on fast to our seats to prevent being jerked off. Nothing can be more
+romantic and picturesque than this journey, and there is something aweful
+in _shooting_ these falls; these rafts are, however, so solidly constructed
+that there is no danger whatever. They can neither sink nor upset. We
+arrived and halted the evening at Tölz, a large village or town on the
+right bank of the Isar. What gives to Tölz a remarkably singular appearance
+is, that on a height at a short distance from the town, and hanging
+abruptly over the river, you perceive several figures in wood, larger than
+the life, which figures form groups, representing the whole history of the
+passion of Jesus Christ. At a short distance, if you are not prepared for
+this, you suppose that they are real men, and that a procession or
+execution is going forward. On landing I immediately ascended this hill in
+order to observe this curiosity, and there I beheld the following groups,
+first: Christ in the midst of his disciples preaching; secondly: the
+disciples asleep in a cave, and Christ watching and praying; next was Judas
+betraying Christ to the soldiery; then the judgment of Christ before
+Pilate; then Christ bearing his cross to the place of execution; and lastly
+the crucifixion on Mount Calvary. The ground is curiously laid out so as to
+represent, as much as possible, the ground in the environs of Jerusalem.
+Tölz is a pretty village, but contains nothing more remarkable than the
+above groups.
+
+The next day at twelve o'clock we perceived the spires of Munich, and at
+two anchored close to one of the bridges from whence, having hired a
+wheelbarrow to trundle my portmanteau, I repaired to the inn called the
+Golden Cross--_Zum goldenen Kreutz_. At Tölz the Rhetian Alps recede from
+the view; the landscape then presents a sloping plain which is perfectly
+level within four miles of Munich. The river widens immediately on issuing
+from the gorges of the Tyrol and for the last five miles we were followed
+by boys on the banks of the river, begging for wood, with which our raft
+was laden, and we threw to them many a faggot. Wood is the great export
+from the Tyrol to Bavaria, as the latter is a flat country and has not much
+wood, with which on the contrary the Tyrol abounds. A sensible difference
+of climate is now felt and the air is keener than in the Tyrol. The price
+of a place on the raft from Mittenwald to Munich cost only one florin, and
+at Tölz an excellent supper, bed and coffee in the morning cost me only one
+florin.
+
+
+MUNICH, 23rd July.
+
+Munich, the capital of Bavaria, is an ancient Gothic city of venerable
+appearance. The houses are very solid in structure, and the streets
+sufficiently broad to give to the city a cheerful appearance. There are
+some suburbs added to it, built in the modern taste, which embellish it
+greatly. A large Place outside the old town, called the _Carolinen-Platz,_
+presents a number of villas disposed in the form of a circus. In these
+suburbs the people assemble on holidays and Sundays, to smoke and drink
+beer, of which a great quantity is consumed, it being the favorite and
+national beverage. From the lively scene of the lower class of the
+bourgeoisie, male and female, meeting here in the _Biersschanks_ and
+_Tanzsaale_ I was reminded of the lines in Faust:
+
+ Gewiss man findet hier
+ Die schönsten Mädchen, und das beste Bier,
+
+which may be thus rendered:
+
+ Here let us halt! 'tis here we're sure to find
+ Beer of the best and maidens fair and kind!
+
+There are other very agreeable promenades outside the town, laid out as
+_jardins anglais,_ the garden of Ostenwald for instance; and should you
+wish to extend your walk further, there is Nymphenburg, a royal Palace and
+gardens, just one league distant from the city.
+
+The _Residenz-schloss_ or Palace of the King is a solid building. The
+interior is well worth seeing. There is a superb saloon with a vast number
+of valuable miniatures appended to the wainscoating. An enormously heavy
+bed, groaning with gold and silver embroidery and pearls and which is said
+to weigh a ton, is to be seen here. There is a very good collection of
+pictures, chiefly portraits, of the Electoral, now Royal family. There is a
+fine chapel too belonging to this palace; a superb staircase of marble, and
+some fine old tapestry representing the actions of Otto von Wittelsbach.
+There is likewise a curious miniature copy of Trajan's column in gold and
+incrusted with precious stones, besides a variety of other things of value.
+
+There are two theatres in Munich; one called the Hof or Court theatre,
+where there is a company of comedians for tragedy and comedy, the expences
+of which are defrayed principally by the King. The boxes are generally let
+to the nobility and the _parterre_ is open to every body on payment. I
+witnessed the representation of Mozart's _Nozze di Figaro._ The King was
+present and was greeted with much affection. He has a very benignant
+expression of countenance. He is much beloved by his subjects, for he has
+governed them paternally. He has given to them a constitution _unasked;_
+for they were so contented with the old Government, that they desired no
+change; but he, with his usual good sense, saw the propriety of consulting
+and complying with the spirit of the age. A German writer of some eminence
+at the time of the French Revolution, when the aristocrats and alarmists of
+all countries were crying out against it, and proposing harsh measures to
+arrest its progress, said: "Sovereigns of Europe, do you wish to set bounds
+to the progress of French principles? Nothing can be more simple; you have
+only to govern your people like Maximilian of Bavaria and Frederick of
+Saxony, and your subjects will never desire a change."
+
+At the German (national) theatre which is a fair sized one, I saw a tragedy
+performed called _Der Wald bey Herman-stadt_ (the Forest near
+Hermanstadt),[122] It was an interesting piece taken from a feudal legend.
+The part of Elisene was performed by Mlle Vohs, a very good actress. I
+missed very much one thing in Munich, and that is the want of _cafés_ like
+those in France and Italy, which have so brilliant an appearance. They make
+coffee here at the inns; and there are two or three dull places up one pair
+of stairs, where they play at billiards, and make as indifferent coffee as
+is made in England. The hour of dining at Munich is in general one o'clock.
+A slice of ham or sausage with beer form the _goûter,_ usually taken at
+five or six o'clock; and at nine follows a supper as solid as the dinner.
+The Germans are not loungers as the French and Italians, who, for the most
+part, spend all their spare time in coffee-houses. When I mentioned to a
+Bavarian that I could find no _cafés_ in Munich resembling those in France
+and Italy, he said with emphasis! _Gott bewahre_ (God forbid)! I could not
+help thinking he was in the right; for those splendid _cafés_ are very
+seducing to young people and tend to encourage a life of idleness and to
+keep them from their studies. The lower _bourgeoisie_ and _Stubenmädchen_
+(_maidservants_) wear a singular head dress. It is made of stuff worked
+with silver or gold and resembles two horns sticking out one at each ear.
+This head dress must be costly. This class of women wear also on _fête_
+days gold crosses, collars and earrings.
+
+The Bavarians seem a frank, honest set of people, tho' sometimes a little
+rough, in their exterior deportment. The character of Otto of Wittelsbach,
+in the tragedy of that name, gives the best idea of the Bavarian character.
+
+I have made acquaintance here with a Mr F-----, an Austrian gentleman, and
+two Polish gentlemen, the one an officer and the other a medical man. They
+are brothers and had both served in the French army. We have agreed to
+travel to Vienna together on board of the raft which starts every week from
+Munich to Vienna. This raft brings to every day between twelve o'clock and
+two near some town or village on the banks of the river, in order to allow
+the passengers to dine, and anchors every evening at seven o'clock near
+some town or village to sup and sleep. You have only to tell the
+_Flossmeister_, or Master of the Raft, at what inn you mean to put up, or
+if you have no preference, he will recommend you one; and at five the next
+morning he goes his rounds to the different inns to collect his passengers,
+and at six gets under weigh.
+
+
+VIENNA, 2nd August.
+
+I left Munich on the 25th July and arrived on the 6th day of our journey,
+30th July, at Vienna, The _Floss_, or raft, on board of which we embarked,
+is about as long as the main deck of an eighty-four gun ship and about
+forty feet in breadth. It is constructed of strong spars lashed together.
+On the spars is constructed a large platform and on the platform several
+cabins, containing tables and chairs. Mr F----, the Poles and myself hired
+a cabin to ourselves. On the raft was a great deal of merchandize going to
+Vienna. At Vienna the _Flossmeister_, after landing his passengers and
+merchandize, sells his raft and returns on horseback to Munich. A raft is
+constructed weekly at Munich from wood felled in the Tyrol and floated on
+the Isar down to Munich. We arrived the first evening at Freysingen, but it
+was nearly dark when we arrived; it seemed however as far as we could
+observe to be a neat village; at any rate, we met with a very comfortable
+inn there with good fare and good beds. We met with a very pleasant family
+on board the raft, bound to Landshut; M. and Mme S. were extremely
+well-informed people and their two daughters very fine girls.
+
+We arrived the following day at twelve o'clock at Landshut, which is a very
+fine town. There is an immense Gothic tower or steeple to the Church of St
+Martin, about 450 feet in height. At Deckendorf, where the Isar flows into
+the Danube, I saluted for the first time that noble river. We stopped the
+night at Pillshofen and arrived the following day at twelve o'clock at
+Passau. Passau is a large, well built and handsome city, and is situated on
+the confluent of three rivers, the Inn, the Illst and the Danube; for here
+the two former flow into the latter, one on each side. Each of these rivers
+just before the point of juncture seem to be of different colors; for
+example the Danube appears blue, the Inn white, and the Illst black. At
+Passau we put up at the Wild Man (_Zum Wilden Mann_), a favorite sign for
+inns in these parts.
+
+The Cathedral and _Residenz-Schloss_ are striking buildings, and the city
+has a lively and grand appearance. The women appear to be in general
+handsome and well dressed. We brought to the evening at Engelhardtzell,
+where the barrier, painted black and yellow, announced our return to the
+Austrian territory. We underwent at the Customs house a rigid search for
+tobacco: they even took away the tobacco that some passengers had in their
+pouches. They were likewise very rigid about our passports. The English
+passports do not please them at all, on account of the features of the
+bearer not being specified therein, and as I answered their questions in
+German, they supposed me to be a native of that country and asked me what
+business I had with a British passport. I replied: _Weil ich ein Engländer
+bin.--Sie ein Engländer? Sie 'sind gewiss aus Nord Deutschland. Sie
+sprechen recht gut Deutsch.--Meine Herren, ich bin ein Engländer: viele
+Engländer studieren und sprechen Deutsch, und wenn Sièmit mir eine
+langeUnterredung gehalten hätten, so hätten Sie bald ausgefunden durch
+meine Sprachfehler, dass ich kein geborner Deutscher bin.--Aber Sie haben
+unsere Fragen vollkommen gut beantwortet.--Warum nicht? man hat mir die
+nehmlichen Fragen so wiederholten Malen gestellt, dass ich die dazu
+gehörigen Antworte auswendig habe, wie em Katechismus_.[123] The officer
+laughed, took up a pen, _viséd_ and gave me back my passport.
+
+The whole of the country on the banks of this noble river the Danube is
+picturesque and presents much variety. There cannot be a more delightful
+summer tour than a descent down this river. The next town of consequence
+that we arrived at was Linz, a large, populous and beautifully built city
+and capital of Upper Austria. The circumjacent country is in part
+mountainous. The Danube is very broad here, and there is an immensely long
+wooden bridge. We put up at the inn _Zum goldenen Kreutz_ (golden cross).
+Here it became indispensably necessary to change our money for Austrian
+paper, for that sort of it called _Wiener Währung_ (Vienna security), since
+neither foreign coin nor another description of Austrian paper, called
+_Conventions-Münze_ (conventional currency), are current for ordinary
+purposes; and it is necessary to get them changed for the current paper
+_Wiener Währung._To explain this matter more fully and clearly: there are
+two sorts of paper money in the Austrian Dominions. One is called
+_Conventions-Münze_ (conventional currency), which is fully equivalent to
+gold and sliver and cannot be refused as such throughout the whole of the
+Austrian dominions; the other, called _Wiener Währung_ (Vienna security) is
+current and payable in Austria proper only, and bears a loss, out of the
+Archduchy. The value of the _Wiener Währung_ fluctuates considerably, but
+the usual par of exchange is as 2 to 1: that means, two hundred florins
+_Wiener Währung_ are equal to one hundred _Convenzions-Münze_ or gold and
+silver money. Even the _Convenzions-Münze_ bears a loss, tho' trifling, out
+of the Imperial Dominions. The exchange has been known to have been at 400
+per cent; that is, four hundred florins _Wiener Währung_ were only worth
+one hundred florins gold and silver; but just now it may be reckoned a
+little beyond par, fluctuating from 200 to 220. In fact, the value of a
+florin _Wiener Währung_ may be calculated at a frank in French money. All
+this is exceedingly troublesome to travellers, particularly to those who do
+not understand the German language; for as they cannot read the
+inscription, it would be difficult for them to know the difference between
+one sort of paper money and the other and they might be seriously imposed
+upon. I advise therefore all travellers, before they arrive at the Austrian
+frontier, whether coming from Bavaria, Saxony, or Italy, to buy up the
+_Wiener Währung_ notes they may meet with, and which may be purchased at
+great profit, probably, beyond the frontier, whereas if they defer
+purchasing till they arrive within the Austrian frontier, they can only
+procure the _Wiener Währung_ at the common rate of exchange current.
+
+At Linz we find ourselves again in a wine country. Linz is renowned for the
+beauty of its women, and we had a most favorable specimen in our landlord's
+daughter, one of the most beautiful girls I ever beheld. We talked to her a
+great deal, and a scene ridiculous enough occurred. She has very beautiful
+arms which we all seemed to admire; and all at once, by instinct as it
+were, the two Poles lifted up one arm and I the other, and our respective
+lips were fastened on either arm at the same moment as if by word of
+command. We apologized for the liberty we took, saying that her arms were
+perfectly irresistible and that we had never seen such fine ones before.
+She accepted our excuse with the utmost good nature, and laughed very
+heartily. Her father is a man of information and a good classical scholar,
+a thing which is by no means uncommon among the inn-keepers of Germany. We
+stopped here that night, and the ensuing forenoon. We had an excellent
+supper, very good wine, and we drank to the health of the fair Amalia, the
+host's daughter. Our host, who was a friend of Mr F----'s, gave us the
+best of every thing, and our expences did not amount to more than seven
+florins _Wiener Währung_, for supper, bed, breakfast and dinner. We passed
+the forenoon in visiting the different parts of the city and we were struck
+with the appearance of opulence and industry that prevails.
+
+Before we arrived at Mölk, which is the next important place, we passed the
+town of Ens and beyond that the famous _Strudel_ or Whirlpool which is
+dangerous at times for boats. Our raft was completely whirled round. This
+whirlpool is caused by rocks rising abruptly out of the water. The popular
+tradition is that this whirlpool is the abode of a very malicious and
+spiteful _Wassernixe_, Undine or Water Goblin, who delighted in drowning
+passengers. The scenery hereabouts is more wild and romantic than what we
+have hitherto passed and bears a great resemblance to the landscape on the
+Rhine between Mayence and Coblentz. Mölk is an Abbey and a very magnificent
+edifice it is, situated on an eminence which forms the angle with the river
+and rises quite _à pio_ from the water's edge; it lies quite _en face_ to
+those who approach it, descending the stream, so that the river seems to be
+terminated by it. It commands a noble prospect. I had only time to inspect
+hastily the church. Beyond Mölk is a range of rocks that bear a great
+resemblance to a wall, and jut out a great deal towards the river. It is
+called the _Devil's wall_ from the tradition of the Devil having
+endeavoured to make a wall to dam up the river. Above this wall is the
+famous castle and vineyard called _Spitz am Platz_, and further on is the
+castle of Dierenstein, situated on a mountain on the left bank of the
+Danube. The ascent is very steep; this castle, now in ruins, was the place
+where Richard Coeur de Lion was confined. The walls only of the castle and
+part of the chapel are all that remain; we did not fail to visit a place of
+such celebrity. A convent lies below it.
+
+We brought to the night at a large village where there is an excellent inn;
+and the next day, the Leopoldsberg, bursting forth to view, announced to us
+the approach to Vienna. We anchored at Nussdorf, where there is a Custom
+house, and from whence the distance to Vienna is about one and half mile
+English. After having my trunk examined, I hired a hackney coach and drove
+into Vienna. The barriers beyond the suburb are called _Lines_, and between
+the Suburbs and the old town is an Esplanade. We entered the Suburbs by the
+_Währinger Linie_, and the old town by the _Rothes Thor_ (Red gate); and
+from thence I repaired to the inn _Zum weissen Wolf_ (white Wolf) in the
+_Altem Fleischmarkt_ (old meat-market).
+
+
+VIENNA, Augt. 4.
+
+The old town of Vienna is not very large, since you can walk round its
+circumference on the ramparts in two hours. It was formerly fortified, but
+the French blew up the fortifications, leaving only the rampart; and by so
+doing they did a thing of great utility for the Viennese, and gave to the
+Austrian government an excellent opportunity of joining the old town to the
+magnificent faubourgs, by filling up the esplanade which separates them
+with streets and squares, which would prevent the unpleasant effects of
+dust in dry, and the mud in wet weather, for this dust and mud renders the
+esplanade almost at all times a disagreeable promenade, there being a sharp
+wind prevalent almost the whole year at Vienna, which blows about the dust
+_en tourbillons_. Here then was an excellent opportunity, afforded by the
+blowing up of the fortifications, of paving the whole of the esplanade and
+filling it up with streets. But no! the Austrian government seem determined
+upon restoring the fortifications, and a considerable number of workmen are
+employed. This is very silly, for these fortifications are not of the least
+use against a foreign enemy, inasmuch as the enemy can always erect his
+batteries among the faubourgs and need only make one parallel, the
+protection and cover afforded to him by the faubourgs rendering the other
+two superfluous. The faubourgs are by far the finest part of the city, and
+the garrison of the old town, in endeavouring to defend it, would destroy
+by every shot they should fire the fine buildings on the faubourgs. Of the
+folly of making such a defence they were made fully sensible in 1809. One
+of the Archdukes threw himself into the old town of Vienna, with an
+intention of defending it to the last and refused to surrender. Napoleon
+caused batteries to be erected on the _Rennweg_ or _Corso_ covered by the
+church of St Charles, the Manege and Palace of the Hungarian noble guard,
+all magnificent buildings in the faubourgs. He then summoned the garrison
+of the old town again to surrender saying: "Every shot fired against the
+besiegers destroys your own most valuable property and finest edifices."
+This argument, backed by the entreaties of the citizens, had its effect and
+the capitulation was signed. This shows the perfect inutility of fortifying
+the old town of Vienna against a foreign enemy. Indeed a capital city
+should never be fortified; it generally contains too many things of value,
+ever to be exposed to the risk of a bombardment. It would seem, however,
+that the object of the Austrian government in reconstructing these works
+were to keep its own subjects at Vienna in check. But in this case it would
+be much more advisable to construct a fortress on the heights of Kahlenberg
+or of Leopoldsberg, both of which command the city and the whole expanse
+below. The Turks were encamped on the Kahlenberg at the famous siege of
+Vienna.
+
+Vienna proper, the old town, is a Gothic city, but a very handsome one. The
+streets are in general broad and well paved; but the _Places_ or Squares
+are small. With the exception of the _Herrengasse_, where the nobility
+reside, the rest of Vienna is inhabited by shopkeepers and wholesale
+dealers; and the shops are brilliant and well fitted up. The _Kärnthner
+Strasse_, a long and tolerably broad street, and the _Kohlmarkt_ present
+the greatest display of wealth. Indeed the _Kärnthner Strasse_ may be
+considered as the principal street; this street and the _Kohlmarkt_ have a
+great resemblance to the finest parts of Holborn. The _Graben_ also present
+a fine display of shops and may be termed the Bond Street of Vienna. The
+_Sanct Stephans Platz_ where the Cathedral church of Vienna, called _St
+Stephans Kirche_, stands, is the largest _Place_ in Vienna. The Cathedral
+is a very ancient and curious Gothic edifice, and the steeple is nearly 450
+feet high. I happened to enter the Cathedral one day on the occasion of a
+solemn requiem celebrated for the soul of Prince Metternich's father. Had
+it been for the son, instead of the father, many an honorable man
+persecuted at the instigation of that most machiavelic of all ministers,
+might exclaim in making a slight alteration in a well known epitaph:
+
+ Cy-gît M---- ah! qu'il est bien
+ Pour son repos et pour le mien!
+
+Among the other striking buildings in the old town is the _Hofburg_ or
+Imperial Palace, a very extensive quadrangular building, with a large court
+in its centre. A Guard mounts here every day at eleven o'clock. It was in
+one of the saloons of this palace that the celebrated Congress of Vienna
+was held; a Congress whose labours will be long and severely felt by Europe
+and duly appreciated by posterity, who will feel any other sentiment but
+that of gratitude for the arrangements entered into there. The _Hofburg_
+was built by Leopold VII in 1200. This building, from its being extremely
+irregular and from its having received additions at intervals in the
+different styles of architecture, has been aptly enough considered as the
+type of the Austrian monarchy, and of its growth from a Markgraviate to an
+Empire; in _this_, by the continued acquisition of foreign territories
+differing from each other in manners and hi speech; in _that_, by the
+continued addition of various specimens of architecture and style of
+building in its augmentation.
+
+
+VIENNA, Aug. 8th.
+
+I am very well content with my abode at the _Weisser Wolf_, tho' it is not
+a first-rate hotel. They are very civil people, and I have an excellent and
+spacious room for two florins _Wiener Whärung_ per diem. Lodgings are the
+only things that are dear in Vienna, every other article is, however,
+cheaper than in any other city I have yet been in. All kinds of Hungarian
+wine may be had at the most reasonable prices. I generally breakfast at a
+neighbouring _Café_ in the _Fleischmarkt_ for the sake of reading the
+_Allgemeine Zeitung_ which is taken in there, and which is the only journal
+having a shade of liberality which is permitted in the Austrian dominions.
+From the hours of twelve to three, dinners _à la carte_ are served at the
+_Weisser Wolf_. For two and half florins _W.W._, I get an excellent dinner
+with a bottle of Offener wine. The wine of Offen resembles much that of
+Bordeaux in its quality and flavor. The tariff however of the dinners and
+wines varies daily a few kreutzers, in consequence of the eternal
+fluctuation of the _W.W._, so that every morning a fresh tariff is affixed
+to the wainscot of the saloon where the dinners are served. Supper, served
+likewise _à la carte_, is at its full tide between the hours of eight and
+ten o'clock; and as Vienna is renowned for the celebrity of its beefsteaks
+and cutlets, called here _Rostbraten_, these and a salad seem to be the
+favourite dish for supper. My mornings I have hitherto passed in lounging
+about the _Kärnthner Gasse, St Stephen's Platz, Kohlmarkt_, etc. For an
+hour before dinner the fashionable promenade is on the rampart in front of
+the palace of Duke Albert of Saxe-Teschen; in the evening on the _Prater_,
+in a carriage, on horseback, or on foot. The _Prater_ is of immense extent
+and offers a great variety of amusements and sights. I generally return
+home at night pretty well fatigued from my rambles.
+
+There is another great inconvenience at Vienna, resulting from the
+fluctuation of the current money, and this is that a stranger, dwelling at
+an inn, is sure to be disturbed five or six times in the morning, sometimes
+as early as five or six o'clock, by Jews who rap at his door to enquire if
+he wants to exchange gold and silver against currency or _vice versâ_. I
+used to lose all patience at being so disturbed in the morning, and was
+obliged in self-defence to put an affiche on the door of my room to this
+effect: "_Man kauft und verkauft hier nichts; kein Wechsler darf
+hereintreten_." "Here there is no buying and selling; no money changer is
+allowed to come in," and I hereby recommend to all strangers not to treat
+with these Jews, but on their arrival, or at any time they think fit, to go
+to a banking establishment in this city, where every day after eleven
+o'clock you can exchange your gold and silver for paper at the just rate of
+exchange, as published at the Bourse, paying only a very slight premium,
+and on leaving Vienna to go to the same establishment to change your
+superfluous _Wiener Währung_ for _Convenzions Münze_ or gold and silver
+money. For when the Jews tell you the rate of exchange is so and so, you
+conclude probably your bargain with them, and on enquiring at the Bourse
+you find that the Jew has made a percentage of six or eight per cent, out
+of you. _Louis d'or_ are the best foreign coin to bring into the Austrian
+Dominions. Next to them in utility are the Dutch ducats, or _Geharnischte
+Männer_ as they are termed, from the figure of the man in armour upon them.
+All other corns suffer a loss in proportion. The bankers in Vienna pay the
+foreign bill of exchange in _Convenzions Münze_, which you must afterwards
+change for _Wiener Währung_, the only current money in Vienna and Austria.
+But what makes it additionally troublesome is that here in Vienna there are
+particular payments, which must absolutely be paid in gold or silver or
+_Convenzions Münze_, and _not Wiener Währung_; for instance the franking of
+foreign letters at the post office, where they do not take the _Wiener
+Währung_. In vain you may intreat them to take the _Wiener Währung_ at any
+rate they please; no! you must go elsewhere and buy from the first person
+you can meet with as much gold and silver as is required for the franking
+of the letters; so bigotted are they in the Austrian dominions to the
+letter of the law! This happened to me: I wanted to frank three letters for
+England and I went to the post office with _Wiener Währung_ paper, not
+being aware of this regulation, and I was obliged to return to my Hotel, to
+lay hold of a Jew, and to buy from him as much gold and silver as was
+requisite for the franking of the letters.
+
+At the _Wechselbank_ or Bank of Exchange I have before mentioned, the crowd
+that attends daily is immense; but the business is carried on without hurry
+or confusion. You hand in your paper or your gold and silver coin, the
+clerk who receives it gives you an order on paper for the amount specified,
+which paper you take into another room and therein receive the amount. This
+establishment, however, remains open only two hours every day, between
+eleven and one I believe; so if you are too late for this interval of time,
+you must apply to the brokers, Christian or Israelite.
+
+
+VIENNA, August 11th.
+
+We left the old town by the _Burg-thor,_ and crossing the Esplanade,
+directed our course to the _Rennweg,_ one of the suburbs, in order to view
+the majestic edifice of St Charles, which is equal in the beauty of its
+architecture to many of the finest churches in Rome. Its façade and cupola
+render it one of the most striking buildings belonging to Vienna. We next
+visited the _Manège_ and the Palace called the palace of the Hungarian
+Noble Guard. They are both beautiful edifices. The faubourgs of Vienna are
+built in the modern style and their buildings, both public and private,
+excellent in their way and in the best state. The streets of the faubourgs
+are broad but not paved. The most celebrated of these faubourgs are _Maria
+Hülf_, _Leopold-stadt_, _Landstrasse_, the _Rennweg_, the _Wühringer
+Gasse_; and I am persuaded that if the old town were united to the faubourg
+by means of streets and squares and the esplanade filled up with buildings,
+Vienna would perhaps be the handsomest city in Europe and the fourth in
+size, for the best buildings and palaces are in the faubourgs, viz., the
+Military College, the Polytechnic School, St Charles' Church, the Porcelain
+fabric, the Palaces of Esterhazy, Kaunitz, Stahremberg, Schwarzenberg,
+Palfy, and the beautiful Palace and ground of Belvedere in which last is a
+noble collection of pictures open to the public. At the Polytechnic school
+one of the principal professors is a friend of Mr F------'s, and he
+explained to us the nature of the establishment and the course of studies
+pursued. The apparatus for every branch of science is on the grandest
+scale. After dinner we repaired to the _Prater_, crossing a branch of the
+Danube which here forms several islands. The _Prater_ requires and deserves
+particular mention. Part of it is something in the style of the _Champs
+Elysées_ at Paris, and it is fully equal to it in the variety of amusements
+and enjoyments to be met with there; but it is far larger and more
+beautiful on account of its landscape and the diversified manner in which
+the grounds are laid out. The _Prater_, then, is an immense park, laid out
+on an island of considerable extent on the Danube. The nearest faubourg to
+it is the _Leopoldstadt_, which is also the most fashionable one, and a
+bridge conducts you from that faubourg direct into the _Prater_. The
+_Prater_ presents a mixture of garden, meadow, upland and forest; the lofty
+trees arranged in avenues or in clumps give a delightful protecting shade.
+On the road destined for the carriages there is every afternoon a most
+brilliant display of carriages. Another avenue is destined for equestrians,
+and two avenues, one on each side of these two, for pedestrians. There are
+besides winding footpaths, that conduct you all over this vast extent of
+ground, and circular grass plots surrounded by trees where the pedestrian
+may repose and eat and drink if he will. Here are _restaurants_ in plenty,
+_cafés_, Panoramas, exhibitions of wild beasts, swings, tennis courts,
+places for running at the ring, do for burlesque dramatic performances,
+_farceurs_, jugglers, De Bach's Equestrian Amphitheatre in the style of
+Franconi, _Salles de Danse_, baths, billiard rooms, gaming tables, and even
+houses appropriated to gallantry. In fact, the _Prater_ is quite the
+Paradise of the bourgeoisie of Vienna, who are fond of the pleasures of the
+table and take every opportunity of making dinner and supper parties. The
+bourgeois of Vienna are far more sensual than spiritual and not at all
+disposed to self-denial.
+
+Excellent hams and sausages are to be had here; and the Viennese who dines
+and sups heartily at his own house never fails, during his evening
+promenade, to take a tolerable good portion of ham or sausage, with a
+proportion of Offen wine or Maylander Beer, by way of staying his stomach
+during the tedious interval between dinner and supper. I need scarce add
+that smoking is universal, as indeed it is all over Germany, for I scarcely
+ever see a German without a pipe either in his mouth or fastened to his
+coat and a bag or pouch of tobacco either in his pocket or attached to his
+button hole. In the _Prater_ dances often take place in the open air
+between the grisettes of Vienna, who are in general handsome and well made,
+and who dress well, and their lovers and admirers. The _Prater_ was first
+opened to the public by the Emperor Joseph II. The _Au-garten_ is another
+place of recreation and amusement, but on a smaller and much more tranquil
+and sober scale, than the _Prater_. None of the lower classes think of
+coming here, tho' it is open to every body decently dressed: there is not
+that profuse eating and drinking going forward. It is more properly
+speaking a promenade, and forms a garden with alleys of trees where music
+is often performed and there is a superb saloon where refreshments may be
+had. The _Au-garten_ is frequented chiefly by the _Noblesse_ and _Haute
+Bourgeoisie_. In the morning likewise it is a fashionable resort to drink
+the mineral waters. It adjoins the _Prater_, being on the same island. It
+was the favourite lounge of Joseph II, who opened it to the public by
+affixing this inscription on one of the gates:
+
+ Allen Menschen gewidmete Erlustigung von ihrem Schätzer
+
+ "Place of recreation open to all Men by their esteemer."
+
+
+VIENNA, Aug. 13th.
+
+There are a great number of theatres at Vienna. Two are situated in the old
+town, viz., the _Hof-theater_ and the _Burg-theater_. The _Hof-theater_ is
+only open when the Court are at Vienna, and they are now at Baden, ten
+leagues distant. The _Burg-theater_ is open all the year round, and may be
+considered as the national theatre. It is much frequented by the
+bourgeoisie and inhabitants of the old town, who do not chuse to take the
+trouble to go to the _Wieden-theater_, which is situated in the faubourgs,
+and which is more of a classical and fashionable theatre than the other,
+inasmuch as it is more elegantly and classically built, better fitted up,
+and has a far better company of comedians. At the _Burgtheater_ I saw
+Kotzebue's _Edelsinn und Armuth_ performed. The Wieden theatre which is, as
+I have said, in the faubourgs, is the handsomest theatre perhaps in Europe
+for its size. It is not large, but it is fitted up with so much taste and
+you see and hear so well; every ornament is so chaste and there is nothing
+at all tawdry or superfluous. It is, I really think, a model of what every
+theatre ought to be. There is a good deal of bronze about it which gives it
+a classical appearance, and the boxes are supported by Caryatides in
+bronze. There is a peculiarity in all the theatres at Vienna, which is,
+that in the _parterre_ you must sit in the place the number of which is
+marked on your ticket. These places are called _Gesperrte Sitze,_ and each
+seat resembles an armchair. When not occupied, the seat is folded up and
+locked to the back of the chair, until the person who holds the ticket
+corresponding to its number comes to take it; so that no other but the
+person holding the ticket corresponding to the number can take it, and you
+are thus never likely to be shoved out of your place, as you are at most of
+the theatres in Europe. There are men stationed at the doors who follow you
+into the _parterre_ to unlock and let down a seat for you, and to them you
+give your ticket with a slight gratification, which is however quite
+optional; your ticket you previously pay for at the door.
+
+
+VIENNA, Augt. 20th.
+
+I have been to see Schönbrunn, the usual residence of the young Napoleon;
+but he is now at Baden with the Imperial family, where his mother, who is
+lately arrived from Italy, is also on a visit. The young Napoleon is said
+to be a remarkable fine boy, and a great favorite with his grandfather the
+Emperor. Many are the anecdotes related of him. I shall mention one. He had
+heard so often talk of his father, that shortly after the arrival of his
+mother, he wished to see his father also and asked his attendants
+repeatedly and not in a very patient tone: _Wo ist denn mein Vater?_[124]
+This was told to his grandfather the Emperor; and he gave directions that
+the child should be brought to him, the very next time he should put the
+question. He then said to him: _Du möchtestwissen wo dein Vater ist? Er ist
+in Verhaft. Man hat es mit ihm gut gemeint; weil er aber unruhig war, so
+hat man ihn in Verhaft gestellt, und Dich wird man auch verhaften, wenn Du
+unruhig bist._[125]
+
+So much for this anecdote; but I did not hear what was the answer of the
+young prince. The young Napoleon is, it appears, a great favorite of the
+soldiers, who quite adore him, and he will sometimes go into the kitchen to
+get bread and meat to give to the soldiers on Guard at the Palace. A
+singular event happened lately to Maria Louisa. During her stay at
+Schõnbrunn, her _chatouille,_ with several things of value in it,
+_bijouterie,_ etc., was stolen from her. She caused enquiries to be made,
+and researches to be set on foot. Nobody has been able to find out who took
+it; but it was put back in the precise place from whence it was taken, and
+not a single article of the _bijouterie_ or things of value was missing. It
+is supposed this theft was made for political purposes, in order to
+discover the nature of her epistolary correspondence, if any existed. Had
+it been taken by a vulgar thief, it is not probable that the articles of
+value would have been restored. Such is the unhappy condition of that
+Princess to be always an object of suspicion and espionnage.
+
+
+_Journey to Prague_.
+
+
+I left Vienna on the 28th August in a _Landkutsche_ and arrived at Prague
+on the first of September.
+
+These _Landkutsche_ are on the same plan and footing with the _vetture_ in
+Italy, and travel in the same manner, with this difference, however; that
+the _Landkutscher_ do not usually, as the _vetturini_ do, undertake to
+provide for the supper and bed of their passengers. In a word, you are not
+_spesato;_ and in Germany there is not the least necessity for it, for
+there is no such thing as extortion on the part of the German innkeepers,
+who are by far the most respectable of that profession. Besides, in most
+places, everything is _tariffed,_ and where it is not, the landlord never
+makes an unreasonable demand, or attempts to make foreigners pay more than
+natives; whereas in Italy if you are not _spesato_ there are no bounds to
+the rapacity of the innkeepers, witness mine host of Terracina. Both Italy
+and Germany present the greatest convenience for travellers, as the
+_Landkutsche_ or _vetture_ are continually passing from town to town. There
+is however this difference between them, that the Italian _vetturini_ will
+abate their price, if their carriage is full excepting one place, and that
+they must start, whereas the German _Landkutscher_ never abate their price.
+
+I paid for my journey from Vienna to Prague thirty-five florins _Wiener
+Währung,_ and we made the journey in five days. Our first day's journey
+brought us to Höllabrunn, having stoppd to dinner at Stockeran. The road is
+excellent and the several towns and villages we past thro' clean and well
+built. The landscape was either a plain, or gently undulating and extremely
+well cultivated.
+
+Bohemia resembles Moravia, being an exceedingly rich corn country,
+generally open; not many trees about the country near the road side, except
+at the _Chateau_ and farm houses. The language is a dialect of the
+Sclavonic, mixed with some German; but at the inns there is always one or
+two servants who speak German. In Bohemia a traveller not speaking German,
+and who has no interpreter with him, would find himself greatly
+embarrassed. The Bohemians call themselves in their own language
+_Cherschky_, and the Hungarians call themselves _Magyar_.
+
+
+[117] Tasso, _Gerusalemme liberata_, canto XV, ottave 31, 32:
+
+ Un uom della Liguria avrà ardimento
+ All' incognito corao esporsi in prima...
+ Tu spiegherai, Colombo, a un nuovo polo
+ Lontane si le fortunate antenne...--ED.
+
+
+[118] Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, XL, 31, 1.--ED.
+
+[119] See reference to Eustace p. 131.
+
+[120] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, XXVIII, 38, 7.--ED.
+
+[121] Boileau, _Satires_, XI, v. 117.
+
+[122] The drama, _Der Wold bei Hermannstadt,_ is the work of Johanna
+ Fraenul von Weissenthurn (1773-1847), a celebrated Viennese actress
+ and authoress. An opera was written on the same text by W. Westmeyer,
+ --ED.
+
+[123] Because I am an Englishman--You are an Englishman? you are certainly
+ a North-German; you speak very correct German.--Gentlemen, I tell you
+ I am an Englishman; many English study and speak the German language
+ and if you had held a long conversation with me, you would soon have
+ perceived from my faults in speaking, that I am not a German.--But you
+ have answered our questions so correctly.--Why not, the same questions
+ have been put to me so often that I have all the necessary answers by
+ heart like a catechism.
+
+[124] Where is my father?
+
+[125] "You wish to know where your father is? He is under arrest; people
+ were well disposed to him; but he is placed under arrest, because he
+ was unruly, and if you are unruly you will be placed under arrest
+ likewise."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+SEPTEMBER 1818-MARCH 1819
+
+The splendid city of Prague--The German expression, "To give the
+basket"--Journey from Prague to Dresden--Journey from Dresden to Berlin--A
+description of Berlin--The Prussian Army--Theatricals--Peasants talk about
+Napoleon--Prussians and French should be allies--Absurd policy of the
+English Tories--Journey from Berlin to Dresden--A description of
+Dresden--The battle of Dresden in 1813--Clubs at Dresden--Theatricals--
+German beds--Saxon scholars--The picture gallery--Tobacco an ally of
+Legitimacy--Saxon women--Meissen--Unjust policy of Europe towards the King
+of Saxony.
+
+
+PRAGUE, 4 Sept.
+
+Prague is a far more striking and splendid city than Vienna, without its
+faubourgs. The streets are broader; and it has a more cheerful and less
+confined appearance than the old town of Vienna. The position of Prague too
+is very romantic and picturesque, part of it lying on a mountain and part
+on a plain; and it stands on the confluent of two rivers, the Mulda and the
+Braun. The upper part of the city, called Oberburg, stands on a height
+called Ratschin, and on this height stands a most magnificent palace and
+other stately buildings. There is a beautiful panoramic view from this part
+of Prague. In this part of the city too is the cathedral of St Wenzel or
+Wenceslaus, who was its founder. His tomb and that of St John Nepomucene, a
+favorite saint of the Bohemians, is in this church. The Cathedral is of
+extreme solidity, but little ornamented, having been plundered by the
+Swedes in 1648. The canopy over the shrine of St John Nepomucene has a
+profusion of votive offerings appended to it. The lower part of Prague is
+divided into two parts by the Mulda. The bridge across the Mulda is one of
+the finest in Europe. It has twenty-four arches, its length is 1700 feet
+and its breadth 35. Among several statues on this bridge is a very
+remarkable one of Jesus Christ, made of bronze gilt, which cost a large sum
+of money to its founder, a Jew! There is a Latin inscription on it which
+explains the paradox. There stood on the same spot a wooden statue of
+Christ in the XVI century. One day an opulent Jew, on passing by, made some
+scoffing or contemptuous remark on it. He was overheard by some of the
+people, accused of blasphemy and condemned to die; but on expressing great
+contrition and offering to pay a fine to any amount, he was pardoned, on
+the condition of his promising to erect a bronze statue gilt of Jesus
+Christ on the same spot, at his own expense, with an inscription explaining
+the reason of its construction; which promise he punctually performed.
+Prague abounds in Jews. Two-thirds at least of its population are of that
+persuasion. In the lower town the most striking edifices are the palace of
+the Wallenstein family, descendants of the famous Wallenstein, so
+distinguished in the Thirty Years war. Annexed to this Palace is a spacious
+garden, which is open to the public as a promenade. It is well laid out.
+There is a large aviary. This Palace covers a vast extent of ground. The
+Colloredo family, who are descended from Wenceslaus, have a superb Palace
+in this city; and there is a stable belonging to it, partly in marble and
+of rich architecture, capable of containing thirty-six horses. No traveller
+who comes to Prague should omit visiting these two Palaces of Wallenstein
+and Colloredo. On the bridge over the Mulda before mentioned, is the statue
+in bronze of St John Nepomucene, on the spot from whence he was thrown into
+the river by his brother saint, King Wenceslaus, for refusing to divulge
+the gallantries of his (Wenceslaus') wife, to whom he was confessor. A
+favorite promenade on Sundays is on the _Färber Insel_ or Dyers island,
+which is a small island on the Mulda. Here the young men of the town come
+to dance with the _grisettes_ and milliner girls of Prague, who are
+renowned for their beauty and complaisance.
+
+The Jewish burying ground is a curiosity for a person who has never visited
+the Oriental countries. The tombstones are stowed thick together. Everybody
+recollects the anecdote of the ingenious method adopted by Joseph II for
+squeezing a large sum of money from the Jews of Prague, by giving out that
+he intended to claim this cemetery, in order to build therein a Palace. The
+Jews who, like all the Orientals, have the most profound veneration for the
+spot where their ancestors are buried, presented a large sum of money to
+the Emperor, to induce him to renounce his design.
+
+The _Stadt-Haus_ (Hotel de Ville) is a fine building; and the _Marktplatz_
+(market square) is very spacious, and contributes much to the beauty of the
+town. In the centre of it stands an ancient fountain of a dodecagonal form.
+The basin is of red marble, and near it stands a large stone column, with a
+statue of the Virgin, bronze gilt, on its summit. A well supplied market,
+or rather fair, is carried on here every day in the week. The Theatre is a
+fine building and is of immense size. I witnessd the representation of a
+burlesque tragedy called _Die Belagerung von Ypsilon_ (the siege of
+Ypsilon), but I could not at all comprehend the cream of the jest. Madame
+Catalani, who is here, sang at this theatre one night. The theatre was
+completely filled and the price of admission to the boxes and _parterre_ a
+ducat. The street adjoining to the theatre was crowded by people
+endeavoring to catch the sweet sounds. Immense hommage has been paid to
+Catalani by the authorities here.
+
+The balls of the _bourgeoisie_ of Prague are splendid and well attended.
+The _bourgeoisie_ is very opulent in this city. There are but few residents
+_Noblesse_. The expences at the inns here are rather greater than those at
+Vienna, wine being a foreign commodity and beer the national beverage. My
+daily expences here for lodging, dinner, supper and breakfast amounted to
+four florins _Convenzions Münze_, about nine franks nearly, French money.
+The country environing Prague is rich and abounding in corn; there are
+likewise hops. The walls of Prague still bear the marks made by Frederic's
+shot when he blockaded Prague.
+
+
+PRAGUE, 7th Sept.
+
+To-morrow I shall start for Dresden, The diligence goes off only once a
+week, but I have engaged a car or rather light basket waggon drawn by two
+horses (a vehicle very common in Germany) to convey me to Dresden in two
+days and half. I am to pay for half of the waggon, and another traveller
+will pay for the remaining half.
+
+Before I leave Prague I must tell you that I have found out the origin of
+the German phrases _Jemand den Korb zu geben (to give the basket)_, which
+means a refusal of marriage. Thus when a young lady refuses an offer of
+marriage on the part of her admirer, the phrase is: _Sie hat ihm den Korb
+gegeben_ (_She has given him the basket_). Hitherto I have not met with any
+one who could explain to me satisfactorily the origin of so singular a
+phrase; but on reading lately a volume of the _Volksmährchen_ (_Popular
+tales_) I found not only the derivation of this phrase, but also that of
+the name of the city of Prague. Both are connected in the same story, and
+both concern the history of Prague. The story is as follows.
+
+Libussa, Duchess of Bohemia, had three lovers, two of whom were not
+remarkably intelligent, but the third possessed a great deal of talent and
+was her favorite. She was much importuned by the rival suitors. She
+appeared before them one day with a basket filled with plums in her hand;
+and said she would give her hand in marriage to whoever of them should
+guess the following arithmetical riddle. She said: "One of you shall take
+half the plums that are in this basket, and one over: another shall take
+half of what remains, and one over: the third shall take half of what still
+remains and three over, and then all the plums will have been taken. Now
+tell me how many plums there are in the basket." Her favorite was the only
+one who could guess the number of plums which was _thirty_. To him
+therefore she gave her hand and the plums, and to the other suitors the
+empty basket. Hence the phrase. The solution of the question is as follows:
+
+ A takes half of the plums in the basket (30) and one
+ over . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 + 1 = 16
+ B half of what remained (14) and one over . . . . . 7 + 1 = 8
+ C half of what remained (6) and three over . . . . . 3 + 3 = 6
+ ---
+ Total 30
+
+Now with regard to the origin of the city of Prague. The former residence
+was much too small, and Libussa directed her workmen to build a town on the
+spot, where they should find at midday a man making the _best use of his
+teeth_. They began their research and one day at that hour discovered a
+carpenter sawing a block of wood. It struck them that this laborious man
+was making a better use of his teeth (viz., teeth of his saw) than the mere
+feeder and they judged that this ought to be the place where the town
+should be built. They therefore proceeded to trace with a plough the
+circumference of the town. On asking the carpenter what he was about to
+make with the block he was sawing, he said " A threshold for a door," which
+is called _Prah_ or _Praha_ in the Bohemian language and Libussa gave to
+the city the name of _Praha_ or _Prag_.
+
+
+BERLIN, 24th Sept.
+
+Berlin has a splendid and cheerful appearance, with fine broad streets,
+superb white buildings and Palaces, for the most part in the Grecian taste;
+it has quite the appearance in short of an Italian city. Nearly all the
+streets are at right angles; they are kept very clean and the shops make a
+brilliant display. I felt so much pain in my legs, from the effect of my
+pedestrian journey, that I was obliged to remain in my chamber one entire
+day. There is a very good _table d'hôte_ at my bin for twelve _Groschen_.
+Wine is paid for extra, and at the rate of from 12 to 18 _Groschen_ the
+bottle. The sort usually drunk here is the Medoc. The prices of articles of
+prune necessity are dearer in Berlin than either at Dresden or Vienna;
+particularly the article of washing, which is dearer than in any country I
+have yet visited.
+
+The next morning I began my rambles, and directed my course to the favorite
+and fashionable promenade of the _beau monde_, at all hours of the day, I
+mean in the fine street or alley _Unter den Linden_, so called from it
+being planted with lime trees. There is a range of elegant buildings on
+each side, and at the end, near the _Thier Garten_ (Park), is a superb gate
+called the _Brandenburger Thor_ in the shape of a triumphal arch ornamented
+with a statue of Peace, with an olive branch in her hand, standing on a car
+drawn by four horses abreast, the whole groupe being of bronze and of
+exquisite workmanship. The four horses are imitated from the Corinthian
+horses at Venice and yield to them in nothing but antiquity. Indeed they
+have a much more pleasing and striking effect, in being thus attached to a
+car, than standing by themselves, as the Venetian ones do, on the top of
+the façade of a church. This _Brandenburger Thor_ is constructed after the
+model of the Propylaeum of Athens.
+
+The Opera House, a building in the Grecian taste erected by Frederic the
+Great with the inscription _Apollini et Musis_, and after that the Academy
+of the Fine Arts engaged my attention. Both these buildings are remarkable,
+and they are near the _Linden_. The old town is much intersected by canals
+communicating with the Spree which divides it. I call it the old town, to
+distinguish it from the quarter composed of streets of recent construction
+between the former _enceinte_ of the town and the Brandenburger Thor. The
+Hotel of the Invalides, a ponderous building, bears the following
+inscription: _Laesis non victis_. The Bank and the Arsenal next engaged my
+attention, as also a Guard House of recent construction in the shape of a
+Doric temple. The Royal Palace is an immense building, partly in the Gothic
+and partly in the Grecian style. It is very heavy but imposing. The
+interior of this Palace is royally fitted up, except the little room
+occupied by the great Frederic, which is left in the same state as when he
+occupied it; and you know he was not fond of superfluous ornament. In the
+green before the Palace stands the statue of the Prince of Anhalt Dessau,
+the founder of the Prussian Infantry system, and at a short distance from
+this, on the _Lange Brücke,_ stands the colossal equestrian statue in
+bronze of the Great Elector.
+
+The _Königstrasse_ is the principal street and a very fine one it is; next
+to it in point of beauty is the _Französische_ _Strasse_. The _Wilhelm
+Platz_ is adorned with the statues in marble of Schwerin, Seidlitz, Keith,
+Winterfeld, and Ziethen. But I cannot enumerate all the splendid public
+establishments and fine things to be seen in this beautiful city. The most
+striking church is that of St Hedwig. I call it the most striking from its
+resemblance to the Pantheon at Rome. The Cathedral is perhaps a finer
+building. 'Tis in this last that the Electoral and Royal remains are
+deposited.
+
+The streets 'here swarm with military, and indeed the profession of arms
+seems to have too much sway in the Prussian dominions. The subalterns and
+young men of the Prussian Army are said to have republican sentiments, and
+they, in common with all the burghers, desire a constitution. It galls them
+to see one enjoyed by the Bavarians, whom they affect to look upon as
+inferior to them in intelligence, and that it should be refused to them.
+Most of the nobility and the greater part of the General and field officers
+are however inveterate aristocrats.
+
+You have heard, I dare say, of the attempt made by some officers among the
+nobility to exclude from the service, after the peace, those officers who
+were not noble. When it is considered that their best and most zealous
+officers sprung from the burghers, and that Prussia, when abandoned by her
+King and nobles, was saved from permanent subjection only by the
+unparalleled exertions of her burghers and peasantry, one is shocked at
+such ingratitude and absurdity. But the officers of the Royal Guard went so
+far as to draw up a petition to the King, requesting him to dismiss all the
+officers of the corps who were not noble, and Blucher was applied to to
+present this petition to the King. Blucher read the paper and ordered all
+the officers to assemble on the parade and thus addressed them: "Gentlemen,
+I have received your paper and read its contents with the utmost
+astonishment. All the remarks that I shall permit myself to make on the
+subject of this petition, are, that it makes me ashamed of being myself a
+noble." He then tore the petition in pieces and dismissed them.
+
+I have been once at the theatre. _Lodoiska_ was performed. I saw a number
+of fine women in the boxes. Formerly gallantry and pleasure were the order
+of the day at Berlin; but now, the Court assuming the exterior of rigid
+morality and strictly exercised religious devotion, mystic cant and
+dullness is the order of the day. The death of the Queen of Prussia threw a
+great damp over the amusements of the Court. At Charlottenburg, which is a
+short distance from Berlin, in the grounds there, they point out to you her
+favourite spots. She was a most amiable Princess, and united to great
+personal beauty so much grace and fascination and so many good qualities
+that she was beloved by all, and the breath of calumny never ventured to
+assail her.
+
+The alley _Unter den Linden_ in the evening presents a great assemblage of
+Cyprian nymphs, who promenade up and down; they dress well and are
+perfectly well behaved. There is a superb establishment of this kind at
+Berlin, which all strangers should visit out of curiosity. It is not
+indispensably necessary to sacrifice to the Goddess whose worship is
+carried on there; but you may limit yourself to admire the temple, call for
+refreshments and contemplate the priestesses.
+
+There is the utmost moral and political freedom at Berlin, and tho' the
+Government is despotic in form, freedom of speech is allowed. An army of
+200,000 men admirably disciplined and armed, of these a garrison of 15,000
+men in Berlin and as many at Potsdam, are quite sufficient to keep in check
+all attempts to put political theories and speculations into practice.
+Indeed, it would be very difficult to excite a revolt; the various German
+governments are carried on very paternally and the government is scarcely
+felt; habits of obedience have taken deep root among the people, and a
+German peasant as long as he gets enough to eat and drink, does not
+conceive himself unhappy, or thinks of a change. I could not help laughing
+the other day, at a little village near Berlin, when I heard some peasants
+talking of Napoleon; one of them, who seemed to have some partiality for
+him, exclaimed, meaning to blame him for leaving Elba: _Aber warum verliess
+er seine Insel? Er hatte doch zu essen und trinken so viel er wolte_ (Why
+did he leave Elba? He had surely plenty to eat and drink). This good
+peasant could not conceive that a man blessed with these comforts should
+like to change his situation or run any risks to do so.
+
+French as well as German is commonly spoken in Berlin, and I am glad to see
+that the prejudice against the French is wearing off. If the French and
+Prussians could understand one another, and knew their own interests, or if
+the French had a liberal national Government, I mean, one more identified
+with the interests of the people than the present one is, what advantage
+might not rise therefrom? They are natural allies, and united they might be
+able effectually to humble the overbearing insolence and political
+coxcombry of the Czar, shake to its centre the systematic despotism and
+light-fearing leader of Austria, and keep in check the commercial
+greediness, monopolizing spirit and Tory arrogance of England. The German
+political writers duly appreciate the illiberal policy of England towards
+the continental nations, by which she invariably helps to crush liberty on
+the Continent in the hopes of paralysing their energies and industry, in
+order to compel them to buy English manufactures, and in fine to make them
+dependent on England for every article of consumption. England, ever since
+the beginning of the reign of George III to the present day, has been
+always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to perpetuate abuses and to
+rivet the fetters of monarchial, feudal and ecclesiastical tyranny.
+
+These are facts and cannot be denied. The English people have been taxed to
+the last farthing to support a war of privileges against Freedom; and
+Europe is in consequence prostrate at the feet of an unprincipled
+coalition, thro' England's arms and England's gold; and then an English
+minister, and his vile hireling journals, tell you that the continental
+nations are not ripe for and do not deserve liberty. Even the Pope and
+Grand Turk, both so much dreaded by our pious ancestors, have been
+supported, caressed and subsidized, in order to help to put down all
+efforts made to obtain rational liberty, which the courtiers always affect
+to stigmatize with the name of "Jacobinism," while a number of needy
+individual have enriched themselves by the public plunder and byaiding and
+abetting the system, all _novi homines_, men who, had there been more to
+gain on the other side than by espousing Toryism, would not have been
+backward; men who are Jacobins in the real sense of the word, however they
+cloak themselves under the specious names of Church and King men; upholders
+of Pitt and his system, for which they affect a veneration they are far
+from really feeling; men, in fact, whose political scruples of whatever
+nature they be, would soon melt away.
+
+
+DRESDEN, 5th October.
+
+I have been fortunate in getting into very comfortable lodgings, having two
+rooms and as much firing as I chuse for eight _Reichsthalers_ per month.
+Coffee is made for me at home in the morning, and I generally dine and sup
+at a _restaurant_ close by near the bridge. The _Platz_ in the Neustadt is
+close to my lodgings, and being very large and well paved and lined with
+trees, it affords a very agreeable promenade. Rows of elegant houses line
+the sides of this Plata, among which the _Stadthaus_ is particularly
+remarkable. The famous _Japan Palace_, as it is called, is also in the
+_Neustadt_, and but a short distance from the _Platz_. The gardens of Count
+Marcolini afford also a pleasant promenade; but by far the most agreeable
+walk, in my opinion, is on the _Zwinger_, a sort of terrace on the left
+bank of the Elbe in the old town, adjoining the palace and gardens of Count
+Bruhl. From this place you have a noble view of a long reach of the Elbe.
+It is besides the favorite promenade of the ladies. On the _Zwinger_ too is
+a building containing a fine collection of paintings. Here are _cafés_
+likewise and a _restaurant_. The evening promenades are in the gardens of
+the _Linkischer Bad_ (Bath of Link) on the banks of the Elbe, where there
+is a summer theatre. This is the favourite resort of the _bourgeoisie_ on
+Sundays and _jours de fête; goûters_ and supper parties are formed here and
+very good music is heard. The Elbe bridge is of beautiful structure, and
+there is a good regulation with respect to those who pass over this bridge;
+which is that one side of the bridge is reserved for those going from the
+new to the old town, and the other side for those going from the old to the
+new town, and if you attempt to go on the wrong side you are stopped by a
+sentry, so that there is no jostling nor lounging on this bridge. An arch
+of this bridge was blown up by Marshal Davoust in order to arrest the
+progress of the Russians, and a great deal of management was necessary to
+effectuate it, for the worthy Saxons have a great veneration for this
+bridge, and in order to inforce the execution of this resolution on the
+part of the Marshal, the personal order of the King and the employment of
+Saxon troops were necessary. It has been rebuilt since, and no one would
+know that the arch had ever been blown up, but from the extreme whiteness
+of the new arch, contrasting with the darker color of the old ones.
+
+In the old town or Dresden proper, the finest buildings are: the Catholic
+church, standing near the bridge, an edifice yielding in beauty but to few
+in Italy and to none in other countries. Here you hear excellent music
+during the church service; and the King and Royal family, all of whom are
+Catholics, attend constantly. The Royal Palace is very near the church and
+not far from it is the theatre. Saxony being a Lutheran country, the public
+exercise of the Catholic religion was not permitted until Napoleon's time,
+when he proposed an arrangement to permit to the King and all other
+Catholics the public celebration of their religion, which proposition was
+acceded to with universal approbation on the part of the Protestants, and
+now the Host is frequently displayed in the streets. There are however but
+few Catholics in Dresden among the natives. So great is the respect for
+usages and customs in Germany, that the Electors of Saxony, on going over
+to Catholicism, never thought even of requesting the indulgence of
+exercising their religion publicly, and the granting it has produced no
+evil consequence, liberalism and the most unreserved toleration in matters
+of religion being the order of the day.
+
+The Royal Palace is a very fine and extensive building and the interior is
+well worth seeing, particularly the superb _Riesen-Saal_ where Augustus II
+used to give his magnificent _fêtes_. One of the last and most brilliant
+_fêtes_ given here was that given by the King of Saxony to the Emperor
+Napoleon just before the Russian campaign, at which the Emperor and Empress
+of Austria and most of the Sovereigns of Germany assisted, to do hommage to
+the great Conqueror.
+
+The _Schloss-gasse_ or Castle Street leads from the Palace into the _Markt
+Platz_ where the markets and fairs are held. In this place, in the
+_Schloss-gasse_ and in another street parallel to it, that leads from the
+porcelain Manufactory to the _Grosser Platz_ (_Grande Place_), are the
+finest shops and greatest display of wealth. On the _Grosser Platz_ stands
+the _Frauen-Kirche_, a superb Protestant church, and which may be
+considered as the cathedral church of Dresden. The _Platz_ is large. There
+is great cleanliness in all the streets of Dresden, and the houses are well
+built and uniform; but there are few other very prominent edifices except
+those I have mentioned. On going outside the town by the gate of Pirna
+stands, almost immediately on the right, on turning down a road, the
+Gardens and Palace of Prince Anthony. Leaving this on your right and
+proceeding along the _chaussée_ or high road which is nearly parallel to
+the river, at the distance of three-quarters mile from the Gate, stands the
+Palace and Gardens called _Der Grosse Garten_ (grand garden), which you
+leave on your right, if you continue your route on the _chaussée_ towards
+Pirna. I have not yet visited the _Grosse Garten_. There is likewise a fine
+promenade on the banks of the Elbe, but quite in an opposite direction to
+the Pirna gate, for to arrive at it from this gate, you must traverse the
+Pirna street and _Grosser Platz_; and on arrival near the bridge direct
+your course to the left, which will lead you out of one of the gates into
+an immensely long avenue of elm trees parallel to the river which forms the
+promenade.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Oct. 10th.
+
+I have been to see the Palace and grounds of the _Grosser Garten_. The
+garden and park, for it unites both, is of great extent, and beautifully
+laid out; but a number of fine trees have been knocked down and mutilated
+by cannon shot during the battle of Dresden in 1818, when this garden was
+occupied by the Allied troops and exposed to a heavy fire of fifty pieces
+of cannon, from a battery erected by Napoleon on the opposite side of the
+river, which completely commanded and enfiladed the whole range of the
+garden. How the Palace itself escaped being knocked to pieces is wonderful;
+but I suppose Napoleon must have given orders to spare it as much as
+possible. This Palace is of beautiful structure and in the style of an
+Italian villa; statues of the twelve Caesars and bas-reliefs adorn the
+exterior. The columns and pilasters are of the Corinthian order. As for the
+interior, it is unfurnished, and has been so since the Seven Years' war,
+when it was plundered by the enemy, and has never since been inhabited by
+the Electoral family. There is a superb rectangular basin of water in this
+garden. These gardens are delightfully laid out; why they are not more
+frequented I cannot conceive, but I have hitherto met with very few people
+there, tho' they are open to all the world. They will form my morning's
+promenade, for I prefer solitude to a crowd in a morning walk. But one of
+the gardeners here tells me that on Sunday evening there is generally a
+good deal of company, who come to listen to the music which is played in a
+building fitted up for the purpose at one side of the garden. Wine, coffee,
+beer and other refreshments are to be had; but beer is the favorite
+beverage. Smoking is universal among the young men; the most ardent
+admirers of the fair sex never forget their pipe. During the courtship the
+surest sign that the fair one does not intend to _give_ her lover _the
+basket_ is when she presents him with a bag to hold his tobacco. Her
+consent is implied thereby.
+
+During the battle of Dresden, the slaughter in this garden was immense, and
+the Allies were finally driven out of it. The gardener related to me an
+affecting story of a young lady of Dresden, whose lover was killed in this
+battle and buried in the _Grosser Garten_. She has taken it so much to
+heart that she comes here three or four times in the week to visit this
+grave and strew flowers over it. She remains for some time absorbed in
+silent meditation and then withdraws. She has a settled melancholy, but it
+has not yet affected her understanding.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Oct. 15th.
+
+I met with my old friend, Sir W.I., who was travelling to Berlin, with the
+idea of passing the winter there and of proceeding in the summer to Moscow.
+Thro' the interests of my friends, Col. D------ and Baron de F------ I have
+been ballotted for and admitted a member of a club or society here called
+the _Ressource_. It is held in a large house on the _Markt Platz_, and is
+indeed a most agreeable resource to all foreigners; for 'tis in this
+society that they are likely to meet and form acquaintance with the
+_noblesse_, principal _bourgeoisie_ and _litterati_. It is conducted on the
+most liberal scale and not confined to those of birth and fortune. Good
+character, polite behaviour and litterary requirements will ensure
+admittance to a candidate. This society consists of members and honorary
+members; among the honorary members are foreigners and others whose stay in
+Dresden is short; but whoever remains for more than one year must cease to
+be an honorary member and must be ballotted for in order to become a
+permanent member, and should he be blackballed he ceases to belong to the
+society altogether. This is a very good regulation. A year is a sufficient
+time of proof for the character and conduct of a person, and should he
+during this interval prove himself obnoxious to the members of the society,
+they can at its expiration exclude him for ever afterwards.
+
+No enquiry is made as to the character and conduct of a person who is
+admitted as an honorary member: it is sufficient that he be recommended by
+a permanent member, which is deemed a sufficient guarantee for his
+respectability. In this society there are dining rooms, billiard rooms,
+card rooms, a large reading room. Here too is a small but well chosen
+library and three or four newspapers in every European language; all the
+German newspapers and reviews and the principal periodical works in the
+German, French, English and Italian languages. The English papers taken in
+here are the _Times, Courier_ and _Chronicle_. Of the French, the
+_Moniteur, Journal des Débats, Constitutionel, Journal du Commerce, Gazette
+de France_ and _Gazette de Lausanne_, and of the Italian the _Gazette di
+Milano, di Venezia, di Firenze_ and _di Lugano_. Every German newspaper is,
+I believe, to be found here. The Society lay in their stock of wine, which
+is of the best quality; good cooks and servants are kept. Dinners go
+forward from one to three. You dine _à la carte_ and pay the amount of what
+you call for to the waiters. Coffee, liqueurs and all sorts of refreshments
+are likewise to be had. Supper, likewise _à la carte_, goes forward between
+nine and eleven. The evening before supper may be employed, if you chuse,
+in cards, billiards, or reading. Very pleasant and useful acquaintances are
+made at the _Ressource_, since if a foreigner renders himself agreeable to
+the gentlemen who frequent this society, they generally propose taking him
+to their houses and introducing him to their families. After an
+introduction, you may go at any hour of the evening you please: but morning
+visits are not much in fashion, since the _toilette_ is seldom made till
+after dinner, which is always early in Germany. There is no getting dinner
+after three o'clock in any part of Dresden. Besides the _Ressource_ there
+are several other Clubs here, such as the _Harmonic_ and others. The public
+balls are given at the _Hôtel de Pologne_ twice a week, viz., one for the
+_Noblesse_ and one for the _Bourgeoisie_. None of the female _Bourgeoisie_
+are admitted to the balls and societies of the _Noblesse_, and only such of
+the males as occupy posts or employments at Court or under Government such
+as _Königs-rath_, _Hof-rath_, or officers of the Army. It is therefore
+usual, when the Sovereign wishes to introduce a person of merit among the
+_Bourgeoisie_ into the upper circles, that he gives him the title of _Rath_
+or Counsellor; but this priviledge of being presentable at Court does not
+extend to their wives and daughters. All the Military officers, from
+whatever class of life they spring, have introduction _de jure_ into the
+balls and societies of the _Noblesse_, and are always in uniform. But when
+they attend the balls of the _Bourgeoisie_, it is the etiquette for them to
+wear plain clothes: at the balls of the _Bourgeoisie_, therefore, not an
+uniform is to be seen. I observed by far the prettiest women at the balls
+of the _Bourgeoisie_, and very many are to be found there who in education
+and accomplishments fully equal those of the _Noblesse_, and this is no
+small merit, for the women in Saxony of the higher classes are extremely
+well educated; most of them are proficient in music and are versed in
+French and Italian litterature. They seem amiable and goodnatured and by no
+means _minaudières_, as Lady Mary Wortley Montague has rather unjustly
+termed them; for they appear to me to be the most frank, artless creatures
+I ever beheld, and to have no sort of _minauderie_ or _coquetterie_ about
+them. Beauty is the appanage of the Saxon women, hence the proverb in
+rhyme:
+
+ Darauf bin ich gegangen nach Sachsen,
+ Wo die schönen Mädchen auf den Baümen wachsen.
+
+In English:
+
+ Behold me landed now on Saxon ground,
+ Where lovely damsels on the trees are found.
+
+A taste for litterature is indeed general throughout the whole nation; and
+this city is considered as the Athens of Germany.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Nov. 8th.
+
+I have been at the theatre and witnessed the representation of a tragedy
+called _Die Schuld_, written by Adolphus Müllner. It is a most interesting
+piece, and the novelty of it has made a striking impression on me. It is
+written in the eight-footed trochaic metre, similar to that in which the
+Spanish tragedies are written. It hinges on a prophecy made by a Gipsey, in
+which the person to whom the prophecy is made, in endeavoring to avert it,
+hastens its accomplishment. The piece is full of interest and the
+versification harmonious. I have been twice at the Italian opera, where I
+saw the _Gazza Ladra_ and _Il Matrimonio secreto_. I came here with the
+idea of giving myself up entirely to the study of the German language; but
+such is the beauty of the country environing Dresden that, though winter
+has commenced I employ the greatest part of the day in long walks. For
+instance I have been to Pillnitz, which is on the right bank of the Elbe
+about seven miles from Dresden, ascending the river. The road is on the
+bank of the river the whole way. The Palace at Pillnitz is vast and well
+built. During a part of the year the Royal family reside there. Pillnitz
+will remain "damn'd to everlasting fame" as the place where the famous
+treaty was signed, the object of which was to put down the French
+Revolution, which Mr Pitt and the British ministry knew of and sanctioned,
+tho' they pretended ignorance of it and professed to have no desire to
+interfere with the affairs of France.
+
+Every thing pleases me at Dresden except the beds. I wish it were the
+fashion to use blankets and _édredons_ for the upper covering instead of
+the _lits de plumes_; for they are too heavy and promote rather too intense
+a perspiration, and if you become impatient of the heat, and throw them off
+you catch an intense cold. You know how partial I am to the Germans, and
+can even put up with their eternal smoking, tho' no smoker myself, but to
+their beds I shall never be reconciled. A German bed is as follows: a
+_paillasse_, over that a mattress, then a featherbed with a sheet fastened
+to it, and over that again another featherbed with a sheet fastened to it;
+and thus you lie between two featherbeds; but these are not always of
+sufficient length, and you are often obliged to coil up your legs or be
+exposed to have them frozen by their extending beyond the featherbeds; for
+the cold is very great during the winter.
+
+The more I see of the people here, the more I like them. The national
+character of the Germans is integrity, tho' sometimes cloaked under a rough
+exterior as in Bavaria and Austria; but here in Saxony it is combined with
+a suavity of manners that is very striking, for the Saxons are the Tuscans
+of Germany in point of politeness, and they are far more accomplished
+because they take more pains in cultivating their minds.
+
+A savant in Italy is a man who writes a volume about a coin, filled with
+hypotheses, when, with all his learning forced into the service, he proves
+nothing; and this very man is probably ignorant in the extreme of modern
+political history, and that of his own times, and has more pedantry than
+taste. Such a man is often however in Italy termed a _Portento_, but in
+Dresden and in most of the capitals of Germany where there are so many of
+science and deep research, a man must not only be well read in antiquities,
+but also well versed in political economy and in analysis before he can
+venture to give a work to the public. Latin quotations, unsupported by
+reason and philosophical argument will avail him nothing, for the German is
+a terrible _Erforscher_ and wishes to know the _what_, the _how_ and the
+_when_ of every thing; besides an Italian _savant_ is seldom versed in any
+other tongue than his own and the Latin, with perhaps a slight knowledge of
+French; whereas in Germany it is not only very common to find a knowledge
+of French, English, Italian, Latin and Greek united in the same person, but
+very many add Hebrew, Arabic and even Sanscrit to their stock of Philology.
+As a specimen for instance of German industry, I have seen, at the club of
+the _Ressource_, odes on the Peace in thirty-six different languages, and
+all of them written by native Saxons. This shows to what an extent
+philology is cultivated in Germany; indeed, it is quite a passion and a
+very useful one it is. I know that many people regard it as a loss of time,
+and say that you acquire only new words, and no new ideas; but I deny this.
+I maintain that every new language learned gives you new ideas, as it puts
+you at once more _au fait_ of the manners and customs of the people, which
+can only be thoroughly learned by reading popular authors in their original
+language: for there are several authors of the merit of whose style it is
+impossible to form an adequate idea in a translation, however correct and
+excellent it be. Indeed I wonder that the study of the German language is
+not more attended to in England, France, and Italy; but to the English,
+methinks, it is indispensable. All the customs and manners of Europe are
+taken from the German; all modern Europe bears the Teutonic stamp. We are
+all the descendants of the Teutonic hordes who subjugated the Roman Empire
+and changed the face of Europe; 'tis they who have given and laid down the
+grand and distinguishing feature between modern Europe and ancient Europe
+and Asia: I mean the respect paid to women. To what nation, I say, is due
+the chivalrous respect to women which is the surest sign of civilization,
+and which was unknown to the ancient Greeks and Romans, except to the
+Germans, who even in their most uncivilized state paid such veneration to
+their women as to consult them as oracles on all occasions and to admit
+them to their councils? Tacitus particularly mentions this; and speaking of
+the Germans of his time, he says, "They have an idea that there is
+something divine about a woman."[126] It is this feeling, handed down to us
+from our Teutonic ancestors, that contributes mainly to make the European
+so superior to all the Asiatic nations, where woman still remains a
+degraded being, and 'tis this feeling that gives to us the palm above all
+Greek and Roman glory. What are the modern European nations, the English,
+French, Italians, Switzers, even Spanish and Portuguese, but the
+descendants of these warlike Teutonic tribes who swept away the effeminate
+Romans from the face of the earth? and do we not see the Teutonic policy
+and usages, defective and degenerated as they sometimes are, the best
+safeguard of liberty against the insidious interpretation of the Roman law,
+which is founded on the pretended superiority of one nation, the inferred
+inferiority of all the rest?
+
+With regard to theatricals, I have witnessed the representation of a
+tragedy, lately published, called _Sappho_, by a young poet of the name of
+Grillparzer. This tragedy is strictly on the Greek model. Its versification
+in iambics is so beautiful that it is regarded as the triumph of the
+_Classics_ over the _Romantics_; and by this piece Grillparzer has proved
+the universality of his genius; for he wrote a short time ago a dramatic
+piece in the _romantic_ style and in the eight rhymed trochaic metre called
+_die Anhfrau_ (the ancestress) where supernatural agency is introduced.
+This I have read; it is a piece full of interest; still it was thought too
+_outré_ by the _Classiker_. It was supposed that this was the peculiar
+style of the author, and that he adopted it from inability to compose in
+the classic taste, when behold! by way of proving the contrary, he has
+given us a drama simple in its plot, where all the unities are preserved,
+and where the subject one would think was too well known to produce much
+interest; he has given, I say, to this piece (Sappho), from the extreme
+harmony of its versification and the pathos of the sentiments expressed
+therein, an effect which I doubt any tragedy of Euripides or Sophocles
+surpasses. The character of Sappho and her passion for Phaon; his
+indifference to her and attachment to the young Melitta, an attendant and
+slave of Sappho's, and Sappho throwing herself into the sea after uniting
+Phaon and Melitta, constitute the plot of the drama. But simple as the
+plot, and old as the story is, it excites the greatest interest, and never
+fails to draw tears from the audience. What can be more artless and
+pathetic, for instance, than these lines of the young Melitta when she
+regrets her expatriatioa:
+
+ Kein Busen schlägt mlr bier in diesem Lande,
+ Und meine Freunden wohnen weit von hier.
+
+In English:
+
+ No bosom beats for me in this strange land,
+ And far from here my friends and parents dwell.
+
+I have no doubt that some of these days _Sappho_ will be translated into
+the idiom of modern Greece and acted in that country. The actress, who did
+the part of Sappho, gave it full effect, and the part of the young Melitta
+was fairly performed; but I did not approve of the acting of the performer
+who played Phaon. He overstepped the modesty of nature and the intention of
+the author; for he was in his gesture and manner grossly rude and insolent
+to poor Sappho, whereas, tho' his love to Melitta was paramount, he ought
+to have shown no ordinary struggle in stifling his gratitude to his
+benefactress Sappho.
+
+I admire the German word _Gebieterinn_ (mistress). It is majestic and
+harmonious, and the only word, in any modern language that I know of,
+poetic enough to render aptly the Greek word [Greek: Despoina].
+
+
+DRESDEN, Decr. 1st.
+
+I have been to visit the famous Gallery of paintings here; but you must not
+expect from me a description. I shall send you a catalogue. It would be
+endless to describe the various _chefs-d'oeuvre_ which are contained in
+this valuable collection. Dresden has always been considered as the
+Florence of Germany and has always been renowned for its Gallery of
+paintings; hence the almost innate taste of the Saxons for the _Beaux Arts_
+and the great encouragement given to them at all tunes by this Government.
+It is here and at Meissen that the best German is thought to be spoken,
+tho' Hanover disputes this prerogative with Dresden.
+
+I have been to see the antiquities and curiosities of the _Japanischer
+Palast_ (Palace of Japan), as it is called. In this Palace is a quantity of
+ancient armour and the most superb collection of porcelain I believe in
+Europe. The collection of precious stones is also immense; and I never in
+my life saw such a profusion of diamonds, emeralds, turquoises, sapphirs,
+amethysts and topazes. In this Museum are three statues found in
+Herculaneum on its first discovery or excavation, viz., an Athlete, an
+Esculapius, and a Venus. Here too, and from this circumstance, the Palace
+takes its name, is a collection of Japanese antiquities and ornaments,
+lacker work in gold and silver, which is unique in the world. From the
+Royal Library, a foreigner, on being recommended, may have at his own house
+all such books to read as can be replaced if lost or spoiled; but the
+manuscripts and scarce and valuable editions are not permitted to be taken
+out of the Library. Any person once admitted on recommendation may go to
+read in this Library at stated hours and may consult any book or manuscript
+he pleases on applying to the librarian.
+
+A person fond of music will be in a continual state of enjoyment at
+Dresden. Besides the fine music in the Royal Chapel, the band of the King's
+Guard is composed of first rate musicians, who attend regularly at Guard
+mounting and play for an hour together. There is also a band of music every
+evening during the summer months that plays in the gardens of the
+_Linkischer Bad_. Then there are various other places of recreation and
+amusement, at all of which musicians are in attendance; for a Saxon cannot
+enjoy his repast or his pipe without music and good music too to facilitate
+his digestion. There is a custom in Dresden that on the occasion of the
+death of a person the young choristers of the Cathedral are sent for to
+sing hymns, standing in a semi-circle round the door of the house of the
+defunct. These choristers are all dressed in black and their style of
+singing is melodious, solemn and impressive.
+
+Smoking is so prevalent here and in all parts of Germany that if you wish
+to denote one of the male sex, _smoker_ would be quite a synonymous word.
+Such is the passion for this enjoyment that even at the balls the young
+men, the moment they have finished the waltz, quit the hands of their
+partners and rush into another room in order to smoke; nor would the beauty
+of Venus nor the wit of Minerva be powerful enough to restrain the young
+German from giving way to his darling practise. Smoking tobacco has I think
+this visible effect, that it serves to calm all tumultuous passions, and
+what confirms me in this idea is, that most young Germans, in commencing
+life as adults, are full of enthusiastic and even exaggerated notions of
+liberty and equality. They are romantic to a degree that is difficult to be
+conceived, and seem to be restrained by no selfish or worldly ideas. This
+you would suppose would tend to render them rather turbulent subjects,
+under an autocratical government; but all this _Schwärmerey_ evaporates
+literally in smoke: they take to their pipe, and by degrees the fumes of
+tobacco cause all these lofty ideas to dissipate: the pipe becomes more and
+more necessary to their existence, and consoles them for their wrongs real
+or imaginary; and in three or four years they sit down contentedly to their
+several occupations, as strait-forward, painstaking, plodding men, quite
+satisfied to follow the routine chalked out for them, and either totally
+forget all ambitious views, or become too indolent to make any sacrifice to
+obtain them, and this _virtue comes from tobacco_!! The German Hippogriff
+becomes an Ox, dull and domestic, and treads out the corn placed before
+him, content to have his share thereof in peace and quietness.
+
+The German Governments, which are mild and paternal, are fully aware of
+this and allow the utmost liberty of speech; well knowing that, thanks to
+that friend and ally of Legitimacy, tobacco, the romantic visionary and
+somewhat refractory youth will subside into a tranquil _ganz alltäglicher
+Mann_ and become totally averse to any innovation which demands the
+sacrifice of repose.
+
+The pipe which has this sedative effect on political effervescence, has a
+still stronger similar effect, it is said, on the passion of love; hence
+the German husbands are proverbially sluggish. But the ladies, none of whom
+smoke, preserve their romanticity during their whole lives, and would, if
+they had their choice, give their hands to foreigners, who are more
+attentive to them than their own countrymen.
+
+The young ladies here are, 'tis said, extremely romantic in their ideas of
+love and capable of the strongest attachment. They think that any thing
+should be pardoned to sincere passion. It has been related to me that some
+time ago a young man, who was devotedly attached to a girl, on the father
+refusing his consent to the marriage, stabbed the girl and then himself. An
+immense number of young ladies attended their funeral, to throw flowers
+over the grave of the two lovers. Assuredly the young man was only a
+noviciate in smoking.
+
+Everybody must, I think, admire the Saxon women. They are in general
+handsome and have fine shapes; they are warm hearted and affectionate; and
+they are almost universally well educated. Indeed the whole Saxon people
+are so amiable that foreigners find themselves so happy here that they are
+unwilling to quit the country. Very many form matrimonial attachments. In
+short, this people fully merit the epithet a celebrated English traveller
+(Sherlock)[127] has bestowed on them when he called them a _herrliches
+Volk_.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Jan. 8d, 1819.
+
+I have made an excursion to Meissen which lies on the same bank of the
+river with the old town of Dresden at a distance of twelve miles. As there
+is no road on the left bank of the river to Meissen, you must cross the
+river twice to arrive at it, viz., once at Neustadt and once at Meissen,
+the road being on the right bank. I put up at the _Hirsch_ (Stag), a very
+comfortable inn. I went to Meissen with a view of seeing the Russian
+contingent pass the Elbe on their return from France, which has been
+evacuated in consequence of the arrangement at Aix-la-Chapelle. They
+appeared a fine body of men, clothed _à la française_ and seemed in high
+spirits. They seem to have imbibed liberal ideas during their residence in
+France, for some of the officers who dined at the inn at Meissen spoke very
+freely on passing events.
+
+The return of the Saxon contingent is expected in Dresden in a day or two,
+and there will no doubt be a great deal of rejoicing among the military and
+their relations to meet their old comrades and friends; and potent
+libations of _Doppel Bier_ will no doubt be made. Meissen is said to be
+famous for the beauty of its women and the few that I saw in the streets
+did not contradict this reputation.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Jany. 5th, 1819.
+
+We have had several balls here. Waltzing is the only sort of dance in
+fashion at Dresden, excepting now and then a Polonaise.
+
+I have witnessed an interesting spectacle in the _Grosser Garten_. The pond
+or basin is completely frozen over, and a Russian Prince, Gallitzin, who is
+here, has fitted up a sort of _Montagnes Russes_ as they are called. Blocks
+of ice are placed on an inclined plane to the top of which you mount by
+means of a staircase; and then, seating yourself in a sort of sledge, you
+slide down the inclined plane with immense velocity. The Prince often
+persuades a lady to sit on this sleigh on his lap and descend together; and
+this no doubt serves to _break the ice_ of many an amorous intrigue. This
+construction of the Prince Gallitzin has contributed to fill the _Grosser
+Garten_ with the _beau monde_, every day from twelve to two o'clock; so
+that you see we are in no want of amusements at Dresden.
+
+The King frequently attends the theatre; he is a tall, fine looking man,
+and is usually dressed in the uniform of his Foot-Guards, which is scarlet
+faced with yellow. The poor King has taken much to heart the injustice with
+which he has been treated by the coalition, and no doubt will not easily
+forget the ill-bred and insolent letter of Castlereagh to the Congress,
+wherein he said that the King of Saxony deserved to lose his dominions for
+adhering to Napoleon. But how the King of Saxony could act otherwise I am
+at a loss to find: so little could he possibly deserve this treatment for
+adhering to Napoleon, that had his advice been taken in the year 1805, the
+French would never have been able to extend their conquests so far, nor to
+dictate laws to Germany. But Lord Castlereagh seems to have either never
+known or wilfully forgotten the anterior political conduct of Saxony. Had
+he been more versed in German affairs, or had studied with more accuracy
+the events passing before his eyes, it would have been a check upon his
+arrogance; but here was a genuine disciple of the Pitt school (that school
+of ignorance and insolence), who sets himself up as the moral regenerator
+of nations and as a distributor of provinces, while he is grossly ignorant
+of the political system of the country on whose destinies he pretends to
+decide so peremptorily. Had Castlereagh paid attention to what was going
+forward in Germany in 1805, he would have seen too that of all powers
+Prussia was the very _last_ who with any _shadow of justice_ could pretend
+to an indemnification at the expense of Saxony. In the year 1805, the King,
+then Elector of Saxony, strongly advised the Prussian Cabinet to forget its
+ancient rivalry and jealousy of Austria and to coalesce with the latter
+power, in resisting the encroachments of Napoleon, in order to prevent the
+latter from attempting the overthrow of the whole fabric of the
+constitution of the Holy Roman Empire, with the intricacy and fragility of
+which no prince in Germany was better acquainted than the Elector of
+Saxony. Prussia however was still reluctant to engage in the contest and
+gave no support whatever to Austria. Napoleon defeats the Austrians at
+Austerlitz and dictates peace. Six months after the Prussian Cabinet,
+excited by a patriotic but rash and ill-calculating party, has recourse to
+arms, not from any generous policy, but because she sees herself outwitted
+by Napoleon, who refuses to cede to her Hanover in perpetuity. Prussia
+begins the war and calls on Saxony, who always moved in her orbit, to join
+her. To the Elector of Saxony this war (in 1806) appeared then ill-timed
+and too late; but with that good faith, nevertheless, which invariably
+characterized him, he remained faithful to his engagement and furnished his
+quota of troops to Prussia. The Saxon troops fought nobly at the battle of
+Jena. This battle annihilates all the power of Prussia, and lays Saxony
+entirely at the mercy of the Conqueror; but Napoleon not only treats Saxony
+with moderation, but with rare generosity; he does not take from her a
+single village, but aggrandizes her and gives to her the Duchy of Warsaw
+and to her Sovereign the title of King. Saxony becomes in consequence a
+member of the confederation of the Rhine and is bound to support the
+Protector in all his wars offensive and defensive. The Russian war in 1812
+begins: every German state, Austria and Prussia in the number, furnishes
+its contingent of troops. The campaign is unsuccessful, the climate of
+Russia having annihilated the French Army, and Napoleon returns to Paris.
+Saxony is now exposed to invasion and harassed by the incursions of the
+Cossacks. The King of Saxony is perplexed in what manner to act, so as to
+ensure to his subjects that protection which was ever uppermost in his
+thoughts; feeling however with his usual sagacity that every thing would
+ultimately depend on the dispositions of Austria, he repairs himself to
+Prague, in order to have an interview with one of the Austrian ministers,
+and to sound that Cabinet. Austria however still vacillates and declines
+stating what her intentions are. Napoleon returns from Paris, defeats the
+Prussians and Russians at Bautzen and re-occupies all Saxony. He then
+writes to the King of Saxony to desire him to return immediately to his
+dominions and to fulfil his engagements. What was the King to do? Austria
+still refusing to declare herself, was he to sacrifice his crown and
+dominions uselessly to the vengeance of Napoleon, to please the Emperor of
+Russia and King of Prussia, who for aught he knew might patch up a peace
+the next day? and this was the more probable from their having been beaten
+at Bautzen, which circumstance also might with equal probability induce
+Austria to coalesce with, instead of against France. All the other members
+of the Confederation of the Rhine remained staunch to Napoleon and poured
+their contingents into Saxony; was he to be the only unfaithful ally and
+towards a Monarch who had always treated him with the strongest marks of
+attachment and regard? and when neither Russia nor Prussia were likely to
+give him the least assistance? He therefore returned to Dresden; and
+Napoleon took up his grand position the whole length of the Elbe, from the
+mountains of Bohemia to Hamburgh, thus covering the whole of Saxony with
+his army. Austria however at last comes forward to join the coalition.
+Fortune changes; the Saxon troops, tired of beholding their country the
+perpetual theatre of war and trusting to the generosity of the Allies, go
+over to them in the middle of a battle, and decide, thereby, the fate of
+the day at Leipzig. The King of Saxony is made a prisoner, and then he is
+punished for what he could not help. Why was he to be punished more than
+any other member of the Confederation of the Rhine? One would think that
+the seasonable defection of his troops at Leipzig should have induced the
+Allies to treat him with moderation. The other States of the Confederation
+did not abandon Napoleon until after he was completely beaten at Leipzig;
+and Austria refused to accede to the coalition until a _carte blanche_ was
+given her to help herself in Italy.
+
+Let every impartial man therefore review the whole of this proceeding and
+then say whether the King of Saxony, so proverbial for his probity, so
+adored by his subjects, deserved to be insulted by such an unfeeling letter
+as that of Castlereagh. No! the King of Saxony better deserves to reign
+than any King of them all. Would they had even a small share of his
+virtues! Another proof and a still stronger one of the great integrity and
+honor of this excellent Prince, is, that when Napoleon offered to mediatize
+in his favor the various ducal Houses in Saxony, such as Weimar, Gotha,
+Cobourg, etc., and to annex these countries to his dominions, he declined
+the offer. Would Prussia, Austria, or Hanover have been so scrupulous?
+
+The young ladies here, tho' well versed and delighting in various branches
+of litterature, cannot overcome that strong national propensity to tales
+and romances wherein the _terrific and supernatural_ abounds; in all their
+romances accordingly this taste prevails strongly; nay, even in some of the
+romances, where the scene is laid in later times, there is some such
+anachronism as the story of a spectre.
+
+I recollect reading a novel, the scene of which is laid in Italy about the
+time of the battle of Marengo, wherein a ghost is introduced who
+contributes mainly to the unravelling of the piece. A young lady here of
+considerable talent and of general information confessed to me, when I
+asked her, what subjects pleased her most in the way of reading, that
+nothing gave her so much delight as "_Geistergeschichten_." Lewis' romance
+of "_The Monk_" is a great favorite in Germany.[128] By the bye, his
+poetical tale of _Alonzo and Imogen_ is evidently taken from a similar
+subject in the _Volks-mährchen_.
+
+The weather has set in very cold and the Elbe is nearly frozen over. It is
+impossible to go out of the house without a _Pelz_ or cloak lined with fur;
+for otherwise, on leaving a room heated by a stove, the effect of the cold
+is almost instantaneous and brings on an ague fit. This I attribute to the
+excessive heat kept up in the rooms and houses by the stoves. As smoking is
+so prevalent here, this contributes much also to keeping the body in a
+praeternatural heat and rendering it still more obnoxious to cold on
+removal from a room to the open air. It has been remarked by a medical
+author, in the Russian campaign in 1812, that the soldiers of the southern
+nations and provinces, viz., Provençaux, Gascons, Italians, Spaniards, and
+Portuguese, endured the cold much better and suffered less from it than the
+Germans and Hollanders. The reason is sufficiently obvious: the former live
+in the open air even in the middle of winter and seldom make use of a fire
+to warm themselves; whereas the Germans and Dutch live in an atmosphere of
+stove-heat and smoke and seldom like to stir abroad in the open air during
+winter, unless necessity obliges them. Hence they become half-baked, as it
+were; their nerves are unstrung, their flesh flabby and they become so
+chilly, as to suffer from the smallest exposure to the atmosphere. In the
+houses in Germany, on account of the stoves, the cold is never felt,
+whereas it is very severely in Italy and Spain where many of the houses
+have no fireplaces. On this account I prefer Germany as a winter residence,
+for I think there is no sensation so disagreeable as to feel cold in the
+house. In the open air I do not care a fig for it, for my cloak lined with
+bearskin protects me amply. The climate here in winter is a dry cold, which
+is much more salubrious and agreeable to me than the changeable, humid
+climate of Great Britain, where, though the cold is not so great, it is
+much more severely felt.
+
+
+[126] Tacitus, _Germania_, C, VIII.--ED.
+
+[127] Martin Sherlock (d. 1797), author of _Lettres d'un voyageur anglais_,
+ which were published in Paris 1779 and, the year after, in London.
+
+[128] Matthew Gregory Lewis, 1775-1818, published _Ambrosio or the Monk_ in
+ 1795.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+MARCH-APRIL 1819
+
+Journey from Dresden to Leipzig--The University of Leipzig--Liberal
+spirit--The English disliked in Saxony--The English Government hostile to
+liberty--Journey to Frankfort--From Frankfort to Metz and Paris--A.F.
+Lemaître--_Bon voyage_ to the Allies--Return to England.
+
+I left Dresden on the 2nd March, 1819. A _Landkutsche_ conveyed me as far
+as Leipzig in a day and half, stopping the first night at Oschaly, where
+there is a good inn. At Leipzig I put up at the _Hôtel de Bavière_ and
+remained five days. Leipzig is a fine old Gothic city. It is, as everybody
+knows, famous for its University and its Fair, which is held twice a year,
+in spring and in autumn, and which is the greatest mart for books perhaps
+in the world. The University of Leipzig and indeed all the Universities of
+Germany are in bad repute among the _Obscuranten_ and _éteignoirs_ of the
+day, on account of the liberal ideas professed by the teachers and
+scholars. In the University of Leipzig every thing may be learned by those
+who chuse to apply, but those who prefer remaining idle may do so, as there
+is less compulsion than at the English Universities. There is however such
+a national enthusiasm for learning, in all parts of Germany, that the most
+careless and ill-disposed youth would never be about to support the
+ridicule of his fellow students were he backward in obtaining prizes, but
+after all I have heard of the dissipation, lawlessness, and want of
+discipline at Leipzig, I can safely affirm that all these stories are
+grossly exaggerated: and I fancy there is little other dissipation going
+forward than amours with _Stubenmädchen_. I do not hear of any drunkenness,
+gaming or horse racing; nor do the professors themselves, who ought to be
+the best judges of what is going on, complain of the insubordination of
+their pupils. But what I principally admire in this, and indeed in other
+German Universities, is that there are no distinctions of rank, such as
+gold tassels, etc., no servile attention paid to sprigs of nobility, as in
+the Universities in England, where the Heads of Colleges and Fellows are
+singularly condescending to the son of a Peer, a Minister, or a Bishop.
+Perfect equality prevails in Leipzig and the son of the proudest
+_Reichsgraf_ is allowed no more priviledges than the son of a barber; nor
+do the professors make the least difference between them. In fact, in spite
+of the vulgar belief in England respecting the _hauteur_ of the German
+_noblesse_ and the vassalage of the other classes, I must say, from
+experience, that the German nobility show far less _hauteur_ and have in
+general more really liberal ideas than most part of our English
+aristocracy, and a German burgher or shop-keeper would disdain to cringe
+before a nobleman as many shopkeepers, aye, and even gentry, are sometimes
+known to do in England. Another circumstance too proves on how much more
+liberal a footing Leipzig and other German Universities are than our
+English ones, which is, that in England none but those who profess the
+religion of the Church of England, or conform to its ritual, are admitted;
+but here all sects are tolerated and admitted, and all live in perfect
+harmony with each other. The students are at liberty to chuse their place
+of worship and the sermons that are preached in the Catholic as well as the
+Protestant churches are such as sensible men of whatever opinion might
+listen to with profit, and without being shocked by absurdities or
+intolerant ideas.
+
+Mysteries, theologic sophistry and politics are carefully avoided, and a
+pure morality, a simple theosophy, comprehensible to the meanest
+understanding, pervades these simple discourses. The consequence of this
+toleration and liberal spirit is that an union between the Lutheran and
+Calvinistic churches has been effected.
+
+I met a number of mercantile people at the _table d'hôte_ at Leipzig in the
+_Hôtel de Bavière_, and I entered a good deal into conversation with them;
+but when they discovered I was an Englishman, I could see a sudden coldness
+and restraint in their demeanour, for we are very unpopular in Germany,
+owing to the conduct of our Cabinet, and they have a great distrust of us.
+The Saxons complain terribly of our Government for sanctioning the
+dismemberment of their country and of the insolent letter of Castlereagh.
+It is singular enough that Saxony is the only country where English goods
+are allowed to be imported free of duty; but our great and good ally the
+King of Prussia (as these goods must pass thro' his territory) has imposed
+a tolerably heavy transit duty. I am glad of it; this is as it should be. I
+rejoice at any obstacles that are put to British commerce; I rejoice when I
+hear of our merchants suffering and I quite delight to hear of a
+bankruptcy. They, the English merchants, contributed with their gold to
+uphold the corrupt system of Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and
+liberticide wars. Yes! it is perfectly fit and proper that the despotic
+governments they have contributed to restore should make them feel their
+gratitude. If the French since their Revolution have not always fought for
+liberty, they have done so invariably for science; and wherever they
+carried their victorious arms, abuses were abolished, ameliorations of all
+kinds followed, and the arts of life were improved. Our Government since
+the accession of George III has never raised its arm except in favor of old
+abuses, to uphold despotism and unfair privileges, or to establish
+commercial monopoly. Our victories so far from being of beneficial effect
+to the countries wherein we gained them, have been their curse. We can
+interfere and be prodigal of money and blood to crush any attempt of the
+continental nations towards obtaining their liberty; but when it is
+necessary to intercede in favour of oppressed patriots, then we are told
+that we have no right to interfere with the domestic policy of other
+nations. We can send ships to protect and carry off in safety a worthless
+Royal family, as at Naples in 1799, but we can view with heartless
+indifference, and even complacency, the murders committed in Spain by the
+infamous Ferdinand and his severities against those to whom he owes his
+crown, all of whom had the strongest daim to our protection as having
+fought with us in the same cause and contributed to our success.
+
+The _Platz_ at Leipzig is large and here it is that the fair is held. The
+theatre is an elegant building and lies just outside one of the gates of
+the city. Innumerable shops of booksellers are here and it is astonishing
+at how cheap a rate printing in all languages is carried forward.
+
+There are some pleasant promenades in the environs of Leipzig; but this is
+not a time of the year to judge of the beauty of the country. I went,
+however, to view the house occupied by Napoleon on the eve of the battle of
+Leipzig. A monument is to be erected to the memory of Poniatowsky in the
+spot where he perished.
+
+I started from Leipzig on 7th March at eleven o'clock. I was five days en
+route from Leipzig to Frankfort, tho' the distance does not exceed
+forty-five German miles. I travelled in the diligence, but had I known that
+the arrangements were so uncomfortable, I should have preferred going in a
+_Landkutsche_, which would have made the journey in seven days and afforded
+me an opportunity of stopping every night to repose; whereas in the
+diligence, tho' they go _en poste_, they travel exceedingly slow and it is
+impossible to persuade the postillion to accelerate his usual pace. He is
+far more careful of his horses than of his passengers. This I however
+excuse; but it is of the frequent stoppages and bad arrangement of them
+that I complain. Instead of stopping at some town for one whole night or
+two whole nights out of the five, they stop almost at every town for three,
+four and five hours; so that these short stoppages do not give you time
+enough to go to bed and they are besides generally made in the day time or
+early in the morning and evening. We passed thro' the following cities and
+places of eminence, viz., Lutzen; the spot where Gustavus Adolphus was
+killed is close to the road on the left hand with a plain stone and the
+initials G.A. inscribed on it. Weimar is a very neat city and where I
+should like much to have staid; but I had only time to view the outside of
+the Palace and the _Stadthaus_. Erfurt and Gotha are both fine looking
+cities. In Gotha I had only time to see the outside of the _Residenz
+Schloss_ or Ducal Palace, which is agreeably situated on an eminence, and
+to remark in the _Neumarkt Kirche_ the portrait of Duke Bernard of Saxe
+Weimar and the monuments of the princes of that family. At Erfurt there is
+the tomb of a Count Gleichen who was made prisoner in the Holy Land, in the
+time of the Crusades, and was released by a Mahometan Princess on condition
+of his espousing her. The Count was already married in Germany and there he
+had left his wife; but such was his gratitude to the fair Musulmane, that
+he married her with the full consent of his German wife and they all three
+lived happily together. Fulda, where we stopped four hours, appears a fine
+city, and is situated on an eminence commanding a noble view of a very
+fertile and extensive plain. The Episcopal Palace and the churches are
+magnificent, and the general appearance of the town is striking. The
+Bishopric of Fulda was formerly an independent ecclesiastical state, but
+was secularised at the treaty of Lunéville and now forms part of the
+territory of Hesse-Cassel.
+
+The _Feld-zeichen_ of Hesse-Cassel is green and red. After passing thro'
+Hanau, where we halted three hours, which gave me an opportunity of viewing
+the field of battle there, we proceeded to Frankfort and arrived there at
+twelve o'clock the 12th of March. I put up at the _Swan_ inn. In summer
+time the country about Fulda and in general between Fulda and Frankfort
+must be very pleasing from the variety of the features of the ground. We
+lived very well and very cheap on the road. The price of the diligence from
+Leipzig to Frankfort was eleven _Reichsthaler_.
+
+After remaining three days to repose at Frankfort I took my place to
+Mayence and from thence to Metz and Paris. In the diligence from Mayence
+and indeed all the way to Paris I found a very amusing society. There were
+two physicians and M. L[emaître], a most entertaining man and of
+inexhaustible colloquial talent; for, except when he slept, he never ceased
+to talk. His conversation was however always interesting and entertaining,
+for he had figured in the early part of the French Revolution and was well
+known in the political and litterary world as the editor of a famous
+journal called _Le Bonhomme Richard_.[129]
+
+Metz is a large, well built and strongly fortified city. Verdun, thro'
+which we passed, became quite an English colony during the war from the
+number of _detenus_ of that nation who were compelled to reside there. At
+Epernay we drank a few bottles of Champagne and a toast was given by one of
+the company, which met with general applause. It was _Bon voyage_ to the
+Allies who have now finally evacuated France to the great joy of the whole
+nation, except of the towns where they were cantoned, where they
+contributed much towards enriching the shopkeepers and inhabitants.
+
+I remained in Paris six days and then proceeded to England.
+
+
+[129] _Le bonhomme Richard aux bonnes gens_ was not a "famous journal," as
+ only two numbers appeared in 1790 (M. Tourneux, _Bibliographie de
+ l'histoire de Paris pendant la Révolution_, vol. 11, p. 585, n. 10,
+ 511). The publisher, Antoine-François Lemaître, whom Major Erye
+ mentions in this passage, was the author of some other revolutionary
+ pamphlets, e.g., _Lettres bougrement patriotiques_, etc.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Acheron, Lake.
+Adam, Major-General commands Light Brigade of General
+ Sir H. Clinton's division.
+Aix-la-Chapelle:
+ Hotel-de-Ville;
+ Cathedral;
+ relics of Charlemagne;
+ Napoleon's benefactions;
+ overbearing demeanour of Prussian soldiers;
+ Faro bank;
+ interesting Tyrolese girl;
+ baths.
+Albanot Villa Doria,
+ ancient monument.
+Albany, Countess of,
+ her claim to be the legitimate Queen of England;
+ Alfieri's attachment to.
+Alexandria: Austrian Government destroys fortifications of
+Alfieri: compared with Shakespeare, Schiller, and Voltaire,
+ monument erected to, by Canova;
+ his sonnet to Countess of Albany.
+Alsace-Lorraine: severance of, from France anticipated by Prussian
+ officers.
+Andernach: ruins of palace of Kings of Austrasia,
+ church containing embalmed body of Emperor Valentinian;
+ crossing of Rhine by Julius Caesar at.
+Angoulême, Duchesse d': temperament and religious fanaticism of.
+Antwerp: English families fly from Brussels to.
+Archenholz: historian of the Seven Years' War.
+Army of the Loire: exemplary conduct of, when disbanded.
+Arona: colossal statue of St Charles Borromeus at.
+Austria: fluctuations in the value of the paper currency of
+ Napoleon's policy as regarded.
+Avernus, Lake.
+
+Baciocchi, Princess Elise: sister of Napoleon and Sovereign of Lucca.
+Baffo, Venetian poet.
+Baiae: baths of Nero,
+ ruins of temples;
+ the Styx;
+ Elysian Fields.
+Belgium:
+ dislike to severance from France;
+ feeling towards Holland;
+ attachment to Napoleon;
+ preparations for the Campaign;
+ all inhabitants requisitioned for the repair of fortifications.
+Berlin: occupation of, after Jena,
+ excellent conduct of French troops of occupation;
+ excesses committed by troops of Rhenish Confederation;
+ insolent conduct of troops raised by Prince of Isenburg;
+ art treasures of, respected by French Republican Armies;
+ Unter den Linden;
+ Brandenburger Thor;
+ public buildings;
+ streets;
+ statues of great men in the Wilhelm Platz;
+ Churches;
+ the officers of the Army;
+ anecdote of Blucher.
+Bern: attempts in 1815 to regain possession of the Canton de Vaud.
+Bigottini: fine performance at the Grand Opera, Paris.
+Bingen: Mausethurm,
+ Bishop Hatto.
+Blacas, Vicomte de: at Court of Louis XVIII at Ghent.
+Blucher: popularity of, in London,
+ encourages the excesses of his soldiery;
+ nicknames of;
+ narrowly escapes capture at Ligny;
+ saves English at Hougoumont;
+ anecdote related of.
+Bohemia: dialect of.
+Bologna: arcades,
+ remarkable picture in gallery of Count Marescalchi;
+ leaning tower;
+ lady-professor of Greek;
+ Carbonari;
+ theatre;
+ women;
+ barbarous dialect.
+Bonn:
+ Electoral palace;
+ Roman antiquity;
+ legends of the Sieben Gebirge;
+ Das Heimliche Gericht.
+Bordas, M, politics of.
+Borgo San Donino, remarkable highway robbery at.
+Borromean Islands, splendid villa in Isola Bella.
+Bourbons, the: want of patriotism of the Duc de Berri,
+ their injudicious conduct;
+ Louis XVIII and Monsieur at Ghent;
+ amusing nickname of Louis XVIII;
+ dislike of the French people to;
+ their atrocious policy;
+ send emissaries to South of France from Coblentz;
+ unpopularity of;
+ fulsome adulation of;
+ cause removal of Sismondi from Geneva;
+ character of royal families of France, Spain, and Naples.
+Brussels: description of,
+ historical associations;
+ Place du Sablon, celebrated fountain;
+ theatres;
+ humanity of inhabitants of, to the wounded after Waterloo.
+
+Caffarelli, Statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Canova, works of, in St Peter's,
+ master-pieces in his atelier in Rome;
+ character of his genius.
+Capellen, Baron de,
+ proclamation of, to the inhabitants of Brussels.
+Capua,
+ thievishness of lower classes of.
+Carbonari, degrees and initiation,
+ object;
+ meaning of name.
+Castlereagh, Lord: insolent letter of, respecting King of Saxony.
+Catalani: singing of.
+Ceylon: Frye's travels in.
+Chalon: affection felt for Napoleon in,
+ Austrian officers in.
+Charleroy: defeat of Prussian army at.
+Chateaubriand: at the Court of Louis XVIII at Ghent.
+Chatham, Earl of: indignation of, at employment of Indians in the War
+ of Independence.
+Clermont: Peter the Hermit preaches First Crusade in,
+ petrifying well;
+ Swiss regiment;
+ anonymous denunciations;
+ method of cleansing town.
+Coblentz: monument to Marceau,
+ Bourbon intrigues with Jacobins and Brissotins.
+Code Napoléon: simplicity and advantages of, as compared with
+ English criminal law.
+Cologne: Cathedral,
+ the three kings;
+ the eleven thousand virgins;
+ etymology of the name;
+ Jean-Marie Farina.
+Cremona: Gothic buildings,
+ Campanile of Cathedral.
+Consalvi, Cardinal: character and abilities of.
+Campagna: limbs of quartered malefactors hung up on roadsides,
+ armed peasants;
+ the malaria.
+
+David: pictures by, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+De l'Epée, Abbé: founder of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_.
+Dessaix: Statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+De Watteville: disbands his army.
+Delille, Abbé, his poetry.
+De Boigne, General: his great services to Scindiah,
+ unjustly accused of treachery towards Tippoo Sahb.
+Didier: handed over by the Sardinian Government to the French,
+ his execution at Grenoble.
+Dijon: the town,
+ manufactories of.
+Dionigi, Mme: literary and artistic attainments of.
+D'Orfei, Mme.
+Dresden: The Japanischer Palast,
+ music in;
+ Prince Galhitzin;
+ the King;
+ bridge over the Elbe;
+ Marshal Davoust;
+ Grosser Garten;
+ Ressource Club;
+ etiquette;
+ title of "Rath";
+ theatres;
+ beds;
+ scholars.
+Duchesnois, Mlle: fine acting of.
+
+Egypt: striking testimony to the good done by the French in.
+Ehrenbreitstein: flying bridge,
+ great natural strength;
+ beauty of women of.
+Ellis, Col. Sir H.: perishes at Waterloo.
+Emigrés, the:
+ incorrigibility of;
+ ingratitude to Napoleon;
+ their foolish expectations;
+ efforts to cause restoration of lands formerly theirs.
+Ens:
+ whirlpool;
+ the Waternixie.
+Erfurt: legend of Count Gleichen.
+Espinassy, General: republican principles of.
+Eton: principles instilled into boys at.
+Eustace, Mr: examples of his credulity and bigotry.
+
+Ferrara:
+ Hugo and Parisina;
+ the Po;
+ relics of Ariosto;
+ MSS of Ariosto, Tasso, Guarini;
+ Hospital of St Anna.
+Firmin: acting of.
+Fleurus: Prussian army defeated at.
+Florence:
+ the Duomo;
+ Battisterio;
+ il Sasso di Dante;
+ theatres;
+ public buildings;
+ statues;
+ Gallery;
+ Venus;
+ de Medici;
+ paintings and sculpture;
+ portraits of sovereigns;
+ Roman antiquities;
+ remarkable imitations in wax of human anatomy;
+ Ponte Vecchio;
+ street paving;
+ thickness of walls of houses;
+ Palazzo Pitti;
+ Canova's Venus;
+ Boboli Gardens;
+ Cascino;
+ beauty of the women;
+ Pegasus;
+ Italian fondness for gaudy colours;
+ Canova's monument to Alfieri;
+ Church of Santa Croce;
+ the Florentine Westminster Abbey;
+ academies;
+ La Crusca;
+ English travellers;
+ Lord Dillon;
+ story illustrating Florentine life.
+Fouché: complains of the conduct of the Allies.
+Frankfort:
+ Venus Vulgivaga;
+ Jews;
+ cathedral;
+ inauguration of Roman Caesars in the Römer;
+ the Golden Bull;
+ portraits of the Emperors;
+ theatre;
+ adaptation of German language to music;
+ political opinion in;
+ dislike to Austria.
+French Revolution: worst excesses of, surpassed.
+
+Galileo: monument erected to, in church of Santa Croce.
+Gauthier, M.: exiled to Lausanne.
+Geneva: scenery,
+ Fort de l'Écluse;
+ arcades;
+ J.J. Rousseau;
+ Calvin;
+ Servetus;
+ sentiments of Genevese towards Napoleon and the Revolution;
+ literary aptitude of Genevese;
+ attachment to their country;
+ the women;
+ French refugees refused an asylum in;
+ admitted into Helvetic Confederation.
+Genoa: the women of,
+ peculiarities of the streets;
+ ducal palace;
+ Columbus;
+ bridge of Carignano;
+ churches.
+Georges, Mlle: fine acting of,
+ her rendering of "Agrippina";
+ plays the part of "Clytemnestra," supported by her sister as "Iphigénie".
+Ghent: Court of Louis XVIII at.
+Girolamo, Signor: anecdote of.
+Godesberg: interesting ruins near.
+Granet: remarkable pictures by.
+Grassini: singing of.
+Grillparzer, author of the tragedy "Sappho".
+Grotto of Pausilippo.
+Grotto del Cane.
+Guérin: pictures by, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Guillotine, the.
+
+Helvetic Confederation: guaranteed by the Allied Powers in 1814,
+ Geneva admitted into.
+Herculaneum.
+Hockheim; Rhenish wines.
+Holland: feeling towards the House of Orange,
+ regret at loss of Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon.
+Hougoumont: Bulow and Blucher march to the assistance of the English at
+ devastation of.
+Hulin, General: cashiers a Prussian officer in the French service.
+
+India: Frye's travels in.
+Innspruck: the Hofkirche,
+ statues of kings and princes connected with Maximilian I.
+
+Kléber: statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Klingmann, Philipp: plot of his tragedy "Faust".
+
+Labédoyère: execution of.
+Lacoste: acts as Napoleon's guide at Waterloo.
+Lafayette: rebukes British Commissioner at the Conference.
+Lafond: acting of.
+Lafontaine, Augustus: comparison of works of, with the "Nouvelle Heloise"
+ of Rousseau.
+La Harpe, General: influences Emperor of Russia in favour of the Vaudois.
+Lamarque: sent by the Convention to arrest Dumouriez,
+ delivered over to the Austrians;
+ votes for Napoleon.
+Landshut: Church of St Martin at.
+Language: influence of, upon the poetry and plays of Italy, France,
+ England and Germany.
+Lausanne: steep ascents,
+ beauty of environs;
+ Republican principles of;
+ intolerant discourse of minister.
+Leipzig: Saxon troops go over to the Mies during the battle of,
+ the University;
+ unpopularity of the English in.
+Leghorn: Hebrew families in,
+ Don Felipe III;
+ Smollett's tomb.
+Liége: situation of,
+ coal-pits near;
+ commerce with Holland;
+ fortifications;
+ destroyed by Joseph II.
+Linz: beauty of the women,
+ curious incident;
+ learned innkeepers.
+Lodi: interesting model in the Hôtel des Invalides of battle of.
+Louvre: works of art in,
+ stripping of, by the Allies.
+Lucca: female servants,
+ the amoroso;
+ Dante's mountain.
+Lyons: buildings,
+ scenery;
+ feelings towards Napoleon;
+ character of inhabitants;
+ manufactures.
+
+Maastricht: situation,
+ Montagne de St Pierre.
+Machiavelli: entombed in church of Santa Croce.
+Mâcon: quai,
+ wine;
+ grisettes.
+Maffei: his "Polyphonte" compared with that of Voltaire.
+Maitland, Captain: Napolean surrenders to.
+Mantua: situation,
+ Cathedral;
+ monuments of the Gonzagas;
+ the T palace and gardens.
+Marengo: the Battle of,
+ Commemoration column thrown down.
+Maria Louisa: ordered to quit papal territory,
+ enthusiastic reception of, at Bologna;
+ victim of a strange theft.
+Mars, Mlle: graceful acting of.
+Massieu: pupil of the Abbé Sicard.
+Mayence: Cathedral,
+ Citadel.
+Michel Angelo: anecdote of.
+Milan: _Teatro della Scala_,
+ the _Duomo_;
+ the women of;
+ dialect;
+ the _Zecca_;
+ palace;
+ Ambrosian Library;
+ hospital;
+ _Teatro Olimpico_;
+ Porta del Sempione;
+ Italian comedy and audiences;
+ Teatro Girolamo;
+ Milanese twang;
+ ballet;
+ acting of La Pallerini.
+Mittenwald: great raft,
+ interesting journey.
+Mölk: tradition of the Devil's Wall,
+ ruins of Castle of Dierenstein;
+ Richard Coeur de Lion.
+Mont Cenis: description of the Chaussée.
+Mont St. Jean: dreadful sight on plateau of.
+Montefiascone: story of the _Vino d'Est_.
+Morice, Colonel: death at Waterloo.
+Munich: the King,
+ national theatre;
+ social life in;
+ female head-dress.
+Murat: Italian opinion of.
+
+Namur: situation of,
+ Citadel demolished by Joseph II;
+ complaints against.
+Prussian soldiery.
+Napoleon: takes tribute of works of art from vanquished Governments,
+ calumniated by the _émigrés_;
+ unjust aspersions on;
+ narrow escape from capture;
+ confident of success before Waterloo;
+ constructs Chaussée of Mont Cenis.
+Naples:
+ life of a man of fashion in;
+ Etruscan vases and papyri in museum;
+ theatres;
+ _Pulcinello_;
+ social advantages;
+ lazzaroni;
+ dialect;
+ effect of general ignorance.
+Nelson, Lord: conduct towards Caraccioli,
+Neuwied: University of.
+Ney, Marshall: Wellington and Emperor of Russia refuse to interfere
+ in favour of
+
+Padua:
+ University;
+ Church of St Anthony;
+ Palazzo della Giustizia;
+ tomb of Livy.
+Paris: Louis XVIII in,
+ Kotzebue on the _Palais Royal_;
+ Café Montausier;
+ the Louvre;
+ statues and paintings collected by the French Government;
+ productions at the Grand Opera;
+ Column of the _Place Vendôme_;
+ Gardens of the Tuileries;
+ Chamber of Deputies;
+ the _Invalides_;
+ models of the fortresses of France;
+ Picture Gallery of the Palais du Luxembourg;
+ frequency of quarrels between French and Prussian officers in the;
+ _Palais Royal_;
+ behaviour of English officers in;
+ masterpieces performed in the _Théâtre français_;
+ Ney shot in the Gardens of the Luxembourg.
+Parma: "L'Amfiteatro Farnese",
+ paintings;
+ birthplace of Cassius.
+Passau: junction of the Danube, Inn and Illst.
+Perugia.
+Pescia,
+ advantages of living in.
+Picton, Lieut-Genl Sir T.: perishes at Waterloo.
+Piedmont: character of the lower classes of.
+Pillnitz:
+ the palace;
+ Treaty of.
+Pisa.
+Pitt: credited with the invention of the sinking fund.
+Pius VII: character and virtues of.
+Pompeii:
+ amphitheatre;
+ houses;
+ Temple of Isis;
+ Praetorium;
+ antiquities removed to Museum of Portici.
+Pontine Marshes.
+Prague: situation,
+ bridge over the Mulda;
+ remarkable statue;
+ Jews;
+ palaces of the Wallensteins and Colloredos;
+ St John Nepomucene;
+ Joseph II's ingenious method of extorting money from the Jews;
+ Catalani;
+ story of the Duchess Libussa.
+
+Rafaelli: mosaic work of.
+Rho: ancient tree.
+Rome: censorship of books at the Dogana,
+ Coliseum;
+ Arch of Constantine;
+ _Via Sacra_--excavations;
+ Tarpeian Rock;
+ Capitol;
+ St Peter's;
+ anecdote of Michel Angelo;
+ statue of St Peter;
+ masterpieces of sculpture in Capitoline Museum;
+ Transteverini;
+ effect of the settling of foreign artists in;
+ Santa Maria Maggiore;
+ Church of St John Lateran;
+ Egyptian obelisk;
+ La Scala Santa;
+ Quirinal;
+ fountains;
+ Column of Trajan;
+ baths of Diocletian;
+ theatres;
+ masterpieces of art in the Vatican Museum;
+ statue of Jupiter Capitolinus;
+ stanze di Rafaello;
+ Appian Road;
+ social life in;
+ the _Avvocati_;
+ Papal Government;
+ post office defalcations;
+ the Carnival;
+ races in the Corso;
+ masquerades;
+ Sovereigns and persons of distinction living in Rome in 1818;
+ Easter in;
+ Swiss Guard;
+ Noble Guard;
+ papal benediction;
+ illumination of St Peter's;
+ fireworks from Castle of St Angelo;
+ the brigand Barbone;
+ his wife.
+
+Savoy: character of inhabitants of.
+Schönbrunn: anecdote of Napoleon's son.
+Schuyler, General: his reproof of General Burgoyne.
+Scindiah: career of.
+Sgricci, Signor: his genius for improvisation.
+Sicard, Abbeé; director of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_,
+eulogises Sir Sidney Smith.
+Sienna: cathedral,
+ Piccolomini monument;
+ dialect.
+Simplon: road over the,
+ Chaussée;
+ _maisons de refuge_.
+Sismondi,
+ the historian banished from Geneva.
+Smith, Lucius F.: friend of De Boigne.
+Smith, Sir Sidney: his eulogy of the Abbé Sicard.
+Spoleto: ruins of ancient buildings.
+St Cloud: favourite residence of Napoleon.
+St Eustatius: pillaged by Admiral Rodney.
+St Germain: depôt for articles plundered by Prussian officers.
+St Helena: injustice of Napoleon's banishment to.
+Stewart, Lord: conduct of, at Conference of French Commissioners
+ with the Allies.
+
+Taddei, Rosa: her talent for improvisation.
+Talma, his ailing at the Théâtre Français.
+Thorwaldsen: character of his genius.
+Tivoli: the Villa d'Este,
+ Adrian's Villa.
+Tölz: remarkable groups of figures in wood, representing
+ history of Christ.
+Tournay,
+ citadel of.
+Trévoux: scenery on the road between Mâcon and,
+ hotel-keeper's beautiful daughter.
+Turin: Chapelle du Saint Suaire,
+ remarkable works of art in;
+ the King of Sardinia.
+Tuscany: contrast with papal dominions,
+ pronunciation;
+ peasantry;
+ fondness of Tuscan women for dress;
+ feeling towards Napoleon in;
+ character of the people;
+ house of Americo Vespucci.
+Tyrol, the: general description of,
+ dress of the peasant women.
+
+Valais: crétins of.
+Vaud, Canton de: character of inhabitants of,
+ gratitude to France;
+ democratic spirit;
+ La Harpe;
+ defends its independence;
+ hatred of French Royalists to.
+Velino: remarkable cascade.
+Venice: Canale Grande,
+ Rialto;
+ palaces of great families;
+ the Merceria;
+ water-fête;
+ Piazza di San Marco;
+ Church of St Mark;
+ Campanile;
+ variety of costumes in;
+ dialect;
+ social life in;
+ Doge's palace;
+ theatres;
+ gondolas.
+Verbruggen, H.: work of, in church of St Gudule, Brussels.
+Verona: amphitheatre,
+ Palladio;
+ Scala family;
+ social advantages in.
+Versailles: magnificence of.
+"Vertraute Briefe" the.
+Vesuvius: eruptions,
+ lava.
+Vicenza.
+Vienna: Art treasures of, respected by French Republican armies,
+ great raft;
+ streets;
+ Cathedral;
+ Hofburg;
+ Congress of;
+ Wechselbank;
+ Belvedere Palace;
+ Prater;
+ theatres.
+Visconte, Galeazzo: builds church of the Certosa.
+Volnais, Mlle: Acting of.
+Voltaire: his play, "Mérope",
+ his benefactions to Ferney;
+ relics of;
+ portraits of contemporaries in his château.
+
+Walker, Adam: his lectures to Etonians stopped.
+Wardle, Col.: republican principles of,
+ anonymous denunciation of.
+Waterloo: French officer's remarks on.
+Wellington: his confidence in the result of the campaign,
+ gallantry of;
+ checks frequency of corporal punishment in the army.
+Wilson, Maj.-Genl: accompanies Frye on a tour through the theatre of War.
+Wilson, Sir R.: his charges against Napoleon.
+Wirion: removed from office by Napoleon.
+
+York, Duke of,
+ opposes frequent corporal punishment in the Army.
+
+Zedera, Chevalier: political dispute with Genevese,
+ his journey with Frye to Italy;
+ his parting with Frye.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo: Reminiscences of
+European Travel 1815-1819, by Major W. E Frye
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European
+Travel 1815-1819, by Major W. E Frye
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819
+
+Author: Major W. E Frye
+
+Release Date: February 4, 2004 [EBook #10939]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AFTER WATERLOO ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team from images generously made available by gallica
+(Bibliotheque nationale de France) at http://gallica.bnf.fr.
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER WATERLOO
+
+Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819
+
+By
+
+MAJOR W.E. FRYE
+
+EDITED WITH A PREFACE AND NOTES
+
+By SALOMON REINACH
+
+Member of the Institute of France
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+1908
+
+
+
+
+To
+
+ V.A.M.
+ S.R.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The knowledge of Major Frye's manuscript and the privilege of publishing it
+for the first time I owe to the kindness of two French ladies, the Misses
+G----. Their father, a well known artist and critic, used to spend the
+summer months at Saint Germain-en-Laye together with his wife, who was an
+English woman by birth. They had been for a long time intimately acquainted
+with Major Frye, who lived and ended his life in that quiet town. The
+Major's hostess, Mme. de W----, after his death in 1858, brought the
+manuscript to Mrs. G---- and gave it to her in memory of her friend. It was
+duly preserved in the G---- family, but remained unnoticed. The Misses
+G---- rediscovered it in 1907, when it had been lying in a cupboard for
+upwards of half a century. On their showing it to me I thought it was
+interesting for many reasons, and worthy of introduction to the public. I
+hope the reader will share my opinion, which is also that of several
+English scholars and men of letters, to whom I communicated extracts from
+the manuscript.
+
+The reminiscences are in the form of letters addressed to a correspondent
+who, however, is never named and of whose health, family and private
+circumstances not the slightest mention is to be found. So I am inclined to
+believe that he never existed, and that Major Frye chose to imitate
+President de Brosses and others who thus recorded their travelling
+experiences in epistolary form.
+
+The manuscript--which will eventually be deposited in a public library--is
+entirely in Major Frye's large and legible hand; at some later time it was
+evidently revised by himself, but many names which I have endeavoured to
+complete were left in blank or only indicated by initials. There are three
+folio volumes, bound in paper boards. In this edition it has been thought
+advisable to leave out a certain number of pages devoted to theatricals, of
+which Major Frye was a great votary, and also some lengthy descriptions of
+landscapes, museums and churches, the interest of which to modern readers
+does not correspond to the space occupied by them. For the information
+contained in the footnotes I am indebted to many correspondents, English,
+French, Swiss, Belgian and Italian, to whom I here express my hearty
+thanks. I am under special obligation to Sir Charles Dilke, Mr Oscar
+Browning, Professor Novati, Professor Corrado Ricci, Commandant
+Esperandieu, Professor Cumont, Professor Stilling and Mr Hoechberg.
+
+Major Frye's tombstone is in the cemetery of Saint Germain, and reads thus:
+"To the memory of Major William Edward Frye, who departed this life the 9th
+day of October, 1858." On the same stone has been added in French:
+"Perceval Edmond Litchfield, decede le 15 Avril, 1888." About P.E.
+Litchfield I know nothing; he must have been the Major's intimate friend
+during the last period of his life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+W.E. Frye was born Oct. 29, 1784, and received his education at Eton
+(1797-9) in the time of the French Revolution. "The system was," he says,
+"to drill into the heads of the boys strong aristocratic principles and
+hatred of democracy and of the French in particular." The effect produced
+on the youth was the reverse of that intended. From 1799 to 1822 he
+belonged to the British army: here is an abstract of his services:
+
+ Ensign, 2nd Foot, 5th August, 1799.
+ Lieutenant, 2nd Foot, 7th March, 1800.
+ Half-pay, 4th Foot, 14th April, 1808.
+ Lieutenant, 24th Foot, 8th December, 1804.
+ Captain, 56th Foot, 18th April, 1805.
+ 3rd Ceylon Regt., 15th Feb., 1810.
+ Half-pay, 3rd Foot, 7th March, 1816.
+ 4th Foot, 24th Feb., 1820.
+ Brevet-Major, 12th August, 1819.
+ Sold out, 15th August, 1822.
+
+In 1799, Frye took a part in the British Expedition to Holland. In 1801 he
+was in Egypt with Lord Abercrombie's army and received the medal for war
+service. His career in India lasted six years and gave him occasion to
+visit the three presidencies and Ceylon. In 1814 he returned on furlough to
+Europe and was in Brussels during the Waterloo campaign. The subsequent
+years--1815 to 1819--he employed visiting Western Europe, as appears from
+his reminiscences. I have read letters of his which prove that he lived in
+Paris from 1830 to 1832. Later, about 1848, he took an apartment in Saint
+Germain, and died there in 1858.
+
+Major Frye was a very distinguished linguist; besides knowing Greek and
+Latin, he understood almost all European languages, and was capable of
+writing correctly in French, Italian and German. The Misses G---- have
+shown me a rare book published by him at Paris in 1844 under the following
+title:
+
+"Trois chants de l'Edda. Vaftrudnismal, Thrymsquidal, Skirnisfor, traduits
+en vers francais, accompagnes de notes explicatives des mythes et
+allegories, et suivis d'autres poemes par W.E. Frye, ancien major
+d'infanterie au service d'Angleterre, membre de l'Academie des Arcadiens de
+Rome. Se vend a Paris, pour l'auteur, chez Heideloff & Cie, Libraires, 18
+Rue des Filles St. Thomas. 1844" (In 8vo, xii, 115 pp.)
+
+At the end of that volume are translations by Major Frye of several
+Northern poems--in German, Italian and English verse--from the Danish and
+the Swedish; then come two sonnets in French verse, the one in honour of
+Lafayette, the other about the Duke of Orleans, whose premature death he
+compares with that of the Northern hero of the Edda, Balder. A part of
+Frye's translation of the Edda, before appearing in book form, had been
+published in _l'Echo de la Litterature et des Beaux Arts_, a periodical
+edited by the Major's friend, M. de Belenet.
+
+Frye loved poetry, though his ideas on the subject were rather those of the
+eighteenth century than our own. It is interesting to find an English
+officer reading Voltaire, Gessner, Ariosto, and quoting them from memory
+(which explains that some of his quotations had to be corrected). The
+sentimental vein of Rousseau's generation still flows and vibrates in him,
+as when he says that he has never been able to read the letters of Wolmar
+to St Preux in Rousseau's _Nouvelle Heloise_ without shedding tears. German
+minor poetry, now quite forgotten, attracted him almost as much as the
+great pages of Schiller, Buerger, and Goethe. The Misses G. possess a
+manuscript translation in three volumes, in the Major's own hand, of
+Wieland's _Agathodemon_ done into English. This he evidently intended to
+publish, as he had written the title-page which is worded as follows:
+
+"Agathodemon, a philosophical romance translated from the German of Wieland
+by W.E. Frye, member of the Academy degli Arcadi in Rome, and of the Royal
+Society of Northern Antiquarians of Copenhagen, ex-major of infantry in His
+British Majesty's service."
+
+Frye describes with accuracy, and shows much appreciation of fine scenery
+and architecture. His judgements in painting and sculpture are sincere,
+though often betraying the autodidact and amateur. He loved music,
+especially Rossini's operas which were then beginning their long career of
+triumph. Theatricals of all sorts, especially ballets, had a great
+attraction for him and elicited his enthusiastic comments. In comparing
+tragedies and comedies which he had seen performed in different countries,
+he gave repeated proofs of his knowledge and critical insight. We can take
+him as a good example of that intelligent class of English travellers whose
+intercourse with the Continental _litterati_ has so well contributed to
+establish the good reputation of British culture and refined appreciation
+of the arts.
+
+The chief interest of Frye's reminiscences lies, however, in quite another
+direction. He was a friend of liberty, a friend of France, an admirer of
+Napoleon, and a hater of the Tory regime which brought about Napoleon's
+downfall. "France's attempts at European domination, in the Napoleonic era,
+are graciously described as but so many efforts towards spreading the light
+of civilization over Europe." These words, written about a quite recent
+work and a propos of the "Entente cordiale," apply perfectly to Frye's
+reminiscences. Travelling immediately before and after the Emperor's
+collapse, he found that everywhere, excepting in Tuscany, the French
+domination was regretted, because the ideals of liberty and equality had
+shone and vanished with the tricolour flag. He admires the French people,
+though not the _Ultras_ and bigots, and has fine words of praise for the
+French army: "Yes, the French soldier is a fine fellow. I have served
+against them in Holland and in Egypt, and I will never flinch from
+rendering justice to their exemplary conduct and lofty valour." He takes
+trouble to refute the exaggerated reports which were then circulated all
+over Europe about the cruelties and vandalism practised by the French: "If
+the French since the Revolution have not always fought for liberty, they
+have done so invariably for science; and wherever they carried their
+victorious arms abuses were abolished, ameliorations of all kinds followed
+and the arts of life were improved. Our government, since the accession of
+George III, has never raised its arm except in favour of old abuses, to
+uphold despotism and unfair privileges or to establish commercial
+monopoly."
+
+Sometimes, indeed, speaking of his own country and its government, Major
+Frye uses very hard words, which might seem unpatriotic if we did not know,
+from many other memoirs and letters, to what a terrible strain orthodox
+Toryism, coupled with bigotry and hypocrisy, had put the patience of
+liberal Englishmen at that period. He called the British government "the
+most dangerous, artful, and determined enemy of all liberty,"--"England,"
+he says, "has been always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to
+perpetuate abuses and to rivet the fetters of monarchical, feudal and
+ecclesiastical tyranny." And later on he inveighs against the English
+merchants, who "contributed with their gold to uphold the corrupt system of
+Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and liberticide wars."
+
+Whatever may be the final judgement of history on the Tory principles in
+politics in the days of the Congress of Vienna, Major Frye's love of
+liberty and intellectual progress entitle him to the sympathy of those who
+share his generous feelings and do not consider that personal freedom and
+individual rights are articles for home use only. Since Frye wrote, the
+whole of Europe, excepting perhaps Russia, has reaped the benefits of the
+French Revolution, and reduced, if not suppressed, what the Major called
+"kingcraft and priestcraft." He did not attempt to divine the future, but
+the history of Europe in the nineteenth century has been largely in
+accordance with his desires and hopes. It is not a small merit for a
+writer, in the midst of one of the most rabid reactions that the world has
+known, to have clung with such tenacity to ideals, the complete victory of
+which may now be contemplated in the near future.
+
+S.R.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MAY-JUNE, 1815
+
+Passage from Ceylon to England--Napoleon's return--Ostend--Bruges
+--Ghent--The King of France at Mass--Alost--Bruxelles--The Duke of
+Wellington very confident--Feelings of the Belgians--Good conduct of
+British troops--Monuments in Bruxelles--Theatricals--Genappe and
+Namur--Complaints against the Prussian troops--Mons--Major-General
+Adam--Tournay--A French deserter--General Clinton's division--Cavalry
+review--The Duke de Berri--Back to Bruxelles--Unjust opinions about
+Napoleon and the French--Battle at Ligny--The day of Waterloo in
+Bruxelles--Visit to the battlefield--Terrible condition of the
+wounded--Kindness of the Bruxellois.
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+From Bruxelles to Liege--A priest's declamation against the French
+Revolution--Maastricht--Aix-la-Chapelle--Imperial relics--Napoleon
+regretted--Klingmann's "Faust"--A Tyrolese beauty--Cologne--Difficulties
+about a passport--The Cathedral--King-craft and priest-craft--The
+Rhine--Bonn and Godesberg--Goethe's "Goetz von Berlichingen"--The Seven
+Mountains--German women--Andernach--Ehrenbreitstein--German hatred against
+France--Coblentz--Intrigues of the Bourbon princes in Coblentz--Mayence--
+Bieberich--Conduct of the Allies towards Napoleon--Frankfort on the
+Mayn--An anecdote about Lord Stewart and Lafayette--German poetry--The
+question of Alsace and Lorraine--Return to Bruxelles--Napoleon's surrender.
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+From Bruxelles to Paris--Restoration of Louis XVIII--The officers of the
+allied armies--The Palais Royal--The Louvre--Protest of the author against
+the proposed despoiling of the French Museums--Unjust strictures against
+Napoleon's military policy--The _cant_ about revolutionary robberies--The
+Grand Opera--Monuments in Paris--The Champs Elysees--Saint-Cloud--The
+Hotel des Invalides--The Luxembourg--General Labedoyere--Priests and
+emigrants--Prussian Plunder--Handsome behaviour of the English
+officers--Reminiscences of Eton--Versailles.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+From Paris to Bruxelles--Visiting the plains of Waterloo--The Duke de Berri
+at Lille--Beauvais--Return to Paris--Remarks on the French theatre
+--Talma--Mlle Duchesnois--Mlle Georges--French alexandrine verse--The Abbe
+Delille--The Opera Comique.
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+From Paris to Milan through Dijon, Chalon-sur-Saone, Lyons, Geneva and the
+Simplon--Auxerre--Dijon--Napoleon at Chalon-sur-Saone--The army of the
+Loire--Macon--French _grisettes_--Lyons--Monuments and theatricals--
+Geneva--Character and opinions of the Genevois--Voltaire's chateau at
+Ferney--The chevalier Zadera--From Geneva to Milan--Crossing the
+Simplon--Arona--The theatres in Milan--Rossini--Monuments in Milan--Art
+encouraged by the French--Mr Eustace's bigotry--Return to Switzerland
+--Clarens and Vevey--Lausanne--Society in Lausanne--Return to Paris--The
+Louvre stripped--Death of Marshal Ney.
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MARCH-JUNE, 1816
+
+Ball at Cambray, attended by the Duke of Wellington--An Adventure between
+Saint Quentin and Compiegne--Paris revisited--Colonel Wardle and Mrs
+Wallis--Society in Paris--The Sourds-Muets--The Cemetery of Pere La
+Chaise--Apathy of the French people--The priests--Marriage of the Duke de
+Berri.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Journey from Paris to Lausanne--Besancon--French refugees in Lausanne
+--Francois Lamarque--General Espinassy--Bordas--Gautier--Michau--M. de
+Laharpe--Mlle Michaud--Levade, a Protestant minister--Chambery--Aix
+--Details about M. de Boigne's career in India--English Toryism and
+intolerance--Valley of Maurienne--Passage across Mont Cenis and arrival at
+Suza--Turin.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Journey from Turin to Bologna--Asti--Schiller and Alfieri--Italian
+_cuisine_--The _vetturini_--Marengo--Piacenza--The Trebbia--Parma--The
+Empress Maria Louisa--Modena--Bologna--The University--The Marescalchi
+Gallery--Character of the Bolognese.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Journey across the Appennines to Florence--Tuscan idioms and
+customs--Monuments and galleries at Florence--The Cascino--Churches--
+Theatres--Popularity of the Grand Duke--Napoleon's downfall not
+regretted--Academies in Florence.
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Journey from Florence to Rome--Sienna--Radicofani--Bolsena--Montefiascone
+wine--Viterbo--Baccano--The Roman Campagna--The papal _douans_--Monuments
+and Museums in Rome--Intolerance of the Catholic Christians--The Tiber and
+the bridges--Character of the Romans--The _Palazzi_ and _Ville_--Canova's
+atelier--Theatricals--An execution in Rome.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+From Rome to Naples--Albano--Velletri--The Marshes--Terracina--Mola di
+Gaeta--Capua--The streets of Naples--Monuments and Museums--Visit to
+Pompeii and ascent to Vesuvius--Dangerous ventures--Puzzuoli and
+Baiae--Theatres at Naples--Pulcinello--Return to Rome--Tivoli.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1816
+
+From Rome to Florence--Sismondi the historian--Reminiscences of
+India--Lucca--Princess Elisa Baciqochi--Pisa--The Campo Santo--Leghorn--
+Hebrews in Leghorn--Lord Dillon--The story of a lost glove--From Florence
+to Lausanne by Milan, Turin and across Mont Cenis--Lombardy in winter--The
+Hospice of Mont Cenis.
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MARCH-SEPTEMBER, 1817
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Clermont-Ferrand--A wretched conveyance--The
+first dish of frogs--Society in Clermont-Ferrand--General de Vergennes--
+Cleansing the town--Return to Lausanne--A zealous priest--Journey to Bern
+and back to Lausanne--Avenches--Lake Morat--Lake Neufchatel--The Diet in
+Bern--Character of the Bernois--A beautiful Milanese lady.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEPTEMBER, 1817-APRIL, 1818
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Milan, Florence, Rome and Naples--Residence at
+Naples--The theatre of San Carlo--Rossini's operas--Gaming in Naples--The
+_Lazzaroni_--Public writers--Carbonarism--Return to Rome--Christmas eve at
+Santa Maria Maggiore--Mme Dionigi--Theatricals--Society in Rome--The papal
+government--Lucien Bonaparte, prince of Canino--Louis Napoleon, ex-King of
+Holland--Pope Pius VII--Thorwaldsen--Granet--The Holy Week in Rome--The
+Duchess of Devonshire--From Rome to Florence by the Perugia road.
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+APRIL-JULY, 1818
+
+Journey from Florence to Pisa and from thence by the Appennines to
+Genoa--Massa--Carrara--Genoa--Monuments and works of art--The
+Genoese--Return to Florence--Journey from Florence through Bologna and
+Ferrara to Venice--Monument to Ariosto in Ferrara--A description of
+Venice--Padua--Vicenza--Verona--Cremona--Return to Milan--The Scala
+theatre--Verona again--From Verona to Innspruck.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1818
+
+Innspruck--Tyrol and the Tyrolese--From Innspruck to Munich--Monuments and
+churches--Theatricals--Journey from Munich to Vienna on a floss--Trouble
+with a passport--Complicated system of Austrian money--Description of
+Vienna--The Prater--The theatres--Schiller's _Joan of Arc_--A
+_Kinderballet_--The young Napoleon at Schoenbrunn--Journey from Vienna to
+Prague.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+SEPTEMBER, 1818-MARCH, 1819
+
+The splendid city of Prague--The German expression, "To give the basket"--
+Journey from Prague to Dresden--Journey from Dresden to Berlin--A
+description of Berlin--The Prussian Army--Theatricals--Peasants talk about
+Napoleon--Prussians and French should be allies--Absurd policy of the
+English Tories--Journey from Berlin to Dresden--A description of
+Dresden--The battle of Dresden in 1813--Clubs at Dresden--Theatricals--
+German beds--Saxon scholars--The picture gallery--Tobacco an ally of
+Legitimacy--Saxon women--Meissen--Unjust policy of Europe towards the King
+of Saxony.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+MARCH-APRIL, 1819
+
+Journey from Dresden to Leipzig--The University of Leipzig--Liberal
+spirit--The English disliked in Saxony--The English Government hostile to
+liberty--Journey to Frankfort--From Frankfort to Metz and Paris--A.F.
+Lemaitre--_Bon voyage_ to the Allies--Return to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MAY-JUNE, 1815
+
+Passage from Ceylon to England--Napoleon's return--Ostend--Bruges--Ghent--
+The King of France at Mass--Alost--Bruxelles--The Duke of Wellington very
+confident--Feelings of the Belgians--Good conduct of British
+troops--Monuments in Bruxelles--Theatricals--Genappe and Namur--Complaints
+against the Prussian troops--Mons--Major-General Adam--Tournay--A French
+deserter--General Clinton's division--Cavalry review--The Duke de
+Berri--Back to Bruxelles--Unjust opinions about Napoleon and the
+French--Battle at Ligny--The day of Waterloo in Bruxelles--Visit to the
+battlefield--Terrible condition of the wounded--Kindness of the Bruxellois.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, May 1, 1815.
+
+I proceed to the fulfilment of my promise, to give you from time to time
+the details of my tour, and my reflections on the circumstances that occur
+at this momentous crisis.
+
+To me, who have spent the greatest part of my life out of Europe, the whole
+scene is so new that I am quite bewildered with it; and you will, I am
+afraid, as I write on the impulse of the moment, find my ideas at times
+rather incoherently put together. What changes have taken place in Europe
+within the last two years! and how great were those which occurred during
+the interval of my passage from Ceylon last year, which island I quitted
+about the time that we received in that part of the world intelligence of
+the battle of Leipsic! Having had a long passage from distant Taprobane, it
+was only on my arrival at the Cape of Good Hope, that I learned, to my
+utter astonishment, the news of the capitulation of Paris to the allied
+powers, and of the overthrow of the power and dynasty of Napoleon. I
+recollect that at the Cape there was great rejoicing and jubilee on this
+occasion; but I confess, as to myself, I did not see any reason for giving
+vent to this extravagant joy; and I must have had even at that time somehow
+or other a presentiment of what would soon happen, as in communicating this
+intelligence to a friend in India I made use of these words: "get a court
+dress made, my good friend, and a big wig, ruffled shirt, and hair-powder,
+and stick an old-fashioned sword by your side, for, depend on it, old
+fashions will come into play again; the most arbitrary and aristocratic
+notions will be revived and terrible machinations will be framed against
+the liberties of Europe."
+
+Of course at the Cape we only heard one side of the question; and I began
+to be almost convinced that it was as necessary for humanity, as for the
+repose of Europe, that the giant should be put down; and I was consoled
+when it was effected, ostensibly, at least, by the voice of the people.
+
+I had scarcely been three months in England, when the return of Napoleon
+from Elba, and the extraordinary dislocation of the Bourbons from the
+throne of France, summoned Europe again to arms; the crusade is preached at
+Vienna, and behold! his Grace of Wellington appointed the Godfrey of the
+holy league. I had reason, about six weeks before the news of this event
+reached London, from some conversation I had with an intelligent friend,
+who had just returned from a tour on the Continent, to suppose that the
+slightest combination against the Bourbons would prove successful, from
+their injudicious conduct and from the temper of the people; but I never
+could have supposed that the return of the man of Elba would be hailed with
+such unparalleled and unanimous acclamation. As I had long ago wished for
+an opportunity of visiting the continent of Europe, which had never before
+occurred to me, I eagerly embraced the offer made to me by my friend
+Major-General Wilson, formerly Lieut.-Governor of Ceylon,[1] to accompany
+him on a military tour through the country about to be the theatre of war.
+Though I had never before visited the Continent (except with the British
+army in the invasion of Holland in 1799, when I began my military career),
+yet I was not wholly unprepared for travelling, having united to a
+classical, as well as military education, a tolerable knowledge of history,
+and a partial acquirement of the principal modern European languages, which
+I had begun to learn when very young and which I kept up during my leisure
+hours in India, which, like those of Don Quixote, were many. I preferred
+this study infinitely to that of the Asiatic languages, for which I never
+felt any taste, as I dislike bombast, hyperbole and exaggeration; and
+though an ardent admirer of the Muses, I never could find pleasure in what
+Voltaire terms "le bon style oriental, ou l'on fait danser les montagnes et
+les collines," and I prefer the amatory effusions of Ovid to those of the
+great King Solomon himself.
+
+The war will no doubt commence in Belgium, and of course the Emperor
+Napoleon will be the assailant, for it cannot be supposed that after the
+act of ban passed against him by the Amphictyons of Vienna he will remain
+tranquil, and not strike the first blow, which may render him master of
+Belgium and its resources.
+
+We embarked at Ramsgate on the first of May for Ostend on board of a small
+vessel bound thither. Our fellow passengers were two officers of dragoons,
+several commissaries with their servants, horses, etc. After a passage of
+twenty-four hours, we entered the harbour of Ostend at one o'clock the
+following day. Ostend, once so flourishing and opulent, has long since
+fallen into decay; its usual dullness is however just now interrupted by
+the bustle of troops landing to join the allied army. Cavalry, infantry,
+artillery, horses, guns, stores, etc., are landed every minute. The quays
+are the only parts of this city which can boast of handsome buildings; the
+fortifications seem to be much out of repair; in fact, the aggrandizement
+of Antwerp occasioned necessarily the deterioration of Ostend.
+
+The General and myself went to put up at the _Tete d'Or_, the only inn
+where we could procure beds; and we embarked early next morning at the
+embouchure of the canal on board of a _treckschuyt_ which conveyed us in
+three hours to Bruges.
+
+The landscape between Ostend and Bruges is extremely monotonous, it being a
+uniformly flat country; yet it is pleasing to the eye at this season of the
+year from the verdure of the plains, which are all appropriated to
+pasturage, and from the appearance of the different villages and towns, of
+which the eye can embrace a considerable number. There is a good road on
+the banks of the canal, and the troops, on their line of march, enlivened
+much the scene. Bruges, formerly the grand mart and emporium of the
+commerce of the East, not only for the Low Countries, but for all the North
+of Europe, seems, if we may judge from the state of the buildings and the
+stillness that prevails, to be also in a state of decline. We however had
+only time to visit the _Hotel de Ville_ and to remark the immense height of
+the steeple on the _Grande Place_. We observed a number of pretty women in
+the streets and in the shops employed in lace making. Bruges has been at
+all times renowned for the beauty of the female sex, and this brought to my
+recollection a passage in Schiller's tragedy of the _Maid of Orleans_,
+wherein the Duke of Burgundy says that the greatest boast of Bruges is the
+beauty of its women.
+
+Another _treckschuyt_ was to start at twelve o'clock for Ghent; but we
+preferred going by land and General Wilson hired a carriage for that
+purpose. The distance is about thirty miles. The road from Bruges to Ghent
+or Gand is perfectly straight, lined with trees and paved like a street.
+The country is quite flat, and though there is nothing to bound the
+horizon, the trees on each side of the road intercept the view.
+
+We arrived at Ghent about six in the afternoon of the 4th and had some
+difficulty in finding room, as the different hotels were filled with
+officers of the allied army; but at length, after many ineffectual
+applications at several, we obtained admission at the _Hotel de Flandre_,
+where we took possession of a double-bedded room, the only one unoccupied.
+
+Gand seems to be a very neat, clean and handsome city, with an air of
+magnificence about it. The _Grande Place_ is very striking, and the
+promenades are aligned with trees. We inspected the exterior of several
+public buildings and visited the interior of several churches. In the
+cathedral we had the honour of seeing at High Mass his most Christian
+Majesty, Monsieur and the Comte de Blacas, Vicomte de Chateaubriand and
+others, composing the Court of _notre Pere de Gand_, as Louis XVIII is
+humorously termed by the French, from his having fixed his head-quarters
+here. A great many French officers who have followed his fortunes are also
+here, but they seem principally to belong to the Gardes du Corps. A number
+of military attended the service in the cathedral in order to witness the
+devotions of the Bourbon family. Monsieur has all the appearance of a worn
+out debauchee, and to see him with a missal in his hand and the strange
+contrite face he assumes, is truly ridiculous. These princes, instigated no
+doubt by the priests, make a great parade of their sanctity, for which
+however those who are acquainted with their character will not give them
+much credit. But religious cant is the order of the day _intra et extra
+Iliacos muros_, abroad as well as in England. The King of France takes the
+lead, having in view no doubt the advice of Buckingham to Richard III:
+
+ A pray'r book in your hand, my Lord, were well,
+ For on that ground I'll make an holy descant.
+
+and M. de Chateaubriand will no doubt trumpet forth the devotion and
+Christian humility of his master. Those, however, who are at all acquainted
+with this prince's habits, and are not interested in palliating or
+concealing them, insinuate that his devotions at the table are more sincere
+than at the altar and that, like the Giant Margutte in the Morgante
+Maggiore of Pulci, he places more faith and reliance on a cappone lesso
+ossia arrosto than on the consecrated but less substantial wafer.[2]
+
+After contemplating this edifying spectacle, we returned to our inn, and
+the next morning after breakfast we set out on our journey to Bruxelles.
+The road is exactly similar to that between Bruges and Gand, but the
+country appears to be richer and more diversified, and many country houses
+were observable on the road side. We passed thus several neat villages. At
+one o'clock we stopped at Alost to refresh our horses and dine. At the
+table d'hote were a number of French officers belonging to the Gardes du
+Corps. On entering into conversation with one of them, I found that he as
+well as several others of them had served under Napoleon, and had even been
+patronised and promoted by him; but I suppose that being the sons of the
+ancient _noblesse_ they thought that gratitude to a _parvenu_ like him was
+rather too plebeian a virtue. Some of them, however, with whom I conversed
+after dinner seemed to regret the step they had taken. "If we are
+successful," said they, "it can only be by means of the Allied Armies, and
+who knows what conditions they may impose on France? If we should be
+unsuccessful, we are exiled probably for life from our country." During
+dinner, two pretty looking girls with musical instruments entered the hall,
+and regaled our ears with singing some romances, among which were _Dunois
+le Troubadour_ and _La Sentinelle_. They sang with much taste and feeling.
+I surmise this is not the only profession they exercise, if I might judge
+from the _doux yeux_ they occasionally directed to some of the officers.
+These girls did not at least seem by their demeanour as if likely to incur
+the anathema of Rinaldo in the _Orlando Furioso_:
+
+ meritamente muoro Una crudele,
+
+but rather more disposed to
+
+ dar vita all'amator fidele.[3]
+
+Alost is a neat, clean town or large village, and the same description will
+serve for all the towns and villages in Brabant and Flanders, as they are
+built on the same plan. We arrived at Bruxelles late in the evening and put
+up at the _Hotel d'Angleterre_.
+
+This morning, the General and myself went to pay our respects to the _Gran
+Capitano_ of the _Holy League_, and we left our cards. He is, I hear, very
+confident of the result of the campaign, and no doubt he has for him the
+prayers of all the pious in England against those atheistical fellows the
+French; and these prayers will surely elicit a "host of angels" to come
+down to aid in the destruction of the Pandemonium of Paris where Satan's
+lieutenant sits enthroned. The reflecting people here are astonished that
+Napoleon does not begin the attack. The inhabitants of Belgium are in
+general, from all that I can hear or see, not at all pleased with the
+present order of things, and they much lament the being severed from
+France. The two people, the Belgians and Hollanders, do not seem to
+amalgamate; and the former, though they render ample justice to the
+moderation, good sense, and beneficent intentions of the present monarch,
+who is personally respected by every one, yet do not disguise their wish to
+be reunited to France and do not hesitate to avow their attachment to the
+Emperor Napoleon. This union does not please the Hollanders either, on
+other grounds. They complain that their interests have been sacrificed
+entirely to those of the house of Orange, and they say that from the
+readiness they displayed in shaking off the yoke of France, and the great
+weight they thereby threw into the scale, they were entitled to the
+restitution of all their colonies in Asia, Africa, and America. The
+colonies of the Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon are what they most regret; for
+these colonies in particular furnished ample employment and the means of
+provision for the cadets of patrician families. If you tell them they have
+acquired the Belgic provinces as an indemnification, they answer: "So much
+the worse for us, for now the patronage of the colonial offices must be
+divided between us and the Belgians."
+
+The preparations for the grand conflict about to take place are carried on
+with unabating activity; the conscription is rigorously enforced and every
+youth capable of bearing arms is enrolled. Almost all the officers of the
+Belgian army and a great proportion of the soldiery have served with the
+French and have been participators of their laurels; one cannot therefore
+suppose that they are actuated by any very devouring zeal against their
+former commander; nor have I found amongst the shop-keepers or respectable
+people with whom I have conversed, and who have been falsely represented as
+having suffered much from the tyranny of Napoleon, any who dislike either
+his person or government, and certainly none either high or low express the
+cannibal wish that I heard some English country gentlemen and London
+merchants utter for the destruction of Paris and of the French people, nor
+would it be easy to find here men of the _humane_ and _generous_ sentiments
+professed by some of our aldermen and contractors when they welcomed with
+ferocious acclamations of joy and were ready to embrace the Baschkir or
+Cossack who told them that he had slaughtered so many French with his own
+hand; nor would the ladies here be so eager to kiss old Blucher as was the
+case in London.
+
+This city is filled with British and Hanoverian troops. Their conduct is
+exemplary, nor is any complaint made against them. The Highland regiments
+are however the favourites of the Bruxellois, and the inhabitants give them
+the preference as lodgers. They are extremely well behaved (they say, when
+speaking of the Highlanders) and they cheerfully assist the different
+families on whom they are quartered in their household labour. This
+reflects a good deal of credit on the gallant sons of Caledonia. Their
+superior morality to those of the same class either in England or in
+Ireland must strike every observer, and must, in spite of all that the
+_Obscuranten_ or _Chevaliers de l'Eteignoir_ and others who wish to check
+the progress of the human mind may urge to the contrary, be mainly
+attributed to the general prevalence of education _a la portee de tout le
+monde_. Wherever the people are enlightened there is less crime; ignorance
+was never yet the safeguard of virtue. As for myself I honour and esteem
+the Scottish nation and I must say that I have found more liberal ideas and
+more sound philosophy among individuals of that nation than among those of
+any other, and it is a tribute I owe to them loudly to proclaim my
+sentiments; for though personal gratitude may seem to influence me a little
+on this subject, yet I should never think of putting forth my opinion in
+public, were it not founded on an impartial observation of the character of
+this enterprising and persevering people. A woman who had some Highlanders
+quartered in her house told me in speaking of them: "Monsieur, ce sont de
+si bonnes gens; ils sont doux comme des agneaux." "Ils n'en seront pas
+moins des lions an jour du combat," was my reply.
+
+I have amused myself with visiting most of the remarkable objects here, but
+you must not expect from me a detail of what you will find in every
+description book. You wish to have my ideas on the subjects that most
+strike me individually, and those you shall have; but it would be very
+absurd and presumptuous in me to attempt to give a _catalogue raisonne_ of
+buildings and pictures and statues, or to set up as a connoisseur when I
+know nothing either of sculpture, of architecture or painting; nor am I
+desirous of imitating the young Englishman, who, in writing to his father
+from Italy, described so much in detail, and so scientifically, every
+production, or staple, peculiar to the cities which he happened to visit,
+that he wrote like a cheese-monger from Parma, like a silk mercer from
+Leghorn, like an olive and oil merchant from Lucca, like a picture dealer
+from Florence, and like an antiquarian from Rome.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, May 10.
+
+The _Hotel d'Angleterre_ where we are lodged is within four minutes walk
+from the finest part of the city, where the Parc and Royal Palace is
+situated. The Parc is not large, but is tastefully laid out in the Dutch
+style, and is the fashionable promenade for the _beau monde_ of Bruxelles.
+The women, without being strikingly handsome, have much grace; their air,
+manner and dress are perfectly _a la francaise_. A good cafe and restaurant
+is in the centre of one of the sides, and the buildings on the quadrangle
+environing the Parc, which form the palace and other tenements are superb.
+The next place I went to see was the _Hotel de Ville_ and its tower of
+immense height. It is a fine Gothic building, but that which should be the
+central entrance is not directly in the centre of the edifice, so that one
+wing of it appears considerably larger than the other, which gives it an
+awkward and irregular appearance. On the Place or Square as we should call
+it, where the _Hotel de Ville_ stands, is held the fruit and vegetable
+market, and a finer one or more plentifully supplied I never beheld. This
+_Place_ is interesting to the historian as being the spot where Counts
+Egmont and Hoorn suffered decapitation in the reign of Philip II of Spain,
+by order of the Duke of Alva, who witnessed the execution from a window of
+one of the houses. The conduct of these noblemen at the place of execution
+was so dignified that even the ferocious duke could not avoid wiping his
+eyes, hardened as his heart was by religious and political fanaticism; and
+though he held them in abhorrence as rebels and traitors a tear did fall
+for them down his iron cheek. How fortunate for the liberties of Holland
+that William the Taciturn did not also fall into the claws of that Moloch
+Philip! I next visited the museum and picture gallery, where I witnessed
+the annual exposition of the modern school of painting. The specimens I saw
+pleased me much, particularly because the subjects were well chosen from
+history and the mythology, which to me is far more agreeable than the
+subjects of the paintings of the old Flemish school; but I am told often
+that I know nothing about painting, so I shall make no further remarks but
+content myself with sending you a catalogue, with the pictures marked
+therein which made most impression on me. With respect to the churches of
+Brussels those of Ste. Gudule and of the Capuchins are the finest and most
+remarkable. In the former is the Temptation of Adam by the Serpent, richly
+carved in wood in figures as large as life grouped round the pulpit.[4]
+
+The _Place du Sablon_ is very striking from the space it occupies, and on
+it is a fountain erected by Lord Bruce.[5] The fountains which are to be
+met with in various parts of the city are highly ornamental, and among them
+I must not omit to mention a singularly grotesque one which is held in
+great veneration by the lower orders of the Bruxellois and is by them
+regarded as a sort of Palladium to the city. It is the figure of a little
+boy who is at _peace_, according to the late Lord Melville's[6]
+pronunciation of the words, and who spouts out his water incessantly,
+reckless of decorum and putting modesty to the blush. What would our
+vice-hunters say to this? He is a Sabbath breaker in the bargain and
+continues his occupation on Sundays as well as other days and _in fine_ he
+rejoices in the name of _Mannekenpis_.
+
+The ramparts, or rather site of the ramparts (for the fortifications of
+Bruxelles no longer exist), form an agreeable promenade; but the favourite
+resort of all the world at Bruxelles in the afternoon is the _Attee verte_.
+Here all classes meet; here the rich display their equipages and horses;
+and the lower orders assemble at the innumerable _guinguettes_ which are to
+be met with here, in order to play at bowls, dominoes, smoke and drink
+beer, of which there is an excellent sort called _Bitterman._ The avenues
+on each side of the carriage road are occupied by pedestrians, and on one
+side of the road is the canal, covered at all times with barges and boats
+decked with flags and streamers. At the cabarets are benches and tables in
+the open air under the trees; and here are to be seen the artisan, the
+bargeman and the peasant taking their afternoon _delassement_, and groups
+of men, women and children drinking beer and smoking. These groups reminded
+me much of those one sees so often in the old Flemish pictures, with this
+difference, that the old costume of the people is almost entirely left off.
+Female minstrels with guitars stroll about singing French romances and
+collecting contributions from this cheerful, laughter-loving people. The
+dark walk, as it is called, near the park is a favourite walk of the upper
+classes in the evening. There his Grace of Wellington is sometimes to be
+seen with a fair lady under his arm. He generally dresses in plain clothes,
+to the astonishment of all the foreign officers. He is said to be as
+successful in the fields of Idalia as in those of Bellona, and the ladies
+whom he honours with his attentions suffer not a little in their
+reputations in the opinion of the _comperes_ and _commeres_ of Bruxelles.
+
+I have only been twice to the theatre since I have been here. The _Salle de
+Spectacle_ is indifferent, but they have an excellent company of comedians.
+The representations are in French. I saw the _Festin de Pierre_ of
+Corneille exceedingly well performed. The actors who did the parts of Don
+Juan and Sganarelle were excellent, and the scene with M. Dimanche, wherein
+he demands payment of his bill, was admirably given. I have also seen the
+_Plaideurs_ of Racine, a very favourite piece of mine; every actor played
+his part most correctly, and the scene between the Comtesse de Pimbeche and
+Chicaneau and L'Intime wherein the latter, disguised as a _Bailli_, offers
+himself to be kicked by the former, was given in very superior style. The
+scene of the trial of the dog, with the orations of Petit Jean as
+_demandeur_ and L'Intime as _defenseur_, were played with good effect. I
+never recollect having witnessed a theatrical piece which afforded me
+greater amusement.
+
+
+NAMUR, May 12.
+
+We left Brussels yesterday afternoon, and having obtained passports to
+visit the military posts we went to Genappe, a small village half-way
+between Bruxelles and Namur, where we brought to for the night at a small
+but comfortable inn called _Le Roi d'Espagne_. Two battalions of the
+regiment Nassau-Usingen are quartered in Genappe. We arrived at Namur this
+morning at nine o'clock and put up at the _Hotel d'Arenberg_. On the road
+we stopped at a peasant's house to drink coffee; and we were entertained by
+our hostess with complaints against the Prussians, who commit, as she said,
+all sorts of exactions on the peasantry on whom they are quartered. Not
+content with exacting three meals a day, when they were only entitled to
+two, and for which they are bound to give their rations, they sell these,
+and appropriate the money to their own use; then the demand for brandy and
+_schnapps_ is increasing. But what can be expected from an army whose
+leader encourages them in all their excesses? Blucher by all accounts is a
+vandal and is actuated by a most vindictive spirit. The Prussians reproach
+the Belgians with being in the French interest; how can they expect it to
+be otherwise? They have prospered under French domination, and certainly
+the conduct of the Prussians is not calculated to inspire them with any
+love towards themselves nor veneration for the Sovereign who has such
+all-devouring allies. I asked this woman why she did not complain to the
+officers. She answered! "Helas, Monsieur, c'est inutile; on donne toujours
+la meme reponse: '_Nichts verstehn_,'" for it appears when these complaints
+are made the Prussian officers pretend not to understand French.
+
+Namur is now the head-quarters of Marshal Blucher, who is in the enjoyment
+of divers _noms de guerre_, such as "Marshall Vorwaerts," "Der alte Teufel."
+On the high road, about two miles and a half before we reached Namur, we
+met with a party of Prussian lancers, who were returning from a foraging
+excursion. They were singing some warlike song or hymn, which was
+singularly impressive. It brought to my recollection the description of the
+Rhenish bands in the _Lay of the Last Minstrel_:
+
+ Who as they move, in rugged verse
+ Songs of Teutonic feuds rehearse.
+
+The Prussian cavalry seem to be composed of fine-looking young men, and I
+admire the genuine military simplicity of their dress, to which might be
+most aptly applied the words of Xenophon when describing the costume of the
+younger Cyrus: [Greek: _En tae Persikae stolae ouden ti hubrsmenae_][7] in
+substituting merely the word [Greek: _Prussikae_] for [Greek: _Persikae_].
+One sees in it none of those absurd ornaments and meretricious foppery
+which give to our cavalry officers the appearance of Astley's men.[8]
+
+The situation of Namur is exceedingly picturesque, particularly when viewed
+from the heights which tower above the town, whereon stood the citadel
+which was demolished by order of Joseph II, as were the fortifications of
+all the frontier fortresses. The present Belgian Government however mean to
+reconstruct them, and Namur in particular, the citadel of which, from the
+natural strength of its position, is too important a post to be neglected.
+The town itself is situated on the confluent of the Sambre and Meuse and
+lies in a valley completely commanded and protected by the citadel. The
+churches are splendid, and there is an appearance of opulence in the shops.
+The inhabitants, from its being a frontier town, are of course much alarmed
+at the approaching contest, for they will probably suffer from both
+parties. We heard at the inn and in the shops which we visited the same
+complaints against the Prussians. The country in the environs of this place
+is exceedingly diversified, and it presents the first mountain scenery we
+have yet met with. The banks of the Meuse hereabouts present either an
+abrupt precipice or coteaux covered with vines gently sloping to the
+water's edge. Namur is distant thirty-four miles from Brussels, and there
+is water conveyance on the Meuse from here to Liege and Maastricht.
+
+
+MONS, May 14.
+
+We started yesterday morning at four o'clock from Namur. The whole road
+between Namur and Mons presents a fine, rich open country abounding in
+wheat, but not many trees. We stopped to breakfast at Fleurus, at an inn
+where there were some Prussian officers. One of them, a lieutenant in the
+2nd West Prussian Regiment, had the kindness to conduct us to see the field
+of battle where the French under Jourdan defeated the Austrians in 1794. It
+is at a very short distance from the town; he explained the position of the
+two armies in a manner perfectly clear and satisfactory to us. The Prussian
+officers all seem very eager for the commencement of hostilities, and their
+only fear is now that all these mighty preparations will end in nothing;
+viz., either that the French people, alarmed at the magnitude of the
+preparations against them, will compel the Emperor Napoleon to abdicate, or
+that the Allies will grow cool and, under the influence of Austria, bring
+about a negotiation which may end in a recognition of the Imperial title
+and dynasty. They would compound for a defeat at first, provided the war
+were likely to be prolonged. In the meantime, reinforcements continue to
+arrive daily for their army. We hear but little news of the intentions or
+movements of the other Allies; it being forbidden to enter into political
+discussions, it is difficult to ascertain the true state of affairs.
+
+We continued our journey through Charleroy and Binch to this place. At a
+small village between Binch and Mons we were stopped by a sentinel at a
+Prussian outpost and our passports demanded. Neither the sentinel, however,
+nor the sergeant, nor any of the soldiers present, could read or understand
+French, in which language the passport was drawn up; but the sergeant told
+me that the officers were in a house about a quarter of a mile distant and
+that he would conduct me thither, but that he himself could not presume to
+let us pass, from not knowing the tenor of our passport. I went accordingly
+with the sergeant to this house, There I found the officer commanding the
+piquet and several others sitting at table, carousing with beer and tobacco
+and nearly invisible from the clouds of smoke which pervaded the room. I
+explained to the officer who we were and requested him to put on the
+passport his _visa_ in the German language, so that the non-commissioned
+officers at the various posts through which we might pass would be able to
+understand it and let us pass without hindrance. This he did accordingly
+and we proceeded on our journey.
+
+We arrived here in the evening and put up at the _Hotel Royal_. We found at
+Charleroy, Binch and here, a number of people employed in repairing and
+reconstructing the fortifications. Men, women and boys are all put in
+requisition to accelerate this object, as it is the intention of the
+Belgian Government to put all the frontier fortresses in the most complete
+state of defence. On ascending one of the steeples this morning we had a
+fine view of the surrounding country and of the height of Genappe, which
+are close to Mons and memorable for the brilliant victory gained by
+Dumouriez over the Austrians in 1792. The landscape presents an undulating
+campaign country, gentle slopes and alternate plains covered with corn, as
+far as the eye can reach, and interspersed with villages and farmhouses. In
+Mons is a very large splendid shop or warehouse of millinery, perfumery,
+jewellery, etc. It is called _La Toilette de Venus_, and is served by a
+very pretty girl, who, I have no doubt from her simpering look and eloquent
+eyes, would have no objection to be a sedulous priestess at the altar of
+the Goddess of Amathus. A battalion of Hollanders--a very fine body of
+men--marched into this place yesterday evening; the rest of the garrison is
+composed of Belgians, chiefly conscripts.
+
+
+LEUZE, May 15.
+
+Yesterday morning we left Mons and proceeded to Ath to breakfast. A
+multitude of people were employed there also at the fortifications. The
+garrison of Ath is composed of Hanoverians. Ath reminded me of the wars of
+King William III and my Uncle Toby's sieges.[9] There was so little
+remarkable to be seen at Ath that we proceeded to this place shortly after
+breakfast and arrived at one o'clock, it being only ten miles distance
+between Ath and Leuze. We took up our quarters with Major-General Adam, who
+commands the Light Brigade of General Sir H. Clinton's division. This
+brigade is quartered here and in the adjacent farmhouses. General Adam,
+though he has attained his rank at a very early age, is far more fitted for
+it than many of our older generals, some of whom (I speak from experience)
+have few ideas beyond the fixing of a button or lappel, or polishing a
+belt, and who place the whole _Ars recondita_ of military discipline in
+pipe-clay, heel-ball and the goose step. Fortunately for this army, the
+Duke of Wellington has too much good sense to be a martinet and the good
+old times are gone by, thank God, when a soldier used to be sentenced to
+two or three hundred lashes for having a dirty belt or being without a
+_queue_. To the Duke of York also is humanity much indebted for his
+endeavours to check the frequency of corporal punishment. The Duke of York,
+with all his zeal for the service, never loses sight of the comfort of the
+soldier and is indefatigable in his exertions to ameliorate his conditions.
+We had a pleasant dinner party at General Adam's, and at night I went to
+sleep at the house occupied by Captain C., one of the aides-de-camp of the
+General,[10] an active, intelligent officer who had formerly served in the
+marines, which service he had quitted in order to enter the regular army.
+
+
+May 16.
+
+Yesterday morning we paid a visit to Tournay, which is distant from Leuze
+about ten miles, and we breakfasted at the _Signe d'Or_. We then proceeded
+to pay our respects to the Commandant General V.[11] The garrison consists
+of Belgians. General V. had been some time in England as a prisoner of war.
+He was made prisoner, I think he said, at Batavia. He received us very
+politely, and not only gave us permission to visit the works of the
+citadel, but sent a sergeant to accompany us. The new citadel is building
+on the site of the old one, and, like it, is to be a regular pentagon. The
+fortifications of the city itself are not to be reconstructed; these of the
+citadel, which will be very strong, rendering them superfluous. The
+sergeant was a native of Wuertemberg and had served in the army of his own
+country and in that of France in most of the campaigns under Napoleon. He
+was a fine old veteran, and very intelligent, for he explained to us the
+nature of the works with great perspicuity. With true Suabian dignity he
+refused a five franc piece which I offered him as a slight remuneration for
+the trouble he had taken, and as he seemed, I thought, rather offended at
+the offer, I felt myself bound to apologize. From the number of workmen
+employed in repairing the citadel, it will not be long before it is placed
+in a respectable state of defence. Tournay is a large handsome city and the
+spacious quais on the banks of the Scheld which runs through it add much to
+the neatness of its appearance. It is only ten miles distant from Lille,
+but all communication from France is stopped. We learned that some of the
+Hanoverians had been deserting. In return we met with a young French hussar
+who had come over to the Allies. He seemed to be an impudent sort of
+fellow, and said, with the utmost _sang-froid_, that the reason he deserted
+was that he had not been made an officer as he was promised, and he hoped
+that Louis XVIII would be more sensible of his merits than the Emperor
+Napoleon. We returned to Leuze to dinner in the afternoon. This morning we
+went to assist at a review of General Clinton's division, on a plain called
+_Le Paturage_, about seven miles distant from Leuze. The Light Brigade and
+the Hanoverian Brigades form this division. The manoeuvres were performed
+with tolerable precision, but they were chiefly confined to advancing in
+line, retiring by alternate companies covered by light infantry and change
+of position on one of the flanks by _echelon_. The British troops were
+perfect; the Hanoverians not so, they being for the most part new levies.
+In one of the _echelon_ movements, when the line was to be formed on the
+left company of the left battalion, a Hanoverian battalion, instead of
+preserving its parallelism, was making a terrible diversion to its right,
+when a thundering voice from the commander of the brigade to the commandant
+of the battalion: "_Mein Gott, Herr Major, wo gehn Sie hin?_" roused him
+from his reverie; when he must have perceived, had he wheeled up into line,
+the fearful interval he had left between his own and the next battalion on
+the left.
+
+After the review had finished we repaired to the chateau of the Prince de
+Ligne, then occupied by Lieut.-General Sir H. Clinton, to partake of a
+breakfast given by him and his lady. On the breaking up of the breakfast
+party, General Wilson and myself remained at the chateau to dine with
+General Adam _al fresco_ in the garden under the trees. The palace and
+garden of the Prince de Ligne are both very magnificent. The latter is of
+great extent, but too regular, too much in the Dutch taste to please me.
+Little or no furniture is in the palace; but there are some family pictures
+and a theatre fitted up in one of the halls for the purpose of private
+theatricals. In the garden is a monument erected by the late Prince de
+Ligne to one of his sons, Charles by name, who was killed in the Russian
+service at the siege of Ismail. The present prince is a minor and resides
+at Bruxelles.
+
+
+GRAMMONT, May 18.
+
+We left Leuze yesterday afternoon and arrived here at seven in the evening
+in order to be present at the cavalry review the next morning. We partook
+of an elegant supper given to us by our friend, Major Grant of the 18th
+Hussars, and we were much entertained and enlivened by the effusions of his
+brilliant genius and inexhaustible wit. The whole cavalry of the British
+army passed in review this morning before the Duke of Wellington, who was
+there with all his staff and received the salutes of all the corps like
+Godfrey, _con volto placido e composto_. It was a very brilliant spectacle.
+The Duke de Berri was present. I think I never beheld so ignoble and
+disagreeable a countenance as this prince possesses. I thought to myself
+that he had much better have stayed away from this review; for he must be
+insensible to all patriotism who could take pleasure in contemplating a
+foreign force about to enter and ravage his own country. We learn that the
+Duchess d'Angouleme is to have a review of the _fideles_ very shortly. She
+is certainly much more warlike than the males of that family; this
+disposition is increased by her religious fanaticism. This renders her, of
+course, a most dangerous person to meddle with politics; but great
+allowances must be made for her feelings, which must naturally be
+embittered by the recollection of so much suffering during the Revolution
+and of the barbarous and inhuman treatment experienced by her father and
+mother.
+
+I observed a peculiarity in this part of the country, viz., that there are
+villages lying close to each other in some of which French is spoken, in
+others Flemish; and that, with some few exceptions, the inhabitants of
+neighbouring villages are reciprocally unintelligible. General Wilson does
+not intend to return to Bruxelles. I shall accompany him as far as Gand and
+then return to Bruxelles to await the issue of the contest.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, June 11.
+
+I took leave of General Wilson at Gand on the 22nd of last month and
+immediately returned here, where I have been ever since. I have shifted my
+quarters to a less expensive hotel and am now lodged at the _Hotel de la
+Paix_. We get an excellent dinner at the table d'hote for one and a half
+francs, wine not included; this is paid for extra, and is generally at the
+price of three francs per bottle. This hotel is very neatly fitted up and
+is very near the _Hotel de Ville_. At the table d'hote I frequently meet
+Prussian officers who on coming in to visit Bruxelles put up here. We have
+just learned the proceedings of the _Champ de Mai_ at Paris, by which it
+appears that Napoleon is solemnly recognized and confirmed as Emperor of
+the French. This intelligence sent a young Prussian officer, who sat next
+to me, in a transport of joy, for this makes the war certain. The Prussians
+seem determined to revenge themselves for the humiliation they suffered
+from the French during the time they occupied their country, and I
+sincerely pity by anticipation the fate of the French peasants upon whom
+these gentlemen may chance to be quartered. Terrible will be the first
+shock of battle, and it may be daily expected, and dreadful will be the
+consequences to the poor inhabitants of the seat of war. Cannot this war be
+avoided? I am not politician enough to foresee the consequences of allowing
+Napoleon to keep quiet and undisturbed possession of the throne of France;
+but the consequences of a defeat on the part of the Allies will be the loss
+of Belgium and the probable annihilation of the British army; certainly the
+dissolution of the coalition, for the minor German powers, and very likely
+Austria also, would be induced to make a separate peace. We can clearly see
+that Napoleon has not now the power he formerly possessed and that the
+Republican party, into whose hands he has thrown himself, seem disposed not
+only to remain at peace, but to shackle him in every possible manner. It is
+evident, too, that his last success was owing to the dislike of the people
+to the Bourbons from their injudicious and treacherous conduct; and the
+threats and impossible language held by the priests and emigrants towards
+the holders of property paved the way for the success of his enterprise and
+enabled him to achieve a triumph unparalleled in history.
+
+On the contrary, by forcing him to go to war, should he gain the first
+victory, Belgium will be re-united to France, all the resources of that
+country brought into the scale against the Allies; Napoleon will be more
+popular than ever, the Republican party will be put to silence, the
+enthusiasm of the army will rise beyond all restraint, and, in a word,
+Napoleon will be himself again. The other Allies can do little without the
+assistance of England, and our finances are by no means in a state to bear
+such intolerable drains.
+
+As to the Prussians, on minute enquiry I do not find that they were so
+ill-treated by the French as is generally believed, and that, except the
+burden of having troops quartered on them (no small annoyance, I allow),
+they had not much reason to complain. The quartering of the troops on them
+and the payment of the war contributions was the necessary consequence of
+the occupation of their country by an enemy; but I have just been reading a
+German work, written by a native of Berlin, shortly after the entry of the
+French troops in that city after the battle of Jena in 1806. This work is
+entitled _Vertraute Briefe aus Berlin_, and in it the author distinctly
+declares that the discipline observed by the French troops during the
+occupation of Berlin was highly strict and praiseworthy, and that the few
+excesses that took place were committed by the troops of the Rhenish
+Confederation; and he adds that the inhabitants preferred having a French
+soldier quartered on them to a Westphalian, Bavarian or Wuertembergher.
+Further, the troops that behaved with the greatest oppression and insolence
+towards the burghers were those belonging to a corps composed of native
+Prussians, raised for the service of Napoleon by the Prince of
+Isenburg.[12] In his recruiting address the prince invites the Prussian
+youth to enter into the service of the invincible Napoleon, and tells him
+that to the soldier of Napoleon everything is permitted. The regiment was
+soon fitted up and the soldiers began to put in practice in good earnest
+the theory of the _affiche_. They committed excesses of all sorts; and one
+officer in particular behaved so brutally and infamously to a poor tailor
+on whom he was quartered, and to whom, before he entered the French
+service, he was under the greatest obligations, that General Hulin, the
+commandant of the place at Berlin during the French occupation, was obliged
+to cashier him publicly on the parade and to cause his epaulettes to be
+torn from his coat in order to mark the disgust and indignation that he and
+all the French officers felt at the base ingratitude of this man.
+
+This work, "Vertraute Briefe" (confidential letters), contains much curious
+matter and very interesting anecdotes respecting the corruption, venality
+and depravation that prevailed in the Prussian Court and army previous to
+the war in 1806. Let this suffice to show that the Prussians have not so
+much reason to complain against the French as they pretend to have;
+besides, the conduct of the Prussian Government itself was so vacillating
+and contradictory that they had themselves only to blame for what they
+suffered. They should have supported Austria in 1805. But the fact is that
+the vanity and the _amour propre_ of the Prussian military were so hurt at
+the humiliation they experienced at and after the battle of Jena that it
+was this that has embittered them so much against the French.
+
+Let it not, however, be supposed for a moment that I seek to excuse or
+palliate the conduct of Napoleon towards Prussia. I have always thought it
+not only unjust but impolitic. Impolitic, because Prussia was, and ought
+always to be, the obvious and natural ally of France, and Napoleon, instead
+of endeavouring to crush that power, should have aggrandized her and made
+her the paramount power in Germany. It was in fact his obvious policy to
+cede Hanover in perpetuity to Prussia, and have rendered thereby the breach
+between the Houses of Brandenburgh and Hanover irreparable and
+irreconcilable. This would have thrown Prussia necessarily into the arms
+of France, in whose system she must then have moved, and all British
+influence on the Continent would have been effectually put an end to.
+Another prime fault of Napoleon was that he did not crush and dismember
+Austria in 1809 as he had it in his power to do; and by so doing he would
+have merited and obtained the thanks and good will of all Germany for
+having overturned so despotic and light-fearing a Government. But he has
+paid dearly for these errors. Instead of destroying a despotic power
+(Austria), he chose rather to crush an enlightened and liberal nation, for
+such I esteem the Prussian nation, and I always separate the Prussian
+people from their Government. The latter fell, and fell unpitied, after one
+battle; but it has been almost miraculously restored by the unparalleled
+exertions and energies of the burghers and people. May this be a lesson to
+the Government! and may the King of Prussia not prove ungrateful!
+
+Troops continue to arrive here daily, and now that the ceremony of the
+_Champ de Mai_ is over, we may expect that Napoleon will repair to his army
+and commence operations.
+
+
+June 17.
+
+Napoleon arrived at Maubeuge on the 18th and the grand conflict has begun.
+The Prussians were attacked on the 14th and 15th at Ligny and driven from
+their position.[13] They are said to have suffered immense loss and to be
+retreating with the utmost confusion. Our turn comes next. The thunder of
+the cannon was heard here distinctly the most part of yesterday and some
+part of our army must have been engaged. Our troops have all marched out of
+Bruxelles in the direction of the frontier. In the affair with the
+Prussians we learn that the Duke of Brunswick was killed and that Blucher
+narrowly escaped being made prisoner.
+
+
+June 18.
+
+The grand conflict has begun with us. It is now four o'clock p.m. The issue
+is not known. The roar of the cannon continues unabated. All is bustle,
+confusion and uncertainty in this city. Cars with wounded are coming in
+continually. The general opinion is that our army will be compelled to
+retreat to Antwerp, and it is even expected that the French will be in
+Bruxelles to-night. All the towns-people are on the ramparts listening to
+the sound of the cannon. This city has been in the greatest alarm and
+agitation since the 16th, when a violent cannonade was heard during the
+afternoon. From what I have been able to collect, the French attacked the
+Prussians on the 14th, and a desperate conflict took place on that day, and
+the whole of the 15th,[14] when the whole of the Prussian army at Ligny,
+Fleurus and Charleroy was totally defeated and driven from its position; a
+dislocation of our troops took place early in the morning of the 16th, and
+our advanced guard, consisting of the Highland Brigade and two Battalions
+of Nassau-Usingen, fell in with the advanced guard of the French Army
+commanded by Marshal Ney near Quatre-Bras, and made such a gallant defence
+against his corps d'armee as to keep it in check the whole day and enable
+itself to fall back in good order to its present position with the rest of
+the army, about ten miles in front of Bruxelles. Indeed, I am informed that
+nothing could exceed the admirable conduct of the corps above mentioned.
+Yesterday we heard no cannonade, but this afternoon it has been unceasing
+and still continues. All the caricatures and satires against Napoleon have
+disappeared from the windows and stalls. The shops are all shut, the
+English families flying to Antwerp; and the proclamation of the Baron de
+Capellen[15] to the inhabitants, wherein he exhorts them to be tranquil and
+assures them that the Bureaux of Government have not yet quitted Bruxelles,
+only serves to increase the confusion and consternation. The inhabitants in
+general wish well to the arms of Napoleon, but they know that the retreat
+of the English Army must necessarily take place through their town; that
+our troops will perhaps endeavour to make a stand, and that the
+consequences will be terrible to the inhabitants, from the houses being
+liable to be burned or pillaged by friend or foe. All the baggage of our
+Army and all the military Bureaux have received orders to repair and are
+now on their march to Antwerp, and the road thither is so covered and
+blocked up by waggons that the retreat of our Army will be much impeded
+thereby. Probably my next letter may be dated from a French prison.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, June 21.
+
+Judge, my friend, of my astonishment and that of almost everybody in this
+city, at the news which was circulated here early on the morning of the
+19th, and has been daily confirmed, viz., that the French Army had been
+completely defeated and was in full flight, leaving behind it 220 pieces of
+cannon and all its baggage, waggons and _munitions de guerre_. I have not
+been able to collect all the particulars, but you will no doubt hear enough
+of it, for I am sure it will be _said_ or _sung_ by all the partisans of
+the British ministry and all the Tories of the United Kingdom for months
+and years to come; for further details, therefore, I shall refer you to the
+Gazette. The following, however, you may consider as a tolerably fair
+precis of what took place. The attack began on the 18th about ten
+o'clock[16] and raged furiously along the whole line, but principally at
+Hougoumont, a large _Metairie_ on the right of our position, which was
+occupied by our troops, and from which all the efforts of the enemy could
+not dislodge them. The slaughter was terrible in this quarter. From twelve
+o'clock till evening several desperate charges of cavalry and infantry were
+made on the rest of our line. Both sides fought with the utmost courage and
+obstinacy, and were prodigal of life in the extreme. But it is generally
+supposed that our army must have succumbed towards the evening had it not
+been for the arrival of Bulow's division of Prussians, followed closely by
+Blucher and the rest of the army, which had rallied with uncommon celerity.
+These moved on the right flank of the French, and decided the fortune of
+the day by a charge which was seconded by a general charge from the whole
+of the English line on the centre and left of the French. Seeing themselves
+thus turned, a panic, it is said, spread among the young Guard of the
+French army, and a cry of "_Sauve qui peut! nous sommes trahis!_" spread
+like wildfire. The flight became universal; the old Guard alone remained,
+refused quarter and perished like Leonidas and his Spartans. The Prussian
+cavalry being fresh pursued the enemy all night, _l'epee dans les reins_,
+and it may be conceived from their previous disposition that they would not
+be very merciful to the vanquished. Indeed, on the 15th, it is said that
+the French were not very merciful to them. It was like the combat of
+Achilles and Hector.
+
+ No thought but rage and never ceasing strife
+ Till death extinguish rage and thought and life.
+
+France will now call out to Napoleon as Augustus did to Varus, "Give me
+back my legions!" The loss on both sides was very great, but it must have
+been prodigious on the side of the French. The whole Allied Army is in full
+pursuit. Several friends and acquaintances of mine perished in this battle,
+viz., Lieut.-General Sir T. Picton, Colonel Sir H. Ellis and Colonel
+Morice.
+
+
+June 22.
+
+This morning I went to visit the field of battle, which is a little beyond
+the village of Waterloo, on the plateau of Mont St Jean; but on arrival
+there the sight was too horrible to behold. I felt sick in the stomach and
+was obliged to return. The multitude of carcases, the heaps of wounded men
+with mangled limbs unable to move, and perishing from not having their
+wounds dressed or from hunger, as the Allies were, of course, obliged to
+take their surgeons and waggons with them, formed a spectacle I shall never
+forget. The wounded, both of the Allies and the French, remain in an
+equally deplorable state.
+
+At Hougoumont, where there is an orchard, every tree is pierced with
+bullets. The barns are all burned down, and in the court-yard it is said
+they have been obliged to burn upwards of a thousand carcases, an awful
+holocaust to the War-Demon.
+
+As nothing is more distressing than the sight of human misery when we are
+unable to silence it, I returned as speedily as possible to Bruxelles with
+Cowper's lines in my head:
+
+ War is a game, which, were their subjects wise,
+ Kings should not play at.
+
+I hope this battle will, at any rate, lead to a speedy peace.
+
+
+June 28.
+
+We have no other news from the Allied Army, except that they are moving
+forward with all possible celerity in the direction of Paris. You may form
+a guess of the slaughter and of the misery that the wounded must have
+suffered, and the many that must have perished from hunger and thirst, when
+I tell you that all the carriages in Bruxelles, even elegant private
+equipages, landaulets, barouches and berlines, have been put in requisition
+to remove the wounded men from the field of battle to the hospitals, and
+that they are yet far from being all brought in. The medical practitioners
+of the city have been put in requisition, and are ordered to make
+domiciliary visits at every house (for each habitation has three or four
+soldiers in it) in order to dress the wounds of the patients. The
+Bruxellois, the women in particular, have testified the utmost humanity
+towards the poor sufferers. It was suggested by some humane person that
+they who went to see the field of battle from motives of curiosity would do
+well to take with them bread, wine and other refreshments to distribute
+among the wounded, and most people did so. For my part I shall not go a
+second time. Napoleon, it is said, narrowly escaped being taken. His
+carriage fell into the hands of the Allies, and was escorted in triumph
+into Bruxelles by a detachment of dragoons. So confident was Napoleon of
+success that printed proclamations were found in the carriage dated from
+"Our Imperial Palace at Laecken," announcing his victory and the liberation
+of Belgium from the insatiable coalition, and wherein he calls on the
+Belgians to re-unite with their old companions in arms in order to reap the
+fruits of their victory. This was certainly rather premature, and reminds
+me of an anecdote of a Spanish officer at the siege of Gibraltar, related
+by Drinkwater in his narrative of that siege.[17] When the British garrison
+made a sortie, they carried the advanced Spanish lines and destroyed all
+their preparations; the Spanish officer on guard at the outermost post was
+killed, but on the table of his guard room was found his guard report
+filled up and signed, stating that "nothing extraordinary had happened
+since guard-mounting."
+
+Mr L. of Northumberland, having proposed to me to make a tour with him to
+Aix-la-Chapelle and the banks of the Rhine, I shall start with him in a day
+or two.
+
+
+[1] Sir Wiltshire Wilson (1762-1842), Commander of the Royal Artillery in
+ Ceylon, 1810-1815.--Ed.
+
+[2] Pulci, _Morgante_, canto XVIII, ottava 114-115. The Giant Morgante
+ meets the villain Margutte and asks him if he be a Christian or a
+ Saracen. Margutte answers that he cares not, but only believes in
+ boiled or in roasted capon:
+
+ Rispose allor Margutte: A dirtel tosto
+ Io non credo pio al nero ch'all' azzurro.
+ Ma nel cappone, o lesso, o vuogll arrosto....
+
+[3] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, iv, 63, f.--ED.
+
+[4] A work of H, Verbruggen of Antwerp (1677).--ED.
+
+[5] Lord Bruce, Earl of Ailesbury, caused this fountain to be erected in
+ 1751, as a token of gratitude to the town of Bruxelles where he had
+ lived in exile.--E.D.
+
+[6] Henry Dundas, Viscount Melville (1741-1811), elevated to the peerage in
+ 1802.--ED.
+
+[7] Xenophon, _Education of Cyrus_, II, 4, 4.--ED.
+
+[8] Astley's Amphitheatre, near Westminster Bridge.--ED.
+
+[9] Uncle Toby, in Laurence Sterne's _Tristram Shandy_.--ED.
+
+[10] Lieutenant R.P. Campbell, aide-de-camp to Major-General Adam.--ED.
+
+[11] In May, 1815, the officer commanding-in-chief at Tournai was
+ General-Major A.C. Van Diermen.--ED.
+
+[12] Karl Friedrich Ludwig Moritz, Fuerst zu Ysenburg-Bierstein (1766-1820),
+ took service with Austria (1784), with Prussia (1804), and later with
+ Napoleon (1806), who commissioned him as brigadier-general. The
+ shameless conduct of this officer is exposed by B. Poten, _Allgemeine
+ Deutsche Biographie_, vol. XLIV, p. 611.--ED.
+
+[13] The battle at Ligny was fought on June 16.--ED.
+
+[14] The facts and dates here given are of course inaccurate; but this
+ proves that Major Frye wrote his text in the very midst of the crisis,
+ and that his manuscript has not been tampered with.--ED.
+
+[15] Baron van Capellen, a Dutch statesman, was governor-general of the
+ Belgian provinces, residing at Bruxelles. He was afterwards
+ governor-general of Dutch India. Born in 1778, he died in 1848. His
+ memoirs have been published in French by Baron Sirtema de Grovestins
+ (1852), and contain an interesting passage on that momentous day,
+ 18th June, 1815.--ED.
+
+[16] Not before half past eleven.--ED.
+
+[17] John Drinkwater, also called Bethune (1762-1844), published a
+ well-known _History of the Siege of Gibraltar, 1779-1783_.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+From Bruxelles to Liege--A priest's declamation against the French
+Revolution--Maastricht--Aix-la-Chapelle--Imperial relics--Napoleon
+regretted--Klingmann's "Faust"--A Tyrolese beauty--Cologne--Difficulties
+about a passport--The Cathedral--King-craft and priest-craft--The
+Rhine--Bonn and Godesberg--Goethe's "Goetz von Berlichingen"--The Seven
+Mountains--German women--Andernach--Ehrenbreitstein--German hatred against
+France--Coblentz--Intrigues of the Bourbon princes in Coblentz--Mayence--
+Bieberich--Conduct of the Allies towards Napoleon--Frankfort on the
+Mayn--An anecdote about Lord Stewart and Lafayette--German poetry--The
+question of Alsace and Lorraine--Return to Bruxelles--Napoleon's surrender.
+
+
+LIEGE, June 26.
+
+Mr L. and myself started together in the diligence from Bruxelles at seven
+o'clock in the evening of the 24th inst. and arrived here yesterday morning
+at twelve o'clock. I experienced considerable difficulty in procuring a
+passport to quit Bruxelles, my name having been included in that of General
+Wilson, which he carried back with him to England. Our Ambassador was
+absent, and I was bandied about from bureau to bureau without success; so
+that I began at last to think that I should be necessitated to remain at
+Bruxelles all my life, when fortunately it occurred to Mr L. that he was
+intimately acquainted with the English Consul, and he kindly undertook to
+procure me one and succeeded. On arrival here we put up at the _Pommelette
+d'Or_. The price of a place in the diligence from Bruxelles to Liege is
+fifteen franks. We passed thro' Louvain, but too late to see anything. The
+country about Liege is extremely striking and picturesque; the river Meuse
+flows thro' the city, and the banks of the river outside the town are very
+_riants_ and agreeable. Liege is a large, well-built city, but rather
+gloomy as to its appearance, and lies in a hollow completely surrounded by
+lofty hills. The remains of its ancient citadel stand on a height which
+completely commands the city; on another height stands a monastery, a
+magnificent building. There are a great many coal-pits in the vicinity of
+Liege, and a great commerce of coals is carried on between this city and
+Holland by the _treckschuyte_ on the Meuse. We visited the ancient
+Episcopal palace and the Churches. The Palace is completely dismantled.
+This city suffered much during the revolt of the Belgian provinces against
+the Emperor Joseph II, and having distinguished itself by the obstinacy of
+its defence, it was treated with great rigour by the Austrian Government.
+The fortifications were blown up, and nothing now remains on the site of
+the old citadel but a large barrack. I remained two whole hours on this
+height to contemplate the beauties of the expanse below. The banks of the
+river, which meanders much in these parts, and the numerous _maisons de
+campagne_ with the public promenades and allees lined with trees,
+exhilarate the scene of the environs, for the city itself is dull enough.
+Several pretty villas are situated also on the heights, and were I to dwell
+here I should choose one of them and seldom descend into the valley and
+city below,
+
+ Where narrow cares and strife and envy dwell.
+
+Liege, however sombre in its appearance, is a place of much opulence and
+commerce. A Belgian garrison does duty here. At the inn, after dinner, I
+fell into conversation with a Belgian priest, and as I was dressed in black
+he fancied I was one of the cloth, and he asked me if I were a Belgian, for
+that I spoke French with a Belgian accent; "Apparemment Monsieur est
+ecclesiastique?--Monsieur, je suis ne Anglais et protestant." He then began
+to talk about and declaim against the French Revolution, for that is the
+doctrine now constantly dinned into the ears of all those who take orders;
+and he concluded by saying that things would never go on well in Europe
+until they restored to God the things they had taken from Him. I told him
+that I differed from him very much, for that the sale of the Church domains
+and of the lands and funds belonging to the suppressed ecclesiastical
+establishments had contributed much to the improvement of agriculture and
+to the comfort of the peasantry, whose situation was thereby much
+ameliorated; and that they were now in a state of affluence compared with
+what they were before the French Revolution. I added: "Enfin, Monsieur,
+Dieu n'a pas besoin des choses terrestres." On my saying this he did not
+chuse to continue the conversation, but calling for a bottle of wine drank
+it all himself with the zest of a Tartuffe. I believe that he was surprised
+to find that an Englishman should not coincide with his sentiments, for I
+observe all the adherents of the ancient regime of feudality and
+superstition have an idea that we are anxious for the re-establishment of
+all those abuses as they themselves are, and it must be confessed that the
+conduct of our Government has been such as to authorize them fully in
+forming such conjectures, and that we shall be their staunch auxiliaries in
+endeavouring to arrest and retrograde the progress of the human mind. In
+fact, I soon perceived that my friend was not overloaded with wit and that
+he was one of those priests so well described by Metastasio:
+
+ Il di cui sapere
+ Sta nel nostro ignorar....
+
+
+MAASTRICHT, 27th June.
+
+This morning, after a promenade on the banks of the Meuse--for I am fond of
+rivers and woods (_flumina amo silvasque inglorius_)--we embarked on a
+_treckschuyt_ and arrived here after a passage of four hours. The scenery
+on the banks of the Meuse all the way from Liege to Maastricht is highly
+diversified and extremely romantic; but here at Maastricht this ceases and
+the dull uniformity of the Dutch landscape begins. When on the ramparts of
+the city to the North and West an immense plain as far as the eye can reach
+presents itself to view; a few trees and sandhills form the only relief to
+the picture. The town itself is neat, clean and dull, like all Dutch towns.
+The fortifications are strong and well worth inspection. The most
+remarkable thing in the neighbourhood of Maastricht is the Montagne de St
+Pierre, which from having been much excavated for the purpose of procuring
+stone, forms a labyrinth of a most intricate nature. I advise every
+traveller to visit it, and if he has a classical imagination he may fancy
+himself in the labyrinth of Crete.
+
+
+AIX-LA-CHAPELLE, 29th June.
+
+We started in the morning of the 28th from Maastricht in the diligence for
+Aix-la-Chapelle and arrived here at twelve o'clock, putting up at Van
+Guelpen's Hotel, _Zum Pfaelzischen Hofe_ (a la Cour palatine), which I
+recommend as an excellent inn and the hosts as very good people. The price
+of our journey from Liege to Maastricht in the water-diligence was 2-1/2
+franks, and from Maastricht to Aix-la-Chapelle by land was 7 franks the
+person. The road from Maastricht to this place is not very good, but the
+country at a short distance from Maastricht becomes picturesque, much
+diversified by hill and dale and well wooded. As the Meuse forms the
+boundary between the Belgic and Prussian territory, we enter the latter
+sooner after leaving Maastricht. I find my friend L. a most agreeable
+travelling companion; travelling seems to be his passion, as it is mine;
+and fortune has so far favoured me in this particular, that my professional
+duties and private affairs have led me to visit the four quarters of the
+globe. After dinner, on the first day of our arrival here, we went to visit
+the _Hotel de Ville_, before which stands on a pedestal in a bason an
+ancient bronze statue of Charlemagne. It has nothing to recommend it but
+its antiquity. The _Hotel de Ville_ is similar to other Gothic buildings
+used for the same purpose. In the great hall thereof there is a large
+picture representing the ambassadors of all the powers who assisted at the
+signing of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1742; and a full length
+portrait of the present King of Prussia, as master of the city, occupies
+the place where once stood that of Napoleon, its late lord. We next went to
+see the Cathedral and sat down on the throne on which the German Caesars
+used to be crowned. We viewed likewise the various costly articles of
+plate, the gifts of pious princes. The most remarkable things among them
+are several superb dresses of gold and silver embroidery, so thickly laid
+on that they are of exceeding weight. These dresses form part of the
+wardrobe of the Virgin Mary. Next to be seen is a case or chest of massy
+silver, adorned with innumerable precious stones of great value; which case
+contains the bones or ashes of Charlemagne. His right arm bone is however
+preserved separate in a glass case. The sword of this prince too, and the
+Imperial crown is to be seen here. The sacristan next proceeded to show to
+us the other relics, but having begun with the exhibition of a rag dipped
+in the sweat of Jesus Christ and a nail of the Holy Cross, we began to
+think we had seen enough and went away perfectly satisfied. There is no
+other monument in honour of Charlemagne, but a plain stone on the floor of
+the Church with the simple inscription "Carolo Magno." On going out of the
+city thro' one of the gates, and at a short distance from it, we ascended
+the mountain or rather hill called the Louisberg on which are built a
+Ridotto and Cafe, as also a Column erected in honour of Napoleon with a
+suitable inscription; the inscription is effaced and is about to be
+replaced by another in the German language in commemoration of the downfall
+of the _Tyrant_, as the Coalition are pleased to call him. This Tyrant is
+however extremely regretted by the inhabitants of Aix-la-Chapelle and not
+without reason, for he was a great benefactor to them and continually
+embellished the city, confirming and increasing its privileges. The
+inhabitants are not at all pleased with their new masters; for the
+behaviour of the Prussian military has been so insulting and overbearing
+towards the burghers and students that it is, I am told, a common
+exclamation among the latter, alluding to the Prussians having stiled
+themselves their deliverers: _De nostris liberatoribus, Domine, libera
+nos_. Indeed, I can evidently discern that they are not particularly
+pleased at the result of the battle of Waterloo.
+
+In the evening I went to the theatre, which has the most inconvenient form
+imaginable, being a rectangle. As anti-Gallicanism is the order of the day,
+only German dramas are allowed to be performed and this night it was the
+tragedy of Faust, or Dr Faustus as we term him in England, not the Faust of
+Goethe, which is not meant for nor at all adapted to the stage, but a drama
+of that name written by Klingmann.[18] It is a strange wild piece, quite in
+the German style and full of horrors and diableries. In this piece the
+sublime and terrible border close on the ridiculous; for instance the Devil
+and Faust come to drink in a beer-schenk or ale-house. 'Tis true the Devil
+is incognito at the time and is called "der Fremde" or "the Stranger"; it
+is only towards the conclusion of the piece that he discovers himself to be
+Satan.... The actor who played the part of the Stranger had something in
+his physiognomy very terrific and awe-inspiring. In another scene, which to
+us would appear laughable and absurd, but which pleases a German audience,
+three women in masks come on the stage to meet Faust, in a churchyard, and
+on unmasking display three skeleton heads.
+
+Poor Faust had stipulated to give his soul to the Devil for aiding him in
+the attainment of his desires; the Devil on his part agrees to allow him to
+commit four deadly sins before he shall call on him to fulfil his contract.
+Faust, in the sequel, kills his wife and his father-in-law. Satan then
+claims him. Faust pleads in arrest of judgement, that he has only committed
+two crimes out of the four for which he had agreed; and that there
+consequently remained two others for him to commit before he could be
+claimed. The Devil in rejoinder informs him that his wife was with child at
+the time he killed her, which constituted the third crime, and that the
+very act of making a contract with the Devil for his soul forms the fourth.
+Faust, overwhelmed with confusion, has not a word to say; and Satan seizing
+him by the hair of his head, carries him off in triumph. This piece is
+written in iambics of ten syllables and the versification appeared to me
+correct and harmonious, and the sentiments forcible and poetical; this
+fully compensated for the bizarrerie of the story itself, which, by the
+bye, with all the reproach thrown by the adherents of the classic taste on
+those of the romantic, is scarcely more _outre_ than the introduction of
+Death ([Greek: _thanatos_]) as a dramatic personage in the _Alcestis_ of
+Euripides.
+
+There is at Aix-la-Chapelle at one of the hotels a Faro Bank; it is open
+like the gates of Hell _noctes atque dies_ and gaming goes forward without
+intermission; this seems, indeed, to be the only occupation of the
+strangers who visit these baths. There is near this hotel a sort of Place
+or Quadrangle with arcades under which are shops and stalls. At one of
+these shops I met with the most beautiful girl I ever beheld, a Tyrolese by
+birth and the daughter of a print-seller. She was from the Italian Tyrol;
+Roveredo, I think she said, was her birthplace. She united much grace and
+manner with her beauty, on account of which I could not avoid complimenting
+her in her native tongue, which she seemed pleased to hear. Her eyes and
+eyebrows brought to my recollection the description of those of Alcina:
+
+ Sotto due negri e sottilissimi archi,
+ Son due neri occhi, anzi, due chiari soli,
+ Pietosi a riguardare, a mover parchi,
+ Intorno a cui par che Amor scherzi e voli.[19]
+
+ Two black and slender arches rise above
+ Two clear black eyes, say suns of radiant light;
+ Which ever softly beam and slowly move;
+ Round these appears to sport in frolic flight,
+ Hence scattering all his shafts, the little Love.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+We then proceeded to look at the suburb of this city called Bortscheid, by
+far the finest part of the city and at some elevation above it. It commands
+an extensive view. We also visited the various bath establishments; the
+taste of the water had some resemblance to that of Harrogate, and is good
+in bilious, scrofulous and cutaneous complaints. On our return to the hotel
+we learned the news of the capitulation of Paris to the Allied powers. It
+is said to be purely a military convention by which the French army is to
+evacuate Paris and retire behind the Loire. There is no talk and no other
+intelligence about Napoleon, except that he had been compelled by the two
+Houses of Legislature to abdicate the throne. We are still in the dark as
+to the intentions of the Allies. I regret much that my friend and fellow
+traveller L. is obliged to return to Bruxelles and cannot accompany me to
+Cologne, to which place I am impatient to go and to pay my respects to old
+father Rhine, so renowned in history.
+
+
+COLOGNE.
+
+I left Aix-la-Chapelle on the morning of the 2nd of July and arrived at
+Cologne about six o'clock in the evening, putting up at the Inn _Zum
+heiligen Geist_ (Holy Ghost), which is situated on the banks of the river.
+The price of the journey in the diligence is 18 franks. On the road hither
+lies Juliers, a large and strongly fortified town surrounded by a marsh. It
+must be very important as a military post. The road after quitting Juliers
+runs for the most part thro' a forest, and has been much improved and
+enlarged by the French; before they improved it, it was almost impassable
+in wet weather. We met on the road several Prussian waggons and
+reinforcements on their march to Bruxelles. Two of my fellow travellers in
+the diligence were very intelligent young men belonging to respectable
+families in Cologne and were returning thither; they likewise complained
+much of the overbearing demeanour of the Prussian military towards the
+burghers.
+
+Cologne is a large, but very dull looking city, as dull as Liege; it would
+seem as if all towns and cities under ecclesiastical domination were dull
+or rendered so by the prohibition of the most innocent amusements. The
+fortifications are out of repair; but the Prussian Government intend to
+make Cologne a place of great strength. The name of the village on the
+opposite of the river is Deutz, and in the time of the French occupation
+there was a _tete-de-pont_. The next morning I was obliged to appear before
+the police, and afterwards before the _Commandant de la Place_, in order to
+have my passport examined and _vise_. At the bureau of the police it was
+remarked to me that my passport was not _en regle_, the features of the
+bearer not being therein specified. I replied that it was not my fault;
+that it was given to me in that shape by the English Consul at Bruxelles
+and that it was not my province to give to the Consul any directions as to
+its form and tenor. The Commissary of Police then asked me what business I
+was about in travelling, and the following conversation took place: "Was
+haben Sie fuer Geschaefte?"--"Keine; ich reise nur um Vergnuegen's Willen."--"
+Sonderbar!"--"Worin liegt das Sonderbare, dass man reist um ein schoenes
+Land zu sehen?"[20]--He made no answer to this, but one of his coadjutors
+standing by him said in a loud whisper, "Ein Herumreiser," which means an
+adventurer or person who travels about for no good,--in a word, a
+suspicious character. I then said with the utmost calm and indifference:
+"Gentlemen, as soon as you shall have finished all your commentaries on the
+subject of my passport, pray be so good as to inform me what I am to do,
+whether I may go on to Mayence and Frankfort as is my intention, or return
+to Bruxelles." The Commissary, after a slight hesitation, signed the _visa_
+and I then carried it to the bureau of the Commandant, whose secretary
+signed it without hesitation, merely asking me if I were a military man.
+
+In the afternoon I went to visit the Dome or Cathedral. It is a fine
+specimen of Gothic architecture, but singular enough the steeple is not yet
+finished. In this Cathedral the most remarkable thing is the Chapel of the
+Three Kings, wherein is deposited a massy gold chest inlaid with precious
+stones of all sorts and of great value, containing the bones of the
+identical three Kings (it is said) who came from the East to worship the
+infant Jesus at Bethlehem. The Scriptures say it was three wise men or
+Magi. The legend however calls them Kings and gives them Gothic names. Let
+schoolmen and theologians reconcile this difference: _ce n'est point notre
+affaire_. To me it appears that when the German tribes embraced
+Christianity and enrolled themselves under the banner of St Peter, it was
+thought but fair to allow them to give vent to a little nationality and to
+blend their old traditions with the new-fangled doctrine, and no doubt the
+Sovereign Pontiffs thought that the people could never be made to believe
+too much; the same policy is practised by the Jesuit missionaries in China,
+where in order to flatter the national vanity and bend it to their purposes
+they represent Jesus Christ as being a great personal friend and
+correspondent of Confucius.
+
+To return to these monarchs, wise men or Magi: their _sculls_ are kept
+separate to the rest of the bones and each _scull_ bears a crown of gold.
+But if you are fond of miracles, legends, and details of relics, come with
+me to the Church of St Ursula in this city, and see the proof positive of
+the miraculous legend of the eleven thousand Virgins who suffered martyrdom
+in this city, in the time of Attila; the bones of all of whom are carefully
+preserved here and adorn the interior walls of the Church in the guise of
+arms arranged in an armoury. Eleven thousand sculls, each bearing a golden
+or gilt crown, grin horribly on the spectator from the upper part of the
+interior walls of the church, where they are placed in a row. What a fine
+subject this would make for a ballad in the style of Buerger to suppose that
+on a particular night in the year, at the midnight hour when mortals in
+slumbers are bound, the bones all descending from the walls where they are
+arranged, forming themselves into bodies, clapping on their heads and
+dancing a skeleton dance round the Ghost of Attila! The people of Cologne,
+in the time of the ecclesiastical Electorate, had the reputation of being
+extremely superstitious, and no doubt there were many who implicitly
+believe this pious tale; indeed, who could refuse their assent to its
+authenticity, on beholding the proof positive in the sculls and bones?
+
+I recollect that in the History of the Compere Mathiew[21] the Pere Jean
+rates mightily the natives of Cologne for their bigotry and superstition
+and for the bad reception they gave to him and to his philosophy. That
+people are happier from a blind belief, as some pretend, appears to me
+extremely problematical. For my part, under no circumstances can I think
+bliss to consist in ignorance; nor have I felt any particular discomfort in
+having learned at a very early age to put under my feet, as Lucretius
+expresses it, the _strepitum Acherontis avari_. On the contrary, it has
+made me a perfect cosmopolitan, extinguished all absurd national and
+religious prejudices, and rendered me at home wherever I travel; and I meet
+the Catholic, the Lutheran, the Moslem, the Jew, the Hindou and the Guebre
+as a brother. _Quo me cunque ferat tempestas, deferor hospes_.[22] Let me
+add one word more to obviate any misrepresentation of my sentiments from
+some malignant Pharisee, that tho' I am no friend to King-craft and
+Priest-craft, and cannot endure that religion should ever be blended with
+politics, yet I am a great admirer of the beautiful and consoling
+philosophy or theosophy of Jesus Christ which inculcates the equality of
+Mankind, and represents the Creator of the universe, the Author of all
+being, as the universal Father of the human race.
+
+Cologne derives its name from _Colonia_, as it was a Roman Colony planted
+here to protect the left bank of the Rhine from the incursions of the
+German hordes. It is here that the grand and original manufactory of the
+far-famed _Eau de Cologne_ is to be seen. The _Eau de Cologne_ is a
+sovereign remedy for all kinds of disorders, and if the _affiches_ of the
+proprietor, Jean-Marie Farina, be worthy of credit, he is as formidable a
+check to old Pluto as ever Aesculapius was. The sale of this water is
+immense.
+
+On my return to the inn, I met with a Dutch clergyman who was travelling
+with his pupils, three very fine boys, the sons of a Dutch lady of rank. He
+was to conduct them to the University of Neuwied, on the right bank of the
+Rhine, in order to place them there for their education. The young men seem
+to have profited much from their studies. Their tutor seemed to be a
+well-informed man and of liberal ideas; he preferred speaking German to
+French, as he said he had not much facility in expressing himself in the
+latter language. He said if I were going his way he would be happy to have
+the pleasure of my company, to which I very willingly acceded, and we
+agreed to start the next morning early so as to arrive at Bonn to
+breakfast, and then to go on to Godesberg, where he proposed to remain a
+few days.
+
+From the windows of our inn we have a fine view of the river, and I have
+not omitted doing hommage to old Father Rhine by taking up some of his
+water in the hollow of my hand to drink. The Rhine of later years has been
+considered the guardian of Germany against the hostile incursions of the
+French, and Schiller represents this river as a Swiss vigilant on his post,
+yet in spite of his vigilance and fidelity unable to prevent his restless
+neighbour from forcing his safeguard. The following are the lines of
+Schiller where the river speaks in a distich:
+
+ Treu wie dem Schwfeizer gebuehrt bewach'ich Germaniens Grenze,
+ Aber der Gallier huepft ueber den duldenden Strom.
+
+ In vain my stream I interpose
+ To guard Germania's realm from foes;
+ The nimble Gauls my cares deride
+ And often leap on t'other side.
+
+
+GODESBERG, 4th July.
+
+The distance from Cologne to Bonn is 18 miles and Godesberg is three miles
+further. We stopped to breakfast at Bonn and after breakfast made a
+promenade thro' the city. Bonn is a handsome, clean, well-built and
+cheerful looking city and the houses are good and solid.
+
+The Electoral Palace is a superb building, but is not occupied and is
+falling rapidly to decay. From the terrace in the garden belonging to this
+Palace, which impends over the Rhine, you have a fine view of this noble
+river. This Palace was at one time made use of as a barrack by the French,
+and since the secularization of the Ecclesiastical Electorates it has not
+been thought worth while to embellish or even repair it. There is a Roman
+antiquity in this town called the _Altar of Victory_, erected on the Place
+St Remi, but remarkable for nothing but its antiquity; it seems to be a
+common Roman altar.[23] The road from Bonn to Godesberg is three miles in
+length and thro' a superb avenue of horse-chesnut trees; but before you
+arrive at Godesberg, there is on the left side of the road a curious
+specimen of Gothic architecture called _Hochkreutz_, very like Waltham
+cross in appearance, but much higher and in better preservation; it was
+erected by some feudal Baron to expiate a homicide. The castle of Godesberg
+is situated on an eminence and commands a fine prospect; it is now a mass
+of rums and the walls only remain. It derives its name of Godesberg or
+Goetzenberg from the circumstance of its having been formerly the site of a
+temple of Minerva built in the time of the Romans, and thence called
+Goetzenberg by the Christians, _Goetze_ in German signifying an idol.
+
+On the plain at the foot of the hill of Godesberg and at the distance of an
+eighth of a mile from the river, a shelving cornfield intervening, stand
+three large hotels and a ridotto, all striking edifices. To the south of
+these is situated a large wood. These hotels are always full of company in
+the summer and autumn: they come here to drink the mineral waters, a
+species of Seltzer, the spring of which is about a quarter of a mile
+distant from the hotels. The hotel at which we put up bears the name of
+_Die schoene Aussicht_ (la Belle Vue) and well does it deserve the name; for
+it commands a fine view of the reaches of the river, north and south.
+Directly on the opposite bank, abruptly rising, is the superb and
+magnificent chain of mountains called the _Sieben Gebirge_ or Seven
+Mountains. On the summit of these mountains tower the remains of Gothic
+castles or keeps, still majestic, tho' in ruins, and frowning on the plains
+below; they bring to one's recollection the legends and chronicles of the
+Middle Ages. They bear terrible awe-inspiring names such as Drachenfels,
+Loewenberg; the highest of them is called Drachenfels or the Rock of Dragons
+and on it stood the Burg or Chateau of a Feudal Count or _Raubgraf_, who
+was the terror of the surrounding country, and has given rise to a very
+interesting romance called _The Knights of the Seven Mountains_. This
+feudal tyrant used to commit all sorts of depredations and descend into the
+plains below, in order to intercept the convoys of merchandize passing
+between Aix-la-Chapelle and Frankfort. It was to check these abuses and
+oppressions that was instituted the famous Secret Tribunal _Das heimliche
+Gericht_, the various Governments in Germany being then too weak to protect
+their subjects or to punish these depredations. This secret tribunal, from
+the summary punishments it inflicted, the mysterious obscurity in which it
+was enveloped, and the impossibility of escaping from its pursuit, became
+the terror of all Germany. They had agents and combinations everywhere, and
+exercised such a system of espionage as to give to their proceedings an
+appearance of supernatural agency. A simple accusation was sufficient for
+them to act upon, provided the accuser solemnly swore to the truth of it
+without reserve, and consented to undergo the same punishment as the
+accused was subjected to, in case the accusation should be false; till this
+solemnity was gone through, no pursuit was instituted against the offender.
+There was scarcely ever an instance of a false accusation, for it was well
+known that no power could screen the delator from the exemplary punishment
+that awaited him; and there were no means of escaping from the omniscience
+and omnipotence of the secret tribunal.
+
+To return to Godesberg, it is a most beautiful spot and much agreeable
+society is here to be met with. The families of distinction of the
+environing country come here for the purpose of recreation and drinking the
+mineral waters. We sit down usually sixty to dinner, and I observe some
+very fine women among them. On Sunday there is a ball at the ridotto. The
+promenades in the environs are exceedingly romantic, and this place is the
+favourite resort of many new married couples who come here to pass the
+honeymoon. The scenery of the surrounding country is so picturesque and
+beautiful as to require the pencil of an Ariosto or Wieland to do justice
+to it:
+
+ Ne se tutto cercato avessi il mondo
+ Vedria di questo un pin gen til paese.[24]
+
+ And, had he ranged the universal world,
+ Would not have seen a lovelier in his round.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+To the researches of the naturalist and mineralogist the Seven Mountains
+offer inexhaustible resources. The living and accommodation of the three
+hotels are very reasonable. For one and a half florins you have an
+excellent and plentiful dinner at the table d'hote, including a bottle of
+Moselle wine and Seltzer water at discretion; by paying extra you can have
+the Rhine wines of different growths and crops and French wines of all
+sorts.
+
+I am much pleased with the little I have seen of the German women. They
+appear to be extremely well educated. I observe many of them in their
+morning walks with a book in their hand either of poetry or a novel.
+Schiller is the favourite poet among them and Augustus Lafontaine the
+favourite novel writer.[25] He is a very agreeable author were he not so
+prolix; yet we English have no right to complain of this fault, since there
+is no novel in all Germany to compare in point of prolixity with Clarissa,
+Sit Charles Grandison, or Tom Jones. The great fault of Augustus Lafontaine
+is that of including in one novel the history of two or three generations.
+A beautiful and very interesting tale of his, however, is entirely free
+from this defect and is founded on a fact. It is called _Dankbarkeit und
+Liebe_ (Gratitude and Love). There is more real pathos in this novelette
+than in the _Nouvelle Heloise_ of Rousseau.
+
+
+EHRENBREITSTEIN, 8 July.
+
+After a _sejour_ of three days at Godesberg, we left that delightful
+residence and proceeded to Neuwied to deposit the boys. We stopped,
+however, for an hour or two at Andernach, which is situated in a beautiful
+valley on the left bank. We viewed the remains of the palace of the Kings
+of Austrasia and the church where the body of the Emperor Valentinian is
+preserved embalmed.
+
+Andernach is remarkable for being the exact spot where Julius Caesar first
+crossed the Rhine to make war on the German nations. Directly opposite
+Neuwied, which is on the right bank, stands close to the village of
+Weissenthurm the monument erected to the French General Hoche. We crossed
+over to Neuwied in a boat. Neuwied is a regular, well-built town, but
+rather of a sombre melancholy appearance and is only remarkable for its
+university. Science could not chuse a more tranquil abode. This University
+has been ameliorated lately by its present sovereign the King of Prussia.
+It was not the interest of Napoleon to favour any establishment on the
+right bank at the expence of those on the left, the former being out of his
+territory. At Neuwied I took leave of my agreeable fellow travellers, as
+they intended to remain there and I to go on to Ehrenbreitstein. An
+opportunity presented itself the same afternoon of which I profited. I met
+with an Austrian Captain of Infantry and his lady at the inn where I
+stopped who were going to Ehrenbreitstein in their _caleche_, and they were
+so kind as to offer me a place in it. I found them both extremely
+agreeable; both were from Austria proper. He had left the Austrian service
+some time ago and had since entered into the Russian service; from that he
+was lately transferred, together with the battalion to which he belonged,
+into the service of Prussia and placed on the retired list of the latter
+with a very small pension. He did not seem at all satisfied with this
+arrangement. He had served in several campaigns against the French in
+Germany, Italy and France, and was well conversant in French and Italian
+litterature.
+
+We stopped _en passant_ at a _maison de plaisance_ and superb English
+garden belonging to the Duke of Nassau-Weilburg. The house is in the style
+of a cottage _orne_, but very roomy and tastefully fitted up; but nothing
+can be more diversified and picturesque than the manner in which the garden
+is laid out. The ground being much broken favours this; and in one part of
+it is a ravine or valley so romantic and savage, that you would fancy
+yourself in Tinian or Juan Fernandez. We arrived late in the evening in the
+Thal Ehrenbreitstein, which lies at the foot of the gigantic hill fortress
+of that name, which frowns over it and seems as if it threatened to fall
+and crush it. My friends landed me at the inn _Zum weissen Pferd_ (the
+White Horse), where there is most excellent accommodation. Just opposite
+Ehrenbreitstein, on the left bank, is Coblentz; a superb flying bridge,
+which passes in three minutes, keeps up the communication between the two
+towns.
+
+Early the next morning, I ascended the stupendous rock of Ehrenbreitstein,
+which has a great resemblance to the hill forts in India, such as Gooty,
+Nundydroog, etc. It is a place of immense natural strength, but the
+fortifications were destroyed by the French, who did not chuse to have so
+formidable a neighbour so close to their frontier, as the Rhine then was.
+The Prussian Government, however, to whom it now belongs, seem too fully
+aware of its importance not to reconstruct the fortifications with as
+little delay as possible. Ehrenbreitstein completely commands all the
+adjacent country and enfilades the embouchure of the Moselle which flows
+into the Rhine at Coblentz, where there is an elegant stone bridge across
+the Moselle. Troops without intermission continue to pass over the flying
+bridge bound to France, from the different German states, viz., Saxons,
+Hessians, Prussians, etc., so that one might apply to this scene Anna
+Comnena's expression relative to the Crusades, and say that all Germany is
+torn up from its foundation and precipitated upon France. I suppose no less
+than 70,000 men have passed within these few days. The German papers,
+particularly the _Rheinische Mercur_, continue to fulminate against France
+and the war yell resounds with as much fury as ever. From the number of
+troops that continue to pass it would seem as if the Allies did not mean to
+content themselves with the abdication of Napoleon, but will endeavour to
+dismember France. The Prussian officers seem to speak very confidently that
+Alsace and Lorraine will be severed from France and reunited to the
+Germanic body, to which, they say, every country ought to belong where the
+German language is spoken, and they are continually citing the words of an
+old song:
+
+
+ Wo ist das deutsche Vaterland?....
+ Wo man die deutsche Zunge spricht,
+ Da ist das deutsche Vaterland.[26]
+
+In English: "Where is the country of the Germans? Where the German language
+is spoken, there is the country of the Germans!"
+
+Coblentz is a clean handsome city, but there is nothing very remarkable in
+it except a fine and spacious "Place." But in the neighbourhood stands the
+_Chartreuse_, situated on an eminence commanding a fine view of the whole
+_Thalweg_. This _Chartreuse_ is one English mile distant from the town and
+my friend the Austrian Captain had the goodness to conduct me thither. It
+is a fine large building, but is falling rapidly to decay, being
+appropriated to no purpose whatever. The country is beautiful in the
+environs of this place, and has repeatedly called forth the admiration and
+delight of all travellers. Near Coblentz is the monument erected to the
+French General Marceau, who fell gloriously fighting for the cause of
+liberty, respected by friend and foe.
+
+
+July 10th.
+
+We had a large society this day at the table d'hote. The conversation
+turned on the restoration of the Bourbons, which nobody at table seemed to
+desire. Several anecdotes were related of the conduct of the Bourbon
+princes and of the emigration, who held their court at Coblentz when they
+first emigrated; these anecdotes did not redound much to their honor or
+credit, and I remark that they are held in great disgust and abhorrence by
+the inhabitants of these towns, on account of their treacherous and
+unprincipled conduct. It was from here that "La Cour de Coblentz," as it
+was called, intrigued by turns with the Jacobins and the Brissotins and, by
+betraying the latter to the former, were in part the cause of the
+sanguinary measures adopted by Robespierre.[27] The object of this
+atrocious policy was that the French people would, by witnessing so many
+executions, become disgusted at the sanguinary tyranny of Robespierre and
+recall the Bourbons unconditionally; which, fortunately for France and
+thanks to the heroism and bravery of the republican armies, did not take
+place; for had the restoration taken place at that time, a dreadful
+reaction would have been encouraged and the cruelties of the reign of
+Terror surpassed. With the same view, emissaries were dispatched from the
+Court of Coblentz to the South of France in order, under the disguise of
+patriots, to preach up the most exaggerated corollaries to the theories of
+liberty and equality.
+
+Among other things at Ehrenbreitstein is a superb pleasure barge belonging
+to the Dukes of Nassau for water excursions up and down the Rhine. A _coche
+d'eau_ starts from here daily to Mayence and another to Cologne. The price
+is ten franks the person. The superb _chaussee on_ the left bank of the
+Rhine, which extends all the way from Cologne to Mayence, was constructed
+by the direction of Napoleon. In the evening I went to the theatre at
+Coblentz, where Mozart's opera of Don Giovanni was represented. I
+recollected my old acquaintance "La ci darem la mano," which I had often
+heard in England.
+
+
+MAYENCE, 12th July.
+
+I embarked in the afternoon of the 11th in the _coche d'eau_ bound to
+Mayence. Except an old "Schiffer," I was the only passenger on board, as
+few chuse to go up stream on account of the delay. I, however, being master
+of my own time, and wishing to view the lovely scenery on the banks of the
+river, preferred this conveyance, and I was highly gratified. After
+Boppart, the bed of the river narrows much. High rocks on each bank hem in
+the stream and render it more rapid. Nothing can be more sublime and
+magnificent than the scenery; at every turn of the river you would suppose
+its course blocked up by rocks, perceiving no visible outlet. Remains of
+Gothic castles are to be seen on their summits at a short distance from
+each other, and where the banks are not abrupt and _escarpes_ there are
+_coteaux_ covered with vines down to the water's edge. The tolling of the
+bells at the different villages on the banks gives a most aweful solemn
+religious sound, and the reverberation is prolonged by the high rocks,
+which seem to shut you out from the rest of the world. There are the walls
+nearly entire of two castles of the Middle Ages, the one called "Die Katze"
+(the cat); the other "Die Maus" (the Mouse); each has its tradition, for
+which and for many other interesting particulars I refer you to Klebe's and
+Schreiber's description of the banks of the Rhine.
+
+We arrived early in the evening at St Goar, where we stopped and slept. St
+Goar is a fine old Gothic town, romantically situated, and is famous from
+having two whirlpools in its neighbourhood. It is completely commanded and
+protected by Rheinfels, an ancient hill fortress, but the fortification of
+which no longer exist. It requires half an hour's walk to ascend to the
+summit of Rheinfels, but the traveller is well repaid for the fatigue of
+the ascent by the fine view enjoyed from the top. I remained at Rheinfels
+nearly an hour. What a solemn stillness seems to pervade this part of the
+river, only interrupted by the occasional splash of the oar, and the
+tolling of the steeple bell! Bingen on the right bank is the next place of
+interest, and on an island in the centre of the river facing Bingen stand
+the ruins of a celebrated tower call'd the "Mauesethurm" (mouse tower), so
+named from the circumstance of Bishop Hatto having been devoured therein by
+rats according to the tradition. This was represented as a punishment from
+Heaven on the said bishop for his tyranny and oppression towards the poor;
+but the story was invented by the monks in order to vilify his memory, for
+it appears he was obnoxious to them on account of his attempts to enforce a
+rigid discipline among them and to check their licentiousness.
+
+Bieberich, a superb palace belonging to the Dukes of Nassau on the right
+bank, next presents itself to view on your left ascending; to your right,
+at a short distance from Bieberich, you catch the first view of Mayence on
+the left bank, with its towers and steeples rising from the glade. We
+reached Mayence at 4 o'clock p.m., and I went to put up at the three Crowns
+(_Drei-Kronen_). The first news I learned on arriving at Mayence was that
+Napoleon had surrendered himself to the Captain of an English frigate at
+Oleron; but though particulars are not given, Louis XVIII is said to be
+restored, which I am very sorry to hear. The Allies then have been guilty
+of the most scandalous infraction of their most solemn promise, since they
+declared that they made war on Napoleon alone and that they never meant to
+dictate to the French people the form of government they were to adopt.
+Napoleon having surrendered and Louis being restored, the war may be
+considered as ended for the present, unless the Allies should attempt to
+wrest any provinces from France, and in this case there is no saying what
+may happen. This has finally ended the career of Napoleon.
+
+There is in Mayence a remarkably fine broad spacious street called "die
+grosse Bleiche" and in general the buildings are striking and solid, but
+too much crowded together as is the case in all ancient fortified cities.
+The Cathedral is well worth seeing and contains many things of value and
+costly relics. When one views the things of value in the churches here, at
+Aix-la-Chapelle and at Cologne, what a contradiction does it give to the
+calumnies spread against the French republicans that they plundered the
+churches of the towns they occupied! There is an agreeable promenade lined
+with trees on the banks of the river called _L'Allee du Rhin._ Mayence is
+strongly fortified and has besides a citadel (a pentagon) of great
+strength, which is separated from the town by an esplanade. The _Place du
+Marche_ is striking and in the _Place Verte_ I saw for the first time in my
+life the Austrian uniform, there being an Austrian garrison as well as
+troops belonging to the other Germanic states, such as Prussians,
+Bavarians, Saxons, Hessians, and troops of the Duchy of Berg. This City
+belongs to the Germanic Confederation and is to be always occupied by a
+mixed garrison. The Archduke Charles has his head-quarters here at present.
+I attended an inspection of a battalion of Berg troops on the _Place
+Verte_; they had a very military appearance and went thro' their manoeuvres
+with great precision. From the top of the steeple of the Church of Sanct
+Stephen you have a fine view of the whole Rheingau. Opposite to Mayence, on
+the right bank, communicating by an immensely long bridge of boats, is the
+small town and fort of Castel, which forms a sort of _tete-de-pont_ to
+Mayence. The works of Castel take in flank and enfilade the embouchure of
+the river Mayn which flows into the Rhine. One of the redoubts of Castel is
+called the redoubt of Montebello, thus named after Marshal Lannes, Duke of
+Montebello.
+
+The German papers continue their invectives against France. In one of them
+I read a patriotic song recommending the youth of Germany to go into France
+to revenge themselves, to drink the wine and live at the cost of the
+inhabitants, and then is about to recommend their making love to the wives
+and daughters of the French, when a sudden flash of patriotism comes across
+him, and he says: "No! for that a German warrior makes love to German girls
+and German women only!" (_Und kuesst nur Deutsche Maedchen._) With regard to
+the women here, those that I have hitherto met with, and those I saw at
+Ehrenbreitstein, were exceedingly handsome, so that the German warriors, if
+love is their object, will do well to remain here, as they may go further
+and fare worse, for I understand the women of Lorraine and Champagne are
+not very striking for personal beauty. There were some good paintings in
+the picture gallery here and this and the fortifications are nearly all
+that need call forth the attention of a traveller who makes but a fleeting
+visit.
+
+
+FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MAYN, 14th July.
+
+I arrived here the day before yesterday in the diligence from Mayence, the
+price of which is two and a half florins the person, and the distance
+twenty-five English miles; there is likewise a water conveyance by the Mayn
+for half the money. The road runs thro' the village of Hockheim, which in
+England gives the name of _Hock_ to all the wines of Rhenish growth. The
+country is undulating in gentle declivities and vales and is highly
+cultivated in vines and corn. I put up here at the _Hotel Zum Schwan_ (The
+Swan), which is a very large and spacious hotel and has excellent
+accommodation. There is a very excellent table d'hote at one o'clock at
+this hotel, for which the price is one and a half florins the person,
+including a pint of Moselle wine and a _krug_ or jar of Seltzer water.
+About four or five o'clock in the afternoon it is the fashion to come and
+drink old Rhine wine _a l'Anglaise_. That sort called _Rudesheimer_ I
+recommend as delicious. There is also a very pleasant wine called the
+_Ingelheimer_, which is in fact the "red Hock." At one of these afternoon
+meetings a gentleman who had just returned from Paris related to us some
+anecdotes of what passed at the Conference between the French commissioners
+who were sent after the abdication of Napoleon, by the provisional
+government, to treat with the Allies; in which it appeared that the British
+commissioner, Lord S[tewart],[28] brother to the Secretary of State for
+Foreign Affairs, made rather a simple figure by his want of historical
+knowledge or recollection. He began, it seems, in rather a bullying manner,
+in the presence of the commissioners, to declaim against what he called the
+perfidy and mutiny of the French army against their lawful Sovereign; when
+the venerable Lafayette, who was one of the commissioners and who is ever
+foremost when his country has need of his assistance, remarked to him that
+the English revolution in 1688, which the English were accustomed always to
+stile glorious, and which he (Lafayette) stiled glorious also, was
+effectuated in a similar manner by the British army abandoning King James
+and ranging themselves under the standard of the Prince of Orange; that if
+it was a crime on the part of the French army to join Napoleon, their
+ancient leader who had led them so often to victory, it was a still greater
+crime on the part of the English army to go over to the Prince of Orange
+who was unknown to them and a foreigner in the bargain; and that therefore
+this blame of the French army, coming from the mouth of an Englishman,
+surprised him, the more so as the Duke of Marlborough, the boast and pride
+of the English, set the example of defection from his Sovereign, who had
+been his greatest benefactor. Lord S[tewart], who did not appear to be at
+all conscious of this part of our history, was staggered, a smile was
+visible on the countenances of all the foreign diplomatists assembled
+there, and Lord S[tewart], to hide his confusion, and with an ill-disguised
+anger, turned to Lafayette and said that the Allies would not treat until
+Napoleon should be delivered to them. "Je m'etonne, my lord, qu'en faisant
+une proposition si infame et si deshonorante, vous vous plaisez de vous
+adresser au prisonnier d'Olmuetz," was the dignified answer of that virtuous
+patriot and ever ardent veteran of liberty.[29]
+
+The main street in Frankfort called the _Zeil_ is very broad and spacious,
+and can boast of a number of splendid houses belonging to individuals,
+particularly the house of Schweitzer[30]; and on the Quai, on the banks of
+the Mayn, there is a noble range of buildings. The bridge across the Mayn
+is very fine and on the other side of the river is the suburb of
+Sachsenhansen, which is famous for being the head-quarters of the
+priestesses of the Venus vulgivaga who abound in this city. There are in
+Frankfort an immense number of Jews, who have a quarter of the city
+allotted to them. The gardens that environ the town are very tastefully
+laid out, and serve as the favourite promenade of the _beau monde_ of
+Frankfort. The Cathedral will always be a place of interest as the temple
+wherein in later times the German Caesars were crowned and inaugurated. At
+the _Hotel de Ville_ called the _Roemer_, which is an ugly Gothic building,
+but interesting from its being in this edifice that the Emperors were
+chosen, is to be seen the celebrated Golden Bull which is written on
+parchment in the Latin language with a golden seal attached to it. In the
+Hall where the Electors used to sit on the election of an Emperor of the
+Romans, are to be seen the portraits of several of the Emperors, and a very
+striking one in particular of the Emperor Joseph II, in full length, in his
+Imperial robes. There is no table d'hote at the _Swan_ for supper, but this
+meal is served up _a la carte_, which is very convenient for those who do
+not require copious meals. At the same table with me at supper sat a very
+agreeable man with whom I entered into conversation. He was a Hessian and
+had served in a Hessian battalion in the English service during the
+American war. He was so kind as to procure me admission to the Casino at
+the Hotel Rumpf,[31] where there is a literary institution and where they
+receive newspapers, pamphlets and reviews in the German, French, English
+and Italian languages. In Frankfort there are several houses of individuals
+which merit the name of palaces, and there is a great display of opulence
+and industry in this city. In the environs there is abundance of _maisons
+de plaisance_. For commerce it is the most bustling city (inland) in all
+Germany, besides it being the seat of the present German Diet; and from
+here, as from a centre, diverge the high roads to all parts of the Empire.
+
+I have been once at the theatre, which is very near the _Swan_. A German
+opera, the scene whereof was in India, was given. The scenery and
+decorations were good, appropriate, and the singing very fair. The theatre
+itself is dirty and gloomy. The German language appears to me to be better
+adapted to music than either the French or English. The number of dactylic
+terminations in the language give to it all the variety that the
+_sdruccioli_ give to the Italian. As to poetry, no language in the world
+suits itself better to all the vagaries and phantasies of the Muse, since
+it possesses so much natural rythm and allows, like the Greek, the
+combination of compound words and a redundancy of epithets, and it is
+besides so flexible that it lends itself to all the ancient as well as the
+modern metres with complete success: indeed it is the only modern language
+that I know of which does so.
+
+As for political opinions here, the Germans seem neither to wish nor to
+care about the restoration of the Bourbons; but they talk loudly of the
+necessity of tearing Alsace and Lorraine from France. In fact, they wish to
+put it out of the power of the French ever to invade Germany again; a thing
+however little to be hoped for. For the minor and weaker Germanic states
+have always hitherto (and will probably again at some future day) invoked
+the assistance of France against the greater and stronger. I observe that
+the Austrian Government is not at all popular here, and that its bad faith
+in financial matters is so notorious and has been so severely felt here,
+that a merchant told me, alluding to the bankruptcy of the Austrian
+Government on two occasions when there was no absolute necessity for the
+measure, that Frankfort had suffered more from the bad faith of the
+Austrian Government than from all the war contributions levied by the
+French.
+
+
+BRUXELLES, 28th July.
+
+On arrival at Coblentz we heard that Napoleon had surrendered himself
+unconditionally to Capt. Maitland of the _Bellerophon_. He never should
+have humiliated himself so far as to surrender himself to the British
+ministry. He owed to himself, to his brave fellow soldiers, to the French
+nation whose Sovereign he had been, not to take such a step, but rather die
+in the field like our Richard III, a glorious death which cast a lustre
+around his memory in spite of the darker shades of his character; or if he
+could not fall in the field, he should have died like Hannibal, rather than
+commit himself into the hands of a government in which generosity is by no
+means a distinguishing feature, and which on many occasions has shown a
+petty persecuting and vindictive spirit, and thus I have no hesitation in
+portraying the characteristics of our Tory party, which, unfortunately for
+the cause of liberty, rules with undivided sway over England. He will now
+end his days in captivity, for his destination appears to be already fixed,
+and St Helena is named as the intended residence; he will, I say, be
+exposed to all the taunts and persecutions that petty malice can suggest;
+and this with the most uncomfortable reflections: for had he been more
+considerate of the spirit of the age, he might have set all the Monarchs,
+Ultras and Oligarchs and their ministers at defiance. But he wished to ape
+Charlemagne and the Caesars and to establish an universal Empire: a thing
+totally impossible in our days and much to be deprecated were it possible.
+
+Consigned to St Helena, Napoleon will furnish to posterity a proverb like
+that of Dionysius at Corinth. This banishment to St Helena will be very
+ungenerous and unjust on the part of the English Government, but I suppose
+their satellites and adherents will term it an act of clemency, and some
+_Church and Kingmen_ would no doubt recommend hewing him in pieces, as
+Samuel did to Agag.
+
+I stopped three days at Aix-la-Chapelle to drink the waters and then came
+straight to this place stopping half a day in Liege. I shall start for
+Paris in a couple of days, as the communication is now open and the public
+conveyances re-established. My passport is _vise_ in the following terms:
+"Bon pour aller a Paris en suivant la route des armees alliees." I am quite
+impatient to visit that celebrated city.
+
+
+[18] Philipp Klingmann (1762-1824) was better known as an actor than as an
+ author.--ED.
+
+[19] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, VII, 12, 1.--ED.
+
+[20] "What business have you? None, I travel for amusement. Strange! What
+ is there strange in travelling to see a fine country?"
+
+[21] _Le Compere Mathieu_, a satirical novel by the Abbe Henri Joseph
+ Dulaurens, published 1765 and sometimes (though wrongly) attributed to
+ Voltaire. One of the prominent talkers in the dialogues is Pere Jean
+ de Domfront.--ED.
+
+[22] Horace, _Epist_., I, i, 15.--ED.
+
+[23] This altar, inscribed _Deae Victoriae Sacrum (Corpus inscr. lat_.
+ XIII, 8252), was erected by the Roman fleet on the Rhine at the place
+ now called _Altsburg_ near Cologne and, after its discovery, taken to
+ Bonn, where it was set up on the _Remigius-Platz_ (now called
+ _Roemer-Platz_) on Dec, 3, 1809. It is now in the Provincial
+ Museum.--ED.
+
+[24] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, vi, 20, 3.--ED.
+
+[25] August Lafontaine (1758-1831), born in Brunswick of a family of French
+ protestants, was the very prolific and now quite forgotten author of
+ many novels and novelettes.--ED.
+
+[26] From Ernst Moritz Arndt's (1779-1860) celebrated poem, _Des Deutschen
+ Vaterland_.--ED.
+
+[27] There seems to be much truth in this opinion, though the question of
+ the intrigues of Louis XVIII with Robespierre is still shrouded in
+ obscurity. Some pages of General Thiebault's memoirs might have
+ cleared it up, but they have been torn out from the manuscript
+ (_Memoires du General Baron Thiebault_, vol. I, p. 273). Louis XVIII
+ paid a pension to Robespierre's sister, Charlotte.--ED.
+
+[28] Sir Charles Stewart, created Lord Stewart In 1814; he was a
+ half-brother of Lord Castlereagh.--ED.
+
+[29] The same story is given, with slight differences, by Lafayette himself
+ (_Memoires_, vol. V, p. 472-3; Paris and Leipzig, 1838). See also
+ _Souvenirs historiques et parlementaires du Comte de Pontecoulant_,
+ vol. III, p. 428 (Paris, 1863). Major Frye's narrative is by far the
+ oldest and seems the most trustworthy.--ED.
+
+[30] The house in question was built about 1780 by Nicolas de Pigage for
+ the rich merchant, Franz von Schweizer; Pigage was the son of the
+ architect of King Stanislas at Nancy. The Schweizer palace became
+ later on the _Hotel de Russie_ and was demolished about 1890, the
+ Imperial Post Office having been erected in its place. The Schweizer
+ family is now extinct.--ED.
+
+[31] A _Casinogesellschaft_, still in existence (1908), was founded at
+ Frankfort in 1805, with the object of uniting the aristocratic
+ elements of the city, admittance being freely allowed to distinguished
+ strangers, in particular to the envoys of the _Bundestag_. The
+ _Gesellschaft_ or club occupied spacious rooms in the house of the
+ once famous _tapissier_ and decorator Major Rumpf, grandfather of the
+ German sculptor of the same name. That building, situated at the
+ corner of the _Rossmarkt_, was demolished about 1880.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+From Bruxelles to Paris--Restoration of Louis XVIII--The officers of the
+allied armies--The Palais Royal--The Louvre--Protest of the author against
+the proposed despoiling of the French Museums--Unjust strictures against
+Napoleon's military policy--The _cant_ about revolutionary robberies--The
+Grand Opera--Monuments in Paris--The Champs Elysees--Saint-Cloud--The Hotel
+des Invalides--The Luxembourg--General Labedoyere--Priests and
+emigrants--Prussian Plunder--Handsome behaviour of the English officers--
+Reminiscences of Eton--Versailles.
+
+
+PARIS, August 3rd.
+
+Here I am in Paris. I left Bruxelles the 29th July, stopped one night at
+Mons and passing thro' Valenciennes, Peronne and St Quentin arrived here on
+the third day. The villages and towns on the road had been pretty well
+stripped of eatables by the Allied army, as well as by the French, so that
+we did not meet with the best fare. In every village the white flag was
+displayed by way of propitiating the clemency of the Allies and averting
+plunder.
+
+
+August 7th.
+
+I have put up at the _Hotel de Cahors_, Rue de Richelieu, where I pay five
+francs per diem for a single room; such is the dearness of lodgings at this
+moment. It is well furnished, however, with sofas, commodes, mirrors and a
+handsome clock and is very spacious withal, there being an alcove for the
+bed. This situation is extremely convenient, being close to the Palais
+Royal, Rue St Honore, Theatre Francais, Louvre and the Tuileries on one
+side, and to the Grand Opera, the Theatre Feydeau, the Italian Opera and
+the Boulevards on the other. The National Library is not many yards distant
+from my hotel, and a few yards from that _en face_ is the Grand Opera house
+or _Academie Royale de Musique_.
+
+This city is filled with officers and travellers of all kinds who have
+followed the army. The House of Legislature of the Hundred Days,--as it is
+the fashion to style Napoleon's last reign--dissolved themselves on the
+demand of a million of francs as a war contribution made by Marshall
+Blucher. Louis XVIII has been hustled into Paris, and now occupies the
+throne of his ancestors under the protection of a million of foreign
+bayonets, and the _banniere des Lis_ has replaced the tricolor on the
+castle of the Tuileries. A detachment of the British army occupies
+Montmartre, where the British flag is flying, and in the Champs Elysees and
+Bois de Boulogne are encamped several brigades of English and Hanoverians.
+The Sovereigns of Russia, Austria and Prussia are expected and then it is
+said that the fate of France will be decided. The Army of the Loire has at
+length made its submission to the King, after stipulating but in vain for
+the beloved tricolor. Report says it is to be immediately dissolved and a
+new army raised with more legitimate inclinations. Should the King accede
+to this, France will be completely disarmed and at the mercy of the Allies,
+and the King himself a state prisoner. The entrance into Paris, thro' the
+Faubourg St Denis, does not give to the stranger who arrives there for the
+first time a great idea of the magnificence of Paris; he should enter by
+the Avenue de Neuilly or by the Porte St Antoine, both of which are very
+striking and superb.
+
+Now you must not expect that I shall or can give you a description of all
+the fine things that I have seen or am about to see, for they have been so
+often described before that it would be a perfect waste of time, and I can
+do better in referring you at once to the _Guide des Voyageurs a Paris_; so
+that I shall content myself with merely indicating these objects which make
+the most impression on me.
+
+My first visit was, as you will have no doubt guessed, to the Palais Royal:
+there I breakfasted, there I dined, and there I passed the whole day
+without the least _ennui_. It is a world in itself. It swarms at present
+with officers of the Allied army. The variety of uniforms adds to the
+splendour and novelty of the scene. The restaurants and cafes are filled
+with them. The Palais Royal is certainly the temple of animal
+gratification, the paradise of gastronomes. The officers are indulging in
+all sorts of luxury, revelling in Champaign and Burgundy, in all the
+pleasures of the belly, as well as _in iis quae sub ventre sunt_. 'Twill be
+a famous harvest for the restaurateurs and for the Cyprians who parade up
+and down the Arcades, sure of a constant succession of suitors. In fact,
+whatever be the taste of a man, whether sensual or intellectual or both, he
+can gratify himself here without moving out of the precincts of the Palais
+Royal. Here are cafes, restaurants, shops of all kinds whose display of
+clocks, jewellery, stuffs, silks, merchandize from all parts of the world,
+is most brilliant and dazzling; here you find reading-rooms where
+newspapers, reviews and pamphlets of all tongues, nations and languages are
+to be met with; here are museums of paintings, statues, plans in relief,
+cosmoramas; here are libraries, gaming houses, houses of fair reception;
+cellars where music, dancing and all kinds of orgies are carried on;
+exhibitions of all sorts, learned pigs, dancing dogs, military canary
+birds, hermaphrodites, giants, dwarf jugglers from Hindostan, catawbas from
+America, serpents from Java, and crocodiles from the Nile. Here, so
+Kotzebue has calculated, you may go through all the functions of life in
+one day and end it afterwards should you be so inclined. You may eat,
+drink, sleep, bathe, go to the _Cabinet d'aisance_, walk, read, make love,
+game and, should you be tired of life, you may buy powder and ball or opium
+to hasten your journey across Styx; or should you desire a more classic
+_exit_, you may die like Seneca opening your veins in a bath. Deep play
+goes forward day and night, and I verily believe there are some persons in
+Paris who never quit these precincts. The restaurants and cafes are most
+brilliantly fitted up. One, _Le Cafe des Mille Colonnes_, so called from
+the reflection of the columns in the mirrors with which the wainscoat is
+lined, boasts of a _limonadiere_ of great beauty. She is certainly a fine
+woman, dresses very well, as indeed most French women do, and has a
+remarkably fine turned arm which she takes care to display on all
+occasions. I do not, however, perceive much animation in her; she always
+appears the same, nor has she made any more impression on me--tho' I am of
+a very susceptible nature in this particular--than a fine statue or picture
+would do. There she sits on a throne and receives the hommage and
+compliments of most of the visitors and the money of all, which seems to
+please her most, for she receives the compliments which are paid her with
+the utmost _sang-froid_ and indifference, and the money she takes especial
+care to count. English troops, conjointly with the National Guard, do duty
+at the entrance of the Palais Royal from the Rue St Honore; and it became
+necessary to have a strong guard to keep the peace, as frequent disputes
+take place between the young men of the Capital and the Prussian officers,
+against whom the French are singularly inveterate.
+
+The French, when left to themselves, are very peaceable in their pleasures
+and the utmost public decorum is observed; their sobriety contributes much
+to this; but if there were in London an establishment similar to that of
+the Palais Royal, it would become a perfect pandemonium and would require
+an army to keep the peace. The French police keep a very sharp look-out on
+all political offences, but are more indulgent towards all moral ones, as
+long as public decorum is not infringed, and then it is severely punished.
+But they have none of that censoriousness or prying spirit in France which
+is so common in England to hunt out and criticise the private vices of
+their neighbours, which, in my opinion, does not proceed from any real
+regard for virtue, but from a fanatical, jealous, envious, and malignant
+spirit. Those vice-hunters never have the courage to attack a man of wealth
+and power; but a poor artisan or labourer, who buys a piece of meat after
+twelve o'clock on Saturday night, or a glass of spirits during church-time
+on Sunday, is termed a Sabbath-breaker and imprisoned without mercy.
+
+In the Palais Royal the three most remarkable temples of dissipation are
+Very's for gastronomes, Robert's faro bank for gamesters, and the Cafe
+Montausier for those devoted to the fair sex. The Cafe Montausier is fitted
+up in the guise of a theatre where music, singing and theatrical pieces are
+given; you pay nothing for admission, but are expected to call for some
+refreshment. It is splendidly illuminated, and is the Cafe _par
+excellence_, frequented by those ladies who have made the opposite choice
+to that of Hercules, and who, taking into consideration the shortness and
+uncertainty of life, dedicate it entirely to pleasure, reflecting that
+
+ Laggiu nell' Inferno,
+ Nell' obblio sempiterno,
+ In sempiterno orrore,
+ Non si parla d'amore.
+
+Of course, this saloon is crowded with amateurs, and the Prussians and
+English are not the least ardent votaries of the Goddess of Paphos; many a
+vanquished victor sinks oppressed with wine and love on the breast of a
+Dalilah: this last comparison suggests itself to me from the immense
+quantity of hair worn by the Prussians, as if their strength, like that of
+Samson's, depended on their _chevelure_. There is a very pretty graceful
+girl who attends here and at the different restaurants and cafes with an
+assortment of bijouterie and other knick-knacks to sell. She is full of wit
+and repartee; but her answer to all those who attempt to squeeze her hand
+and make love to her is always: "_Achetez quelque chose._" Her name is
+Celine and she has a great flow of conversation on all subjects but that of
+love, which she invariably cuts short by "_Achetez quelque chose._"
+
+
+
+10th August.
+
+I have been to see the Museum of sculpture and painting in the Louvre, but
+what is to be seen there baffles all description:
+
+ Se tante lingue avessi e tante voci
+ Quanti occhi il cielo o quante arene il mare
+ Non basterian a dir le lodi immense.
+
+The _Apollo Belvedere_, the _Venus de Medici_ and the _Laocoon_ first
+claimed my attention, and engaged me for at least an hour and a half before
+I could direct my attention to the other masterpieces. I admire indeed the
+_Laocoon_, still more the _Venus_, but the _Apollo_ certainly bears away
+the palm and I fully participate of all Winkelmann's enthusiasm for that
+celebrated statue. The _Venus_ is a very beautiful woman, but the _Apollo_
+is a god. One is lost, and one's imagination is bewildered when one enters
+into the halls of sculpture of this unparalleled collection, amidst the
+statues of Gods, Demi-Gods, Heroes, Philosophers, Poets, Roman Emperors,
+Statesmen and all the illustrious worthies that adorned the Greek and Roman
+page. What subjects for contemplation! A chill of awe and veneration
+pervaded my whole frame when I first entered into that glorious temple of
+the Arts. I felt as I should were I admitted among supernatural beings, or
+as if I had "shuffled off this mortal coil" and were suddenly ushered into
+the presence of the illustrious tenants of another world; in fact, I felt
+as if Olympus and the whole Court of Immortals were open to my view. No! I
+cannot describe these things, I can only feel them; I throw down the pen
+and call upon expressive silence to muse their praise.
+
+Of the Picture Gallery too what can I say that can possibly give you an
+idea of its variety and extent? Here are the finest works of the Italian,
+Flemish, and French schools, and you are as much embarrassed to single out
+the favourite object, as the Grand Signor would be, among six or seven
+hundred of the most beautiful women in the world, to make his choice. The
+only fault I find in this collection is that there were rather too many
+Scripture pieces, Crucifixions, Martyrdoms and allegorical pictures, and
+too few from historical or mythological subjects. Yet perhaps I am wrong in
+classing the Scripture pieces with Martyrdoms, Crucifixions, Grillings of
+Saints and Madonnas; there are very many beautiful episodes in the
+Scriptures which would furnish admirable subjects for painters. Why then
+have they chosen disgusting subjects such as Judith sawing off Holofernes'
+head, Siserah's head nailed to the bedpost, John the Baptist's on a
+trencher, etc.? But the pictures representing Martyrdoms are too revolting
+to the eye and should not be placed in this Museum.
+
+It is reported that the Allies mean to strip this Museum [of sculpture and
+painting]. No! it cannot be, they never surely can be guilty of such an act
+of Vandalism and contemptible spite. I am aware that there is a great
+clamour amongst a certain description of English for restoring these
+statues and pictures to the countries from whence they came, and that it is
+the fashion to term the translation of them to Paris a revolutionary
+robbery; but let us bring these gentlemen to a calm reasoning on the
+subject.
+
+The statues and paintings in question belonged either to Governments at war
+with France, or to individuals inhabiting those countries; now, with
+respect to individuals, I will venture to affirm, on the best authority,
+that the property of no individual was taken from him without an
+equivalent. Those who had statues and pictures of value and wished to sell
+them, received their full value from the French Government, but there was
+no force used on the occasion; in fact, many who were in want of money were
+rejoiced at the opportunity of selling, as they could never have otherwise
+disposed of those valuable articles to individuals at the same price that
+the French Government gave. I recollect a day or two ago being in
+conversation with a Milanese on this subject and others connected with the
+occupation of Italy by the French. I happened to mention that the conquest
+of Italy by the Republican armies must have been attended with confiscation
+of property; he assured me that no such thing as confiscation of property
+took place; that so far from being the losers by the French invasion and
+the establishment of their system, they had on the contrary been
+considerable gainers, for that the country flourished under their
+domination in a manner before unknown, and that one of the greatest
+advantages attendant on the occupation was the establishment of an equality
+of weight and measures, the decimal division of the coin, the introduction
+of an admirable code of laws free'd from all barbarisms--legal, political
+and theological--and intelligible to all classes, so that there was no
+occasion to cite old authors and go back for three or four hundred years to
+hunt out authorities and precedents for what men of sense could determine
+at once by following the dictates of their own judgment.
+
+With respect to the statues and pictures belonging to the different
+governments of Italy, it must never be forgotten that these governments
+made war against the French Revolution either openly or insidiously, and
+did their utmost to aid the coalition to crush the infant liberties of
+France. Those who did not act openly did so covertly and indirectly; in
+short, from their tergiversations and intrigues, they had no claim whatever
+on the mercy of the conquerors, who treated them with a great deal of
+clemency. The destruction of these governments was loudly called for by the
+people themselves, who looked on the French as their deliverers.
+
+It will be admitted, I believe, that it is and has been the custom on the
+continent, in all wars, for all parties to levy war contributions on the
+conquered or occupied countries; but Buonoparte thought it more glorious
+for the French name to take works of art instead of money; and not a statue
+or picture was taken from the vanquished governments except by a solemn
+treaty of cession, or given in lieu of contributions at the option of the
+owners, and the Princes were very glad to give up their pictures and
+statues, which the most of them did not know how to appreciate, in lieu of
+money which they were all anxious to keep; and on these articles a fair
+value was fixed by competent judges. In this manner did the French become
+the possessors of these valuable objects of art, and in this manner was the
+noble Museum in Paris filled up, and surely nothing could be more generous
+and liberal than the use made of the Museum by the French Government;
+foreigners were indeed more favoured than the inhabitants themselves. To
+the inhabitants of Paris this Museum is open twice a week; but to
+foreigners on producing their passports, it is open every day in the week
+all the year round; artists of all nations are allowed, during a certain
+number of hours each day, to come to copy the statues and pictures which
+suit their taste; and stoves are lighted for their accommodation during
+winter, and all this gratis.--Now, before these objects of art were
+collected here, they were distributed, some in churches, and some in
+Government palaces. To see the first, required a specific introduction to
+the owner; to see the second, application to the attendants of the churches
+became necessary, and for both these you were required to pay fees to the
+servants and church-attendants, who are always impatient to take your fee
+and hurry you through the apartments or chapels, scarcely giving you time
+to examine anything. To be admitted into the Government palaces was a
+matter of favour, and here also fees were required.[32] Here in the Louvre
+there is no introduction required; no court to be paid to _major-domos_, no
+favour; it is open to all classes, high and low, without exception, and no
+money is allowed to be given.
+
+But there are some people, in their ridiculous fury against the French
+Revolution, who would fain persuade us that before that epoch there was a
+golden age on the earth, that there were no acts of violence committed, no
+frauds practised, no property injured, no individuals ill-used; that every
+Prince governed like Numa; that every noble was a Bayard, and every priest
+like a primitive apostle. Why I need go no further than the Seven Years'
+war to show that in that war, during the height of European civilisation,
+and carried on between the most polished nations in Europe, there were much
+more acts of violence and rapine carried on than ever were done by the
+French republicans. I by no means wish to excuse or even palliate the acts
+of ferocity which took place at that epoch of the French Revolution called
+the reign of Terror, which were executed by a people wrought up to frenzy
+by a recollection of their wrongs; and I know too well that many virtuous
+individuals fell victims to their indiscriminating fury; but I do believe
+and aver that much more clamour was made at the execution of a handful of
+corrupt courtiers, intriguing and profligate women of quality and worthless
+priests, than all the rest put together.
+
+To return to the Seven Years' war (I may be permitted to take this
+retrospect, I hope, since it is the fashion, and those who differ with me
+in opinions go much farther back than I do), let the French royalists and
+emigrants recollect the confiscation of property and barbarity exercised by
+Marshall Richelieu in Hanover, where many families were reduced to beggary.
+They may not chuse to recollect this; but the Hanoverians do and they have
+not forgotten the _Pavillon de Hanovre_, so called by the wits of the time
+from its having been built by the Marshall with money arising from the
+spoils of Hanover; will they recollect also the harsh treatment inflicted
+on the burghers and citizens of a town in Germany, who were shut up in a
+room and kept without food or drink for nearly three days because they
+would not consent to fix a heavy and unwarrantable contribution on their
+fellow citizens; when these unhappy but virtuous men were only allowed to
+go out for the necessities of nature attended by sentries, and on the third
+day, when fainting with hunger, a little bread and water was given to them,
+with an assurance that in future they were not to expect such luxuries.
+Have they forgot the devastation committed in Berlin by the Austrians in
+the Seven Years' war, when they pillaged, burned or destroyed all the
+valuable property of the royal Palaces, the most valuable works of art,
+vases, statues of antiquity, the loss of which could never be replaced;
+when they lopped off the heads, arms and legs of the statues? Have they
+forgot the conduct of the belligerent powers at the siege of Dresden at the
+same epoch, when whole families, among whom were helpless old men and women
+with children at the breast, were compelled to leave Dresden in the middle
+of a most rigorous winter and were driven to take refuge in the fields
+where the most of them perished with hunger and cold; and where many
+individuals lost their reason and became insane from the treatment they
+received? Have they forgotten the merciless barbarities inflicted by the
+Russians in the same war on the inhabitants of the Prussian territory?
+their ripping up and burning men, women, and children? and the dreadful
+retaliation inflicted on them at the battle of Zorndorff, when the
+Prussians, exasperated at the idea of those horrors so fresh in their
+memory, on being ordered to bury the Russian dead, threw the wounded men
+also belonging to that nation into the graves dug for the dead, to be thus
+buried alive, and hastily filled them up with earth, as if fearful that
+they might relent, did they give themselves time for reflection? These are
+not exaggerations; they are given by an author celebrated for his
+impartiality and deep research and who was an eye-witness of many of these
+proceedings; I mean Archenholz in his admirable history of the Seven Years'
+war.[33]
+
+Then again in the war of American Independence (and here my countrymen must
+excuse me if I point out the acts of injustice committed by them, when
+acting in obedience to an unprincipled and arbitrary government and in a
+cause hostile to freedom), who does not recollect the private property
+wantonly destroyed and confiscated by the English? their employing the
+Indian tribes, those merciless savages of the forest, to scalp, etc., which
+called forth the indignation of a Chatham? and the grossly unjust pillage
+and confiscation of property which took place at St Eustatius by the
+commanders of a _religious and gracious King_?[34] Again, who does not
+recollect the gentle but deep reproof given by the American General
+Schuyler to the English General Burgoyne, when the latter was made prisoner
+by the Americans under Gates? General Schuyler's valuable house, barns,
+etc., had been burned by the express order of Burgoyne. Nevertheless,
+Schuyler received him with dignified politeness, magnanimously stifled the
+recollection of the injury he had received, and obtained for him a good
+quarter, merely remarking, "General, had my house and farms not been
+burned, I could have offered you a more comfortable abode." How Burgoyne
+must have felt this reproof! yet he was not by nature a harsh man, but he
+had the orders of his government to exercise severities; he was educated in
+Tory principles, and passive obedience is their motto.
+
+Can one forget likewise even, in the late war, Nelson's conduct to
+Caraccioli at Naples, whom he caused to be hanged on board of an English
+ship of war, together with a number of other patriots, in violation of a
+solemn capitulation, by which it had been stipulated that they should be
+considered as prisoners of war and sent to France? Then again the wanton
+destruction of the Capitol and other public buildings at Washington not
+devoted to military purposes, which it is not usual to destroy or deface;
+and the valuable public library too which was burned? What excuse can be
+offered for this? Were the times of Omar returned? It is fair and allowed
+by the laws of war to blow up and destroy arsenals, magazines, containing
+warlike stores and engines of destruction, but to destroy with Gothic
+barbarity buildings of great symmetry and beauty, and a library too--O fie!
+
+Why I will defy any man to point out a single instance where the French
+republican armies or Napoleon ever injured or wantonly destroyed a single
+national edifice, a single work of art, a single book belonging to any
+other country! On the contrary, they invariably extended their protection
+to the Arts and Sciences. Why at Vienna, where there is, I understand, a
+most splendid museum, and many most valuable works of art and antiquity,
+tho' this city fell twice into their possession, they never destroyed or
+took away a single article; but, on the contrary, there, as well as in
+Berlin, they invited the inhabitants to form a civic guard for the
+protection of their property. As to the Vandalism shewn during the reign of
+Terror, and I by no means seek to palliate it, that was of short duration,
+it was madness, if you will, but it was disinterested--and other nations
+who talk a great deal about their superior morality would do well to look
+at home. They would there observe, in their own historic page, that the
+atrocities of the French Revolution have not only been equalled but
+surpassed perhaps by more dreadful scenes committed at Wexford in 1798,
+under the auspices of the Government then ruling Ireland and which the
+noble and virtuous ----[35] disdained to serve.
+
+Excuse this long digression, but I feel it my duty to open the eyes of my
+countrymen and prevent them from supporting on all occasions the unjust
+acts of their Government, which reflect dishonour on a great and
+enlightened nation; which can boast, among its annals, of some of the most
+heroic, splendid, and disinterested characters that ever the world
+produced.
+
+All that I need add on the subject of the statues and pictures is, that
+putting out of the question the justice or injustice of the restitution, it
+will be a great loss to England and to English artists in particular,
+should they be removed: many an artist can afford to make a trip to Paris,
+who would find it beyond his means to make a journey to Florence or Rome.
+
+If these objects of art are to be taken away, it should be stipulated so in
+the treaty of peace; and then everybody would understand it. This would be
+putting it on the fairest footing. You then say to France: "You gained
+these things by conquest; you lose them by defeat"; but for God's sake let
+us have no more of that _cant_ about revolutionary robberies!
+
+
+PARIS, ----
+
+I went for the first time to the Grand Opera, or, as it is here called, the
+Academie Royale de Musique, which is in the Rue de Richelieu. _Armida_ was
+the piece performed, the music by Glueck. The decorations were splendid and
+the dancing beyond all praise. The scenes representing the garden of Armida
+and the nymphs dancing fully expressed in the mimic art those beautiful
+lines of Tasso:
+
+ Cogliam d'amor la rosa! amiamo or, quando
+ Esser si puote riamato amando![36]
+
+The effect of the dissolution of the palace and gardens by the waving of
+Armida's wand is astonishing; it appears completely to be the work of
+inchantment, from the rapidity of execution which follows the _potentissime
+parole_. The French recitative however does not please me. The serious
+opera is an exotic and does not seem to thrive on the soil of France. The
+language does not possess sufficient intonation to give effect to the
+recitative.
+
+On the contrary, the comic operas are excellent; and here the national
+music and singing appear to great advantage. It never degenerates to the
+grotesque or absurd _buffo_ of the Italians, but is always exquisitely
+graceful, simple, touching and natural.
+
+Among the ballets, I have seen perhaps three of the best, viz., _Achille a
+Scyros, Flore et Zephire_ and _La folle par amour_. In the ballet of Flore
+and Zephire, the dancers who did these two parts appeared more aerian than
+earthly. To use a phrase of Burke's, I never beheld so _beautiful a vision.
+Nina_, or _la folle par amour_, is a ballet from private life. The title
+sufficiently explains its purport; it is exquisitely touching and pathetic.
+O what a divine creature is Bigottini! what symmetry of form! what innate
+grace, what a captivating expression of countenance; and then the manner in
+which she did the mad scenes and her return to reason! Oh! I was moved even
+to tears. Never had any performance such an effect upon me. What a
+magnificent _tout ensemble_ is the Grand Opera at Paris! Whenever I feel
+chagrined or melancholy I shall come here; I feel as if I were in a new
+world; the fiction appears reality; my senses are ravished, and I forget
+all my cares.
+
+I have very little pleasure in visiting royal Palaces, unless they have
+been the residence of some transcendent, person like Napoleon or Frederick
+II of Prussia, as the sight of splendid furniture and royal pomp affords me
+no gratification; and I would rather visit Washington's or Lafayette's
+farms in company with these distinguished men than dine with all the
+monarchs of Europe. After a hasty glance at the furniture of the Tuileries,
+what fixed my attention for a considerable time was "La Salle des
+Marechaux," where are the portraits of all the modern French Marshalls.
+They are all full length portraits and are striking resemblances; some are
+in the Marshall's undress uniform and others in the full court costume
+which is very elegant, being the costume of the time of Francis I with the
+Spanish hat and plumes. I did not observe Ney's or Soult's portraits among
+them.
+
+In front of the great square of the Tuileries where the troops exercise,
+stands the Arch of Triumph erected by Napoleon, commonly called _l'Arc du
+Carrousel_. It is a beautiful piece of architecture, but is far too small
+to tally with such a vast mass of buildings as the Palace and offices of
+the Tuileries. By the side of them it appears almost Lilliputian. It would
+have been better to have made it in the style of the triumphal arch of the
+Porte St Denis. On this arc of the Carrousel are _bas-reliefs_ both outside
+and inside, representing various actions of Napoleon's life. He is always
+represented in the Roman costume, with the imperial laurel on his brows,
+with kings kneeling, and presenting the keys of conquered cities. On the
+outside are statues, large as life, in modern military costume,
+representing the different _armes_ which compose the French army.[37] On
+the top of this Arc du Carrousel is an antique car of triumph, to which are
+harnessed the four bronze horses which were taken from the facade of the
+Church of San Marco in Venice. They are of beautiful workmanship and of
+great antiquity. What various and mighty revolutions have these horses
+witnessed! Cast in Corinth in the time of the glories of the Grecian
+commonwealths and removed by conquest to Rome, they witnessed the
+successive fall of the Grecian and Roman states; transferred to
+Constantinople in the time of Constantine, and from thence removed to
+Venice when Constantinople fell into the hands of the French and Venetians;
+transferred from thence to Paris in 1798, they have witnessed the
+successive falls of the Eastern and Western Empires, of the Republic of
+Venice and the Napoleonic dynasty and Empire. Report says they are to be
+restored to Venice; and who knows whether they may not be destined one day
+to return to their original country, Greece, under perhaps Russian
+auspices?
+
+The Gardens of the Tuileries which lie at the back part of the palace are
+very spacious, well laid out in walks and lined with trees. Large basins
+inlaid with stone, fountains and statues add to the grandeur of these
+gardens; they extend from the Tuileries as far as the Place Louis XV
+parallel to the Seine, and are separated by a wall and parapet and a
+beautiful cast iron railing from the Quai, and on the other side from the
+Rue de Rivoli, one of the new streets, and the best in Paris for
+pedestrians. On the side opposite the palace itself is the _Place Louis
+XV_, called in the time of the republic _Place de la Revolution_, and where
+the unfortunate Louis XVI suffered decapitation. The _Place Louis XV_ is by
+far the most magnificent thing of the kind I have ever seen and far exceeds
+the handsomest of our squares in London. On one side of it is the _Hotel du
+Garde Meuble_, a superb edifice. On the other the Quai, the river; and on
+the other side of the river is the _Palais du Corps legislatif_, now the
+place where the Chamber of Deputies hold their sitting, and which has a
+magnificent facade. In front of this place are the Champs Elysees and
+avenue of Neuilly and behind the gardens and palace of the Tuileries.
+
+My next visit was to the _Place Vendome_, where stands the majestic column
+of the Grand Army. To me this column is the most striking thing of its kind
+that I have hitherto seen. It is of bronze and of the most beautiful
+workmanship, cast from the cannon taken from the Austrians in the war of
+1805, and on it are figured in bas-relief the various battles and
+achievements, winding round and round from the base to the capital. It is
+constructed after the model of the Column of Trajan in Rome.
+
+The next place I visited was the Chamber of Deputies. It is a fine building
+with a Doric facade and columns; it is peculiarly striking from its noble
+simplicity. On the facade are bas-reliefs representing actions in
+Napoleon's life. The flight of steps leading to the facade is very grand,
+and there are colossal figures representing Prudence, Justice, Fortitude
+and other legislative virtues. The Chamber itself where the Deputies hold
+their sittings is in the form of a Greek theatre; the arch of the
+semi-circle forms the gallery appropriated to the audience, and comprehends
+in its enclosure the seats of the deputies like the seats in a Greek
+theatre; on the chord of the semi-circle where the _proscenium_ should be,
+is the tribune and President's seat. The whole is exceedingly elegant. The
+Orator whose turn it is to speak leaves his seat, ascends the tribune and
+faces the Deputies. The anti-rooms adjoining this Chamber are fitted up
+with long tables and fauteuils and are appropriated to the sittings of the
+various committees. These antichambers are hung round with pictures
+representing the victories of the French armies; but they are covered with
+green baize and carefully concealed from the public eye in order to stifle
+recollections and prevent comparisons.
+
+
+PARIS, August.
+
+I mounted on horseback and rode out to St Cloud to breakfast, passing
+through the Champs Elysees, the Bois de Boulogne and the little town of
+Passy, and returned by the Quai, as far as the bridge of Jena, which I
+passed and went to visit the _Hotel des Invalides, le Champ de Mars_, the
+_Pantheon_ or Church of St Genevieve and the Palace of the Luxembourg. This
+was pretty good work for one day; and as you will expect some little
+account of my ideas thereon, I shall give you a _precis_ of what most
+interested me.
+
+In the Champs Elysees are quartered several English regiments who are
+encamped there, and this adds to the liveliness of the scene; our soldiers
+seem to enjoy themselves very much. They are in the midst of places of
+recreation of all kinds, such as guinguettes, tennis-courts, dancing salons
+and cafes, and besides these (places of Elysium for English soldiers), wine
+and brandy shops innumerable; our soldiers seem to agree very well with the
+inhabitants. In the Bois de Boulogne are Hanoverian troops as well as
+English. At Passy I stopped at the house occupied by my friend, Major C. of
+the 33rd Regt.,[38] who was to accompany me to St Cloud. St Cloud is an
+exceedingly neat pretty town, well and solidly built, and tolerably large.
+There are a great many good restaurants and cafes, as St Cloud with its
+Palace, promenades and gardens forms one of the most favourite resorts of
+the Parisians on Sundays and _jours de fete_. Diners _de societe_ and
+_noces et festins_ are often made here; and there is both land and water
+conveyance during the whole day. There are two roads by land from Paris:
+the one on the Quai the whole way; the other through the Bois de Boulogne
+and Champs Elysees. The gardens of St Cloud are laid out something in the
+style of a _jardin anglais_, but mixed with the regular old fashioned
+garden; it abounds in lofty trees, beautiful sites and well arranged vistas
+commanding extensive views of Paris and the country environing. St Cloud
+was the favourite residence of Napoleon; and the furniture in the palace
+here shows him to be a man of the most refined taste. All is elegant and
+classic; there is nothing superfluous; the furniture is modern, but in
+strict imitation of the furniture of the ancients and chiefly in bronze.
+There are superb vases and candelabras in marble, magnificent clocks of
+various kinds, marble busts, and busts in bronze of great men, and bronze
+statues large as life holding lamps. The chairs and sofas too are in a
+classic taste, as are the beds and baths. We were informed here that
+Blucher, who passed one night here, tore with his spur the satin covering
+of one of the sofas and that he did it wilfully; but I never can believe
+that the old man would be so silly, and I rather think that this story is
+an invention of the keeper of the Palace, or that if it was done, it was
+done by an accident merely. But the fact is that Blucher has a contempt for
+and hates the Parisians and likes to mortify them on all occasions; he
+threatens to do a number of things which he never seriously intends, merely
+for the sake of teasing them; and it must be owned that they deserve a
+little contempt from the want of _caractere_ they showed on the entrance of
+the Allies. Be it as it may, Blucher is the _bete noire_ of the Parisians
+and they are as much afraid of him as the children are of _Monsieur
+Croque-mitaine_.
+
+We returned from St Cloud by the Quai, crossed the bridge of Jena,
+galloped along the _Champs de Mars_, took a hasty glance at the _Hotel des
+Invalides_, a magnificent edifice and which may be distinguished from all
+other buildings by its gilded cupola. It is a superb establishment in every
+respect, and is furnished with an excellent library. A great many old
+soldiers are to be seen in this library occupied in reading; they are very
+polite to all visitors, particularly to ladies. Nothing can better
+demonstrate the superior character, intelligence and deportment of the
+French soldiers over those of all other countries than the way in which
+they employ their time in literary pursuits, their dignified politeness to
+visitors and the intelligent answers they give to questions. I am afraid
+our British veterans, brave as they are in the field, occupy themselves,
+when laid up as invalids, more in destroying their bodies by spirituous
+liquors than in improving their minds by reading. The Chapel of this
+establishment where were displayed the banners and trophies taken at
+different epochs from the enemies of France, and which were much mutilated
+by the wars since the Revolution, is now stripped of all the ensigns of
+glory. They were all burned by the French themselves previous to the
+capitulation of Paris in 1814, in order to prevent their falling into the
+hands of the enemy. An old soldier who was my guide related this with tears
+in his eyes, but suddenly checking himself said: "_Mais telle est
+l'histoire_."
+
+The only things now in this Chapel that interest the eye of the traveller
+are the monuments of Vauban and Turenne. Of the rest nought remains but the
+brilliant souvenirs.
+
+ Fuit Ilium, et ingens
+ Gloria Teucrorum!...[39]
+
+I had a great deal of difficulty in inducing this old soldier to accept of
+three franks; I told him at last that, as he did not want it himself, to
+take it and give it to somebody that did. I then visited the rest of the
+establishment. There is a whole range of rooms which contains models or
+plans in relief of all the fortresses of France; they are admirably and
+most minutely executed; not only the fortifications and public buildings,
+but the private houses, the gardens, orchards, meadows, mountains, hill and
+dale, bridges, trees, every feature of the ground in fine and of the
+surrounding country are given in miniature. In fact it gives you the same
+idea of the places themselves and of the environing country as if you were
+held up in the air over them to inspect them; or as if you viewed them from
+a balloon at the distance of 800 yards from the earth. The models of
+Strassburg, Lille and three or four others have been taken away by the
+Austrians and Prussians, but I have seen those of Calais, Dunkirk,
+Villefranche, Toulon, and Brest, and in fact almost every other French
+fortress. This is one of the most interesting sights in Paris, and for this
+we are certainly indebted to the occupation; for I question much if
+travellers were ever permitted to see these models until Paris fell into
+the hands of the Allies. Prussian sentries do duty at the doors; how
+grating this must be to the old invalids! Among the models I must not omit
+to mention a very curious one which represents the battle of Lodi. The town
+of Lodi, the bridge and river are admirably executed. The soldiers are
+represented by little figures about a quarter of an inch in height and
+cobwebs are disposed so as to represent the smoke of the firearms,
+Buonaparte and his staff are on horseback on one side of the bridge. There
+is also a very fine model of the _Hotel des Invalides_ itself.
+
+From hence we went to the garden and palace of the Luxembourg. These
+gardens form the midday and afternoon promenade of that part of the city.
+In one wing of the Palace is the Chamber of Peers, elegantly fitted up and
+in some respect resembling a Greek theatre. The busts of Cicero, Brutus,
+Demosthenes, Phocion and other great men of antiquity adorn the niches of
+this chamber and on the grand _escalier_ are the statues in natural size of
+Kleber, Dessaix, Caffarelli and other French generals. Report says that
+these statues will be removed.
+
+In the picture gallery at the Luxembourg is a choice collection of pictures
+of the modern French school such as Guerin, David, etc. The subjects are
+extremely well chosen, being taken from the mythology or from ancient and
+modern history. I was too glad to find no crucifixions, martyrdoms, nor
+eternal Madonnas. I distinguished in particular the _Judgment of Brutus_
+and the _Serment des Horaces et des Curiaces_. Connoisseurs find the
+attitudes too stiff and talk to you of the Italian school; but I prefer
+these; yet I had better hold my tongue on this subject, for I am told I
+know nothing about painting.
+
+Poor Labedoyere[40] is sentenced to be shot by the Court Martial which
+tried him, and the sentence will be carried immediately into execution. His
+fate excites universal sympathy, and I have seen many people shed tears
+when talking on this subject. He certainly ought to be protected by the
+12th Article of the Capitulation. The French are very uneasy; the Allies
+have begun to strip the Louvre and there is no talk of what the terms of
+peace are to be, or what is the determination of the Allies. This is a
+dreadful state of uncertainty for the French people and may lead to a
+general insurrection. The Allies continue pouring troops into France and
+levying contributions. "_Vae victis_" seems their motto. France is now a
+disarmed nation, and no French uniform is to be seen except that of the
+National Guard and the "Garde Royale." France is at the mercy of her
+enemies and prostrate at their feet; a melancholy prospect for European
+liberty!
+
+The Allies have parades and reviews two or three times a week and the
+Sovereigns of Russia, Austria and Prussia constantly attend; Wellington is
+their showman. These crowned Heads like mightily playing at soldiers; I
+should think His Grace must be heartily tired of them. Massacres and
+persecutions of the Protestants have begun to take place in the South of
+France, and the priests are at work again threatening with excommunication
+and hell the purchasers and inheritors of emigrant estates and church
+lands. These priests and emigrants are incorrigible. Frequent quarrels take
+place almost every evening in the Palais Royal between the Prussian
+officers and the French, particularly some of the officers from the army of
+the Loire. I rather suspect these latter are the aggressors. The Prussians
+being gorged with plunder come there to eat, drink and amuse themselves and
+have as little stomach for fighting as the soldier of Lucullus had after
+having enriched himself; but the officers of the army of the Loire are,
+poor fellows, in a very different predicament; they have not even been paid
+what is due to them, and they, having none of those nice felicities (to use
+an expression of Charlotte Smith's)[41] which make life agreeable, are
+ready for any combat, to set their life on any cast, "to mend it, or to be
+rid of 't." The Prussians indulge in every sort of dissipation, which they
+are enabled to do by the plunder which they have accumulated, and of which
+they have formed, I understand, a _depot_ at St Germain. They send these
+articles of plunder to town every day to be sold, and then divide the
+profits, which are sure to be spent in the Palais Royal, and other places
+of revel and debauchery.
+
+They sometimes affect a fastidiousness of stomach which is quite laughable,
+and not at all peculiar to the Germans, who are in general blessed by
+nature with especial good appetites; and they spend so much money that the
+English officers who have not had the advantages of plunder that these
+Prussians have had must appear by the side of them stingy and niggardly.
+
+I was witness one day to a whimsical scene, which will serve to give you an
+idea of the airs of importance these gentlemen give themselves. I was one
+day at Versailles and after having visited the palace and gardens I entered
+the Salon of a restaurateur and called for a veal cutlet and _vin
+ordinaire_. There was a fat Prussian Major with two or three of his
+companions at one of the tables, who had been making copious libations to
+Bacchus in Burgundy and Champaign. He heard me call for _vin ordinaire_,
+and whether it was to show his own magnificence I know not, but he called
+out to the _cafetiere_: "Madame, votre vin ordinaire est il buvable? car
+j'en veux donner a mon trompette, et s'il n'est pas bon, il n'en boira pas.
+Faites venir mon trompette." Now I dare say in his own country this Major
+would not have disdained even the "schwarze Bier" of Brandenburgh.
+
+Scarcely any quarrels, I believe, take place between the English and
+French, nor did I hear of any violent fracas but one. In this instance, the
+English officers concerned must have been sad, brutal, vulgar fellows.
+They, however, after behaving in a most gross insulting manner, were
+compelled by some Frenchmen not to eat but to drink their words, and that
+out of a vessel not usually employed in drinking. I shall not repeat the
+contemptible affair, but it furnished the subject of a caricature.
+
+The English officers in general behave in a handsome and liberal manner,
+and their conduct was spoken of in high terms of encomium by very many of
+the French themselves. I regret however exceedingly that any of the British
+officers should have imbibed the low prejudices and vulgar hatred against
+the French, which certain people preach up in England to cover their own
+peculations and interested views. A young friend of mine, with whom I was
+one day talking on political subjects, said to me: "I cannot help agreeing
+with you in many things, but I am staggered when I think that your ideas
+and reasoning are so contrary to the ideas in which I have been brought up;
+so that I rather avoid entering at all on political questions."
+
+I do not wonder at all at this, for I recollect when I was at school at
+Eton, the system was to drill into the heads of the boys strong
+aristocratic principles and hatred of Democracy and of the French in
+particular; we were ordered to write themes against the French Revolution
+and verses of triumph over their defeats, with now and then a sly theme on
+the great advantage of hereditary nobility; in these verses God Almighty
+was to be represented as closely allied to the British Government and a
+_sleeping partner_ of the Administration. One of the fellows of Eton
+College actually told the late Mr Adam Walker, the celebrated lecturer on
+natural and experimental philosophy, who was accustomed to give lectures
+annually to the Etonians, that his visits were no longer agreeable and
+would be dispensed with in future; as "Philosophy had done a great deal of
+harm and had caused the French Revolution."
+
+With respect to my visit to Versailles, I was much struck with the vast
+size and magnificence of the buildings and with the ingenuity displayed in
+the arrangement of the grounds and the numerous groups of statues,
+grottos, aqueducts, fountains and ruins. Still it pleases me less than St
+Cloud, for I prefer the taste of the present day in gardening and the
+arrangement of ground, to the ponderous and tawdry taste of the time of
+Louis XIV, and I prefer St Cloud to Versailles, just as I should prefer a
+Grecian Nymph in the simple costume of Arcadia to a fine court lady rouged
+and dressed out with hoops, diamonds, and headdress of the tune of Queen
+Anne. Napoleon must have had an exquisite taste.
+
+
+[32] Exceptions to this are, I understand, the Gallery at Florence, and the
+ Museo Vaticano at Rome, which are both open to all and no fees allowed.
+
+[33] Johann Wilhelm Archenholz (1743-1812), author of the _Geschichte des
+ Siebenjaehrigen Krieges_, 1789.--ED.
+
+[34] In February, 1781, before the declaration of war was generally known
+ in the West Indies, Rodney's fleet surrounded the Dutch island of
+ Eustatius, which had become a sort of entrepot for supplying America
+ with British goods; two hundred and fifty ships, together with several
+ millions worth of merchandise, were seized and sold at a military
+ auction. The plunder of Eustatius was bitterly commented upon In the
+ British House of Commons.--Lee Richard Hildreth, _The History of the
+ United States_, vol. III, p. 335.--ED.
+
+[35] The name is in blank. Major Frye may have meant Beauchamp Bagenal
+ Harvey (1762-1798), the squire of Wexford who deserted to the Irish
+ rebels.--ED.
+
+[36] Tasso, _Jerusalemme liberata_, canto XVI, ottava 15.--ED.
+
+[37] For instance, a Cuirassier, a Dragoon, a Grenadier, a Tirailleur, an
+ Artilleryman.
+
+[38] Major G. Colclough, senior major of the 33rd Regt.--ED.
+
+[39] Virgil, _Aen_., II. 325.--ED.
+
+[40] La Bedoyere (Charles Huchet, Comte de) distinguished himself in
+ several of the Napoleonic wars, in particular at Ratisbonne and
+ Borodino. Being a colonel at Grenoble, in March, 1815, he deserted to
+ Napoleon's cause and was nominated by him general and _pair de
+ France_. In July, 1815, he was arrested in Paris, tried for high
+ treason and shot, August 19, in spite of Benj. Constant's efforts to
+ save him.--ED.
+
+[41] Charlotte Smith (1749-1806), author of _Emmeline, or the Orphan of the
+ Castle_ (1788), _Celestina_ (1792), _The Old Manor House_ (1793),
+ etc.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+From Paris to Bruxelles--Visiting the plains of Waterloo--The Duke de Berri
+at Lille--Beauvais--Return to Paris--Remarks on the French theatre--
+Talma--Mlle Duchesnois--Mlle Georges-French alexandrine verse--The Abbe
+Delille--The Opera Comique.
+
+I met with my brother-in-law and his nephew at Paris, and hearing from them
+that they had an intention of returning to England by the way of Bruxelles,
+with the idea of visiting the plains of Waterloo, I was induced to
+accompany them. We started on the 18th August, taking the exact route from
+Paris that was taken by Napoleon. Passed the first night at St Quentin; the
+second at a small village on the line between Mons and Charleroy in the
+Belgian territory. The next morning, after breakfasting at Nivelles, we
+proceeded to Quatre Bras and Mont St Jean. At the little cabaret called _a
+la belle Alliance_ we met a host of Englishmen who had been to behold the
+field of battle; Lacoste, the peasant who was Napoleon's guide on the day
+of battle, was about to conduct them across the fields to Hougoumont. We
+followed them. The devastation of the place, every tree being pierced with
+bullets, and the whole premises being nearly burned to the ground, seemed
+to astonish their _weak minds_; one of them was not contented till he had
+measured the length and breadth of the garden and orchards.
+
+Cuirasses, helmets, swords and various other spoils of war found on the
+spot, were offered for sale by some boys and eagerly bought up as relics.
+My brother-in-law made a purchase of a helmet, sword and cuirass, intending
+to hang it up in his hall. For my part I have seen, and can see no reason
+whatever to rejoice at this event. I fear it is pregnant with infinite
+mischief.
+
+We arrived at Bruxelles on the afternoon of the 20th August and after
+visiting thePark, _Alee verte_ and Palace of Laeken, we proceeded the next
+morning on our journey to Lille.
+
+The Duke of Berri was at Lille and a grand _fete_ was given in the evening
+to celebrate the second restoration of the Bourbons. Fireworks were let
+off, the city was brilliantly illuminated and boys (hired of course) went
+about the streets singing the following refrain
+
+ A bas, a bas Napoleon!
+ Vivent, vivent les Bourbons!
+
+A number of beautiful women elegantly attired paraded up and down the
+public promenades, which are exceedingly well and tastefully laid out. This
+city is built with great regularity, and the streets are broad, neat, and
+clean. It is by far the handsomest city I have ever seen either in France
+or Belgium. The _Hotel de Ville_ and the theatre both are on the _Grande
+Place_ and are well worth seeing. Lille is renowned for its fortifications;
+I much wished to visit the citadel but I was not permitted. At dinner at
+the table d'hote at the _Hotel du Commerce_, I remarked a French officer
+declaiming violently against Napoleon; but I heard afterwards that he was
+the son of an Emigrant; the rest of the company did not seem to approve his
+discourse and shewed visible impatience at it.
+
+Lille may be easily recognised at its approach from the immense quantity of
+wind-mills that are in the vicinity of this city, some of which are used
+for grinding of wheat and others for the expression of oil. A great deal of
+flax from whence the oil is made, grows in the country.
+
+I left Lille on the morning of the 24th inst., with the courier for Amiens.
+From Amiens I took the diligence to Beauvais and on arrival there I put up
+under the hospitable roof of my friend Major G., of the 18th Light
+Dragoons, lately made Lt.-Colonel for his gallantry at Waterloo.[42] I did
+not want for amusement here, for the next day a _fete champetre_ was given
+just outside the walls of the town, and I admired the grace and tournure of
+the female peasantry and their good dancing. How much more creditable are
+these innocent and agreeable _fetes_ to the fairs and meetings in England,
+which are generally signalized in drunkenness! The next afternoon presented
+a novel sight to the inhabitants of Beauvais, it being a grand cricket
+match played between the officers of the 10th and 18th Dragoons. It was won
+by the latter, mainly owing to the superior play of Colonel G. of the 18th,
+who never touched a bat since he was at Burney's school. The Officers
+afterwards dined _al fresco_ and many toasts accompanied by the huzzas were
+given, to the astonishment of the bystanders, who seemed to consider us as
+little better than barbarians. One of the officers wishing to pay a
+compliment to the inhabitants of Beauvais proposed the health of Louis
+XVIII, but they seemed to take it coldly and not at all to be flattered by
+the compliment.
+
+After five days very agreeable residence at Beauvais, I put myself in the
+diligence to return to Paris. During the journey an ardent political
+altercation arose between a young lady, who appeared to be a warm partisan
+of Napoleon, on the one side, and a Garde du Corps on the other. The lady
+was seconded by a young gentleman, of whom it was difficult to say, whether
+he sustained her argument from a dislike to the present order of things, or
+from a wish to ingratiate himself in her favour. The argument of the Garde
+du Corps was espoused, but soberly, by one of the passengers who was a
+mathematical professor at one of the Lyceums; he was not by any means an
+Ultra, but he supported the Bourbons, with moderate, gentlemanly and I
+therefore believe sincere attachment. This professor seemed a well informed
+sort of man; he told me that he was acquainted with Sir James M., formerly
+recorder at Bombay. On our arrival at the _Bureau des Messageries_, the
+whole company forgot their disputes and parted good friends; and the young
+man who was partisan of the young lady in the political dispute took care
+to
+inform himself of her abode in Paris.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Remarks on the various dramatic performances which I witnessed at Paris,
+with opinions on the French theatre in general.
+
+In my ideas of dramatic works I am neither rigidly classic nor romantic,
+and I think both styles may be good if properly managed and the interest
+well kept up; in a word I am pleased with all genres _hors le genre
+ennuyux_,[43] and tho' a great admirer of Shakespeare and Schiller, I am
+equally so of Voltaire, Racine and Corneille; I take equal delight in the
+pathos of the sentimental dramas of Kotzebue as in the admirable satire and
+_vis comica_ of the unrivalled Moliere, so that on my arrival at Paris I
+was not violently prejudiced either for or against the French stage, but
+rather pre-occupied, to use a gentler term, in its favour; and I have not
+been at all disappointed, for I think I can pronounce it with safety the
+first, perhaps the only stage in Europe.
+
+I now mean to speak not of Operas, nor of Operas-comiques, nor of
+melodrames, nor of vaudevilles; all these have their respective merits; but
+when I speak of the French stage, I confine myself to the regular theatre
+of tragedy and comedy, of their classical pieces; in a word, to the
+dramatic performances usually given at the _Theatre Francais_.
+
+The first piece I saw performed was _Manlius_;[44] but I was too far off
+from the stage to judge of the acting, and could do little more than catch
+the sounds. The parterre and the whole house was full. I was in the fourth
+tier of boxes, yet I could distinguish at intervals the finest and most
+prominent traits, of Talma's acting, particularly in that scene where he
+upbraids his friend with having betrayed him. This he gave with uncommon
+energy and effect. The plot of this piece is very similar to that of
+_Venice preserved_.[45]
+
+The next piece I saw represented was the _Avare_ of Moliere, which to me
+was one of the greatest dramatic treats I had ever witnessed. Every part
+was well supported. The next was _Athalie_ of Racine. Here too I was highly
+gratified. Mlle Georges performed the part of Athalie and gave me the
+perfect ideal of the haughty Queen. Her narration of the dream was given
+with the happiest effect, and in her attempt to conceal her uneasiness and
+her affected contempt of the dream in these lines:
+
+ Un songe, me devrois--je inquieter d'un songe?
+
+she seemed in reality to labour under all the anxiety and fatigue arising
+from it. That fine scene between Joad and Joas was well given, and the
+little girl who did the part of Joas performed with a good deal of spirit.
+The actor who played Joad recited in a most impressive manner the advice to
+the young prince terminating in these lines:
+
+ Vous souvenant, mon fils, que cache sous ce lin,
+ Comme eux vous futes pauvre et comme eux orphelin.
+
+The interrogating scene between Athalie and Joad was given spiritedly, but
+the rather abrupt and uncourtierlike reply to the Queen's remark, "Ils sont
+deux puissans dieux"--"Lui seul est dieu, Madame, et le votre n'est rien"--
+excited a laugh and I fancy never fails to do so, every time the piece is
+performed.
+
+Racine has several passages in his tragedies which perhaps have rather too
+much _naivete_ for the dignity of the cothurnus; for instance in the answer
+of Agamemnon to Achille in the tragedy of _Iphigenie_:
+
+ Puisque vous le savez, pourquoi le demander?
+
+A poet of to-day would be quizzed for a line like the above, but who dare
+venture to point out any defect in an author of whom Voltaire has said and
+with justice too, that the only criticism to be made of him (Racine) would
+be to write under every page: "Admirable, harmonieux, sublime!"
+
+The costume and the decorations at the _Theatre francais_ are so strictly
+classical and appropriate in every respect, that it is to me a source of
+high delight to witness the representation of the favourite pieces of
+Racine, Corneille, Moliere and Voltaire, which I have so often read with so
+much pleasure in the closet and no small quantity of which I have by heart.
+
+The next piece I saw was the _Cinnna_ of Corneille; and here it was that I
+beheld Talma for the second time. I was of course highly pleased, tho' I
+was rather far off to hear very distinctly; this was, however, no very
+great loss, as I was perfectly well acquainted with the tragedy. Talma's
+gestures, his pause's, his natural mode of acting gave a great relief to
+the long declamation with which this tragedy abounds. When this tragedy was
+given it was during the time that poor Labedoyere's trial was going on, and
+the allusions to Augustus' clemency were eagerly seized and applauded. It
+was hoped that Louis XVIII would imitate Augustus. Vain hope!
+
+I have seen _Phedre_; the part of Phedre by that admirable actress Mlle
+Duchesnois, who performs the part so naturally and with so much passion
+that we entirely forget the extreme plainness of the person. She acts with
+far more feeling and pathos than Mlle Georges. I shall never be able to
+forget Mlle Duchesnois in _Phedre_. She gave me a full idea of the
+impassioned Queen, nor were it possible to depict with greater fidelity the
+"Venus toute entiere a sa proie attachee," as in that beautiful speech of
+Phedre to Oenone wherein she reveals her passion for Hippolyte and
+pourtrays the terrible struggle between duty and female delicacy on the one
+hand, and on the other a flame that could not be overcome, convinced as it
+were of the complete inutility of further efforts of resistance and
+invoking death as her only refuge. I was moved even to tears. I am so great
+an admirer of the whole of this speech beginning "Mon mal vient de plus
+lorn" etc., and ending "Un reste de chaleur tout pret a s'exhaler," that I
+think in it Racine has not only united the excellencies of Euripides,
+Sappho and Theocritus in describing the passion of love, but has far
+surpassed them all; that speech is certainly the masterpiece of French
+versification and scarcely inferior to it is that beautiful and ingenuous
+confession of love by Hippolyte to Aricie. What an admirable _pendant_ to
+the love of Phedre! In Hippolyte you behold the innocence, simplicity and
+ingenuousness of a first and pure attachment: in Phedre the _embrasement_,
+the ungovernable delirium of a criminal passion.
+
+I have seen Mlle Duchesnois again in the _Merope_ of Voltaire and admire
+her more and more. This is an admirable play. The dialogue is so spirited;
+the agitation of maternal tenderness, and the occasional bursts of feelings
+impossible to be restrained, render this play one of the most interesting
+perhaps on the French stage, and Mlle Duchesnois gave with the happiest
+effect her part in those two scenes; the first wherein she supposes Egisthe
+to be the person who has killed her son; in the other where having
+discovered the reality of his person, she is obliged to dissemble the
+discovery, but on Egisthe being about to be sacrificed she exclaims
+"Barbare, c'est mon fils!" The part of Egisthe was given by a young actor
+who made his appearance at this theatre for the first tune, and he executed
+his part with complete success (Firmin, I think, was his name). Lafond did
+the part of Polyphonte and did it well. At this tragedy many allusions were
+caught hold of by the audience according as they were Bourbonically or
+Napoleonically inclined; at that part of Polyphonte's speech wherein he
+says:
+
+ Le premier qui fut Roi fut un soldat heureux.
+ Qui sert bien son pays n'a pas besoin d'ayeux.
+
+Thunders of applause proceeded from those who applied it to Napoleon. At
+the line:
+
+ Est il d'autre parti que celui de nos rois?
+
+a loud shout and clapping proceeded from the Royalists; but I fancy if
+hands had been shown these last would have been in a sad minority. I have
+often amused myself with comparing the _Merope_ of Voltaire with that of
+Maffei and am puzzled to which to give the preference. Maffei has made
+Polyphonte a more odious and perhaps on that account a more theatrical
+character, while Voltaire's Polyphonte is more in real life. In the play of
+Voltaire he is a rough brutal soldier, void of delicacy of feeling and not
+very scrupulous, but not that praeternatural deep designing villain that he
+is represented in the piece of Maffei. In fact Maffei's Polyphonte appears
+too _outre_; but then on the stage may not a little exaggeration be
+allowed, just as statues which are destined to be placed in the open air or
+on columns appear with greater effect when larger than the natural size?
+Alfleri seems to have given the preference to the Merope of Voltaire.
+
+I have seen Talma a second time in the part of Nero in the Britannicus of
+Racine; Mlle Georges played the part of Agrippina. Talma was Nero from head
+to foot; his very entry on the stage gave an idea of the fiery and
+impatient character of the tyrant, and in the scene between him and his
+mother Agrippina nothing could be better delineated. The forced calm of
+Agrippina, while reproaching her son with his ingratitude, and the
+impatience of Nero to get rid of such an importunate monitress, were given
+in a style impossible to be surpassed. Talma's dumb show during this scene
+was a masterpiece of the mimic art. If Talma gives such effects to his
+roles in a French drama, where he is shackled by rules, how much greater
+would he give on the English or German stages in a tragedy of Shakespeare
+or Schiller!
+
+Blank verse is certainly better adapted to tragedy than rhymed
+alexandrines, but then the French language does not admit of blank verse,
+and to write tragedies in prose, unless they be tragedies in modern life,
+would deprive them of all charm; but after all I find the harmonious pomp
+and to use a phrase of Pope's "The long majestic march and energy divine"
+of the French alexandrine, very pleasing to the ear. I am sure that the
+French poets deserve a great deal of credit for producing such masterpieces
+of versification from a language, which, however elegant, is the least
+poetical in Europe; which allows little or no inversion, scarce any poetic
+license, no _enjambement_, compels a fixed caesura; has in horror the
+hiatus; and in fine is subject to the most rigorous rules, which can on no
+account be infringed; which rejects hyperbole; which is measured by
+syllables, the pronunciation of which is not felt in prose; compels the
+alternative termination of a masculine or feminine rhyme; and with all this
+requires more perhaps than any other language that cacophony be sedulously
+avoided. Such are the difficulties a French poet has to struggle with; he
+must unite the most harmonious sound with the finest thought. In Italian
+very often the natural harmony of the language and the music of the sound
+conceal the poverty of the thought; besides Italian poetry has innumerable
+licenses which make it easy to figure in the Tuscan Parnassus, and where
+anyone who can string together _rime_ or _versi sciolti_ is dignified with
+the appellation of a poet; whereas from French poetry, a mediocrity is and
+must be of necessity banished. Neither is it sufficient for an author to
+have sublime ideas; these must be filed and pruned. Inspiration can make a
+poet of a German, an Italian or an Englishman, because he may revel in
+unbounded license of metre and language, but in French poetry inspiration
+is by no means sufficient; severe study and constant practise are as
+indispensable as poetic verve to constitute a French poet. The French poets
+are sensible of this and on this account they prefer imitating the
+ancients, polishing their rough marble and fitting it to the national
+taste, to striking out a new path.
+
+The Abbe Delille, the best poet of our day that France has produced, has
+gone further; he had read and admired the best English poets such as
+Milton, Pope, Collins and Goldsmith, and has not disdained to imitate them;
+yet he has imitated them with such elegance and judgment that he has left
+nothing to regret on the part of those of his countrymen who are not
+acquainted with English, and he has rendered their beauties with such a
+force that a foreigner Versed in both languages who did not previously know
+which was the original, and which the translation, might take up passages
+in Pope, Thomson, Collins and Goldsmith and read parallel passages in
+Delille and be extremely puzzled to distinguish the original: for none of
+the beauties are lost in these imitations. And yet, in preferring to
+imitate, it must not be inferred that he was deficient in original
+thoughts.
+
+To return to the theatre, I have seen Mlle Mars in the _role_ of Henriette
+in the _Femmes Savantes_ of Moliere. Oh! how admirable she is! She realizes
+completely the conception of a graceful and elegant Frenchwoman of the
+first society. She does not act; she is at home as it were in her own
+salon, smiling at the silly pretensions of her sister and at the ridiculous
+pedantry of Trissotin; her refusing the kiss because she does not
+understand Greek was given with the greatest _naivete_. In a word Mlle Mars
+reigns unrivalled as the first comic actress in Europe.
+
+I have seen too, _Les Plaideurs_ of Racine and _Les fourberies de Scapin_
+of Moliere, both exceedingly well given; particularly the scene in the
+latter wherein it is announced to Geronte that his son had fallen into the
+hands of a Turkish corsair, and his answer "Que diable allait-il faire dans
+la galere?"
+
+I have seen also _Andromaque_, _Iphigenie_ and _Zaire_. Mlle Volnais did
+the part of Andromaque; but the monotonous plaintiveness of her voice,
+which never changes, wearies me. In _Iphigenie_ I was more gratified; for
+Mlle Georges did the part of Clytemnestre, and her sister, a young girl of
+seventeen, made her debut in the part of Iphigenie with great effect. The
+two sisters supported each other wonderfully well, and Lafond did Agamemnon
+very respectably.
+
+Mlle Georges the younger, having succeeded in _Iphigenie_, appeared in the
+part of Zaire, a bold attempt, and tho' she did it well and with much
+grace, yet it was evidently too arduous a task for her. The whole onus of
+this affecting piece rests on the _role_ of Zaire. In the part where
+_naivete_ was required she succeeded perfectly and her burst: "Mais
+Orosmane m'aime et j'ai tout oublie" was most happy; but she was too faint
+and betrayed too little emotion in portraying the struggle between her love
+for Orosmane and the unsubdued symptoms of attachment to her father and
+brother and to the religion of her ancestors. In short, where much passion
+and pathos was required, there she proved unequal to the task; but she has
+evidently all the qualities and dispositions towards becoming a good
+actress, and with more study and practise I have no doubt that three or
+four years hence, she will be fully equal to the difficult task of giving
+effect to and portraying to life, the exquisitely touching and highly
+interesting _role_ of Zaire. She was not called for to appear on the stage
+after the termination of the performance, tho' frequently applauded during
+it. The actor who did the part of Orosmane, in that scene wherein he
+discovers he has killed Zaire unjustly, gave a groan which had an unhappy
+effect; it was such an awkward one, that it made all the audience laugh; no
+people catch ridicule so soon as the French.
+
+What I principally admire on the French stage is that the actors are always
+perfect in their parts and all the characters are well sustained; the
+performance never flags for a moment; and I have experienced infinitely
+more pleasure in beholding the dramas of Racine and Voltaire than those of
+Shakespeare, and for this reason that, on our stage, for one good actor you
+have the many who are exceedingly bad and who do not comprehend their
+author: you feel consequently a _hiatus valde deflendus_ when the principal
+actor or actress are not on the stage. I have been delighted to see Kemble,
+and Mrs Siddons and Miss O'Neil, and while they were on the stage I was all
+eyes and ears; but the other actors were always so inferior that the
+contrast was too obvious and it only served to make more conspicuous the
+flagging of interest that pervades the tragedies of Shakespeare, _Macbeth_
+alone perhaps excepted. I speak only of Shakespeare's faults as a
+dramaturgus and they are rather the faults of his age than his own; for in
+everything else I think him the greatest litterary genius that the world
+ever produced, and I place him far above any poet, ancient or modern; yet
+in allowing all this, I do not at all wonder that his dramatic pieces do
+not in general please foreigners and that they are disgusted with the low
+buffoonery, interruption of interest and want of arrangement that ought of
+necessity to constitute a drama; for I feel the same objections myself when
+reading Shakespeare, and often lose patience; but then when I come to some
+sublime passage, I become wrapt up in it alone and totally forget the piece
+itself. In order to inspire a foreigner with admiration for Shakespeare, I
+would not give him his plays to read entire, but I would present him with a
+_recueil_ of the most beautiful passages of that great poet; and I am sure
+he would be so delighted with them that he would readily join in the "All
+Hail" that the British nation awards him. Thus you may perceive the
+distinction I make between the creative genius who designs, and the artist
+who fills up the canvas; between the Poet and the Dramaturgus. I am
+probably singular in my taste as an Englishman, when I tell you that I
+prefer Shakespeare for the closet and Racine or Voltaire or Corneille for
+the stage: and with regard to English tragedies, I prefer as an acting
+drama Home's _Douglas_[46] to any of Shakespeare's, _Macbeth_ alone
+excepted; and for this plain reason that the interest in _Douglas_ never
+flags, nor is diverted.
+
+In giving my mite of admiration to the French stage, I am fully aware of
+its faults, of the long declamation and the _fade galanterie_ that
+prevailed before Voltaire made the grand reform in that particular: and on
+this account I prefer Voltaire as a tragedian to Racine and Corneille. The
+_Phedre_ and _Athalie_ of Racine are certainly masterpieces, and little
+inferior to them are _Iphigenie, Andromaque_ and _Britannicus_, but in the
+others I think he must be pronounced inferior to Voltaire; as a proof of my
+argument I need only cite _Zaire, Alzire, Mahomet, Semiramis, l'Orphelin de
+la Chine, Brutus_. Voltaire has, I think, united in his dramatic writings
+the beauties of Corneille, Racine and Crebillon and has avoided their
+faults; this however is not, I believe, the opinion of the French in
+general, but I follow my own judgment in affairs of taste, and if anything
+pleases me I wait not to ascertain whether the "master hath said so."
+
+It shows a delicate attention on the part of the directors of the _Theatre
+Francais_, now that so many foreigners of all nations are here, to cause to
+be represented every night the masterpieces of the French classical
+dramatic authors, since these are pieces that every foreigner of education
+has read and admired; and he would much rather go to see acted a play with
+which he was thoroughly acquainted than a new piece of one which he has not
+read; for as the recitation is extremely rapid it would not be so easy for
+him to seize and follow it without previous reading.
+
+Of Moliere I had already seen the _Avare_, the _Femmes savantes_ and the
+_Fourberies de Scapin_. Since these I have seen the _Tartuffe_ and _George
+Dandin_ both inimitably performed; how I enjoyed the scene of the _Pauvre
+homme!_ in the _Tartuffe_ and the lecture given to George Dandin by M. and
+Mme de Sotenville wherein they recount the virtues and merits of their
+respective ancestors. Of Moliere indeed there is but one opinion throughout
+Europe; in the comic line he bears away the palm unrivalled and here I
+fully agree with the "general."
+
+I must not quit the subject of French theatricals without speaking of the
+_Opera comique_ at the _Theatre Faydeau_. It is to the sort of light pieces
+that are given here, that the French music is peculiarly appropriate, and
+it is here that you seize and feel the beauty and melody of the national
+music; these little _chansons_, _romances_ and _ariettas_ are so pleasing
+to the ear that they imprint themselves durably on the memory, which is no
+equivocal proof of their merit. I cannot say as much for the tragic singing
+in the _Opera seria_ at the Grand French Opera, which to my ear sounds a
+perfect psalmody. There is but one language in the world for tragic
+recitative and that is Italian. On the other hand, in the _genre_ of the
+_Opera comique_, the French stage is far superior to the Italian. In the
+French comedy everything is graceful and natural; the Italians cannot catch
+this happy medium, so that their comedies and comic operas are mostly
+_outre_, and degenerate into downright farce and buffoonery.
+
+
+[42] Major James Grant, of the 18th Light Dragoons, was made a Brevet
+ Lieutenant Colonel on 18th June, 1815.--ED.
+
+[43] A phrase in prose, often quoted as a verse, from Voltaire's preface to
+ the _Enfant Prodigue: Tous les genres sont bons, hors le genre
+ ennuyeux_.--ED.
+
+[44] A tragedy often acted by Talma, the work of Antoine d'Aubigny de
+ Lafosse (1653-1708).--ED.
+
+[45] Thomas Otway's once celebrated tragedy, 1682.--ED.
+
+[46] _The Tragedy of Douglas_, by John Home (1722-1808).--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+From Paris to Milan through Dijon, Chalon-sur-Saone, Lyons, Geneva and the
+Simplon--Auxerre--Dijon--Napoleon at Chalon-sur-Saone--The army of the
+Loire--Macon--French _grisettes_--Lyons--Monuments and theatricals--
+Geneva--Character and opinions of the Genevois--Voltaire's chateau at
+Ferney--The chevalier Zadera--From Geneva to Milan--Crossing the
+Simplon--Arona--The theatres in Milan--Rossini--Monuments in Milan--Art
+encouraged by the French--Mr Eustace's bigotry--Return to Switzerland--
+Clarens and Vevey--Lausanne--Society in Lausanne--Return to Paris--The
+Louvre stripped--Death of Marshal Ney.
+
+I left Paris on the 17th Sept., in the diligence of Auxerre, The company
+was as follows: a young Genevois who had served in the National Guard at
+Paris, and had been wounded in a skirmish against the Prussians near that
+city; a young Irish Templar; a fat citizen of Dijon and an equally fat
+woman going to Dole. We arrived the following day at 11 o'clock at Auxerre,
+a town situated on the banks of the Seine. Water conveyance may be had from
+Paris to Auxerre, price 12 francs the person: the price in the diligence is
+28 francs. We had during our journey much political conversation; the
+Bourbons and the English government were the objects of attack, and neither
+my friend the barrister nor myself felt the least inclined to take up their
+cause. The Genevois had with him Fouche's expose of the state of the
+nation, wherein he complains bitterly of the conduct of the Allies. All
+France is now disarmed and no troops are to be seen but those in foreign
+uniform. The face of the country between Paris and Auxerre is not
+peculiarly striking; but the soil appears fertile and the road excellent.
+After breakfast we started from Auxerre and stopped to sup and sleep the
+same night at Avallon. At Semur, which we passed on the following day,
+there is a one arched bridge of great boldness across the river Armancon.
+We arrived in the evening at Dijon. The country between Auxerre and Dijon
+is very undulating in gentle hill and dale, but for the want of trees and
+inclosures it has a bleak appearance. As you leave Avallon and approach
+Dijon, the hills covered with vines indicate your arrival in a wine
+country. I put up at the _Chapeau rouge_ at Dijon and remained there one
+day, in order to visit the _Chartreuse_ which is at a short distance from
+the town and commands an extensive view. It was devastated during the
+Revolution. The view from it is fine and extensive and that is all that is
+worth notice. The country about it is rich and cultivated, and the
+following lines of Ariosto might serve for its description:
+
+ Culte pianure e delicati colli,
+ Chiare acque, ombrose ripe e prati molli.[47]
+
+ 'Mid cultivated plain, delicious hill,
+ Moist meadow, shady bank, and crystal rill.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+The city of Dijon is large, handsome and well built. It has an appearance
+of industry, comfort and airiness. There are several mustard manufactories
+in this town. A dinner was given yesterday by the municipality to the
+National Guard, and an immense quantity of mustard was devoured on the
+occasion in honor of the staple manufactory of Dijon. From Dijon I put
+myself in the diligence to go to Chalon and after stopping two hours at
+Beaune, arrived at Chalon at 5 o'clock p.m. The country between Dijon and
+Chalon is flat, but cultivated like a garden. It is likewise the wine
+country _par excellence_. I do not know a wine more agreeable to palate
+than the wine of Beaune.
+
+At Chalon I put up at the _Hotel du Parc_. Chalon is beautifully situated
+on the banks of the Saone. The Quai is well constructed and forms an
+agreeable promenade. There is an Austrian garrison in Chalon. The hostess
+of the inn told me that Napoleon stopped at her house on his way from Lyons
+to Paris, when he returned from Elba, and she related to me with great
+eagerness many anecdotes of that extraordinary man: she said that such was
+the _empressement_ on the part of the inhabitants to see him, and embrace
+him by way of testifying their affection, that the Emperor was obliged to
+say: "Mais vous m'etouffez, mes enfans!" In fact, had the army remained
+neutral, the peasantry alone would have carried the Emperor on their
+shoulders to Paris. It is quite absurd to say that a faction did this and
+that it was effectuated merely by the disaffection of the Army. The Army
+did its duty in the noblest manner, for it is the duty of every army to
+support the national cause and the voice of the people, and by no means to
+become the blind tools of the Prince; for it is absurd, as it is degrading
+to humanity, it is impious to consider the Prince as the proprietor of the
+country and the master of the people; he is, or ought to be, the principal
+magistrate, the principal soldier paid by the people, like any other
+magistrate or soldier, and like them liable to be cashiered for misconduct
+or breach of faith. This is not a very fashionable doctrine nowadays, and
+there is danger of it being forgotten altogether in the rage for what is
+falsely termed legitimacy; it becomes therefore the bounden duty of every
+friend of freedom to din this unfashionable doctrine into the ears of
+Princes and unceasingly to exclaim to them and to their ministers:
+
+ Discite justitiam moniti et non temnere gentes.[48]
+
+In their conduct on this occasion the French soldiers proved themselves far
+more constitutional than those of any other army in Europe; let despots,
+priests and weak-headed Tories say what they please to the contrary.
+
+I embarked the following morning at 12 o'clock in the _coche d'eau_ for
+Lyons. There was a very numerous and motley company on board: there were
+three bourgeois belonging to Lyons returning thither from Paris; a quiet
+good-humoured sort of woman not remarkable either for her beauty nor
+vivacity; a young Spaniard, an adherent of King Joseph Napoleon, very
+taciturn and wrapped up in his cloak tho' the weather was exceeding hot; he
+seemed to do nothing else but smoke _cigarros_ and drink wine, of which he
+emptied three or four bottles in a very short time--a young Piedmontese
+officer, disbanded from the army of the Loire, who no sooner sat down on
+deck than he began to chaunt Filicaja's beautiful sonnet, "_Italia, Italia,
+O tu cui feo la sorte_," etc.--a merchant of Lyons who had been some time
+in England, and spoke English well--a Lyonnese Major of Infantry, also of
+the army of the Loire, who had served in Egypt in the 32nd Demi-brigade;
+three Austrian officers of Artillery with their servants. A large barge
+which followed and was towed by the _coche d'eau_ was filled with Austrian
+soldiers, and on the banks of the river were a number of soldiers of the
+Army of the Loire returning to their families and homes.
+
+The peaceable demeanour and honourable conduct of this army is worthy of
+admiration, and can never be sufficiently praised: not a single act of
+brigandage has taken place. The Austrian officers expressed to me their
+astonishment at this, and said they doubted whether any other army in
+Europe, disbanded and under the same circumstances, would behave so well. I
+told them the French soldier was a free-man and a citizen and drawn from a
+respectable class of people, which was not the case in most other
+countries. Yes, these gallant fellows who had been calumniated by furious
+Ultras, by the base ministerial prints of England, and the venal satellites
+of Toryism, who had been represented as brigands or as infuriated Jacobins
+with red caps and poignards, these men, in spite, of the contumely and
+insult they met with from servile prefects, and from those who never dared
+to face them in the field, are a model of good conduct and they preserve
+the utmost subordination, tho' disbanded: they respect scrupulously the
+property of the inhabitants and pay for everything. Mr. L., the young Irish
+barrister, told me at Dijon that he left his purse by mistake in a shop
+there in which were 20 napoleons in gold, when a soldier of the army of the
+Loire, who happened to be in the shop, perceived it and came running after
+him with it, but refused to accept of anything, tho' much pressed by Mr.
+L., who wished to reward him handsomely for his disinterested conduct. Yes,
+the French soldier is a fine fellow. I have served against them in Holland
+and in Egypt and I will never flinch from rendering justice to their
+exemplary conduct and lofty valour. No! it is not the French soldiery who
+can be accused of plundering and exaction, but what brought the French name
+in disrepute was the conduct of certain _prefects_ and _administrators_ in
+Germany who were promoted to these posts for no other reason than because
+they were of the old _noblesse_ or returned _Emigrants_, whom Napoleon
+favoured in preference to the Republicans whom he feared. These emigrants
+repaid his favours with the basest ingratitude; after being guilty of the
+grossest and most infamous _concussions_ on the inhabitants of those parts
+of Germany where their jurisdiction extended, they had the hypocrisy after
+the restoration to declaim against the oppression of the _Usurper's_
+government and its system: but Napoleon richly deserved to meet with this
+ingratitude for employing such unprincipled fellows. I believe he was never
+aware of the villany they carried on, or they would have met with his
+severest displeasure in being removed from office, as was the case with
+Wirion at Verdun.[49]
+
+I do not find that the French soldiers with whom I have conversed are so
+much attached to the person of the Emperor as I was led to believe; but
+they are attached to their country and liberty; and in serving him, they
+conceived they were serving the man _par excellence_ of the People.
+
+The French army too was beloved by the people, instead of being dreaded by
+them as the armies of most other European nations are. In short, whenever I
+met with and held conversation with soldiers of this army, I was always
+tempted to address them in the words of Elvira to Pizarro when she seeks to
+console him for his defeat:
+
+ Yet think another morning shall arise,
+ Nor fear the future, nor lament the past.[50]
+
+The French Major was very much inclined to take up a quarrel with an
+Austrian officer, on my account, but I dissuaded him. The cause was as
+follows. A young Austrian boy, servant to one of the officers of Artillery,
+had entered the _coche d'eau_ at Chalon, some minutes before his master,
+and began to avail himself of the right of conquest by taking possession of
+the totality of one of the cabins and endeavouring to exclude the other
+passengers; among other things he was going to thrust my portmanteau out of
+its place. I called to him to let it alone, when the French Major stepped
+forward and said that if he dared to touch any of the baggage belonging to
+the passengers, he would punish him on the spot and his master also, for
+that he longed to measure swords with those "Jean F---- d'Autrichiens."
+Fearful of a serious quarrel between them and being unwilling that any
+dispute should occur on my account, I requested the Major not to meddle
+with the business, for that I was sure the Austrian officer would check the
+impertinence of his servant when he came on board; and that if he did not,
+I was perfectly able and willing to defend my own cause. The Austrian
+officers came on board a few minutes after, when I addressed them in
+German, and explained to them the behaviour of the boy; they scolded him
+severely for his impertinence to us and threatened him with the _Schlag_,
+should it occur again. The rest of the journey passed without any incident.
+I found that my friend the Major had served in the French army in Egypt in
+the division Lanusse in the battle of the 21st March, 1801, (30 Ventose)
+and that consequently we were opposed to each other in that battle, as I
+was then serving as a Lieutenant in the Queen's Regiment, commanded by that
+excellent and amiable officer the Earl of D[alhousie] in General Doyle's
+brigade.
+
+The voyage on the Saone presents some pleasing and picturesque points of
+view; the _coteaux_ on the banks of the river are covered with vines. We
+arrived at 8 o'clock in the evening to sup and sleep at Macon and put up at
+the _Hotel des Sauvages_. We had a most sumptuous repast, fish, flesh,
+fowls, game, fruit and wine in profusion, for all which, including our
+beds, we had only to pay 2-1/2 francs the person.
+
+There is a spacious Quai at Macon, which always adds to the beauty of a
+city, and there are some fine buildings, public and private. I need not
+enlarge on the excellence of the Macon wine. The country girls we observed
+on the banks of the river as we floated along, and the _grisettes_ of the
+town who were promenading on the Quai when we arrived, wore a peculiarly
+elegant _costume_ and their headdress appeared to me to be something
+Asiatic.
+
+The voyage on the subsequent day was more agreeable than the preceding one.
+The country between Macon and Lyons is much more beautiful and diversified
+than that which we have hitherto seen and resembles much the picturesque
+scenery of the West-Indian landscape. One part between Macon and Trevoux
+resembles exactly the island of Montserrat.
+
+Within two miles of Trevoux we were hailed by some _grisettes_ belonging to
+the inns at that place, in order to invite us to dine at their respective
+inns. There was one girl exceedingly beautiful whose name was Sophie,
+daughter of the proprietor of the _Hotel des Sauvages_ at Trevoux. She, by
+her grace and coquetry, obtained the most recruits and when we disembarked
+from the boat, she led us in triumph to her hotel. From her beauty and
+graceful manner, Sophie, in a country where so much hommage is paid to
+beauty, must be a most valuable acquisition to the interests of the inn,
+and tho' she smiles on all, she takes care not to make herself cheap, and
+like Corisca in the _Pastor Fido_ she holds put hopes which she does not at
+all intend to gratify. After passing by the superb scenery on the banks of
+the river (which increases in interest as you approach Lyons), the _Isle
+Barbe_ and _la Tour de la belle Allemande_, we arrived at Lyons at 5 p.m.
+and debarked on the _Quai de la Saone_. A _fiacre_ took me up and deposited
+me safe at the _Hotel du Nord_ situated on the _Place St Claire_ and not
+many yards distant of the _Quai du Rhone_.
+
+
+LYONS, 26th Sept.
+
+Lyons is situated on a tongue of land at the junction of the Saone and
+Rhone, and there is a fine bridge on the spot where the streams unite,
+called _le pont du Confluent_, which joins the extremity of the tongue of
+land with the right bank of the Saone. There is besides a large bridge
+across the Rhone, higher up, before it joins the Saone, leading in a right
+line from the _Hotel de Ville_; and two other bridges across the Saone. The
+_Quai du Rhone_ is by far the finest and most agreeable part of the city.
+It is spacious, well paved, aligned with trees, and boast the finest
+edifices public and private in the whole city; it is the favourite
+promenade of the _beaux_ and _belles_ of Lyons. The sight of the broad and
+majestic Rhone itself is a grand object, and on a fine day the prospect is
+augmented by the distant view of the fleecy head of Mont Blanc. On this
+Quai and within a 100 yards of the bridge on the Rhone are the justly
+celebrated _bains du Rhone_, fitted up in a style of elegance even superior
+to those called _les Bains Vigier_ on the Seine at Paris. The grand
+Hospital is also on the Quai; the facade is beautiful; its architecture is
+of the Ionic order and the building itself as well as its interior economy
+has frequently elicited the admiration of travellers. Among the Places in
+this city the finest is that of Bellecour.
+
+The scenery is extremely diversified in the environs of Lyons, and in the
+city there is great appearance of wealth and splendour. Lyons flourished
+greatly during the time of the continental blockade, as it was the central
+depot of the commerce between France and Italy. Napoleon is much respected
+and regretted here, and with reason, as he was a great benefactor to this
+city. The Lyonnese are too frank, too open in their sentiments and too
+grateful not to render justice to his great talents and good qualities,
+while they blame and deplore his ambition. In fact an experience of a few
+days and some acquaintance I made here has given me a very favourable
+impression of the inhabitants of this city. The men are frank in their
+manners, polite, well informed, and free from all frivolity. The women are
+in general handsome, well shaped, and have much grace and are exceedingly
+well educated; they seem totally free from the _Petite-maitressism_ of the
+Parisian women, and both sexes seem to possess a good deal of what the
+French term _caractere_. Had the Parisians resembled the Lyonnese, Paris
+would never have fallen twice into the hands of the enemy, nor would the
+Lyonnese women have welcomed the entry of the invaders into their city with
+waving handkerchiefs, etc. These qualities of the inhabitants, the beauty
+of the country, and the cheapness of all the comforts and luxuries of life,
+would make Lyons one of the most agreeable places of residence to a
+foreigner of liberal sentiments and principles.
+
+Cloth and silk are the staple manufactures of Lyons, particularly the
+latter; I accompanied my friend Mr M---- to see his fabrique of silk which
+is of considerable extent and importance, and everything appeared to me, as
+far as one totally ignorant of the business and its process could judge,
+admirably regulated and rapid in its execution. The _tournure_ of the
+_grisettes_ of Lyons is very striking and they possess completely the
+_grata protervitas_, the _vultus nimium lubricus aspici_ which Horace so
+much admires in Glycera.
+
+I visited both the theatres here, viz.: the _Grand Theatre_, situated near
+the _Hotel de Ville_, and the smaller one called the _Theatre des
+Celestins_. At the former was some good dancing, and at the latter I was
+engaged in a conversation which I cannot forbear citing as it will serve to
+show the dislike the people have to the feudal system and the dread they
+have of its re-establishment, tho' they can know nothing about it except by
+tradition. The piece performed was called _Le petit Poucet_ (Tom Thumb and
+the Ogre); but I missed my old acquaintance the Ogre and his seven-league
+boots of Mother Goose, and found that in this melodrama he was transformed
+into a tyrannical and capricious _Seigneur Feodal_. There was a very pretty
+young lady about 16 years of age accompanied by her father in the same box
+with me, and I observed to her, "Ou est donc l'Ogre? il parait que l'on en
+a fait un Seigneur feodal." "Oui, monsieur (she replied), et avec raison,
+car ils etaient bien les Ogres de ce temps la." I entered into a long
+conversation with my fair neighbour and found her well informed and well
+educated, with great good sense and knowledge of the world far beyond her
+years. She told me that she had begun to study English and that her father
+was a miniature painter. I took leave of her not without feeling much
+affected and my heart not a little "percosso dall' amoroso strale."
+
+I must not forget to mention that there is a most spacious and magnificent
+building on the _Quai du Rhone_ to the North of the bridge, which serves as
+a cafe and ridotto or assembly room for balls, etc. I am afraid to say how
+many feet it has in length; but it is the most superb establishment of the
+kind I have ever met with.
+
+Fortunately for the city of Lyons, the famous decree of Robespierre for
+its destruction, and the column with the inscription, "Lyon a porte les
+armes contre la liberte; Lyon n'est plus," which was to occupy its place,
+was never put in execution and tho' this city suffered much from
+revolutionary vandalism yet it soon recovered and has flourished ever since
+in a manner unheard of at any former period. No people are more sensible
+than the Lyonnese of the great benefits produced by the Revolution, and no
+people more deprecate a return to the _ancien regime_.
+
+
+Oct. 2nd, GENEVA.
+
+I started in the diligence for Geneva on the 28th Sept. and found it
+exceedingly cold on ascending the mountain called the _Cerdon_; the scenery
+is savage and wild, and the road in many parts is on the brink of
+precipices. We stopped at Nantua for supper and partook of some excellent
+trout. There is a large lake near the town, and 'tis here that the Swiss
+landscape begins. Commanding a narrow pass stands the fort of L'Ecluse. The
+Austrians lost a great many men in attempting to force it. From this place
+you have a noble view of the Alps and Mont-Blanc towering above them. As
+this was the first time I beheld these celebrated mountains I was
+transported with delight and my mind was filled with a thousand classical
+and historical recollections! The scenery, the whole way from Fort l'Ecluse
+to Geneva, is most magnificent and uncommonly varied. Mountain and valley,
+winter and summer, on the same territory. Descending, the city of Geneva
+opens gradually; you behold the lake Leman and the Rhone issuing from it.
+We entered the city, which is fortified, and after crossing the double
+bridge across the Rhone, we arrived at the _Hotel de l'Eau de Geneve_ at 12
+o'clock. The most striking thing in the city of Geneva to the traveller's
+eye as he enters it, is the view of the arcades on each side of the street,
+excellent for pedestrians and for protection against sun and rain, but
+which give a heavy and gloomy appearance to the city. An immense number of
+watch-makers is another distinguishing feature in this city. The first
+thing shewn to me by my _valet de place_ was the house where Jean Jacques
+Rousseau was born; I then desired him to shew me the spot where that
+barbarian Calvin caused to be burnt the unhappy Servetus for not having the
+same religious opinions as himself.
+
+The most agreeable promenades of the city are on the bastions and ramparts,
+a place called _La Treille_ and a garden or park of small extent called
+_Plain Palais_. In this park stands on a column the bust of J.J. Rousseau.
+This park was the scene of a great deal of bloodshed in 1791 on account of
+political disputes between the aristocratic and democratic parties, or
+rather between the admirers and imitators of the French Revolution and
+those who dreaded such innovations. This affair excited so much horror, and
+the recollection of it operated so powerfully on the imagination of the
+inhabitants, that the place became entirely abandoned as a public
+promenade, and avoided as a polluted spot for many years. Very likely
+however a sort of lustration has taken place; an oration was pronounced and
+the place again declared worthy of contributing to the recreation of the
+inhabitants. It is now become the favourite promenade of the citizens of
+Geneva, tho' there are still some who cannot get over their old prejudices
+and never set their foot in it. There is likewise a pleasant walk as far as
+the town of Carrouge in Savoy, which town has been lately ceded by the King
+of Sardinia to the republic of Geneva. In Geneva the sentiments of the
+inhabitants do not seem to be favourable either to the French Revolution,
+or to Napoleon. Their political ideas accord very much with those professed
+by the government party in England, and they make a great parade of them
+just now, as a means of courting the favour of England and of the Allied
+Sovereigns. The government here have shewn a great disposition to second
+the views of the Allied Powers in persecuting those Frenchmen who have been
+proscribed by the Bourbon government.
+
+This state lost its independence during the revolutionary wars and was
+incorporated with France. As the citizens were suspected of being more
+favourable to the English than suited the policy of the French government
+of that time, they were viewed with a jealous eye and I believe some
+individuals were harshly treated; but what most vexed and displeased them
+was the enforcement of the conscription among them, for the Genevois do not
+like compulsion; they are besides more pacific than war-like and tho' like
+the Dutch they have displayed great valour where their interest is at
+stake, yet Mercury is a deity far more in veneration among them than
+Bellona. The natural talent of this people is great, and it has been
+favoured and developed by the freedom of their institutions; and this
+republic has produced too many eminent men for that talent to be called in
+question; they seem to have decided talents and dispositions for financial
+operations. A Genevois has the aptitude of great application united to a
+very discerning, natural genius, and he generally succeeds in everything he
+undertakes. Literature is much cultivated here, and the females, who are
+in general handsome and graceful, excel not only in the various feminine
+accomplishments, such as music, dancing and drawing, but they carry their
+researches into the higher branches of litterature and science and acquire
+with great facility foreign languages. It is true that you now and then
+meet with a little pedantry on the part of the young men and some of the
+young women are _tant soit feu precieuses_; and you may guess from their
+conversation, which is sometimes forced, that the person who speaks has
+been learning his discourse by heart from some book in the morning, with
+the intention of sporting it as a natural conversation in the evening. In
+short, one does not meet with that _abandon_ in society that is to be met
+with in Paris; you must measure your words well to shine in a Genevese
+society. This, however, is a very pardonable sort of coxcombry; and tho' it
+appear sometimes pedantic, and occasionally laughable, yet it tends to
+encourage learning and science, and compels the young men to read in order
+to shine and captivate the fair.
+
+The Genevese women make excellent wives and mothers; and many strangers,
+struck with their beauty and talent, as well as with the _agremens_ of the
+country in general, marry at Geneva and settle themselves there for life.
+It is observed that the Genevoises are so attached to their country that on
+forming a matrimonial connection with foreigners, they always stipulate
+that they shall not be removed from it. On the dismemberment of the Empire
+of Napoleon, Geneva was _agrege_ to the Helvetic Confederation, as an
+independent Canton of which there are now twenty-two. Three, viz. Geneva,
+Vaud, and Neufchatel, are French in language and manners. One, the Tessino,
+is Italian, and the remaining eighteen are all German. It is a great
+advantage to Geneva to belong to the Helvetic Confederacy, as formerly,
+when she was an isolated independent state, she was in continual dread of
+being swallowed up by one or other of her two powerful neighbours, France
+and the King of Sardinia, and only existed by their forbearance and mutual
+jealousy.
+
+I walked out one morning to Ferney in order to visit the chateau of
+Voltaire and to do hommage to the memory of that great man, the benefactor
+of the human race. It was he who gave the mortal blow to superstition and
+to the power of the clergy. It is the fashion for priests, Ultras and
+Tories to rail against him, but I judge him by his works and the effect of
+his works. His memory is held in reverence by the inhabitants of Ferney as
+their father and benefactor. He spent his whole fortune in acts of the most
+disinterested charity; he saved entire families from ruin and portioned off
+many a young woman who was deprived of the gifts of fortune and enabled
+them to form happy matrimonial connections; in short, doing good seems to
+have been one of the most ardent passions of his soul. In three memorable
+instances he shewed his hatred of cruelty and injustice, and unmasked
+triumphantly ecclesiastical imposture and fanaticism. He has been
+reproached with vanity, but surely that may be pardoned in a man who
+received the hommage of the whole literary world, who was considered as an
+oracle, and whose every sentence was recorded; whose talent was so
+universal, that he excelled in every branch of litterature that he
+undertook.
+
+Ferney, which was only a miserable village when Voltaire first took up his
+residence there, is now a large flourishing and opulent town.
+
+I found Voltaire's Chateau occupied by a fat heavy Swiss Officer who was on
+duty there, Ferney being at this moment occupied by the troops of the Swiss
+confederation. He was at breakfast, but on my stating to him that I was
+come to see the apartments of Voltaire he directed the housekeeper to shew
+them to me. On the left hand side after ascending a flight of steps, before
+you come into the Chateau, is a Chapel built by Voltaire with this simple
+inscription: "_Deo erexit Voltaire_." In the apartment usually occupied by
+him for the purpose of composition, are preserved his chair, table,
+inkstand and bed as sacred relics; and in the Salon are to be seen the
+portraits of several public characters, his contemporaries, and which were
+constantly appended there in his life time. Among these portraits I
+distinguished those of Frederick the Great of Prussia, Catherine II of
+Russia, Lekain, Diderot, Alembert, Franklin, Helvetius, Marmontel and
+Washington, besides many others. There is nothing remarkable either in the
+Chateau, or in the gardens appertaining to it; but as it stands on an
+elevation, it commands a fine view, which is so well described in that ode
+which begins:
+
+ O maison d'Aristippe, o jardins d'Epicure!
+
+I returned to Geneva and dined with my friend M. Picot the banker, who
+presented me to his brother's family, which I found a very amiable one, and
+I was particularly delighted with his father, a fine venerable old man, who
+is a pastor of the Church of Geneva and a great admirer of our poets
+Thomson and Milton.
+
+I have made acquaintance at the _Ecu de Geneve_ with a very gallant and
+accomplished officer, the Chevalier Zadera, a Pole by birth and a Colonel
+in the French army.[51] He had been on the staff of the Prince d'Eckmuehl at
+Hamburgh and had served previously in St Domingo, in Germany and in Italy.
+He had just quitted the French service, having a great repugnance to serve
+under the Bourbon dynasty, and he is about to go to Italy on private
+business. He seems a very well informed man and well versed in French,
+Italian and German litterature. He also understands well to read and write
+English and speaks it, but not at all fluently. He acquired his English in
+the United States of America, whither he went when he escaped from the
+horrors of St Domingo. By the Americans he was received with open arms and
+unbounded hospitality as the compatriot of Pulaski who fell gloriously
+fighting in their cause, the cause of liberty, at the battle of Savannah.
+He was liberally supplied with money by several individuals without the
+smallest expectation or chance of repayment at the time, and was forwarded
+in this manner from town to town and from state to state throughout the
+whole Union; so that the tour he made and the time he passed in that land
+of liberty, he reckons as far the most agreeable epoch of his life. One
+evening at the _Ecu de Geneve_ I found Zadera in altercation on political
+subjects with two French Ultras who had been emigrants, a Genevois and a
+Bernois, both anti-liberal. This was fearful odds for poor Zadera to be
+alone against four _acharnes_. I sat down and espoused his cause and we
+maintained our argument gloriously. The dispute began on the occasion of
+Zadera condemning the harshness shewn by the government of Geneva towards
+the _Conventionnels_ and others who were banished from France on the second
+restoration of Louis XVIII by a vote of the _Chambre introuvable_ in
+refusing them an asylum in the Republic and compelling them to depart
+immediately in a very contumelious manner. I said it was inconsistent and
+unworthy of the Genevese who called themselves republicans to persecute or
+join in the persecution of the republicans of France in order to please
+foreign despots. The others then began to be very violent with me. I
+replied, "Messieurs, vous avez beau parler; les Genevois sont de tres bons
+cambistes et les meilleurs banquiers de l'Europe, mais il ne sont pas bons
+republicains."
+
+Geneva has been so often described by tourists that I shall not attempt any
+description except to remark that there are several good Cabinets and
+collections of pictures belonging to individuals. There is a magnificent
+public library. The manufactures are those of watches and models of the
+Alps which are exceedingly ingenious. There are no theatrical amusements
+here; and during divine service on Sunday the gates of the city are shut,
+and neither ingress nor egress permitted; fortunately their liturgy (the
+Calvinistic) is at least one hour shorter than the Anglican. Balls and
+concerts take place here very often and the young Genevois of both sexes
+are generally proficient in music. They amuse themselves too in summer with
+the "tir de l'arc" in common with all the Swiss Cantons.
+
+
+October 3rd.
+
+I have been in doubt whether I should go to Lausanne, return to Paris or
+extend my journey into Italy; but I have at length decided for the latter,
+as Zadera, who intends to start immediately for Milan, has offered me a
+place in his carriage _a frais communs_. I found him so agreeable a man and
+possessing sentiments so analogous to my own that I eagerly embraced the
+offer, and we are to cross the Simplon, so that I shall behold a travel
+over that magnificent _chausee_ made by Napoleon's orders, which I have so
+much desired to see and which everybody tells me is a most stupendous work
+and exceeding anything ever made by the Romans. As the Chevalier has served
+in Italy and was much _repandu_ in society there, I could not possibly have
+a pleasanter companion. He has with him Dante and Alfieri, and I have
+Gessner's _Idylls_ and my constant travelling companion Ariosto, so that we
+shall have no loss for conversation, for when our native wits are
+exhausted, a page or two from any of the above authors will suggest
+innumerable ideas, anecdotes, and subjects of discourse.
+
+
+MILAN, 10th Oct.
+
+We started from Geneva at seven in the morning of the 4th October, and in
+half an hour entered the Savoyard territory, of which _douaniers_ with blue
+cockades (the cockade of the King of Sardinia) gave us intimation. The road
+is on the South side of the lake Leman. In Evian and Thonon, the two first
+villages we passed thro', we do not find that _aisance_, comfort and
+cleanliness that is perceivable on the other side of the lake, in the
+delightful Canton de Vaud. The double yoke of priestcraft and military
+despotism presses hard upon the unhappy Savoyard and wrings from him his
+hard-earned pittance, while no people are better off than the Vaudois; yet
+the Savoyards are to the full as deserving of liberty as the Swiss. The
+Savoyard possesses honesty, fidelity and industry in a superior degree, and
+these qualities he seldom or ever loses, even when exposed to the
+temptations of a great metropolis like Paris, to which they are compelled
+to emigrate, as their own country is too poor to furnish the means of
+subsistence to all its population. When in Paris and other large cities,
+the Savoyards contrive, by the most indefatigable industry and incredible
+frugality, to return to their native village after a certain lapse of time,
+with a little fortune that is amply sufficient for their comfort. The
+poorest Savoyard in Paris never fails to remit something for the support of
+his parents. Both Voltaire and Rousseau have rendered justice to the good
+qualities of this honest people. It is a thousand pities that this country
+(Savoy) is not either incorporated with France, or made to form part of the
+Helvetic confederacy.
+
+On passing by La Meillerie we were reminded of "La nouvelle Heloise" and
+the words of St Preux: "Le rocher est escarpe: l'eau est profonde et je
+suis au desespoir." On the opposite side of the lake is to be seen the
+little white town of Clarens, the supposed residence of the divine Julie. A
+little beyond St Gingolph, which lies at the eastern extremity of the lake,
+we quit Savoy and enter into the Valais, which now forms, a component part
+of the Helvetic confederacy. German is the language spoken in the Valais.
+As the high road into Italy passes thro' the whole length of this Canton,
+Napoleon caused it to be separated from the Helvetic union and to form a
+Republic apart, with the ulterior view and which he afterwards carried into
+execution of annexing it to the French Empire. The Valais forms a long and
+exceedingly narrow valley, thro' the whole length of which the Rhone flows
+and falls into the lake Leman at St Gingolph. The breadth of this valley in
+its widest part is not more probably than 1,000 yards, and in most places
+considerably narrower, and it is enclosed on each side, or rather walled up
+by the immense mountains of the higher Alps which rise here very abruptly
+and seem to shut out this valley from the rest of the world. The high road
+runs nearly parallel to the course of the Rhone and is sometimes on one
+side of the river and sometimes on the other, communicating by bridges;
+from the sinuosity of the road and the different points of view presented
+by the salient and re-entering angles, of the mountains the scenery is
+extremely picturesque, grand and striking, and as sometimes no outlet
+presents itself to view, you do not perceive how you are ever to get out of
+this valley but by a stratagem similar to that of Sindbad in the Valley of
+Diamonds. At St Maurice is a remarkable one-arched bridge built by the
+Romans. We stopped at Martigny to pass the night; within one mile of
+Martigny and before arriving at it, we perceived the celebrated waterfall
+called the _Pissevache_; and the appellation, though coarse, is perfectly
+applicable. From Martigny a bridle road branches off which leads across the
+Grand St Bernard to Aoste. The next morning we arrived at Sion, called in
+the language of the country Sitten, the metropolis of the Valais; it is a
+neat-looking and tolerably large town, and which from its position might be
+made a most formidable military post, as there is a steep hill close to it
+which rises abruptly from the centre of the valley, and commands an
+extensive view east and west. Works erected on this height would enfilade
+the whole road either way and totally obstruct the approach of an enemy.
+There is besides a large castle on the southern _paroi_ of mountains which
+hem in this valley, which would expose to a most galling fire and take in
+flank completely those who should attempt to force the passage whether
+coming from St Maurice or Brieg. We stopped two hours at Sion to mend a
+wheel and this gave me time to ascend the mountain on which the castle
+stands. There were several masons and workmen employed in the construction
+of a church which they are erecting at the request and entire expense of
+His Sardinian Majesty. I could not ascertain what were the reasons that
+induced the King to build a church in a foreign territory. I did not
+observe either on the road or in any of the village thro' which we passed
+any striking specimen of Valaisan female beauty; but I often remarked the
+prominent bosom that Rousseau describes as frequent among them. We met with
+several _cretins_ or idiots, all of whom had _goitres_ in a greater or less
+degree. These _souls of God without sin_, as the cretins are called, are
+very merry souls; they always appear to be laughing. They seem to have
+adopted and united three systems of philosophy: they are Diogenes as to
+independence and neglect of decency and cleanliness; Democriti as to their
+disposition to laugh perpetually; and Aristippi inasmuch as they seem to be
+perfectly contented with their state. They are in general fat and well fed,
+for the poorest inhabitants give them something. They have a good deal of
+cunning, and many curious anecdotes are related of them which shews that
+they are endowed with a sort of sagacity resembling the instinct of
+animals. I recollect one myself mentioned by Zimmermann in his Essay on
+Solitude, of a cretin who was accustomed to imitate with his voice the
+sound of the village clock whenever it struck the hours and quarters; one
+day, by some accident, the clock stopped; yet the cretin went through the
+chimes of the hours and quarters with the same regularity as the clock
+would have done had it been going.
+
+We arrived at night at the village of Brieg at the foot of the Simplon and
+put up at a very comfortable inn. Brieg and Glisse are two small villages
+lying within a quarter of a mile distance from each other. The direct road
+runs thro' Brieg and is a great advantage to this town; while Glisse lost
+this benefit from the opposition shewn by its inhabitants to the annexation
+of the Valais to the French Empire. They now deeply regret this refusal as
+few travellers chuse to stop at Glisse.
+
+_Passage of the Simplon_.
+
+ Chi mi dara la voce e le parole
+ Convenienti a si nobil soggetto?[52]
+
+ Who will vouchsafe me voice that shall ascend
+ As high as I would raise my noble theme?
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+How shall I describe the Simplon and the impressions that magnificent piece
+of work, the _chaussee_ across it, made on my mind? On arrival at the
+village of the Simplon, which lies at nearly the greatest elevation off the
+road and is more than half-way across, I wrote in my enthusiasm for the
+author of this gigantic work, the following lines:
+
+ O viaggiator, se avessi tu veduto
+ Quel monte, pria che fosse il cammin fatto,
+ Leveresti le mani, e stupefatto
+ Diresti, "chi l'avrebbe mai creduto?
+ Son come quel d'Alcide i tuoi miracoli!
+ Vincesti, Napoleon', piu grandi ostacoli!"
+
+Imagine a fine road or causeway broad enough for three carriages to go
+abreast, cut in the flanks of the mountains, winding along their contours,
+sometimes zigzag on the flank of one ravine, and sometimes turning off
+nearly at right angles to the flank of another; separated from each other
+by precipices of tremendous depth, and communicating by one-arched bridges
+of surprising boldness; besides stone bridges at each re-entering angle, to
+let pass off the water which flows from the innumerable cascades, which
+fall from the summits of the mountains. Ice and snow eternal on the various
+_pics_ or _aiguilles_ (as the summits are here called) which tower above
+your head, and yet in the midst of these _belles horreurs_ the road is so
+well constructed, so smooth, and the slope so gentle that when there are
+fogs, which often happen here and prevent you from beholding the
+surrounding scenery, you would suppose you were travelling on a plain the
+whole time. Balustrades are affixed on the sides of the most abrupt
+precipices and buttresses also in order to secure the exterior part of the
+_chaussee_. On the whole length of the _chaussee_ on the exterior side are
+conical stones of four feet in height at ten paces distant from each other,
+in order to mark the road in case of its being covered with snow. There are
+besides _maisons de refuge_ or cottages, at a distance of one league from
+each other, wherein are stationed persons to give assistance and food to
+travellers, or passengers who may be detained by the snow storms. There is
+always in these cabins a plentiful supply of biscuit, cheese, salt and
+smoked meats, wine, brandy and fire-wood. In those parts of the road where
+the sides of the ravines are not sloping enough to admit of the road being
+cut along them, subterraneous galleries have been pierced through the rock,
+some of fifty, some of a hundred and more yards in length, and nearly as
+broad as the rest of the road. In a word it appears to me the grandest work
+imagined or made by man, and when combined with its extreme utility, far
+surpasses what is related of the Seven Wonders of the world. There are
+fifty-two bridges throughout the whole of this route, which begins at the
+distance of three miles from Geneva, skirts the southern shore of the lake,
+runs thro' the whole Valais, traverses the Simplon and issuing from the
+gorges of the mountains at Domo d'Ossola terminates at Rho in the Milanese.
+From Brieg to the toll-house, the highest part of the road, the distance is
+about 18 miles. It made me dreadfully giddy to look down the various
+precipices; and what adds to the vertigo one feels is the deafening noise
+of the various waterfalls. As the road is cut zigzag, in many parts, you
+appear to preserve nearly the same distance from Brieg after three hours'
+march, as after half an hour only, since you have that village continually
+under your eyes, nor do you lose sight of it till near the toll-house.
+Brieg appears when viewed from various points of the road like the
+card-houses of children, the Valais like a slip of green baize, and the
+Rhone like a very narrow light blue ribband; and when at Brieg before you
+ascend you look up at the toll-house, you would suppose it impossible for
+any human being to arrive at such a height without the help of a balloon.
+It reminded me of the castle of the enchanter in the _Orlando Furioso_, who
+keeps Ruggiero confined and who rides on the Hippogriff.
+
+The village of the Simplon is a mile beyond the toll-house, descending. We
+stopped there for two hours to dine. A snow storm had fallen and the
+weather was exceedingly cold; the mountain air had sharpened our appetite,
+but we could get nothing but fish and eggs as it was a _jour maigre_, and
+the Valaisans are rigid observers of the ordinances of the Catholic church.
+We however, on assuring the landlord that we were _militaires_, prevailed
+on him to let us have some ham and sausages. German is the language here.
+The road from the toll-house to Domo d'Ossola (the first town at the foot
+of the mountain on the Italian side) is a descent, but the slope is as
+gentle as on the rest of the road. Fifteen miles beyond the village of the
+Simplon stands the village of Isella, which is the frontier town of the
+King of Sardinia, and where there is a rigorous _douane_, and ten miles
+further is Domo d'Ossola, where we arrived at seven in the evening. Between
+Isella and Domo d'Ossola the scenery becomes more and more romantic,
+varying at every step, cataracts falling on all sides, and three more
+galleries to pass. Domo d'Ossola appears a large and neat clean town, and
+we put up at a very good inn. At Isella begins the Italian language, or
+rather Piedmontese.
+
+The next morning we proceeded on our journey till we reached Fariolo, which
+is on the northern extremity of the _Lago Maggiore_. The road from Domo
+d'Ossola thro' the villages of Ornavasso and Vagogna is thro' a fertile and
+picturesque valley, or rather gorge, of the mountain, narrow at first, but
+which gradually widens as you approach to the lake. The river Toso runs
+nearly in a parallel direction with the road. The air is much milder than
+in Switzerland, and you soon perceive the change of climate from its
+temperature, as well as from the appearance of the vines and mulberry trees
+and Indian corn called in this country _grano turco_.
+
+At Fariolo, after breakfast, my friend Zadera took leave of me and embarked
+his carriage on the lake in order to proceed to Lugano; and I who was bound
+to Milan, having hired a cabriolet, proceeded to Arona, after stopping one
+hour to refresh the horses at Belgirate. The whole road from Fariolo to
+Arona is on the bank of the _Lago Maggiore_, and nothing can be more neat
+than the appearance of all these little towns which are solidly and
+handsomely built in the Italian taste.
+
+Before I arrived at Arona, and at a distance of two miles from it, I
+stopped in order to ascend a height at a distance of one-eighth of a mile
+from the road to view the celebrated colossal statue in bronze of St
+Charles Borromaeus, which may be seen at a great distance. It is seventy
+cubits high, situated on a pedestal of twenty feet, to ascend which
+requires a ladder. You then enter between his legs, or rather the folds of
+his gown, and ascend a sort of staircase till you reach his head. There is
+something so striking in the appearance of this black gigantic figure when
+viewed from afar, and still more when you are at the foot of it, that you
+would suppose yourself living in the time of fairies and enchanters, and it
+strongly reminded me of the Arabian Nights, as if the statue were the work
+of some Genie or Peri; or as if it were some rebel Genius transformed into
+black marble by Solomon the great Prophet. I am not very well acquainted
+with the life and adventures of this Saint, but he was of the Borromean
+family, who are the most opulent proprietors of the Milanese. Every tract
+of land, palace, castle, farm in the environs of Arona seem to belong to
+them. If you ask whose estate is that? whose villa is that? whose castle is
+that? the answer is, to the Count Borromeo, who seems to be as universal a
+proprietor here as _Nong-tong-paw_ at Paris or _Monsieur Kaniferstane_ at
+Amsterdam.[53] Arona is a large, straggling but solidly built town, and
+presents nothing worth notice.
+
+We proceeded on our journey the next morning. Shortly after leaving Arona,
+the road diverges from the lake and traverses a thick wood until it reaches
+the banks of the Tessino; on the other bank of which, communicating by
+means of a flying bridge, stands the town of Sesto Calende. The Tessino
+divides and forms the boundary between the Sardinian and Austrian
+territory, and Sesto Calende is the frontier of His Imperial, Royal and
+Apostolic Majesty. After a rigorous search of my portmanteau at the
+_Douane_, and exhibiting my passport, I was allowed to proceed on my
+journey to Milan.
+
+At Rho, where I stopped to dine, stands a remarkably ancient tree said to
+have been planted in the time of Augustus. The country presents a perfect
+plain, highly cultivated, all the way from Sesto to Milan. The _chaussee_
+is broad and admirably well kept up and lined on both sides with poplars.
+The roads in Lombardy are certainly the finest in Europe. I entered Milan
+by the gate which leads direct to the esplanade between the citadel and the
+city, and drove to the _Pension Suisse_, which is in a street close to the
+Cathedral and Ducal palace.
+
+
+MILAN, 12 October.
+
+I am just returned from the _Teatro della Scala_, renowned for its immense
+size: it certainly is the most stupendous theatre I ever beheld and even
+surpassed the expectation I had formed of it, so much so that I remained
+for some minutes lost in astonishment. I was much struck with the
+magnificence of the scenery and decorations. An _Opera_ and _Ballo_ are
+given every night, and the same are repeated for a month, when they are
+replaced by new ones. The boxes are all hired by the year by the different
+noble and opulent families, and in the _Parterre_ the price is only thirty
+soldi or sous, about fifteen pence English, for which you are fully as well
+regaled as at the _Grand Opera_ at Paris for three and a half francs and
+far better than at the Italian theatre in London for half a guinea. The
+opera I saw represented is called _L'Italiana in Algieri_, opera buffa, by
+Rossini.
+
+The _Ballo_ was one of the most magnificent spectacles I ever beheld. The
+scenery and decorations are of the first class and superior even to those
+of the _Grand Opera_ at Paris. The _Ballo_ was called _Il Cavaliere del
+Tempio_. The story is taken from an occurrence that formed an episode in
+the history of the Crusades and which has already furnished to Walter Scott
+the subject of a very pleasing ballad entitled the _Fire-King_, or _Count
+Albert and Fair Rosalie_. Battles of foot and horse with real horses,
+Christians and Moslems, dancing, incantations, excellent and very
+appropriate music leave nothing to be desired to the ravished spectator. In
+the _Ballo_ all is done in pantomime and the acting is perfect. The
+Italians seem to inherit from their ancestors the faculty of representing
+by dumb show the emotions of the mind as well as the gestures of the body,
+and in this they excel all other modern nations. The dancing is not quite
+so good as what one sees at the Paris theatre, and besides that sort of
+dancing they are very fond in Italy of grotesque dances which appear to me
+to be mere _tours de force_. But the decorations are magnificent, and the
+cost must be great.
+
+It was a fine moonlight night on my return from the _Scala_, which gave a
+very pleasing effect to the _Duomo_ or Cathedral as I passed by it. The
+innumerable aiguilles or spires of the most exquisite and delicate
+workmanship, tapering and terminating in points all newly whitened, gave
+such an appearance of airiness and lightness to this beautiful building
+that it looked more visionary than substantial, and as if a strong puff of
+wind would blow it away. The next morning I went to visit the Cathedral in
+detail. It stands in the place called _Piazza del Duomo_. On this _piazza_
+stands also the Ducal Palace; the principal cafes and the most splendid
+shops are in the same _piazza_, which forms the morning lounge of Milan.
+Parallel to one side of the _Duomo_ runs the _Corsia de' Servi_, the widest
+and most fashionable street in Milan, the resort of the _beau monde_ in the
+evening, and leading directly out to the _Porta Orientale_. The Cathedral
+appears to me certainly the most striking Gothic edifice I ever beheld. It
+is as large as the Cathedral of Notre Dame at Paris, and the architecture
+of the interior is very massive. There is little internal ornament,
+however, except the tomb or mausoleum of St Charles Borromeo, round which
+is a magnificent railing; there are also the statues of this Saint and of
+St Ambrogio. There are several well-executed bas-reliefs on the outside of
+the Church, from Scripture subjects, and the view from any of the balconies
+of the spires is very extensive. On the North the Alps, covered with snow
+and appearing to rise abruptly within a very short horizon, tho' their
+distance from Milan is at least sixty or seventy miles; and on all the
+other sides a vast and well-cultivated plain as far as the eye can reach,
+thickly studded with towns and villages, and the immense city of Milan nine
+miles in circumference at your feet. The streets in general in Milan are
+well paved; there is a line of trottoir on each side of the street
+equi-distant from the line of houses; so that these trottoirs seem to be
+made for the carriage wheels to roll on, and not for the foot passengers,
+who must keep within the space that lies between the trottoirs and line of
+houses. With the exception of the _Piazza del Duomo_ there is scarcely
+anything that can be called a _piazza_ in all Milan, unless irregular and
+small open places may be dignified with that name; the houses and buildings
+are extremely solid in their construction and handsome in their appearance.
+A canal runs thro' the city and leads to Pavia; on this canal are stone
+bridges of a very solid construction. The shops in Milan are well stored
+with merchandize, and make a very brilliant display. The finest street,
+without doubt, is the _Corsia de' Servi_. In the part of it that lies
+parallel to the Cathedral, it is about as broad as the _Rue St Honore_ at
+Paris; but two hundred yards beyond it, it suddenly widens and is then
+broader than Portland Place the whole way to the _Porta Orientale_. On the
+left hand of this street, on proceeding from the Cathedral to the _Porta
+Orientale_, is a beautiful and extensive garden; an ornamental iron railing
+separates it from the street. From the number of fine trees here there is
+so much shade therefrom that it forms a very agreeable promenade during the
+heat of the day. On the right hand side of the _Corsia de' Servi_,
+proceeding from the Cathedral, are the finest buildings (houses of
+individuals) in Milan, among which I particularly distinguished a superb
+palace built in the best Grecian taste with a colonnaded portico,
+surmounted by eight columns. Just outside the _Porta Orientale_ is the
+_Corso_, with a fine spacious road with _Allees_ on each side lined with
+trees. The _Corso_ forms the evening drive and _promenade a cheval_ of the
+_beau monde_. I have seen nowhere, except in Hyde Park, such a brilliant
+show of equipages as on the Corso of Milan. I observe that the women
+display a great _luxe de parure_ at this promenade.
+
+The women here appear to me in general handsome, and report says not at all
+cruel. They have quite a _fureur_ for dress and ornaments, hi the adapting
+of which, however, they have not so much taste as the French women have.
+The Milanese women do not understand the _simplicite recherchee_ in their
+attire, and are too fond of glaring colours. The Milanese women are accused
+of being too fond of wine, and a calculation has been made that two bottles
+_per diem_ are drank by each female in Milan; but, supposing this
+calculation were true, let not the English be startled, for the wine of
+this, country is exceedingly light, lighter indeed than the weakest
+Burgundy wine; indeed, I conceive that two bottles of Lombard wine are
+scarce equivalent in strength to four wine glasses of Port wine. The
+Lombards for this reason never drink water with their wine; and indeed it
+is not necessary, for I am afraid that all the wine drank in Milan is
+already baptised before it leaves the hands of the vendor, except that
+reserved for the priesthood; such, at any rate, was the case before the
+French Revolution, and no doubt the wine sellers would oppose the abolition
+of so _ancient_ and _sacred_ a custom. The Milanese are a gay people,
+hospitable and fond of pleasure: they are more addicted to the pleasures of
+the table than the other people of Italy, and dinner parties are in
+consequence much more frequent here than in other Italian towns. The women
+here are said to be much better educated than in the rest of Italy, for
+Napoleon took great pains to promote and encourage female instruction, well
+knowing that to be the best means of regenerating a country.
+
+The dialect spoken in the Milanese has a harsh nasal accent, to my ear
+peculiarly disagreeable. Pure Italian or Tuscan is little spoken here, and
+that only to foreigners. French, on the contrary, is spoken a good deal;
+but the Milanese, male and female, among one another, speak invariably the
+_patois_ of the country, which has more analogy to the French than to the
+Italian, but without the grace or euphony of either.
+
+I have visited likewise the _Zecca_, or Mint, where I observed the whole
+process of coining. They still continue to coin here Napoleons of gold and
+silver, with the date of 1814, and they coin likewise crowns or dollars
+with Maria Theresa's head, with the date of the last year of her reign. The
+double Napoleon of forty _franchi_ of the Kingdom of Italy is a beautiful
+coin; on the run are the words, _Dio protegge l'Italia_. It may not be
+unnecessary to remark that in Italy by the word _Napoleone_, as a coin, is
+meant the five franc piece with the head of Napoleon, and a twenty franc
+gold piece is called _Napoleone d'oro_.
+
+At the _Zecca_ I was shown some gold, silver and bronze medals, struck in
+commemoration of the formation of the Lombardo-Venetian Kingdom, under the
+sceptre of Austria. They bear the following inscription, which, if I
+recollect aright, is from Horace:
+
+ Redeunt in aurum
+ Tempora priscum,[54]
+
+but this golden age is considered by the Italians as a very leaden one; and
+it seems to bear as much analogy to the golden age, as the base Austrian
+copper coin, daubed over with silver, and made to pass for fifteen and
+thirty soldi, has to the real gold and silver _Napoleoni_, which by the way
+are said to be fast disappearing; they are sent to Vienna, and Milan will
+probably be in time blessed with a similar paper currency to that of
+Vienna.
+
+Napoleon seems to be as much regretted by the Milanese as the Austrian
+Government is abhorred; in fact, everybody speaks with horror and disgust
+of the _aspro boreal scettro_ and of the _aquila che mangia doppio_, an
+allusion taken from the arms of Austria, the double-headed Eagle.
+
+I have visited the ancient Ducal, now the Royal, Palace; it is a spacious
+building, chaste in its external appearance, but its ulterior very
+magnificent; its chiefest treasures are the various costly columns and
+pilasters of marble and of _jaune antique_ which are to be met with. The
+_salle de danse_ is peculiarly elegant, and in one of the apartments is a
+fine painting on the plafond representing Jupiter hurling thunderbolts on
+the Giants. Jupiter bears the head of Napoleon. Good God! how this man was
+spoiled by adulation!
+
+The staircase of the Palace is superb, and the furniture is of the most
+elegant description, being faithfully and classically modelled after the
+antique Roman and Grecian. After visiting the Ambrosian library (by the
+way, it is quite absurd to visit a library unless you employ whole days to
+inspect the various editions), I went to the Hospital, which is a
+stupendous building, and makes up 8,000 beds. The arrangement of this
+hospital merits the greatest praise. I then peeped into several churches,
+and I verily believe my conductor would have made me visit every church in
+Milan, if I had not lost all patience, and cried out: _perche sempre
+chiese? sempre chiese? andiamo a vedere altra cosa_. He conducted me then
+to the citadel, or rather place where the citadel stood, and which now
+forms a vast barrack for the Austrian troops. We then went to visit the
+_Teatro Olimpico_, which was built by Napoleon. It is built in the style of
+the Roman amphitheatres, but much more of an oval form than the Roman
+amphitheatres were in general; that is to say, the transverse axis is much
+longer in proportion to the conjugate diameter than is the case in the
+Roman amphitheatres, and it is by no means so high. In the time of
+Napoleon, games were executed in this circus in imitation of the games of
+the ancients, for Napoleon had a great hankering to ape the Roman Caesars
+in everything. There were, for instance, gymnastic exercises, races on
+foot, horse races, chariot races like those of the Romans, combats of wild
+beasts, and as water can be introduced into the arena, there were sometimes
+exhibited _naumachiae_ or naval fights. These exhibitions were extremely
+frequent at Milan during the vice-regency of Prince Eugene Napoleon; during
+this Government, indeed, Milan flourished in the highest degree of opulence
+and splendour and profited much by being one of the principal depots of the
+inland trade between France and Italy, during the continental blockade,
+besides enjoying the advantage of being the seat of Government during the
+existence of the _Regno d'Italia_. Even now, tho' groaning under the leaden
+sceptre of Austria, it is one of the most lively and splendid cities I ever
+beheld; and I made this remark to a Milanese. He answered with a deep sigh:
+"Ah! Monsieur, si vous aviez ete ici dans le temps du Prince Eugene! Mais
+aujourd'hui nous sommes ruines."
+
+My next visit was to the _Porta del Sempione_, which is at a short distance
+from the amphitheatre, and which, were it finished, would be the finest
+thing of the kind in Europe; it was designed, and would have been completed
+by Napoleon, had he remained on the throne. Figures representing France,
+Italy, Fortitude and Wisdom adorn the facade and there are several
+bas-reliefs, among which is one representing Napoleon receiving the keys of
+Milan after the battle of Marengo. All is yet unfinished; columns,
+pedestals, friezes, capitals and various other architectural ornaments,
+besides several unhewn blocks of marble, lie on the ground; and probably
+this magnificent design will never be completed for no other reason than
+because it was imagined by Napoleon and might recall his glories. Verily,
+Legitimacy is childishly spiteful!
+
+Yesterday morning I went to see an Italian comedy represented at the
+_Teatro Re_. The piece was _l'Ajo nell' imbarazzo_--a very droll and
+humorous piece--but it was not well acted, from the simple circumstance of
+the actors not having their parts by heart, and the illusion of the stage
+is destroyed by hearing the prompter's voice full as loud as that of the
+actors, who follow his promptings something in the same way that the clerk
+follows the clergyman in that prayer of the Anglican liturgy which says "we
+have erred and strayed from our ways like lost sheep." An Italian audience
+is certainly very indulgent and good-natured, as they never hiss, however
+miserable the performance.
+
+But in speaking of theatrical performances, no person should leave Milan
+without going to see the _Teatro Girolamo_, which is one of the
+"curiosities" of the place, peculiar to Milan, and more frequented,
+perhaps, than any other. This is a puppet theatre, but puppets so well
+contrived and so well worked as to make the spectacle well worth the
+attention of the traveller. It is the _Nec plus ultra of Marionettism_, in
+which Signer Girolamo, the proprietor, has made a revolution, which will
+form an epoch in the annals of puppetry; having driven from the stage
+entirely the _graziosissima maschera d'Arlecchino_, who used to be the hero
+of all the pieces represented by the puppets and substituted himself, or
+rather a puppet bearing his name, in the place of Harlequin, as the
+principal _farceur_ of the performance. He has contrived to make the puppet
+Girolamo a little like himself, but so much caricatured and so monstrously
+ugly a likeness that the bare sight of it raises immediate laughter. The
+theatre itself is small, being something under the size of our old
+Haymarket little theatre, but is very neatly and tastefully fitted up. The
+puppets are about half of the natural size of man, and Girolamo, aided by
+one or two others, works them and gives them gesture, by means of strings,
+which are, however, so well contrived as to be scarcely visible; and
+Girolamo himself speaks for all, as, besides being a ventriloquist, he has
+a most astonishing faculty of varying his voice, and adapting it to the
+_role_ of each puppet, so that the illusion is complete. The scenery and
+decorations are excellent. Sometimes he gives operas as well as dramas, and
+there is always a _ballo_, with transformation of one figure into another,
+which forms part of the performance. These transformations are really very
+curious and extremely well executed. Almost all the pieces acted on the
+theatre are of Girolamo's own composition, and he sometimes chooses a
+classical or mythological subject, in which the puppet Girolamo is sure to
+be introduced and charged with all the wit of the piece. He speaks
+invariably with the accent and _patois_ of the country, and his jokes never
+fail to keep the audience in a roar of laughter; his mode of speech and
+slang phrases form an absurd contrast to the other figures, who speak in
+pure Italian and pompous _versi sciolti_. For instance, the piece I saw
+represented was the story of Alcestis and was entitled _La scesa d'Ercole
+nell Inferno_, to redeem the wife of Admetus. Hercules, before he commences
+this undertaking, wishes to hire a valet for the journey, has an interview
+with Girolamo, and engages him. Hercules speaks in blank verse and in a
+phrase, full of _sesquipedalia verba_, demands his country and lineage.
+Girolamo replies in the Piedmontese dialect and with a strong nasal accent:
+"_De mi pais, de Piemong_." Girolamo, however, though he professes to be as
+brave as Mars himself has a great repugnance to accompanying his master to
+the shades below, or to the "_casa del diavolo_," as he calls it; and while
+Hercules fights with Cerberus, he shakes and trembles all over, as he does
+likewise when he meets _Madonna Morte_.
+
+All this is very absurd and ridiculous, but it is impossible not to laugh
+and be amused at it. An anecdote is related of the _flesh and blood_
+Girolamo, that he had a very pretty wife, who took it into her head one day
+to elope with a French officer; and that to revenge himself he dramatized
+the event and produced it on his own theatre under the title of _Colombina
+scampata coll'uffiziale_, having filled the piece with severe satire and
+sarcastic remarks against women in general and Colombina in particular.
+
+The atelier of the famous artist in mosaic Rafaelli is well worth
+inspecting; and here I had an opportunity of beholding a copy in mosaic and
+nearly finished of the celebrated picture of Leonardo da Vinci representing
+the _Caena Domini_. What a useful as well as admirable art is the mosaic to
+perpetuate the paintings of the greatest masters! I recollected on
+beholding this work that Eustace, in his _Tour thro' Italy_,[55] relates
+with a pious horror that the French soldiers used the original picture as a
+target to practise at with ball cartridge, and that Christ's head was
+singled out as the mark. This absurd tale, which had not the least shadow
+of truth in it, has, it appears, gained some credit among weak-minded
+people; and I therefore beg leave to contradict it in the most formal
+manner. It was Buonaparte who, the moment the picture was discovered,
+ordered it to be put in mosaic. No! the French were the protectors and
+encouragers, and by no means the destroyers of the works of art; and this
+ridiculous story of the picture being used as a target was probably
+invented by the priesthood, who seemed to have taken great delight in
+imposing on poor Eustace's credulity. To me it seems that such a story
+could only have been invented by a monk, and believed and repeated by an
+old woman or a bigot. The priests and French emigrants have invented and
+spread the most shameful and improbable calumnies against the French
+republicans and against Napoleon, and that credulous gull John Bull has
+been silly enough to give full credence to all these tales, and stand
+staring with his eyes and mouth open at the recital, while a vulgar jobbing
+ministry (as Cobbet would say) _picked his pockets_.
+
+Quite of a piece with this is the said Mr Eustace's bigotry, in not chusing
+to call Lombardy by its usual appellation "Lombardy," and affectedly
+terming it "the plain of the Po." Why so, will be asked? Why because Mr
+Eustace hates the ancient Lombards, and holds them very nearly in as much
+horror as he does the modern French; because, as he says, they were the
+enemies of the Church and made war on and despoiled the Holy See. The fact
+is that the Lombard princes were the most enlightened of all the monarchs
+of their time; they were the first who began to resist the encroachments of
+the clergy and to shake off that abject submission to the Holy See which
+was the characteristic of the age. The Lombards were a fine gallant race of
+men and not so bigoted as the other nations of Europe. Where has there ever
+reigned a better and more enlightened and more just and humane prince than
+Theodoric?[56] But Theodoric was an Arian, hence Mr Eustace's aversion, for
+he, with the most servile devotion, rejects, condemns and anathematizes
+whatever the Church rejects, condemns and anathematizes. For myself I look
+on the extinction of the Lombard power by Charlemagne to have been a great
+calamity; had it lasted, the reformation and deliverance of Europe from
+Papal and ecclesiastical tyranny would have happened probably three hundred
+years sooner and the Inquisition never have been planted in Spain. I have
+made this digression from a love of justice and from a wish to vindicate
+the French Republic and Napoleon from one at least of the many unjust
+aspersions cast on them. I feel it also my duty to state on every occasion
+that I, belonging to an army sent to Egypt in order to expel them from that
+country, have been an eyewitness of the good and beneficial reforms and
+improvements that the French made in Egypt during a period of only three
+years. They did more for the good of that country in this short period,
+than we have done for India in fifty years.
+
+Being obliged to be in London on the 24th December I took leave of the
+agreeable city of Milan with much regret on the 19th of October and engaged
+a place in a Swiss _voiture_ going to Lausanne. My fellow travellers were
+two Brunswick officers in the service of the Princess of Wales, who were
+returning to their native country; and a Hungarian and his son settled in
+Domo d'Ossola. Nothing occurred till we arrived at Arona, where we were
+detained a whole day, in consequence of some informality in the passport of
+the two Germans, viz., that of its not having been _vise_ by the Sardinian
+Charge d'Affaires at Milan.
+
+During our detention at Arona, I fell in with a young Frenchman who was
+going to Milan in company of some Swiss friends. The Swiss were permitted
+to proceed, but the other was not, for no other reason than because he was
+a Frenchman; so that he took a place in our carriage in order to return to
+Switzerland. I found him a very agreeable companion, for tho' much
+chagrined and vexed at this harsh and ungenerous treatment on the part of
+the Piedmontese authorities, he soon recovered his good humour, and
+contributed much to the pleasure of our journey. The Germans came back to
+Arona very late at night, and during the rest of the journey gave vent to
+their feelings with many an execration such as _verfluchter Spitzbube,
+Hundsfott_, on the heads of the inexorable police officers of Arona. The
+next day, on passing by Belgirate, we took a boat to visit the Borromean
+islands, and afterwards returned to rejoin our carriage at Fariolo. The
+first of these islands that we visited was the _Isola Bella_, where there
+is a large and splendid villa, belonging to the Borromean family. The rooms
+are of excellent and solid structure, and there are some good family
+pictures. The furniture is ancient, but costly. The _rez de chaussee_ or
+lower part of the house, which is completely _a fleur d'eau_ with the lake,
+is tastefully paved, and the walls decorated with a mosaic of shells. One
+would imagine it the abode of a sea nymph. I thought of Calypso and
+Galatea. There are in these apartments _a fleur d'eau_ two or three
+exquisite statues.
+
+
+LAUSANNE, 11th November.
+
+I have been now nearly three weeks at Lausanne and am much pleased both
+with the inhabitants, who are extremely affable and well-informed, and with
+the beautiful sites that environ this city, the capital of the Canton de
+Vaud. The sentiments of the Vaudois, with the exception of a few absurd
+families among the _noblesse_, who from ignorance or prejudice are
+sticklers for the old times, are highly liberal; and as they acquired their
+freedom and emancipated themselves from the yoke of the Bernois, thro' the
+means of the French Revolution, they are grateful to that nation and
+receive with hospitality those who are proscribed by the present French
+Government; their behaviour thus forming a noble contrast to the servility
+of the Genevese. The Government of the Canton de Vaud is wholly democratic
+and is composed of a Landamman and grand and petty council, all
+_bourgeois_, or of the most intelligent among the agricultural class, who
+know the interests of their country right well, and are not likely to
+betray them, as the _noblesse_ are but too often induced to do, for the
+sake of some foolish ribband, rank, or title. The _noblesse_ are in a
+manner self-exiled (so they say) from all participation in the legislative
+and executive power; for they have too much _morgue_ to endure to share the
+government with those whom they regard as _roturiers_; but the real state
+of the case is that the people will not elect them, and the people are
+perfectly in the right, for at the glorious epoch when, without bloodshed,
+the burghers and plebeians upset the despotism of Bern, the conduct of the
+_noblesse_ was very equivocal. La Harpe was the leader of this beneficial
+Revolution, for which, however, the public mind was fully prepared and
+disposed; and La Harpe was a virtuous, ardent and incorruptible patriot.
+
+This canton had been for a long period of years in a state of vassalage to
+that of Bern; all the posts and offices of Government were filled by
+Bernois and the Vaudois were excluded from all share in the government, and
+from all public employments of consequence. When the Sun of Revolution,
+after gloriously rising in America, had shone in splendour on France, and
+had successfully dissipated the mists of tyranny, feudality, priestcraft
+and prejudice, it was natural that those states which had languished for so
+many years in a humiliating situation should begin to look about them and
+enquire into the origin of all the shackles and restraints imposed on them;
+and no doubt the Vaudois soon discovered that it was an anomaly in politics
+as well as in reason that two states of such different origin, the one
+being a Latin and the other a Teutonic people, with language, customs, and
+manners so different, should be blended together in a system in which all
+the advantages were on the side of Bern, and nought but vassalage on the
+part of Vaud. A chief was alone wanting to give the impulse; he was soon
+found; the business was settled in forty-eight hours; and by the mediation
+of the French Government, Vaud was declared and acknowledged an independent
+state and for ever released from the dominion of Bern. The federative
+constitution was then abolished throughout the union, and a general
+Government, called the Helvetic Republic, substituted in its place; but
+this constitution not suiting the genius and habits of the people, nor the
+locality of the country, was not of long duration; troubles broke out and
+insurrections, which were fomented and encouraged by the adherents of the
+old regime. But Napoleon, by a wise and salutary mediation, stepped in
+between them, and prevented the effusion of blood, by restoring the old
+confederation, modified by a variety of ameliorations. In the act of
+mediation, Napoleon contented himself with separating the Valais entirely
+from the confederation, and shortly after annexing it to France, on account
+of the high road into Italy across the Simplon running thro' that
+territory, and which it became of the utmost importance to him to be master
+of. The new Helvetic Confederation was inviolably respected and protected
+by Napoleon; for never after the act of mediation did any French troops
+enter in the Canton de Vaud, or any part of the Union to pass into Italy.
+They always moved on the Savoy side of the Lake to enter into the Valais.
+This act of mediation saved probably a good deal of bloodshed and in a very
+short time gave such general satisfaction, and was in every respect so
+useful and beneficial to the Helvetic Union, that in spite of the intrigues
+of the Senate of Bern, who have never been able to digest the loss of Vaud,
+the Allied Powers in the year 1814 solemnly guaranteed the Helvetic
+Confederation as established by the Act of Mediation, merely restoring the
+Valais to its independence and aggregating it as an independent Canton to
+the general Union. Geneva, on its being severed from the French Empire, and
+recovering its independence, solicited the Helvetic Union to be admitted as
+a member and component part of that Confederacy; which was agreed to, and
+it was and remains aggregated to it also.
+
+In 1815, on the return of Napoleon from Elba and on the renewal of the war,
+the Bern Government made a most barefaced attempt to regain possession of
+the Canton de Vaud; to this they were no doubt secretly encouraged by the
+Allies, and principally it is said by the British Government, the most
+dangerous, artful and determined enemy of all liberty; but this project was
+completely foiled, by the penetration, energy and firmness of the
+inhabitants of the Canton de Vaud and of its Government in particular. The
+central Government of the Union was at that time held at Bern and it was
+agreed upon in the Diet that Switzerland should remain perfectly neutral
+during the approaching conflict; an army of observation of 80,000 men was
+voted and levied to enforce this neutrality, but the command of it was
+given to De Watteville, who had been a colonel in the English service, and
+was a determined enemy of the French Revolution and of everything connected
+with or arising out of it. On the approach of the Austrian army, De
+Watteville, instead of defending the frontier and repelling the invasion,
+disbanded his army and allowed the Austrians to enter. No doubt he was
+encouraged, if not positively ordered to do this, by the Government of
+Bern, many members of which are supposed to have received bribes from the
+British Government to render the decreed neutrality null and void. At the
+same moment that this army was disbanded, the directoral Canton (Bern)
+caused to be intimated to the Canton de Valid that it was the wish and
+intention of the High Allies to replace Switzerland in the exact state it
+was in, previous to the French Revolution; and that, in consequence, two
+Commissioners would be sent from Bern to Lausanne, to take charge of the
+Bureaux, Archives and _insignia_ of Government, etc., and to act as a
+provisional Government under the direction of Bern. The Landamman and the
+grand and petty council at Lausanne, on learning this intelligence,
+immediately saw thro' the scheme that was planned to deprive them of their
+independence; they, therefore, passed a decree, threatening to arrest and
+punish as conspirators the Commissioners, should they dare to set their
+foot in the Canton, and declaring such of their countrymen who should aid
+or abet this scheme, or deliver up a single document to the Commissioners,
+traitors and rebels; they likewise called on the whole Canton to arm in
+defence of its independence and proclaimed at the same time that should
+this plan be attempted to be carried into execution, they would join their
+forces to those of Napoleon and thus endanger the position of the Allies.
+They took their measures accordingly; the whole Canton Sew to arms; the
+Bernois and the Allies were alarmed and consultations held; the Count de
+Bubna, the Austrian General, being consulted, thought the attempt so
+hazardous and so pregnant with mischief that he had the good sense to
+recommend to the Allied Powers and to the Canton of Bern to desist from
+their project and not to make or propose any alteration in the Helvetic
+Constitution, as guaranteed in 1814. His advice was of great weight and was
+adopted, and thus the Vaudois by their firmness preserved their
+independence. They met with great support likewise on this trying occasion
+from General La Harpe, preceptor to the Emperor of Russia, and a relation
+to the gentleman of the same name who was so instrumental in the
+emancipation of Vaud. La Harpe, who enjoyed the confidence of his pupil,
+exerted himself greatly in procuring his good offices in favour of the
+Vaudois his countrymen, and this was no small weight in the scale.
+
+Lausanne is an irregularly built city, and not very agreeable to
+pedestrians, for its continual steep ascents and descents make it extremely
+fatiguing, and there is a part of the town to which you ascend by a flight
+of stairs; the houses in Lausanne have been humorously enough compared to
+musical notes. The country in the environs is beautiful beyond description
+and has at all times elicited the admiration of travellers. There is an
+agreeable promenade just outside the town, on the left hand side of the
+road which leads to Geneva, called _Montbenon_, which is the fashionable
+promenade and commands a fine view of the lake. On the left hand side is a
+Casino and garden used for the _tir de l'arc_, of which the Vaudois, in
+common with the other Helvetic people, are extremely fond. On the right
+hand side of the road is a deep ravine planted in the style of an English
+garden, with serpentine gravel walks, and on the other side of the ravine
+stands the upper part of the city, the Cathedral, _Hotel de Ville_, and the
+_Chateau du Bailli_, which is the seat of Government. From the terrace of
+the Cathedral you enjoy a fine view, but a still finer and far more
+comprehensive one is from the Signal house, or _Belvedere_ near the forest
+of Sauvabelin (_Silva Bellonae_ in Pagan times)[57]. In this wood fairs,
+dances and other public festivals are held, and it is the favourite spot
+for parties of pleasure to dine _al fresco_; it is a pity, however, that
+the edifice called the _Belvedere_ was not conceived in a better taste; it
+has an uncouth and barbarous appearance.
+
+Lausanne is situated about a quarter of a mile (in a right line) from the
+lake, and you descend continually in going from the city to the Lake Leman
+by a good carriage road, until you arrive on the borders of the lake, where
+stands a neat little town called Ouchy, or as it is sometimes termed _le
+port de Lausanne_. There is a good quai and pier. The passage across the
+lake from Ouchy to the Savoy side requires four hours with oars.
+
+I have made several pleasant acquaintances here, viz., M. Pidon the
+Landamman, a litterato of the first order; Genl La Harpe, the tutor of the
+Emperor of Russia; but the most agreeable of all is the Baron de
+F[alkenskiold], an old gentleman of whose talents, merits and delightful
+disposition I cannot speak too highly. He has the most liberal and
+enlightened views and opinions, and is extremely well versed in English,
+French and German litterature. He is a Dane by birth and was exiled early
+in life from his own country, on account of an accusation of being
+implicated in the affair of Struensee; and it is generally supposed that he
+was one of Queen Matilda's favoured lovers, which supposition is not
+improbable, as in his youth, to judge from his present dignified and
+majestic appearance, he must have been an uncommonly handsome man. He has
+lived ever since at Lausanne, and tho' near seventy-four years of age and
+tormented with the gout, he never loses his cheerfulness, and passes his
+time mostly with his books. He gives dinner parties two or three times a
+week, which are exceedingly pleasant, and one is sure to meet there a
+small, but well informed society of natives and foreigners. Most German
+travellers of rank and litterary attainments, who pass thro' Lausanne,
+bring letters of introduction and recommendation to the Baron and are sure
+to meet with the utmost hospitality and attention.
+
+The women of the Canton de Vaud are in general very handsome, well shaped
+and graceful; litterature, music, dancing and drawing are cultivated by
+them with success; and among the men, tho' one does not meet perhaps with
+quite as much instruction as at Geneva (I mean that it is not so general),
+yet no pedantry whatever prevails as in Geneva. At Lausanne they have
+sincere and solid republican principles and they do not pay that servile
+court to the English that the Genevese do; nor have they as yet adopted the
+phrase "_Dieu me damne_."
+
+
+PARIS, Dec. 5th.
+
+I returned to Paris by Geneva and crossing the Jura chain of mountains
+passed thro' Dole, Auxonne and Dijon. At Geneva, where I stopped three
+days, I met, at a musical party given by M. Picot the banker, the
+celebrated cantatrice Grassini, who looked as beautiful as ever, and sung
+in the most fascinating style several airs, particularly "_Quelle pupille
+tenere_" in the opera of the _Orazj e Curiazi_. To my taste her style of
+singing is far preferable to that of Catalani; there is much more pathos
+and feeling in the singing of Grassini; it is completely and truly the
+"_cantar che nell'anima si sente_." Catalani is very powerful, wonderful,
+if you will, in execution; but she does not touch my heart as Grassini
+does.
+
+On my return to Paris from Geneva I found that the conditions of peace had
+been made public. They are certainly hard, not so much on account of the
+cession of territory, which is trifling, as on account of the vast sums of
+money that Prance is obliged to pay, and the still more galling condition
+of having to pay and feed at her expense an army of occupation of 150,000
+men, of the Allied troops, for a term of three or five years, and to cede
+during that period several important fortresses. The inhabitants of Paris
+look very gloomy and nobody seems to think that the peace will last half as
+long. Prussia and Austria strove hard to wrest Alsace and German Lorraine
+from France; hosts of German publicists had accompanied their armies into
+France and had written pamphlet upon pamphlet to prove that mountains and
+not rivers were the proper boundaries of nations and that wherever the
+German language prevails, the country ought to belong to the Germanic body.
+Ergo, the Vosges mountains were the natural boundaries of France, and
+Alsace and German Lorraine should revert to Germany. Russia and England,
+however, opposed this, and insisted that these two provinces should remain
+with France; but I have no doubt that the first movements that may occur in
+France (and they will perhaps be secretly encouraged) will serve as a
+pretext for the Allies to separate these countries definitively from
+France.
+
+The Louvre has been stripped of the principal statues and pictures which
+have been sent back to the places from whence they were taken, to the great
+mortification of the Parisians, most of whom would have consented to the
+cession of Alsace and Lorraine and half of France to boot on condition of
+keeping the statues and pictures. The English Bureaux are preparing to
+leave Paris and the troops will soon follow; a new French army is
+organizing and several Swiss battalions are raised. It is generally
+supposed that by the end of December France, with the exception of the
+fortresses and districts to be occupied by the Allied Powers, will be freed
+from the pressure of foreign troops.
+
+The Chamber of Peers is occupied with the trial of Marshall Ney, the
+Conseil de Guerre, which was ordered to assemble for that purpose having
+declared itself incompetent. The friends of Ney advised him to claim the
+protection of the 12th Article of the Capitulation of Paris, and Madame
+Ney, it is said, applied both to the Duke of Wellington and to the Emperor
+of Russia; both ungenerously refused; to the former Nature has not given a
+heart with much sensibility, and the latter bears a petty spite against Ney
+on account of his title, _Prince de la Moskowa_. It is pretty generally
+anticipated that poor Ney will be condemned and executed; for tho' at the
+representation of _Cinna_ a few nights ago, at the Theatre Francais, the
+allusions to clemency were loudly caught hold of and applauded by the
+audience, yet I suspect Louis XVIII is by no means of a relenting nature,
+and that he is as little inclined to pardon political trespasses as his
+ancestor Louis IX was disposed to pardon those against religion; for,
+according to Gibbon, his recommendation to his followers was: _"Si
+quelqu'un parle contre la foi chretienne dans votre presence, donnez lui
+l'epee ventre-dedans_."
+
+
+December 18th.
+
+I met with an emigrant this day at the Palais Royal who was acquainted with
+my family in London. It was the Vicomte de B*****ye.[58] He had resided
+some time in England and also in Switzerland. He is an amiable man, but a
+most incorrigible Ultra. He displayed at once the ideas that prevail among
+the Ultras, which must render them eternally at variance with the mass of
+the French nation. In speaking of the state of France, he said: "_Je n'ai
+jamais cesse et jamais je ne cesserai de regarder comme voleurs tous les
+acquereurs des biens des emigres. Il faudroit, pour le bonheur de la
+France, qu'elle fut places dans le meme etat ou elle etait avant la
+Revolution._" He would not listen to my reasons against the possibility of
+effecting such a plan, even were the plan just and reasonable in itself. I
+told him that for the emigrants to expect to get back their property was
+just as absurd as for the descendants of those Saxon families in England,
+whose ancestors were dispossessed of their estates by William the
+Conqueror, to think of regaining them, and to call upon the Duke of
+Northumberland, for instance, as a descendant of a Norman invader, to give
+up his property as unjustly acquired by his progenitors. We did not hold
+long converse after this; his ideas and mine diverged too much from each
+other.
+
+The English are very much out of favour with the emigrants, as well on
+account of the stripping of the Louvre as on account of not having shot all
+the _liberaux_. They had the folly to believe that the Allied troops would
+merely make war for the emigrants' interests, and after having put to death
+a considerable quantity of those who should be designated as rebels and
+Jacobins by them (the emigrants), would replace France in the exact
+position she was in 1789, and then depart.
+
+Poor Marshall Ney's fate is decided. He was sentenced to death, and the
+sentence was carried into execution not on the _Place de Grenelle_ as was
+given out, but in the gardens of Luxemburgh at a very early hour. He met
+his fate with great firmness and composure. I leave Paris to-morrow for
+London.
+
+
+[47] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, VI, 20, 7.
+
+[48] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 620 (temnere _divos_).--ED.
+
+[49] Louis Wirion (1764-1810), an officer of _gendarmerie_,
+ commander-general of the _place_ de Verdun since 1804, was accused in
+ 1808 of having extorted money from certain English prisoners quartered
+ in Verdun (Estwick, Morshead, Garland, etc.). Wirion shot himself
+ before the end of the long proceedings, which do not seem to have
+ established his guilt, but had reduced him to misery and despair.--ED.
+
+[50] Richard Brinsley Sheridan's (1751-1816) _Pizarro_, produced at Drury
+ Lane in 1799.--ED.
+
+[51] Three brothers Zadera, all born in Warsaw, served in the Imperial
+ army.--ED.
+
+[52] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_ III, 2, i.--ED.
+
+[53] These words mean, or are supposed to mean, in French and in Dutch: "I
+ don't understand" (_je n'entends pas_).--ED.
+
+[54] Horace, _Carm._, IV, 2,39.--ED.
+
+[55]John Chetwode Eustace (1762-1815), author of _A Tour through Italy_
+ (2 vol., London, 1813), the eighth edition of which appeared in
+ 1841.--ED.
+
+[56] Theodoric was a Goth, not a Lombard.--ED.
+
+[57] Of course, _Silva Beleni_.--ED.
+
+[58] Perhaps Clement Francois Philippe de Laage Bellefaye, mentioned in the
+ _Souvenirs_ of Baron de Frenilly, p. 94. His large estates had been
+ confiscated in the Revolution.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER
+WATERLOO
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+MARCH-JUNE,1816
+
+Ball at Cambray, attended by the Duke of Wellington--An Adventure between
+Saint Quentin and Compiegne--Paris revisited--Colonel Wardle and Mrs
+Wallis--Society in Paris--The Sourds-Muets--The Cemetery of Pere La
+Chaise--Apathy of the French people--The priests--Marriage of the Duke de
+Berri.
+
+
+March, 1816.
+
+This time I varied my route to Paris, by passing thro' St Omer, Douay and
+Cambray. At Cambray I was present at a ball given by the municipality. The
+Duke of Wellington was there. He had in his hand an extraordinary sort of
+hat which had something of a shape of a folding cocked hat, with divers red
+crosses and figures on it, so that it resembled a conjurer's cap. I
+understand it is a hat given to his Grace by magnanimous Alexander; St
+Nicholas perhaps commissioned the Emperor to present it to Wellington, for
+his Grace is entitled to the eternal gratitude of the different Saints, as
+well as of the different sovereigns, for having maintained them
+respectively in their celestial and terrestrial dominions; and it is to be
+hoped, after his death, that the latter will celebrate for him a brilliant
+apotheosis, and the former be as complaisant to him and make room for him
+in the Empyreum as Virgil requests the Scorpion to do for Augustus:
+
+ ...Ipse tibi jam brachia contrahit ardens
+ Scorpios, et coeli jusia plus parts reliquit.[59]
+
+I met with an adventure in my journey from St Quentin to Compiegne, which,
+had it happened a hundred years ago in France, would have alarmed me much
+for my personal safety. It was as follows. I had taken my place at St
+Quentin to go to Paris; but all the diligences being filled, the _bureau_
+expedited a _caleche_ to convey me as far as Compiegne, there to meet the
+Paris diligence at nine the next morning. It was a very dark cold night,
+and snowed very hard.
+
+Between eleven and twelve o'clock at night, half way between St Quentin and
+Compiegne, the axle tree of the carriage broke; we were at least two miles
+from any village one way and three the other; but a lone house was close to
+the spot where the accident happened. We had, therefore, the choice of
+going forward or backward, the postillion and myself helping the carriage
+on with our hands, or to take refuge at the lone house till dawn of day. I
+preferred the latter; we knocked several times at the door of the lone
+house, but the owner refused to admit us, saying that he was sure we were
+_gens de mauvaise vie_, and that he would shoot us if we did not go away.
+The postillion and I then determined on retrograding two miles, the
+distance of the nearest village, and remaining there till morning. We
+arrived there with no small difficulty and labour, for it snowed very fast
+and heavily, and it required a good deal of bodily exertion to push on the
+carriage. Arrived at the village, we knocked at the door of a small
+cottage, the owner of which sold some brandy. He received me very civilly,
+gave me some eggs and bacon for supper, and a very fair bed.
+
+The next morning, after having the axle tree repaired, we proceeded on our
+journey to Compiegne. I suffered much from the cold during this adventure,
+and did not sleep well, having fallen into a train of thought which
+prevented me from so doing; and I could not help bringing to my
+recollection the adventure of Raymond in the forest near Strassburg, in the
+romance of _The Monk_. Nothing worthy of note occurred during the rest of
+the journey; but this adventure obliged me to remain one day at Compiegne
+to wait for the next diligence.
+
+
+PARIS, April 8th, 1816.
+
+I delivered my letters to the Wardle family and am very much pleased with
+them. I meet a very agreeable society at their house. Col Wardle is quite a
+republican and very rigid in his principles.[60] His daughter is a young
+lady of first rate talents and has already distinguished herself by some
+poetical compositions. I met at their house Mrs Wallis, the sister of Sir
+R. Wilson.[61] She is an enthusiastic Napoleonist, and wears at times a
+tricolored scarf and a gold chain with a medal of Napoleon's head attached
+to it; this head she sometimes, to amuse herself, compels the old emigrants
+she meets with in society to kiss. The trial of her brother is now going on
+for aiding and abetting the escape of Lavalette. I sincerely hope he will
+escape any severity of punishment, but I more fear the effects of Tory
+vengeance against him in England, in the shape of depriving him of his
+commission, than I do the sentence of any French court. Yet tho' I wish him
+well, I cannot help feeling the remains of a little grudge against him for
+his calumny against Napoleon in accusing him of poisoning the sick of his
+own army before the walls of St Jean d'Acre. I have always vindicated the
+character of Napoleon from this most unjust and unfounded aspersion,
+because having been in Egypt with Abercrombie's army and having had daily
+intercourse with Belliard's division of the French army, after the
+capitulation of Cairo, and during our joint march on the left bank of the
+Nile to Rosetta, I knew that there was not a syllable of truth in the
+story. Mrs Wallis, however, tells me that her brother has expressed deep
+regret that he ever gave credence and currency to such a report; and that
+he acknowledges that he was himself deceived. But he did Napoleon an
+irreparable injury, and his work on the Egyptian campaign contributed in a
+very great degree to excite the hatred of the English people against
+Napoleon, as well as to flatter the passions and prejudices of the Tories.
+
+In the affair however of Lavalette Wilson has nobly retrieved his character
+and obliterated all recollection of his former error. It is amazing the
+popularity he and his two gallant associates have acquired in France by
+this generous and chevaleresque enterprise.
+
+I meet at Col Wardle's a very pleasant French society: conversation, music
+and singing fill up the evening.
+
+
+April 15th.
+
+I have been presented to a very agreeable lady, Madame Esther Fournier, who
+holds a _conversazione_ at her house in the Rue St Honore every Wednesday
+evening. Here there is either a concert, a ball or private theatricals;
+while in a separate room play goes forward and _crebs_, a game of dice
+similar to hazard, is the fashionable game. Refreshments are handed round
+and at twelve o'clock the company break up. Mme Fournier is a lady of very
+distinguished talent and always acts a principal role herself in the
+dramatic performances given at her private theatricals.
+
+I have become acquainted too with a very pleasant family, M. and Mme
+Vanderberg, who are the proprietors of a large house and magnificent garden
+in the Faubourg du Roule. M. Vanderberg is a man of very large fortune.[62]
+He has three daughters, handsome and highly accomplished, and one son; one
+of them was married to General R----, but is since divorced; the second is
+married to a young colonel of Hussars, and the third is still unmarried;
+but being very young, handsome, accomplished and rich, there will be no
+lack of suitors whenever she is disposed to accept the connubial chain. I
+have dined several times with this family. There is an excellent table. The
+choicest old wines are handed about during dinner, and afterwards we
+adjourn to another room to take coffee and liqueurs.
+
+If there is no evening party, the company retire, some for the theatre,
+some for other houses, where they have to pass the evening; if the family
+remain at home you have the option of retiring or remaining with them, and
+the evening is filled up with music or _petits jeux_. I meet with several
+agreeable and distinguished people at this house, among whom are M. Anglas,
+Mme Duthon from the Canton de Vaud, a lady of great vivacity and talent,
+and General Guilleminot and his lady. Col. Paulet, who married M.
+Vanderberg's second daughter, was on the staff of General Guilleminot at
+the battle of Waterloo and suffered much from a fever and ague that he
+caught on the night bivouacs.
+
+I have attended a seance of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_ founded
+by the famous Abbe de l'Epee, and continued with equal success by his
+successor the Abbe S[icard],[63] who delivered the lecture and exhibited
+the talent and proficiency of his pupils. The eldest pupil, Massieu,
+himself deaf and dumb, is an extraordinary genius and he may be said in
+some measure to direct all the others. Massieu, who has a very interesting
+and even handsome countenance, and manners extremely prepossessing,
+conducts the examination of the pupils by means of signs, and writing on a
+slate or paper; and it is wonderful to observe the progress made by these
+interesting young persons, who have been so harshly treated by Nature. The
+definitions they give of substances and qualities are so just and happy;
+and in their situation, definition is everything, for they cannot learn by
+rote, as other boys often do, who, in the study of philology, acquire only
+words and not things or meanings. The deaf and dumb persons, on the
+contrary, acquire at once by this method of instruction the philosophy of
+grammar; and then it is far from being the dry study that many people
+suppose. A German princess who was present exclaimed in a transport of
+admiration at some of the specimens of definitions and inferences given by
+the pupils; " Oh! I wish that I were born deaf and dumb, were it only to
+learn grammar properly!" Sir Sidney Smith was present at this lecture and
+seemed inclined to make himself a little too conspicuous. For instance,
+before the examination began, he seated himself close by the Abbe S[icard]
+and pulling a paper out of his pocket said that he had found it on the
+ground on his way hither; and that it was part of a leaf from an edition of
+Cicero which contained a sentence so applicable to the character and
+talents of his friend the Abbe, that he requested permission to read it
+aloud and translate it into French for the benefit of those who did not
+understand Latin. He then read the sentence. The Abbe, not to be out-done
+in compliments, then rose and made a most flaming speech in eulogium of his
+friend "the heroic defender of St John d'Acre" and pointed him out to the
+audience as the first person who had foiled the arms of the "Usurper."
+
+Now this word "Usurper" applied to Napoleon did not at all please the
+audience, and it shewed a great deal of servility on the part of the Abbe
+to insult fallen greatness, and in the person too of a man who had rendered
+such vast services to science. In fact this episode was received coldly,
+and somewhat impatiently by the audience; and many thought it was a thing
+_got up_ between the Admiral and the Abbe to flatter each other's vanity;
+indeed my friend Mrs Wallis, next to whom I was placed, and who does not at
+all agree with the gallant Admiral in politics, intimated this in a
+whisper, loud enough to be heard by all the audience and added: "Such a
+humbug is enough to make one sick." Sir Sidney Smith heard all this and
+seemed a good deal abashed and disconcerted; he, however, had the good
+sense to say nothing, and the examination began.
+
+
+PARIS, May 5th.
+
+I formed a party with some friends to visit the cemetery of Pere la Chaise.
+We remarked in particular the places where poor Labedoyere and Marshal Ney
+are buried. There is no tombstone on the former, but some shrubs have been
+planted, and a black wooden cross fixed to denote the spot where he lies.
+
+To Marshal Ney there is a stone sepulchre with this inscription: "_Cy-git
+le Marechal Ney, Prince de la Moskowa_." This cemetery is most beautifully
+laid out. The multitude of tombs, the variety of inscriptions in prose and
+verse, some of which are very affecting, the yews, the willows, all render
+this a delightful spot for contemplation; it commands an extensive view of
+Paris and the surrounding country. Foreigners of distinction who die in
+Paris are generally buried here; but it would require a volume to describe
+to you in detail this interesting cemetery. I think the practice of
+strewing flowers over the grave is very touching and classic; it reminded
+me of the description of Marcellus's death in Virgil:
+
+ ... Manibus date lilia plenis.
+
+We however strewed over the tombs of Labedoyere and Ney not lilies, but
+violets, for my friend Mrs W[allis], who was of our party, has a great
+aversion to the lily.
+
+We have just heard of Didier's capture and execution at Grenoble.[64] There
+are continual reports of insurrections and plots, but it is now well known
+that the most of them are _got up_ by the Ultras to entrap the unwary. The
+French people seem sunk in apathy and to wish for peace at any rate;
+nothing but the most extreme provocation will induce them to take up arms;
+but then, if they once do so, woe to the _Chambre Introuvable_, as the
+present Chamber of Deputies is called; certainly such a set of venal,
+merciless and ignorant bigots and blockheads never were collected in any
+assembly. There have occurred several scandalous scenes at Nimes and other
+places. The Protestants are openly insulted and threatened, and the
+government is either too weak to prevent it, or, as is supposed, secretly
+encourages those excesses. In fact in Paris there are two polices; the one,
+that of the Government, the other, and by far the most troublesome, that of
+_Monsieur_[65] and the violent Ultra party, or as they are collectively
+called the _Pavilion Marsan_.[66] The priests are at work everywhere
+trumping up old legends, forging communications from the Holy Ghost,
+receiving letters dropped from heaven by Jesus Christ, and all this is done
+with the idea of working on fanatical minds, to induce them to commit acts
+of outrage and violence on those whom the priests designate as enemies to
+the faith, and on weak ones, with the idea of frightening them into
+restoring the lands and property which they have purchased or inherited and
+which formerly belonged to emigrants or to the Church.
+
+A lady of my acquaintance (to give you an idea of the arts of these holy
+hypocrites) sent for a priest to confess and to receive absolution, not
+from any faith in the efficacy of the business, but merely from a desire of
+conforming to the ceremonies of the national worship. The priest arrived,
+but began by apologizing to her that he was sorry he could not administer
+to her the sacrament of absolution; she, surprized, asked the reason; he
+answered that it was because her uncle had purchased Church lands, which
+she inherited, and that unless she could resolve to restore them to the
+church, he could not think of giving her absolution. The lady was at a loss
+whether to be indignant at his impudence or to laugh outright at his folly.
+She however assumed a becoming gravity and _sang-froid_, and told him that
+he was very much mistaken if he thought he had got hold of a simpleton or a
+bigot in her; that she had sent for him merely with the idea of conforming
+to the national worship, and not with the most remote persuasion of the
+necessity or efficacy of his or any other priest's absolution; she added:
+"Your conduct has opened my eyes as to the views of all your cloth; I see
+you are incurable. I shall never send for any of you again; and be assured
+this anecdote shall not be forgotten. You may retire." The priest, abashed
+and mortified in finding himself mistaken in his supposed prey, stammered
+an excuse and retired.
+
+I intend to remain at Paris until after the marriage ceremony of the Duke
+and Duchess of Berri, and I shall then proceed to Lausanne. It is expected
+there will be some disturbance on the occasion of this marriage.
+
+I have witnessed an execution by the guillotine on the Place de Greve near
+the _Hotel de Ville_. The criminal was guilty of a burglary and murder. It
+is the only execution (except political ones) that has taken place at Paris
+for the last six months, whereas in England they are strung up by dozens
+every fortnight. Independent of there being far less crimes committed in
+France than in England, the French code punishes but few offences with
+death.
+
+Why is not the sanguinary English criminal code with death in every
+line--why is it not reformed, I say? 'Twould be well if our legislators,
+instead of their puerile and frothy declamations against revolutionary
+principles and the ambition of Napoleon, would occupy themselves seriously
+with this subject. But then the lawyers would all oppose the simplification
+of our Code. They find by experience that a complicated one, obstructed by
+customs, statutes and acts of Parliament, difficult to be correctly
+interpreted, and frequently at variance with each other, is a much more
+profitable thing, a much wider and more lucrative field for the exercise of
+their profession, than the simplicity of the Code Napoleon; and they would
+die of rage and despair at the thought of anybody not a lawyer being able
+to interpret the laws himself. Now as our country gentlemen and members of
+Parliament are always much inclined to take lawyer's advice, and are
+besides fully persuaded and convinced that there are no abuses whatever in
+England and that everything is as it should be, there is no hope of any
+amelioration in this particular. All reasoning and argument is lost on such
+political optimists.
+
+The punishment of the guillotine certainly appears to be the most humane
+mode of terminating the existence of a man that could possibly be invented.
+The apparatus is preserved in the _Hotel de Ville_, and is never exposed to
+view or erected on the place of execution, till about an hour before the
+execution itself takes place. At the hour appointed the criminal is brought
+to the scaffold, fastened to the board, placed at right angles with the
+fatal instrument, the head protruding thro' the groove, which embraces the
+neck; the executioner pulls a cord, the axe descends and the head of the
+criminal falls into a basket. The whole ceremony of the execution does not
+take three minutes when the criminal once arrives at the foot of the
+guillotine. There is none of that horrible struggling that takes place in
+the operation of hanging.
+
+June 21st, 1816.
+
+The ceremony of the marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Berri passed off
+quietly enough. Several people, it is true, were arrested for seditious
+expressions, but no tumult occurred. A great apprehension seemed to prevail
+lest something should occur, but the gendarmerie and police were so
+vigilant that all projects, had there been any, would have proved abortive.
+
+
+[59] Virgil, _Georg._, I, 35.--ED.
+
+[60] Colonel Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle was the celebrated exposer of the scandal
+ in 1808-9, when the mistress of the Duke of York was found to be
+ trafficking in Commissions. He had retired from active service in
+ 1802, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Financial reasons obliged
+ him, after 1815, to live on the Continent; he died in Florence,
+ 1833.--ED.
+
+[61] Sir Robert Thomas Wilson (1779-1849), author of _The History of the
+ British Expedition to Egypt_, 1802; a French translation of that work
+ elicited a protest from Napoleon.--ED.
+
+[62] Vanderberg had made a fortune as a contractor to the French army; he
+ is mentioned in Ida Saint Elme's _Memoires d'une contemporaine_ and
+ elsewhere.--ED.
+
+[63] Abbe Sicard (Rooh Ambroise) was director of the Institution of
+ Sourds-Muets from 1790 to 1797 and from 1800 to 1822.--ED.
+
+[64] Paul Didier (1758-1816) took part in a Bonapartist conspiracy at Lyons
+ in 1816, raised an insurrection in the Isere and fled to Piedmont,
+ whence he was surrendered to the French authorities, condemned to
+ death and executed at Grenoble.--ED.
+
+[65] The King's brother, afterwards Charles X.--ED.
+
+[66] The N.E. pavilion of the Tuileries.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Journey from Paris to Lausanne--Besancon--French refugees in
+Lausanne--Francois Lamarque--General Espinassy--Bordas--Gautier--Michau--
+M. de Laharpe--Mlle Michaud--Levade, a Protestant minister--Chambery--Aix--
+Details about M. de Boigne's career in India--English Toryism and
+intolerance--Valley of Maurienne--Passage across Mont Cenis and arrival at
+Suza--Turin.
+
+
+LAUSANNE, July 8th.
+
+Departing from Paris on the 24th June, 1816, I varied my journey into
+Switzerland this time, for instead of travelling thro' Lyons or Dole, I
+took the route of Besangon, Pontarlier, Jougne and Orbe. The country
+between Dijon and Besancon is a rich and fertile plain. At Besancon the
+mountainous country begins; it is a strong fortress, and the last
+considerable town of the French frontier. It lies in a very picturesque
+situation, being nearly environed by the Doubs, which meanders under its
+walls, and by very lofty mountains; on the other side of the Doubs stands
+the citadel, its chief strength. The town of Besangon is exceedingly
+handsome and well built, and there are several agreeable promenades, two of
+which I must particularize, viz., the promenade de Chamarre and the garden
+of the Palace of Granvelle. There are besides several Roman antiquities and
+the remains of a large amphitheatre. I amused myself very well for a couple
+of days at Besancon, and met with some agreeable society at the _Hotel de
+France_ where I lodged. I left Besancon at eight in the morning of the 30th
+June, and arrived at Pontarlier at six the same evening. Pontarlier is a
+dreary, melancholy looking place, consisting of a very long street and
+several offsets of streets, situated in the midst of mountains, eternally
+covered with snow. Winter reigns here during nine months of the year. At
+Pontarlier the whole garrison were under arms, when I arrived, to pay the
+last duties to a most respectable and respected officer, whose death was
+occasioned by falling into the river, while at the _necessary_, by the
+under board giving way. This officer had served in almost all the campaigns
+of Napoleon and had greatly distinguished himself. What a cruel death for a
+warrior who had been in fifty battles! That death should have shunned him
+in the field of battle, to make him fall in a manner at once inglorious and
+ridiculous! yet such is destiny. Pyrrhus fell by a tile flung from a house
+by an old woman, and I am acquainted with a gallant captain in the British
+Navy who lost his leg by amputation, having broken it (oh horror!) by a
+fall from the top of a stage coach.
+
+I left Pontarlier on the 2d July, and arrived at Lausanne the same evening
+at five o'clock. On my return to Lausanne I had the pleasure to form an
+acquaintance with several eminent Frenchmen proscribed and banished from
+France, on account of having voted the death of Louis XVI, as members of
+the National Convention, which tried him, and for having voted, after the
+return of Napoleon from Elba, the _Acte additionnel_, which excluded the
+Bourbons for ever from the throne of France, Among them are, 1st, Monsieur
+Lamarque, who was one of the commissioners sent by the Convention to arrest
+Dumouriez, but being seized by him, and delivered over to the Austrians, he
+passed some time in captivity and was at length released, by being
+exchanged with some others against the Duchess d'Angouleme.[67] He is a
+very able man and seems to have far more political talent than any of the
+other _Conventionnels_ who are here. On Napoleon's return from Elba he
+voted for him, but made strong objections against the formation of a
+peerage, which he said was perfectly useless in France, and pregnant with
+mischief to boot, as it would only serve as an _appui_ to despotism. He
+wrote a pamphlet with some excellent remarks on this, subject. He therein
+points out the evils of an hereditary Chamber, and of a priviledged
+aristocracy, who have nothing to expect from the people, but all from the
+Prince; and in its stead he proposes an additional elective Chamber,
+something on the plan of the Senate in America, but he decidedly reprobates
+an hereditary peerage.
+
+The next is General Espinassy, a very good classical scholar and a most
+upright and amiable man.[68] In his vote he was solely influenced by strong
+but conscienscious republican principles; he resides here with his wife and
+two sons; he was considered as one of the best engineer officers in France
+and he opposed the nomination of Napoleon to the Imperial dignity in 1804.
+
+Another, M. Bordas,[69] opposed Napoleon's assumption of the Consulship on
+the 18th Brumaire, and was proscribed by him for a short time, but
+afterwards amnestied and received into favour. He gave his vote for
+Napoleon on the _Champ de Mai_ in 1815, but accompanied this vote by a bold
+speech towards Napoleon wherein he found fault with his former despotic
+practises, and reminded him of the solemnity of his promise to govern in
+future paternally and nationally, as became the sovereign of a free people.
+M. Bordas is a very cheerful, lively, companionable man and tho' seventy
+years of age, he has an uncommon share of vivacity, with something of the
+_ci-devant jeune homme_ about him, and He is pleased to be considered still
+as a man _a bonnes fortunes_.
+
+The next to him is M. Gauthier, who had been a lawyer, and held a
+considerable post as a magistrate in the time of the Republic and under the
+Empire.[70] He possesses a good deal of talent, close logical reasoning,
+and has determined public principle.
+
+The next, M. Michaud, had been also an advocate, and is possessor of
+considerable property in the department of the Doubs;[71] he is a most
+rigid unbending republican, something in the style of Verrina in Schiller's
+_Fiesco_; he opposed the assumption of the supreme power by Buonaparte on
+the 18th Brumaire; he voted against the Consulship for life, as well as
+against the assumption of the Imperial dignity. He is a very good classical
+scholar. He is a widower and has with him here Mlle Elisa, his only
+daughter, who follows her father's fortunes. She is a very amiable and
+accomplished young lady; she has a thorough knowledge of music and of
+painting in oils, and is classically versed in the Italian language. I soon
+became acquainted with the whole of these illustrious exiles, and I find
+great delight and instruction from their conversation; and this is a great
+relief to me, for the life one leads in a Swiss town is rather monotonous.
+
+
+LAUSANNE.
+
+I dine very often with my neighbour the Baron de Falkenskioeld, and at his
+house I became acquainted with M. de Laharpe, who was preceptor to the
+present Emperor of Russia. He is a native of this Canton, and has returned
+here to pass the remainder of his life. He is married to a very amiable
+Russian lady, and having acquired a pretty good fortune in Russia, he lives
+here very happily and comfortably; but notwithstanding this, he is often
+tempted to visit Paris, Milan and other great cities, and when there, sighs
+to return to his native mountains.
+
+As the Ultras of France bear a great hatred towards the inhabitants of the
+Canton de Vaud, on account of the asylum given and sympathy shown to the
+_proscrits_, they have been at the pains of trumping up and printing a
+pretended petition from the inhabitants of the department of the Doubs,
+praying that the French Government would endeavor to obtain the removal of
+these _proscrits_ from the Canton de Vaud, and stating that the said Canton
+was the _foyer_ of Jacobinical principles, and the place where Napoleon's
+return from Elba was planned and accelerated, and thro' which the
+conveyance of intelligence backwards and forwards was conducted. I have no
+doubt that in this petition more is meant than meets the ear; that the
+Oligarchs of Bern, as well as the Ultras of France, have a share in it, and
+that it may be considered not so much as an attempt to compel the Canton to
+refuse asylum to these exiles, as to excite the Great Powers to enforce the
+abolition of the independence of Vaud, and to replace it under the dominion
+and authority of the Canton of Bern.
+
+Everybody here, however, sees thro' the drift of this petition, and many
+persons whose names are put down as having signed it, have written to their
+friends at Lausanne, to declare not only that they never signed such a
+petition, but their entire ignorance even of the agitation of the question
+till they saw the petition itself in print. The French government, however,
+has not ventured to act any further upon it, than to make a pompous display
+of the royalist zeal and _bon esprit_ that pervades the Department of the
+Doubs.
+
+I see a good deal of Mlle Michaud. I find her conversation extremely
+agreeable. She had lent to me an Italian work by Verri entitled _Le notti
+Romane al sepolcro di Stipione_. She is a very rigid Catholic, having been
+educated by a priest of very strict ideas. Her devotion however does not
+render her less cheerful or less amiable. She having expressed a wish to
+hear the Protestant church service, I offered to accompany her and we went
+together one Sunday to the Cathedral Church at Lausanne. But it
+unfortunately happened that on that day a sermon was preached which must
+have given a great deal of pain to her filial feelings. Mr Levade, the
+minister, took it into his head to give a political sermon, in which, after
+a great deal of commonplace abuse of Voltaire, Rousseau and the French
+Revolution, and very fulsome adulation towards the English government (a
+subject which was brought in by the head and shoulders), of that _island_
+(as he termed it) _surrounded by the Ocean_, he lavished a great deal of
+still more fulsome adulation on the Bourbons; and then most wantonly and
+unnecessarily began a furious declamation against the _regicides_ as he
+termed them, who had taken refuge in the Canton, and intimated pretty
+plainly how pleasing it would be to God Almighty that they should be
+expelled from it. This intolerant discourse, more worthy of a raving Jesuit
+than of a Protestant minister, was deservedly scouted by the inhabitants of
+Lausanne; but this did not hinder poor Mlle Michaud from being much
+affected at the opprobrious tirade directed against a set of men, among
+whom her father bore a conspicuous part, and who acted from patriotic
+motives. I must not omit to state that in this discourse M. Levade
+interwove some hyperbolical compliments towards the young Prince of Sweden,
+who attended the service that morning. He told him that the eyes of all
+Europe were fixed upon him, and that Providence had him under his especial
+care.
+
+Now the following is the character of M. Levade.[72] He is a time-serving,
+meddling priest, and a most flagrant adulator of the powers that be. He
+thinks that by declaiming against the French Revolution, and against
+Voltaire and Rousseau, that he will get into favor with the great people
+who pass thro' Lausanne, with the French and English Government adherents,
+and with the great Tory families of England. No considerable personage ever
+passes through Lausanne, but Mr Levade is the first to make him a visit;
+and no rich or noble English family arrives with whom he does not
+ingratiate himself, and he is not sparing of his adulations. This mode of
+procedure has been a very profitable concern to him, as he has received a
+vast number of presents, and several valuable legacies, besides securing a
+number of pupils among the English families, that come or that have been
+here. He is in short a thorough parasite and time server, in every sense of
+the word. This adulation of the Bourbon family in his sermon, besides the
+meanness of it, was highly misplaced, coming from the mouth of a Protestant
+minister, and somebody exclaimed on leaving the Church: "_Que doit-on
+penser d'un ministre protestant du Canton de Vaud, qui prodigue des
+louanges a une famille qui a ete l'ennemie acharnee de l'Elise reformee, et
+qui a persecute les protestants d'une maniere si atroce?_" But Mr Levade
+(tho' to the honor of the clergymen of the Canton de Vaud he is singular
+among _them_), yet he has many persons who perfectly resemble him among the
+members of the Church of England, and who are as eager to support despotism
+and to crush liberty as any disciple of Loyola or any Janissary of the
+Grand Signor. The other Protestant ministers of this Canton were highly
+indignant at this sermon; in fact, it was the first time in this city that
+the House of God had been profaned by the introduction of political
+subjects into a religious discourse. This sermon was the common topic of
+conversation for many days after.
+
+
+CHAMBERY, 2d August.
+
+I left Lausanne for Geneva on 28 July. I stopped at Nyon to pay a visit to
+Mme Duthon, with whom I became acquainted at Paris. I dined with her and
+passed a most agreeable day. Her talents are of the first order, and she is
+as great an enthusiast for the German language and litterature as myself,
+besides being well versed in Italian. She had a female relation with her.
+We took a boat after dinner to navigate the lake, and we visited the
+Chateau and domains of Joseph Napoleon. The next day I proceeded to Geneva.
+
+I determined on making the journey into Italy this time by Mont-Cenis, and
+to make it on foot as far as the foot of Mont-Cenis on the Italian side,
+intending to profit of the opportunity of the first conveyance I should
+meet with at Suza to proceed to Turin. I accordingly forwarded my
+portmanteau to Turin to the care of a banker there, and sallied forth from
+Geneva at six o'clock on the morning of 1st August.
+
+I stopped to dine at Frangy and reached Romilly at seven in the evening.
+There is nothing worthy of remark at Romilly. The next morning I stopped at
+Aix to breakfast, and visited the bath establishment. The scenery is
+picturesque on this route, and the whole road from Aix to Chambery is
+aligned with remarkably fine large trees. At three in the afternoon I
+arrived at Chambery, the capital of Savoy. It is a large handsome city,
+situated in a fruitful valley, with a great many gardens and orchards
+surrounding it. There is a strong garrison here. Among the many _maisons de
+plaisance_ in the environs of this city, the most distinguishable is the
+villa of General De Boigne, who has passed the greatest part of his life in
+India, in the service of Scindiah, one of the Mahratta chiefs;[73] and it
+was by De Boigne's assistance that Scindiah, from being a petty chief, with
+not more than three or four hundred horse, became the founder of a powerful
+kingdom, comprized chiefly of the provinces of the Ganges and Jumna, torn
+from the Mogol Empire, whose Sovereign fell into the hands of Scindiah.
+Scindiah caused the Mogol Emperor's eyes to be put out, and kept him as a
+state prisoner in Delhi, till the year 1805, when on the Mahrattas engaging
+in war with the English, Scindiah was defeated by Lake and lost the greater
+part of his conquests. De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, long before
+this rupture took place, and at that time Scindiah had a fine regular army
+of thirty battalions of 1,000 men, each disciplined, armed and equipped in
+the European manner. He had likewise sixty squadrons of regular cavalry and
+a formidable train of artillery. At Chambery I met with two French
+_voyageurs de commerce_, who with that positiveness, which is often the
+national characteristic, insisted that De Boigne owed his riches and
+fortune to his treachery, in having betrayed and sold Tippoo Saib to the
+English, when he was in Tippoo's service; and I find this is the current
+report all over Savoy.
+
+Now it is an accusation totally devoid of foundation, as I shall presently
+show; and I took this opportunity of vindicating the reputation of De
+Boigne, by simply stating that De Boigne could never have betrayd Tippoo,
+since he was never in his service; 2dly, that he had, when in the service
+of Scindiah, fought against Tippoo, when the Mahrattas coalesced with the
+English against that Prince in 1792; and that had it not been for the
+assistance given by the Mahrattas to the English (a most impolitic
+coalition on the part of the Mahrattas, as it turned out afterwards),
+Tippoo would not have been compelled to conclude so humiliating a treaty of
+peace; 3dly, that De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, three years before
+the second war and death of Tippoo in 1799. I stated, too, that I was
+perfectly well acquainted with these particulars of De Boigne's career,
+from having served six years in India, and from having been personally
+acquainted with a gentleman of the name of Lucius Ferdinand Smith, who was
+the ultimate friend of De Boigne and his lieutenant general in the service
+of Scindiah; I added that I could not conceive how so unjust and unfounded
+an aspersion on De Boigne's character could find currency.
+
+I hope that what I said will be effectual towards doing away this injurious
+report; but very probably it will not, for when the vulgar once imbibe an
+opinion, it is difficult to eradicate it from their minds, and they are not
+at all obliged to the person who endeavors to undeceive them, so that
+General De Boigne's treachery and sale of Tippoo to the English will be
+handed down to posterity among the Savoyards, as a fact of which it will be
+as little permitted to doubt as of the treachery of Judas.
+
+
+CHAMBERY, August 3d.
+
+At the _table d'hote_ this day I nearly lost all patience on hearing an
+elderly English gentleman extolling the English Ministry to the skies, and
+abusing the army of the Loire, calling them rebels and traitors. I stood up
+in defence of these gallant men, and stated that the French Army in the
+time of the Republic and of the Empire were the most constitutional of all
+the European armies, since they were taken from and identified with the
+people; and that it was this brotherly feeling for their fellow citizens
+that induced them to join the standards of Napoleon, on his return from
+Elba; that they only followed the voice of the nation; that all France was
+indignant at the tergiversation and breach of faith on the part of the
+restored Government, in a variety of instances; and that, had Napoleon and
+the army been out of the question, the Bourbons would not have failed to be
+upset, from the indignation their measures had excited among the people. He
+then said that the Army of the Loire was a most dangerous body of men, and
+that that was the reason why the Allies insisted on their being disbanded.
+I replied that this was the highest compliment he could pay them, and the
+greatest feather in their cap, since it went to prove, that as long as this
+Army was in existence, neither the crowned despots, nor the Ultras thought
+themselves safe; and that they could not venture to pursue their
+anti-national projects, which were all directed towards depriving the
+French people of all they had gained by the Revolution and bringing them
+back to the _blessings_ of the ancient _regime_. He could say nothing in
+reply, but that he feared I had Jacobin principles, to which I made
+rejoinder: "If these be Jacobin principles, I glory in them." Some
+Sardinian officers, who were present, seemed to enjoy my argument, tho'
+they said nothing; and one took me aside, when we quitted the table, and
+said he rejoiced to see me take the old man in hand, as he disgusted them
+every day by his tirades against the liberal party, and by his fulsome
+adulations of the British Government. The old gentleman held forth likewise
+in a long speech respecting the finances of England, in praise of the
+sinking fund, and when it was suggested to him that England from the
+immense national debt must one day become bankrupt: "_Non, Monsieur_," (he
+said),"_la Caisse d'Amortissement empechera cela_." In fine, the _Caisse
+d'Amortissement_ was to work miracles. I replied that the principle of the
+_Caisse d'Amortissement_ was good, provided a constant and consistent
+economy were practised; but that at present and during the whole time from
+its establishment, it had been a mockery on the understanding of the
+Nation, when we reflected on the profligate expenditure of public money,
+occasioned by the ruinous, unjust and liberticide wars, which were entered
+into and fomented by the British Government. Indeed, I said it was like the
+conduct of a man who possessing an income of 200L per annum, should set
+apart, in a box as a _Caisse d'epargne_, 20L annually, and at the same time
+continue a style of living, the annual expence of which would so far exceed
+his income, as to oblige him to borrow 7 or 800L every year. The old
+gentleman was all amort at this comparison, which must be obvious to every
+one. Nothing shows in a more glaring light the blind and superstitious
+reverence paid to great names; for because this sinking fund was proposed
+by Pitt, all his adherents extol it to the skies, without analysing it, and
+give him besides the credit of an invention to which he had no right
+whatever.
+
+
+ST JEAN DE MAURIENNE.
+
+I started from Chambery on the morning of the fourth of August, and stopped
+at Montmelian to breakfast. Here begins the valley of Maurienne, and as
+this valley, along which the road is cut, is extremely narrow, being hemmed
+in on each side by the High Alps, Montmelian, which stands on an eminence
+in the centre of the valley (the road running thro' the town), must be a
+post of the utmost importance towards the defence of this pass. It was a
+fortified place of great consideration in the former wars, and if the
+fortifications were repaired and improved, it might be made almost
+impregnable, as it would enfilade the road on each side. From the
+above-mentioned features of the ground, the valley narrowing more and more
+as you proceed, from the high mountains that align it and from its
+sinuosities, it follows that at every angle or curve caused by these
+sinuosities, you appear as if you were shut out from all the rest of the
+world and could proceed no further. The river Isere runs thro' and parallel
+with this valley. It rises in the mountains of Savoy and falls into the
+Rhone in Dauphine. I passed the night at Aiguebelle.
+
+From Aiguebelle to St Jean de Maurienne is twelve leagues, and I found
+myself so tired with walking, and my legs from being swelled gave me so
+much pain, that I determined to give up the _gloriole_ of making the whole
+journey on foot as I intended and to remain here for two days to repose and
+then profit by the first conveyance that might pass to conduct me to Turin.
+
+From Aiguebelle the valley becomes still more narrow, and there is a
+continual ascent, tho' it is so gentle as scarcely to be perceptible. Every
+spot of ground in this valley, which will admit of cultivation, is put to
+profit by the industry of the inhabitants. Here one sees beans, indian
+corn, and even wines; for the heat is very great indeed in summer and
+autumn, owing to the rays of the sun being concentrated, as it were, into a
+focus, in this narrow valley, and were the bed of the Isere to be deepened,
+or were it less liable to overflow, from the melting of the snow in spring
+and summer, much land, which is now a marsh, might be applied to
+agricultural purposes. The inhabitants of this valley regret very much the
+separation of Savoy from France, as during the time that Duchy was annexed
+to the French Empire, each peasant possessing an ass could earn three
+franks per diem in transporting merchandise across Mont-Cenis. St Jean de
+Maurienne is a neat little town. I put up at the same inn, and slept in the
+same bedroom which was occupied by poor Didier who was put to death at
+Grenoble for having raised the standard of liberty. He was surprized here
+in bed by the _Carabiniere Reali_ of the Sardinian government, those
+satellites of despotism; and according to the barbarous principles laid
+down by the crowned heads, delivered over to the French authorities. I
+observed a great many _cretins_ in this valley.
+
+
+SUZA, 10th August.
+
+On the morning of the 8th August two _vetturini_ passed by the inn at St
+Jean de Maurienne, and I engaged a place in one of them, as far as Turin.
+We arrived at the village of Modena in the evening. The landscape is much
+the same as what we have hitherto passed, but the climate is considerably
+colder, from the land being more elevated. Hitherto I had suffered much
+inconvenience from the heat. The next morning we reached Lans-le-Bourg, the
+last town of Savoy lying at the foot of Mount Cenis.
+
+After breakfast we began the ascent of Mont Cenis, and I made the whole way
+from Lans-le-Bourg to the _Hospice_ of Mont Cenis, that is, the whole
+ascent, a distance of twenty-five Italian miles, on foot. This _chaussee_
+is another wonderful piece of work of Napoleon; a broad carriage road, wide
+enough for three carriages to go abreast, and cut zig-zag with so gentle a
+slope as to allow a heavy French diligence to pass, with the utmost ease,
+across a mountain where it was formerly thought impossible a wheel could
+ever run. This _chaussee_ is passable at all seasons of the year; the
+mountain is not so high as that of the Simplon and is less liable to
+impediments from the snow; the obstacles from nature are less, and you can
+descend in a sledge from the _Hospice_ by gliding down the side of the
+cone, and thus descending in nine or ten minutes, whereas the ascent
+requires four hours' time. From Lans-le-Bourg to the _Hospice_ on
+Mont-Cenis the road is on the flank of an immense mountain and you have no
+ravines to cross; the road is cut zig-zag on the flank of the mountain and
+forms a considerable number of very acute angles, as it is made with so
+gentle a slope that you scarcely feel the difficulty of the ascent. These
+repeated zig-zags and acute angles formed by the road, and the very slight
+slope given to the ascent, make the different branches appear to be almost
+parallel to each other, and it is a very curious and novel sight when a
+number of carriages are travelling together on this road to see them with
+their horses' heads turned different ways, yet all following the same
+course, just like ships on different tacks beating against the wind to
+arrive at the same port, a comparison that could not fail immediately to
+occur to a sailor. There is scarcely ever any detention on this road from
+the fall of snow, as there are a considerable number of persons employed to
+_deblay_ it as soon as it falls; but here, as well as on the Simplon, there
+are _maisons de refuge_ at a short distance from each other. We stopped for
+two hours at the inn at Mont-Cenis, which is about one hundred yards from
+the _Hospice_. It was a remarkable fine day, and I enjoyed my walk very
+much. The mountain air was keen and bracing and particularly delightful
+after being shut up for some many days in the close valley. We had some
+excellent trout for dinner. At Mont-Cenis, near the _Hospice_, is a large
+lake which is frozen during eight months of the year. Here reigns eternal
+winter and the mountains are covered with snows that never melt. From
+Mont-Cenis to Suza the descent is very grand and striking, and the scenery
+resembles that of the Simplon; there are more obstacles of nature than on
+the former part of the road, and here ravines are connected by the means of
+bridges, and there are subterraneous galleries to pass thro. Several
+_chutes d'eau_ are here observable; one of them I cannot avoid mentioning,
+as being very magnificent. It is formed by the Cenischia[74] which divides
+Savoy from Piedmont and runs into the Dora at Suza. We were highly
+gratified at the sight of the sublime scenery on all sides, and at the
+magnificent _chaussee_, and we all (I mean the passengers in the two
+coaches and myself) did hommage to the mighty genius who conceived and
+caused to be executed such a stupendous work. We arrived at Suza at six
+o'clock p.m.
+
+
+TURIN, 18th August.
+
+Suza is a tolerably large town and has a neat appearance. It is commanded
+and defended by the fort of Brunetti, now dismantled, but which is to be
+repaired according to the treaty of 1815. It will then be a very important
+post and completely barr the pass of Suza. The road from Suza to Rivoli is
+thro' a valley widening at every step; at Rivoli you _debouche_ at once
+from the gorge of the mountain into a boundless plain. The road is then on
+a magnificent _chaussee_ the whole way to Turin, and every vegetable
+production announces a change of climate to those coming from Savoy. Here
+are fields of wheat, indian corn, mulberry and elm trees and vines hung in
+festoons from tree to tree, which give a most picturesque appearance to the
+landscape, and, together with the country houses, serve as a relief to the
+boundless plain. The _chaussee_ is lined with trees on each side the whole
+way from Rivoli to Turin; I observed among carriages of all sorts small
+cars, like those used by children, drawn by dogs. These cars contain one
+person each. They are frequent in this part of the country, and such a
+conveyance is called a _cagnolino_. The Convent of St Michael, situated on
+an immense height to the right of the road between Suza and Rivoli, is a
+very striking object. The mountain forms a single cone and it appears
+impossible to reach the summit except on the back of a Hippogriff:
+
+ E ben appar che d'animal ch'abbia ale
+ Sia questa stanza nido o tana propria.[75]
+
+ The castle seemed the very neat and lair
+ Of animal, supplied with plume and quill.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+
+TURIN, 14 August.
+
+Turin is a large, extremely fine and regular city, with all the streets
+built at right angles. The shops are very brilliant; the two _Places_, the
+_Piazza del Castello_ and the _Piazza di San Carlo_, are very spacious and
+striking, and there are arcades on each side of the quadrangle formed by
+them. The _Contrada del Po_ (for in Turin the streets are called
+_Contrade_) leads down to the Po, and is one of the best streets in Turin.
+Over the Po is a superb bridge built by Napoleon. In the centre of the
+_Piazza del Castello_ stands the Royal Palace, and on one side of the
+_Piazza_ the Grand Opera house. The streets in Turin are kept clean by
+sluices. The favorite promenades are, during the day, under the arcades of
+the _Piazza del Castello_ and those of the _Contrada del Po_; and in the
+evening round the ramparts of the city, or rather on the site where the
+ramparts stood. The French, on blowing up the ramparts, laid out the space
+occupied by them in walks aligned by trees. The fortifications of the
+citadel were likewise destroyed.
+
+In the Cathedral Church here the most remarkable thing is the _Chapelle du
+Saint Suaire_ (holy winding sheet). It is of a circular form, is inlaid
+with black marble and admits scarce any light; so that it has more the
+appearance of a Mausoleum than of a Chapel. It reminded me of the _Palace
+of Tears_ in the Arabian Nights.
+
+In the environs of Turin, the most remarkable buildings are a villa
+belonging to the King called _La Venezia_, and the _Superga_, a magnificent
+church built on an eminence, five miles distant from Turin. In the Royal
+Palace, on the _Piazza del Castello_, there is some superb furniture, but
+the exterior is simple enough. The country environing Turin forms a plain
+with gentle undulations, increasing in elevation towards the Alps, which
+are forty miles distant, and is so stocked with villas, gardens and
+orchards as to form a very agreeable landscape. From the steeple of the
+_Superga_ the view is very fine.
+
+In the University of Turin is a very good _Cabinet d'Histoire naturelle_,
+containing a great variety of beasts, birds and fishes stuffed and
+preserved; there is also a Cabinet of Comparative Anatomy, and various
+imitations in wax of anatomical dissections. Among the antiquities, of
+which there is a most valuable collection, are two very remarkable ones:
+the one a beautiful bronze shield, found in the Po, called the shield of
+Marius; it represents, in figures in bas-relief, the history of the
+Jugurthine war.[76] This shield is of the most exquisite workmanship. The
+other is a table of the most beautiful black marble incrusted and inlaid
+with figures and hieroglyphics of silver. It is called the _Table of Isis_,
+was brought from Egypt and is supposed to be of the most remote antiquity.
+It is always kept polished. Among the many valuable pieces of sculpture to
+be met with here is a most lovely Cupid in Parian marble. He is represented
+sleeping on a lion's skin. It is the most beautiful piece of sculpture I
+have ever seen next to the Apollo Belvedere and the Venus dei Medici; it
+appears alive, and as if the least noise would awake it.[77]
+
+Turin used to be in the olden time one of the most brilliant Courts and
+cities in Europe, and the most abounding in splendid equipages; now very
+few are to be seen. When Piedmont was torn from the domination of the House
+of Savoy and annexed to France, Turin, ceasing to be the capital of a
+Kingdom, necessarily decayed in splendor, nor did its being made the _Chef
+lieu_ of a _Prefecture_ of the French Empire make amends for what it once
+was. The Restoration arrived, but has not been able to reanimate it; an air
+of dullness pervades the whole city. Obscurantism and anti-liberal ideas
+are the order of the day.
+
+I witnessed a military review at which the King of Sardinia assisted. The
+troops made a very brilliant appearance and manoeuvred well. His Majesty
+has a very good seat on horseback and a distinguished military air. He is a
+man of honor tho' he has rather too high notions of the royal dignity and
+authority, and is too much of a bigot in religion; but his word can be
+depended on, a great point in a King; there are so many of them that break
+theirs and falsify all their promises. He will not hear of a constitution,
+and endeavors to abolish or discountenance all that has been effected
+during his absence. The priests are caressed and restored to their
+privileges, so that the inhabitants of Piedmont are exposed to a double
+despotism, a military and a sacerdotal one; the last is ten times more
+ruinous and fatal to liberty and improvement than the former.
+
+I have put up in Turin in the _Pension Suisse_, where for seven franks per
+diem I have breakfast, dinner, supper and a princely bed room. The houses
+are in general lofty, spacious and on a grand scale.
+
+
+[67] Francois Lamarque, born 1756, a member of the Convention, ambassador
+ in Sweden, prefect of the Tarn and member of the Cour de Cassation
+ (1804). He was exiled in 1816.--ED.
+
+[68] Major Frye (who wrote the name Despinassy) certainly means
+ Antoine-Joseph Marie Espinassy de Fontanelle's (1787-1829), who was a
+ member of the Convention, voted the King's death and served in the
+ Republican army of the Alps. In 1816, he was banished and went to
+ Lausanne, where he died 1829.--ED.
+
+[69] Pardoux Bordas (1748-1842) was a member of the Convention. Though he
+ had not voted the death of Louis XVI, he was banished from France in
+ 1816 and did not return there before 1828.--ED.
+
+[70] Antoine Francis Gauthier des Orcieres (1752-1838) was elected to the
+ Etats Generaux in 1789, and, in 1792, to the Convention, where he
+ voted the death of Louis XVI. Later on, he was member of the Conseil
+ des Anoiena, juge au tribunal de la Seine and conseiller a la cour
+ imperiale de Paris (1815). Banished in 1816, he returned to France in
+ 1828.
+
+[71] Jean Baptists Michaud, a member of the Directoire du departement du
+ Doubs, and a member of the National Convention, voted the death of
+ Louis XVI and against the proposed appeal to the people.--ED.
+
+[72] Jean Daniel Paul Etienne Levade (1750-1834), Protestant minister first
+ in England, then in Amsterdam, finally minister at Lausanne and
+ professor of theology at the _Academie_ of the same town.--ED.
+
+[73] Countess de Boigne, in her interesting _Memoirs_ (of which there is an
+ English translation) abstained from describing her husband's career in
+ India; this lends additional interest to the information collected by
+ Major Frye,--ED.
+
+[74] The manuscript has _Sennar_, a name quite unknown at Suza.--ED.
+
+[75] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, iv, 13, 5.--ED.
+
+[76] This shield, now at the _Armoria Reale_, is not antique, but is
+ ascribed to Benvenuto Cellini.--ED.
+
+[77] This statue of Cupid is not antique, and has been recently ascribed to
+ Michelangelo (Knapp, _Michelangelo_, p. 155.)--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Journey from Turin to Bologna--Asti--Schiller and Alfieri--Italian
+_cuisine_--The _vetturini_--Marengo--Piacenza--The Trebbia--Parma--The
+Empress Maria Louisa--Modena--Bologna--The University--The Marescalchi
+Gallery--Character of the Bolognese.
+
+
+August ---- 1816
+
+'Twas on a fine morning the 16th August that I took my departure from Turin
+with a _vetturino_ bound to Bologna. I agreed to pay him sixty francs for
+my place in the coach, supper and bed. When this stipulation for supper and
+bed is included in the price fixed for your place with the _vetturino_, you
+are said to be _spesato_, and then you have nothing extra to pay for but
+your breakfast. There were two other travellers in the _vettura_, both
+Frenchmen; the one about forty years of age was a Captain of cavalry _en
+retraite_, married to a Hungarian lady and settled at Florence, to which
+place he was returning; the other, a young man of very agreeable manners,
+settled likewise at Florence, as chief of a manufactory there, returning
+from Lyons, his native city, whither he had been to see his relations. I
+never in my life met with two characters so diametrically opposite. The
+Captain was quite a _bourru_ in his manners, yet he had a sort of dry,
+sarcastic, satirical humour that was very diverting to those who escaped
+his lash. Whether he really felt the sentiments he professed, or whether he
+assumed them for the purpose of chiming in with the times, I cannot say,
+but he said he rejoiced at the fall of Napoleon. My other companion,
+however, expressed great regret as his downfall, not so much from a regard
+for the person of Napoleon, as for the concomitant degradation and conquest
+of his country, and he spoke of the affairs of France with a great deal of
+feeling and patriotism.
+
+The Captain seemed to have little or no feeling for anybody but himself;
+indeed, he laughed at all sentiment and said he did not believe in virtue
+or disinterestedness. When, among other topics of conversation, the loss
+the French Army sustained at Waterloo was brought on the _tapis_, he said,
+"_Eh bien! qu 'importe? dans une seule nuit a Paris on en fabriquera assez
+pour les remplacer!_" A similar sentiment has been attributed to the great
+Conde.[78] We had a variety of amusing arguments and disputes on the road;
+the Captain railed at merchants, and said that he did not believe that
+honor or virtue existed among mercantile people (no compliment, by the bye,
+to the young fabricant, who bore it, however, with great good humour,
+contenting himself with now and then giving a few slaps at the military for
+their rapacity, which mercantile people on the Continent have now and then
+felt, before the French Revolution, as well as after). The whole road from
+Turin to Alexandria della Paglia is a fine broad _chausee_. The first day's
+journey brought us to Asti. A rich plain on each side of the road, the
+horizon on our right bounded by the Appennines, on our left by the Alps,
+both diverging, formed the landscape. Asti is an ancient, well and solidly
+built city, but rather gloomy in its appearance. It is remarkable for being
+the birthplace of Vittorio Alfieri, the celebrated tragic poet, who has
+excelled all other dramatic poets in the general _denouement_ of his
+pieces, except, perhaps, Voltaire alone. I do not speak of Alfleri so much
+as a poet as a _dramaturgus_. I may be mistaken, and it is, perhaps,
+presumptuous in me to attempt to judge, but it has always appeared to me
+that Voltaire and Alfieri have managed dramatic effect and the intrigue and
+catastrophe of their tragedies better than any other authors. Shakespeare,
+God as he is in genius, is in this particular very deficient. Schiller,
+too, the greatest modern poetic genius perhaps and the Shakespeare of
+Germany, has here failed also, and nothing can be more correct than the
+estimate of Alfieri made by Forsyth[79] when, after speaking of his
+defects, he says: "Yet where lives the tragic poet equal to Alfieri?
+Schiller (then living also) may perhaps excel him in those peals of terror
+which flash thro' his gloomy and tempestuous scene, but he is far inferior
+in the mechanism of his drama."
+
+To return to my first day's journey from Turin. It was a very long day's
+work, and we did not arrive at Asti till very late, after having performed
+the last hour, half in the dark, on a road which is by no means in good
+repute. The character of the lower class of Piedmontese is not good. They
+are ferocious, vindictive and great marauders. They make excellent soldiers
+during war and they not unfrequently, on being disbanded after peace, by
+way of keeping their hand in practise and of having the image of war before
+their eyes, ease the traveller of his coin and sometimes of his life. Our
+conversation partook of these reminiscences, and during the latter part of
+our journey turned entirely on bandits "force and guile," so that we were
+quite rejoiced at seeing the smoke and light of the town of Asti and
+hearing the dogs bark, which reminded me of Ariosto's lines:
+
+ Non molto va che dalle vie supreme
+ De' tetti uscir vede il vapor del fuoco
+ Sente cani abbajar, muggire armento,
+ Viene alla villa, e piglia alloggiamenti.[80]
+
+ Nor far the warrior had pursued his best,
+ Ere, eddying from a roof, he saw the smoke,
+ Heard noise of dog and kine, a farm espied,
+ And thitherward in quest of lodging hied.
+
+ --_Trans_. W.S. ROSE.
+
+We met on alighting at the door of a large spacious inn, two ladies who had
+very much the appearance of the two damsels at the inn where Don Quixote
+alighted and received his order of knighthood; but, in spite of their
+amorous glances and a decided leer of invitation, I had like Sacripante's
+steed more need of "_riposo e d'esca che di nuova giostra_." The usual
+Italian supper was put before us, and very good it was, viz., _Imprimis: A
+minestra_ (soup), generally made of beef or veal with vermicelli or
+macaroni in it and its never failing accompaniment in Italy, grated
+Parmesan cheese. Then a _lesso_ (bouilli) of beef, veal or mutton, or all
+three; next an _umido_ (fricassee) of cocks' combs and livers, a favourite
+Italian dish; then a _frittura_ of chickens' livers, fish or vegetables
+fried. Then an _umido_ or ragout of veal, fish with sauce; and lastly, an
+arrosto (roast) of fowls, veal, game, or all three. The _arrosto_ is
+generally very dry and done to cinders almost. Vegetables are served up
+With the _umidi_, but plain boiled, leaving it optional to you to use
+melted butter or oil with them. A salad is a constant concomitant of the
+_arrosto_. A desert or fruit concludes the repast. Wine is drank at
+discretion. The wine of Lombardy is light and not ill flavored; it is far
+weaker than any wine I know of, but it has an excellent quality, that of
+facilitating digestion. A cup of strong coffee is generally made for you in
+the morning, for which you pay three or four _soldi_ (sous), and in giving
+five or six _soldi_ to the waiter, all your expenses are paid supposing you
+are _spesato_, i.e., that the _vetturino_ pays for your supper and bed; if
+not, your charges are left to the conscience of the aubergiste, which in
+Italy is in general of prodigious width. I therefore advise every traveller
+who goes with a _vetturino_ to be a spesato, otherwise he will have to pay
+four or five times as much and not be a whit better regaled. The
+_vetturini_ generally pay from three to three and a half francs for the
+supper and bed of their passengers. As the _vetturini_ invariably make a
+halt of an hour and half or two hours at mid-day in some town or village,
+this halt enables you to take your _dejeuner a la fourchette_, which you
+pay for yourself, unless you stipulate for the payment of that also with
+the _vetturino_ by paying something more, say one a half franc per diem for
+that. In this part, and indeed in the whole of the north of Italy not a
+female servant is to be seen at the inns and men make the beds. It is
+otherwise, I understand, in Tuscany.
+
+The whole appearance of the country from Asti to Alexandria presents an
+immense plain extremely fertile, but the crops of corn being off the
+ground, the landscape would not be pleasing to the eye, were it not
+relieved by the frequency of mulberry trees and the vines hung in festoons
+from tree to tree. The villages and farmhouses on this road are extremely
+solid and well built. We arrived at Alexandria about twelve o'clock, and
+after breakfast I hired a horse to visit the field of battle of Marengo,
+which is in the neighbourhood of this city, Marengo itself being a village
+five miles distant from Alexandria. Arrived on the plain, I was conducted
+to the spot where the first Consul stood at the time that he perceived the
+approach of Desaix's division. I figured to myself the first Consul on his
+white charger, halting his army, then in some confusion, riding along the
+line exposed to a heavy fire from the Austrians, who cannonaded the whole
+length of the line; aides-de-camp and orderlies falling around him, himself
+calm and collected, "spying 'vantage," and observing that the Austrian
+deployment was too extended, and their centre thereby weakened, suddenly
+profiting of this circumstance to order Desaix's division to advance and
+lead the charge which decided the victory on that memorable day, which,
+according to Mascheroni:
+
+ _splende
+ Nell' abisso de' secoli, qual Sole_.
+
+The whole field of battle is an extensive plain, with but few trees, and to
+use Campbell's lines:
+
+ every turf beneath the feet
+ Marks out a soldier's sepulchre.
+
+The Column, erected to commemorate this glorious victory, has been thrown
+down by order of the Austrian government--a poor piece of puerile spite,
+but worthy of legitimacy. Alexandria is, or rather _was_, for the
+fortifications no longer exist, more remarkable for being an important
+military post than for the beauty of the city itself. There is, however, a
+fine and spacious _Place_, which serves as a parade for the garrison, and
+being planted with trees by the French when they held it, forms an
+agreeable promenade. The fortifications were blown up by the Austrians
+before the place was given over to the Sardinian authorities, a flagrant
+breach of faith and contract, since by the treaty of 1814 they were bound
+to give up all the fortified places that were restored or ceded to the King
+of Sardinia in the same state in which they were found when the French
+evacuated them, and the Austrians took possession provisorily. The French
+regarding (and with reason) this fortress as the key of Lombardy always
+kept the fortifications in good repair and well provided with cannon. But
+the Austrian government, knowing itself to be unpopular in Italy and
+trembling for the safety of her dominions, being always fearful that the
+Piedmontese Government might one day be induced to favour an
+insurrectionary or national movement in the north of Italy, determined,
+finding that it could not keep the fortress for itself, which it strove
+hard to do under divers pretexts, to render it of as little use as they
+possibly could do to the King of Sardinia; so they blew up the
+fortifications and carried off the cannon, leaving the King without a
+single fortified place in the whole of his Italian dominions to defend
+himself, in case of attack, against an Austrian invasion.
+
+On the morning of the 15th August we passed thro' Tortona, now no longer a
+fortress of consequence. All this country may be considered as classic
+ground, immortalized by the campaigns of Napoleon, when commander in chief
+of the army of the French Republic in Italy, a far greater and more
+illustrious _role_ than when he assumed the Imperial bauble and
+condescended to mix with the vulgar herd of Kings.
+
+We arrived at Voghera to breakfast and at Casteggio at night. The country
+is much the same as that which we have already passed thro', being a plain,
+with a rich alluvial soil, mulberry trees and a number of solidly built
+stone farmhouses. The next morning at eleven o'clock we arrived at Piacenza
+on the Po, and were detained a quarter of an hour at the _Douane_ of Her
+Majesty the Archduchess, as Maria Louisa, the present Duchess of Parma, is
+stiled, we being now arrived in her dominions. We drove to the _Hotel di
+San Marco_, which is close to the _Piazza Grande_, and alighted there. On
+the Piazza stands the _Hotel de Ville_, and in front of it are two
+equestrian statues in bronze of the Princes Farnesi; the statues, however,
+of the riders appear much too small in proportion with the horses, and they
+resemble two little boys mounted on Lincolnshire carthorses.
+
+I did not visit the churches and palaces in this city from not having time
+and, besides, I did not feel myself inclined or _bound_ (as some travellers
+think themselves) to visit every church and every town in Italy. I really
+believe the _ciceroni_ think that we _Ultramontani_ live in mud hovels in
+our own country, and that we have never seen a stone edifice, till our
+arrival in Italy, for every town house which is not a shop is termed a
+_palazzo_, and they would conduct you to see all of them if you would be
+guided by them. I had an opportunity, during the two hours we halted here,
+of walking over the greater part of the city, after a hasty breakfast.
+Piacenza is a large handsome city; among the females that I saw in the
+streets the Spanish costume seems very prevalent, no doubt from being so
+long governed by a Spanish family.
+
+On leaving Piacenza we passed thro' a rich meadow country and met with an
+immense quantity of cattle grazing. The road is a fine broad _chaussee_
+considerably elevated above the level of the fields and is lined with
+poplars. Where this land is not in pasture, cornfields and mulberry trees,
+with vines in festoons, vary the landscape, which is additionally enlivened
+by frequent _maisons de plaisance_ and excellently built farmhouses. We
+passed thro' Firenzuola, a long well-built village, or rather _bourg_, and
+we brought to the night at Borgo San Donino. At this place I found the
+first bad inn I have met with in Italy, that is, the house, tho' large, was
+so out of repair as to be almost a _masure_; we however met with tolerably
+good fare for supper. We fell in with a traveller at Borgo San Donino, who
+related to us an account of an extraordinary robbery that had been
+committed a few months before near this place, in which the _then_ host was
+implicated, or rather was the author and planner of the robbery. It
+happened as follows. A Swiss merchant, one of those men who cannot keep
+their own counsel, a _bavard_ in short, was travelling from Milan to
+Bologna with his cabriolet, horse and a large portmanteau. He put up at
+this inn. At supper he entered into conversation with mine host, and asked
+if there was any danger of robbers on the road, for that he should be sorry
+(he said) to fall into their hands, inasmuch as he had with him in his
+portmanteau 24,000 franks in gold and several valuable articles of
+jewellery. Mine host assured him that there was not the slightest danger.
+The merchant went to bed, directing that he should be awakened at daybreak
+in order to proceed on his journey. Mine host, however, took care to have
+him called full an hour and half before daybreak, assuring him that light
+would soon dawn. The merchant set out, but he had hardly journeyed two
+miles when a shot from behind a hedge by the road side brought his horse to
+the ground. Four men in masks rushed up, seized him and bound him to a
+tree; they then rifled his portmanteau, took out his money and jewels and
+wished him good morning.
+
+Before we arrived at Borgo San Donino we crossed the Trebbia, one of the
+many tributary streams of the Po, and which is famous for two celebrated
+battles, one in ancient, the other in modern tunes (and probably many
+others which I do not recollect); but here it was that Hannibal gained his
+second victory over the Romans; and here, in 1799, the Russians under
+Souvoroff defeated the French under Macdonald after an obstinate and
+sanguinary conflict; but they could not prevent Macdonald from effecting
+his junction with Massena, to hinder which was Souvoroff's object. In fact,
+in this country, to what reflections doth every spot of ground we pass,
+over, give rise! Every field, every river has been the theatre of some
+battle or other memorable event either in ancient or modern times.
+
+ _Quis gurges aut quae flumina lugubris
+ Ignara belli?[81]_
+
+We started from Borgo San Donino next morning; about ten miles further on
+the right hand side of the road stands an ancient Gothic fortress called
+Castel Guelfo. Between this place and Parma there is a very troublesome
+river to pass called the Taro, which at times is nearly dry and at other
+times, so deep as to render it hazardous for a carriage to pass, and it is
+at all times requisite to send on a man to ford and sound it before a
+carriage passes. This river fills a variety of separate beds, as it
+meanders very much, and it extends to such a breadth in its _debordements_,
+as to render it impossible to construct a bridge long enough to be of any
+use.
+
+This, however, being the dry season, we passed it without difficulty. Two
+or three other streams on this route, _seguaci del Po_, are crossed in the
+same manner.
+
+The road to Parma, after passing the Taro, lies nearly in a right line and
+is bordered with poplars. If I am not mistaken, it was somewhere in this
+neighbourhood that the Carthaginians under Hannibal suffered a great loss
+in elephants, who died from cold, being incamped during the winter. I am
+told there is not a colder country in Europe than Lombardy during the
+winter season, which arises no doubt from its vicinity to the Alps.
+
+Opulence seems to prevail in all the villages in the vicinity of Parma, and
+an immense quantity of cattle is seen grazing in the meadows on each side
+of the road. The female peasantry wear the Spanish costume and are
+remarkably well dressed.
+
+We arrived at Parma at twelve o'clock and stopped there three hours.
+
+
+PARMA.
+
+After a hasty breakfast, Mr G-- and myself sallied forth to see what was
+possible during the time we stopped in this city, leaving the Captain, who
+refused to accompany us, to smoke his pipe. This city is very large and
+there is a very fine _Piazza._ The streets are broad, the buildings
+handsome and imposing, and there is a general appearance of opulence. We
+first proceeded to visit the celebrated amphitheatre, called _l'Amfiteatro
+Farnese_ in honour of the former sovereigns of the Duchy. It is a vast
+building and unites the conveniences both of the ancient and modern
+theatres. It has a roof like a modern theatre, and the seats in the
+_parterre_ are arranged like the seats in an ancient Greek theatre. Above
+this are what we should call boxes, and above them again what we usually
+term a gallery. A vast and deep arena lies between the _parterre_ and the
+orchestra and fills up the space between the audience and the _proscenium_.
+It is admirably adapted both for spectators and hearers; when a tragedy,
+comedy or opera is acted, a scaffolding is erected and seats placed in the
+arena. At other times the arena is made use of for equestrian exercises and
+chariot races in the style of the ancients, combats with wild beasts, etc.,
+or it may be filled with water for the representation of naval fights
+(_naumachia_); in this case you have a vast oval lake between the
+spectators and the stage. It is a great pity that this superb and
+interesting building is not kept in good repair; the fact is it is seldom
+or ever made use of except on very particular occasions: it is almost
+useless in a place like Parma, "so fallen from its high estate," but were
+such an amphitheatre in Paris, London, or any great city, it might be used
+for all kinds of _spectacles_ and amusements. A small theatre from the
+design of Bernino stands close to this amphitheatre, and is built in a
+light tasteful manner. If fresh painted and lighted up it would make a very
+brilliant appearance. This may be considered as the Court theatre. At a
+short distance from the theatres is the Museum of Parma, in which there is
+a well chosen gallery of pictures. Among the most striking pictures of the
+old school is without doubt that of St Jerome by Correggio; but I was full
+as much, dare I be so heretical as to say more pleased, with the
+productions of the modern school of Parma. A distribution of prizes had
+lately been made by the Empress Maria Louisa, and there were many
+paintings, models of sculpture and architectural designs, that did infinite
+credit to the young artists. I remarked one painting in particular which is
+worthy of a Fuseli. It represented the battle of the river God Scamander
+with Achilles. The subjects of most of the paintings I saw here were taken
+from the mythology or from ancient and modern history; and this is perhaps
+the reason that they pleased me more than those of the ancient masters. Why
+in the name of the [Greek: to kalon] did these painters confine
+themselves so much to Madonnas, Crucifixions, and Martyrdoms, when their
+own poets, Ariosto and Tasso, present so many subjects infinitely more
+pleasing? Then, again, in many of these crucifixions and martyrdoms, the
+gross anachronisms, such as introducing monks and soldiers with match-locks
+and women in Gothic costume at the crucifixion, totally destroy the
+seriousness and interest of the subject by annihilating all illusion and
+exciting risibility.
+
+Parma will ever be renowned in history as the birthplace of Caius Cassius,
+the Mend and colleague of Brutus.
+
+The Empress Maria Louisa lives here in the Ducal Palace, which is a
+spacious but ornamental edifice. She lives, 'tis said, without any
+ostentation. Out of her own states, her presence in Italy would be attended
+with unpleasant consequences to the powers that be, on account of the
+attachment borne to Napoleon by all classes of society; and it is on this
+account that on her last visit to Bologna she received an intimation from
+the papal authorities to quit the Roman territory in twenty-four hours. We
+next passed thro' St Hilario and Reggio and brought to the evening at the
+village of Rubbiera. At St Hilario is the entrance into the Duke of
+Modena's territory, and here we underwent again &n examination of trunks,
+as we did both on entering and leaving the territory of Maria Louisa.
+
+Reggio is a large walled city, but I had only time to visit the Cathedral
+and to remark therein a fine picture of the Virgin and the Chapel called
+"Capella della Morte." Reggio pretends to the honour of having given birth
+to the Divine Ariosto:
+
+ Quel grande che canto l'armi e gli amorl,
+
+as Guarini describes him, I believe. The face of the country from Parma to
+Reggio is exactly the same as what we have passed thro' already.
+
+The next day (20 August) we passed thro' Modena, where we stopped to
+breakfast and refresh horses. It is a large and handsome city, the Ducal
+Palace is striking and in the Cathedral is presented the famous bucket
+which gave rise to the poem of Tassoni called _La Secchia rapita._ An air
+of opulence and grandeur seems to prevail in Modena.
+
+At Samoggia we entered the Papal territory and again underwent a search of
+trunks. Within three miles of Bologna a number of villas and several
+tanneries, which send forth a most intolerable odour, announce the approach
+to that celebrated and venerable city. On the left hand side, before
+entering the town, is a superb portico with arcades, about one and a half
+miles in length, which leads from the city to the church of San Luca. On
+the right are the Appennines, towering gradually above you. Bologna lies at
+the foot of these mountains on the eastern side and here the plain ends for
+those who are bound to Florence, which lies on the western side of the vast
+ridge which divides Italy. We arrived at Bologna at half-past seven in the
+evening, and here we intend to repose a day or two; I shall then cross the
+Appennines for the first time in my life. A reinforcement of mules or oxen
+is required for every carriage; from the ascent the whole way you can
+travel, I understand, very little quicker _en poste_ than with a
+_vetturino_. We are lodged at Bologna in a very comfortable inn called
+_Locanda d'Inghilterra_.
+
+
+BOLOGNA, 22d August.
+
+The great popularity of Bologna, which is a very large and handsomely built
+city, lies in the colonnaded porticos and arcades on each side of the
+streets throughout the whole city. These arcades are mightily convenient
+against sun and rain, and contradict the assertion of Rousseau, who
+asserted that England was the only country in the world where the safety of
+foot passengers is consulted, whereas here in Bologna not only are
+_trottoirs_ broader than those of London in general, but you are
+effectually protected against sun and rain, and are not obliged to carry an
+umbrella about with you perpetually as in London. This arcade system, is,
+however, rather a take off from the beauty of the city, and gives it a
+gloomy heavy appearance, which is not diminished by the sight of friars and
+mendicants with which this place swarms, and announce to you that you are
+in the holy land. At Bologna it is necessary to have a sharp eye on your
+baggage, on account of the crowds of ragged _faineans_ that surround your
+carriage while it is unloading.
+
+The first thing that the _ciceroni_ generally take you to see in Italy are
+the churches, and mine would not probably have spared me one, but I was
+more anxious to see the University. I however allowed him to lead me into
+two of the principal churches, viz., the _Duomo_ or Cathedral, and the
+church of San Petronio, both magnificent Gothic temples and worth the
+attention of the traveller. On the _Piazza del Gigante_ is a fine bronze
+statue of Neptune. The _Piazza_ takes its name from this statue, as at one
+time in Italy, after the introduction of Christianity and when the ancient
+mythology was totally forgotten, the statues of the Gods were called Giants
+or named after Devils and their prototypes believed to be such.
+
+In the Museum at the University is an admirable collection of fossils,
+minerals, and machines in every branch of science. There are some excellent
+pictures also; the University of Bologna was, you know, at all times famous
+and its celebrity, is not at all diminished, for I believe Bologna boasts
+more scientific men, and particularly in the sciences _positives_, than any
+other city in Italy.
+
+In the _Palazzo pubblico_ (_Hotel de Ville_) is a Christ and a Samson by
+Guido Reni; but what pleased me most in the way of painting was the
+collection in the gallery of Count Marescalchi. The Count has been at great
+pains to form it and has shown great taste and discernment. It is a small
+but unique collection. Here is to be seen a head of Christ, the colouring
+of which is so brilliant as to illuminate the room in which it is appended,
+when the shutters are closed, and in the absence of all other light except
+what appears thro' the crevices of the window shutters. This head, however,
+does not seem characteristic of Christ; it wants the gravity, the soft
+melancholy and unassuming meekness of the _great Reformer_: in short, from
+the vivid fire of the eyes and the too great self-complacency of the
+countenance, it gave me rather the idea
+
+ Del biondo Dio che in Tessalia si adora.
+
+I passed two hours in this cabinet. I next repaired to the centre of the
+city with the intention of ascending one at least of the two square towers
+or _campanili_ which stand close together, one of which is _strait_, the
+other a leaning one. _Garisendi_ is the name of the leaning tower, and it
+forms a parallelipipedon of 140 feet in height and about twenty feet in
+breath and length. It leans so much as to form an angle of seventy-five
+degrees with the ground on which it stands. The other tower, the strait
+one, is called _Asinelli_ and is a parallelipipedon of 310 feet in height
+and about twenty-five feet in length and breadth. I ascended the leaning
+tower, but I found the fatigue so great that I was scarcely repaid by the
+fine view of the surrounding country, which presents on one side an immense
+plain covered with towns, villages and villas, and on the other the
+Appennines towering one above another. When on the top of _Garisendi_,
+_Asinelli_ appears to be four times higher than its neighbour, and the bare
+aspect of its enormous height deterred me from even making the attempt of
+ascending it. When viewed or rather looked down upon from _Garisendi_,
+Bologna, from its being of an elliptical form and surrounded by a wall and
+from having these two enormous towers in the centre, resembles a boat with
+masts.
+
+From the great celebrity of its University and the eminent men it has
+produced, Bologna is considered as the most litterary city of Italy.
+Galvani was born in Bologna and studied at this University, and among the
+modern prodigies is a young lady who is professor of Greek and who is by
+all accounts the most amiable _Bas bleu_ that ever existed.[82] The
+Bolognese are a remarkably fine, intelligent and robust race of people, and
+are renowned for their republican spirit, and the energy with which they at
+all times resisted the encroachments of the Holy See. Bologna was at one
+time a Republic, and on their coins is the word Libertas. The Bolognese
+never liked the Papal government and were much exasperated at returning
+under the domination of the Holy Father. In the time of Napoleon, Bologna
+formed part of the _Regno d'ltalia_ and partook of all its advantages.
+Napoleon is much regretted by them; and so impatiently did the inhabitants
+bear the change, on the dismemberment of the kingdom of Italy, and their
+transfer to the pontifical sceptre, that on Murat's entry in their city in
+1815 the students and other young men of the town flew to arms and in a few
+hours organised three battalions. Had the other cities shown equal energy
+and republican spirit, the revolution would have been completed and Italy
+free; but the fact is that the Italians in general, tho' discontented, had
+no very high opinion of Murat's talents as a political character, and he
+besides _committed_ a great fault in not entering Rome on his march and
+revolutionising it. Murat, like most men, was ruined by half-measures. The
+last tune that Maria Louisa was here the people surrounded the inn where
+she resided and hailed her with cries of _Viva I'Imperatrice!_ The Pope's
+legate in consequence intimated to her the expediency of her immediate
+departure from the city, with a request that she would not repeat her
+visit. Bologna is considered by the Ultras, _Obscuranten,_ and _Eteignoirs_
+as the focus and headquarters of Carbonarism.
+
+In the evening I visited the theatre built by Bibbiena and had the pleasure
+of hearing for the first time an Italian tragedy, which, however, are now
+rarely represented and scarcely ever well acted. This night's performance
+formed an exception and was satisfactory. The piece was _Romeo and
+Giulietta_. The actress who did the part of Giulietta performed it with
+great effect, particularly in the tomb scene. In this scene she reminded me
+forcibly of our own excellent actress, Miss O'Neill. This was the only part
+of the play that had any resemblance to the tragedy of Shakespeare. All the
+rest was on the French model. I saw a number of beautiful women in the
+boxes. The Bolognese women are remarkable for their fine complexions; those
+that I saw were much inclined to _embonpoint_.
+
+
+[79] And also to Napoleon, after the battle at Eylau.--ED.
+
+[80] Joseph Forsyth (1763-1815), author of _Remarks on antiquities, arts
+ and letters in Italy_, London, 1813.--ED.
+
+[81] Horace, _Carm._, II, I, 33.--ED.
+
+[82] The young woman in question was Clotilda Tambroni (1768-1818). She
+ taught Greek at the University of Bologna and was in correspondence
+ with the great French scholar Ansse de Villoison.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Journey across the Appennines to Florence--Tuscan idioms and
+customs--Monuments and galleries at Florence--The Cascino--Churches--
+Theatres--Popularity of the Grand Duke--Napoleon's downfall not
+regretted--Academies in Florence.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 26th August.
+
+The moment you leave Bologna to go to Florence you enter the gorges of the
+Appennines, and after journeying seven miles, begin to ascend the ridge.
+The ascent begins at Pianoro. Among these mountains the scenery is wild and
+romantic, and tho' not so grandiose and sublime as that of the Alps, is
+nevertheless extremely picturesque. One meets occasionally with the ruins
+of old castles on some of the heights, and I was strongly reminded, at the
+sight of these antique edifices, of the mysteries of Udolpho and the times
+of the Condottieri. The silence that reigns here is only interrupted by the
+noise of the waterfall and the occasional scream of the eagle. The wild
+abrupt transition of landscape would suggest the idea of haunting places
+for robbers, yet one seldom or never hears of any, on this road. In Tuscany
+there is, I understand, so much industry and morality, that a robbery is a
+thing unknown; but in his Holiness's dominions, from the idleness and
+poverty that prevails, they are said to be frequent. Why it does not occur
+in these mountains, in that part of them, at least, which belongs to the
+Papal Government, I am at a loss to conceive.
+
+Here the chesnut and olive trees salute the Ultramontane traveller for the
+first time. The olive tree, tho' a most useful, is not an ornamental one,
+as it resembles a willow or osier in its trunk and in the colour of its
+leaves. The chesnut tree is a glorious plant for an indolent people, since
+it furnishes food without labour, as the Xaca or Jack fruit tree does
+to the Cingalese in Ceylon. On one of the heights between Pianoro and
+Lojano you have in very clear weather a view of both the Adriatic and
+Tyrrhene seas. We brought to the night at Scarica l'Asino and the next
+morning early we entered the Tuscan territory at Pietra Mala, where there
+is a _Douane_ and consequently an examination of trunks. At one o'clock we
+arrived at an inn called _Le Maschere_, about fifteen miles distance from
+Florence; it is a large mansion and being situated on an eminence commands
+an extensive view. One becomes soon aware of being in the Tuscan territory
+from the number of cultivated spots to be seen in this part of the
+Appennines: for such is the industry of the inhabitants that they do
+wonders on their naturally sterile soil. One sees a number of farms. Every
+spot of ground is in cultivation, between _Le Maschere_ and Florence in
+particular; these spots of ground, gardens, orchards and villas forming a
+striking and pleasing contrast with the wild and dreary scenery of the
+Appennines. Another thing that indicates one's arrival among the Tuscans is
+their aspiration of the letter _c_ before _a_, _o_ and _u_, which is at
+first extremely puzzling to a foreigner accustomed only to the Roman
+pronunciation. For instance, instead of _camera_, _cotto_, _curvo_, they
+pronounce these words _hamera_, _hotto_, and _hurvo_ with an exceeding
+strong aspiration of the _h_. It is the same too with the _ch_ which they
+aspirate, _ex gr._ instead of _pochino_, _chiave_, they say _pohino_,
+_hiave_. The language however which is spoken is the most classical and
+pure Italian and except the above mentioned aspiration it is delightful to
+the ear; peculiarly so to those who come from the north of Italy, and have
+only hitherto heard the unpleasing nasal twang of the Milanese and the
+exceeding uncouth barbarous dialect of Bologna. Another striking
+peculiarity is the smart appearance of the Tuscan peasantry. They are a
+remarkably handsome race of men; the females unite with their natural
+beauty a grace and elegance that one is quite astonished to find among
+peasants. They express themselves in the most correct and classical
+language and they have a great deal of repartee. As the peasantry of
+Tuscany enjoy a greater share of _aisance_ than falls to the lot of those
+of any other country, and as the females dress with taste and take great
+pains to appear smart on all occasions, they resemble rather the
+shepherdesses on the Opera stage or those of the fabled Arcadia than
+anything in real life. The females too are remarkably industrious and will
+work like horses all the week to gain wherewithal to appear smart on
+holidays. Their dress is very becoming, and they wear sometimes jewellery
+to a large amount on their persons; a very common ornament among them is a
+collar of gold around their necks. Their usual head-dress is either a white
+straw hat, or a black round beaver hat, with black ostrich feathers. I
+prefer the straw hat; it is more tasteful than the round hat which always
+seems to me too masculine for a woman. At the inn at _Le Maschere_ we were
+waited on by three smart females. The whole road from _Le Maschere_ to
+Florence is very beautiful and diversified. Vineyards, gardens, farm houses
+and villas thicken as one approaches and when arrived within three miles of
+Florence, which lies in a basin surrounded by mountains, one is quite
+bewildered at the sight of the quantity of beautiful villas and _maisons de
+plaisance_ in every direction.
+
+Every thing indicates life, industry and comfort in this charming country.
+We stopped at a villa belonging to the Grand Duke called _II Pratolino_,
+seven miles distant from Florence. Here is to be seen the famous statue
+representing the genius of the Appennines. The Villa is unfurnished and out
+of repair and the garden and grounds are neglected: it is a great pity, for
+it is a fine building and in a beautiful position. The celebrated Bianca
+Capello, a Venetian by birth, and mistress of Francesco II de' Medici,
+Grand Duke of Tuscany, used to reside here.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 27th August.
+
+I am extremely well pleased with my accommodations at the hotel where I am
+lodged. Mme Hembert, the proprietor, was once _femme de chambre_ to the
+Empress Josephine; she is an excellent woman and a very attentive hostess,
+and I recommend her hotel to all those travellers who visit Florence and do
+not care to incur the expence of Schneider's. There is an excellent and
+well served _table d'hote_ at two o'clock, wine at discretion, for which,
+and for my bedroom, I pay seven _paoli_ per day. This hotel has the
+advantage of being in a very central situation. It is close to the _Piazza
+del Gran Duca_, the post-office, the _Palazzo Vecchio_, the Bureaux of
+Government, the celebrated Gallery of Sculpture and Painting and to the
+Arno. It is only 300 yards from the _Piazza del Duomo_, where the Cathedral
+stands, and 600 yards from the principal theatre _Della Pergola_ on the one
+side; while on the other side, after crossing the _Ponte Vecchio_, stands
+the _Palazzo Pitti_, the residence of the Grand Duke, at a distance of
+seven or 800 yards.
+
+The _Piazza del Gran Duca_ is very striking to the eye of the northern
+traveller; the statues of the Gods in white marble in the open air would
+make him fancy himself in Athens in the olden time. The following statues
+in bronze and white marble are to be seen on this _Piazza_. In bronze are:
+a statue of Perseus by Cellini; Judith with the head of Holofernes by
+Donatello; David and Goliath; Samson. In white marble are the following
+beautiful statues: a group representing Hercules and Cacus; another
+representing a Roman carrying off a Sabine woman. The Hercules, who is in
+the act of strangling Cacus, rests on one leg. Nearly in the centre of the
+_Piazza_, opposite to the post office and in front of the _Palazzo
+Vecchio_, is the principal ornament of the _Piazza_, which consists of a
+group representing Neptune in his car or conch (or shell) drawn by
+sea-horses and accompanied by Tritons. The statue of Neptune is of colossal
+size, the whole group is in marble and the conch of Egyptian granite. This
+group forms a fountain. There is likewise on this _Piazza_ an immense
+equestrian statue in bronze of Cosmo the First by John of Bologna. The
+_Palazzo Vecchio_ is a large Gothic building by Arnulpho and has a very
+lofty square tower or _campanile_.
+
+The Gallery of Florence being so close to my abode demanded next my
+attention. The building in which this invaluable Museum is preserved forms
+three sides of a parallelogram, two long ones and one short one, of which
+the side towards the south of the quai of the Arno is the short one.
+
+On the north is an open space communicating with the _Piazza del Gran
+Duca_. The Gallery occupies the whole first floor of this vast building.
+The _rez de chaussee_ is occupied, on the west side, by the bureaux of
+Government, and on the south and east sides by shopkeepers, in whose shops
+is always to be seen a brilliant display of merchandize. As there are
+arcades on the three sides of this parallelogram, they form the favorite
+meridian promenade of the _belles_ and _beaux_ of Florence, particularly on
+Sundays and holidays, after coming out of Church. I ascended the steps from
+a door on the east side of the building, to visit the Gallery.
+
+The quantity and variety of objects of art, of the greatest value, baffle
+all description, and it would require months and years to attempt an
+analysis of all it contains. I shall therefore content myself with pointing
+out those objects which imprinted themselves the most forcibly on my
+imagination and recollection. In a chamber on the left hand of one wing of
+the Gallery stands the Venus de' Medici, sent back last year from France.
+In the same chamber with her are the following statues: the extremely
+beautiful _Apollino_; the spotted Faun; the _Remouleur_ or figure which is
+in the act of whetting a sickle. All these were in Paris, and are now
+restored to this Gallery. In this chamber two pictures struck me in
+particular: the one the Venus of Titian, a most voluptuous figure; the
+other a portrait of the mistress of Rafaello, called "_La Fornarina_," from
+her being a baker's daughter.
+
+Returning to the Gallery I was quite bewildered at the immense number of
+statues, pictures, sarcophagi, busts, altars, etc. Among the pieces of
+sculpture those that most caught my attention were: the _Venus genetrix_
+(which I had seen before at Paris); the _Venus victrix_; the _Venus
+Anadyomene_; Hercules and Nessus, a superb groupe; a young Bacchus; and an
+exquisitely chiselled group representing Pan teaching Olympus to play the
+syrinx, tho' the attitude of the former is rather indecorous from not being
+in a very quiescent state; a fine statue of Leda with the swan; a Mercury,
+both worthy of great attention. I remarked also in particular a statue of
+Marsyas attached to a tree and flayed. It is of a pale reddish marble, and
+tho' I perfectly agree with Forsyth, that colored marble is not at all
+adapted to statuary, yet in this instance it gives a wonderful effect and
+is strikingly suitable, as the slight reddish colour gives a full idea of
+the flesh after the skin is torn off. It makes one shudder to look at it.
+In one of the halls are the statues of Niobe and her daughters, a beautiful
+group. Then there is the celebrated copy of the group of the Laocoon by
+Bandinelli, which none but the most perfect and skilful connoisseur could
+distinguish from the original. But it is totally impossible for me to
+describe the immense variety of paintings, historical, portrait and
+landscape; the statues single or in groups; the sarcophagi, altars,
+bas-reliefs, inscriptions, bronzes, medals, vases, baths, candelabra,
+cameos, Etruscan and Egyptian idols with which this admirable Museum is
+filled. In a line on each side of the Gallery near the ceiling is a
+succession of portraits in chronological order of the Grand Dukes of
+Tuscany, the Germanic Emperors, the Kings of France, of England, of Spain,
+of Portugal, of the Popes and of the Ottoman Emperors. Among the
+antiquities I particularly noticed a large steel mirror and a Roman Eagle
+in bronze of the 24th Legion.
+
+Having passed full four hours in this Museum, I descended the steps,
+crossed the Arno and repaired to the building in which is preserved the
+_Cabinet d'Histoire Naturelle_. In this Museum what is most remarkable are
+the imitations in wax of the whole anatomy of the human body. It is the
+first collection of its kind; indeed it is unique in Europe. These
+imitations are kept in glass cases and are so true and so perfectly correct
+as to leave nothing to desire to the student in anatomy. These imitations
+in wax not only include all the details of anatomy, but also the progress
+of generation, gestation, and of almost every malady to which the human
+body is liable. They are of a frightful exactitude. There are likewise in
+this Museum imitations in wax of various plants and shrubs exotic as well
+as indigenous and the collection of stuffed birds, beasts and fishes and
+that of insects, mineralogy and conchology scarcely yields to the
+collection at the _Jardin des Plantes_ at Paris. Neither here nor at the
+Florentine gallery are fees allowed to be taken; on the contrary a strict
+prohibition of them is posted up in the French, Italian, German and English
+languages.
+
+On the _Ponte Vecchio_ on each side are jewellers' shops, who sell besides
+jewellery, cameos and works in mosaic. The Quais on each side of the Arno
+are very broad and spacious and form agreeable promenades in the winter
+season. The buildings on the banks of the Arno are magnificent. The streets
+of Florence have this peculiarity that they are all paved with large flag
+stones, which makes them mightily pleasant for pedestrians, but dangerous
+at times for horses who are apt to slip. Most of the houses in Florence
+have walls of prodigious thickness; one would suppose each house was meant
+to be a fortress in case of necessity.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 29th August.
+
+On the other side of the Arno, a little beyond the _Cabinet Physique_ and
+Museum of Natural History stands the _Palazzo Pitti_, the residence of the
+Grand Duke. It is a vast building and has a large and choice collection of
+pictures; but its finest ornament in my opinion is the statue of Venus by
+Canova, which to me at least appears to equal the Medicean Venus in beauty
+and in grace. The magnificent and spacious garden belonging to the Palace
+is called the garden of Boboli. These gardens form the grand promenade of
+the Florentines on Sundays and holidays. The alleys are well shaded by
+trees, which effectually protect the promenaders from the rays of the sun.
+There are a great many statues in this garden, but the most striking is a
+group which lies nearly in the centre of the garden. It is environed by a
+large circular basin or lake lined with stone and planted with orange trees
+on the whole circumference. In the centre of the lake is a rock and on this
+rock is a colossal statue in white marble of Neptune in his car. The car is
+in the shape of a marine conch and serves as a basin and fountain at the
+same time. There are several other fountains and _jets d'eau_, among which
+is a group representing Adam and Eve and the statue of a man pouring out
+water from a vase which he has on his shoulder.
+
+The _Corso_ or grand evening promenade for carriages and equestrians is on
+a place called the Cascino, pronounced by the Florentines _Hascino_. The
+Cascino consists of pleasure grounds on the banks of the Arno outside the
+town, laid out in roads, alleys and walks for carriages, equestrians and
+pedestrians. There is a very brilliant display of carriages every evening.
+There are _restaurants_ on the Cascino and supper parties are often formed
+here. This place is often the scene of curious adventures. Cicisbeism is
+universal at Florence, tho' far from being always criminal, as is generally
+supposed by foreigners. I find the Florentine women very graceful and many
+very handsome; but in point of beauty the female peasantry far exceed the
+_noblesse_ and burghers. All of them however dress with taste. The
+handsomest woman in Florence is the wife of an apothecary who lives in the
+_Piazza del Duomo_ and she has a host of admirers.
+
+On the promenade _lungo l'Arno_ near the Cascino is a fountain with a
+statue of Pegasus, with an inscription in Italian verse purporting that
+Pegasus having stopped there one day to refresh himself at this fountain,
+found the place so pleasant that he remained there ever since. This is a
+poetic nation _par excellence_. _Affiches_ are announced in sonnets and
+other metres; and tho' in other countries the votaries of the Muses are but
+too apt to neglect the ordinary and vulgar concerns of life, yet here it by
+no means diminishes industry, and the nine Ladies are on the best possible
+terms with Mr Mercury.
+
+I shall not attempt a description of the various _palazzi_ and churches of
+Florence, tho' I have visited, thanks to the zeal and importunity of my
+_cicerone_, nearly all, except to remark that no one church in Florence,
+the Cathedral and Baptistery on the _Piazza del Duomo_ excepted, has its
+facade finished, and they will remain probably for ever unfinished, as the
+completion of them would cost very large sums of money, and the restored
+Government, however anxious to resuscitate the _ancient faith_, are not
+inclined to make large disbursements from their own resources for that
+purpose. I wish however they would finish the facade of two of these
+churches, viz., that of _Santa Maria Novella_ and that of _Santa Croce_.
+_Santa Maria Novella_ stands in the Piazza of that name which is very
+large. It is a beautiful edifice, and can boast in the interior of it
+several columns and pilasters of _jaune antique_ and of white marble. But
+they have a most barbarous custom in Florence of covering these columns
+with red cloth on _jours de Fete_, which spoils the elegant simplicity of
+the columns and makes the church itself resemble a _theatre des
+Marionnettes_. But the Italians are dreadfully fond of gaudy colours. In
+the church of _Santa Croce_ what most engaged my attention was the monument
+erected to Vittorio Alfieri, sculptured by Canova. It is a most beautiful
+piece of sculpture. A figure of Italy crowned with turrets seems fully
+sensible of the great loss she has sustained in one who was so ardent a
+patriot, as well as an excellent tragic poet. This monument was erected at
+the expence of the Countess of Albany (Queen of England, had _legitimacy_
+always prevailed, or been as much in fashion as it now is) as a mark of
+esteem and affection towards one who was so tenderly attached to her, and
+of whom in his writings Alfieri speaks with the endearing and affectionate
+appellation of _mia Donna_. The beautiful sonnet to her, which accompanies
+the dedication of his tragedy of _Mirra_, well deserves the monument; there
+is so much feeling in it that I cannot retrain from transcribing it:
+
+ Vergognando talor, che ancor si taccia,
+ Donna, per me l'almo tuo nome in fronte
+ Di queste omai gla troppe a te ben conte
+ Tragedie, ond'io di folle avrommi taccia;
+
+ Or vo' qual d'esse meno a te dispiaccia
+ Di te fregiar; benche di tutte il fonte
+ Tu sola fosti, e'l viver mio non conte
+ Se non dal Di, ch'al viver tuo si allaccia.
+
+ Della figlia di Ciniro infelice
+ L'orrendo a un tempo ed innocente amore
+ Sempre da' tuoi begli occhi il planto elice;
+
+ Prova emmi questo, ch'al mio dubbio core
+ Tacitamente imperiosa dice,
+ Ch'io di Mirra consacri a te il dolore.
+
+In this sanctuary (church of the _Santa Croce_) are likewise the tombs and
+monuments of other great men which Italy has produced. There is the
+monument erected to Galileo which represents the earth turning round the
+sun with the emphatic words: _Eppur si muove._ Here too repose the ashes of
+Machiavelli and Michel Angelo. This church is in fact the Westminster Abbey
+of Florence.
+
+To go from the _Piazza del gran Duca_ to the _Piazza del Duomo_, where
+stands the Cathedral, you have only to pass thro' a long narrow street or
+rather alley (for it is impervious to carriages) with shops on each side
+and always filled with people going to or returning from the Duomo. This
+Cathedral is of immense size. The architecture is singular from its being a
+mixture of the Gothic and Greek. It appears the most ponderous load that
+ever was laid on the shoulders of poor mother earth. There is nothing light
+in its structure to relieve the massiveness of the building, and in this
+respect it forms a striking contrast to the Cathedral of Milan which
+appears the work of Sylphs. The outside of this Duomo of Florence is
+decorated and incrusted with black and white marble, which increases the
+massiveness of its appearance. The steeple or Campanile stands by itself,
+altogether separate from the Cathedral, and this is the case with most of
+the Churches in Italy that are not of pure Gothic architecture. This
+_Campanile_ is curiously inlaid and incrusted on its outside with red,
+white and black marble. The Baptistery is another building on the same
+_Piazza_. It is in the same stile of building as the Duomo, but incloses
+much less space, and was formerly a separate church, called the church of
+St John the Baptist. The immense bronze doors or rather gates, both of the
+Duomo and Battisterio, attracted my peculiar notice. On them are figured
+bas-reliefs of exquisite and admirable workmanship, representing Scripture
+histories. It was the symmetry and perfection of these gates that induced
+Michel Angelo to call them in a fit of enthusiasm _The Gates of Paradise_.
+At the door of the Battisterio are the columns in red granite, which once
+adorned the gates of the city at Pisa, and were carried off by the
+Florentines in one of their wars. Chains are fastened round these columns,
+as a memorial of the conquest. The cupolas both of the Duomo and
+Battisterio are octangular. There is a stone seat on the _Piazza del Duomo_
+where they pretend that Dante used occasionally to sit; hence it is called
+to this day _Il Sasso di Dante_.
+
+You will now no doubt expect me to give some account of the theatres. At
+the _Pergola_, which is a large and splendid theatre, I have seen two
+operas; the one, _L'Italiana in Algieri_, which I saw before at Milan last
+year; the other, the _Barbieri di Seviglia_ by Rossini, which afforded to
+my ears the most delightful musical feast they ever enjoyed. The cavatina
+_Una voce poco fa_ gave me inconceivable delight. The _Ballo_ was of a very
+splendid description and from a subject taken from the Oriental history
+entitled _Macbet Sultan of Delhi_. How the Mogul Sultan came to have the
+name of Macbet I know not. On the _plafond_ of the _Pergola_ is an
+allegorical painting representing the restored Kings of Europe replaced on
+their thrones by Valor and Justice. The decorations at this theatre are not
+quite so splendid as those of the _Scala_ at Milan, but living horses and
+military evolutions seem to be annexed to every historical _Ballo_. Horses
+indeed appear to be an indispensable ingredient in the _Balli_ in the large
+cities of Italy.
+
+In the _Teatro Cocomera_, comedies are performed, and very generally those
+of the inexhaustible Goldoni. I saw the _Bugiardo_ very fairly performed at
+this theatre. The story is nearly the same as that of our piece, _The
+Liar_, which is I believe imitated from _Le Menteur_ of Corneille. The
+actor who did the Liar was a very good one. The actresses screamed too much
+and were rather coarse. Another night at the theatre I saw a piece call'd
+_II furioso_, a _comedie larmoyante_ which was interesting and well given;
+but the voice of the prompter was occasionally too loud. Tragedies are very
+seldom played; the language of Alfieri could never, I will not say be given
+with effect, but even conceived by the modern actors. It would be like a
+tragedy of Sophocles performed by boys at school. There is another reason
+too why these tragedies are not given; they abound too much in republican
+and patriotic sentiments to be grateful to the ears of the Princes who
+reign in Italy, all of whom being of foreign extraction and unshackled by
+constitutions, come under the denomination of those beings called by Greeks
+[Greek: Turannoi], I use this word in its Greek sense. Of the Tuscan
+Government it is but justice to say that from the days of Leopold to the
+present day it was and is a mild, just and paternal government, more so
+perhaps than any in Europe; and the only one that can any way reconcile one
+altogether to those lines of Pope:
+
+ For forms of Government let fools contest;
+ Whate'er is best administer'd is best.[83]
+
+In the time of Leopold the factious nobility were kept in check, and the
+industrious classes, mercantile and agricultural, encouraged. The peasantry
+were, and are, the most affluent in Europe; and this is no small incitement
+to the industry that prevails. On the elevation of Leopold to the throne of
+the Caesars, the present Grand Duke succeeded in Tuscany; and he followed
+the same system that Leopold did, and was equally beloved by his subjects.
+Tuscany was the only country in Italy that did not desire a change at the
+period of the French conquest, and the only state wherein the French were
+not hailed as deliverers. The Tuscans exhibited a very honorable spirit on
+the occasion of Buonaparte's visit to the Grand Duke in 1797. They went
+together to the Theatre della Pergola, and on their entering into the Grand
+Ducal box, the Grand Duke was hailed with cries of _Viva il Nostro
+Sovrano_: now this proof of attachment at a period when Buonaparte was
+all-mighty in Italy, when the Grand Duke was but an inferior personage, at
+a time too when it was doubtful whether or not he would be dethroned, and
+in the very presence of the mighty conqueror, reflects great honor and
+credit on the Tuscan character. Buonaparte was much struck at this proof of
+disinterested attachment on the part of the Florentines towards their
+Sovereign, and told the Grand Duke very ingenuously that he had received
+orders to revolutionize the country, from the French Directory; but that as
+he perceived the people were so happy, and the Prince so beloved, he could
+not and would not attempt to make any change.
+
+The applause given to the Grand Duke at this critical period is so much the
+more creditable to the Florentines as they in general receive their Prince,
+on his presenting himself at the theatre, with no other ceremonial than
+rising once and bowing. There is no fulsome _God save the King_ repeated
+even to nausea, as at the English theatres. In fact none of the Italians
+pay that servile adulation to their Sovereigns that the French and English
+do.
+
+The changes projected in Italy at the treaty of Luneville by Napoleon then
+first Consul, and his further views on Italy, induced him at length to
+eject an Austrian Prince from the sovereignty of a country which he
+intended to annex to the French Empire. The Grand Duke was indemnified with
+a principality in Germany, where he remained until the downfall of Napoleon
+in 1814; subsequent arrangements again restored him to the sway of the land
+he loved so well, and he returned to Florence as if he had only been absent
+on a tour, finding scarcely any change in the laws and customs and habits
+of the country; for tho' Tuscany was first erected into a Kingdom by the
+title of Etruria, and afterwards annexed to the French Empire, the
+institutions and laws laid down by Leopold and followed strictly by his
+successor were preserved; very little innovation took place, and the few
+innovations that were effected were decided ameliorations; for the Emperor
+Napoleon had too much tact not to preserve and protect the good he found,
+tho' he abolished all old abuses. The improvements introduced by the French
+have been preserved and confirmed by the Grand Duke on his return, for he
+is a man of too much good sense, and has too much love of justice, to think
+of abolishing the good that has been done, merely because it was done by
+the French. Tuscany has now a respectable military force of 8,000 men well
+armed, clothed and equipped in the French manner.
+
+Tuscany is the only part of Italy where the downfall of Napoleon was not
+regretted; the inhabitants of Leghorn indeed rejoiced at it, for the
+commerce of Tuscany being chiefly maritime, Leghorn suffered a good deal
+from the continental system. Leghorn in fact decayed in the same proportion
+that Milan and other inland cities rose into opulence.
+
+The character of the Tuscan people is so amiable and pacific that crime is
+very rare indeed. Murder is almost unknown and the punishment of death is
+banished from the penal code. Where the government is good, the people are
+or soon become good. I know of no country in the world more agreeable for a
+foreigner to settle in than Tuscany.
+
+I omitted to remark that in the street called _Borgo d'Ognissanti_ is a
+large house or _palazzo_ which belonged to Americo Vespucci. His bust is to
+be seen in the Florentine Gallery. It is curious to remark the different
+appellations given to the word _street_ in the different cities of Italy.
+In Milan a street is called _vico_ and in Turin, _contrada_; in Florence
+_strada_ and in Rome, I understand, _via_.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 1st Sept.
+
+I shall start in a day or two for Rome, being very impatient to behold the
+Eternal City, a plan which I have had in view from my earliest days and
+which I have not been able hitherto to effect; for like the Abbe Delille I
+had sworn to visit the sacred spot where so many illustrious men had spoke
+and acted, and to do hommage in person to their Manes. I was always a great
+admirer of the "_Popolo Re_."
+
+In Florence there are a great many literary societies such as the
+_Infuocati, Immobili_, and the far renowned _La Crusca_.
+
+Frequent _Academies_, for so a sitting of a litterary society in Italy is
+termed, are held in Florence. There are likewise two Casinos, one for the
+nobility and the other for the merchants and burghers; the wives and
+daughters of the members attend occasionally; and cards, music and dancing
+are the amusements. Florence abounds in artists in alabaster whose
+workmanship is beautiful. They make models in alabaster of the most
+celebrated pieces of sculpture and architecture, on any scale you chuse:
+they fabricate busts too and vases in alabaster. The vases made in
+imitation of the ancient Greek vases are magnificent, and some of them are
+of immense size. Foreigners generally chuse to have their busts taken; for
+almost all foreigners who arrive here are or pretend to be smitten with an
+ardent love for the fine arts, and every one wishes to take with him models
+of the fine things he has seen in Italy, on his return to his native
+country. Here are English travellers who at home would scarcely be able to
+distinguish the finest piece of ancient sculpture--the Mercury, for
+instance, in the Florentine Gallery, from a Mercury in a citizen's garden
+at Highgate--who here affect to be in extacies at the sight of the Venus,
+Apollino, &c., and they are fond of retailing on all occasions the terms of
+art and connoisseurship they have learned by rote, in the use of which they
+make sometimes ridiculous mistakes. For instance I heard an Englishman one
+day holding forth on the merits of the Vierge _quisouse_, as he called it.
+I could not for some time divine what he meant by the word _quisouse_, but
+after some explanation I found that he meant the celebrated painting of the
+_Vierge qui coud_, or _Vierge couseuse_, as it is sometimes called, which
+latter word he had transformed into _quisouse_. This affectation, however,
+of passion for the _belle arti_, tho' sometimes open to ridicule, is very
+useful. It generates taste, encourages artists, and is surely a more
+innocent as well as more rational mode of spending money and passing time
+than in encouraging pugilism or in racing, coach driving and cock fighting.
+
+
+[83] Pope, _Essay on Man_, ep. III, 303-4.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Journey from Florence to Rome--Sienna--Radicofani--Bolsena--Montefiascone
+wine--Viterbo--Baccano--The Roman Campagna--The papal _douane_--Monuments
+and Museums in Rome--Intolerance of the Catholic Christians--The Tiber and
+the bridges--Character of the Romans--The _Palassi_ and _Ville_--Canova's
+atelier--Theatricals--An execution in Rome.
+
+
+September----, 1816.
+
+I made an agreement with a _vetturino_ to take me to Rome for three _louis
+d'or_ and to be _spesato_. In the carriage were two other passengers, viz.,
+a Neapolitan lady, the wife of a Colonel in the Neapolitan service, and a
+young Roman, the son of the _Barigello_ or _Capo degli Sbirri_ at Rome. We
+issued from the _Porta Romana_ at 6 o'clock a.m. the 3d September.
+
+The road winds thro' a valley, and has a gentle ascent nearly the whole way
+to Poggibonsi, where we brought to the first night. The soil hereabouts is
+far from fertile, but every inch of it is put to profit. The olive tree is
+very frequent and several farms and villages are to be met with. The next
+day we arrived at 12 o'clock at Sienna. The approach to Sienna is announced
+by a quantity of olive trees. The situation of this city being on an
+elevation, makes it cold and bleak. We remained here three hours, so that I
+had time to visit some of the places worthy of remark in this venerable
+city, which is handsome and very solidly built, but has rather a sombre
+appearance. The _Piazza Grande_ lies in a bottom to which you descend from
+the environing streets. It is in the shape of a mussel shell and of very
+large size. The Cathedral is Gothic and is a very majestic and venerable
+building. Inside it is of black and yellow marble. The pavement of this
+church contains Scripture histories in mosaic. A library is annexed to the
+church. The librarian pointed out to me 80 folio volumes of church music
+with illuminated plates; likewise an ancient piece of sculpture much
+mutilated, viz., a group of the three Graces. In one of the chapels of this
+Cathedral are eight columns of _verd-antique_. I observed a monument of the
+Piccolomini family who belong to this city; one of which family figured a
+good deal in the Thirty Years' War in Germany. I saw several women in the
+Cathedral and at the windows of the houses. The greater part of them were
+handsome. The Italian language is spoken here in its greatest purity; it is
+the pure Tuscan dialect without the Tuscan aspiration. The Siennese
+language is in fact the identical _lingua Toscana in bocca Romana_.
+
+We arrived the same evening at Buon Convento, an old dismal dirty-looking
+town formerly fortified; but the country in the environs is pleasing
+enough. The inn here is very bad. On the road between Sienna and this place
+I observed a number of mulberry trees.
+
+The next morning, the 5th Sept., we arrived at Radicofani or rather at an
+inn or post house facing Radicofani. This is a very ancient city, and from
+its being on an eminence it has an imposing appearance. Above it towers an
+immense conical shaped mountain, evidently a volcano in former times. In
+fact, the whole country hereabouts is volcanic, which is plainly seen from
+the immense masses of calcined stones, the exhalations of sulphur and the
+dreary wild appearance of the country, where scarce a tree is to be seen. I
+never in my life saw so many calcined rocks and stones of great magnitude
+heaped together as at Radicofani. It gave the idea as if it were the
+identical field of battle between Jupiter and the Titans, and as if the
+masses of rock that everywhere meet the eye had been hurled at the Empyreum
+by the Titans and had fallen back on the spot from whence they were torn
+up. It is indeed very probable that this volcano which vomited forth rocks
+and stones in a very remote age, gave rise to the Fable of the war between
+Jupiter and the Giants; just as the volcanos in Sicily and Stromboli gave
+rise to the story of the Cyclops with one eye (the crater) in their
+forehead. But the mountain of Radicofani must have been a volcano anterior
+even to Aetna; it presents the image of an ancient world destroyed by fire.
+
+At Ponte Centino the next morning we took our leave of
+
+ _La patria bella
+ Di vaghe Donne e di dolce favella;_
+
+in plain prose, we left the Tuscan territory, and re-entered the dominions
+of His Holiness. After being detained half an hour at the _Douane_, we
+proceeded to Acquapendente to breakfast. The country between Radicofani and
+Acquapendente is dreary, thinly populated, little cultivated, and volcanic
+steams of sulphur assail the nostrils. Before we arrived at Acquapendente
+we had a troublesome river to cross, which at times is nearly dry, and at
+other times the water comes down in torrents from the surrounding mountains
+and precipices, so as to render its passage extremely dangerous. It is
+always necessary previous to the passage of a carriage, to send on a man to
+ford and sound it, from its meandering and forming different beds crossed
+seven times, twice less than Styx _novies interfusa_, and it is a very slow
+operation from the number of rocks and quicksands; so that, should the
+torrent come down while you are in the act of crossing, you and your whole
+equipage would be swept away by the stream and drowned or dashed to pieces.
+Travellers going to and returning from Rome are frequently detained for a
+day or two at Ponte Centino or Acquapendente during the rainy season; for
+immediately after heavy rains, there is always a great risk and it is
+better to halt for several hours to allow the waters to pass off. The
+extent of ground that this river covers by its meandering and forming so
+many beds nearly parallel to each other renders it impossible to construct
+a bridge long enough; and it would be always liable to be swept away by the
+torrent. Nobody ever thinks of crossing the river in the dark. There having
+no rain fallen for several days we passed it without difficulty.
+
+Within a mile of Acquapendente the landscape varies and the approach to
+this town is exceedingly picturesque. Acquapendente is situated on a lofty
+eminence from which several magnificent cascades descend into the ravine
+below and which give the name to the town. There are a great number of
+trees about this town and they afford a great relief to the eye of the
+traveller after so many hours' journey thro' volcanic wastes. The town of
+Acquapendente is very ancient; it is very large, but ill-paved and dirty;
+the best buildings in it are, however, modern. The inhabitants appear lazy
+and dirty. On entering into conversation with some soldiers belonging to
+the Papal army, who were stationed at this place, I found that most of them
+had served under Napoleon. They spoke of him with tears of affection in
+their eyes, and I pleased them much by reciprocating their opinions of that
+great man. To speak well of Napoleon is the surest passport to civility and
+good treatment on the part of the soldiers and _douaniers_.
+
+In the evening we arrived at Bolsena, the ancient Volsinium, a city of the
+Volscians. It is an ancient looking town, not very clean, and inhabited by
+indolent people. It is situated on the banks of a large lake, on which
+there are three small islands. It is very aguish and unhealthy, and the
+inhabitants appear sickly, with marvellous sallow complexions. The inn
+where we put up was a pretty good one, and as this lake abounds in fish, we
+had some excellent trout and pike for supper; among other dishes there was
+one that was very gratifying to me, an old East and West Indian; and that
+was the _Peveroni_ or large red and green peppers or capsicums fried in
+oil. Some excellent Orvieto wine crowned our repast, and helped to restore
+us from our fatigues.
+
+On leaving Bolsena the next morning, the 7th, and within a very short
+distance from that town we entered a thick and venerable forest, thro'
+which the road runs for several miles. Fine old trees of immense height
+covered with foliage and thickly studded together give to this forest an
+aweful and romantic appearance. It is quite a _lucus opaca ingens_. This
+forest has been held sacred since the earliest times and is even now held
+in such superstitious veneration by the people that they do not allow it to
+be cut. The Dryads and Hamadryads have no doubt long ago taken their
+flight, but the wood, from its length and opaqueness, inspired me with some
+apprehension lest it might be the abode of some modern votaries of Mercury,
+people having confused ideas of _meum_ and _tuum_, and the _appropriative
+faculty_ too strongly developed in their organization, and I expected every
+moment to hear a shot and the terrible cry of _ferma_; but we met with no
+accident nor did we fall in with a living soul. On issuing from this forest
+we perceived on an eminence before us, at a short distance, the town of
+Montefiascone. We stopped there as almost all travellers do to taste the
+famous Montefiascone wine or _Est_ wine, as it is frequently called. This
+wine is fine flavored, _petillant_ and wonderfully exhilarating. It is
+renowned for having occasioned the death of a German prelate in the
+sixteenth century, who was travelling in Italy and who was remarkably fond
+of good wine. The story is as follows. He was accustomed to send on his
+servant to the different towns thro' which he was to pass with directions,
+to taste and report on the quality of the different wines to be found
+there, and if they were good to mark the word _Est_ on the casks from which
+he tasted them. The servant, on arrival at Montefiascone, was highly
+pleased with the flavour of the wine, of which there were three casks at
+the inn where they put up. He accordingly wrote the word _Est_ on each of
+the casks. The Bishop arrived soon after and took such a liking to this
+wine that he died in a few days of a fever brought on by continual
+intoxication. He was buried in one of the churches at Montefiascone and the
+monks of the Convent there, themselves _bons-vivans_, determined to give
+him a suitable epitaph. They accordingly caused to be engraved on his tomb
+the following Latin inscription commemorative of the event: _Est, Est, Est,
+propter nimium Est, Dominus Episcopus mortuus_ EST. From the above
+circumstance this wine is called _Vino d'Est_, and it affords no small
+revenue to the proprietor of the _cabaret_ on the road side who sells it.
+
+We arrived at Viterbo to breakfast and at Ronciglione in the evening.
+Viterbo is a large and handsome city and contains several striking
+buildings. It is paved with lava and contains a great variety of fountains.
+There is some appearance of commerce and industry in this town and there
+are several _maisons de plaisance_ in the neighbourhood. From Viterbo,
+thro' Monterosi, to Ronciglione the road lies over a mountain of steep
+ascent; here and there are patches of forest. There is not a house to be
+seen on this route and from there being a good deal of wood, and no
+appearance of cultivation, one fancies oneself rather in the wilds of a new
+country like America, than in so old a one as Italy.
+
+Ronciglione is an old rubbishing town half in ruins and contains no one
+thing remarkable.
+
+The next morning at four o'clock we started from Ronciglione and reached
+Baccano to breakfast.
+
+Baccano contains only two buildings; but they are both very large and
+roomy; the one is the inn, and the other serves as a barrack for the
+Military. There is always a strong military detachment here for the
+security of the road against robbers, who occasionally infest this
+neighbourhood. The inn is of immense size. Travellers, who arrive here
+late, would do well to halt here the whole night, as not only the road is
+dangerous on account of robbers, but because if they arrive at Rome after
+five o'clock p.m., they cannot release their baggage and carriage from the
+Custom house till next day. Every carriage public or private that arrives
+in Rome is bound, unless a special permission to the contrary be obtained
+from the Government, to drive direct to the Custom house (_Dogana_). In the
+like manner, on travelling from Rome to Florence, people generally prefer
+to start from Rome at twelve o'clock and bring to the night at Baccano, so
+as to avoid the bad inn at Ronciglione and sleep in preference at Viterbo.
+I here speak only of those who travel by short stages as the _vetturini_
+do.
+
+Ariosto has given a celebrity to this wretched place Baccano in his poem of
+the _Orlando Furioso_, in the story of Giocondo in the 28th Canto, as being
+the identical place where Fausto, the brother of Giocondo, remained to
+await the return of his brother from Rome, to which place he had gone back,
+when half way between Baccano and Rome, to fetch the _monile_ which he had
+left behind him, and found his wife not _alone_ and _dying with grief_ as
+he apprehended, but _sotto la coltre_ with a servant of the family.
+
+The country between Baccano and Rome is as unpleasing and even worse than
+that between the former place and Ronciglione. It is hilly, but not a tree,
+nor a house, nor a sign of cultivation to be seen except the two or three
+wretched hovels at La Storta. There is nothing at all that announces the
+approach to a capital city; and in addition to the dismal landscape there
+is a sight still more dismal that salutes the eye of the traveller at
+intervals of two or three miles and which does not tend to inspire pleasing
+ideas; and this is the sight of arms and legs of malefactors and murderers
+suspended on large poles on the road side; for it is the custom here to cut
+off the arms and legs of murderers after decapitation, and to suspend them
+_in terrorem_ on poles, erected on the very spot where they committed the
+murder. The sight of these limbs dangling in the wind is not a very
+comfortable one towards the close of the evening.
+
+We left the _Sepolero di Nerone_, an ancient tomb so called, on the right
+of our road and half a mile beyond it crossed the Tiber at the _Ponte Molle
+(Pons Milvius)_, where there is a gate, bridge and military post. From this
+post to the _Porta del Popolo_, the entrance into the city for those coming
+from the North, the distance is one mile; there is a white wall on each
+side of the road the whole way, and some farm houses and villas. Near the
+_Ponte Molle_ is the field of battle where Maxentius was defeated by
+Constantine.
+
+We entered the _Porta del Popolo_, crossed the _Piazza_ of the same name,
+where three streets present themselves to view. In the centre is the street
+called the _Corso_, running in a direct line from the _Porta_ across the
+_Piazza_. We drove along the _Corso_ till we arrived at a _Piazza_ on our
+right hand, which _Piazza_ is called _della Colonna_ from the Column of
+Antoninus, which stands on it. We then crossed the _Piazza_ which is very
+large and soon reached the _Dogana_ or Custom house, formerly the temple of
+Antoninus Pius, where vile modern walls are built to fill up the intervals
+between eleven columns of Grecian marble. Here our baggage underwent a
+rigorous research; this rigour is not so much directed against the
+fraudulent introduction of contraband or duty-bearing merchandise, as
+against _books_, which undergo a severe scrutiny. Against Voltaire and
+Rousseau implacable war is waged, and their works are immediately
+confiscated. Other authors too are sometimes examined, to see whether they
+contain anything against Mother Church. As the people employed in
+inspecting books are not much versed in any litterature or language but
+their own, except perhaps a little French, it is not easy for them to find
+out the contents of books in other languages. I had Schiller's works with
+me, a volume of which one of the _douaniers_ took up and looked at; on
+seeing the Gothic letter he seemed as much astonished as if he had got hold
+of a book of _Cabbala_ or _Magic_. He detained the whole work, but it was
+sent to me the next day, on my declaring that there was nothing damnable or
+heretical in it; for there was no person belonging to the department who
+could read German. When the _douaniers_ proceeded to the examination of the
+books belonging to one of my fellow travellers, the Neapolitan lady, she
+expressed great repugnance to the procedure; the _douaniers_ however
+insisted and, behold! there were several _livres galants_ with plates
+somewhat _lubriques_, the discovery of which excited blushes on her part
+and considerable laughter on the part of the byestanders. These books,
+however, not being contraband, were immediately returned to her, as was an
+edition of Baffo, belonging to my other fellow traveller, returned to him.
+Now this Baffo was a Venetian poet and his works are the most profligate
+that ever were penned or imagined by mortal man. Martial and Petronius
+Arbiter must hide their diminished heads before Baffo. The owner of this
+book chose to read out loud, quite unsolicited, several _choice_ sonnets of
+this poet for our edification during the journey; and this branch of
+litterature seemed to be the only one with which he was acquainted.
+
+When the examination was over I took leave of my fellow travellers, and
+repaired to the _German Hotel_ in the _Via de' Condotti_, where I engaged
+an apartment, and sat down to dinner at an excellent _table d'hote_ at five
+o'clock. There was a profusion of everything, particularly of fish and
+game. Mullets and wild boar are constant dishes at a Roman table. The
+mullets at Rome are small but delicious, and this was a fish highly prized
+by the ancient Romans. Game of all kinds is very cheap here, from the
+abundance of it that is to be met with in wild uninhabited wastes of Latium
+and in the Pontine marshes. Every peasant is a sportsman and goes
+constantly armed with fire-arms, not only to kill game, but to defend
+himself against robbers, who infest the environs of Rome, and who sometimes
+carry their audacity so far as to push their _reconnaissances_ close to the
+very walls of the city. At the _German Hotel_ the price of the dinner at
+_table d'hote_, including wine at discretion, is six _paoli_, about three
+franks. I pay for an excellent room about three _paoli_ per diem and my
+breakfast at a neighbouring _Caffe_ costs me one _paolo_. A _paolo_ is
+worth about five pence English. There are ten _paoli_ to a _scudo Romano_
+and ten _bafocchi_ to a _paolo_, The _bafocco_ is a copper coin.
+
+
+ROME, 12th Sept.
+
+A great number of Germans dine at the _table d'hote_ of Franz's hotel.
+Among them I distinguished one day a very intelligent Bavarian Jew. I
+proposed to him a walk to the Coliseum the following morning, as
+independent of the benefit I derived from his conversation I was curious to
+see whether it was true or not that the Jews always avoided walking under
+the Arch of Titus, which was erected in commemoration of the capture of
+Jerusalem by the Romans under Titus, in the reign of Vespasian. On stepping
+out of the _Hotel Allemand_, the first thing that met my eye was the
+identical beggar described by Kotzebue in his travels in Italy, and he
+gives the very same answer now as then to those who give him nothing, viz.,
+_Pazienza_.
+
+We crossed the _Piazza di Spagna_, ascended the superb flight of steps of
+the _Trinita de' Monti_, where there is a French church called the Church
+of St Louis: near it is the _Villa Medici_, which is the seat of the French
+Academy of the fine arts at Rome. We then filed along the _Strada Felice_
+till we arrived at the church of _Santa Maria maggiore_, a superb edifice,
+the third church in Rome in celebrity, and the second in magnificence. An
+immense Egyptian Obelisk stands before it. We then, turning a little to the
+right, made the best of our way to the Coliseum where we remained nearly
+two hours. I had figured to myself the grandest ideas of this stupendous
+building, but the aspect of it far exceeded the sketch even of my
+imagination. In Egypt I have seen the Pyramids, but even these vast masses
+did not make such an impression on me as the Coliseum has done. I am so
+unequal to the task of description that I shall not attempt it; I will give
+you however its dimensions which my friend the Jew measured. It is an
+ellipse of which the transverse axis is 580 feet in length and its
+conjugate diameter 480; but it is not so much the length and breadth as the
+solidity of this building that strikes the traveller with astonishment. The
+arcaded passage or gallery (on the _rez de chaussee_ between the interior
+and the exterior wall), which has a vaulted roof over which the seats are
+built, is broad enough to admit three carriages abreast: and the walls on
+each side of this gallery are at least twenty feet thick. What a
+magnificent spectacle it must have been in the time of the ancient Romans,
+when it was ornamented, gilded, and full of spectators, of which it could
+contain, it is said, 86,000! The Coliseum has been despoiled by various
+Popes and Cardinals to furnish stone and marble to build their palaces;
+otherwise, so solid is the building, Time alone would never suffice to
+destroy it. At present strict orders are given and sentries are posted to
+prevent all further dilapidations, and buttresses have been made to prop up
+those parts which had given way. What a pity it is that the Arena has not
+been left empty, instead of being fitted up with tawdry niches and images
+representing the different stations of the Crucifixion! In the centre is an
+immense Cross, which whoever kisses is entitled to one hundred days
+indulgence. To what reflections the sight of this vast edifice leads! What
+combats of gladiators and wild beasts! What blood has been spilled! Was it
+not here that the tyrannical and cowardly Domitian ordered Ulpius Glabrio,
+of consular dignity, to descend into the arena and fight with a lion? The
+Christian writers mention that many of their sect suffered martyrdom here
+by being compelled to fight with wild beasts; but even this was not half so
+bad as the conduct of the Christians, when they obtained possession of
+political power and dominion, in burning alive poor Jews, Moors and
+heretics some centuries afterwards. Indeed the cruelty of the Pagans was
+much exaggerated by the above writers and were it even true to its full
+extent, their severity was far more excusable than that of the Christians
+in later times, for the efforts of the Christian sect in the times of
+Paganism were unceasingly directed towards the destruction of the whole
+fabric of polytheism, on which was based the entire, social and political
+order of the Empire; and they thus brought on themselves perhaps merited
+persecution, by their own intolerance; whereas, when they got the upper
+hand, they showed no mercy to those of a different religion, and Orthodoxy
+has wallowed successively in the blood of Arians, Jews, Moors and
+Protestants.
+
+How many a poor Jew or Moor in Spain and Portugal has been burned alive for
+no other reason than
+
+ _Pour n'avoir point quitte la foi de leurs ancetres._
+
+No, no; no sect or religion was ever so persecuting as the Catholic
+Christians! The Polytheists of all times, both ancient and modern, were
+tolerant to all religions and so far from striving to make proselytes,
+often adopted the ceremonies of other worships in addition to their own;
+witness the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans of old, and the Hindoos and
+Chinese of the present day. The Jews, ferocious and prejudiced as they
+were, never persecuted other nations on the ground of religion, and if they
+held these nations in abhorrence as idolaters, and considered themselves
+alone as the holy people, the people of God (Yahoudi), they never dreamed
+of making converts. The Mussulmans tho' they hold it as a sacred precept of
+their religion to endeavour to make converts to Islam, do not use violent
+means and only compel those of a different faith to pay a higher tribute.
+At any rate, they never have or do put people to death merely for the
+difference of religious opinions. Such were the reflections I made on
+walking about the Arena of this colossal edifice so worthy of the _popolo
+Re_.
+
+On leaving the Coliseum the first thing that meets the eye is the Arch of
+Constantine, under which the Roman triumphal and ovationary processions
+moved towards the Capitol. The Arch of Constantine stands just outside the
+Coliseum. It is of immense size and extremely well preserved. The ground on
+which it stands being much filled up and only half of the Arch appearing,
+the rest remaining buried in the earth, it was judged adviseable to
+excavate all around it in order to come to the pedestal; so that now there
+is a walled enclosure all around it and into this enclosure it is a descent
+of at least eighteen feet from the ground outside. Several statues of
+captive Kings and bas-reliefs representing the victories of Constantine
+adorn the facade of this triumphal arch. The inscriptions are perfect, and
+the letters were formerly filled up with bronze; but these have been taken
+out at the repeated sackings that poor Rome has undergone from friend and
+foe. At a short distance from the Arch of Constantine is the Arch of Titus,
+under which we moved along on our road towards the Capitol and my friend
+the Jew was too much of a cosmopolite to feel the smallest repugnance at
+walking under the Arch. Our conversation then turned on the absurd hatred
+and prejudice that existed between Christians and Jews; he was very liberal
+on this subject and in speaking of Jesus Christ he said: "Jesus Christ was
+a Jew and a real philosopher and was therefore persecuted, for his
+philosophy interfered too much with, and tended to shake the political
+fabric of the Jewish constitution and to subvert our old customs and
+usages: for this reason he was put to death. I seek not to defend or
+palliate the injustice of the act or the barbarity with which he was
+treated; but our nation did surely no more than any other nation ancient or
+modern has done or would still do against reformers and innovators."
+
+The Arch of Titus is completely defaced outside, but in the interior of the
+Arch, on each side, is a bas relief: the one representing Vespasian's
+triumph over the Jews, and the Emperor himself in a car drawn by six
+horses; the other represents the soldiers and followers of the triumph,
+bearing the spoils of the conquered nation, and among them the famous
+candlesticks that adorned the temple of Jerusalem are very conspicuous.
+These figures are in tolerable preservation, only that the Emperor has lost
+his head and one of the soldiers has absconded.
+
+On issuing from the Arch of Titus we found ourselves in the Forum, now the
+_Campo Vaccino_: so that cattle now low where statesmen and orators
+harangued, and lazy priests in procession tread on the sacred dust of
+heroes.
+
+ Ou des pretres heureux foulent d'un pied tranquille
+ Les tombeaux des Catons et les cendres d'Emile.
+
+So sings Voltaire, I believe, or if they are not his lines, they are the
+Abbe Delille's.[84]
+
+The imagination is quite bewildered here from the variety of ancient
+monuments that meet the eye in every direction. What vast souvenirs crowd
+all at once on the mind! Look all around! the _Via Sacra_, the Arch of
+Severus, and the Capitol in front; on one side of you, the temple of Peace,
+that of Faustina and that of the Sun and Moon: on the other the remaining
+three columns of the temple of Jupiter Stator; the three also of the temple
+of Jupiter Tonans; the eight columns of the temple of Concord; and the
+solitary column of Phocas. At a short distance the temple of Castor and
+Pollux and that of Romulus and Remus, which is a round building of great
+antiquity, whose rusticity forms a striking contrast with the elegance of
+the colonnaded temples, and which was evidently built before the conquest
+of Greece by the Romans and the consequent introduction of the fine arts
+and of the Grecian orders of architecture.
+
+You may wish to know my sensations on traversing this sacred ground. The
+_Via Sacra_ recalled to me Horace meeting the _bavard_ who addresses him:
+_Quid agis, dulcissime rerum_?[85] I then thought of the Sabine rape; of
+Brutus' speech over the body of Lucretia; then I almost fancied I could see
+the spot where stood the butcher's shop, from whence Virginius snatched the
+knife to immolate his daughter at the shrine of Honor; next the shade of
+Regulus flitted before my imagination, refusing to be exchanged; then I
+figured to myself Cicero thundering against Catiline; or the same with
+delicate irony ridiculing the ultra-rigor of the Stoics, so as to force
+even the gravity of Cato to relax into a smile; then the grand, the heroic
+act of Marcus Brutus in immolating the great Caesar at the altar of
+liberty. All these recollections and ideas crowded on my imagination
+without regard to order or chronology, and I remained for some time in a
+state of the most profound reverie, from which I was only roused by my
+friend the Jew reminding me that we had a quantity of other things to see.
+
+The first object that engaged my attention on being roused from my reverie,
+was the Arch of Severus at the foot of the Capitol which towers above it.
+Excavations have been made around this Arch (for otherwise only half of it
+could be seen) and a stone wall built around the excavated ground in the
+same manner as at the Arch of Constantine. Round several of the columns of
+the temples I have above enumerated, excavations have been also made;
+otherwise the lower half of them would remain buried in the earth and give
+to the monuments the appearance of a city which had been half swallowed up
+by an earthquake. By dint of digging round the column of Phocas, the
+ancient paved road which led to the Capitol has been discovered and is now
+open to view. This ancient road is at least thirty feet below the surface
+of the present road and the ground about it. This shows how the ground must
+have been filled up by the destruction of buildings at the different
+sackings of Rome and the consequent accumulation of rubbish. The French
+when they were here began these excavations and the Duchess of Devonshire
+continues them.[86] It is useful in every way; it employs a number of poor
+people and may be the means of discovering some valuable remains of
+antiquity and objects of art. At any rate it is highly gratifying to have
+discovered the identical road to the Capitol on which so many Consuls,
+Dictators and Emperors moved in triumph, and so many captive Kings wept in
+chains.
+
+We then ascended the steps that lead to the modern Capitol and mounted on
+the _Campanile_ of the same, from whence there is a superb panoramic view
+of Rome. On descending from the _Campanile_, we visited the Tarpeian rock,
+which is now of inconsiderable height, the ground about it and heaps of
+rubbish having filled up the abyss below. We then entered the court yard of
+the Capitol. The Capitol and building annexed to it form three sides of a
+rectangle, the centre or _corps de logis_ lying North and South, and the
+wings East and West, the whole inclosing a court yard open on the South
+side of the rectangle, from whence you descend into the street on the plain
+below, by a most magnificent escalier or flight of steps. Of the Capitol,
+the _corps de logis_ or central building to which the _Campanile_ belongs,
+is reserved for the occupation and habitation of the _Senator Romano_, a
+civil magistrate, corresponding something to the mayor in France or
+_Oberbuergermeister_ in the German towns, and who is chosen from among the
+nobility and nominated by the Pope. The wings contain the _Museum
+Capitolinum_ of painting and sculpture. There is a great deal to call forth
+the admiration of the traveller in the court yard of the Capitol. The most
+prominent object is the famous bronze equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius,
+which cannot fail to rivet the attention of the least enthusiastic
+spectator. I observed at each angle of the facade of the Capitol a colossal
+statue of a captive King in a Phrygian dress; but still more striking than
+these are the colossal statues of Castor and Pollux leading horses, which
+stand a little in front of the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius, and
+nearer the _escalier_, the one on the right the other on the left. Two
+lions in basalt on each side of the _escalier_ are very striking objects,
+and the _escalier_ itself is the most superb thing of the kind perhaps in
+the world. This _escalier_ and the Marcus Aurelius, unique also in its
+kind, are both the workmanship of Michael Angelo.[87] We descended this
+_escalier_ and then fronted it to take a view of the Capitol from the
+bottom; but the statue of Marcus Aurelius is so prominent and so grand that
+it absorbed all my attention.
+
+After dinner I walked a little in the gardens on the Pincian hill, and then
+visited some friends belonging to the French Academy of Painting and
+Sculpture, who were so good as to shew me their productions, and also a
+copy of the superb folio edition of Denon's work on Egypt which to me, who
+had been in that country, was highly gratifying. Oh! what a pity that the
+French could not keep that country! What a paradise they would have made of
+it! As it is (and to their credit be it said) they did more good for the
+country during three years only, than we have done for our possessions in
+India for fifty years.
+
+
+ROME, 15th Septr.
+
+The next morning, after an early breakfast, I repaired to the Pantheon, now
+called _Santa Maria della Rotonda_, and appropriated to the Catholic
+worship. It is easily recognizable by its rotundity and by the simple
+grandeur of its facade and portico. The bronze has been taken out of the
+letters of the inscription. This beautiful specimen of ancient architecture
+is situated in a small _piazza_ or square called _Piazza della Rotonda_,
+where a market of poultry, game, and vegetables is held. There are only now
+three or four steps on the _escalier_ to ascend, in order to enter into the
+portico; but as it is known that according to the descriptions of the
+Pantheon in ancient times there was an immense flight of steps to ascend,
+it is an additional proof how much the ground on which modern Rome stands
+has been filled up, and consequently it is evident that the greater part of
+this flight of steps remains still buried in the earth.
+
+If I was so struck with the appearance of this interesting edifice outside,
+how much more so should I have been on seeing the inside, were not the
+niches, where formerly stood the statues of the Gods, filled with tawdry
+dolls representing the Virgin Mary and _he_ and _she_ saints. The columns
+and pilasters in the interior of this temple are beautiful, all of _jaune
+antique_ and one entire stone each. How much better would it have been to
+replace the statues of the _Dii Majorum Gentium_ which occupied the niches,
+by statues in marble of the Apostles, instead of the dolls dressed in
+tawdry colors, and the frippery gilding of the altars on which they stand,
+which disfigure this noble building. The Pantheon was built by Agrippa as
+the inscription shews. In the interior are sixteen columns of _jaune
+antique_. The bronze that formerly ornamented this temple was made use of
+to fabricate the baldachin of St Peter's. Of late years it has been the
+fashion to erect monuments affixed to the walls of the interior of the
+Pantheon to the memory of the great men and heroes of poetry, painting,
+sculpture and music who were natives of Italy, or for foreigners,
+celebrated for their excellence in those arts, who have died in Rome. Here
+are for instance, tablets to the memory of Metastasio, Rafael Mengs,
+Sacchini, Poussin, Winckelmann; the Phidias of modern days, the illustrious
+Canova, has recommended the placing in the Pantheon of the busts in marble
+of all the great men who have flourished in Italy, as the most appropriate
+ornament to this temple. He himself with a princely liberality has made a
+present to it of the busts of Dante, Petrarca, Ariosto, Tasso, Guarini,
+Alfieri, Michel Angelo, Rafaello, Metastasio and various other worthies.
+These busts are all the production either of Canova himself, or made by his
+pupils under his direction; they are not the least remarkable ornament of
+the place. In the centre of the _Piazza della Rotonda_ stands an obelisk
+brought from Egypt, which belonged to a temple sacred to Isis in that
+country.
+
+I next repaired to the _Piazza di Navona_, a large and spacious square,
+where there is a superb fountain representing a vast rock with four
+colossal figures, one of which reclines at the foot of the rock, at each
+angle of the pedestal that supports it, and it is surmounted by an Obelisk
+which was brought from Egypt and was found in the gardens of Sallust. The
+four colossal figures represent the four river Gods of the four great
+rivers in Europe, Asia, Africa and America, viz., the Danube, the Ganges,
+the Nile, and the Plata. The statue of the Nile has his head half-concealed
+by a cloak, emblematical of the source of that river not being discovered.
+In the _Piazza_ are frequently held fairs, shews of wild beasts, theatrical
+exhibitions and sometimes combats of wild beasts.
+
+I crossed the Tiber on my way to St Peter's at the _Ponte di Sant' Angelo_;
+directly on the other side of the river stands the castle of that name, an
+immense edifice formerly the _Moles Adriana_ or Mausoleum of the Emperor
+Adrian. It is of a circular form and is a remarkably striking object. From
+here there is a spacious street as broad as Portland place, which leads to
+the magnificent _Piazza_, where stands the Metropolitan Church of the
+Christian world, the pride of Christendom, the triumph of modern
+architecture, flanked on each side by a semi-circular colonnaded portico,
+which constitutes one of its greatest beauties and distinguishes it from
+all the other temples in the world. On the Piazza, considerably in front of
+this wonderful edifice and nearly in the centre, stands an immense Egyptian
+Obelisk, and at a short distance on each side of the Obelisk two
+magnificent fountains which spout water to a great height and which
+contribute greatly to the ornament of the _Piazza_.
+
+Now you must not expect me to give you a description of this glorious
+temple. I never in my life possessed descriptive powers, even for objects
+of no great importance: how then could I attempt to delineate the
+innumerable beauties of this edifice? Yet, vast as it is, the proportions
+of the facade are so correct, that they, together with the semi-circular
+colonnaded portico, serve to diminish its apparent size and to render its
+mass less imposing, but perhaps more beautiful. On this account it appears
+at first sight of less size than the Church of St Paul's in London. The
+beauty of the architecture, viz., of the facade and of the colonnaded
+portico would require days to examine and admire. What shall I say then of
+the wonders of the interior, crowded and charged as it is with the finest
+pieces of sculpture, columns of the most beautiful _verd antique_ and of
+_jaune antique_; the masterpieces of painting copied in mosaic; the
+precious, stones and marbles of all sorts that adorn the variety of
+magnificent chapels and altars; the immense baldachin with its twisted
+columns of bronze (the spoils of the Pantheon and of the temple of
+Jerusalem); the profusion of gilding and ornament of all sorts and where in
+spite of this profusion there seems _rien de trop_. At first entrance the
+eye is so dazzled with the magnificent _tout ensemble_ as to be incapable
+for a long time of examining any thing in detail. Each chapel abounds in
+the choicest marbles and precious stones: in a word it would seem as if the
+whole wealth of the Earth were concentrated here. Without impiety or
+exaggeration, I felt on entering this majestic temple for the first time
+just as I conceive a resuscitated mortal would feel on being ushered into
+the scene of the glories of Heaven. The masterpieces of painting are here
+perpetuated in mosaic, and so correctly and beautifully done, that unless
+you approach exceedingly close indeed, it is impossible to distinguish them
+from paintings. What an useful as well as ornamental art is the mosaic!
+There are a great variety of confessionals where penitents and pilgrims may
+confess, each in his own tongue, for there is a confessional for the use of
+almost every native tongue and language in the Catholic world. The cupola!
+What an astonishing sight when you look up at it from below! How can I
+better describe it than by relating the anecdote of Michel Angelo its
+constructor, who when some one made a remark on the impossibility of making
+a finer Cupola than that of the Pantheon, burst out into the following
+exclamation: "Do you think so? Then I will throw it in the air," and he
+fulfilled his word; for the cupola of St Peter's is exactly of the size of
+that of the Pantheon, tho' at such an elevation as to give it only the
+appearance of one fourth of its real size, or even less. The sublimity of
+the design can only be equalled by the boldness and success of its
+execution. Till it was done, it was thought by every artist impossible to
+be done. What an extraordinary genius was this Michel Angelo! Ariosto has
+hot at all exaggerated in his praise when he speaks of him in punning on
+his name:
+
+ _Michel_ piu che mortal, _Angel_ divino.[88]
+
+ Michael, less man than Angel and divine.
+
+ --Trans, W.S. ROSE.
+
+Among the various splendid marble monuments with which this temple abounds
+is one erected to the memory of Pope Rezzonico, constructed by Canova and
+reckoned one of his masterpieces. The Pope is represented in his
+canonicals. Behind and above him is a colossal statue of Religion with a
+cross in one hand and rays in form of spikes issuing from her head. I do
+not like these spikes. On the dexter side of this monument, is a beautiful
+male youthful figure representing a funereal genius with an inverted torch.
+The signal delicacy, beauty and symmetry of this statue forms a striking
+contrast with the figure of an immense lion sleeping on the sinister side;
+and this lion is an irrefragable proof that Canova excels in the
+delineation of the terrible as well as the beautiful, for it is admirably
+executed.
+
+At another monument is a superb female figure of colossal size representing
+Truth. It was formerly naked, but they have contrived to execute in
+coloured marble a vestment to cover her loins and veil her secret beauties.
+The reason of which is, that this beautiful statue made such an impression
+once upon a traveller (some say he was an Englishman, others a Spaniard)
+that it inspired him with a sort of Pygmalionic passion which he attempted
+to gratify one night; he was discovered in the attempt, and since that
+time, to prevent further scandal or attempts of the sort and to conceal
+from profane eyes the charms of the too alluring Goddess, this colored
+marble vestment was imagined and executed. This story is borrowed from
+Lucian.[89]
+
+There is also here a fine statue of Pope Gregory XIII and a magnificent
+bas-relief, the subject of which is the reform of the calendar by that
+Pope. Here too is a monument to Christina Queen of Sweden, and a bas-relief
+representing her abjuration of the Lutheran Faith.
+
+But why should I attempt to detail all these monuments, while it would
+require folios for the purpose; let me rather introduce you to the hero and
+tutelary saint of this sanctuary. St Peter, a superb bronze statue
+something above the usual size of men, is seated on a curule chair in the
+nave of the church on the right hand side as you approach the baldachin. He
+holds in his hands the keys of Heaven. He receives the adoration of all the
+faithful who enter into this temple, and this adoration is performed by
+kissing his foot which, from the repeated kissings, is become of a bright
+polish and is visibly wearing away. The statue was formerly a statue of
+Jupiter Capitolinus, but on the grand revolution among the inhabitants of
+Olympus and the downfall of Jupiter, it was broken to pieces, melted down
+and fabricated into an image of St Peter, so that this statue has lost
+little of its former sovereignty and still rules Heaven and Earth if not
+with regal, with at least vice-regal power, tho' under a different name.
+
+In the Sistine Chapel is the celebrated painting al fresco of the day of
+Judgment by Michel Angelo, an aweful subject and nobly and awefully
+executed.
+
+In the porch under the facade of St Peter's are two marble statues on
+horseback, one at each end of the porch: they represent Constantine the
+Great and Charlemagne, the two great benefactors of the holy Catholic
+Church; the one, in fact, its founder, the other its preserver.
+
+As the Palace of the Vatican stands close to the Church of St Peter's and
+communicates with it by an _escalier_, I ascended the _escalier_ in order
+to behold and examine the famous Museum of the Vatican, the first in the
+world, and unique for the vast treasures of the fine arts that it contains;
+treasures which the united wealth of all Europe and India to boot could not
+purchase at their just price. Here in fact it may be said are preserved the
+riches and plunder of the whole world, which was stripped of all its
+valuables by those illustrious brigands the ancient Romans. And mark in
+this point the good fortune of Rome; instead of losing them again as other
+nations have lost their trophies, Superstition came to her aid and caused
+them to be respected and preserved, 'till an enlightened age arose which
+guided by Philosophy, Humanity and Science will for ever preserve them
+secure against all attacks of barbarians in a sanctuary so worthy of them.
+
+
+_Museum Vaticanum_[90]
+
+A superb flight of steps leads into a hall of immense length filled on each
+side with statues, busts, sarcophagi, altars, urns, vases and candelabra,
+all monuments of antiquity and of the most exquisite workmanship. The walls
+on each side of this hall are inlaid with tablets bearing inscriptions in
+Greek, Latin and Etruscan. One is quite bewildered amongst such a profusion
+of Gods, Semi-Gods, Heroes. I must single out a few of the most remarkable
+for their workmanship. Here is a group representing the sacrifice of
+Mithras. On ascending a few steps at the other end of this hall, in a small
+octangular room, are the statue of Meleager; the famous Torso; the tomb of
+Scipio with bas-reliefs. On leaving the chamber you come into an octangular
+gallery, issuing from which are four circular chambers; each chamber
+contains a masterpiece of art. In one is the Apollo Belvedere, in another
+the Laocoon (both safely arrived from Paris); in the third Antinous; in the
+fourth the Perseus of Canova, with Medusa's head and his famous group of
+the two pugilists. Descriptions of the three first would be superfluous--
+for of them
+
+ Mills altri han detto e con via miglior plettro,
+
+and even with respect to the Perseus of Canova, I shall content myself with
+remarking that the sculptor had evidently the Apollo Belvedere in his
+ideal, and if he has not quite equalled that celebrated statue, it is
+because it is impossible; but he certainly has given the nearest possible
+approximation to its excellence.
+
+In another hall and just at its entrance are the statues of Menander and
+Posidippus in a sitting posture, one on either side. In this hall are
+innumerable fine statues, but the further end of it, fronting you as you
+enter, is a statue which at once engages and rivets your undivided
+attention; it at once induces you to approach and to take no notice of the
+statues on the right and left of the hall. And how should it be otherwise,
+since it is the identical statue of the father of the Gods and men, the
+famous Jupiter Capitolinus which adorned the Capitol in ancient Rome. He is
+sitting on a throne with a sceptre in one hand and the thunderbolts in the
+other, at his feet an eagle. It is a glorious statue and in every respect
+characteristic; such grandeur, such majesty in the countenance! It is
+impossible not to feel awe and reverence on beholding it. It was on
+contemplating this venerable statue that an Englishman who was at Rome some
+sixty years ago, stood wrapt for a time in silent veneration; then suddenly
+breaking silence he made a profound obeisance before the statue and
+exclaimed: "Recollect, O father of the Gods and men, that I have paid my
+hommage to you in your adversity and do not forget me, should you ever
+raise your head above water again!"
+
+In the hall of the Muses are the statues of the tuneful Nine which were
+found underground among the ruins of Hadrian's villa at Tivoli.
+
+In the centre of a circular chamber of vast dimensions, is an enormous
+circular basin of porphyry, of forty-one feet in diameter. A superb mosaic
+adorns the floor of the centre of this chamber, and is inclosed.
+Appropriate ornaments to this immense chamber are the colossal statues of
+the _Dii majorum Gentium_. Here are Juno, Minerva, Cybele, Jupiter,
+Serapis, Mars, Ceres, and others.
+
+In another hall are two enormous Egyptian Gods in yellow granite; two
+superb sarcophagi in red marble and two immense Sphinxes in granite. In
+another chamber is an antique car drawn by two horses: the near one is
+modern, the off one ancient. The wheels of this car are modern; both car
+and horses are of exquisite workmanship. Several fine statues adorn this
+chamber, among which the most remarkable are a Phocion, a Paris, an
+Antinous, and a Triton carrying off a Nereid.
+
+I must not omit to mention that in one of the halls is the famous group of
+the Nile, represented by an enormous colossal River God, surrounded by
+fourteen children playing with young crocodiles. Opposite to this group is
+another equally celebrated, viz., the colossal statue of the Tiber, with
+the she-wolf giving suck to Romulus and Remus by his side. The mosaic
+pavements in this Museum surpass in richness any in the world. In one of
+the halls, among the works of modern times, are two beautiful marble tables
+richly inlaid with all sorts of stones of value, with bas-reliefs on them;
+the one representing the visit of the Emperor Joseph II, and the other that
+of Gustavus III of Sweden to Rome, and their reception by the Pope.
+
+One of the halls of sculpture is appropriated to the figures of animals of
+all kinds, from the lion and eagle down to the rat and crawfish in marbles
+of all colors, and of all sizes; the best executed among them appeared to
+me a group representing a greyhound bitch giving suck to her young. As for
+the valuable cameos, coins, medals, and smaller remnants of antiquity in
+this Museum, they are innumerable.
+
+With regard to the paintings that belong to this Museum, there is only a
+small, collection but it is unique. Here is the Transfiguration and some
+other masterpieces of Rafaello.
+
+In the _Stanze di Rafaello_ (so they are called) are several large fresco
+paintings, viz., one representing the battle of Maxentius and Constantine;
+another, the school of Athens and Socrates sitting among the other
+philosophers; a third representing a fire; besides others.
+
+In one of these _stanze_ is a work in tapestry representing Jesus Christ
+bursting forth from the sepulchre, but he has a visage far too rubicund and
+wanting in dignity; he looks like a person flushed with wine issuing from a
+tavern; in the countenance there is depicted (so it appears to me) a
+vulgar, not a dignified triumph.
+
+The Palace of the Vatican is of immense size and is said to cover as much
+ground as the city of Turin; and I am inclined to think that there is not a
+great deal of exaggeration in this statement, for the vista along the
+corridors and galleries appears to be endless. The Library of the Vatican
+is of course very extensive and of immense value; but the books, as well as
+the manuscripts, are kept in presses which are locked, and it is rather
+awkward to be continually applying to the _custode_ to take out and put
+back a book.
+
+The Museum of the Vatican is open twice a week to the public, viz.
+Thursdays and Sundays; but foreigners, on shewing their passports, may
+obtain admission at any time.
+
+
+ROME, 17th Sept.
+
+My next visit was to the Capitol in order to inspect the _Museum
+Capitolinum_. This time I ascended the magnificent _escalier_ of Michel
+Angelo, having the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius in front. On
+arriving at the courtyard, I entered the building on my left (which is on
+the right of the facade). Under the colonnaded portico of this wing are the
+statues of Caesar and Augustus; here too is the naval column of the consul
+Duilius, in commemoration of the first naval victory gained over the
+Carthaginians; also a colossal statue of the Rhine called Marforio. In one
+of the halls two large statues of the Egyptian Goddess Isis and various
+other Egyptian divinities. In this Museum among other things is an altar
+representing Claudia drawing to the land the Ship of Cybele; a magnificent
+sarcophagus with a bas relief on its side representing the progress of
+life; Amalthea giving suck to Jupiter; the God Anubis found among the ruins
+of Adrian's palace at Tivoli. On ascending the staircase, I observed on the
+right hand fixed in the wall a tablet with a plan of ancient Rome carved on
+it. In one of the halls above stairs the most remarkable statue is that of
+the dying gladiator (brought back from Paris); this is certainly a noble
+piece of sculpture; the bodily pain and mental anguish are singularly well
+expressed in the countenance; a superb bronze statue of Hercules; a Centaur
+in black marble; a Faun in _rosso antico_; a group of Cupid and Psyche; a
+Venus in Parian marble rather larger than the common size. One of the halls
+in this museum contains the busts of all the philosophers; another those of
+all the Roman emperors; there is also a colossal statue of Pyrrhus; a
+superb Agrippina and the celebrated mosaic of the four pigeons. In
+enumerating the above I have only to observe that they only constitute a
+thousandth part of what is to be seen here. After passing three hours in
+this wing of the building, I went over across the courtyard to the other
+wing. Under the portico of this wing the following are the most remarkable
+among the statues: a Roman _triumphans_, two Phrygian kings in black
+marble. In one of the rooms above stairs is a very remarkable piece of
+antiquity, viz., the bronze wolf giving suck to Romulus and Remus, which
+was found in the temple of Romulus and which was struck by lightning during
+the consulate of Julius: the marks made by the lightning are quite
+distinct. There is in this wing a small but excellent collection of
+paintings, and a great variety of statues, busts, sarcophagi, candelabra,
+and antiquities of all sorts.
+
+The front part, or _corps de logis_ of the Capitol is called _Il Palazzo
+del Senato conservatore_, and is the residence of the _Senator Romano_ who
+is chosen by the Pope. By the bye, I understand this dignity is generally
+given to a foreigner, the Pontiffs being, rather jealous of the Roman
+nobility.
+
+This wing of the Capitol employed me two hours; but I must visit this
+Museum as well as that of the Vatican often again; for it would require
+months and years to examine them duly.
+
+
+ROME, 18th Sept.
+
+On this side of the river which is called _Transtevere_, I had an
+opportunity of observing the inhabitants, who are called _Transteverini_,
+the most of whom pretend to be the descendants of the ancient Romans,
+unmixed with any foreign blood. They certainly have very much of that
+physiognomy that is attributed to the ancient Romans, for they are a tall,
+very robust race of men having something of a ferocious dignity in their
+countenance which, however, is full of expression, and the aquiline nose is
+a prominent feature among them. They are exceedingly jealous of their
+women, whom they keep within doors as much as they can, and if a stranger
+on passing by their doors should chance to observe their wives or daughters
+who may be standing there and should stop to admire them (for many of them
+have an air of antique beauty and majesty of countenance which is
+remarkably striking), they will instantly order the females to retire, with
+an air of asperity.
+
+Whether they really be the pure descendants of the ancient Romans is
+difficult to say: but it is by no means improbable, since even to this day
+they intermarry solely with one another, and refuse to give their daughters
+in marriage to foreigners or to those of mixed blood.
+
+Instances have been known of these families, who are for the most part very
+poor, refusing the most advantageous offers of marriage made to their
+daughters by rich foreign merchants and artists, on the ground merely that
+the suitors were not _Romani_ but _Barbari._
+
+As for the _bourgeoisie_ of Rome in general, they _have been_ for some
+centuries back and _are_ a very mixed race, composed of all the nations of
+Europe. Most of the foreign artists who come here to study the fine arts,
+viz., Belgians, Dutch, German, French, English, Swedes, Danes, Poles and
+Russians, as well as those from other parts of Italy, struck with the
+beauty of the women, and pleased with the tranquility and agreeable society
+that prevails in this metropolis, and the total freedom from all _gene_ and
+etiquette, marry Roman women and fix here for life: so that among this
+class you meet with more foreign names than Roman; and it is this sort of
+colonisation which keeps up the population of Rome, which would otherwise
+greatly decrease as well from the celibacy of the number that become
+priests, as from the malaria that prevails in and about the city in July
+and August.
+
+
+ROME, 19th Sept.
+
+I have been employed for the last two days in visiting some of the
+churches, _palazzi_ and villas of modern Rome; but the number is so
+prodigious and there are such a variety of things to be seen in each that I
+shall only make mention of a few; indeed there are many that I have not
+seen and probably shall not have time to see. As sacred things should
+precede profane, let us begin with the churches.
+
+The first that claims the attention of the traveller after St Peter's, is
+the church of St John Lateran which is the oldest church in Christendom,
+and was the metropolitan of Rome and of the Christian world before the
+building of St Peter's. It lies very nearly in a right line with the
+_Piazza di Spagna_, and on a prolonged line, forming an obtuse angle with
+the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, which, as I first visited, I shall
+first describe and afterwards resume what I have to remark on the subject
+of St John Lateran.
+
+Santa Maria Maggiore is the third church in importance, but the second in
+magnificence in Rome. Before its facade stands a single column of granite
+of the Corinthian order. The facade of this church is beautiful but it
+would be far better without the _campanile_, which I think always
+disfigures a church of Grecian architecture; besides it is not in the
+centre of the building. The church is richly adorned with mosaics and its
+several chapels are admirable from the execution of their architecture and
+sculpture and the value of the different rich marbles and precious stones
+with which the monuments therein are made and incrusted. Among these
+Chapels are those of Sixtus V, Paul V. The grand altar is of porphyry. But
+the most striking beauty of this church and which eclipses all its other
+ornaments, are the forty columns of beautiful Grecian marble on each side
+of the nave. The ceiling, too, is superb and richly gilt; the gilding must
+have cost an immense sum and was done, it is said, with the first gold that
+was brought from America. Nothing can be more rich than this plafond. The
+above forty columns belonged formerly to the temple of Juno Lucina. It is
+singular that the ceremony of the _accouchement_ of the Virgin and the
+birth of Christ should be performed here. On the 24th December this
+pantomime is regularly acted, and crowds of all sorts of people attend,
+particularly women. At the moment that the Virgin is supposed to be
+delivered a salve of artillery announces the good tidings. This is
+singular, I say, when one recollects the peculiar attributes of Juno Lucina
+and the assistance she was supposed to give to persons in the same
+situation.
+
+You cannot expect me to detail to you all the riches in precious stones and
+gifts of pious princes that adorn the several chapels of this and other
+churches; but they appear to contain every stone and jewel mentioned in the
+Arabian Nights as being to be found in the cave where Aladdin was left by
+the magician; and it must be allowed that the Popes have been remarkably
+adroit inchanters in conjuring to Rome all the riches of the Earth.
+
+The church of St John Lateran is larger and more striking as to its
+exterior and as to its architecture than that of Santa Maria Maggiore, but
+it is not so charged with ornament and there is scarce any gilding. There
+is a simple elegance about it that I think far more pleasing than the
+magnificence of Santa Maria.
+
+St John Lateran contains several beautiful pieces of sculpture in white
+marble, rather larger than the usual size of man, of the twelve Apostles,
+six on one side of the nave and six on the other; and above them are
+bas-reliefs, also in marble, representing the various scenes from the
+history of the Old and New Testament. These twelve statues are admirably
+well executed and they give to this temple an air of simple grandeur. In
+this church are very few paintings on mosaics, but little gilding and no
+superfluous ornaments. Sculpture is, in my opinion, far more appropriate to
+a place of worship than paintings or dazzling ornaments. Another very
+striking beauty of this noble and venerable temple are the columns it
+contains some of which are in granite and others of the most beautiful
+_verd-antique_. There are besides two superb Corinthian columns of bronze
+which adorn one of the altars. Among the chapels of this Cathedral is one
+belonging to the Corsini family, which is probably the richest in Europe,
+and contains more precious stones and marbles than any other. Yet as this
+and the other chapels are in recesses and separated from the aisles of the
+church by large bronze gates, you cannot see their contents till you enter
+the said chapels; and thus your attention is not diverted by them from the
+contemplation of the simple grandeur of the columns and statues which adorn
+the body of the temple.
+
+The bronze columns above mentioned were taken from the temple of Jupiter
+Capitolinus. On one side in front of the church of St John Lateran stands
+an immense Egyptian Obelisk 115 feet in height, brought from Egypt to Rome
+in the time of Constantine.
+
+I think the placing of these Obelisks in front of the facade of the most
+remarkable edifices is an excellent arrangement, as they are never-failing
+landmarks to distinguish from afar off the edifices to which they belong.
+This Obelisk was found in the _Circus Maximus_, from which it was removed
+and placed on this spot by Sixtus V. A large Orphan establishment is close
+to this church; and close to it also the _Battisterio_ of Constantine,
+which rests on forty-eight columns of porphyry, said to be the finest in
+Europe. Another church in the vicinity contains _La Scala Santa_ or holy
+staircase of marble which, according to the tradition, adorned Pontius
+Pilate's palace at Jerusalem, and on which identical staircase Jesus Christ
+ascended to be interrogated by Pilate. The tradition further says that it
+was transported to Rome by Angels. This staircase has twenty-eight steps,
+and no one is allowed to mount it except on his knees. Nobody ever descends
+it, but there are two other _escaliers_ parallel to it, one on the right
+hand, the other on the left, by which you descend in the usual manner. Not
+being aware of this ceremony, I, on entering the edifice, began to ascend
+the _escalier_ which was nearest to me, which proved to be the _Scala
+Santa_, for no sooner had I begun to ascend it as I would any other flight
+of steps than two or three voices screamed out: "_Signore! O signore! a
+ginocchia; o'e la scala santa_!" I asked what was meant and was then told
+the whole story, and that it was necessary to mount this staircase on one's
+knees or not at all. This I did not think worth the trouble, being quite
+contented with beholding it. The marble of this staircase is much worn by
+the number of devout people who ascend it in this manner, and this
+ceremony, aided by a _quantum suff_ of faith is no doubt of great efficacy.
+
+The fourth church in estimation, and I believe the next ancient in Rome to
+St John Lateran, is the church of _San Paolo fuor della mura_, so called
+from its being situated outside the gates of the city. It is of immense
+size, but out of repair and neglected. The most striking object of its
+architectural contents are the 120 columns of Parian marble which support
+its nave.
+
+_St Pietro in Vincoli_ is chiefly remarkable for its being built near the
+dungeon where, according to the tradition, St Peter was confined and from
+whence he was released by Angels; its chief ornament is the colossal statue
+of Moses. Somewhere close to this place are shewn the ruins of the
+Mamertine prison where Jugurtha was incarcerated and died.
+
+There are in Rome about three hundred other churches, all of which can
+boast of very interesting and valuable contents. One in particular called
+the Portuguese Church is uncommonly beautiful tho' small; another, that of
+St Ignazio, or the Jesuits' church, is vast and imposing, and very fine
+singing is occasionally to be heard there.
+
+
+ROME, 21st Sept.
+
+The Palace occupied by the Pope is that of the Quirinal, standing on the
+Quirinal Hill, which is commonly called _Monte Cavallo_ from the statues of
+the two _Hippodamoi_ or tamers of horses, thought to be meant for Castor
+and Pollux which stand on this hill; this group is surmounted by an
+Egyptian obelisk. These statues are said to be the work of Phidias; but
+there is a terrible disproportion between the men and the horses they are
+leading; they give you the idea of Brobdignagians leading Shetland ponies.
+The Quirinal palace is every way magnificent and worthy of the Sovereign
+Pontiff; there are large grounds annexed to it; it stands nearly in the
+centre of Rome and from this palace are dated the Papal edicts. The Pope
+resides here during the whole year, with the exception of three or four
+months in the hot season, when he repairs to Castel Gandolfo near la
+Riccia.
+
+Of the fountains the grandest and most striking is that of Trevi, which
+lies at the foot of Quirinal Hill. Here is a magnificent group in marble of
+Neptune, in his car in the shape of a mussel-shell drawn by Sea-horses and
+surrounded by Nymphs and Tritons. An immense basin of white marble, as
+large as a moderate sized pond, receives the water which gushes from the
+nostrils of the Sea-horses and from the mouths of the Tritons. There is a
+very good and just remark made on the subject of this group by Stolberg,
+viz. the attention of Neptune seems too much directed towards one of his
+horses, a piece of minutiae more worthy of a charioteer endeavouring to
+turn a difficult corner, than of the God who at a word could control the
+winds and tranquillize the Ocean.
+
+The fountain Termina, so called from its vicinity to the Thermes of
+Diocletian, is the next remarkable fountain. Here is a colossal statue of
+Moses striking the rock and causing the water to gush forth. The grandeur
+and majesty of this statue would be more striking but for the incongruity
+of the arcades on each side of the rock, and the two lions in black basalt
+who spout water. Moses and the rock would have been sufficient. Simplicity
+is, in my opinion, the soul of architecture, and where is there in all
+history a subject more peculiarly adapted to a fountain than this part of
+the history of Moses?
+
+The Fountain Paolina is a fountain that springs from under a beautiful
+arcade, but there are no statues nor bas-reliefs. It is a plain neat
+fountain and the water is esteemed the best in Rome. This fountain is
+situated on the Janicule Hill, from which you have perhaps the best view of
+Rome; as it re-unites more than any other position, at one _coup d'oeil_,
+both the modern and debris of the ancient city, without the view of the one
+interfering with or being intercepted by the other. From here you can
+distinguish rums of triumphal arches, broken columns, aqueducts, etc., as
+far as the eye can reach. It demonstrates what an immense extent of ground
+ancient Rome must have covered. Near the fountain is the church where St
+Peter is said to have suffered martyrdom with his head downwards.
+
+The Column of Trajan is near the fountain Trevi, and it stands in an
+inclosure, the pavement of which is seven feet lower than the _piazza_ on
+which it stands. The inclosure is walled round. Had not this excavation
+been made, one third of the column (lower part) would not be seen. The
+_Piazza_, on which this column stands is called _Il foro Trajano_. The
+column represents Trajan's triumphs over the Daci, Quadi and Marcomanni,
+and is the model from whence Napoleon's column of the Grand Army in the
+_Place Vendome_ at Paris is taken. A statue of St Peter stands on this
+column.
+
+The Column of Antoninus stands on the _Piazza Colonna_; on it are
+sculptured the victories gained by that Emperor. Round this column it has
+not been necessary to make excavations. On this column stands the statue of
+St Paul.
+
+Amongst the immense variety of edifices and ruins of edifices which most
+interest the antiquarian are the Thermes of Diocletian. Here are four
+different semi-circular halls, two of which were destined for philosophers,
+one for poets and one for orators; baths; a building for tennis or rackets;
+three open courts, one for the exercise of the discus, one for athletes and
+one for hurling the javelin. Of this vast building part is now a
+manufactory, and the hall of the wrestlers is a Carthusian church.
+
+I have now, I believe, visited most, if not all that is to be seen in Rome.
+I have visited the Pyramid of Cestius, the tomb of Metella, I have
+consulted, the nymph Egeria, smelled at the _Cloaca Maxima_; in fine, I
+have given in to all the _singeries_ of _pedantry_ and _virtu_ with as much
+ardour as Martinus Scriblerus himself would have done. But it yet remains
+for me to speak of the most interesting exhibition that modern Rome can
+boast, and of the most interesting person in it and in all Italy, and that
+is the atelier of Canova and Canova himself, the greatest sculptor,
+perhaps, either of ancient or modern times, except the mighty unknown who
+conceived and executed the Apollo of the Vatican.
+
+In the atelier of Canova the most remarkable statues I observed are: a
+group of Hector and Ajax of colossal size, not quite finished; a Centaur,
+also colossal; a Hebe; two Ballerine or dancing girls, one of which
+rivetted my attention most particularly. She is reclining against a tree
+with her cheek _appuyed_ on one hand; one of her feet is uplifted and laid
+along the other leg as if she were reposing from a dance. The extreme
+beauty of the leg and foot, the pulpiness of the arms, the expressive
+sweetness of the face, and the resemblance of the marble to wax in point of
+mellowness, gives to this beautiful statue the appearance of a living
+female _brunette_. It was a long time before I could withdraw my eyes from
+that lovely statue.
+
+The next object that engaged my attention was a group representing a Nymph
+reclining on a couch _semi-supine_, and a Cupid at her feet. The luxurious
+contour of the form of this Nymph is beyond expression and reminded me of
+the description of Olympia:
+
+ Le parti che solea coprir la stola
+ Fur di tanta eccellenza, ch'anteporse
+ A quante n'avea il mondo potean forse.[91]
+
+ Parts which are wont to be concealed by gown
+ Are such, as haply should be placed before
+ Whate'er this ample world contains in store.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE
+
+This group is destined for the Prince Regent of England. Another beautiful
+group represents the three Graces; this is intended for the Duke of
+Bedford. Were it given to me to chuse for myself among all the statues in
+the atelier of Canova, I should chuse these three, viz., the Ballerina, the
+Nymph reclining, and this group of the Graces.
+
+Canova certainly is inimitable in depicting feminine beauty, grace and
+delicacy. Among the other statues in this atelier the most prominent are: a
+statue of the Princess Leopoldina Esterhazy in the attitude of drawing on a
+tablet with this inscription:
+
+ _Anch'io voglio tentar l'arte del bello._
+
+This lady is, it seems, a great proficient in painting.
+
+Here too are the moulds of the different statues made by Canova, the
+statues themselves having been finished long ago and disposed of; viz., of
+the Empress Maria Louisa of France; of the mother of Napoleon (_Madame
+Mere_ as she is always called) in the costume and attitude of Agrippina; of
+a colossal statue of Napoleon (the statue itself is, I believe, in the
+possession of Wellington.[92]) Here too is the bust of Canova by Canova
+himself, besides a great variety of bas-reliefs and busts of individuals,
+models of monuments, etc.
+
+And now, my friend, I have given you a _precis_ not of all that I have
+seen, but of what has most interested me and made on my mind impressions
+that can never be effaced. I trust entirely to my memory, for I made no
+notes on the spot. Many of the things I have seen too much in a hurry to
+form accurate ideas and judgment thereon; most of what we see here is shewn
+to us like the figures in a _lanterna magica_, for in the various _palazzi_
+and villas the servants who exhibit them hurry you from room to room,
+impatient to receive your fee and to get rid of you. I am about to depart
+for Naples. On my return to Rome I shall not think of revisiting the
+greater number of the _palazzi_, villas and churches; but there are some
+things I shall very frequently revisit and these are the two Museums of the
+Vatican and of the Capitol, St Peter's, the Coliseum and antiquities in its
+neighbourhood, the Pantheon, and last but not least the atelier of the
+incomparable Canova.
+
+You may perhaps be unwilling to let me depart from Rome without some
+information as to theatricals. With regard to these, Rome must hang down
+her head, for the pettiest town in all the rest of Italy or France is
+better provided with this sort of amusement than Rome. There is a theatre
+called _Teatro della Valle_, where there is a very indifferent set of
+actors, and this is the only theatre which is open throughout the year.
+Comedies only and farces are given. The theatres Aliberti and Argentino are
+open during the Carnaval only. Operas are given at the Argentino, and
+masquerades at the Aliberti. But in fact the lovers of Operas and of the
+Drama must not come to Rome for gratification. It is not considered
+conformable to the dignity and sanctity of an ecclesiastical government to
+patronize them; and it is not the custom or etiquette for the Pope,
+Cardinals or higher Clergy ever to visit them. The consequence is that no
+performer of any consideration or talent is engaged to sing at Rome, except
+one or two by chance at the time of the Carnaval. In amends for this you
+have a good deal of music at the houses of individuals who hold
+_conversazioni_ or assemblies; in which society would flag very much but
+for the music, which prevents many a yawn, and which is useful and
+indispensable in Italy to make the evening pass, as cards are in England.
+
+I intend to stop several days here on my return from Naples, for which
+place I shall start the day after to-morrow having engaged a place in a
+_vettura_ for two and half _louis d'or_ and to be _spesato_. I am not to be
+deterred from my journey by the many stories of robberies and
+assassinations which are said to occur so frequently on that road.
+
+By the bye, talking of robberies and murders, a man was executed the day
+before yesterday on the _Piazza del Popolo_ for a triple murder. I saw the
+guillotine, which is now the usual mode of punishment, fixed on the centre
+of the _Piazza_ and the criminal escorted there by a body of troops; but I
+did not stop to witness the decapitation, having no taste for that sort of
+_pleasuring_. This man richly deserved his punishment.
+
+
+[84] These lines are from Voltaire's _Henriade_, a poem which no Frenchman
+ reads nowadays, but that Major Frye could quote from memory. The
+ correct reading of the first verse is: _Des pretres fortunes_, etc.
+ (_Henriade_, canto iv. ed. Kehl, vol. x, p. 97.)--ED.
+
+[85] Horace, _Sat_., 1, 9, 4.--ED.
+
+[86] Lady Elizabeth Hervey, second wife of William, fifth Duke of
+ Devonshire (1809); died March, 1824.--ED.
+
+[87] A singular slip of the pen; Frye must have known that the equestrian
+ statue is a Roman work--ED.
+
+[88] Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, xxxiii, 2, 4.--ED.
+
+[89] See Lucian, _Imag._, iv; _Amores_, xv, xvi.--ED.
+
+[90] Major Frye's description is incorrect in many particulars, on which it
+ seemed unnecessary to draw attention.--ED.
+
+[91] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, XI, 67, 6.
+
+[92] That colossal marble statue was given to the Duke of Wellington by
+ Louis XVIII, and is still to be seen in London, at Apsley House.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+From Rome to Naples--Albano--Velletri--The Marshes--Terracina--Mola di
+Gaeta--Capua--The streets of Naples--Monuments and Museums--Visit to
+Pompeii and ascent to Vesuvius--Dangerous ventures--Puzzuoli and
+Baiae--Theatres at Naples--Pulcinello--Return to Rome--Tivoli.
+
+I started from Rome on the 26th September; in the same _vettura_ I found an
+intelligent young Frenchman of the name of R---- D----, a magistrate in
+Corsica, who was travelling in Italy for his amusement. There were besides
+a Roman lawyer and not a very bright one by the bye; and a fat woman who
+was going to Naples to visit her lover, a Captain in the Austrian service,
+a large body of Austrian troops being still at Naples. We issued from Rome
+by the _Porta Latina_ and reached Albano (the ancient Alba) sixteen miles
+distant at twelve o'clock. We reposed there two hours which gave me an
+opportunity of visiting the _Villa Doria_ where there are magnificent
+gardens. These gardens form the promenade of the families who come to
+Albano to pass the heat of the summer and to avoid the effect of the
+exhalations of the marshy country about Rome.
+
+As Albano is situated on an eminence, you have a fine view of the whole
+plain of Latium and Rome in perspective. The country of Latium however is
+flat, dreary and monotonous; it affords pasture to an immense quantity of
+black cattle, such as buffaloes, etc.
+
+Just outside of Albano, on the route to Naples, is a curious ancient
+monument called _Il sepolcro degli Orazj e Curiazj._ It is built of brick,
+is extremely solid, of singular appearance, from its being a square
+monument, flanked at each angle by a tower in the shape of a cone. It is of
+an uncouth rustic appearance and must certainly have been built before
+
+ _Grecia capia ferum victorem cepit et artes
+ Intulit agresti Latio....._[93]
+
+and I see no reason against its being the sepulchre of the Horatii and
+Curiatii, particularly as it stands so near Alba where the battle was
+fought; but be this as it may there is nothing like faith in matters of
+antiquity; the sceptic can have little pleasure.
+
+The country on leaving Albano becomes diversified, woody and picturesque.
+Near Gensano is the beautiful lake of Nemi, and it is the spot feigned by
+the poets as the scene of the amours of Mars and Rhea Silvia. Near Gensano
+also is the country residence of the Sovereign Pontiffs called Castel
+Gandolfo. La Riccia, the next place we passed thro', is the ancient Aricia,
+mentioned in Horace's journey to Brundusium. We arrived in the evening at
+Velletri.
+
+Velletri is a large town or rather city situated on a mountain, to which
+you ascend by a winding road skirting a beautiful forest. From the terrace
+of one of the _Palazzi_ here, you have a superb view of all the plain below
+as far as the rock of Circe, comprehending the Pontine marshes. There are
+several very fine buildings at Velletri, and it is remarkable as being the
+birthplace of Augustus Caesar. There is a spacious _Piazza_ too on which
+stands a bronze statue of Pope Urban VIII. Velletri is twenty-eight miles
+from Rome.
+
+The next morning, the 27th, we started early so as to arrive by six o'clock
+in the evening at Terracina. At Cisterna is a post-house and at Torre tre
+Ponti is a convent, a beautiful building, but now delapidated and
+neglected. Near it is a wretched inn, where however you are always sure to
+find plenty of game to eat. Here begin the Pontine marshes and the famous
+Appian road which runs in a right line for twenty-five miles across the
+marshes. It was repaired and perfectly reconstructed by Pius VI, and from
+him it bears its present appellation of _Linea Pia_. This convent and
+church were also constructed by Pius VI with a view to facilitate the
+draining and cultivating of the marshes by affording shelter to the
+workmen. The _Linea Pia_ is a very fine _chaussee_ considerably raised
+above the level of the marsh, well paved, lined with trees and a canal sunk
+on one side to carry off the waters. The Pontine marshes extend all the way
+from Torre tre Ponti to Terracina. On the left hand side, on travelling
+from Rome to Naples, you have two miles or thereabouts of plain bounded by
+lofty mountains; on the right a vast marshy plain bounded by the sea at a
+distance of seven or eight miles. Nothing can be more monotonous than this
+strait road twenty-five miles in length, and the same landscape the whole
+way. The air is extremely damp, aguish and unhealthy. Those who travel late
+in the evening or early in the morning are recommended not to let down the
+glasses of the carriage, in order to avoid inhaling the pestilential miasma
+from the marshes, which even the canal has not been able to drain
+sufficiently.
+
+No one can find amusement in this desolate region but the sportsman; and he
+may live in continual enjoyment, and slay wild ducks and snipes in
+abundance; a number of buffaloes are to be seen grazing on the marshes.
+They are not to be met with to the North of Rome. They resemble entirely
+the buffaloes of Egypt and India, being black, and they are very terrific
+looking animals to the northern traveller, who beholds them here for the
+first time.
+
+These marshes supply Rome abundantly with waterfowl and other game of all
+kinds. Every _vetturino_ who is returning to Rome, on passing by, buys a
+quantity, for a mere trifle, from the peasantry, who employ themselves much
+_a la chasse_, and he is certain to sell them again at Rome for three or
+four times the price he paid, and even then it appears marvellous cheap to
+an Englishman, accustomed as he is to pay a high price for game in his own
+country.
+
+We arrived a little before six at Terracina, which is on the banks of the
+Mediterranean and may be distinguished at a great distance by its white
+buildings. The chain of mountains on the left of our road hither form a
+sort of arch to the chord of the _linea Pia_ and terminates one end of the
+arch by meeting the _linea Pia_ at Terracina, which forms what the sailors
+call a bluff point. Terracina stands on the situation of the ancient Anxur
+and the description of it by Horace in his Brundusian journey;
+
+ Impositum saxis late candentibus Anxur[94]
+
+is perfectly applicable even now. It is a handsome looking city and is the
+last town in the Pope's territory: part of it is situated on the mountain
+and part on the plain at its foot close to the sea.
+
+The fine white buildings on the heights, the temple of Jupiter Anxurus (of
+which the facade and many columns remain entire) towering above them, the
+orange trees and the sea, afford a view doubly pleasing and grateful to the
+traveller after the dreary landscape of the Pontine Marshes. There is but
+one inn at Terracina but that is a very large one; there is, however, but
+very indifferent fare and bad attendance. The innkeeper is a sad
+over-reaching rascal, who fleeces in the most unmerciful manner the
+traveller who is not _spesato_. He is obliged to furnish those who are
+_spesati_ with supper and lodging at the _vetturino's_ price; but he always
+grumbles at it, gives the worst supper he can and bestows it as if he were
+giving alms. As the road between Terracina and Fondi (the first Neapolitan
+town) is said to be at times infested by robbers, few travellers care to
+start till broad daylight. We did so accordingly the following morning. On
+arriving at a place called the _Epitafio_, from there being an ancient tomb
+there, we took leave of the last Roman post. At one mile and half beyond
+the _Epitafio_ is the first Neapolitan post at a place called _Torre de'
+Confini_, where we were detained half an hour to have our passports
+examined and our portmanteaus searched. Three miles beyond this post is the
+miserable and dirty town of Fondi, wherein our baggage again underwent a
+strict search. On leaving Terracina the road strikes inland and has
+mountains covered with wood to the right and to the left, nor do we behold
+the sea again till just before we arrive at Mola di Gaeta, which is an
+exceeding long straggling town on its banks; several fishing vessels lie
+here and it is here that part of the Bay of Naples begins to open. The
+country from Terracina to Fondi is uncultivated and very mountainous;
+between Fondi and Mola di Gaeta it is pretty well cultivated; Itri, thro'
+which we passed, is a long, dirty, wretched looking village.
+
+The next day at twelve o'clock we arrived and stopped to dine at St Agatha,
+a miserable village, with a very bad tho' spacious inn the half of which is
+unroofed. We arrived at Capua the same evening having passed the rivers
+Garigliano and Volturno, and leaving the Falernian Hills on our left during
+part of the road. The landscape is very varied on this route, sometimes
+mountainous, sometimes thro' a rich plain in full cultivation.
+
+Capua is a fortified town situated in a flat country and marshy withal. It
+is a gloomy, dirty looking city and whatever may have been its splendour
+and allurements in ancient times, it at present offers nothing inviting or
+remarkable. The lower classes of the people of this town are such thieves
+that our _vetturino_ recommended us to remove every thing from the carriage
+into our bed rooms, so that we had the trouble of repacking every thing
+next morning. Capua is the only place on the whole route where it is
+necessary to take the trunks from the carriage. From Capua to Naples is
+twenty miles; a little beyond Capua are the remains of a large Amphitheatre
+and this is all that exists to attest the splendour of ancient Capua. The
+road between Capua and Naples presents on each side one of the richest and
+most fruitful countries I ever beheld. It is a perfect garden the whole
+way. The _chaussee_ is lined with fruit trees. Halfway is the town or
+_borgo_ of Aversa which is large, well-built, opulent and populous. We
+entered Naples at one o'clock, drove thro' the _strada di Toledo_ and from
+thence to the _largo di Medina_ where we put up at the inn called the
+_Aquila nera_. A cordon of Austrian troops lines the whole high road from
+Fondi to the gates of Naples; and there are double sentries at a distance
+of one mile from each other the whole way.
+
+
+NAPLES, Octr. 5th.
+
+In Naples the squares or _Piazze_ are called _Larghi_; they are exceedingly
+irregular as to shape; a trapezium would be the most appropriate
+denomination for them. The _Largo di Medina_ is situated close to the Mole
+and light house and is not far from the _Largo del Palazzo_ where the Royal
+Palace stands, nor from the _Strada di Toledo_, which is the most bustling
+part of the town. On the Mole and sometimes in the _Largo di Medini_
+Pulcinello holds forth all day long, quacks scream out the efficacy of
+their nostrums and _improvisatori_ recite battles of Paladins. Here and in
+the _Strada di Toledo_ the noise made by the vendors of vegetables, fruit,
+lemonade, iced water and water-melons, who on holding out their wares to
+view, scream out "_O che bella cosa_!"--the noise and bustle of the cooks'
+shops in the open air and the cries of "_Lavora_!" made by the drivers of
+_calessini_ (sort of carriage) makes such a deafening _tintamarre_ that you
+can scarcely hear the voice of your companion who walks by your side. In
+the _Largo del Palazzo_ there is always a large assembly of officers and
+others, besides a tolerable quantity of _ruffiani_, who fasten upon
+strangers in order to recommend to them their female acquaintances. A
+little further is the Quai of St Lucia, where the fish market is held, and
+here the cries increase. The quantity of fish of all sorts caught in the
+bay and exposed for sale in the market is immense and so much more than can
+be sold, that the rest is generally given away to the _Lazzaroni_. Here are
+delicious mullets, oysters, whitings, soles, prawns, etc. There is on the
+Quai of St Lucia a _restaurant_ where naught but fish is served, but that
+is so well dressed and in such variety that amateurs frequently come to
+dine here on _maigre_ days; for two _carlini_[95] you may eat fish of all
+sorts and bread at discretion. The wine is paid for extra. On the Quai of
+St Lucia is a fountain of mineral water which possesses the most admirable
+qualities for opening the _primae viae_ and purifying the blood. It is an
+excellent drink for bilious people or for those afflicted with abdominal
+obstructions and diseases of the liver. It has a slight sulfurous mixed
+with a ferruginous taste, and is impregnated with a good deal of fixed air,
+which makes it a pleasant beverage. It should be taken every morning
+fasting. The presidency over this fountain is generally monopolized by a
+piscatory nymph who expects a _grano_ for the trouble of filling you a
+glass or two. In reaching it to you she never fails to exclaim _"Buono per
+le natiche,"_ and it certainly has a very rapid effect; I look upon it as
+more efficacious than the Cheltenham waters and it is certainly much more
+agreeable in taste. At the end of the Quai of St Lucia is the _Castello
+dell 'Uovo,_ a Gothic fortress, before the inner gate of which hangs an
+immense stuffed crocodile. This crocodile is said to have been found alive
+in the _fosse_ of the castle, but how he came there has never been
+explained; there is an old woman's story that he came every day to the
+dungeon where prisoners were confined, and took out one for his dinner. The
+_Castello dell 'Uovo_ stands on the extremity of a tongue of land which
+runs into the sea. After passing the _Castello dell 'Uovo_ I came to the
+_Chiaia_ or Quai properly so called, which is the most agreeable part of
+Naples and the favorite promenade of the _beau-monde._ The finest buildings
+and _Palazzi_ line the _Chiaia_ on the land side and above them all tower
+the Castle of St Elmo and the _Chartreuse_ with several villas intervening.
+The garden of the _Chiaia_ contains gravel walks, grass plots, alleys of
+trees, fountains, plantations of orange, myrtle and laurel trees which give
+a delightful fragrance to the air; and besides several other statues, it
+boasts of one of the finest groups in Europe, called the _Toro Farnese._ It
+is a magnificent piece of sculpture and represents three men endeavouring
+to hold a ferocious bull. It is a pity, however, that so valuable a piece
+of sculpture should be exposed to the vicissitudes of the season in the
+open air. The marble has evidently suffered much by it. Why is such a
+valuable piece of sculpture not preserved in the Museum?
+
+On the _Chiaia_ are _restaurants_ and _cafes_. 'Tis here also that the
+nobility display their carriages and horses, it being the fashionable drive
+in the afternoon: and certainly, except in London, I have never seen such a
+brilliant display of carriages as at Naples.
+
+The principal street at Naples is the _Strada di Toledo_. It resembles the
+_Rue St Honore_ and can boast of as much wealth in its shops. The houses
+are good, solid and extremely lofty, and the streets are paved with lava.
+There are two excellent _restaurants_ at Naples, one in the _Largo del
+Palazzo_, nearly opposite the Royal Palace, called the _Villa di Napoli_;
+the other not far from it in the _Strada di Toledo_, called _La Corona di
+Ferro_. Naples is renowned for the excellency of its ices. You have them in
+the shape of all kinds of fruit and wonderfully cheap. Many of the ice
+houses and _caffes_ remain open day and night; as do some of the gaming
+tables, which are much frequented by the upper classes. The theatre of St
+Carlo, which was consumed last year by fire, is rising rapidly from its
+ashes and will soon be finished. In the mean time Operas are performed at
+the _Teatro Fondi_, a moderate sized theatre. I here saw performed the
+opera of _Don Giovanni_ of Mozart, with the _ballo_ of _La pazza per
+amore_. Mme Colbran, a Spanish lady, is the _Prima Donna_ and an excellent
+singer.
+
+In all the private societies at Naples a great deal of gaming goes on, and
+at some houses those visitors, who do not play, are coolly received. The
+following may be considered as a very fair specimen of the life of a young
+man of rank and fashion at Naples. He rises about two p.m., takes his
+chocolate, saunters about in the _Strada di Toledo_ or in the _Largo del
+Palazzo_ for an hour or two, then takes a _promenade a cheval_ on the
+_Chiaia_; dines between six and seven; goes to the Opera where he remains
+till eleven or half-past eleven; he then saunters about in the different
+Cafes for an hour or two; and then repairs to the gaming table at the
+_Ridotto_, which he does not quit till broad daylight. The ladies find a
+great resource in going to church, which serves to pass away the time that
+is not spent in bed, or at the Opera, or at the _promenade en voiture_. The
+ladies seldom take exercise on foot at Naples. There being very little
+taste for litterature in this vast metropolis, the most pleasant society is
+among the foreign families who inhabit Naples or at the houses of the
+_Corps diplomatique_. There is, however, a good _cabinet litteraire_ and
+library in the _Strada di San Giacomo_, where various French and Italian
+newspapers may be read. The Austrians occupy the greater part of the
+military posts at Naples; at the Royal Palace however the Sicilian guards
+do duty; they are clothed in scarlet and _a anglaise_.
+
+
+NAPLES, 8th Octr.
+
+One day I went to visit the Museum or _Studii_, as it is called, which is
+situated at the extremity of the _Strada di Toledo_ on the land side. Here
+is a superb collection of sculpture and painting; and this building
+contains likewise the national library, and a choice and unique collection
+of Etruscan vases. A large hall contains these vases, which were found at
+Pompeii[96]; they are much admired for their beauty and simplicity; each
+vase has a mythological or historical painting on it. In this Museum I was
+shewn the rolls of papyrus found in Pompeii and Herculaneum and the method
+of unrolling them. The work to unroll which they are now employed at this
+Museum is a Greek treatise on philosophy by Epicurus. It is a most delicate
+operation to unroll these leaves, and with the utmost possible care it is
+impossible to avoid effacing many of the letters, and even sentences, in
+the act of unrolling. It must require also considerable learning and skill
+in the Greek language, combined with a good deal of practise, to supply the
+deficiency of the words effaced. When these manuscripts are put in print,
+the letters that remain on the papyrus are put in black type, and the words
+guessed at are supplied in red; so that you see at one glance what letters
+have been preserved, and what are supplied to replace those effaced by the
+operation of unrolling; and in this manner are all the papyrus manuscripts'
+printed.
+
+
+_Visit to Pompeii and Ascent of Vesuvius_.
+
+_11th Oct_.
+
+We returned, Mr R---- D---- and I, from our visit to Vesuvius, half dead
+with fatigue from having had little or no rest the whole night, about three
+o'clock to Naples.
+
+We left Naples in a _caleche_ yesterday after breakfast and drove to
+Portici. Portici, Resina, and Torre del Greco are beautiful little towns on
+the sea-shore of the bay of Naples or rather they may be termed a
+continuation of the city, as they are close together in succession, and the
+interval filled up with villas. The distance from the gates of Naples to
+Portici is three miles. The road runs through the court yard of the Royal
+Palace at Portici which has a large archway at its entrance and sortie. We
+proceeded to Resina and alighted in order to descend under ground to
+Herculaneum, Resina being built on the spot where Herculaneum stood. There
+are always guides on this road on the look out for travellers; one
+addressed us, and conducted us to a house where we alighted and entered.
+Our guide then prepared a flambeau, and having unlocked and lifted up a
+trap door invited us to descend. A winding _rampe_ under ground leads to
+Herculaneum. We discovered a large theatre with its proscenium, seats,
+corridors, vomitories, etc., and we were enabled, having two lighted
+torches with us, to read the inscriptions. Some statues that were found
+here have been removed to the Museum at Portici. This is the only part of
+Herculaneum that has been excavated; for if any further excavations were
+attempted, the whole town of Resina, which is built over it, would fall in.
+Herculaneum no doubt contains many things of value, but it would be rather
+too desperate a stake to expose the town of Resina to certain ruin, for the
+sake of what _might_ be found. At Pompeii the case is very different, there
+being nothing built over its site.
+
+After having satisfied our curiosity here, we regained the light of heaven
+in Resina, and proceeded to Pompeii, which is seven miles further, the
+total distance from Naples to Pompeii being ten miles. The part of Pompeii
+already discovered looks like a town with the houses unroofed situated in a
+deep gravel or sand pit, the depth of which is considerably greater than
+the height of the buildings standing in it. You descend into it from the
+brink, which is on a level with the rest of the country; Pompeii is
+consequently exposed to the open air, and you have neither to go under
+ground, nor to use _flambeaux_ as at Herculaneum, but simply to descend as
+into a pit. There is always a guard stationed at Pompeii to protect the
+place from delapidation and thefts of antiquarians. From its resembling, as
+I have already said, a town in the centre of a deep gravel pit, you come
+upon it abruptly and on looking down you are surprized to see a city newly
+brought to day. The streets and houses here remain entire, the roofs of the
+houses excepted, which fell in by the effect of the excavation; so that you
+here behold a Roman city nearly in the exact state it was hi when it was
+buried under the ashes of Vesuvius, during its first eruption in the year
+79 of the Christian era. It does not appear to me that the catastrophe of
+Pompeii could have been occasioned by an earthquake, for if so the streets
+and houses would not be found upright and entire: it appears rather to have
+been caused by the showers of ashes and _ecroulement_ of the mountain,
+which covered it up and buried it for ever from the sight of day. The first
+place our guide took us to see was a superb Amphitheatre about half as
+large as the Coliseum: the arena and seats are perfect, and all the
+interior is perfectly cleared out: so are the dens where the wild beasts
+were kept; so that you look down into this amphitheatre as into a vast
+basin standing on its brink, which is on a level with the rest of the
+ground around it, and by means of the seats and passages you may descend
+into the _arena_. This Amphitheatre is at a short distance from the rest of
+the town. What is at present discovered of this city consists of a long
+street with several off-sets of streets issuing from it: a temple, two
+theatres, a praetorium, a large barrack, and a peculiarly large house or
+villa belonging probably to some eminent person, but no doubt when the
+excavation shall be recommenced many more streets will be discovered, as
+from the circumstance of there being an amphitheatre, two other theatres
+and a number of sepulchral monuments outside the gates, it must have been a
+city of great consequence. Most of the houses seem to have had two stories;
+the roofs fell in of course by the act of excavation, but the columns
+remain entire. I observe that the general style of building in Pompeii in
+most of the houses is as follows: that in each building there is a court
+yard in the centre, something like the court yard of a convent, which is
+sometimes paved in mosaic, and generally surrounded by columns; in the
+middle of this court is a fountain or basin: the court has no roof and the
+wings of the house form a quadrangle environing it. The windows and doors
+of the rooms are made in the interior sides of the quadrangle looking into
+the court yard; on the exterior there appears to be only a small latticed
+window near the top of the room to admit light. I have seen in Egypt and in
+India similarly built houses, and it is the general style of building in
+Andalusia and Barbary. In the rooms are niches in the walls for lamps,
+precisely in the style of the Moorish buildings in India.
+
+In many of the chambers of the houses at Pompeii are paintings _al fresco_
+and arabesques on the walls which on being washed with water appear
+perfectly fresh. The subjects of these paintings are generally from the
+mythology. In some of the rooms are paintings _al fresco_ of fish, flesh,
+fowl and fruit; in others Venus and the Graces at their toilette, from
+which we may infer that the former were dining rooms and the latter
+boudoirs. A large villa (so I deem it as it stands without the gates) has a
+number of rooms, two stories entire and three court yards with fountains,
+many beautiful fresco paintings on the walls of the chambers. Annexed to
+this villa is a garden arranged in terraces and a fish pond. A covered
+gallery supported by pillars on one of the sides of the garden served
+probably as a promenade in wet weather. In the cellars of this villa are a
+number of _amphorae_ with narrow necks. Had the ancients used corks instead
+of oil to stop their _amphorae_, wine eighteen hundred years old might have
+been found here. It is not the custom even of the modern Italians to use
+corks for the wine they keep for their own use: a spoonful of oil is poured
+on the top of the wine in the flask and when they mean to drink it they
+extract the oil by means of a lump of cotton fastened to a stick or long
+pin which enters the neck of the flask and absorbs and extracts the oil.
+
+Among the buildings discovered in Pompeii is a large Temple of Isis; here
+you behold the altar and the pillar to which the beasts of sacrifice were
+fastened. In this temple at the time of the first excavation were found all
+the instruments of sacrifice and other things appertaining to the worship
+of that Goddess. These and other valuables such as statues, coins, utensils
+of all sorts were removed to Portici, where they are now to be seen in the
+Museum of that place. The _Praetorium_ at Pompeii is the next remarkable
+thing; it is a vast enclosure: a great number of columns are standing
+upright here and the most of them entire; the steps forming the ascent to
+the elevated seat where the Praetor usually sat, remain entire. There is a
+large building and court yard near one of the gates of the city supposed to
+have been a barrack for soldiers; three skeletons were found here with
+their legs in a machine similar to our stocks. The scribbling and
+caricatures on the walls of this barrack are perfectly visible and legible.
+When one wanders thro' the streets of this singularly interesting city, one
+is tempted to think that the inhabitants have just walked out. What a
+dreadful lingering death must have befallen these inhabitants who could not
+escape from Pompeii at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius which covered
+it with ashes. The air could only be exhausted by degrees, so that a
+prolonged suffocation or a death by hunger must have been their lot.
+
+Four skeletons were found upright in the streets, having in their hands
+boxes containing jewellery and things of value, as if in the act of
+endeavouring to make their escape: these must soon have perished, but the
+skeleton of a woman found in one of the rooms of the houses close to a bath
+shews that her death must have been one of prolonged suffering.
+
+What a fine subject Pompeii would furnish for the pen of a Byron! As I have
+before remarked, all the valuables and utensils of all sorts found here
+have been removed to Portici; it is a great pity that everything could not
+be left in Pompeii in the exact situation in which it was found on its
+first discovery at the excavation. What a light it would have thrown (which
+no description can give) on the melancholy catastrophe as well as on the
+private life and manners of the ancients! But if they had been left here,
+they would, even tho' a guard of soldiers were stationed here to protect
+them, have been by degrees all stolen.
+
+There were some magnificent tombs just outside the gates which must have
+been no small ornament to the city.
+
+We returned to Resina to dinner at six o'clock.
+
+We had made an arrangement with one of the guides of Vesuvius called
+Salvatore that he should be ready for us at Resina at seven o'clock with a
+mule and driver for each of us to ascend the mountain, and we found him
+very punctual at the door of the inn at that hour. The terms of the journey
+were as follows. One _scudo_ for Salvatore and one _scudo_ for each mule
+and driver for which they were to forward us to the mountain, remain the
+whole night and reconduct us to Resina the following morning. The object in
+ascending at night and remaining until morning is to combine the night view
+of the eruption with the visit (if possible) to the crater, which cannot
+with safety be undertaken by night, and to enjoy likewise the noble view at
+sunrise of the whole bay and city of Naples and the adjacent islands. We
+started therefore at a quarter past seven and arrived at half past nine at
+a small house and chapel, called the hermitage of Vesuvius, which is
+generally considered as half-way up the mountain. In this house dwells an
+old ecclesiastic who receives travellers and furnishes them with a couch
+and frugal repast. We dismounted here and our worthy host provided us with
+some mortadella and an omelette; and we did not fail to do justice to his
+excellent _lacrima Christi_, of which he has always a large provision. We
+then betook ourselves to rest, leaving orders to be awakened at two o'clock
+in order to proceed further up the mountain. There was a pretty decent
+eruption of the mountain, which vomited fire, stones and ashes at an
+interval of twenty-five minutes, so that we enjoyed this spectacle during
+our ascent. A violent noise, like thunder, accompanies each eruption, which
+increases the awefulness and grandeur of the sight. At two o'clock our
+guide and muleteers being very punctual, we bade adieu to the hermit,
+promising him to come to breakfast with him the next morning; we then
+mounted our mules and after an hour's march arrived at the spot where the
+ashes and cinders, combined with the steepness of the mountain, prevent the
+possibility of going any further except on foot. We dismounted therefore at
+this place, and sent back our mules to the hermitage to wait for us there.
+We now began to climb among the ashes, and tho' the ascent to the position
+of the ancient crater is not more than probably eighty yards in height, we
+were at least one hour before we reached it, from its excessive steepness
+and from gliding back two feet out of three at every step we made. We at
+length reached the old crater and sat ourselves down to repose till
+day-break. Tho' it was exceeding cold, the exhalation from the veins of
+fire and hot ashes kept us as warm as we could wish: for here every step is
+literally
+
+ _per ignes
+ Suppositos cineri doloso_.[97]
+
+We remained on this spot till broad daylight and witnessed several
+eruptions at an interval of twenty or twenty-five minutes. I remarked that
+the mountain toward the summit forms two cones, one of which vomited fire
+and smoke, and the other calcined stones and ashes, accompanied by a
+rumbling noise like thunder. The stones came clattering down the flanks of
+the mountain and some of them rolled very near us; had we been within the
+radius formed by the erupted stones we probably should have been killed.
+
+At daylight Mr R---- D---- proposed to ascend the two cones in spite of the
+remonstrances of our guide Salvatore, who told us that no person had yet
+been there and that we must expect to be crushed to death by the stones,
+should an eruption take place, and that it was almost as much madness to
+attempt it, as it would be to walk before a battery of cannon in the act of
+being fired. Tho' I did not admit all the force of this comparison, yet I
+began to think there was a little too much risk in the attempt; my French
+friend however was deaf to all remonstrance and said to me, "_As-tu peur_?"
+I replied: "No! that I was at all times very indifferent as to life or
+death, but that I did not like pain, and was not at all desirous to have an
+arm or leg broken, the former accident having happened to a German a few
+days before; nevertheless, I added, if you persist in going, I will
+accompany you." We accordingly started to ascend the cone, which vomited
+fire and smoke, taking care to place ourselves on the windward side in
+ascending, and after much fatigue we arrived in about fifteen minutes close
+to the apex of the cone, after groping amidst the ashes and stumbling on a
+vein of red hot cinders. My shoes were sadly burnt, my stockings singed and
+my feet scorched; my friend was less fortunate, for he tumbled down with
+his hands on a vein of red hot cinders and burned them terribly. My great
+and principal apprehension in making this ascent was of stumbling upon
+holes slightly encrusted with ashes and that the whole might give way and
+precipitate me into some _gouffre._ On arrival at the summit of the cone we
+had just time to look down and perceive that there was a hole or _gouffre,_
+but whether it were very deep or not we could not ascertain, for a blast of
+fire and smoke issuing from it at this moment nearly suffocated us; we
+immediately lost no time in gliding down the ashes on the side of the cone
+on our breech, and reached its base in a few seconds, where we waited till
+an eruption took place from the other cone, in order to profit of the
+interval to ascend it also. It required four minutes' walk to reach the
+base of the other cone and about twelve to ascend to its apex; on arrival
+at the brink, where we remained about two minutes, we had just sufficient
+time to observe that there was no deep hole or bottomless _gouffre_ as we
+expected, but that it formed a crater with a sort of slant and not
+exceeding thirty feet in depth to the bottom, which looked exactly like a
+lime-kiln, being of a dirty white appearance, and in continual agitation,
+as it were of limestones boiling; so that a person descending to the bottom
+of this crater would probably be scorched to death or suffocated in a few
+minutes, but would infallibly be ejected and thrown into the air at the
+first eruption. I mean by this that he would not disappear or fall into a
+bottomless pit (as I should have supposed before I viewed the crater), but
+that his friends would be sure of finding his body either yet living or
+dead, outside the brink of the crater, within the radius made by the
+erupted stones and ashes.
+
+Our guide now begged us for God's sake to descend, as an eruption might be
+expected every minute. We accordingly glided down the exterior surface of
+the cone among the ashes, on our breech, for it is impossible to descend in
+any other way and in a few seconds we reached its base. Finding ourselves
+on a little level ground we began to run or rather wade thro' the ashes in
+order to get out of reach of the eruption, but we had not gone thirty yards
+when one took place. The stones clattered down with a frightful noise and
+we received a shower of ashes on our heads, the dust of which got into our
+eyes and nearly blinded us. On reaching the brink of the old crater we
+stopped half an hour to enjoy the fine view of Parthenope in all her glory
+at sunrise. We then descended rapidly, sometimes plunging down the ashes on
+our feet and sometimes gliding on our breech till we arrived at the place
+where we had descended from our mules, and this distance, which required
+one hour to ascend, cost us in its descent not more than seven minutes.
+
+We then walked to the hermitage in about an hour and a quarter, and arrived
+there with no other accident than having our shoes and stockings totally
+spoiled, our feet a little singed, the hands of Mr. R.D. severely burned
+and both begrimed with ashes like blacksmiths. The ecclesiastic gave us a
+breakfast of coffee and eggs and a glass of Maraschino, and we gave him two
+_scudi_ each. Before we departed he presented to us his Album, which he
+usually does to all travellers, inviting them to write something. I took up
+the pen and feeling a little inspiration wrote the following lines:
+
+ Anch'io salito son sul gran Vesuvio,
+ Mentre cadsa di cineri un diluvio;
+ Questo cammin mi piace d'aver fatto,
+ Ma plu mi piace il ritornare intatto.
+
+which pleased the old man very much to see a foreigner write Italian verse.
+I pleased him still more by letting him know that I was an enthusiastic
+admirer and humble cultivator of the Tuscan Muse, and that having read and
+studied most of their poets, particularly _il divino Ariosto_, I now and
+then caught a _scintilletta_ from his verse. We now took a cordial farewell
+of our worthy old host, mounted our mules and descended the mountain. On
+arrival at Portici we dismissed our guide Salvatore with a _scudo pour
+boire_, besides the stipulated price. Salvatore asked me to give him a
+written certificate of his services, which he generally sollicits from all
+those whom he conducts to the Volcano. I asked him for his certificate
+book, and begged to know whether he would have it in prose or verse. He
+laughed and said: _Vostra Excellenza e padrone_. I took out my pencil and
+wrote the following quatrain:
+
+ Dal monte ignivomo tornati siam stanchissimi,
+ E del buon Salvator siam tutti contentissimi;
+ Felice il pellogrin che a Salvator si fida,
+ Che di lui non si puo trovare un miglior guida.
+
+I never saw any body so delighted as Salvatore appeared when I read to him
+what I had written in his book.
+
+I have another observation to make before I take leave of this celebrated
+mountain, which is, that the liquid lava which it ejects is far more
+dangerous and destructive than the eruption of stones and ashes; the lava
+flows from the flanks of the mountain in a liquid stream. Sometimes there
+will be an eruption and no lava flowing: at other tunes the lava flows from
+the flanks of the mountain, without any eruption from the crater; at other
+times, and then it is most alarming, the eruption takes place accompanied
+by the flowing of the lava. All this demonstrates that the volcano is the
+effect of the efforts of the subterraneous fire to get some vent and escape
+from its confinement. This time I did not observe any lava flowing, except
+a slight vein of it on the spot where Mr R.D. fell down and burned his
+hands; but it is easy to observe on the side of the mountain the course and
+route taken at different times by the lava, which has become hardened and
+is very plainly to be distinguished, as it resembles a _river_ (if I may
+use the word) of slate meandering between the green sward of the mountain
+and descending toward the sea. You can plainly distinguish the course and
+direction of the lava which destroyed part of Torre del Greco and swept it
+into the sea.
+
+At Portici, having washed ourselves at the inn from head to foot in order
+to get rid of our blacksmith's appearance, and having purchased a new pair
+of shoes and stockings each, we visited the Royal Palace and Museum with a
+view principally of examining the objects of art and valuables discovered
+in Pompeii. The Royal Palace is called _la Favorita_, its architecture is
+beautiful; the garden or rather lawn which is ornamented by statues and
+enriched by orange groves extends to the sea. The first thing that presents
+itself to the view of the visitor at the Museum of Portici are the two
+equestrian statues of Marcus Balbus proconsul and procurator and of his
+son, which statues were found in Herculaneum. I forgot to mention that
+there is an inscription with that name on the side of the proscenium of the
+theatre easily legible by the light of _flambeaux_.
+
+To return to the Museum at Portici, we were then shewn into a room
+containing curious _morceaux_ of antiquity discovered at Pompeii: a tripod
+in bronze and various other articles of the same metal; tables, various
+lamps in bronze, resembling exactly those used in Hindostan, wooden pens,
+dice, grains of corn quite black and scorched, a skeleton of a woman with
+the ashes incrusted round it (the form of her breast is seen on the crust
+of ashes; golden armlets were found on her which were shewn to us), steel
+mirrors, combs, utensils for culinary purposes, such as _casseroles_,
+frying pans, spoons, forks, pestles and mortars, instruments of sacrifice,
+weights and measures, coins, a _carcan_ or _stock_, &c.
+
+In the upper rooms are to be seen the paintings and _fresques_ found in the
+same place. The paintings are poor things, and in their landscapes the
+Romans seem to have had little more idea of perspective than the Chinese;
+but the _fresques_ are beautiful: the female figures belonging thereto are
+delineated with the utmost grace and delicacy. They consist of subjects
+chiefly from the mythology. I noticed the following in particular, viz.,
+Chiron teaching the young Achilles to draw the bow; the discovery of
+Orestes; Theseus and the Minotaur (he has just slain the Minotaur and a boy
+is in the act of kissing his hand as if to thank him for his deliverance;
+the Minotaur is here represented as a monster with the body of a man and
+the head of a bull); a Centaur carrying off a nymph; a car drawn by a
+parrot and driven by a cricket: a woman offering to another little Loves
+for sale (she is pulling out the little Cupids from a basket and holding
+them by their wings as if they were fowls); a beautiful female figure
+seated on a monster something like the Chimaera of the ancients and holding
+a cup before the monster's mouth (emblematical of Hope nourishing a
+Chimaera). The arabesques taken from Pompeii and preserved here are very
+beautiful. Here also are two statues found in Pompeii: the one representing
+a drunken Faun, the other a sitting Mercury. We met two Polish ladies here,
+who were amusing themselves in copying the _fresques_. We returned to
+Naples at five o'clock, and dined at the _Villa di Napoli_. In the evening
+we went to the _Teatro de' Fiorentini_. The piece performed was Pamela or
+_La virtu premiata,_ which I understand is quite a stock piece in Italy. It
+is written by Goldoni. It was very badly performed; the actors were not
+perfect in their parts, and the prompter's voice was as loud as usual. The
+costume was appropriate enough, which is far from being always the case at
+this theatre.
+
+
+NAPLES, 13 Octr.
+
+We started on the 12th at six o'clock in the morning (Mr R----- D. and
+myself) in a _caleche_ in order to visit Puzzuoli, Baii and all the
+classical ground in that direction. We of course passed through the grotto
+of Pausilippo. This grotto is thirty feet high and about five hundred feet
+long. In fact, it is a vast rock undermined and a high road running thro'
+it, the breadth of which is sufficient for three carriages to go abreast.
+From its great length it is of course exceeding dark; in order therefore to
+obviate this inconvenience lamps constantly lighted are suspended from the
+roof and on the sides of the grotto, and holes pierced towards the top to
+admit a little daylight. The road pierced thro' this rock and called the
+grotto of Pausilippo abridges the journey to Puzzuoli very considerably, as
+otherwise you would be obliged to go round by Cape Margelina, which would
+increase the distance ten miles. On issuing from the grotto on the other
+side, you arrive in a few minutes on the seashore, on the bay formed
+between Cape Margelina and Puzzuoli. We stopped at the lake Agnano which is
+strongly impregnated with sulfur. On the banks of this lake are the
+_Thermae_ or vapour baths, and here is also the famous _Grotto del Cane_,
+the pestilential vapour arising from which rises about three inches from
+the ground and has the appearance of a spider's web. An unfortunate dog
+performs the miracle of the resurrection to all those who visit this
+natural curiosity; and we also were curious to see its effect. The guardian
+of the Thermes seized the poor animal and held his nose close to the place
+from whence the vapour exhales. The dog was seized with strong convulsions
+and in two minutes he was perfectly senseless and to all appearance dead;
+but on being placed in the open air, he soon recovers. The poor beast shews
+evident repugnance to the experiment, and I wonder he does not endeavor to
+make his escape, for he has sometimes to perform this feat four or five
+times a day. I should suppose that he will not be very long lived, for the
+repeated doses of this mephitic vapour must surely accelerate his
+dissolution. The heat of the _Thermae_ and steam of the sulphur is almost
+insupportable; but it has a most beneficial effect on maladies of the
+nerves and cutaneous complaints.
+
+We then proceeded on our journey to Puzzuoli, the ancient Puteoli, where
+are the remains of the famous mole (or bridge as others call it) of
+Caligula, intended to embrace or unite the two extremes of the bay of Baiae
+formed on one side by Puzzuoli and on the other by cape Misenus. We
+alighted to take a _dejeuner a la fourchette_ at Puzzuoli, and then went to
+visit the temple of Jupiter Serapis, which is a vast edifice and tho' in
+ruins very imposing. On wandering thro' the enceinte of this famous temple,
+I thought of Apollonius of Tyana and his sudden appearance to his friend
+Damis at the porch of this very temple, when he escaped from the fangs of
+Domitian and when it was believed that, by means of magic art, he had been
+able at once to transport himself from the Praetorium at Rome to Puteoli.
+As I said before, the bay included by cape Misenus and Puzzuoli is what is
+called Baiae. The land is low and marshy from Puzzuoli to a little beyond
+the lake Avernus; but from Monte Nuovo it begins to rise and form high
+cliffs nearly all way to Cape Misenus. It was on these high cliffs that the
+opulent Romans built their villas and they must have been as much crowded
+together as the villas at Ramsgate and Broadstairs. We embarked in a boat
+at Puzzuoli to cross over to Baiae (i.e., the place where the villas
+begin), but we stopped on our way thither at a landing place nearly in the
+centre of the bay in order to visit the lake Avernus and the Cave of the
+Cumaean Sybil, described by Virgil, as the entrance into the realm of
+Pluto. The lake Avernus, in spite of its being invested by the poets with
+all that is terrible in the mythology as a river of Hell, looks very like
+any other lake, and tho' it is impregnated with sulphur, and emits a most
+unpleasant smell, birds do not drop down dead on flying over it as
+formerly. The ground about it is marshy and unwholesome. The silence and
+melancholy appearance of this lake and its environing groves of wood are
+not calculated to inspire exhilarating ideas. Full of classic souvenirs we
+went to descend into the Cave of the Sybil, and as we descended I could not
+refrain from repeating aloud Virgil's lines:
+
+ _Di quibus imperium est animarum umbrasque silentes_,[98] etc.
+
+This descent really is fitted to give one an idea of the descent to the
+shades below, and what added to the illusion was that when we arrived at
+the bottom of the descent and just at the entrance of the cave where the
+Sybil held her oracles, we discovered four fierce looking fellows with
+lighted torches in their hands standing at the entrance. My friend cried
+out _Voila les Furies_, and these proved to be our boatmen who, while we
+were contemplating the _bolge d'Averno_, had run on before to provide
+torches to shew us the interior of the grotto of the Sybil. As this grotto
+is nearly knee-deep filled with water we got on the backs of the boatmen to
+enter it. It is about twenty-five feet long, fifteen broad and the height
+about thirteen feet. As we were neither devoured by Cerberus nor hustled by
+old Charon into his boat, we returned from the _Shades below_ to the light
+of heaven, triumphant like Ulysses or Aeneas, considering ourselves now
+among the _Pauci quos aequus amavit Jupiter_.[99]
+
+Acheron, the dreadful Acheron, is not far from Avernus and is likewise a
+lake, tho' call'd a river in the mythology. It is also sulfuric and the
+ground about it is woody, low, marshy and consequently aguish.
+
+We next ascended the cliffs of Baiae and we were shown the remains of the
+villas of Cicero, Caesar, Sylla and other great names. We then went to the
+baths of Nero (so called). Here it is the fashion to descend under ground
+in order to feel the effect of the sulfuric heat, which is intense, and my
+friend who descended soon returned dripping with perspiration and calling
+out: _Qui n'a pas vu cela n'a rien vu!_ but I did not chuse to descend, as
+I could feel no pleasure in being half stifled and the _grotto del Cane_
+had already given me a full idea of the force of the vapour of the
+_Thermes_.
+
+We then descended from the cliffs of Baiae on the other side, and visited
+the remains of three celebrated temples of antiquity situated on the beach
+nearly and very close to each other, viz., the temples of Diana, of Venus
+and of Mercury; all striking objects and majestic, tho' in a state of
+dilapidation. Each of these temples has cupolas. We then ascended the slope
+of ground leading towards cape Misensus, to visit the _Cento Camarelle_ and
+_Piscina mirabile_, both vast edifices under ground, serving as cellars or
+appendages to a Palace that stood on this spot. We then visited the lake
+called the _Mare Morto_ or Styx; and then went round to the other side of
+it, to visit those beautiful _coteaux_ planted in vines and their summits
+crowned with groves which have obtained the name of the Elysian fields.
+This Styx and these Elysian fields look like any other lake and _coteaux_
+and are entirely indebted to the lyre of Maro for their celebrity.
+
+From thence we went to the extremity of cape Misenus and embarked in our
+boat (which we had sent on there to wait for us) to return to Puzzuoli by
+crossing the bay at once. In this bay and near cape Misenus a Roman fleet
+was usually stationed and Pliny's uncle, I believe, commanded one there at
+the time of the first eruption of Vesuvius which cost him his life.
+
+There is a singular phenomenon in this bay of a mountain that in one of the
+later eruptions and earthquakes was formed in twenty-four hours near the
+seashore and was named _Monte Nuovo._
+
+The small salt water lake called _Lacus Lucrinus_ is also on this bay. It
+appears to me to be an artificial lake, made probably by the opulent Romans
+who resided at Baiae to hold their mullets and other sea fish which they
+wished to fatten.
+
+Near Puzzuoli likewise is the famous _Solfaterra,_ the bed of an ancient
+volcano. It is well worth examining. It has been long since extinguished,
+but you meet with vast beds of sulphur and calcined stones, and the smell
+is at times almost insupportable. We returned to Naples by half-past seven
+o'clock, not a little tired but highly gratified by our excursion.
+
+
+NAPLES, 14th Oct.
+
+At the _Teatro Nuovo_ I have seen another Italian tragedy performed. The
+piece was _Tito Manlio Torquato_, taken from the well known anecdote in the
+Roman history. The scenery, decorations and _costume_ were good and
+appropriate, not so the acting; for the actors as usual were imperfect in
+their parts. I fully agree with Alfieri that Italy must be united and enjoy
+a free popular government before one can expect to see tragedies well
+performed. It is very diverting to see the puppet shows at Naples and to
+hear the witticisms and various artifices of the showman of Pulcinello to
+secure payment in advance from his audience, who would otherwise go away
+without paying as soon as the performance was over.
+
+This performance is much attended by the _lazzaroni_ and _faineans_ of the
+lower orders of Naples and the puppet showman is obliged to have recourse
+to various stratagems and ingenious sallies to induce a handsome
+contribution to be made. Sometimes he will say with a very grave face (the
+curtain being drawn up and no Pulcinello appearing) that he is very sorry
+there can be no performance this day; for that poor Signor Pulcinello is
+sick and has no money to pay the Doctor: but that if a _quete_ be made for
+him, he will get himself cured and make his appearance as usual. All the
+while that one of the showmen goes about collecting the _grani_, the other
+holds a dialogue with Pulcinello (still invisible). Pulcinello groans and
+is very miserable. At length the collection is made. Pulcinello takes
+medicine, says he is well again, makes his appearance and begins. At
+another time the audience is informed that there can be no performance as
+Pulcinello is arrested for debt and put in prison, where he must remain
+unless a subscription of money be made for him to pay his debts and take
+him out of gaol. Then follows an absurd dialogue between Pulcinello
+(supposed to answer from the prison) and the showman. The showman scolds
+him for being a spendthrift and leading a profligate life, calls him a
+_briccone_, a _birbante_, and Pulcinello only groans out in reply, _Povero
+me, Povero Pulcinello, che disgrazia! sventurato di me! di non aver
+denari!_ These strokes of wit never fail to bring in many a _grano_.
+
+At another time the curtain is drawn up and discovers a gibbet and
+Pulcinello standing on a ladder affixed to it with a rope round his neck.
+The showman with the utmost gravity and assumed melancholy informs the
+audience that a most serious calamity is about to happen to Naples: that
+Signor Pulcinello is condemned to be hanged for a robbery, and that unless
+he can procure _molti denari_ to bribe the officers of justice to let him
+escape, he will inevitably be hanged and the people will never more behold
+their unhappy friend Pulcinello. The showman now implores the commiseration
+of the audience, and now reproaches Pulcinello with his profligacy and
+nefarious pranks which have brought him to an untimely end. Pulcinello
+sobs, cries, promises to reform and to attend mass regularly in future.
+What Neapolitan heart can resist such an appeal? The _grani_ are collected.
+Pulcinello gives money to the puppet representing the executioner; down
+goes the gibbet, and Pulcinello is himself again.
+
+I shall return in a day or two to Rome, having seen nearly all that Naples
+affords. I have now full liberty to die when I chuse according to the
+proverb: _Veder Napoli e poi morire_.
+
+Naples certainly is, taking it all in all, the most interesting city in
+Europe, for it unites every thing that is conducive to the _agremens_ of
+life. A beautiful city, a noble bay, a vast commerce, provisions of the
+best sort, abundant and cheap, a pleasant society, a delicious climate,
+music, Operas, _Balli,_ Libraries, Museums of Painting and Sculpture; in
+its neighbourhood two subterraneous cities, a volcano in full play, and
+every spot of ground conveying the most interesting _souvenirs_ and
+immortalized in prose and verse. Add thereto the vapour baths of sulphur
+for stringing anew the nerves of those debilitated by a too ardent pursuit
+of pleasure, and the Fountain of St Lucia for those suffering from a
+redundancy of bile. Now tell me of any other residence which can equal
+this? Adieu.
+
+
+ROME, 22nd Octr.
+
+Nothing material occurred on my return from Naples to Rome; but on the 2d
+day after my arrival I made an excursion to Tivoli, which is about eighteen
+miles distant from Rome. I passed the night at the only inn at Tivoli. The
+next morning I walked to the _Villa d'Este_ in this neighbourhood, which is
+a vast edifice with extensive grounds. Here on a terrace in front of the
+villa are models in marble of all the principal edifices and monuments,
+ancient and modern, of Rome, very ingeniously executed. From the _Villa
+d'Este_ is a noble view of the whole plain of Latium and of the "Eternal
+City."
+
+From hence I walked about two miles further to visit the greatest antiquity
+and curiosity of the place, which is the Villa or rather the ruins of the
+celebrated Villa built by Adrian, which must have been of immense size from
+the vast space of ground it occupies. It was intended to unite everything
+that the magnificent ideas of a Prince could devise who wished to combine
+every sort of recreation, sensual as well as intellectual, within the
+precincts of his Palace; columns, friezes, capitals, entablatures and
+various other spoils of rich architecture cover the ground in profusion:
+many of the walls and archways are entire and almost an entire cupola
+remains standing. Besides the buildings above ground, here are cellars
+under ground intended as quarters for the guards and capable of holding
+three thousand men, as well as stabling for horses. In the inclosure of and
+forming part of this Villa, which covers a circumference of seven miles,
+were a gymnasium, baths, temples, a school of philosophers, tanks, a
+theatre, &c. The greatest part of these buildings are choaked up and
+covered with earth, since it is by excavation alone that what does appear
+was brought to light. It was by excavation that a man discovered a large
+hall wherein he found the nine beautiful statues of the Muses, which now
+adorn the Museum of the Vatican; and no doubt if the Roman government would
+recommence the excavations many more valuables might be found. Hadrian's
+villa has already furnished many a statue, column and pilaster to the
+Museums, churches and Palaces of Rome.
+
+I was much more gratified in beholding the remains of this Villa than in
+visiting Tivoli and I remained here several hours. At four o'clock in the
+afternoon I started on my return to Rome; it was imprudent not to have
+started sooner, as it is always dangerous to be outside the walls of Rome
+after dark, in consequence of the brigands who infest the environs and
+sometimes come close to the walls of the city.
+
+I reached my hotel in Rome at nine o'clock, one hour and half after dark,
+but had the good fortune to meet nobody. The Roman peasantry generally go
+armed and those who feed cattle in the fields of the Campagna or have any
+labour to perform there never sleep there on account of the _mal'aria._
+
+
+[93] Horace, _Epist.,_ II, 1, 156.--ED.
+
+[94] Horace, Sat., i, 5, 26.--ED.
+
+[95] A _carlino_ is of the value of half a franc or five pence English. The
+ accounts in Naples are kept in _ducati_, _carlini_ and _grani_. Ten
+ _carlini_ make a ducat and ten _grani_ (a copper coin) make a carlino.
+ A grano is a _sou_ French in value. The _ducato_ is an imaginary coin.
+ The _soudo Napoletano_, a handsome silver coin of the size of an _ecu
+ de six francs_, is equal to twelve carlini.
+
+[96] Not one of these vases was found at Pompeii.--ED.
+
+[97] Horace, _Carm_., II, 1, 7.--ED.
+
+[98] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 264.--ED.
+
+[99] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 129.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1816
+
+From Rome to Florence--Sismondi the historian--Reminiscences of
+India--Lucca--Princess Elisa Baciocchi--Pisa--The Campo Santo--Leghorn--
+Hebrews in Leghorn--Lord Dillon--The story of a lost glove--From Florence
+to Lausanne by Milan, Turin and across Mont Cenis--Lombardy in winter--The
+Hospice of Mont Cenis.
+
+
+FLORENCE, Novr. 20th.
+
+I bade adieu to Rome on the 28th October and returned here by the same road
+I went, viz., by Radicofani and Sienna. I arrived here after a journey of
+six days, having been detained one day at Aquapendente on account of the
+swelling of the waters. The day after my arrival here I despatched a letter
+to Pescia to Mr Sismondi de' Sismondi, the celebrated author of the history
+of the Italian Republics, to inform him of my intended visit to him, and I
+forwarded to him at the same time two letters of introduction, one from
+Colonel Wardle and the other from Mr Piton, banker at Geneva, who mentioned
+me in his letter to Sismondi as having _des idees parfaitement analogues
+aux siennes_. I received a most friendly answer inviting me to come to
+Pescia and to pass a few days with him at his villa. Pescia is thirty miles
+distant from Florence and the same from Leghorn. I was delighted with the
+opportunity of seeing a man whom I esteemed so much as an author and as a
+citizen, and of visiting at the same time the different cities of Tuscany,
+particularly Lucca and Pisa. I accordingly hired a cabriolet and on the
+morning of the 6th Novr drove to Prato, a good-sized handsome town, solidly
+built, ten miles distant from Florence. The country on each side of the
+road appears highly cultivated, and the road is lined with villas and farm
+houses with gardens nearly the whole way. Changing horses at Prato, I
+proceeded ten miles further to Pistoia, a large elegant and well-built town
+on the banks of the Ombrone.
+
+The streets in Pistoia are broad and well paved and the _Palazzo pubblico_
+is a striking building; so is the _Seminario_ or College. Here I changed
+horses again and proceeded to Pescia, where I alighted at the villa of M.
+Sismondi. The distance between Pistoia and Pescia is about ten or eleven
+miles.
+
+Pescia is a beautiful little town, very clean and solidly built, lying in a
+valley surrounded nearly on all sides by mountains. Its situation is
+extremely romantic and picturesque, and there are several handsome villas
+on the slopes and summits of these mountains. On market days Pescia is
+crowded with the country people who flock hither from all parts, and one is
+astonished to see such a number of beautiful and well dressed country
+girls. Industry and comfort are prevalent here, as is the case indeed all
+over Tuscany; I mean agricultural industry, for commerce is just now at a
+stand.
+
+I passed three most delightful days and which will live for ever in my
+recollection, with Mr Sismondi, in whom I found an inexhaustible fund of
+talent and information, combined with such an unassuming simplicity of
+character and manner that he appeared to me by far the most agreeable
+litterary man that I ever met with. His mother, who is a lady of great
+talent and perfectly conversant in English litterature, resides with him.
+His sister also is settled at Pescia, being married to a Tuscan gentleman
+of the name of Forti. The sister has a full share of the talents and
+amiable qualities of her mother and brother. With a family of such
+resources as this, you may suppose our conversation did not flag for a
+moment, nor do I recollect in the course of my whole life having passed
+such a pleasant time; and I only wished that the three days could be
+prolonged to three years. Politics, the occurrences of the day, living
+characters, classical reminiscences, French, English, Italian and German
+litterature, afforded us an inexhaustible variety of topics for
+conversation: and the profound local knowledge that Mr Sismondi possesses
+of Italy, of its history and antiquities, renders his communications of the
+utmost value to the traveller. Our supper was prolonged to a late hour and
+I question if the suppers and conversations of Scipio and Atticus, those
+_nodes caenaeque Deum_[100] were more piquant or afforded more variety than
+ours. Shakespeare, Schiller, Voltaire, Ariosto, Dante, Filangieri, Michel
+Angelo, Washington, Napoleon, all furnished anecdotes and reflexions in
+abundance.
+
+The last evening that I passed here, two families of Pescia came in. One of
+the gentlemen was a great reader of voyages and travels, and India suddenly
+became the subject of discourse. As I had passed six years in that country,
+during which time I had visited the three Presidencies of Calcutta, Madras,
+and Bombay, having ascended the Ganges as far as Benares, having visited
+the Mysore country and Nizam's territory, having sojourned three weeks
+among the splendid and magnificent ruins of Bijanagur or Bisnagar, having
+travelled thro' the whole of the Deccan from Pondicherry to cape Comorin,
+besides having traversed on horseback the whole circumference of Ceylon and
+across the whole island from East to West by the Wanny, I was enabled to
+furnish them with many an anecdote from the Eastern world, which to them
+was a great treat, and I dare say at times my narration appeared almost as
+marvellous as a story in the Arabian Nights, particularly when I related
+the various religious ceremonies, the grim Idol of Juggernaut, the swinging
+to _recover cast_, the exposure of old people to the holy death in the
+Ganges by stopping up their nose, mouth and ears with mud, and placing them
+on the water's edge at low tide in order that they should be swept off at
+the high water; the holy city of Benares; the magnificent remains of
+Bisnagar; the splendid Pagodas of Ramisseram; the policy of the Bramins;
+the appalling voluntary penances of the _Joguis_ or _Fakirs_ as the
+Europeans call them; the bed of spikes; the arm held up in the air for
+fifteen years; the tiger hunt; the method of catching the elephant in
+Ceylon; the pearl fishery; Sepoy establishment; in short I must have
+appeared to them a Ulysses or a Sindbad, and I dare say that they thought I
+added from time to time a little embellishment from my imagination, tho' I
+can safely and solemnly aver that I did not extenuate nor exaggerate any
+thing, but simply related what I had myself seen and witnessed.
+
+Mr Sismondi is under a sort of banishment from his native country Geneva in
+consequence of the side of the question he took in his writings on the
+return of the Emperor Napoleon from Elba. It was indeed natural for the
+restored government (the Bourbons) to desire the removal from France of a
+man of talent who had exposed their past and might scrutinize their future
+conduct and wilful faults; but why the Government of Geneva should espouse
+their quarrel and visit one of their most estimable citizens with
+banishment for opinions not at all connected with nor influential upon
+Geneva, appears to me not only absurd and anomalous, but unjust in the
+highest degree. But such is the state of degradation to which Europe is
+reduced by the triumph of the old _regime_; and the Swiss Governments are
+compelled to become the instruments of the vengeance of the coalition. But
+I shall dwell no more on this subject at present. Let us hope that in a
+short time a more liberal spirit will arise, and the Genevese will be eager
+to recall in triumph the illustrious citizen of whom they have so much
+reason to be proud.
+
+We spent our mornings, Mr Sismondi and I, in promenades towards the most
+striking points of the country immediately environing Pescia, and as I had
+at this time some idea of coming to settle in Tuscany, he was so kind as to
+conduct me to look at several villas that were to let; and I inspected
+three very beautiful ones well furnished and each capable of holding a
+large family, that were to be let for 18, 20, and 24 _louis d'or_ per
+annum.
+
+Wine and every article of life is of prodigious cheapness here, and the
+inhabitants are so respectable, and there is such an absence of all crime,
+that Pescia must be a very desirable and economical residence for any
+foreign family possessing a sufficient knowledge of Italian to mix with the
+society of the natives. There are several ancient and noble families in the
+neighbourhood, highly respectable in point of moral character and manners,
+but rather in _decadence_ in point of fortune.
+
+It was with the greatest regret that I bade adieu to the amiable Sismondi,
+his mother and sister; but I hope for a time only, as I have some idea of
+removing my domicile from Lausanne to this part of the world.
+
+I started at 10 o'clock a.m. on the 11th of November and after two hours'
+journey in a cabriolet arrived at Lucca, a distance of ten miles, and put
+up at the _Hotel del Pelicano._ The road runs thro' a highly cultivated
+country.
+
+Lucca is a large fortified city, situated hi a beautifully luxuriant plain
+or basin surrounded on all sides by hills and mountains of various slopes,
+contours and heights, and abounding in villas, vineyards, mulberry and
+olive plantations. Every spot of ground is in cultivation and the industry
+of the inhabitants of Lucca is proverbial. Indeed the whole territory of
+this little _ci-devant_ Republic is a perfect paradise.
+
+The city itself, from the massiveness and solidity of the edifices, has
+more of a solemn than a lively appearance; but there is a delightful walk
+on the ramparts which are lined with trees. The streets are well paved. The
+extreme antiquity of the city and style of its edifices make it appear less
+_riani_ than the other cities in Tuscany. The Cathedral is Gothic and there
+are in it the statues of the four Evangelists. This and the _Palazzo
+Pubblico_ are the most conspicuous edifices. Tho' the Republic is
+annihilated, the word _Libertas_ still remains on an escutcheon on the
+gates of the city. Lucca, tho' no longer a Republic and enclavee in
+Tuscany, is for the present an independent state and belongs to an Infanta
+of Spain (formerly Princess of Parma) who takes the title of Duchess of
+Lucca. It is generally supposed however that on the demise of Maria Louisa,
+ex-Empress of the French and now Duchess of Parma, this family, viz., the
+Duchess of Lucca and her son will resume their ancient possessions in the
+Parmesan, and that Lucca will then be incorporated with Tuscany.
+
+Before the fall of Napoleon the Princess Elisa Baciocchi his sister was
+sovereign of Lucca, and she it was who has embellished the outside of the
+city with some beautiful promenades. She devoted her whole time, talents
+and resources to the good of her subjects and is highly esteemed and much
+regretted by them. The present Duchess of Lucca has no other character but
+that which seems common to the Royal families of France, Spain and Naples;
+viz., of being very weak and priest-ridden. Lucca furnishes excellent
+female servants who are remarkable for their industry and probity. Their
+only solace is their lover or _amoroso_, as they term him; and when they
+enter into the service of any family, they always stipulate for one day in
+the week on which they must have liberty to visit their _amoroso_, or the
+_amoroso_ must be allowed to come to the house to visit them. This is an
+ancient custom among them and has no pernicious consequences, nor does it
+interfere with their other good qualities. At the back of Lucca is an
+immense mountain which stands between it and Pisa, and intercepts the
+reciprocal view of the two cities which are only ten miles distant from
+each other. This mountain and its peculiarity is the very one mentioned by
+Dante in his _Inferno_ in the _episode_ of Ugolino:
+
+ _Cacciando il lupo e i lupicini_ AL MONTE,
+ PER CHE i Pisan veder Lucca NON ponno.[101]
+
+I started from Lucca in a cabriolet and in two hours arrived at Pisa,
+putting up at the _Tre Donzelle_ on the Quai of the Arno. Between Lucca and
+Pisa are the _Bagni di Lucca_, a favorite resort for the purpose of bathing
+and drinking the mineral waters.
+
+Pisa is one of the most beautiful cities I have seen in Italy. The extreme
+elegance and comfort of the houses, the spacious Quai on the Arno which
+furnishes a most agreeable promenade, the splendid style of architecture of
+the _Palazzi_ and public buildings, the cleanliness of the streets, the
+salubrity of the climate, the mildness of the winter, the profusion and
+cheapness of all the necessaries of life, and above all the amenity and
+simplicity of the inhabitants, combine to make Pisa an agreeable and
+favorite residence. Yet the population having much decreased there appears
+an air of melancholy stillness about the city and grass may be seen in some
+of the streets. This decay in population causes lodgings to be very cheap.
+
+The most striking object in Pisa is the leaning tower _(Torre cadente)_ and
+after that the Cathedral, Baptistery, and _Campo Santo_ which are all close
+to the tower and to each other. Imagine two fine Gothic Churches in a
+square or place like Lincoln's Inn Fields; a large oblong building nearly
+at right angles with the churches and inclosing a green grass plot in its
+quadrangle and a leaning tower of cylindrical form facing the churches: and
+then you will have a complete idea of this part of Pisa.
+
+I must not omit to mention that there is a breed of camels here belonging
+to the Grand Duke; I believe it is the only part of Europe except Turkey
+where the breed of camels is attempted to be propagated.
+
+
+LEGHORN, 17 Novr.
+
+I left Pisa for Leghorn on the morning of the 15th November, and after a
+drive of two hours in a cabriolet I arrived at the latter place and put up
+at the _Aquila Nera._ The distance between Pisa and Leghorn is only 10 or
+11 miles and a plain with few trees, either planted in corn or in
+pasturage, forms the landscape between the two cities.
+
+Leghorn (Livorno), being a modern city, does not offer anything remarkably
+interesting to the classical traveller either from its locality or its
+history. Founded under the auspices of the Medici it has risen rapidly to
+grandeur and opulence, and has eclipsed Genoa in commerce. It is a
+remarkably handsome city, the streets being all broad and at right angles;
+the _Piazze_ are large and the _Piazza Grande_ in particular is
+magnificent. There is a fine broad street leading from the _Piazza Grande_
+to the Port. The Port and Mole are striking objects and considerable
+commercial bustle prevails there.
+
+Among the few things worthy of particular notice is the Jewish Synagogue,
+decorated with costly lamps and inscriptions in gold in the Hebrew and
+Spanish languages, many of which allude to the hospitality and protection
+afforded to the Hebrew nation by the Sovereigns of Tuscany. There are a
+great number of Hebrew families here: they all speak Spanish, being the
+descendants of those unfortunate Jews who were expelled from Spain at the
+time of the expulsion of the Moors in the reign of Don Felipe III surnamed
+_el Discreto_, who was determined not to suffer either a Jew, Mahometan or
+heretic in all his dominions. This barbarous decree was the ruin and
+destruction of a number of industrious families, thousands of whom died of
+despair at being exiled from their native land. In return for this what has
+Spain gained? The Inquisition--despotism in its worst form--poverty--rags
+--lice--an overbearing insolent and sanguinary priesthood of whom the
+monarch is either the puppet or the slave; a degraded nobility; a half
+savage, grossly ignorant, lazy and brutal people. A proper judgment on the
+Spanish nation for its cruelty and fanaticism! My guide at Leghorn
+conducted me to see the burying ground belonging to the English factory,
+which is interesting enough from the variety of tombs, monuments and
+inscriptions. Here all Protestants, to whatever nation they belong, are
+buried. I noticed Smollett's tomb. It is on the whole an interesting spot,
+tho' not quite so much so as the cemetery of Pere La Chaise at Paris.
+
+I returned to Florence from Leghorn _tout d'une traite_ in the diligence.
+We stopped at Fornacetti (half way) to dine. There is a good _table d'Hote
+(ordinario)_ there.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 22nd Novr.
+
+I have become acquainted with Lord Dillon[102] and his family, who are
+residing here and from whom I have received much civility. I met at his
+house the Marchese Giuliani, one of the adherents of King Joachim, a very
+amiable and clever man who speaks English fluently. Lord Dillon is a man of
+much reading and information and his conversation is at all times a great
+treat. His lady too is very amiable and accomplished. I went one day with a
+friend of mine to a _pique-nique_ party at the Cascino, where a laughable
+adventure occurred perfectly in the stile of the _novelle_ of Boccacio. As
+it is not the custom in Florence that husbands and wives should go together
+to places of public amusement, the lady is generally accompanied by her
+_cavalier servente:_ but it by no means follows that the _cavalier
+servente_ is the favored lover: one is often adopted as a cover to another
+who enjoys the peculiar favors of the lady. A gentleman who arrived at the
+hall where the supper table was laid out, somewhat earlier than the rest of
+the company and before the chamber was lighted, observed a gentleman and
+lady ascend the staircase, turn aside by a corridor and enter a chamber
+together. It was dark and he could not distinguish their persons. He waited
+fifteen or twenty minutes and observed them leave the chamber together,
+pass along the corridor and disappear. He had the curiosity to go into the
+chamber they had just left and found on the bed a lady's glove. He took up
+the glove and put it in his pocket, determined that this incident should
+afford him some amusement at supper and the company also by putting some
+fair one to the blush. Accordingly, when the supper was nearly over, he
+held up the glove and asked with a loud voice if any lady had lost a glove;
+when his own wife who was sitting at the same table at some distance from
+him called out with the utmost _sangfroid: E il mio! dammelo: l'ho lasciato
+cadere._ You may conceive what a laugh there was against him, for he had
+related the circumstances of his finding it to several of the company
+before they sat down to supper. This reminded me of an anecdote mentioned
+by Brantome as having occurred at Milan in his time, a glove being in this
+case also the cause of the _desagrement_. A married lady had been much
+courted by a Spanish Cavalier of the name of Leon: one day, thinking he had
+made sure of her, he followed her into her bedroom, but met with a severe
+and decided repulse and was compelled to leave her _re infecta_. In his
+confusion he left one of his gloves on the bed which remained there
+unperceived by the lady. The husband of the lady arrived shortly afterwards
+and as he was aware of the attentions of the Spaniard to his wife and had
+noticed his going into the house, he went directly to his wife's chamber,
+where the first thing that captivated his attention was a man's military
+glove on the bed. He, however, said nothing, but from that moment abstained
+from all conjugal duty. The lady finding herself thus neglected by a
+husband who had been formerly tender and attentive, was at a loss to know
+the reason, and determined to come to an _eclaircissement_ with him in as
+delicate a manner as she could. She therefore took a slip of paper, wrote
+the following lines thereon and placed it on his table:
+
+ _Vigna era, vigna son;
+ Era podada, or piu non son;
+ E non so per qual cagion
+ Non mi poda il mio patron._[103]
+
+The husband, on reading these lines, wrote the following in answer:
+
+ _Vigna eri, vigna sei;
+ Eri podada, e piu non sei;
+ Per la gran fa del Leon
+ Non ti poda il tuo patron._
+
+The lady on reading these lines perceived at once the cause of her
+husband's estrangement and succeeded in explaining the matter
+satisfactorily to him, which was facilitated by the ingenuous declaration
+of Leon himself that he had tried to succeed but had been repulsed. The
+husband and wife being perfectly reconciled lived happily and no doubt the
+vine was cultivated as usual.
+
+I left Florence the 27th November, and arrived at Turin 5th December. In an
+evil hour I engaged myself to accompany an old Swiss Baroness with whom I
+became acquainted at the Hotel of Mine Hembert to accompany her to Turin.
+She had with her her son, a fine boy of thirteen years of age but very much
+spoiled. We engaged a _vetturino_ to conduct us to Turin, stopping one day
+at Milan. The Baroness did not speak Italian and generally sent for me to
+interpret for her when any disputes occurred between her and the people at
+the inns, and these disputes were tolerably frequent, as she always gave
+the servants wherever she stopped a good deal of trouble and on departing
+generally forgot to give them the _buona grazia._ I sometimes paid them for
+her myself in order to avoid noise and tumult; at other times we departed
+under vollies of abuse and imprecations such as _brutta vecchia, maladetta
+carogna,_ and so forth. The Baroness had strong aristocratic prejudices and
+was a bitter enemy of the French Revolution to which she attributed
+collectively all the _desagremens_ she had experienced during life and all
+the inconveniences she met with during our present journey. The negligence
+and impertinence of the servants in Italy were invariably attributed by her
+to the revolutionary principle and she told me that the servants in her
+native canton Bern were the best in the world, but that even in them the
+French Revolution had made a great deal of difference and that they were
+not so submissive as they used to be. As she sent for me to be her dragoman
+in all her disputes on the road, you may conceive how glad I was to arrive
+at Turin to be rid of her. She put me in mind of Gabrina in the _Orlando
+Furioso._ We stopped one day at Milan but we were very near being detained
+two or three days at Fiacenza owing to an informality in the Baroness's
+passport, which had not been vise by the Austrian Legation at Florence. In
+vain she pleaded that she was told at the inn at Florence that such _visa_
+was not necessary; the police officer at the Austrian _Douane_, at a short
+distance beyond Piacenza, was inexorable and refused to _viser_ her
+passport to allow her to proceed. She was in a sad dilemma and it was
+thought we should be obliged to remain at Piacenza. I however recommended
+her to be guided by me and not to talk with or scold anybody, and that I
+would ensure her arrival at Milan without difficulty, for I had observed
+that her scolding the officer at the _Douane_ only served to make him more
+obstinate. I recommended her therefore that when we should arrive within
+sixty or seventy paces of the gate at Milan, she should get out of the
+carriage with her son and walk thro' the gate on foot with the utmost
+unconcern as if she belonged to the town and was returning from a
+promenade; and that while they stopped us who were in the carriage to
+examine our passports, she should walk direct to the inn where we were to
+lodge, then write to the Consul of her nation to explain the business. She
+followed my advice and passed unobserved and unmolested into Milan. On the
+preceding evening at Castel-puster-lengo at supper I asked whether she
+thought the rigour of the Austrian government was also the offspring of the
+French Revolution. The Baroness had brought up her son in all these
+feelings and particularly in a determined hatred of the Canton de Vaud; for
+in the evening when we arrived at the inn and were sitting round the fire,
+he would shake the burning faggots about and say: _Voila la ville de
+Lausanne en cendres!_ If he grows up with these ideas and acts upon them,
+he stands a good chance of being shot in a duel by some Vaudois. It is a
+pity to see a child so spoiled, for he was a very fine boy, tho' very
+violent in his temper which probably he inherited from his mother. Somebody
+at the _pension Surpe_ at Milan who knew her told me that the Baroness was
+of an aristocratic family and had married a rich _bourgeois_ of Bern whom
+she treated rather too much _de haut en bas;_ in short that it was a
+marriage quite _a la George Dandin_, till the poor man took it into his
+head to die one day. At Turin we parted company, she for Genoa and I for
+Lausanne.
+
+
+_From Turin to Lausanne_.
+
+I felt the cold very sensibly in the journey from Florence to Milan and
+Turin. There is not a colder country in Europe than Lombardy in the winter.
+The vicinity of the Alps contributes much to this; and the houses being
+exceedingly large and having no stoves it is quite impossible that the
+fireplaces can give heat sufficient to warm the rooms. I started from Turin
+on the morning of the 9th December in the French diligence bound to Lyon,
+but taking my place only as far as Chambery. In the diligence were a
+Piedmontese Colonel who had served under Napoleon, and a young Scotchman, a
+relation of Lord Minto. The latter was fond of excursions in ice and snow
+and on our arrival at Suza he proposed to me to start from there two or
+three hours before the diligence and to ascend Mont Cenis on foot as far as
+the _Hospice_ and I was mad enough to accede to the proposal, for it
+certainly was little less than madness in a person of my chilly habits and
+susceptibility of cold and who had passed several years within the tropics
+to scale the Alps on foot in the middle of December and to walk 24 miles in
+snow and ice at one o'clock in the morning, which was the hour at which we
+started. I was well clad in flannel and I went thro' the journey valiantly
+and in high spirits and without suffering much from the cold till within
+five miles of the Hospice, when a heavy snow storm came on; it then began
+to look a little ugly and but for Napoleon's grand _chausses_ we were lost.
+We struggled on three miles further in the snow before we fell in with a
+_maison de refuge_. We knocked there and nobody answered. We then
+determined _coute que coute_ to push on to the _Hospice_ which we knew
+could not be more than two miles distant; indeed it was much more advisable
+so to do than to run the risk of being frozen by remaining two or three
+hours in the cold air till the diligence should come up. In standing still
+I began to feel the cold bitterly; so in spite of the snow storm, we pushed
+on and arrived at the inn at Mont-Cenis at five in the morning. We rubbed
+our hands and faces well with snow and took care not to approach the fire
+for several minutes, fortifying ourselves in the interim with a glass of
+brandy. We then had some coffee made and laid ourselves down to sleep by
+the side of an enormous fire until the diligence arrived, which made its
+appearance at eight o'clock. The passengers stopped to breakfast and the
+Scotchman proposed to me to make the descent of Lans-le-Bourg also on foot;
+but I was quite satisfied with the prowess I had already exhibited and
+declined the challenge. He however set off alone and thus performed the
+entire passage of Mont Cenis on foot. As for the rest of us we were carried
+down on a _traineau_; that is to say the diligence was unloaded and its
+wheels taken off; the baggage and wheels were put on one _traineau_ and the
+diligence with the passengers in it on another, and in this manner we
+descended to Lans-le-Bourg. Nothing remarkable occurred on this journey and
+we arrived at Chambery in good case. I hired a _caleche_ to go to Geneva,
+remained there three days and arrived at Lausanne on the 18th December.
+
+
+[100] Horace, _Sat_., II, 6, 65.--ED.
+
+[101] Dante, _Inferno_, I, 33,29.--ED.
+
+[102] Henry Augustus, thirteenth Viscount Dillon (1777-1832), married
+ (1807) to Henrietta Browne (died 1862).--ED.
+
+[103] Quoted from memory, with mistakes. The text has been corrected as it
+ stands in Brantome, _Les Dames galantes_, ed. Chasles, vol. I, p.
+ 351.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER
+WATERLOO
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MARCH-SEPTEMBER, 1817
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Clermont-Ferrand--A wretched conveyance--The
+first dish of frogs--Society in Clermont-Ferrand--General de
+Vergeunes--Cleansing the town--Return to Lausanne--A zealous
+priest--Journey to Bern and back to Lausanne--Avenches--Lake Morat--Lake
+Neufchatel--The Diet in Bern--Character of the Bernois--A beautiful
+Milanese lady.
+
+I started from Lausanne on the 4th March 1817, and arrived on the same day
+at 4 o'clock at Geneva. On my arrival at Geneva, my banker informed me that
+I had been denounced to the police, for some political opinions I had
+spoken at the _Hotel de l'Ecu de Geneve_, previous to my journey into
+Italy, and that I had been traced as far as Turin. I went directly on
+hearing this to the police, and desired to know who my accusers were, and
+that the accusation against me might be investigated immediately. Both
+these propositions were however declined, and I was told it was an _affaire
+passee_, and of no sort of consequence; so that from that day to this I
+have never been able to ascertain who my friends were.
+
+I left Lausanne with the intention of paying a visit to my friend Col.
+Wardle and his family at Clermont-Ferrand, in the Department of the Puy de
+Dome, in Auvergne, where they are residing. I staid three days at Geneva,
+and then set off at 7 in the evening on the 8th March with the Courier for
+Lyons.
+
+I never regretted any thing so much, and was near paying severely for my
+rashness in putting myself into such a wretched conveyance, at such a
+season of the year; but I had made the agreement with the Courier without
+inspecting his carriage, and was obliged to adhere to the bargain. It was a
+vehicle entirely open before; it was a bitter cold, rainy, snowy night; and
+I had the rain and snow in my face the whole way, and on crossing the
+Cerdon I was seized with a violent ague fit, and suffered so much from it
+that on arrival at a village beyond Nantua where we stopped for supper, I
+determined to proceed no further, but to rest there that night; and I asked
+the innkeeper if he could furnish me with a bed for the night. He however
+made so many objections and seemed so unwilling that I should remain, that
+I was obliged to make up my mind to proceed. I allayed the _frissonnement_
+by a large glass of brandy and water, made fiery hot. At eight o'clock next
+morning I arrived at Lyons, more dead than alive. A warm bath, however,
+remaining in bed the whole day, buried in blankets, abstaining from all
+food, a few grains of calomel at night and copious libations of rice gruel
+the next day restored me completely to health; and after a _sejour_ of four
+days at Lyons, I was enabled to proceed on my journey to Clermont on the
+14th March. We arrived at Roanne in the evening and I stopped there the
+whole night.
+
+Between Lyons and Roanne is the mountain of Tarare where the road is cut
+right athwart the mountain and is consequently terribly steep; indeed it is
+the steepest ascent for a carriage I ever beheld. All the passengers were
+obliged to _bundle out_ and ascend on foot; and even then it is a most
+arduous _montee_ for such a cumbrous machine as a French diligence.
+
+The country between Lyons and Roanne appears diversified; but this is not
+the season for enjoying the beauties of nature. Roanne consists of one
+immensely long street, but it is broad, and contains excellently built
+houses and shops. There is a theatre also and baths. It is situated on the
+Loire which I now salute for the first time.
+
+The following morning at nine o'clock a _patache_ (a sort of two wheeled
+carriage) was in waiting to convey me the remainder of my journey; and I
+arrived at night at a large village or town called Thiers. Halfway between
+Roanne and Thiers, on stopping at a small village to dine, I observed a
+dish of frogs at the kitchen fire at the inn; and as it was the first time
+I had observed them as an article of food in France, I was desirous to
+taste them. They were dressed in a _fricassee_ of white sauce, and I found
+them excellent. The legs only are used. They would be delicious as a curry.
+The next morning we continued our journey; and crossing the river Allier at
+twelve o'clock, arrived at Clermont-Ferrand at 2 p.m., and dined with Col.
+Wardle. Clermont and Ferrand are two towns within a mile and half distant
+from each other and this Clermont is generally called Clermont-Ferrand to
+distinguish it from other towns of the same name.
+
+
+CLERMONT, March 26th.
+
+I have taken lodgings for a month, and board with a French family for 90
+franks per month. On the road hither the immense mountain called the Puy de
+Dome is discernible at a great distance; it is said to have been a volcano.
+
+Clermont is a very ancient city and has an air of dullness; but the _Place_
+and promenades round the town are excellent. It is the capital of this
+department (Puy de Dome). There is a terrible custom here of emptying the
+_aguas mayores y menores_ (as the Spaniards term those secretions) into the
+small streets that lie at the back of the houses. The consequence is that
+they are clogged up with filth and there is always a most abominable
+stench. One must be careful how one walks thro' these streets at night,
+from the liability of being saluted by a golden shower. The lower classes
+of the Auvergnats have the reputation of being dirty, slovenly and idle.
+
+Here is a church built by the English in the time of Edward III, when the
+Black Prince commanded in this country; and it was in a chapel in this
+city, the remains of which still exist, that Peter the Hermit preached the
+first crusade. These are almost the only things worthy of remark in the
+town itself, except that there is a good deal of commerce carried on,
+manufactures of crockery, cloth and silk stockings. But in the natural
+curiosities of the environs of Clermont there is a great deal to interest
+the botanist and mineralogist and above all there is a remarkable
+petrifying well, very near the town, where by leaving pieces of wood,
+shell-fish and other articles exposed to the dropping of the water, they
+become petrified in a short time. This water has the same effect on dead
+animals and rapidly converts them into stone. I have myself seen a small
+basket filled with plovers' eggs become in eight days a perfect
+petrifaction.
+
+
+CLERMONT, April 2d.
+
+I am arrived here at rather a dull season: the Carnaval is just over and
+all the young ladies are taking to their _Livres d'Heures_ to atone for any
+levity or indiscretion they may have been guilty of during the hey day of
+the Carnaval. The Wardle family have a very pleasant acquaintance here,
+chiefly among the _liberaux_, or moderate royalists, but there are some
+most inveterate _Ultras_ in this city, who keep aloof from any person of
+liberal principles, as they would of a person infected with the plague. The
+noblesse of Auvergne have the reputation of being in general ignorant and
+despotic. There is but little _agrement_ or instruction to be derived from
+their society, for they have not the ideas of the age. In general the
+nobles of Auvergne, tho' great sticklers for feudality and for their
+privileges, and tho' they disliked the Revolution, had the good sense not
+to emigrate.
+
+There is a Swiss regiment of two battalions quartered here. It bears the
+name of its Colonel, De Salis. As there are a number of officers of the old
+army here, on half pay, about three hundred in number, it is said, frequent
+disputes occur between them and the Swiss officers. The Swiss are looked
+upon by the people at large as the satellites of despotism and not without
+reason. It is, I think, degrading for any country to have foreign troops in
+pay in time of peace. Several attempts have been made in the Chamber of
+Deputies to obtain their removal or _licenciement_, but without success. As
+it is supposed that the song of the _Ranz des Vaches_ affects the
+sensibility of the Swiss very much, and makes them long to return to their
+native mountains, a wag has recommended to all the young ladies in France
+who are musicians to play and sing the _Ranz des Vaches_ with all their
+might, in order to induce the Swiss to betake themselves to their native
+country.
+
+There has been a great deal of denunciation going forward here; but the
+General de V----[104] who commands the troops in Clermont, determined to
+put a stop to it. He had the good sense to see that such a system, if
+encouraged, would be destructive of all society, prejudicial to the
+Government, and vexatious to himself; as he would be thereby kept
+continually in hot water. Accordingly, on a delator presenting himself and
+accusing another of not being well affected to the present order of things,
+and of having spoken disrespectfully of the King, M. de V---- said to him:
+"I have no doubt, Sir, that your denunciation proceeds from pure motives,
+and I give you full credit for your zeal and attachment to the royal cause;
+but I cannot take any steps against the person whom you accuse, unless you
+are willing to give me leave to publish your name and consent to be
+confronted with him, so that I may examine fairly the state of the case,
+and render justice to both parties." The accuser declined acceding to this
+proposition. The General desired him to withdraw, and shortly after
+intimated publicly that he would listen to no denunciation, unless the
+denouncer gave up his name and consented to be confronted with the accused.
+The consequence of this intimation was that all denunciations ceased. The
+late Prefect however was not so prudent, and chose rather to encourage
+delation; but mark the consequence! He arrested several persons wrongfully,
+was obliged to release them afterwards, was in continual hot water and it
+ended by the Government being obliged to displace him. To avoid the merited
+vengeance of many individuals whom he had ill-treated, he was obliged, on
+giving up his prefecture, to make a precipitate retreat from Clermont. The
+delators attempted the same system with the new Prefect and Col. Wardle,
+having invited some of the Swiss officers to a ball, to which were likewise
+invited people of all opinions, an information was lodged against him,
+purporting that he wanted to corrupt the Swiss officers from their
+allegiance. The Prefect sent the letter to Col. Wardle and said that it had
+not made the slightest impression on his mind, and that he treated it as a
+malicious report. The new Prefect adopted the same system as the General
+and tranquillity is since perfectly restored.
+
+Things have been taking a better turn since the dissolution of the _Chambre
+introuvable_. Decazes, the present minister, is an able man, and if he is
+not _contrarie_ by the _Liberaux_, he will keep the fanatical _Ultras_ in
+good order. The Bishop of Clermont is a liberal man also, and as it seems
+the wish of the present public functionaries here to conciliate, it is to
+be hoped that their example will not be lost on the _bons vieux
+gentilshommes_ of Auvergne.
+
+I find an inexhaustible fund of entertainment from the conversation of M.
+C----. He has so many interesting anecdotes to relate respecting the French
+Revolution. With regard to his present occupations, which are directed
+towards rural economy, he tells me that he has succeeded in a plan of
+cleansing the town from its Augean filth, and making it very profitable to
+himself; and that he calculates to obtain a revenue thereby of twenty
+thousand franks annually. He has, in short, undertaken to be the grand
+_scavenger_ of the town, and the Government, in addition to a salary of
+2,500 francs per annum, which they give him for his trouble, give to him
+the exclusive privilege of removing all the dung he can collect in the
+precincts of the city, and of converting it to his own advantage. He began
+by fitting up a large enclosure, walled on each side, and in which he
+deposits all the filth he can collect in the stables, yards and streets of
+Clermont. He sends his carts round the town every morning to get them
+loaded. All their contents are brought to this repository, and shot out
+there. Straw is then placed over this dung, and then earth or soil
+collected from gullies and ravines, and this arranged _stratum super
+stratum_, till it forms an immense compact cake of rich compost; and when
+it has filled one of the yards and has completed a thickness of five feet,
+he sells it to the farmers, who send their carts to carry it off. He has
+divided this enclosure or repository into three or four compartments. The
+compost therefore is prepared, and ready to be carried off in one yard,
+while the others are filling. In this he has rendered a great benefit to
+the public, for the Auvergnats are incurable in their custom of emptying
+their _pots de chambre_ out of the windows; so that the streets every
+morning are in a terrible state: but thanks to the industry of C---- his
+cars go round to collect the precious material, and all is cleared away by
+twelve o'clock. He collects bones too, and offal to add to the compost. He
+conducted me to see his premises; but the odour was too strong....
+
+I returned to Lausanne by the same route, leaving Clermont on the 6th
+April, staying four days at Lyons and as many at Geneva. Young Wardle
+accompanied me. We met with no other adventure on the road than having a
+young Catholic priest, fresh from the seminary, for our travelling
+companion, from Thiers to Roanne. This young man wished to convert Wardle
+and myself to Catholicism.
+
+Among many arguments that he made use of was that most silly one, which has
+been so often sported by the Catholic theologians, viz.: that it is much
+safer to be a Catholic than a Protestant, inasmuch as the Catholics do not
+allow that any person can be saved out of the pale of their church, whereas
+the Protestants do allow that a Catholic may be saved. I answered him that
+this very argument made more against Catholicism than any other, and that
+this intolerant spirit would ever prevent me (even had such an idea entered
+into my head) of embracing such a religion. I then told him that, once for
+all, I did not wish to enter into any theological disputes; that I had
+fully made up my mind on these subjects; and that I would rather take the
+opinion of a Voltaire or a Franklin on these matters than all the opinions
+of all the theologians and churchmen that ever sat in council from the
+Council of Nicsea to the present day. This silenced him effectually. Such
+is the absurd line of conduct pursued by the Catholic priests of the
+present day in France. Instead of reforming the discipline and dogmas of
+their church and adapting it to the enlightened ideas of the present age,
+they are sedulously employd in preaching intolerant doctrines, and reviving
+absurd legends, and pretended miracles, which have been long ago consigned
+to contempt and oblivion by all rational Catholics; and by this they hope
+to re-establish the ecclesiastical power in its former glory and
+preponderance. Vain hope! By the American and French Revolutions a great
+light is gone up to the _Gentiles_. Catholicism is on its last legs, and
+they might as soon attempt to replace our old friend and school
+acquaintance Jupiter on the throne of heaven, as to re-establish the Papal
+power in its pristine splendour; to borrow the language of the _Pilgrim's
+Progress_, the Giant _Pope_ will be soon as dead as the Giant _Pagan_.
+
+On arrival at Lyons we put up at the _Hotel du Parc_, where I found cheaper
+and better entertainment than at the _Hotel du Nord_.
+
+My friend young Wardle has fallen in love with a very beautiful _cafetiere_
+at Lyons', and spends a great part of his time in the _cafe_, at which this
+nymph administers, and looks at her, _sighs, looks and sighs again_. It is
+not probable however that he will succeed in his suit, for she has been
+courted by very many others and no one has succeeded. She remains constant
+to her _good man_, and the breath of calumny has never ventured to assail
+her. I met one day at Lyons with my old friend W----s of Strassburg, who
+was a Lieutenant in the 25th Regiment in the French service and served in
+the battle of Waterloo.[105] He is now here and being on _demi-solde_,
+employs himself in a mercantile house here as principal commis. He dined
+with us and we passed a most pleasant day together.
+
+I arrived on the 20th April at Lausanne.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After remaining some weeks, at Lausanne on my return from Clermont, I
+determind on making a pedestrian trip as far as Bern and Neufchatel
+previous to returning into Italy, which it is my intention to do in
+September. I sent on my portmanteau accordingly to Payerne near Avenches,
+intending to pay a visit and pass three days with my friend, the Revd. Mr.
+J[omini],[106] the rector of the parish there, from whom I had received a
+pressing invitation. I was acquainted at Lausanne with his daughter, Mme
+C----, and was much pleased in her society. She had great talent of
+conversation, and I never in my life met with a lady possessed of so much
+historical knowledge. I started on the 27th June from Lausanne, passed the
+first night at Mondon and the next afternoon arrived at Avenches, the
+_Aventicum_ of the ancient Romans. Payerne is only a mile distant from
+Avenches, and I was received with the utmost cordiality by the worthy
+pastor and his daughter. The scenery on the road to Avenches is very like
+the scenery in all the rest of the Canton de Vaud, viz., alternate mountain
+and valley, lofty trees, and every spot capable of cultivation bearing some
+kind of produce; corn just ready for the sickle and fruit such as cherries
+and strawberries in full bloom. Avenches has an air of great antiquity and
+looks very gloomy withal, which forms a striking contrast to the neat, well
+built towns and villages of this Canton on the banks of the lake Leman
+where everything appears so stirring and cheerful. Avenches, on the
+contrary, is very dull, and there is little society.
+
+At Mr. J[omini] there were, besides his daughter, his son and his son's
+wife. All the _ministres_ (for such is the word in use to designate
+Protestant clergymen and you would give great offence were you to call them
+_pretres_) have a fixed salary of 100L sterling per annum, with a house and
+ground attached to the cure; so that by farming a little they can maintain
+then? families creditably. M. Jomini lost his wife some time ago, and still
+remains a widower.
+
+I left Payerne on the fifth of July and walked to the _campagne_ of M. de
+T[reytorre]us,[107] situated on the banks of the lake Morat. It is a very
+pretty country house, spacious and roomy, and I was received with the
+utmost cordiality by M. de T[reytorrens] and his amiable family. He is a
+very opulent proprietor in this part of the country, and has spent part of
+his life in England. He is a dignified looking man, a little too much
+perhaps of the old school and no friend to the innovations and changes
+arising from the French Revolution. Having lived much among the Tory
+nobility of England, he has imbibed their ideas and views of things. His
+son is now employed in one of the public offices in London. His wife and
+three daughters, one of whom is married to a _ministre_, dwell with him.
+With this family I passed three days in the most agreeable manner. I find
+the style and manner of living of the _noblesse_ (or country gentlemen, as
+we should style them) of Switzerland very comfortable, in every sense of
+the word. I wish my friends the French would take more to a country life,
+it would essentially benefit the nation. The way of living in M. de
+T[reytorre]us family is as follows. A breakfast of coffee and bread and
+butter is served up to each person separately in their own room, or in the
+_Salle a manger_, Before dinner every one follows his own avocation or
+amusement. At one, the family assemble to dinner which generally consist of
+soup, _bouilli, entrees_ of fish, flesh and fowl, _entremets_ of
+vegetables, a _roti_ of butcher's meat, fowl or game, pastry and desert.
+The wine of the country is drunk at dinner as a table wine, and _old_ wines
+of the country or wines of foreign growth are handed round to each guest
+during the desert. After dinner coffee and liqueurs are served. After an
+hour's conversation or repose, promenades are proposed which occupy the
+time till dusk. Music, cards or reading plays fill up the rest of the
+evening, till supper is announced at nine o'clock, which is generally as
+substantial as the dinner.
+
+On taking leave of Mr. de T[reytorre]ns' family I walked to the banks of
+the lake Neufchatel, having a stout fellow with me to carry my _sac-de
+nuit_. On arrival at the lake I crossed over in a boat to Neufchatel, which
+lies on the other side. I remained there the whole of the day. It is a very
+pretty neat little city, in a romantic position. Its government is a
+complete anomaly. Neufchatel forms a component part of the Helvetic
+confederacy, and yet the inhabitants are vassals of the King of Prussia,
+and the aristocracy are proud of this badge of servitude. The King of
+Prussia however does not at all interfere with its internal government, and
+his supremacy is in no other respects useful to him than in giving him a
+slight revenue. French is the language spoken in the canton. There is a
+marked distinction of rank all over Switzerland, except in Geneva, Vaud and
+the small democratic cantons such as Zug and Schwytz, where it is merely
+nominal. In short, tranquillity is the order of the day. Each rank respects
+the privileges of the other and the peasant, however rich, is not at all
+disposed to vary from his usual mode of life or to ape the noble; and
+hence, tho' sumptuary laws are no longer in force, they continue so
+virtually and the peasantry in all the German cantons adhere strictly to
+the national costume.
+
+
+BERN, 14 July.
+
+I put myself in the diligence that plies between Neufchatel and Bern at
+nine p.m., on the 12 July, and the following morning put up at the _Crown
+Inn_ in the city of Bern, in the _Pays Allemand_, whereas the French
+cantons are termed the _Pays Romand_. Bern is a remarkably elegant city as
+much so as any in Italy, and much cleaner withal. The streets are broad,
+and in most of them are _trottoirs_ under arcades. There are a great number
+of book-sellers here, and the best editions of the German authors are to be
+procured very cheap. Bern is situated on an eminence forming almost an
+island as it were in the middle of the river Aar; steep ravines are on all
+sides of it; and there is a bridge over the Aar to keep up the
+communication; and as the borders of the island, on which the city stands,
+are very steep, a zig-zag road, winding along the ravines, brings you to
+the city gates. These gates are very superb. On each side of the gates are
+two enormous white stone bears, the emblems of the tutelary genius of this
+city. The houses are very lofty and solidly built. The promenades in the
+environs of Bern are the finest I have seen anywhere, and the grounds
+allotted to this purpose are very tastefully laid out. These promenades are
+paved with gravel and cut thro' the forests, that lie on the _coteaux_ and
+ravines on the other side of the Aar. There are several neat villas in the
+neighbourhood of these promenades, and there are _cafes_ and _restaurants_
+for those who chuse to refresh themselves. Such is the beauty of these
+walks, that one feels inclined to pass the whole day among them. They are
+laid out in such variety, and are so multiplied, that you often lose your
+way; you are sure however to be brought up by a _point de vue_ at one or
+other of the angles of the zig-zag; and this serves as a guide _pour vous
+orienter_, as the French say. Another favorite promenade is a garden, in
+the town itself, that environs the whole city from which and from the
+superb terrace of the Cathedral you have a magnificent view of the glaciers
+that tower above the Grindelwald and Lauterbrunn. The immense forests that
+are in the neighbourhood of Bern form a striking contrast with the
+cornfields in the vallies and on the _coteaw._ There are but few vineyards
+in the neighbourhood of Bern.
+
+
+BERN, 16 July.
+
+The Diet is held this year in Bern and it is now sitting. I have met with
+the two Deputies of the Canton de Vaud, MM. P----- and M-----. I am glad to
+hear from them that the animosity existing between the two cantons of Bern
+and Vaud is beginning to subside. M. P------ has made a most able and
+conciliating speech at the Diet. Still there is a good deal of jealousy
+rankling in the breast of the Bern _noblesse_ and the _avulsumimperium_ is
+a very sore subject with them. I recollect once at Lausanne meeting with a
+young man of one of the principal families of Bern, who had been hi the
+English service. The conversation happened to turn on the emancipation of
+the Canton de Vaud from the domination of Bern, when the young man became
+perfectly furious and insisted that the Vaudois had no right whatever to
+their liberty, for that the Canton of Bern had purchased the province of
+Vaud from the Dukes of Savoy. _"En un mot" (said he), "ils sont nos
+esclaves, nos ilotes et ils sont aussi clairement notre propriete que les
+negres de la Jamaique le sont de leurs maitres"_
+
+A very harsh measure has lately been passed in the Diet, evidently
+suggested by the aristocracy of Bern, which tended to fine and punish those
+Swiss officers who remained in Prance to serve under Napoleon after his
+return from Elba, and who did not obey the order of the Diet which recalled
+them. A very able objection has been made to this measure in a _brochure,_
+wherein it is stated that many of these officers had no means of living
+out of France and that, on a former occasion, when a number of Swiss
+officers were serving the English Government and were employed in America
+in the war against the United States in 1812 and 1818, the Diet, then under
+Napoleon's influence, issued a decree recalling them and commanding them to
+quit the English service forthwith. This they refused to do and continued
+to serve. No notice whatever was taken of this act of disobedience, when
+they returned to their native country on being disbanded in 1814, and they
+were very favourably received. Why then, says the author of this pamphlet,
+is a similar act of disobedience to pass unnoticed in one instance and to
+be so severely punished in another? Or do you wish to prove that your
+vengeance is directed only against those who remained in France, to fight
+for its liberties, when invaded by a foreign foe, while those who remained
+in America to fight against the liberties and existence of the American
+Republic you have received with applause and congratulation? Is such
+conduct worthy of Republicans? O, fie!
+
+Such an argument is in my opinion convincing for all the world except for
+an English Tory, a French _Ultra_ or a Bern Oligarch.
+
+The Arsenal here is well worth seeing; here is a superb collection of
+ancient armour, much of which were the spoils of the Austrian and
+Burgundian chivalry, who fell in their attempts to crush Helvetic liberty.
+
+By way of shewing how fond the Bernois are of old institutions and customs,
+they have been at the trouble to catch three or four bears and keep them in
+a walled pit in the city, where they are well fed and taken care of. The
+popular superstition is that the bears entertained in this manner
+contribute to the safety of the commonwealth; and this establishment
+continued ever in full force, until the dissolution of the old Confederacy
+took place and the establishment in its place of the Helvetic Republic
+under the influence of the French directorial government. The custom, then,
+appearing absurd and useless, was abolished, and the bears were sold. But
+since the peace of 1814 other bears have been caught and are nourishd, as
+the former ones were, at the expence of the state.
+
+Bern derives its name from _Bueren_, the German word for _Bears_ (plural
+number). Only the French spell _Berne_, with an _e_ at the end of it.
+
+There are no theatrical amusements going forward here. Cards and now and
+then a little music form the evening recreations.
+
+In the inn at Bern I became acquainted with a most delightful Milanese lady
+and her son. Her name is L------; she is the widow of an opulent banker at
+Milan and has a large family of children. She was about thirty-eight years
+of age and is still a remarkably handsome woman. Time has made very little
+impression on her and she unites very pleasing manners with a great taste
+for litterature. She is greatly proficient in the English language and
+litterature, which she understands thoroughly, tho' she speaks it with
+difficulty. She is an enthusiastic admirer of Shakespeare, Milton and
+Byron. She had been to Zurich for her son, who was employed in a commercial
+house there, in order to take him back with her into Italy. She spoke
+French as well as Italian, and her son had a very good knowledge of German.
+She offered me a seat in her carriage, on the understanding that I was
+going to Lausanne, where she intended to stop a day or two. An offer of the
+kind made by so elegant and fascinating a woman you may be assured I did
+not scruple to accept, and I was in hopes of improving on this acquaintance
+and renewing it at Milan. Indeed, did not business oblige me to remain some
+weeks at Lausanne, I should certainly offer my services to escort her all
+the way to Milan. She had letters of introduction for Lausanne, and during
+her stay there I acted as her _cicerone_, to point out the most interesting
+objects and points of view, which the place affords.
+
+
+[104] Louis Charles Joseph Gravier, vicomte de Vergennes d'Alonne, was the
+ son of the Comte de Vergennes, who was minister under the reign of
+ Louisi XVI. Born at Constantinople in 1766, he took service at the
+ early age of thirteen, was promoted captain in 1782 and colonel in
+ 1788. Having emigrated in 1791, he served in Conde's army, then took
+ service in England from 1795 to 1797. On the 3rd March, 1815, he
+ re-entered the army as "marechal de camp," and, on the 2nd November of
+ that same year, was promoted general commander of the department of
+ Puy de Dome. He retired on the 8th March, 1817, and seems to have been
+ much regretted at Clermont. Died 1821.--ED.
+
+[105] Jean Francois Wlnkens, born at Aix-la-Chapelle In 1790, is mentioned
+ in the records of the French War Office as having served in the 25th
+ Regiment at Waterloo. His family may have belonged to Strassburg.--ED.
+
+[106] Pierre Jacques Jomini, Protestant minister at Avenches from 1808 to
+ 1819.--ED.
+
+[107] The Treytorrens family, of old nobility and fame, now extinct,
+ possessed a large estate at Guevaux, on the borders of the lake of
+ Morat.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEPTEMBER 1817-APRIL 1818
+
+Journey from Lausanne to Milan, Florence, Rome and Naples--Residence at
+Naples--The theatre of San Carlo--Rossini's operas--Gaming in Naples--The
+_Lazzaroni_--Public writers--Carbonarism--Return to Rome--Christmas eve at
+Santa Maria Maggiore--Mme Dionigi--Theatricals--Society in Rome--The papal
+government--Lucien Bonaparte, prince of Canino--Louis Napoleon, ex-King of
+Holland--Pope Pius VII--Thorwaldsen--Granet--The Holy Week in Rome--The
+Duchess of Devonshire--From Rome to Florence by the Perugia road.
+
+I started from Lausanne with a party of two ladies in a Milanese _vettura_
+on the morning of the 20th September. We arrived at Milan on the 25th late
+in the evening. On passing the Simplon we met with three or four men who
+had the appearance of soldiers, and asked for alms something in the style
+of the old Spanish soldier who accosted Gil Blas on his first journey. Our
+ladies were a little alarmed. On travelling over the plains of Lombardy,
+one of these ladies, who had never before been out of her country
+(Switzerland) and was consequently accustomed to see the horizon bounded at
+a very short distance by immense mountains on all sides, was much alarmed,
+on arrival at the plain, at seeing no bounds to the horizon; she was
+apprehensive of _falling down_ and _rolling over_. Her remark reminded me
+of one of the objections made to the project of Columbus's voyage in
+discovery of a western passage to India; it was said that in consequence of
+the rotundity of the earth they would roll down and never be able to get up
+again. The sensation experienced by my fellow traveller, however, may be
+well accounted for and explained by any one who from a plain surface
+situated on a great height looks down without a railing or balcony.
+
+These ladies were quite delighted with the splendour and bustle of Milan
+and particularly when I took them to the _Scala_ theatre, where a very
+splendid _Ballo_ was given, intitled _Sammi Re d'Egitto_. The scenery and
+decorations were magnificent, being taken from Denon's drawings of Egyptian
+views, and the costume was exceedingly appropriate. My fellow travellers
+were much struck at the appearance of the horses on the stage and the
+grotesque dancing. The last scene was the most magnificent. It represented
+the great Pyramids, on the angles of which stood a line of soldiers from
+the _base_ to the _apex_ holding lighted torches. The _coup d'oeil_ was
+enchanting. I took the ladies to see my old friend Girolamo and in fine was
+their _cicerone_ every where. We remained only four days at Milan and then
+proceeded to Florence, where we arrived on the 7th October. We employed six
+days for our journey and one day we halted at Bologna. After remaining four
+days at Florence and taking the Radicofani road we arrived at Rome the 18th
+October.
+
+At Rome I met my friend P.G. and his wife who were travelling towards
+Naples and I likewise made two very pleasant acquaintances, the one a
+Portuguese, the other a Milanese. The Milanese is a cousin of the
+Neapolitan minister Di M------; and the Portuguese (M. de N------) had been
+employed by his Government in a diplomatic capacity at Vienna. At Rome I
+engaged appartments from the 20th of December for three months and then
+started for Naples, with the intention of passing two months there, and
+returning to Rome, to be in time to witness the fete at Christmas Eve. At
+Velletri I met with a Jamaica family, Mr and Mrs O------, with their
+daughter and daughter-in-law; and we were strongly advised to take an
+escort as far as _Torre tre ponti_, being obliged to start very early from
+Velletri in order to reach Terracina before night-fall. Nothing however
+occurred and we arrived at Terracina without accident. The rascally
+innkeeper there made Mr O------ pay forty franks for each miserable room
+that he occupied, and fifteen franks a head for his supper; he was very
+insolent with all. I was rejoiced to find that in one instance he failed in
+his hopes of extortion. As he is obliged by law to furnish supper and beds
+at a fixed price to those who travel with _vetturini_ and are _spesati_,
+he, whenever a _vetturino_ arrives locks up all his decent chambers and
+says that they are engaged, in order to keep them for those travellers who
+may arrive in their own carriages and whom he can fleece _ad libitum_. A
+friend of mine and his lady, who were travelling in their own carriage,
+had, in order to avoid this extortion, engaged with a _vetturino_ to
+conduct them from Naples to Rome with _his horses_, but their own carriage,
+and, had stipulated to be _spesati_. Mine host of Terracina, seeing a smart
+carriage drive up, ordered one of his best rooms to be got ready, ushered
+them in himself and returnd in half an hour to ask what they would have for
+supper; when to his great astonishment and mortification, they referred him
+for the arrangement of the supper to the _vetturino_, saying that they were
+_spesati_. He then began to curse and swear, said that they should not have
+that room, and wanted to turn them out of it forcibly; but my friend Major
+G---- took up one of his pistols, which were lying on the table, and told
+the innkeeper that if he did not cease to molest them and instantly quit
+the room, he would blow out his brains. This threat had the desired effect,
+and he withdrew. It appears that this fellow has in the end outwitted
+himself, for most people now, who travel on this road in their own
+carriage, chuse to travel with a _vetturino_ and his horses and are
+_spesati_, solely in order to avoid the extortion practised upon them.
+
+We arrived at Naples on the 29th October without accident. A _buona grazia_
+of a _scudo_ at the frontier obviated the delay which would otherwise have
+occurred in examining our baggage by the _douaniers_. I put up at No 1
+_Largo St Anna di Palazzo_, near the _Strada di Toledo_, at the house of
+one Berlier, who had been a domestic of poor Murat's. The Austrian troops
+being now withdrawn, the military cordon of sentinels from the frontier to
+Naples is kept up by the Neapolitan troops; but what a contrast between the
+vigilance of the Austrian sentinels, and the negligence of the Neapolitans!
+The last time I travelled on this road, I never failed, after dusk, to hear
+the shout of _Wer da?_ of the Austrian sentries, long before I came up to
+them, and I always found them alert. Now that the cordon was Neapolitan, I
+always found the sentries either asleep, or playing at cards with their
+companion (the sentries being double), both having left their arms at the
+place where they were posted. At night I have no doubt they all fall
+asleep, so that three or four active _banditti_ might come and cut the
+throats of the whole chain of sentries in detail.
+
+
+30th October, 1818.
+
+I have begun my course of water drinking at the fountain of Sta Lucia.
+Since I was here the last time, the theatre of St Carlo has been finished
+and I went to visit it the second night after my arrival. It is a noble
+theatre and of immense size, larger it is said than the _Scala_ at Milan,
+tho' it does not appear so. The profusion of ornament and gilding serves to
+diminish the appearance of its magnitude. It is probably now the most
+magnificent theatre in Europe. The performance was _Il Babiere di Siviglia_
+by Rossini, and afterwards a superb _Ballo_ taken closely from Coleman's
+_Blue-Beard_ and arranged as a _Ballo_ by Vestris. The only difference lies
+in the costume and the scenery; for here the _Barbe Bleue,_ instead of
+being a Turkish Pacha, as in Coleman's piece, is a Chinese Mandarin, and
+the decorations are all Chinese. A great deal of Scotch music is introduced
+in this _Ballo,_ and seems to give great satisfaction. At the little
+theatre of San Carlino I witnessed the representation of Rossini's
+_Cenerentola,_ a most delightful piece. The young actress who did the part
+of Cenerentola acted it to perfection and sung so sweetly and correctly,
+that it would seem as if the _role_ were composed on purpose for her. The
+part of Don Magnifico was extremely well played, and those of the sisters
+very fairly and appropriately. The three actresses who did the part of
+Cenerentola and her sisters, were all handsome, but she who did Cenerentola
+surpassed them all; she was a perfect beauty and a grace. I think the music
+of this opera would please the public taste in England. Rossini seems to
+have banished every other musical composer from the stage.
+
+I have seen, at the Theatre of San Carlo, the _Don Giovanni_ of Mozart; but
+certainly, after being accustomed to the extreme vivacity of Rossini's
+style, the music, even of the divine Mozart, appears to go off heavily.
+There is too much of what the French call _musique de fanfares_ in the
+opera of _Don Giovanni_ and I believe most of the Italians are of my way of
+thinking.
+
+We have just heard of the death of the poor Princess Charlotte. I am no
+great admirer of Kings and Queens; and yet I must own, I could not help
+feeling regret for the death of this princess. I had formed a very high
+opinion of her, from many traits in her character; and I fancied and hoped
+that she was destined to redeem England from the degradation and bad odour
+into which she had been plunged by the borough-mongers and bureaucrats,
+engendered by the Pitt system. She had liberal ideas and an independent
+spirit. I really almost caught myself shedding tears at this event, and had
+she been buried here, I should have gone to scatter flowers upon her tomb:
+
+ His saltem accumulem donis, et fungar inani
+ Munere.[108]
+
+Has no royalist or ministerial poet been found to do hommage to her
+_manes_? Had she lived to be Queen of England she would have found a
+thousand venal pens to give her every virtue under heaven.
+
+There is a professor of natural philosophy now at Naples, of the name of
+Amici, from Modena, who has invented a microscope of immense power. The
+circulation of the blood in the thigh of a frog (the coldest animal in
+nature), when viewed thro' this microscope, appears to take place with the
+rapidity of a Swiss torrent.
+
+Since I have been here, I have once more ascended Vesuvius; there was no
+eruption at all this time, but I witnessed the sight of a stream of red-hot
+liquid lava flowing slowly down the flank of the mountain. It was about two
+and a half feet broad.
+
+In my letters from Naples, the last time I was there, I gave you some idea
+of the state of society. Among the upper classes gaming is reduced to a
+science and is almost exclusively the order of the day. There is little or
+no taste for litterature among any part of the native society. The upper
+classes are sensualists; the middling ignorant and superstitious. With
+regard to the _Lazzaroni_, I do not think that they at all deserve the ill
+name that has been given to them. They always seem good humoured and
+willing to work, when employment is given to them; and they do not appear
+at all disposed to disturb the public peace, which, from their being so
+numerous and formidable a body, they could easily do. The Neapolitan
+dialect has a far greater affinity to the Spanish than to the Tuscan, and
+there are likewise, a great many Greek words in it. When one takes into
+consideration the extreme ignorance that prevails among the Neapolitans in
+general, one is astonished that such a prodigy of genius as Filangieri
+could have sprung up among them. What talent, application, deep research
+and judgment were united in that illustrious man! And yet there are many
+Neapolitans of rank who have never heard of him. Would you believe that on
+my asking one of the principal booksellers in Naples for Filangieri's work
+on legislation (an immortal work which has called forth the admiration and
+eulogy of the greatest geniuses of the age, of which Benjamin Franklin and
+Sir Wm Jones spoke in the most unqualified terms of approbation; a work
+which has been translated into all the languages of Europe), I was told by
+the bookseller that he had never heard either of the author or of his work.
+
+A very curious thing at Naples is the number of public writers; who compose
+letters and memorials in booths, fitted up in the streets. As the great
+majority of the people are so ignorant as to be unable to read or write, it
+follows that when they receive letters, they must find somebody to read
+them for them and to write the answers required. They accordingly, on the
+receipt of a letter, bring it to one of these public scribes, ask him to
+read it for them and to write an answer, for which trouble he receives a
+fixed pay. These writers are thus let into the secrets of family affairs of
+more than half of the city; and as some-of them are in the pay of the
+Government for communicating intelligence, you may guess how formidable
+they may become to liberty and how dangerous an engine in the hands of a
+despotic Government.
+
+It appears that the theatre of San Carlo is principally kept up by gaming;
+that is to say, the managers and proprietors would not undertake the
+direction of it without the Gaming Bank being annexed to it; for otherwise
+they would lose money, the expence of the Opera on account of the
+magnificent decorations of the Ballets being very great, which the receipts
+of the theatre are insufficient to meet; but the profits of the Casino
+cover all and amply reimburse the proprietors.
+
+With regard to political opinions here there is a great stagnation. It
+costs the Neapolitans too much trouble to think and reflect. M-----, the
+principal minister, is however no favourite; neither is N-----, who has
+quitted the Austrian service, and is nominated Captain-General of the
+Neapolitan army.[109]
+
+There is a great talk about the increase of Carbonarism. You will probably
+ask me what Carbonarism means. I am not initiated in the secret of the
+Carbonari; but as far as I can understand, this sect or secret society has
+its mysteries like modern Free-masonry or like the Orphics of old, and
+several progressive degrees of initiation are required. Its secret object
+is said to be the emancipation of Italy from a foreign despotism and the
+forming of a government purely national. This is the reason why this sect
+is regarded with as much jealousy by the different governments of Italy as
+the early Christians used to be by the Pagan Emperors. Great proofs of
+courage, constancy and self denial are required from the initiated; and
+very many fail, or do not rise beyond the lower degrees of initiation, for
+it is very difficult for an Italian to withstand sensuality. But the
+leaders of this sect are perfectly in the right to require such proofs, for
+no man is fit to be trusted with any political design whatever, who has not
+obtained the greatest mastery over his passions. The word _Carbonari_, I
+need not tell you, means _Coalmen_; the Italian history presents many
+examples of secret societies taking their appellation from some mechanical
+profession.
+
+I have now been nearly two months in Naples, and the _zampogne_ or
+bag-pipes, which play about the streets at night, announce the speedy
+approach of Christmas, so that I shall soon take my departure for Rome.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I left Naples on the 18th of December and arrived at Rome on the 22d. I am
+settled in my old lodgings, No. 29 _Piazza di Spagna_. Nothing worth
+mentioning occurred during the journey.
+
+The fete, of the birth of Christ held at Santa Maria Maggiore on the
+evening of the 24th December is of the most splendid description, and
+attended by an immense crowd of women. Guns are fired on the moment that
+the birth of the Saviour is announced, and this event occurs precisely at
+midnight. The Romans seem to rejoice as much at the anniversary of this
+event, as if it happened for the first time, and as if immediate temporal
+advantage were to be derived from it.
+
+I have mixed a good deal in society in Rome since my return from Naples.
+Among other acquaintance I must particularly distinguish Mme Dionigi, a
+very celebrated lady, possessing universality of talent.[110] She is well
+known all over Italy, for the extent of her litterary attainments, but more
+particularly for her proficiency in the fine arts, above all in painting,
+of which she is an adept. She also possesses the most amiable qualities of
+the heart, and is universally beloved and respected for the worth of her
+private character, and for her generous disposition. She has all the
+vivacity of intellect belonging to youth, tho' now nearly eighty-six years
+of age,[111] and of a very delicate physical constitution; in short she
+affords, and I often tell her so, the most striking proof of the
+immortality of the soul. There is a _conversazione_ at her house twice a
+week, where you meet with foreign as well as Italian _litterati_, and
+persons of distinction of all nations, tongues and languages. Her eldest
+daughter, Mme D'Orfei, is an excellent _improvisatrice_, and has frequently
+given us very favourable specimens of the inspiration which breathes itself
+in her soul. I have likewise witnessed the talent of two very extraordinary
+_improvisatori_, the one a young girl of eighteen years of age, by name
+Rosa Taddei. She is the daughter of the proprietor of the _Teatro della
+Valle_ at Rome, and sometimes performs herself in dramatic pieces; yet,
+strange to say, tho' she is an admirable _improvisatrice_ and possesses a
+thorough classic and historical knowledge, she is but an indifferent
+actress.
+
+It is a great shame that her father obliges her to act on the stage in very
+inferior parts, when she ought only to exhibit on the tripod. I assisted at
+an _Accademia_ given by her one evening at the _Teatro della Valle_, when
+she improvised on the following subjects, which were proposed by various
+members of the audience: 1st, _La morte d'Egeo_; 2dy, _La Madre Ebrea_;
+3rd, _Coriolano alle mura di Roma_; 4th, _Ugolino_; 5th, _Saffo e Faone_;
+6th, in the Carnaval with the following _intercalario: "Maschera ti
+conosco, tieni la benda al cor_!" which _intercalario_ compels a rhyme in
+_osco_, a most difficult one. The _Madre Ebrea_ and _Coriolano_ were given
+in _ottava rima_ with a _rima obbligata_ for each stanza. The _Morte
+d'Egeo_ was given in _terza rima_. Her versification appeared to be
+excellent, nor could I detect the absence or superabundance, of a single
+syllable. She requires the aid of music, chuses the melody; the audience
+propose the subject, and _rima obbligata_, and the _intercalario_, where it
+is required. In her gestures, particularly before she begins to recite, she
+reminded me of the description given of the priestess of. Delphi. She walks
+along the stage for four or five minutes in silent meditation on the
+subject proposed, then suddenly stops, calls to the musicians to play a
+certain symphony and then begins as if inspired. Among the different rhimes
+in _osco_, a gentleman who sat next to me proposed to her _Cimosco_. I
+asked him what _Cimosco_ he meant; he replied a Tuscan poet of that name.
+For my part, I had never heard of any other of that name than the King
+_Cimosco_ in the _Orlando Furioso_, who makes use of fire-arms; and Rosa
+Taddei was, it appears, of my opinion, since this was the _Cimosco_ she
+chose to characterise; and she made thereby a very neat and happy
+comparison between the gun of Cimosco and the arrow of Cupid. This talent
+of the _improvisatori_ is certainly wonderful, and one for which there is
+no accounting. It appears peculiar to the Italian nation alone among the
+moderns, but probably was in vogue among the ancient Greeks also. It is
+certain that Rosa Taddei gives as fine thoughts as are to be met with in
+most poets, and I am very much tempted to incline to Forsyth's opinion that
+Homer himself was neither more nor less than an _improvisatore_, the Greek
+language affording nearly as many poetic licences as the Italian, and the
+faculty of heaping epithet on epithet being common in both languages.
+
+The other genius in this wonderful art is Signer Sgricci. He is so far
+superior to Rosa Taddei in being five or six years older, in being a very
+good Latinist and hi _improvising_ whole tragedies on any subject, chosen
+by the audience. When the subject is chosen, he develops his plan, fixes
+his _dramatis personae_ and then strikes off in _versi sciolti_. He at
+times introduces a chorus with lyric poetry. I was present one evening at
+an _Accademia_ given by him in the Palazzo Chigi. The subject chosen was
+_Sophonisba_ and it was wonderful the manner in which he varied his plot
+from that of every other dramatic author on the same subject. He _acted_
+the drama, as well as composed it, and pourtrayed the different characters
+with the happiest effect. The ardent passion and impetuosity of Massinissa,
+the studied calm philosophy and stoicism of Scipio, the romantic yet
+dignified attachment of Sophonisba, and the plain soldierlike honorable
+behaviour of Syphax were given in a very superior style. I recollect
+particularly a line he puts in the mouth of Scipio, when he is endeavouring
+to persuade Massinissa to resist the allurements and blandishments of love:
+
+ Che cor di donne e laberinto, in quale
+ Facil si perde l'intelletto umano.
+
+This drama he divided into three acts, and on its termination he improvised
+a poem in _terza rima_ on the subject of the contest of Ajax and Ulysses
+for the armour of Achilles.
+
+Wonderful, however, as this act of improvising may appear, it is not
+perhaps so much so as the mathematical faculty of a youth of eight years of
+age, Yorkshireman by birth, who has lately exhibited his talent for
+arithmetical calculation _improvised_ in England and who in a few seconds,
+from mental calculation, could give the cube root of a number containing
+fifteen or sixteen figures.
+
+Is not all this a confirmation of Doctor Gall's theory on craniology? viz.,
+that our faculties depend on the organisation of the scull. I think I have
+seen this frequently exemplified at Eton. I have known a boy who could not
+compose a verse, make a considerable figure in arithmetic and geometry; and
+another, who could write Latin verse with almost Ovidian elegance, and yet
+could not work the simplest question in vulgar fractions. Indeed, I think
+there seems little doubt that we are born with dispositions and
+propensities, which may be developed and encouraged, or damped and checked
+altogether by education.
+
+I have become acquainted with several families at Rome, so that I am at no
+loss where to spend my evenings. Music is the never failing resource for
+those with whom the spirit of conversation fails. The society at Rome is
+perfectly free from etiquette or _gene_. When once presented to a family
+you may enter their house every evening without invitation, make your bow
+to the master and mistress of the house, enter into conversation or not as
+you please. You may absent yourself for weeks together from these
+_conversazioni_, and nobody will on your re-appearance enquire where you
+have been or what you have been doing. In short, in the intercourse with
+Roman society, you meet with great affability, sometimes a little _ennui_,
+but no _commerage_. The _avvocati_ may be said to form almost exclusively
+the middling class in Rome, and they educate their families very
+respectably. This class was much caressed by the French Government during
+the time that Rome was annexed to the French Empire, and most of the
+employes of the Government at that time were taken from this class. I have
+met with several sensible well-informed people, who have been accurate
+observers of the times, and had derived profit in point of instruction from
+the scenes they had witnessed.
+
+The Papal Government began, as most of the restored governments did, by
+displacing many of these gentlemen, for no other fault than because they
+had served under the Ex-government, and replaced them by ecclesiastics, as
+in the olden time. But the Papal Government very soon discovered that the
+whole political machine would be very soon at a stand, by such an
+_epuration_; and the most of them have been since reinstated. Consalvi, the
+Secretary of State, is a very sensible man; he has hard battles to fight
+with the _Ultras_ of Rome in order to maintain in force the useful
+regulations introduced by the French Government, particularly the
+organisation of a vigilant police, and the putting a stop to the murders
+and robberies, which used formerly to be committed with impunity. The
+French checked the system of granting asylum to these vagabonds altogether.
+But on the restoration of the Papal Government a strong interest was made
+to allow asylums, as formerly, to criminals. Many of these gentry began to
+think that the good old times were come again, wherein they could commit
+with impunity the most atrocious crimes; and no less than eighty persons
+were in prison at one time for murder. This opened the eyes of the
+Government, and Consalvi insisted on the execution of these men and carried
+his point of establishing a vigilant police. The Army too has been put on a
+better footing. The Papal troops are now clothed and disciplined in the
+French manner, and make a most respectable appearance. The infantry is
+clothed in white; the cavalry in green. The cockade is white and yellow. No
+greater proof can be given of the merit and utility of the French
+institutions in Italy, than the circumstance of all the restored
+Governments being obliged by their interests (tho' contrary to their wishes
+and prejudices), to adopt and enforce them. There is still required,
+however, a severer law for the punishment of post office defalcations.
+Simple dismissal is by no means adequate, when it is considered how much
+mischief may ensue from such offences. A very serious offence of this
+nature and which has made a great sensation, has lately occurred. As all
+foreign letters must be franked, and as the postage to England is very
+high, one of the clerks at the Post office had been in the habit of
+receiving money for the franking of letters, appropriated it to his own
+use, and never forwarded the letters. This created great inconvenience; a
+number of families having never received answers to their letters and being
+without the expected remittances, began to be uneasy and to complain. An
+enquiry was instituted, and it was discovered that the clerk above
+mentioned had been carrying on this game to a great extent. He used to tear
+the letters and throw the fragments into a closet. Several scraps of
+letters were thus discovered and, on being examined, he made an ample
+confession of his practises. He was merely discharged, and no other
+punishment was indicted on him. I am no advocate for the punishment of
+death for any other crime but wilful murder; but surely this fellow was
+worse than a robber, and deserved a greater severity of punishment.
+
+
+ROME, 10th February, 1818.
+
+The Carnaval has long since begun, and this is the heaven of the Roman
+ladies. On my remarking to a lady that I was soon tired of it and after a
+day or two found it very childish, she replied: "_Bisogna esser donna e
+donna Italiana per ben godere de' piaceri del Carnevale_."
+
+When I speak of the Carnaval, I speak of the last ten days of it which
+precede Lent. The following is the detail of the day's amusement during the
+season.
+
+After dinner, which is always early, the masks sally out and repair to the
+_Corso_. The windows and balconies of the houses are filled with
+spectators, in and out of masks. A scaffolding containing an immense number
+of seats is constructed in the shape of a rectangle, beginning at the
+_Piazza del Popolo_, running parallel to the _Corso_ on each side, and
+terminating near the _Piazza di Venezia_; close to which is the goal of the
+horse race that takes place in this enclosure. Carriages, with persons in
+them, generally masked, parade up and down this space in two currents, the
+one ascending, the other descending the _Corso_. They are saluted as they
+pass with showers of white comfits from the spectators on the seats of the
+scaffolding, or from the balconies and windows on each side of the street.
+These comfits break into a white powder and bespatter the clothes of the
+person on whom they fall as if hair-powder had been thrown on them. This
+seems to be the grand joke of this part of the Carnival. After the
+carriages have paraded about an hour, a signal is given by the firing of a
+gun that the horse race is about to begin. The carriages, on the gun being
+fired, must immediately evacuate the _Corso_ in order to leave it clear for
+the race; some move off and _rendezvous_ on the _Piazza del Popolo_ just
+behind the scaffolding, from the foot of which the horses start; others
+file off by the _Via Ripetta_ and take their stand on the _Piazza Colonna_.
+The horse-race is performed by horses without riders, generally five or six
+at a time. They are each held with a bridle or halter by a man who stands
+by them, in order to prevent their starting before the signal is given; and
+this requires no small degree of force and dexterity, as the horses are
+exceedingly impatient to set off. The manes of the horses are dressed in
+ribbands of different colours to distinguish them. Pieces of tin, small
+bells and other noisy materials are fastened to their manes and tails, in
+order by frightening the poor animals, to make them run the faster, and
+with this view also squibs and crackers are discharged at them as they pass
+along. A second gun is the signal for starting; the keepers loose their
+hold, and off go the horses. The horse that arrives the first at the goal
+wins the grand prize; and there are smaller ones for the two next. This
+race is repeated four or five times till dusk, and then the company
+separate and return home to dress. They then repair to the balls at the
+different casinos, and at the conclusion of the ball, supper parties are
+formed either at _restaurants_ or at each other's houses. During the time
+occupied in the balls and promenades, as every body goes masked either in
+character or in _domino_, there is a fine opportunity for pairing off, and
+it is no doubt turned to account. This is a pretty accurate account of a
+Roman Carnaval. A great deal of wit and repartee takes place among the
+masks and they are in general extremely well supported, and indeed they
+ought to be, for there is a great sameness of character assumed at every
+masquerade, and very little novelty is struck out, except perhaps by some
+foreigner, who chuses to introduce a national character of his own, which
+is probably but little, or not at all, understood by the natives, and very
+often not at all well supported by the foreigner himself. An American
+gentleman once made his appearance as an Indian warrior with his
+war-hatchet and calumet; he danced the war dance, which excited great
+astonishment. He then presented his calumet to a mask, who not knowing what
+the ceremony meant, declined it, when the Mohawk flourished his hatchet and
+gave such a dreadful shriek as to set the whole company in alarm.[112] On
+the whole this character was so little understood that it was looked upon
+as a _mauvaise plaisanterie_.
+
+The usual characters are Pulcinelli, Arlecchini, Spanish Grandees, Turks,
+fortune tellers, flower girls and Devils; sometimes too they go in the
+costume of the Gods and Goddesses of the ancient mythology. I observe that
+the English ladies here prefer to appear without masks in the costume of
+the Swiss and Italian peasantry.
+
+There is a very large English society at Rome, and at some of the parties
+here, you could suppose yourself in Grosvenor Square.
+
+The late political changes have brought together in Rome many persons of
+the most opposite parties and sentiments, who have fallen from the height
+of political power and influence into a private station, but who enjoy
+themselves here unmolested, and even protected by the Government, and are
+much courted by foreigners. I have seen at the same masquerade, in the
+_Teatro Aliberti_, in boxes close to each other, the Queen of Spam (mother
+of Ferdinand VII), and the Princess Borghese, Napoleon's sister. In a box
+at a short distance from them were Lucian Buonaparte, his wife and
+daughters. Besides these, the following ex-Sovereigns and persons of
+distinction, fallen from their high estate, reside in Rome, viz., King
+Charles IV of Spain; the ex-King of Holland, Louis Buonaparte; the
+abdicated King of Sardinia, Victor Emanuel; Don Manuel Godoy, the Prince of
+Peace; Cardinal Fesch, and Madame Letitia, the mother of Napoleon.
+
+I had an opportunity of being presented to Lucian, who bears the title of
+Prince of Canino, before I left Rome for Naples, as on leaving the Pays de
+Vaud I was charged by a Swiss gentleman to deliver a letter to him, the
+purport of which was to state that he had rendered services to Joseph
+Napoleon, when he was resident in that Canton, in consequence of which he
+had been persecuted and deprived of his employment at Lausanne, which was
+that of Captain of the Gendarmerie; and in the letter he sollicited
+pecuniary assistance from the Prince of Canino. I rode out one morning to
+the Villa of Ruffinella where the Prince resides and was very politely
+received; it appeared however that the Prince was totally unacquainted with
+the person who wrote the letter, nor was he at all aware of the
+circumstances therein mentioned. I told him that I was but little
+acquainted with the writer of the letter, but that he, on hearing of my
+intention of going to Rome, asked me to deliver it personally. The Prince
+told me he would write himself to the applicant on the subject. Here the
+negotiation ended; but on my taking leave the Prince said he should be
+happy to see me whenever I chose to call. The Prince has the character of
+being an excellent father and husband, and seems entirely and almost
+exclusively devoted to his family. He has a remarkably fine collection of
+pictures and statues in his house at Rome.
+
+I had an opportunity likewise of seeing the ex-King of Holland, Louis
+Napoleon, who seems to be a most excellent and amiable man, and in fact
+everybody agrees in speaking of him with eulogy.
+
+With regard to the present Pontiff Pius VII, from the excellence of his
+private character and virtues, and from his unassuming manners and goodness
+of heart, there is but one opinion respecting him. Even those who do not
+like the ecclesiastical Government, and behold in it the degradation of
+Italy, render justice to the good qualities of Pius VII. He always
+displayed the greatest moderation and humanity in prosperity, and in
+adversity he was firm and dignified. In his morals and habits he is quite a
+primitive Christian, and if he does not possess that great political talent
+which has distinguished some of his predecessors, he has been particularly
+fortunate and discriminating in the choice of his minister, in whom are
+united ability, firmness, suavity of manner and unimpeachable character. I
+think I have thus given a faithful delineation of Cardinal Consalvi.
+
+
+ROME, March 12th.
+
+I have made a very valuable acquaintance in M. K[oelle][113] the envoy of
+the King of Wuertemberg, to the Holy See. He is an enthusiastic admirer of
+his countryman the poet Schiller, and thro' his means of procuring German
+books, I am enabled to prosecute my studies in that noble language. An
+Italian lady there having heard much of Schiller and Buerger, and not being
+acquainted with the German language, requested me to make an Italian
+translation of some of the pieces of those poets; chusing the _Leonora_ of
+Buerger as one, and leaving to myself the choice of one from Schiller, I
+represented the extreme difficulty of the task, but as she had read a
+sonnet of mine on Lord Guildford's project of establishing an University in
+the Italian language, she would not hear of any excuse. To work then I set,
+and completed the translation of _Leonora_, together with one of Schiller's
+_Feast of Eleusis_. These and my sonnet were the cause of my being
+recommended for admission as a member of the Academy _degli Arcadi_ in Rome
+and I received the pastoral name of _Galeso Itaoense_.
+
+The Carnaval is now over and the ladies are all at their _Livres d'Heures_,
+posting masses and prayers to the credit side, to counterbalance the sins
+and frailties committed during the carnaval in the account which they keep
+in the Ledger of Heaven. Dancing and masquerading are now over and
+_Requiems_ and the _Miserere_ the order of the day at the _conversazioni_.
+
+At Mr K[oelle]'s house I have become acquainted with Thorwaldsen, the famous
+Danish sculptor, who is by many considered as the successful rival of
+Canova; but their respective styles are so different, that a comparison can
+scarce be made between them. Canova excels in the soft and graceful, in the
+figures of youthful females and young men; Thorwaldsen in the grave, stern
+and terrible. In a word, did I wish to have made a Hebe, a Venus, an
+Antinoues, an Apollo, I should charge Canova with their execution. Did I
+wish for an Ajax, an Hercules, a Neptune, a Jupiter, I should give the
+preference to Thorwaldsen.
+
+In their private characters they much resemble each other, being both
+honorable, generous, unassuming, and enthusiastic lovers of their
+profession and of the fine arts hi general.
+
+I have been to see a remarkably fine picture, by a modern French artist, of
+the name of Granet. It may be considered as the _chef d'oeuvre_ of the
+perspective or dioramic art. This picture represents the ulterior of the
+convent of the Capuchins, near the Barberini Palace. The picture is by no
+means a very large one; but the optical deception is astonishing. You fancy
+you are standing at the entrance of a long hall and ready to enter it; on
+looking at it, thro' a piece of paper rolled hi form of a speaking
+trumpet--which by hiding from the sight the frame of the picture, prevents
+the illusion from being dissipated--you suppose you could walk into the
+hall; and each figure of a monk therein appears a real human creature, seen
+from a long distance, so skilfully has the artist disposed his light and
+shade. This picture has excited the admiration of connoisseurs, as well as
+others, and it is universally proclaimed a masterpiece. M. Granet's house
+is filled every day with persons coming to see this picture, and many
+repeat their visits several tunes in the week. He has received several
+orders for copies of this picture, and I fancy he begins to be tired of
+eternally copying the same thing; for he told me that he wished that the
+gentlemen who employed him would vary their subjects, and either chuse some
+other themselves, or let him chuse for them. But no! such is the effect of
+vogue and fashion, and such the despotic influence they exercise even over
+the polite arts, that everybody must have a copy of Granet's picture of the
+interior of the Convent of Capuchins _coute que coute_; so that poor Granet
+seems bound to this Convent for life; except in the intervals of his
+labours, he should hit off another subject, with equal felicity, and this
+alone may perhaps serve to diminish the universal desire of possessing a
+copy of the Convent. The original picture is destined for the King of
+France.[114]
+
+I remarked, in the collection of the works of this artist, a small picture
+representing Galileo in prison, and a monk descending the steps of the
+dungeon bringing him his scanty meal. A lamp hangs suspended from the roof,
+in the centre of the dungeon, and the artist has made a very happy hit in
+throwing the whole glare of the lamp on the countenance of Galileo, who is
+seated reading a book, while the gaoler monk is left completely in the
+shade. On seeing this I exclaimed: _Veramente, Signor Granet, e buonissimo
+quel vostro concetto!_
+
+
+Easter Tuesday.
+
+I have at length seen all the fine sights that Rome affords during the Holy
+Week, and have witnessed most of the religious ceremonies, viz., the
+illuminated cross hi St Peter's on Good Friday; the high mass celebrated by
+the Pope in person on Easter Sunday; the Papal benediction from a window of
+the church above the facade on the same day; the illumination of the facade
+of St Peter's on Easter Monday, and the _Girandola_ or grand firework at
+the Castle of St Angelo on the same evening. The ceremony of the Pope
+washing the feet of twelve poor men I did not see, for I could not get into
+the Sistine Chapel, where the ceremony was performed: and at the mass
+performed by the Pope in the Sistine Chapel I did contrive to enter, but
+was so oppressed by the crowd and heat, that I almost fainted away, and was
+very glad to get out of the Chapel again, before the ceremony commenced.
+Why in the name of commonsense do they perform these ceremonies in the
+Sistine Chapel which is small, instead of doing them in the church of St
+Peter's, which would contain so many people and produce a much grander
+effect?
+
+A great many people are deprived of seeing the ceremonies in the Sistine
+Chapel from the difficulty of getting in. The Pope's Swiss Guard attend on
+that day in their ancient _costume_, with helmets, cuirasses and halberds;
+these guard the entrance of the staircase leading to the Chapel, and they
+have no small trouble and difficulty in maintaining order, as there is
+always a great scuffle to get in, and they are particularly importuned by
+German visitors, who thinking to be favored by them, in speaking to them in
+their own language, vociferate; _Ich bin Ihr Landsmann!_ and hope by this
+to obtain a preference.
+
+On Friday evening a large Cross is erected before the grand altar; every
+part of this Cross is filled with lamps, and at seven in the evening the
+whole is illuminated. It has a most brilliant appearance and gives the
+happiest _chiaro-oscuro_ effect to the statues, columns and pilasters which
+abound in this vast temple. There is no other light on this occasion than
+that reflected from the Cross. On Easter Sunday, when the Pope celebrates
+high mass in the church of St Peter's, the Papal noble Guard, composed of
+young men from the principal families in Rome, form a hedge on each side of
+the nave of the church, from the entrance of the facade to the grand altar.
+The street or interval formed between this double line may be about thirty
+feet broad, and behind this guard or in any other part of the church, the
+spectators may stand; but as these guards wear very large feathers in their
+hats, they intercept very much the sight of those who stand behind them.
+The uniform of the Papal Noble Guard is very splendid, being a scarlet
+coat, covered with gold lace, white feathers, white breeches and long
+military boots. The approach of the Pope is announced by the thunder of
+cannon, and he is brought into the Church dressed in full pontificals, with
+the triple Crown on his head, on a chair borne by men, _palanquin_ fashion;
+he is conducted thro' the lane formed by the Papal Guard, and as he passes
+he makes the sign of the cross several times with his finger, repeating the
+words: _Urbi et Orbi_. He is then set down, with his face fronting the
+baldachin, when he immediately takes off the tiara, and begins the
+ceremony. That ended, he leaves the church in the same state, and then
+ascends the staircase, in order to prepare to give the benediction, which
+is usually given from a window above the facade of the church. The Pope is
+there seated on a chair with the triple Crown on his head. Troops of
+cavalry and infantry are drawn up in a semi-circle before the facade of the
+church, and the whole vast _arena_ of the _Piazza di San Pietro_ is covered
+with spectators. On a sudden his Holiness rises, extends his hands towards
+heaven, then spreads them open, and seems as if he scattered something he
+held in them on the crowd below; a silly young Frenchman who was standing
+next to me said: _Le voila! Le voila qui arrache la benediction au ciel, et
+qui la repand sur tout le monde!_ I could not refrain from laughing at this
+sally, tho' I was much impressed with the solemnity of the scene, which I
+think one of the grandest and most sublime I ever beheld. This ceremony
+concluded, salves of ordnance were fired. The Pope retires amidst clouds of
+smoke, and seems to vanish from the Earth. The troops then fire a _feu de
+joie_ and move off, playing a march in quick time, and the company
+disperse.
+
+It is the etiquette on these occasions that no person be admitted either
+into the church of St Peter or into the Sistine Chapel except in full
+toilette. The ladies dress generally in black with caps and feathers; the
+gentlemen either in black full dress or in military uniform. From the
+variety of foreigners of all nations that are here, most of whom are
+military men, or intitled to wear military uniforms, much is added to the
+splendour of the spectacle.
+
+On the evening of Easter Monday, I was present at the illumination of the
+facade of St Peter's. Rows of lamps are suspended the whole length of the
+columns and pilasters and all over the cupola, so that, when illuminated,
+the style of the architecture is perceptible. The illumination takes place
+almost at once. How it is managed I cannot say; but a splendid illuminated
+temple seems at once to drop from the clouds, like the work of an
+enchanter; I say _drop from the clouds_, because the illumination begins
+from the cross and cupola and is communicated with the rapidity of
+lightning to every other part of the edifice. About ten o'clock the same
+evening the most magnificent firework perhaps in the world begins to play
+from the castle of St Angelo. All kinds of shapes are assumed by these
+fireworks: here are castles, pagodas, dragons, griffins, etc. These last
+about an hour and then conclude, and with them conclude all the ceremonies
+used in commemoration of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+
+Among the sights of Rome I must not omit that of a famous robber of the
+name of Barbone, who was the terror of the whole surrounding country from
+the depredations he committed. Having capitulated, and surrendered himself
+to the Papal Government, he is now confined in the Castle of St Angelo as a
+state prisoner. His wife, or a woman calling herself so, is confined there
+with him, and she is said to be a woman of uncommon beauty. It is quite the
+rage among the English here to go to see these _illustrious_ captives, and
+Madame Barbone, superbly dressed, receives the hommage of the visitors. The
+Duchess of D[evonshire] is said to have visited her, and made her a present
+of a pearl necklace. I hope this is not true. Surely the Duchess, who is a
+woman of talent and an encourager of the fine arts, might have found some
+other object worthier of her munificence. What claims the mistress, or even
+the wife, of a public robber can have on the generosity of travellers, I am
+at a loss to conceive; but such is the _bizarrerie_ and _inconsequence_ of
+the English, and no doubt, be this story of her Grace of D[evonshire]
+having given a present true or not, it will occasion many other presents
+being made to the captive Princess by a host of silly lord-aping English
+men and women. Barbone has, it is said, made an excellent capitulation. He
+has stipulated to be released from prison after a year and a day's
+confinement, and no doubt he will then resume his old trade of brigandage.
+In the meantime he has disbanded his troops, as he calls them; but will his
+troops obey him, now that he is a captive? will they not rather chuse
+another leader?
+
+In the time of the French occupation, nothing of this kind took place; but
+the present Government is weak and timid. I have not been myself to see
+either Barbone or his wife, but I have heard quite enough about them; they
+form one of the principal sights in Rome, and I am quite _unfashionable_ in
+not having gone to visit them; for according to the opinion of my English
+acquaintance, he who has not seen Barbone and his wife has seen nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I started from Rome on the second of April with a _vetturino_, and on
+arrival at Baccano, we struck off into a road on the right hand, and
+arrived at Civita Castellana at a late hour. Civita Castellana merits no
+further attention, except that it is supposed to stand on the site of the
+ancient city of Veii. The following day at ten o'clock we reached the small
+town of Narni. Here are the remains of a beautiful bridge, constructed over
+the ravine, thro' which flows the river Nera, and which was built in the
+time of Augustus. It affords a very favorable specimen of the Roman bridge
+architecture. There is a small chapel here, and it contains, engraved on a
+stone, a description of a miracle wrought here about four years ago by the
+Virgin Mary, who saved the life of a postillion. He went into the river to
+water his horses, when he was carried off by the torrent and would have
+been drowned, had not the Virgin, on her aid being invoked, dashed into the
+river and haled him out by the hair of his head. Of this story, to use a
+phrase of old Josephus,[115] every one may believe as much as he thinks
+proper; but certain it is that the postillion made oath (which oath is
+registered) that his life was saved by the Virgin Mary in this manner, and
+he has put up a votive tablet at her shrine, which remains to this day,
+commemorative of the event. There is also a Roman aqueduct in the
+neighbourhood, eleven Italian miles in length.
+
+We arrived at Terni at three o'clock and immediately hired a _caleche_ (the
+other travellers and myself) to visit the famous cascade of the Velino,
+about three miles distant from the town of Terni. The road thither is very
+rugged, and is a continual ascent on the flank of a ravine. For a long time
+before you arrive on the brink of the cascade, you hear the roaring of the
+waters; and it certainly is the most magnificent and awe-inspiring sight of
+the kind I ever beheld. It is far more stupendous than any cascade in
+Switzerland. That of Tivoli compared to it is as an infant six months old
+to a Goliath. The Velino forms three successive falls, and the last is
+tremendous, since it falls from a height of 1,068 feet into the abyss
+below. The foam and the froth it occasions is terrific; and the spray
+ascends so high that in standing at the distance of fifty yards from the
+fall you become as wet as if you had been standing in a shower of rain. The
+first fall it forms is of 800 feet; the second little less; the third I
+have stated already. No painting can possibly give a faithful delineation
+of this, and very possibly no poetic description can give an adequate idea
+thereof. We passed the whole night at Terni and the next morning we stopped
+to dine at Spoleto. The same evening we arrived at Foligno. Spoleto is a
+neat town and well paved. Several ruins of ancient buildings are in its
+vicinity. Before you arrive there, on the left of the road, is an immensely
+high two-arched bridge. There is an aqueduct likewise just outside the
+town. We did not omit to read the inscription on the gate of the town, in
+commemoration of the repulse of Hannibal, who failed in his attempt to make
+himself master of this city, after having beat the Romans near the lake
+Trasymene. The gate is called in consequence _Porta Fugae_, and this gate
+constitutes the principal glory of Spoleto. We were shown the rums of a
+Palace built by Theodoric. On leaving the town, just outside the gate, we
+were shewn a bridge which had laid underground for many centuries and had
+been lately discovered. A bridge was known to have been built here in the
+time of Augustus, and it is very probably the identical one; we could only
+see the top and part of the parapet.
+
+Foligno is a large, well built city, neatly paved, populous and commercial,
+renowned for manufactories of paper, wax, and confectionary.
+
+The whole road between Spoleto and Foligno is thro' a beautiful valley in
+high cultivation. There is a good deal of rich pasture ground, and it is
+watered by the river called in ancient tunes Clitumnus. Here are to be seen
+a fine breed of white cattle for which this part of the country has been
+long renowned, which cattle were used, in preference, for sacrifices
+(_Albi, Clitumne, greges_).[116] A similar breed is to be found in India
+and Egypt.
+
+The streets in Foligno are broad. I remarked the _Palazzo Pubblico_ and
+Cathedral as very fine buildings. Our next day's journey brought us to
+Perugia, after passing by Assisi, the birth place of the famous St Francis,
+founder of the order of Franciscans. It is situated on an eminence:
+convents and churches abound therein.
+
+Perugia is a large and opulent city, standing like a fortress on a
+mountain, and towering over the plain below. It is of steep ascent from the
+plain, and there are various terraces along the ramparts, commanding
+several fine points of view of the rich and fertile plains all round. These
+terraces are planted with trees and form the promenades appertaining to the
+city. The architecture of the various churches and Palaces is very
+superior. The streets are broad and every building has an air of
+magnificence. The Cathedral, dedicated to St Laurence, is well worth
+visiting; it stands on the _Piazza del Duomo_, where there is a fine
+fountain ornamented with statues. In the church of St Peter's there are
+some fine columns of marble and some pictures of Perugino and Raffaello.
+
+
+[108] Virgil, _Aen_., VI, 886.--ED.
+
+[109] Of the two persons here mentioned, by their initials only, the first,
+ Luigi de' Medici, was chosen as Chancellor of the Exchequer by King
+ Ferdinando in June, 1815. The second was Nugent, an Austrian
+ _marescallo_, who became _capitano generale_ of the Neapolitan army,
+ August, 1816, and _capo del supremo comando_, February, 1817.--ED.
+
+[110] This most distinguished lady, Marianna Candidi, was born in Rome in
+ 1756; her mother, Magdalena Scilla, was the daughter of a well known
+ antiquary of Messina, Agostino Scilla. Marianna learned Latin, drawing
+ and music; she achieved a reputation as landscape painter, and was
+ elected a member of the Academies of St Luke in Rome, of Bologna, Pisa
+ and Philadelphia. She married the lawyer Domenico Dionigi, and gave him
+ seven children, one of whom, Henrietta, became Madame Orfei, and was
+ much esteemed as "improvisatrice." Madame Dionigi herself published
+ several works, among which a _Storia de' tempi presenti_, written in
+ view of the education of her children. Her _salon_ in Rome was
+ frequented by many men of distinction, such as Visconti, d'Agincourt,
+ Erskine, etc. She died on the 10th June, 1826, at the age of seventy.
+ --ED.
+
+[111] She was no more than sixty-two at that time.--ED.
+
+[112] To present the calumet is an offer of peace and amity among the
+ aborigines of North America and to refuse it is regarded as the
+ greatest insult.
+
+[113] Frye gives only the initial of the name, which I have completed from
+ the _Almanach de Gotha_, 1818.--ED.
+
+[114] The Interior of the Convent of the Capucini was first painted by
+ Granet in the year 1811. None of the numerous replicas are in the
+ Louvre, but there is one in London (Buckingham Palace) and one at
+ Chatsworth.--ED.
+
+[115] The author may have meant "old Herodotus."--ED.
+
+[116] Virgil, _Georg._, II, 146.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+APRIL-JULY, 1818
+
+Journey from Florence to Pisa and from thence by the Appennines to
+Genoa--Massa-Carrara--Genoa--Monuments and works of art--The
+Genoese--Return to Florence--Journey from Florence through Bologna and
+Ferrara to Venice--Monument to Ariosto in Ferrara--A description of
+Venice--Padua--Vicenza--Verona--Cremona--Return to Milan--The Scala
+theatre--Verona again--From Verona to Innspruck.
+
+It is the custom for most travellers going to Genoa to embark on board of a
+_felucca_ at Spezia, which lies on the sea coast, not far from Sarzana: but
+I preferred to go by land, and I cannot conceive why anyone should expose
+himself to the risks, inconveniences and delays of a sea passage, when it
+is so easy to go by land thro' the Appennines. I started accordingly the
+following morning, mounted on a mule, and attended by a muleteer with
+another mule to convey my portmanteau. I found this journey neither
+dangerous nor difficult, but on the contrary agreeable and romantic. The
+road is only a bridle road. I paid forty-eight franks for my two mules and
+driver, and started at seven in the morning from Sarzana. The wild
+appearance of the Appennines, the aweful solitudes and the highly
+picturesque points of view that present themselves at the various
+sinuosities of the mountains and valleys; the view of the sea from the
+heights that tower above the towns of Oneglia and Sestri Levante, rendered
+this journey one of the most interesting I have ever made. I stopped to
+dine at Borghetto and brought to the night at Sestri Levante, breakfasted
+the next morning at Rapallo, and arrived the same evening at four o'clock
+in Genoa. Borghetto is a little insignificant town situate in a narrow
+valley surrounded on all sides by the lofty crags of the Appennines. Sestri
+Levante is a long and very straggling town, part of it being situated on
+the sea shore, and the other part on the gorge of the mountain descending
+towards the sea beach; so that the former part of the town lies nearly at
+right angles with the latter, with a considerable space intervening. The
+road for the last four miles between Borghetto and Sestri Levante is a
+continual descent. The inn was very comfortable and good at Sestri Levante.
+The beginning of the road between Sestri and Rapallo is on the beach till
+near Rapallo, when it strikes again into the mountains and is of
+considerable ascent. Rapallo is a very neat pretty place, situate on an
+eminence commanding a fine view of the sea. The greater part of the road
+between Rapallo and Genoa is on the sea-coast, but cut along the mountains
+which here form a bluff with the sea. Villas, gardens and vineyards line
+the whole of this route and nothing can be more beautiful. The neatness of
+the villas and the abundance of the population form a striking contrast to
+the wild solitudes between Sarzana and Sesto, where (except at Borghetto)
+there is not a house to be seen and scarce a human creature to be met, and
+where the eagle seems to reign alone the uncontrolled lord of the creation.
+
+
+GENOA, 23rd April.
+
+The view of Genoa from the sea is indisputably the best; for on entering by
+land from the eastern side, the ramparts are so lofty as to intercept the
+fine view the city would otherwise afford. From the sea side it rises in
+the shape of an amphitheatre; a view therefore taken from the sea gives the
+best idea of its grandeur and of the magnificence of its buildings, for
+everybody on beholding this grand spectacle must allow that this city well
+deserves its epithet of _Superba_.
+
+I observe in my daily walks on the _Esplanade_ a number of beautiful women.
+The Genoese women are remarkable for their beauty and fine complexions.
+They dress generally in white, and their style of dress is Spanish; they
+wear the _mezzara_ or veil, in the management of which they display much
+grace and not a little coquetry. Instead of the fan exercise recommended to
+women by the _Spectator_, the art of handling the _mezzara_ might be
+reduced to a manual and taught to the ladies by word of command.
+
+I put up at the house of a Spanish lady on the _Piazza St Siro_, and here
+for four _livres_ a day I am sumptuously boarded and lodged. There are
+three principal streets in Genoa, viz., _Strada Nuova_, _Balbi_, and
+_Nuovissima_. Yet these three streets may be properly said to form but one,
+inasmuch as they lie very nearly in a right line. These streets are broad
+and aligned with the finest buildings in Genoa. This street or streets are
+the only ones that can be properly called so, according to the idea we
+usually attach to the word. The others deserve rather the names of lanes
+and alleys, tho' exceedingly well paved and aligned with excellent houses
+and shops. In fact the streets _Nuova_, _Nuovissima_ and _Balbi_ are the
+only ones thro' which carriages can pass. The others are far too narrow to
+admit of the passage of carriages. The houses on each side of them are of
+immense height, being of six or seven stories, which form such a shade as
+effectually to protect those who walk thro' these alleys from the rays of
+the sun. The houses diminish in height in proportion as they are built on
+the slant of the mountain from the bottom to the top, those at the bottom
+being the loftiest. Carriages are scarcely of any use in the city of Genoa,
+except to drive from one end of the town to another thro' the streets
+_Nuova_, _Balbi_ and _Nuovissima_; and accordingly a carriage with four
+wheels, or even with two, is a rare conveyance in Genoa. The general mode
+of conveyance is on a sedan chair, carried by porters, or on the backs of
+mules or asses. Genoa is distinguished by the beauty of the Palaces of its
+patricians, which are more numerous and more magnificent than those of any
+other city, probably, in the world.
+
+The Ducal Palace or Palace of Government, where the Doge used to reside,
+claimed my first attention; yet, tho' much larger, it is far less splendid
+than many of the Palaces of individual patricians. In fact, the Ducal
+Palace is built in the Gothic taste and resembles a Gothic fortress, having
+round towers at each angle. The Hall, where the Grand Council used to sit,
+is superb, and is adorned with columns of _jaune antique_. On the _plafond_
+is a painting representing the discovery of America by Columbus; for the
+Genoese duly appreciate, and never can forget their illustrious countryman.
+The lines of Tasso, "_Un uom della Liguria avra ardimento_," etc., and the
+following stanza, _Tu spiegherai Colombo a urn nuovo polo_, etc. are in the
+mouth of everyone.[117] The Hall of the Petty Council is neat, but it is
+the recollection of the history of this once famous Republic that renders
+the examination of this Palace so interesting. But now Genoa's glory is
+gone; she has been basely betrayed into the hands of a Government she most
+detested. The King of Sardinia is nowhere; and he is not a little proud of
+being the possessor of such a noble sea port, which enables him to rank as
+a maritime power.
+
+The Genoese are laborious and make excellent sailors; but now there is
+nothing to animate them; and they will never exert themselves in the
+service of a domination which is so little congenial to them. They sigh for
+their ancient Government, of whose glories they had so often heard and
+whose brilliant exploits have been handed down to the present day not
+merely by historical writers and poets, but by _improvisatori_ from mouth
+to mouth. The Genoese nobles, those merchant Kings, whose riches exceeded
+at one time those of the most powerful monarchs of Europe, who were the
+pawn-brokers to those Sovereigns, are now in a state of decay. Commerce can
+only flourish on the soil of liberty, and takes wing at the sight of
+military and sacerdotal chains; and tho' the present Sovereign affects to
+caress the Genoese _noblesse_, they return his civilities with sullen
+indifference, and half concealed contempt and aversion. The commerce of
+Genoa is transferred to Leghorn, which increases in prosperity as the
+former decays.
+
+The climate of Genoa is said to be exceedingly mild during the winter,
+being protected on the north by the Appennines, which tower above it to an
+immense height. Beautiful villas and grounds tastefully laid out in
+plantations of orange trees, pomegranates, etc., abound in the environs of
+this city, and everything announces the extreme industry of the
+inhabitants, for the soil is proverbially barren. This shews what they have
+done and what they could still do were they free; but now they have nothing
+to animate their exertions. The public promenades are on the bastions and
+curtains of the fortifications, on the _Esplanade_ and in the streets
+_Balbi_, _Nuova_ and _Nuovissima_. There is also another very delightful
+promenade, tho' not much used by the ladies, viz., on the Mola or Pier
+enveloping the harbour.
+
+One of the most remarkable constructions in Genoa is the bridge of
+Carignano, which is built over an immense ravine and unites the hills
+Fengano and Carignano. It is so high that houses of six stories stand under
+its arches in the valley below. No water except in times of flood runs
+under this bridge and it much resembles, tho' somewhat larger, the bridge
+at Edinburgh which unites the old and new towns. The principal churches
+are: first, the Cathedral, which is not far from the Ducal Palace; it is
+richly ornamented and incrusted with black marble; the church of the
+Annunziata and that of St Sire. They are all in the Gothic style of
+architecture and loaded with that variety of ornament and diversity of
+beautiful marbles which distinguish the churches of Italy from those of any
+other country. Near the bridge of Carignano is a church of the same name,
+wherein are four marble colossal statues.
+
+On the west of the city and running two miles along the sea-beach is the
+_faubourg_ of St Pietro d'Arena, which presents a front of well built
+houses the whole way; these houses are principally used as magazines and
+store houses.
+
+
+FLORENCE, 5 May.
+
+I left Genoa on the 30th April, returned on mule-back from Genoa to
+Sarzana, stopping the first night at Sestri. The second evening when near
+Sarzana, it being very dark, I somehow or other got out of the road and my
+mule fell with me into a very deep ditch; but I was only slightly bruised
+by the fall; my clothes however were covered with dirt and wet. The road
+from Genoa to Sarzana might with very little expense be made fit for
+carriages by widening it. At present it is only a bridle road, and on some
+parts of it, on the sides of ravines, it is I think a little ticklish to
+trust entirely to the discretion of one's _monture_; at least I thought so
+and dismounted twice to pass such places on foot. A winding stream is to be
+forded in two or three places, but it is not deep except after rains; and
+then I think it must be sometimes dangerous to pass, till the waters run
+off. Those, who are fond of mountain scenery will, like myself, be highly
+gratified in making this journey; for it is thro' the loftiest, wildest and
+most romantic part of the Appennines. From Sarzana I hired a cabriolet to
+return to Pisa and from thence I took the diligence to Florence.
+
+
+FERRARA.
+
+On the 9th of May I set out from Florence on my journey hither. Two days'
+journey brought me to Bologna where I stopped one day; and the following
+day I reached this place (Ferrara), six miles distant from Bologna. The
+country between these two cities is a perfect plain and very fertile. At
+Malalbergo (half-way) We crossed the Reno in a boat. I put up at the _Tre
+Mori_ in Ferrara. Having remained two and half days here I have had time to
+inspect and examine almost everything of consequence that the city affords.
+The city itself has an imposing, venerable appearance and can boast of some
+fine buildings; yet with all this there is an air of melancholy about it.
+It is not peopled in proportion to its size and grass is seen growing in
+several of the streets. I believe the unhealthiness of the environing
+country is the cause of the decrease of population, for Ferrara lies on a
+marshy plain, very liable to inundation In the centre of the city stands
+the ancient Palace of the Dukes of Ferrara, a vast Gothic edifice, square,
+and flanked with round towers, and a large court-yard in the centre. It was
+in this court-yard that Hugo and Parisina were decapitated. From the top of
+this palace a noble view of the plain of the Po represents itself, and you
+see the meanderings of that King of Rivers, as the Italian poets term it.
+As the Po runs thro' a perfectly flat country, and is encreased and swollen
+by the torrents from the Alps and Appennines that fall into the smaller
+rivers, which unite their tributary streams with the Po and accompany him
+as his _seguaci_ to the Adriatic, this country is liable to the most
+dreadful inundations: flocks and herds, farm-houses and sometimes whole
+villages are swept away. Dykes, dams and canals innumerable are in
+consequence constructed throughout this part of the country, to preserve it
+as much as possible from such calamities. Ariosto's description of an
+over-flowing of this river is very striking, and I here transcribe it:
+
+ Con quel furor che il Re de' fiumi altero,
+ Quando rompe tal volta argine e sponda,
+ E che ne' campi Ocnei si apre il sentiero,
+ E i grassi solchi e le biade feconde,
+ E con le sue capanne il gregge intero,
+ E co' cani i pastor porta neil' onde, etc.[118]
+
+ Even with that rage wherewith the stream that reigns,
+ The king of rivers--when he breaks his mound.
+ And makes himself a way through Mantuan plains--
+ The greasy furrows and glad harvests, round,
+ And, with the sheepcotes, nock, and dogs and swains
+ Bears off, in his o'erwhelming waters drowned.
+
+ --Trans. W.S. ROSE.
+
+The next place I went to see was the Lyceum or University, where there is a
+very fair cabinet of natural history in all its branches. The Library is
+very remarkable, and possesses a great number of valuable manuscripts. But
+my principal object in visiting this Museum was to see the monument erected
+in honour of Ariosto, which has been transferred here from the Benedictine
+church. The inkstand and chair of this illustrious bard are carefully
+preserved and exhibited. They exactly resemble the print of them that
+accompanies the first edition of Hoole's translation of the _Orlando
+Furioso_. Among the manuscripts what gratified me most was the manuscript
+of the _Gerusalemme liberata_ of Tasso. But few corrections appear in this
+manuscript; tho from the extreme polish and harmony of the versification
+one would expect a great many. It is written in an extremely legible hand.
+
+I also inspected the original manuscripts of the _Pastor Fido_ of Guarini
+and of the _Suppositi_ of Ariosto.
+
+I then went to visit the Hospital of St Anna, for the sake of seeing the
+dungeon where poor Tasso was confined and treated as mad for several years.
+When one beholds this wretched place, where a man can scarce stand upright,
+one only wonders how he could survive such treatment; or how he could
+escape becoming insane altogether. The old wooden door of this cell will
+soon be entirely cut away by amateurs, as almost everyone who visits the
+dungeon chops off a piece of wood from the door to keep as a relic. The
+door is in consequence pieced and repaired with new wood, and in a short
+time will be in the state of Sir John Cutter's worsted stockings which were
+darned so often with silk that they became finally all silk.
+
+Ferrara has a strong citadel which is still garrisoned by Austrian troops;
+and they will probably not easily be induced to evacuate it. The Austrian
+Eagle seldom looses his hold.
+
+
+VENICE, 18th May.
+
+On the 16th May at six o'clock in the morning I left Ferrara in a
+_cabriolet_ to go to the _Ponte di Lago oscuro_, which is a large village
+on the south bank of the Po, three miles distant from Ferrara. A flying
+bridge wafted me across the river, which is exceedingly broad and rapid to
+the north bank, where a barge was in waiting to receive passengers for
+Venice. This barge is well fitted up and supplied with _comestibles_ of all
+sorts and couches to recline on. The price is twelve francs for the
+passage, and you pay extra for refreshments. The bark got under weigh at
+seven o'clock and descended rapidly this majestic river, which however,
+from its great breadth, and from the country on each side of it being
+perfectly flat, did not offer any interesting points of view. Plains and
+cattle grazing thereon were the only objects, for they take care to build
+the farms and houses at a considerable distance from the banks, on account
+of the inundations. After having descended the Po for a considerable
+distance, we entered a canal which unites the Po with the Adige. We then
+descended the Adige for a short distance, and entered another canal which
+unites the Adige with the Brenta. Here we stopped to change barges, and it
+required an hour and half to unload and reload the baggage. We then entered
+the Brenta and from thence into the Lagoons, and passing by the islands of
+Malamocco and Chiozzo entered Venice by the _Canale grande_ at three
+o'clock in the morning. The whole night was so dark as totally to deprive
+us of the view of the approach of Venice. The barge anchored near the Post
+office and I hired a gondola to convey me to the inn called _Le Regina
+d'Ungheria_.
+
+
+VENICE, 26th May.
+
+I was much struck, as everyone must be who sees it for the first time, at
+the singular appearance of Venice. An immense city in the midst of the
+Ocean, five miles distant from any land; canals instead of streets;
+gondolas in lieu of carriages and horses! Yet it must not be inferred from
+this that you are necessarily obliged to use a gondola in order to visit
+the various parts of the city; for its structure is as follows. It is built
+in compartments on piles on various mud banks, always covered indeed by
+water, but very shallow and separated from each other (the mud banks I
+mean) by deep water. On each of these compartments are built rows of
+houses, each row giving front to a canal. The space between the backs of
+the rows of houses forms a narrow street or alley paved with flag stones,
+very like Cranborn Alley for instance; and these compartments are united to
+each other (at the crossings as we should say) by means of stone bridges;
+so that there is a series of alleys connected by a series of bridges which
+form the _tout ensemble_ of this city; and you may thus go on foot thro'
+every part of it. To go on horseback would be dangerous and almost
+impracticable, for each bridge has a flight of steps for ascent and
+descent. All this forms such a perfect labyrinth from the multiplicity and
+similarity of the alleys and bridges, that it is impossible for any
+stranger to find his way without a guide. I lost my way regularly every
+time that I went from my inn to the _Piazza di San Marco_, which forms the
+general rendezvous of the promenaders and is the fashionable lounge of
+Venice; and every time I was obliged to hire a boy to reconduct me to my
+inn. On this account, in order to avoid this perplexity and the expence of
+hiring a gondola every time I wished to go to the _Piazza di San Marco_ I
+removed to another inn, close to it, called _L'Osteria della Luna_, which
+stands on the banks of the _Canale grande_ and is not twenty yards from the
+_Piazza_.
+
+I then hired a gondola for four days successively and visited every canal
+and every part of the city. Almost every family of respectability keeps a
+gondola, which is anchored at the steps of the front door of the house.
+After the _Piazza di San Marco_, of which I shall speak presently, the
+finest buildings and Palaces of the nobility are on the banks of the
+_Canale grande_, which, from its winding in the shape of an S, has all the
+appearance of a river. The _Rialto_ is the only bridge which connects the
+opposite banks of the _Canale grande_; but there are four hundred smaller
+bridges in Venice to connect the other canals.
+
+The _Rialto_, the resort of the money changers and Jews, is a very singular
+and picturesque construction, being of one arch, a very bold one. On each
+side of this bridge is a range of jewellers' shops. A narrow Quai runs
+along the banks of the _Canale grande_.
+
+I have visited several of the _Palazzi_, particularly those of the families
+Morosini, Cornaro, Pisani, Grimani, which are very rich in marbles of
+_vert_ and _jaune antique_; but they are now nearly stripped of all their
+furniture, uninhabited by their owners, or let to individuals, mostly
+shopkeepers; for since the extinction of the Venetian Republic almost all
+the nobility have retired to their estates on the _terra firma_, or to
+their villas on the banks of the Brenta; so that Venice is now inhabited
+chiefly by merchants, shopkeepers, chiefly jewellers and silk mercers,
+seafaring people, the constituted authorities, and the garrison of the
+place.
+
+Tho' Venice has fallen very much into decay, since the subversion of the
+Republic, as might naturally be expected, and still more so since it has
+been under the Austrian domination, yet it is still a place of great
+wealth, particularly in jewellery, silks and all articles of dress and
+luxury. In the _Merceria_ you may see as much wealth displayed as in
+Cheapside or in the Rue St Honore.
+
+I have had the pleasure of witnessing a superb regatta or water _fete_,
+given in honour of the visit of the Archduke Rainier to this city, in his
+quality of Viceroy of the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom. There were about one
+hundred and fifty barges, each fitted up by some department of trade and
+commerce, with allegorical devices and statues richly ornamented,
+emblematical of the trade or professions to which the barge belonged. Each
+barge bore an appropriate ensign, and the dresses of the crew were all
+tasteful, and thoroughly analogous to the profession they represented.
+These barges are richly gilded, and from the variety of the costumes and
+streamers, I thought it one of the most beautiful sights I ever beheld.
+Here were the bankers' barge, the jewellers', the mercers', the tailors',
+the shoe-makers', and, to crown all, the printers' barge, which showered
+down from the masthead sonnets in honor of the _fete_, printed on board of
+the barge itself. Every trade or profession, in short, had a barge and
+appropriate flag and costumes. A quantity of private barges and gondolas
+followed this procession. The Archduke and his staff occupied the
+Government barge, which is very magnificent and made in imitation of the
+Bucentaur. Musicians were on board of many of the barges, and the houses on
+both banks of the _Canale Grande_ were filled with beautiful women and
+other spectators waving their handkerchiefs. Guns were fired on the
+embarkation of the Viceroy from the _Piazzetta di San Marco_, and on his
+return. The _Piazza_ itself was splendidly illuminated, and the _cafes_
+which abound there, and which constitute one half of the whole quadrangle,
+were superbly and tastefully decorated.
+
+The _Piazza di San Marco_ is certainly the most beautiful thing of the kind
+in the world. It is a good deal in the style of the _Palais Royal_ at
+Paris, and tho' not so large, is far more striking, from the very tasteful
+and even sumptuous manner in which the _cafes_ are fitted up, both
+internally and externally; they have spacious rooms with mirrors on all
+sides, some in the shape of Turkish tents, others in that of Egyptian
+temples. The _Piazza_, forming an oblong rectangle, is arcaded on the two
+long sides, and of the two short ones, one presents a superb modern palace
+built by Napoleon, and richly adorned with the statues of all the heathen
+Gods on the top, which Palace was usually occupied by Eugene Napoleon; the
+other presents the church of St Marco and the old palace of Government,
+where in the time of the Republic the Doge used to reside. The church of St
+Mark is unique as a temple in Europe, for it is neither Grecian nor Gothic,
+but in a style completely Oriental, from the singularity of its structure,
+its many gilded cupolas and the variety of its exterior ornaments. At
+_first sight_ it appears a more striking object than either St Peter's in
+Rome or St Paul's in London. On the top of the facade, which is singularly
+picturesque, stand the four bronze horses which have been brought back from
+Paris to their old residence.
+
+I ascended the top of the facade in order to examine them. They are
+beautifully formed, in very good cast and have not at all been damaged by
+the journey. The _Piazza_ is paved with broad flagged stones. The Doge's
+palace is a vast building, very picturesque withal, and seems a _melange_
+of Gothic and Moorish architecture. At right angles to it and facing the
+_Piazzetta_, which issues from the _Piazza_ and forms a quai to the _Canale
+Grande_, stands the famous state prison and _Ponte de 'Sospiri_. On the
+_Piazzetta_ and fronting the landing place stand two columns of white
+marble, on one of which stands the winged Lion of St Marco and on the other
+a crocodile, emblematical of the foreign commerce and possessions of the
+Republic. The space between these two columns was allotted for the
+execution of State criminals. Not far from the church of St Marco, and near
+to that angle of the _Piazza_ which connects it with the _Piazzetta_,
+stands the famous _Campanile_ or Steeple of San Marco. It is a square
+building 800 feet in height, from the top of which one has the best view of
+Venice and its adjacent isles, the distant Alps and the _marina dove il Po
+discende_. A Quai, if Quai it may be called, which has a row of houses on
+each side, one row of which is on the water's edge, leads from the
+_Piazzetta_ to some gardens, which terminate on a point of land. This Quai
+is very broad and well paved, and is the only thing that can be called a
+street in all Venice. The _Piazza di San Marco_, therefore, this Quai and
+the garden before mentioned form the only promenades in Venice. This garden
+moreover has trees, and these are the only trees that are to be met with in
+this city. In this garden are two _Cafes_.
+
+The variety of costume is another very agreeable spectacle at Venice. Here
+you meet with Albanians, Greeks, Turks, Moors, Sclavonians and Armenians,
+all in their respective national costumes. The first Armenian I met with
+here was sitting on a stone bench on the _Piazza di San Marco_, and this
+brought forcibly to my recollection the Armenian in Schiller's
+_Ghost-seer_.
+
+These _Cafes_ and _Casinos_ on the _Piazza_ are open day and night. Ices
+and coffee superiorly made and other refreshments of all kinds at very low
+prices are to be had. Some of these _casinos_ are devoted to gaming. The
+first families in Venice repair to the _Piazza_ in the evening after the
+Opera, female as well as male. They promenade up and down the _Piazza_ or
+sit down and converse in the _Cafes_ and _Casinos_ till a late hour. Few go
+to bed in Venice in the summer time before six In the morning, so that
+sleep seems for ever banished from the _Piazza_. Music and singing goes
+forward in these _casinos_, and the ear is often charmed with the sound of
+those delightful Venetian airs, whose simple melody ravishes the soul. The
+Venetian dialect is very pleasing, and scarcely yields in harmony to the
+Tuscan. It contains a great many Sclavonic words. It is the only dialect of
+Italy that is at all pleasing to my ear, for I do not at all relish the
+nasal twang and truncated terminations of the Piedmontese and Lombard
+dialects, nor the semi-barbarous jargon of the Genoese and the Neapolitan
+and, least of all, the execrable cacophony of the Bolognese.
+
+I visited of course the Arsenal and the Doge's Palace. The apartments in
+the latter are very spacious and ornamented in the Gothic taste of
+grandeur. The chamber of the Council is peculiarly magnificent. There is a
+good deal of tapestry and some fine paintings and statues: among the former
+I particularly noticed an allegorical picture, representing the triumph of
+Venice over the league of Cambray. Venice is represented by the winged
+Lion, and the powers of the Coalition are pourtrayed by various other
+beasts. Among the latter is a beautiful group in marble representing
+Ganymede and the Eagle. The terror depicted in the countenance of the
+beautiful boy, and the passion that seems to agitate the Eagle, are
+surprizingly well pourtrayed.
+
+The principal theatre at Venice, the _Teatro Fenice_, is not open; but I
+have visited the other theatres, and among other things witnessed the
+representation of a new opera, call'd _Il Lupo d'Ostende_. The piece itself
+was rather interesting; but the music was feeble and did not seem to give
+general satisfaction. The singing is in general very good at Venice, but in
+scenery, dresses and decorations the theatres here are far inferior to
+those of Milan and Naples.
+
+I find the air of Venice very hot and unpleasant, arising from the
+exhalation from the canals; and it appears to me as if I were on board of
+an enormous ship. I begin to pant for _terra firma_ and green fields.
+
+I have visited in a gondola some of the islands, viz., Malamocco and St
+Lazare, where there is a convent of Armenian monks.
+
+Why are the gondolas hung with black? it gives to them such a dismal
+funereal appearance. They always resemble the bodies of hearses placed on
+boats. I am not fond of gaudy colours in general, yet I do think a gondola
+should have a somewhat livelier color than black.
+
+
+PADUA, 8th June.
+
+Padua is not above ten miles distant from Fusina. As I started from Venice
+at six in the morning I had a fine receding view of the Ocean Queen, with
+her steeples and turrets rising from the sea. Venice has no fortifications
+and needs them not. Her insular position protects her from land attacks,
+and the shoals prevent the approach of ships of war. Floating batteries
+therefore and gunboats are her best defence. The road from Fusina to Padua
+is on the banks of the Brenta the whole way, and is lined with trees. There
+are a great number of villas on the banks of the Brenta, well built in the
+best style of architecture, the most of them after the designs of Palladio,
+the Prince of modern architects.
+
+Padua is an exceedingly large city: but its arcades and the narrowness of
+the streets give it a gloomy appearance. There are however some beautiful
+promenades in the suburbs. There are also the remains of an ancient Arena.
+Padua is famous for its Seminario or University, which is a superb edifice.
+The Church of St Anthony of Padua is of vast size, having six cupolas.
+There are four organs in this church. In the chapel of the Saint himself
+are a great many ornaments, among which are a crucifix in bronze and
+fresques representing the different actions and miracles of this patron
+Saint of the Padovani. Probably as this city was founded by the Trojan
+Antenor they have transformed his name into that of a Christian Saint and
+called him St Anthony, just as Virgil has been transformed into a magician
+at Naples. There is a fine view from the steeple of this immense edifice.
+There is another magnificent church also in this city, that of St Justine,
+built after the designs of Palladio, the principal ornament of which is a
+painting of the martyrdom of the Saint by Paul Veronese. But one of the
+greatest curiosities in this ancient city is the immense Saloon in the
+_Palazzo della Giustizia_. It is, I presume, the loftiest and largest hall
+in the world that is supported by nothing but its walls, it being three
+hundred feet long, one hundred feet broad and one hundred feet high. In
+the Saloon is the tomb of Livy, the Historian, who was a native of Padua.
+The inhabitants of Padua dress much in black, seem a quiet, staid sort of
+people, and are very industrious. I put up at the _Stella d'Oro_, a good
+inn.
+
+
+VICENZA, 10th June.
+
+I arrived at this beautiful _bijou_ of a town on the morning of the 9th
+June at eight o'clock. I call it a _bijou_ from its exceeding neatness, and
+the extreme beauty of the architecture of its edifices, which are almost
+all after the designs of Palladio, of white stone and in the Greek taste.
+Palladio was a native of Vicenza. The _Piazza_ and _Palazzo Pubblico_
+perfectly correspond with the beauty of the rest of the city, and the
+promenades about it are tastefully laid out. But the two most striking
+objects in point of edifices in Vicenza and both constructed by Palladio
+are the covered portico and the _Teatro Olimpico_. The covered portico is
+two miles in length and leads to the chapel of the _Madonna del Monte_,
+situated on an eminence, at that distance from the city. A magnificent
+triumphal arch stands before it, and there is an extensive view of the
+surrounding country. The _Teatro Olimpico_ is a small, but beautiful
+theatre, built strictly after the model of the ancient Greek theatres. It
+is peculiarly precious as being the only one of the kind in Europe. How
+admirably adapted both for seeing and hearing are such theatres! It has,
+for scenery, the model of a Palace, curiously carved in wood, which
+represents a Royal Palace, for the ancients never shifted their scenes, and
+this may account for their adhering so strictly to the unities. Statues and
+bas-reliefs adorn this beautiful little theatre. Many years ago, on
+particular occasions, it was the custom to act plays here, either
+translated from the Greek, or taken strictly from the Greek model. This
+theatre is esteemed Palladio's _chef d'oeuvre_.
+
+The _Campo di Marie_ is a vast _Place_ outside the town. The Place and its
+gate are well worth inspecting, so is the famous villa with the Rotonda,
+belonging to the Marchese di Capra, the original after which the villa
+belonging to the Duke of Devonshire at Chiswick is built. The environs of
+this interesting city are very beautiful and present an exceeding rich
+soil, highly cultivated in corn, mulberry trees and vines hanging from them
+in festoons.
+
+
+VERONA, 12th June.
+
+I started yesterday morning from Vicenza and arrived here in about three
+hours, the distance being nearly the same as between Vicenza and Padua. We
+crossed the Adige which divides the city into two unequal parts and drove
+to the _Due Torri_, a large and comfortable inn with excellent rooms and
+accommodations. Verona is a very handsome city, for here also Palladio was
+the designer or builder of many edifices. It has a very cheerful and gay
+appearance, tho' not quite so much so as Vicenza. The reason of this
+difference is that in Verona the greater part of the buildings are in the
+Gothic style, which always appears heavy and melancholy, whereas in Vicenza
+all is Grecian. The Amphitheatre of course claimed my first notice. It
+yields only to the Coliseum in size and grandeur and is in much better
+preservation, the whole of the ellipse and its walls being entire, whereas
+in the Coliseum part of the walls have been pulled down. Indeed the
+Amphitheatre of Verona may be said to be almost perfectly entire. _Tempus
+edax rerum_ has been its only enemy; whereas avarice and religious
+fanaticism have contributed, much more than time, to the dilapidation of
+the Coliseum. The Amphitheatre of Verona can contain 24,000 persons. In it
+is constructed a temporary theatre of wood, where they perform plays and
+farces in the open air. Verona is much embellished by several _Palazzi_
+built by Palladio, which form a curious contrast with the other buildings
+and churches which are in the Gothic style. Verona can boast among its
+antiquities of three triumphal arches, the first, _Porta de' Bursari_,
+erected in the year 252 in the reign of the Emperor Gallienus; the second,
+called _Porta del Foro_; and the third, built by Vitruvius himself, in
+honour of the family Gavia.
+
+The churches here are richly ornamented and the _Palazzo del Consiglio_ has
+many fine marble and bronze statues. In this city also are the tombs and
+monuments of the Scala family, who were at one time Sovereigns of Verona.
+They are in the Gothic style and of curious execution. The Cathedral has an
+immense _campanile_ (steeple), from which is a fine view of the surrounding
+country, and the progressive risings of the Alps, the lower parts of which
+lie close upon Verona. Beautiful villas and farmhouses abound in the
+neighbourhood of this city. The favourite promenades are the _Corso_ and
+the _Bra_. On the _Bra_ I saw a very brilliant display of carriages, and
+some very pretty women in them. The theatre is by Palladio, is exquisitely
+beautiful, and very tastefully fitted up. I assisted at the representation
+of _La Gazza Ladra_, one of Rossini's best operas.
+
+I should think Verona would be a very delightful sejour; everything is very
+cheap; a fine country highly cultivated; a remarkably healthy climate; a
+society which unites much urbanity and a love of amusement with a taste for
+the fine arts and for the graver sciences, and a general appearance of
+opulence and comfort. The shops in Verona appear very splendid, and the
+_Bra_, when lighted up in the evening, is a very lively and animating
+scene.
+
+
+MANTUA, 15 June.
+
+I could not go to Milan without stepping a little out of my road to visit
+this ancient and redoubtable fortress, so celebrated in the early campaigns
+of Buonaparte, besides the other claims it has on the traveller's attention
+as the birth place of Virgil. This place is of immense strength, as a
+military post; being situated on a small isthmus of land, separating two
+lakes, and communicating with the rest of the country by an exceeding
+narrow causeway. This position, added to the strength of the
+fortifications, render the fortress impregnable, if well garrisoned and
+provisioned. The city is, however, unhealthy from the lake and marshy land
+about it, and there is but a scanty population. Grass grows in the streets
+and it is the dullest and indeed the only dull town in all Italy.
+Everything in this city announces decay and melancholy, and I met with
+several men looking full as halfstarved and deplorable as Shakespeare's
+Apothecary in Romeo and Juliet. Yet the city is by no means an ugly one.
+The buildings are imposing, the streets broad and well paved, and there is
+a fine circular promenade in the centre of which is a Monument erected in
+honor of Virgil by the French general Miollis, who had a great veneration
+for all poets. The _Palazzo pubblico_ and the Cathedral are the most
+striking buildings. The latter contains the tombs and monuments of the
+Gonzaga family, the whilom Sovereigns of Mantua. There are also several
+monuments in honor of some French officers, who were killed in the
+campaigns of Italy under Buonaparte and erected to their memory by his
+direction.
+
+Outside the town, at a short distance from the causeway and _tete de pont_,
+is the celebrated palace called the T, from its being in the form of that
+letter, which was the usual residence of the Dukes of Mantua. It is a noble
+edifice and its gardens are well laid out. These gardens have this
+peculiarity, that at the entrance of each of the grand avenues is a figure
+of a man on horseback caparizoned in armour, like the Knights of old. This
+is all I have to say about Mantua. The Mincio beset with "osiers dank"
+flows into the lake.
+
+
+CREMONA, 16th June.
+
+From Mantua I directed my course to this city, which is large and
+fortified, situated on the Po which forms many little islands in the
+environs. This city is of great antiquity, and has a number of Gothic
+buildings. You do not find here the specimens and imitations of Grecian
+architecture as at Vicenza and Verona. The _campanile_ of the Cathedral is
+of immense height, but one is repaid for the fatigue of ascending by the
+extensive view from its summit. There are 498 steps. I put up at the
+_Colombina_, a very good inn. The Cremonese seem to be an industrious
+people. There is a great deal of pasture land in the environs of this city
+and much cheese is made here and in the Lodesan. Several ricefields are
+also to be met with between this place and Lodi.
+
+
+MILAN, 25 June.
+
+I have been on a visit to the ancient and venerable city of Pavia, which is
+about eighteen miles distant from Milan, thro' a rich highly cultivated
+plain. The road lies in a right line the whole way. About three miles
+distant from Pavia on the Milan side stands the celebrated _Certosa_, which
+we stopped to visit. The church of the _Certosa_ contains the greatest
+quantity of riches in marbles, and precious stones, of any building in the
+world, probably. The architecture is Gothic, and the workmanship of the
+exterior exquisite; but the ulterior is most dazzling; and at the sight of
+the rich marbles and innumerable precious stones of all kinds with which it
+abounds, I was reminded of Aladdin and began to fancy myself in the cavern
+of the Wonderful Lamp. This church was built by Galeazzo Visconti, whose
+coffin is here, and his statue also, in white marble. There are several
+bas-reliefs of exquisite workmanship. There are no fewer than seventeen
+altars here and of the most beautiful structure you can conceive, being
+inlaid in mosaic with jasper, onyx and lapis-lazuli. Besides these precious
+marbles of every colour and quantity under heaven, here are abundance of
+rubies, emeralds, amethysts, aquamarines and topazes, incrusted in the
+different chapels and altars. Here again is a proof of the falsehood and
+injustice of the aspersions cast on the French army, as being the
+plunderers of churches; for if they were so, how comes it that the
+_Certosa_ the richest of all, was spared? Mr Eustace[119] in his admiration
+of Church splendour, should at least have given the French no small degree
+of credit for their abstinence from so rich a prize. A canal runs parallel
+to the road the whole way from Milan to Pavia, where it joins the Tessino.
+The banks of the Canal and each side of the road are lined with poplars.
+Pavia is one of the most ancient cities in Italy and has something very
+antique and solemn in its appearance. It is quite Gothic and was the
+capital city of the Lombard Kings. The streets are broad and the _Piazza_
+is large. I could not find any traces of the ancient palace of the Lombard
+Kings, which I should like much to have done; for then I should have
+endeavoured to make out the chamber into which Jocondo peeped and
+discovered what cured him of his melancholy, and where the impatient Queen
+received the petulant answer from her beloved Nano, conveyed by one of her
+waiting maids who told her:
+
+ E per non stare in perdita d'un soldo,
+ A voi nega venire fl manigoldo.[120]
+
+ Nor, lest he lose a doit, his paltry stake,
+ Will that discourteous churl his game forsake
+
+ --_Trans._ W.S. ROSE.
+
+
+MILAN, 28th June.
+
+I have been to the _Scala_ theatre, to see the _Ballet of the Vestal_, one
+of the most interesting Ballets I ever beheld. Oh! what a mighty magician
+is the ballet master Vigano, and as for the prima ballerina, Pallerini,
+what praises can equal her merit? then, the delightful soul soothing music,
+so harmonious, so pathetic, and the decorations so truly tasteful and
+classical! I can never forget the impression this fascinating Ballet made
+on me. It is called _La Vestale_. It opens with a view of the Circus in
+ancient Rome, and various gymnastic exercises, combats of gladiators, of
+athletes, and ends with a chariot race with real horses. The Roman Consuls
+are present in all their pomp, surrounded by Lictors with axes and fasces.
+The Vestal virgins assist at this spectacle, and from one of them the
+victor in the games receives a garland, as the recompense of his prowess.
+The victor is the son of one of the Consuls and the hero of the piece; the
+heroine is the Vestal Virgin who crowns him with the garland. The young
+victor becomes desperately enamored of the Vestale, and she appears also to
+feel an incipient flame. After the games are over, the victor returns to
+his father's house, and meeting there one of his friends, discloses to him
+his love for the Vestale and his idea of entering by stealth into the
+temple of Vesta, where his beloved was appointed to watch the sacred fire.
+His friend endeavors, but in vain, to dissuade him from so rash an attempt,
+which can only end in the destruction, both of his beloved and himself. All
+the remonstrances, however, of the friend are vain; and the hero fixed in
+his resolve watches for the opportunity, when it is the turn of his beloved
+to officiate in the temple of Vesta, and enters therein. The Vestale is
+terrified and supplicates him to retire: in vain; and after a long but
+ineffectual struggle she sinks into his arms at the foot of the altar.
+Suddenly the sacred flame becomes extinguished; a noise is heard; the
+Vestals enter; the unfortunate fair is roused from her stupor by the noise
+of footsteps and has just time to oblige her lover to retire, which he
+reluctantly does, but not unperceived by the Vestals. The Matron of the
+Vestals reproaches her with the crime she has committed and orders her to
+be placed in a dungeon. She is brought out to be examined by the High
+Priest, found guilty and condemned by him to the usual punishment of the
+Vestals for a breach of their vow, viz., the being buried alive outside the
+gates of Rome. The moment the sentence is pronounced a black veil is thrown
+over her. The scene then changes to the place of execution; the funeral
+procession takes place; the vault is dug and a man stands by with a pitcher
+of water and loaf of bread, to deliver to her when she should descend. The
+Consuls are present, attended by the Lictors and Aediles. All the other
+vestals are present, of whom the culprit takes an affectionate leave and is
+about to descend into the vault. Suddenly a noise of arms and shouts are
+heard. It is her lover who having collected a few followers come rushing
+forward with arms in their hands to arrest the execution. He forces his way
+into the presence of the Consuls, but the sight of his father inspires him
+with awe; he staggers back; at this moment a Lictor at the command of the
+other Consul plunges a spear into his breast. The Vestal is hurried to the
+brink of the vault, into which she is forced to descend to the
+accompaniment of mournful music, while her dying lover vainly endeavours to
+crawl towards her. The curtain falls.
+
+The exquisite acting of La Pallerini drew tears from my eyes: it was indeed
+too horrible a subject for a _Ballo_, which in my opinion ought to end
+happily. The scenery was the finest of the kind I think I ever witnessed.
+The first scene represents the _Circus maximus_; the interior of the temple
+of Vesta and the place of execution outside the walls of Rome were most
+classically correct and appropriate: the music was beyond all praise and
+singularly affecting. This Ballet has excited such an enthusiastic
+approbation that Vigano the Ballet master, Pallerini who acts the Vestal
+and the young man who performs the hero of the piece were summoned every
+evening after the termination of the Ballet, to appear on the stage, and
+receive applauses, which seemed to increase at every representation. I have
+been to see this ballet six or seven times, and always with increased
+delight. I was there on the last night of its representation, when some
+amateurs and people connected with the theatre put in practice what
+appeared to mean ill-judged _concetto_, however well merited the compliment
+it meant to convey. When the Vestal was about to descend into the vault, a
+genius with wings rose from it and repeated a few lines beginning _Tu non
+morrai_ and telling her that the suffrages of the Insubrian people had
+decreed to her immortality, and printed sonnets were showered down on the
+stage from all parts of the house. I think it would have been much better
+to let the piece finish in the usual way, and then at its termination call
+for La Pallerini to advance and receive the garlands and hommage so justly
+her due.
+
+I was in the _loge_ belonging to my friend Mme L-----; there were three or
+four _litterati_ with her, and they were all unanimous that it was an
+absurd and pedantic _concetto_.
+
+In a day or two I shall start from Milan for Munich thro' Brescia and
+Verona and the Tyrol.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+JULY-SEPTEMBER 1818
+
+Innspruck--Tyrol and the Tyrolese--From Innspruck to Munich--Monuments and
+churches--Theatricals--Journey from Munich to Vienna on a floss--Trouble
+with a passport--Complicated system of Austrian money--Description of
+Vienna--The Prater--The theatres--Schiller's _Joan of Arc_--A
+_Kinderballet_--The young Napoleon at Schoenbrunn--Journey from Vienna to
+Prague.
+
+
+INNSPRUCK, 15th July.
+
+I had engaged with a _vetturino_ to convey me from Verona to Innspruck for
+four _louis d'or_ and to be _spesato_. A Roman gentleman and his lady were
+my fellow travellers; they were going to pass the summer months at a small
+_campagne_ they possess in the Tyrol. We stopped the first night at
+Roveredo. The road from Verona to Roveredo is on the banks of the Adige
+(called in German the Etsch) in a narrow and deep valley, shut up on both
+sides by mountains, almost immediately on leaving Verona. We found the
+weather extremely hot in this valley. Roveredo seems to be a very neat
+clean little city, and the Adige flows with astonishing rapidity along this
+narrow valley. The women of Roveredo have the reputation of being very
+beautiful; and I recollect having seen two Roveredo girls at Venice, who
+were models of female beauty. They have a happy mixture of German and
+Italian blood and manners, but Italian is the language of the country. The
+second morning of our journey we arrived and stopped to dinner at the
+venerable and celebrated city of Trent. The country we passed thro' is much
+the same as that between Verona and Roveredo, the Adige being on our left.
+Trent lies also in the valley of the Adige, shut up between the Alps. The
+whole valley appears in high cultivation. The streets of Trent are broad;
+the Cathedral is a remarkably fine Gothic building. In the church of Sta
+Maria Maggiore was held the famous council of Trent. There are a great many
+silk mills in Trent. German as well as Italian is spoken; indeed the two
+languages are equally familiar to most of the inhabitants. In the evening
+we arrived at Sabern after passing thro' Lavis. One description will serve
+for these towns and indeed for most of the towns in the Tyrol, viz., that
+of being neat, clean and solidly built. The inns are excellent and the
+inhabitants very civil. The Adige runs close to the road and parallel to
+it, nearly the whole way to Bolsano or Botzen, where Italian ceases to be
+spoken and German is the national tongue. Botzen is a large and flourishing
+place.
+
+One general description will serve for the Tyrol, regarding the towns,
+adjacent country, customs, inns, inhabitants, dress and manners.
+
+First the towns are fully as neat, clean and well built as those in
+Switzerland; the country too is very similar, tho' not quite on so grand a
+scale of sublimity; but you have fully as much variety in mountain and
+valley, glacier and cascade. The climate is exactly the same as that of
+Switzerland, being very hot in the valleys in summer. The inns are clean
+and good, the provisions excellent and well cooked, the wines much better
+than those of Switzerland; there is good attendance by females and all at a
+far cheaper rate than in Switzerland. The Tyroleans are much more courteous
+in their manners than the Swiss; they have not that boorishness and are of
+more elegant figure than their Helvetic neighbours. The women of the Tyrol
+are in general remarkably beautiful, exceedingly well shaped and of fine
+complexions.
+
+In the towns the bourgeoises dress well, something in the French style, and
+it is their custom to salute travellers who pass by kissing their hands to
+them. The dress of the female peasantry, however, is unpleasing to the eye
+and so uncouth, that it would make the most beautiful women appear homely.
+In the first place I will speak of their head dress, of which there are
+three different kinds, two of which are as _bizarre_ as can be imagined.
+The first sort is a cap of sheepskin, the fleece of which is as white as
+snow, and the cap is of conical shape, the base being exceeding large in
+proportion to its height, and resembles much the sugar loaves made in
+Egypt. The second is a black scull cap, with the three pieces of stiff
+black _gaze_, sticking out like the vanes of a windmill; so that when put
+on the head, one vane stands upright from the forehead and the other two
+from each ear. The third head dress is a broad straw hat, and I wish they
+would stick to this coiffure, and discard the two others. Then the waist of
+their dress is as long as
+
+ ...du pole antarctique an detroit de Davis.[121]
+
+Their petticoats are exceedingly short, scarcely reaching the calf of the
+legs, which are enveloped in a pair of flaming red stockings. Who the devil
+could invent such an ungraceful dress for a female?
+
+The costume of the men on the contrary is becoming and graceful. It
+resembles very much the costume of the Andalusians. The hat is exactly the
+same, the crown being small and the rim very broad.
+
+The Tyroleans are a fine gallant race of men and are excellent marksmen.
+They were formerly much attached to the House of Austria; but that
+attachment is now entirely changed to dislike, from the ingratitude they
+have met with, since they have been replaced under that scepter.
+
+The only fault I find in the Tyroleans, is that they are rather too devout
+and consequently too much under the influence of the clergy. Yet in their
+devotion there is not the smallest tinge of hypocrisy and they are esteemed
+a highly moral people.
+
+If you arrive at an inn in the evening, while the family are at prayer,
+neither master nor servants will come to wait on you, till prayers are
+over; and then you will be served with sufficient alacrity; but the prayers
+are rather long.
+
+I believe the priests extort a good deal of money from these good people.
+The road thro' the Tyrol was made by the Romans, in the time of Septimus
+Severus. An immense number of Crucifixes on the road attest and command the
+devotion of the people.
+
+How Kotzebue can call Innspruck a dirty town I am at a loss to conceive. He
+must have visited it during very rainy weather; for to me it appears one of
+the cleanest and most chearful towns I have ever seen. There are several
+very fine buildings, for instance the Jesuits' College, and the Franciscan
+monastery; Nothing can be more picturesque than the situation of this city
+in the valley of the Inn and its romantic windings. The suburbs are very
+extensive and can boast several fine houses. The cupola of the Government
+House is gilded, which gives it a splendid appearance. In the _Hofkirche_
+or church of the court there are a number of statues, large as life, in
+bronze; among which my guide pointed out to me those of Clovis, Godfrey of
+Bouillon, Albert the Wise, Charles V, Philip II of Spain, Rudolph of
+Hapsburgh, and to my great astonishment the British King Arthur; there were
+twenty-eight statues altogether. But on my return to my inn, I found that
+my guide had made a great error respecting King Arthur, and that the said
+statue represented Prince Arthur, son of Henry VII, King of England, and
+not the old Hero of Romance; and my hostess' book further informed me that
+these statues were those of the Kings and Princes belonging to families
+connected by descent and blood with Maximilian I. In the same _Hofkirche_
+is a fine monument erected to Maximilian and a statue of bronze of this
+Emperor is figured kneeling between four bronze figures representing four
+Virtues. In the gardens of the Palace of the Archduke Ferdinand in this
+city is a fine equestrian statue which rests entirely on the hind feet of
+the horse. From Innspruck there is a water passage by the river Inn all the
+way to Vienna, as the Inn flows into the Danube at Passau. The banks of the
+Inn are so romantic and picturesque that I would willingly prolong my
+_sejour_ at Innspruck, but as I mean to take the journey from Mittenwald to
+Munich by the river Isar, I must take advantage of the raft which starts
+from that place the day after to-morrow.
+
+
+MUNICH, 20th July.
+
+I left Innspruck in a _chaise de poste_ on the 16th, and arrived the same
+evening at five o'clock at Mittenwald. At a short distance before I arrived
+at Mittenwald, I entered the Bavarian territory, which announces itself by
+a turnpike gate painted white and blue, the colours and _Feldzeichen_ of
+Bavaria. In the Austrian territory the barriers are painted black and
+yellow, these being the characteristic colors of Austria.
+
+Mittenwald is a small neat town, offering nothing remarkable but a church
+yard or _Ruhe-garten_ (garden of repose) as it is called, where there are a
+number of quaint inscriptions on the tombstones. At Mittenwald I had some
+trouble about my passport, as it was not _vise_ by a Bavarian authority;
+but I explained to the officer that I had never fallen in with any Bavarian
+authority since I left Rome, and that, while at Rome, I had no intention of
+going thro' Bavaria; that at Milan the Austrian authorities had _vise_ my
+passport for Vienna and that I should only pass thro' Munich, without
+making a longer stay than one week. He acquiesced in my argument, but
+inserted my explanation on the passport. At half a quarter of a mile beyond
+Mittenwald I met the raft just about to get under weigh at eleven o'clock
+a.m. This raft is about as long as the length of a thirty-six gun frigate,
+and formed of spars fastened together; on this is a platform about one and
+a half feet high. The Isar begins its course close to Mittenwald, and the
+place on which the raft stood, previous to departure, was very shallow; but
+water was quickly let in from sluices to float the raft, and off we set
+with a cargo of peasants, male and female, and merchandise bound for
+Munich. As the river Isar rushes between immense mountains, and forms a
+continual descent until the plains of Bavaria open to view, you may
+conceive with what rapidity we went. We encountered several falls of water
+of two, three, four and sometimes five feet which we had to _shoot_, which
+no boat could possibly do without being upset. The lower part of the raft
+was frequently under water in making these _shoots_ and we were obliged to
+hold on fast to our seats to prevent being jerked off. Nothing can be more
+romantic and picturesque than this journey, and there is something aweful
+in _shooting_ these falls; these rafts are, however, so solidly constructed
+that there is no danger whatever. They can neither sink nor upset. We
+arrived and halted the evening at Toelz, a large village or town on the
+right bank of the Isar. What gives to Toelz a remarkably singular appearance
+is, that on a height at a short distance from the town, and hanging
+abruptly over the river, you perceive several figures in wood, larger than
+the life, which figures form groups, representing the whole history of the
+passion of Jesus Christ. At a short distance, if you are not prepared for
+this, you suppose that they are real men, and that a procession or
+execution is going forward. On landing I immediately ascended this hill in
+order to observe this curiosity, and there I beheld the following groups,
+first: Christ in the midst of his disciples preaching; secondly: the
+disciples asleep in a cave, and Christ watching and praying; next was Judas
+betraying Christ to the soldiery; then the judgment of Christ before
+Pilate; then Christ bearing his cross to the place of execution; and lastly
+the crucifixion on Mount Calvary. The ground is curiously laid out so as to
+represent, as much as possible, the ground in the environs of Jerusalem.
+Toelz is a pretty village, but contains nothing more remarkable than the
+above groups.
+
+The next day at twelve o'clock we perceived the spires of Munich, and at
+two anchored close to one of the bridges from whence, having hired a
+wheelbarrow to trundle my portmanteau, I repaired to the inn called the
+Golden Cross--_Zum goldenen Kreutz_. At Toelz the Rhetian Alps recede from
+the view; the landscape then presents a sloping plain which is perfectly
+level within four miles of Munich. The river widens immediately on issuing
+from the gorges of the Tyrol and for the last five miles we were followed
+by boys on the banks of the river, begging for wood, with which our raft
+was laden, and we threw to them many a faggot. Wood is the great export
+from the Tyrol to Bavaria, as the latter is a flat country and has not much
+wood, with which on the contrary the Tyrol abounds. A sensible difference
+of climate is now felt and the air is keener than in the Tyrol. The price
+of a place on the raft from Mittenwald to Munich cost only one florin, and
+at Toelz an excellent supper, bed and coffee in the morning cost me only one
+florin.
+
+
+MUNICH, 23rd July.
+
+Munich, the capital of Bavaria, is an ancient Gothic city of venerable
+appearance. The houses are very solid in structure, and the streets
+sufficiently broad to give to the city a cheerful appearance. There are
+some suburbs added to it, built in the modern taste, which embellish it
+greatly. A large Place outside the old town, called the _Carolinen-Platz,_
+presents a number of villas disposed in the form of a circus. In these
+suburbs the people assemble on holidays and Sundays, to smoke and drink
+beer, of which a great quantity is consumed, it being the favorite and
+national beverage. From the lively scene of the lower class of the
+bourgeoisie, male and female, meeting here in the _Biersschanks_ and
+_Tanzsaale_ I was reminded of the lines in Faust:
+
+ Gewiss man findet hier
+ Die schoensten Maedchen, und das beste Bier,
+
+which may be thus rendered:
+
+ Here let us halt! 'tis here we're sure to find
+ Beer of the best and maidens fair and kind!
+
+There are other very agreeable promenades outside the town, laid out as
+_jardins anglais,_ the garden of Ostenwald for instance; and should you
+wish to extend your walk further, there is Nymphenburg, a royal Palace and
+gardens, just one league distant from the city.
+
+The _Residenz-schloss_ or Palace of the King is a solid building. The
+interior is well worth seeing. There is a superb saloon with a vast number
+of valuable miniatures appended to the wainscoating. An enormously heavy
+bed, groaning with gold and silver embroidery and pearls and which is said
+to weigh a ton, is to be seen here. There is a very good collection of
+pictures, chiefly portraits, of the Electoral, now Royal family. There is a
+fine chapel too belonging to this palace; a superb staircase of marble, and
+some fine old tapestry representing the actions of Otto von Wittelsbach.
+There is likewise a curious miniature copy of Trajan's column in gold and
+incrusted with precious stones, besides a variety of other things of value.
+
+There are two theatres in Munich; one called the Hof or Court theatre,
+where there is a company of comedians for tragedy and comedy, the expences
+of which are defrayed principally by the King. The boxes are generally let
+to the nobility and the _parterre_ is open to every body on payment. I
+witnessed the representation of Mozart's _Nozze di Figaro._ The King was
+present and was greeted with much affection. He has a very benignant
+expression of countenance. He is much beloved by his subjects, for he has
+governed them paternally. He has given to them a constitution _unasked;_
+for they were so contented with the old Government, that they desired no
+change; but he, with his usual good sense, saw the propriety of consulting
+and complying with the spirit of the age. A German writer of some eminence
+at the time of the French Revolution, when the aristocrats and alarmists of
+all countries were crying out against it, and proposing harsh measures to
+arrest its progress, said: "Sovereigns of Europe, do you wish to set bounds
+to the progress of French principles? Nothing can be more simple; you have
+only to govern your people like Maximilian of Bavaria and Frederick of
+Saxony, and your subjects will never desire a change."
+
+At the German (national) theatre which is a fair sized one, I saw a tragedy
+performed called _Der Wald bey Herman-stadt_ (the Forest near
+Hermanstadt),[122] It was an interesting piece taken from a feudal legend.
+The part of Elisene was performed by Mlle Vohs, a very good actress. I
+missed very much one thing in Munich, and that is the want of _cafes_ like
+those in France and Italy, which have so brilliant an appearance. They make
+coffee here at the inns; and there are two or three dull places up one pair
+of stairs, where they play at billiards, and make as indifferent coffee as
+is made in England. The hour of dining at Munich is in general one o'clock.
+A slice of ham or sausage with beer form the _gouter,_ usually taken at
+five or six o'clock; and at nine follows a supper as solid as the dinner.
+The Germans are not loungers as the French and Italians, who, for the most
+part, spend all their spare time in coffee-houses. When I mentioned to a
+Bavarian that I could find no _cafes_ in Munich resembling those in France
+and Italy, he said with emphasis! _Gott bewahre_ (God forbid)! I could not
+help thinking he was in the right; for those splendid _cafes_ are very
+seducing to young people and tend to encourage a life of idleness and to
+keep them from their studies. The lower _bourgeoisie_ and _Stubenmaedchen_
+(_maidservants_) wear a singular head dress. It is made of stuff worked
+with silver or gold and resembles two horns sticking out one at each ear.
+This head dress must be costly. This class of women wear also on _fete_
+days gold crosses, collars and earrings.
+
+The Bavarians seem a frank, honest set of people, tho' sometimes a little
+rough, in their exterior deportment. The character of Otto of Wittelsbach,
+in the tragedy of that name, gives the best idea of the Bavarian character.
+
+I have made acquaintance here with a Mr F-----, an Austrian gentleman, and
+two Polish gentlemen, the one an officer and the other a medical man. They
+are brothers and had both served in the French army. We have agreed to
+travel to Vienna together on board of the raft which starts every week from
+Munich to Vienna. This raft brings to every day between twelve o'clock and
+two near some town or village on the banks of the river, in order to allow
+the passengers to dine, and anchors every evening at seven o'clock near
+some town or village to sup and sleep. You have only to tell the
+_Flossmeister_, or Master of the Raft, at what inn you mean to put up, or
+if you have no preference, he will recommend you one; and at five the next
+morning he goes his rounds to the different inns to collect his passengers,
+and at six gets under weigh.
+
+
+VIENNA, 2nd August.
+
+I left Munich on the 25th July and arrived on the 6th day of our journey,
+30th July, at Vienna, The _Floss_, or raft, on board of which we embarked,
+is about as long as the main deck of an eighty-four gun ship and about
+forty feet in breadth. It is constructed of strong spars lashed together.
+On the spars is constructed a large platform and on the platform several
+cabins, containing tables and chairs. Mr F----, the Poles and myself hired
+a cabin to ourselves. On the raft was a great deal of merchandize going to
+Vienna. At Vienna the _Flossmeister_, after landing his passengers and
+merchandize, sells his raft and returns on horseback to Munich. A raft is
+constructed weekly at Munich from wood felled in the Tyrol and floated on
+the Isar down to Munich. We arrived the first evening at Freysingen, but it
+was nearly dark when we arrived; it seemed however as far as we could
+observe to be a neat village; at any rate, we met with a very comfortable
+inn there with good fare and good beds. We met with a very pleasant family
+on board the raft, bound to Landshut; M. and Mme S. were extremely
+well-informed people and their two daughters very fine girls.
+
+We arrived the following day at twelve o'clock at Landshut, which is a very
+fine town. There is an immense Gothic tower or steeple to the Church of St
+Martin, about 450 feet in height. At Deckendorf, where the Isar flows into
+the Danube, I saluted for the first time that noble river. We stopped the
+night at Pillshofen and arrived the following day at twelve o'clock at
+Passau. Passau is a large, well built and handsome city, and is situated on
+the confluent of three rivers, the Inn, the Illst and the Danube; for here
+the two former flow into the latter, one on each side. Each of these rivers
+just before the point of juncture seem to be of different colors; for
+example the Danube appears blue, the Inn white, and the Illst black. At
+Passau we put up at the Wild Man (_Zum Wilden Mann_), a favorite sign for
+inns in these parts.
+
+The Cathedral and _Residenz-Schloss_ are striking buildings, and the city
+has a lively and grand appearance. The women appear to be in general
+handsome and well dressed. We brought to the evening at Engelhardtzell,
+where the barrier, painted black and yellow, announced our return to the
+Austrian territory. We underwent at the Customs house a rigid search for
+tobacco: they even took away the tobacco that some passengers had in their
+pouches. They were likewise very rigid about our passports. The English
+passports do not please them at all, on account of the features of the
+bearer not being specified therein, and as I answered their questions in
+German, they supposed me to be a native of that country and asked me what
+business I had with a British passport. I replied: _Weil ich ein Englaender
+bin.--Sie ein Englaender? Sie 'sind gewiss aus Nord Deutschland. Sie
+sprechen recht gut Deutsch.--Meine Herren, ich bin ein Englaender: viele
+Englaender studieren und sprechen Deutsch, und wenn Siemit mir eine
+langeUnterredung gehalten haetten, so haetten Sie bald ausgefunden durch
+meine Sprachfehler, dass ich kein geborner Deutscher bin.--Aber Sie haben
+unsere Fragen vollkommen gut beantwortet.--Warum nicht? man hat mir die
+nehmlichen Fragen so wiederholten Malen gestellt, dass ich die dazu
+gehoerigen Antworte auswendig habe, wie em Katechismus_.[123] The officer
+laughed, took up a pen, _vised_ and gave me back my passport.
+
+The whole of the country on the banks of this noble river the Danube is
+picturesque and presents much variety. There cannot be a more delightful
+summer tour than a descent down this river. The next town of consequence
+that we arrived at was Linz, a large, populous and beautifully built city
+and capital of Upper Austria. The circumjacent country is in part
+mountainous. The Danube is very broad here, and there is an immensely long
+wooden bridge. We put up at the inn _Zum goldenen Kreutz_ (golden cross).
+Here it became indispensably necessary to change our money for Austrian
+paper, for that sort of it called _Wiener Waehrung_ (Vienna security), since
+neither foreign coin nor another description of Austrian paper, called
+_Conventions-Muenze_ (conventional currency), are current for ordinary
+purposes; and it is necessary to get them changed for the current paper
+_Wiener Waehrung._To explain this matter more fully and clearly: there are
+two sorts of paper money in the Austrian Dominions. One is called
+_Conventions-Muenze_ (conventional currency), which is fully equivalent to
+gold and sliver and cannot be refused as such throughout the whole of the
+Austrian dominions; the other, called _Wiener Waehrung_ (Vienna security) is
+current and payable in Austria proper only, and bears a loss, out of the
+Archduchy. The value of the _Wiener Waehrung_ fluctuates considerably, but
+the usual par of exchange is as 2 to 1: that means, two hundred florins
+_Wiener Waehrung_ are equal to one hundred _Convenzions-Muenze_ or gold and
+silver money. Even the _Convenzions-Muenze_ bears a loss, tho' trifling, out
+of the Imperial Dominions. The exchange has been known to have been at 400
+per cent; that is, four hundred florins _Wiener Waehrung_ were only worth
+one hundred florins gold and silver; but just now it may be reckoned a
+little beyond par, fluctuating from 200 to 220. In fact, the value of a
+florin _Wiener Waehrung_ may be calculated at a frank in French money. All
+this is exceedingly troublesome to travellers, particularly to those who do
+not understand the German language; for as they cannot read the
+inscription, it would be difficult for them to know the difference between
+one sort of paper money and the other and they might be seriously imposed
+upon. I advise therefore all travellers, before they arrive at the Austrian
+frontier, whether coming from Bavaria, Saxony, or Italy, to buy up the
+_Wiener Waehrung_ notes they may meet with, and which may be purchased at
+great profit, probably, beyond the frontier, whereas if they defer
+purchasing till they arrive within the Austrian frontier, they can only
+procure the _Wiener Waehrung_ at the common rate of exchange current.
+
+At Linz we find ourselves again in a wine country. Linz is renowned for the
+beauty of its women, and we had a most favorable specimen in our landlord's
+daughter, one of the most beautiful girls I ever beheld. We talked to her a
+great deal, and a scene ridiculous enough occurred. She has very beautiful
+arms which we all seemed to admire; and all at once, by instinct as it
+were, the two Poles lifted up one arm and I the other, and our respective
+lips were fastened on either arm at the same moment as if by word of
+command. We apologized for the liberty we took, saying that her arms were
+perfectly irresistible and that we had never seen such fine ones before.
+She accepted our excuse with the utmost good nature, and laughed very
+heartily. Her father is a man of information and a good classical scholar,
+a thing which is by no means uncommon among the inn-keepers of Germany. We
+stopped here that night, and the ensuing forenoon. We had an excellent
+supper, very good wine, and we drank to the health of the fair Amalia, the
+host's daughter. Our host, who was a friend of Mr F----'s, gave us the
+best of every thing, and our expences did not amount to more than seven
+florins _Wiener Waehrung_, for supper, bed, breakfast and dinner. We passed
+the forenoon in visiting the different parts of the city and we were struck
+with the appearance of opulence and industry that prevails.
+
+Before we arrived at Moelk, which is the next important place, we passed the
+town of Ens and beyond that the famous _Strudel_ or Whirlpool which is
+dangerous at times for boats. Our raft was completely whirled round. This
+whirlpool is caused by rocks rising abruptly out of the water. The popular
+tradition is that this whirlpool is the abode of a very malicious and
+spiteful _Wassernixe_, Undine or Water Goblin, who delighted in drowning
+passengers. The scenery hereabouts is more wild and romantic than what we
+have hitherto passed and bears a great resemblance to the landscape on the
+Rhine between Mayence and Coblentz. Moelk is an Abbey and a very magnificent
+edifice it is, situated on an eminence which forms the angle with the river
+and rises quite _a pio_ from the water's edge; it lies quite _en face_ to
+those who approach it, descending the stream, so that the river seems to be
+terminated by it. It commands a noble prospect. I had only time to inspect
+hastily the church. Beyond Moelk is a range of rocks that bear a great
+resemblance to a wall, and jut out a great deal towards the river. It is
+called the _Devil's wall_ from the tradition of the Devil having
+endeavoured to make a wall to dam up the river. Above this wall is the
+famous castle and vineyard called _Spitz am Platz_, and further on is the
+castle of Dierenstein, situated on a mountain on the left bank of the
+Danube. The ascent is very steep; this castle, now in ruins, was the place
+where Richard Coeur de Lion was confined. The walls only of the castle and
+part of the chapel are all that remain; we did not fail to visit a place of
+such celebrity. A convent lies below it.
+
+We brought to the night at a large village where there is an excellent inn;
+and the next day, the Leopoldsberg, bursting forth to view, announced to us
+the approach to Vienna. We anchored at Nussdorf, where there is a Custom
+house, and from whence the distance to Vienna is about one and half mile
+English. After having my trunk examined, I hired a hackney coach and drove
+into Vienna. The barriers beyond the suburb are called _Lines_, and between
+the Suburbs and the old town is an Esplanade. We entered the Suburbs by the
+_Waehringer Linie_, and the old town by the _Rothes Thor_ (Red gate); and
+from thence I repaired to the inn _Zum weissen Wolf_ (white Wolf) in the
+_Altem Fleischmarkt_ (old meat-market).
+
+
+VIENNA, Augt. 4.
+
+The old town of Vienna is not very large, since you can walk round its
+circumference on the ramparts in two hours. It was formerly fortified, but
+the French blew up the fortifications, leaving only the rampart; and by so
+doing they did a thing of great utility for the Viennese, and gave to the
+Austrian government an excellent opportunity of joining the old town to the
+magnificent faubourgs, by filling up the esplanade which separates them
+with streets and squares, which would prevent the unpleasant effects of
+dust in dry, and the mud in wet weather, for this dust and mud renders the
+esplanade almost at all times a disagreeable promenade, there being a sharp
+wind prevalent almost the whole year at Vienna, which blows about the dust
+_en tourbillons_. Here then was an excellent opportunity, afforded by the
+blowing up of the fortifications, of paving the whole of the esplanade and
+filling it up with streets. But no! the Austrian government seem determined
+upon restoring the fortifications, and a considerable number of workmen are
+employed. This is very silly, for these fortifications are not of the least
+use against a foreign enemy, inasmuch as the enemy can always erect his
+batteries among the faubourgs and need only make one parallel, the
+protection and cover afforded to him by the faubourgs rendering the other
+two superfluous. The faubourgs are by far the finest part of the city, and
+the garrison of the old town, in endeavouring to defend it, would destroy
+by every shot they should fire the fine buildings on the faubourgs. Of the
+folly of making such a defence they were made fully sensible in 1809. One
+of the Archdukes threw himself into the old town of Vienna, with an
+intention of defending it to the last and refused to surrender. Napoleon
+caused batteries to be erected on the _Rennweg_ or _Corso_ covered by the
+church of St Charles, the Manege and Palace of the Hungarian noble guard,
+all magnificent buildings in the faubourgs. He then summoned the garrison
+of the old town again to surrender saying: "Every shot fired against the
+besiegers destroys your own most valuable property and finest edifices."
+This argument, backed by the entreaties of the citizens, had its effect and
+the capitulation was signed. This shows the perfect inutility of fortifying
+the old town of Vienna against a foreign enemy. Indeed a capital city
+should never be fortified; it generally contains too many things of value,
+ever to be exposed to the risk of a bombardment. It would seem, however,
+that the object of the Austrian government in reconstructing these works
+were to keep its own subjects at Vienna in check. But in this case it would
+be much more advisable to construct a fortress on the heights of Kahlenberg
+or of Leopoldsberg, both of which command the city and the whole expanse
+below. The Turks were encamped on the Kahlenberg at the famous siege of
+Vienna.
+
+Vienna proper, the old town, is a Gothic city, but a very handsome one. The
+streets are in general broad and well paved; but the _Places_ or Squares
+are small. With the exception of the _Herrengasse_, where the nobility
+reside, the rest of Vienna is inhabited by shopkeepers and wholesale
+dealers; and the shops are brilliant and well fitted up. The _Kaernthner
+Strasse_, a long and tolerably broad street, and the _Kohlmarkt_ present
+the greatest display of wealth. Indeed the _Kaernthner Strasse_ may be
+considered as the principal street; this street and the _Kohlmarkt_ have a
+great resemblance to the finest parts of Holborn. The _Graben_ also present
+a fine display of shops and may be termed the Bond Street of Vienna. The
+_Sanct Stephans Platz_ where the Cathedral church of Vienna, called _St
+Stephans Kirche_, stands, is the largest _Place_ in Vienna. The Cathedral
+is a very ancient and curious Gothic edifice, and the steeple is nearly 450
+feet high. I happened to enter the Cathedral one day on the occasion of a
+solemn requiem celebrated for the soul of Prince Metternich's father. Had
+it been for the son, instead of the father, many an honorable man
+persecuted at the instigation of that most machiavelic of all ministers,
+might exclaim in making a slight alteration in a well known epitaph:
+
+ Cy-git M---- ah! qu'il est bien
+ Pour son repos et pour le mien!
+
+Among the other striking buildings in the old town is the _Hofburg_ or
+Imperial Palace, a very extensive quadrangular building, with a large court
+in its centre. A Guard mounts here every day at eleven o'clock. It was in
+one of the saloons of this palace that the celebrated Congress of Vienna
+was held; a Congress whose labours will be long and severely felt by Europe
+and duly appreciated by posterity, who will feel any other sentiment but
+that of gratitude for the arrangements entered into there. The _Hofburg_
+was built by Leopold VII in 1200. This building, from its being extremely
+irregular and from its having received additions at intervals in the
+different styles of architecture, has been aptly enough considered as the
+type of the Austrian monarchy, and of its growth from a Markgraviate to an
+Empire; in _this_, by the continued acquisition of foreign territories
+differing from each other in manners and hi speech; in _that_, by the
+continued addition of various specimens of architecture and style of
+building in its augmentation.
+
+
+VIENNA, Aug. 8th.
+
+I am very well content with my abode at the _Weisser Wolf_, tho' it is not
+a first-rate hotel. They are very civil people, and I have an excellent and
+spacious room for two florins _Wiener Whaerung_ per diem. Lodgings are the
+only things that are dear in Vienna, every other article is, however,
+cheaper than in any other city I have yet been in. All kinds of Hungarian
+wine may be had at the most reasonable prices. I generally breakfast at a
+neighbouring _Cafe_ in the _Fleischmarkt_ for the sake of reading the
+_Allgemeine Zeitung_ which is taken in there, and which is the only journal
+having a shade of liberality which is permitted in the Austrian dominions.
+From the hours of twelve to three, dinners _a la carte_ are served at the
+_Weisser Wolf_. For two and half florins _W.W._, I get an excellent dinner
+with a bottle of Offener wine. The wine of Offen resembles much that of
+Bordeaux in its quality and flavor. The tariff however of the dinners and
+wines varies daily a few kreutzers, in consequence of the eternal
+fluctuation of the _W.W._, so that every morning a fresh tariff is affixed
+to the wainscot of the saloon where the dinners are served. Supper, served
+likewise _a la carte_, is at its full tide between the hours of eight and
+ten o'clock; and as Vienna is renowned for the celebrity of its beefsteaks
+and cutlets, called here _Rostbraten_, these and a salad seem to be the
+favourite dish for supper. My mornings I have hitherto passed in lounging
+about the _Kaernthner Gasse, St Stephen's Platz, Kohlmarkt_, etc. For an
+hour before dinner the fashionable promenade is on the rampart in front of
+the palace of Duke Albert of Saxe-Teschen; in the evening on the _Prater_,
+in a carriage, on horseback, or on foot. The _Prater_ is of immense extent
+and offers a great variety of amusements and sights. I generally return
+home at night pretty well fatigued from my rambles.
+
+There is another great inconvenience at Vienna, resulting from the
+fluctuation of the current money, and this is that a stranger, dwelling at
+an inn, is sure to be disturbed five or six times in the morning, sometimes
+as early as five or six o'clock, by Jews who rap at his door to enquire if
+he wants to exchange gold and silver against currency or _vice versa_. I
+used to lose all patience at being so disturbed in the morning, and was
+obliged in self-defence to put an affiche on the door of my room to this
+effect: "_Man kauft und verkauft hier nichts; kein Wechsler darf
+hereintreten_." "Here there is no buying and selling; no money changer is
+allowed to come in," and I hereby recommend to all strangers not to treat
+with these Jews, but on their arrival, or at any time they think fit, to go
+to a banking establishment in this city, where every day after eleven
+o'clock you can exchange your gold and silver for paper at the just rate of
+exchange, as published at the Bourse, paying only a very slight premium,
+and on leaving Vienna to go to the same establishment to change your
+superfluous _Wiener Waehrung_ for _Convenzions Muenze_ or gold and silver
+money. For when the Jews tell you the rate of exchange is so and so, you
+conclude probably your bargain with them, and on enquiring at the Bourse
+you find that the Jew has made a percentage of six or eight per cent, out
+of you. _Louis d'or_ are the best foreign coin to bring into the Austrian
+Dominions. Next to them in utility are the Dutch ducats, or _Geharnischte
+Maenner_ as they are termed, from the figure of the man in armour upon them.
+All other corns suffer a loss in proportion. The bankers in Vienna pay the
+foreign bill of exchange in _Convenzions Muenze_, which you must afterwards
+change for _Wiener Waehrung_, the only current money in Vienna and Austria.
+But what makes it additionally troublesome is that here in Vienna there are
+particular payments, which must absolutely be paid in gold or silver or
+_Convenzions Muenze_, and _not Wiener Waehrung_; for instance the franking of
+foreign letters at the post office, where they do not take the _Wiener
+Waehrung_. In vain you may intreat them to take the _Wiener Waehrung_ at any
+rate they please; no! you must go elsewhere and buy from the first person
+you can meet with as much gold and silver as is required for the franking
+of the letters; so bigotted are they in the Austrian dominions to the
+letter of the law! This happened to me: I wanted to frank three letters for
+England and I went to the post office with _Wiener Waehrung_ paper, not
+being aware of this regulation, and I was obliged to return to my Hotel, to
+lay hold of a Jew, and to buy from him as much gold and silver as was
+requisite for the franking of the letters.
+
+At the _Wechselbank_ or Bank of Exchange I have before mentioned, the crowd
+that attends daily is immense; but the business is carried on without hurry
+or confusion. You hand in your paper or your gold and silver coin, the
+clerk who receives it gives you an order on paper for the amount specified,
+which paper you take into another room and therein receive the amount. This
+establishment, however, remains open only two hours every day, between
+eleven and one I believe; so if you are too late for this interval of time,
+you must apply to the brokers, Christian or Israelite.
+
+
+VIENNA, August 11th.
+
+We left the old town by the _Burg-thor,_ and crossing the Esplanade,
+directed our course to the _Rennweg,_ one of the suburbs, in order to view
+the majestic edifice of St Charles, which is equal in the beauty of its
+architecture to many of the finest churches in Rome. Its facade and cupola
+render it one of the most striking buildings belonging to Vienna. We next
+visited the _Manege_ and the Palace called the palace of the Hungarian
+Noble Guard. They are both beautiful edifices. The faubourgs of Vienna are
+built in the modern style and their buildings, both public and private,
+excellent in their way and in the best state. The streets of the faubourgs
+are broad but not paved. The most celebrated of these faubourgs are _Maria
+Huelf_, _Leopold-stadt_, _Landstrasse_, the _Rennweg_, the _Wuehringer
+Gasse_; and I am persuaded that if the old town were united to the faubourg
+by means of streets and squares and the esplanade filled up with buildings,
+Vienna would perhaps be the handsomest city in Europe and the fourth in
+size, for the best buildings and palaces are in the faubourgs, viz., the
+Military College, the Polytechnic School, St Charles' Church, the Porcelain
+fabric, the Palaces of Esterhazy, Kaunitz, Stahremberg, Schwarzenberg,
+Palfy, and the beautiful Palace and ground of Belvedere in which last is a
+noble collection of pictures open to the public. At the Polytechnic school
+one of the principal professors is a friend of Mr F------'s, and he
+explained to us the nature of the establishment and the course of studies
+pursued. The apparatus for every branch of science is on the grandest
+scale. After dinner we repaired to the _Prater_, crossing a branch of the
+Danube which here forms several islands. The _Prater_ requires and deserves
+particular mention. Part of it is something in the style of the _Champs
+Elysees_ at Paris, and it is fully equal to it in the variety of amusements
+and enjoyments to be met with there; but it is far larger and more
+beautiful on account of its landscape and the diversified manner in which
+the grounds are laid out. The _Prater_, then, is an immense park, laid out
+on an island of considerable extent on the Danube. The nearest faubourg to
+it is the _Leopoldstadt_, which is also the most fashionable one, and a
+bridge conducts you from that faubourg direct into the _Prater_. The
+_Prater_ presents a mixture of garden, meadow, upland and forest; the lofty
+trees arranged in avenues or in clumps give a delightful protecting shade.
+On the road destined for the carriages there is every afternoon a most
+brilliant display of carriages. Another avenue is destined for equestrians,
+and two avenues, one on each side of these two, for pedestrians. There are
+besides winding footpaths, that conduct you all over this vast extent of
+ground, and circular grass plots surrounded by trees where the pedestrian
+may repose and eat and drink if he will. Here are _restaurants_ in plenty,
+_cafes_, Panoramas, exhibitions of wild beasts, swings, tennis courts,
+places for running at the ring, do for burlesque dramatic performances,
+_farceurs_, jugglers, De Bach's Equestrian Amphitheatre in the style of
+Franconi, _Salles de Danse_, baths, billiard rooms, gaming tables, and even
+houses appropriated to gallantry. In fact, the _Prater_ is quite the
+Paradise of the bourgeoisie of Vienna, who are fond of the pleasures of the
+table and take every opportunity of making dinner and supper parties. The
+bourgeois of Vienna are far more sensual than spiritual and not at all
+disposed to self-denial.
+
+Excellent hams and sausages are to be had here; and the Viennese who dines
+and sups heartily at his own house never fails, during his evening
+promenade, to take a tolerable good portion of ham or sausage, with a
+proportion of Offen wine or Maylander Beer, by way of staying his stomach
+during the tedious interval between dinner and supper. I need scarce add
+that smoking is universal, as indeed it is all over Germany, for I scarcely
+ever see a German without a pipe either in his mouth or fastened to his
+coat and a bag or pouch of tobacco either in his pocket or attached to his
+button hole. In the _Prater_ dances often take place in the open air
+between the grisettes of Vienna, who are in general handsome and well made,
+and who dress well, and their lovers and admirers. The _Prater_ was first
+opened to the public by the Emperor Joseph II. The _Au-garten_ is another
+place of recreation and amusement, but on a smaller and much more tranquil
+and sober scale, than the _Prater_. None of the lower classes think of
+coming here, tho' it is open to every body decently dressed: there is not
+that profuse eating and drinking going forward. It is more properly
+speaking a promenade, and forms a garden with alleys of trees where music
+is often performed and there is a superb saloon where refreshments may be
+had. The _Au-garten_ is frequented chiefly by the _Noblesse_ and _Haute
+Bourgeoisie_. In the morning likewise it is a fashionable resort to drink
+the mineral waters. It adjoins the _Prater_, being on the same island. It
+was the favourite lounge of Joseph II, who opened it to the public by
+affixing this inscription on one of the gates:
+
+ Allen Menschen gewidmete Erlustigung von ihrem Schaetzer
+
+ "Place of recreation open to all Men by their esteemer."
+
+
+VIENNA, Aug. 13th.
+
+There are a great number of theatres at Vienna. Two are situated in the old
+town, viz., the _Hof-theater_ and the _Burg-theater_. The _Hof-theater_ is
+only open when the Court are at Vienna, and they are now at Baden, ten
+leagues distant. The _Burg-theater_ is open all the year round, and may be
+considered as the national theatre. It is much frequented by the
+bourgeoisie and inhabitants of the old town, who do not chuse to take the
+trouble to go to the _Wieden-theater_, which is situated in the faubourgs,
+and which is more of a classical and fashionable theatre than the other,
+inasmuch as it is more elegantly and classically built, better fitted up,
+and has a far better company of comedians. At the _Burgtheater_ I saw
+Kotzebue's _Edelsinn und Armuth_ performed. The Wieden theatre which is, as
+I have said, in the faubourgs, is the handsomest theatre perhaps in Europe
+for its size. It is not large, but it is fitted up with so much taste and
+you see and hear so well; every ornament is so chaste and there is nothing
+at all tawdry or superfluous. It is, I really think, a model of what every
+theatre ought to be. There is a good deal of bronze about it which gives it
+a classical appearance, and the boxes are supported by Caryatides in
+bronze. There is a peculiarity in all the theatres at Vienna, which is,
+that in the _parterre_ you must sit in the place the number of which is
+marked on your ticket. These places are called _Gesperrte Sitze,_ and each
+seat resembles an armchair. When not occupied, the seat is folded up and
+locked to the back of the chair, until the person who holds the ticket
+corresponding to its number comes to take it; so that no other but the
+person holding the ticket corresponding to the number can take it, and you
+are thus never likely to be shoved out of your place, as you are at most of
+the theatres in Europe. There are men stationed at the doors who follow you
+into the _parterre_ to unlock and let down a seat for you, and to them you
+give your ticket with a slight gratification, which is however quite
+optional; your ticket you previously pay for at the door.
+
+
+VIENNA, Augt. 20th.
+
+I have been to see Schoenbrunn, the usual residence of the young Napoleon;
+but he is now at Baden with the Imperial family, where his mother, who is
+lately arrived from Italy, is also on a visit. The young Napoleon is said
+to be a remarkable fine boy, and a great favorite with his grandfather the
+Emperor. Many are the anecdotes related of him. I shall mention one. He had
+heard so often talk of his father, that shortly after the arrival of his
+mother, he wished to see his father also and asked his attendants
+repeatedly and not in a very patient tone: _Wo ist denn mein Vater?_[124]
+This was told to his grandfather the Emperor; and he gave directions that
+the child should be brought to him, the very next time he should put the
+question. He then said to him: _Du moechtestwissen wo dein Vater ist? Er ist
+in Verhaft. Man hat es mit ihm gut gemeint; weil er aber unruhig war, so
+hat man ihn in Verhaft gestellt, und Dich wird man auch verhaften, wenn Du
+unruhig bist._[125]
+
+So much for this anecdote; but I did not hear what was the answer of the
+young prince. The young Napoleon is, it appears, a great favorite of the
+soldiers, who quite adore him, and he will sometimes go into the kitchen to
+get bread and meat to give to the soldiers on Guard at the Palace. A
+singular event happened lately to Maria Louisa. During her stay at
+Schonbrunn, her _chatouille,_ with several things of value in it,
+_bijouterie,_ etc., was stolen from her. She caused enquiries to be made,
+and researches to be set on foot. Nobody has been able to find out who took
+it; but it was put back in the precise place from whence it was taken, and
+not a single article of the _bijouterie_ or things of value was missing. It
+is supposed this theft was made for political purposes, in order to
+discover the nature of her epistolary correspondence, if any existed. Had
+it been taken by a vulgar thief, it is not probable that the articles of
+value would have been restored. Such is the unhappy condition of that
+Princess to be always an object of suspicion and espionnage.
+
+
+_Journey to Prague_.
+
+
+I left Vienna on the 28th August in a _Landkutsche_ and arrived at Prague
+on the first of September.
+
+These _Landkutsche_ are on the same plan and footing with the _vetture_ in
+Italy, and travel in the same manner, with this difference, however; that
+the _Landkutscher_ do not usually, as the _vetturini_ do, undertake to
+provide for the supper and bed of their passengers. In a word, you are not
+_spesato;_ and in Germany there is not the least necessity for it, for
+there is no such thing as extortion on the part of the German innkeepers,
+who are by far the most respectable of that profession. Besides, in most
+places, everything is _tariffed,_ and where it is not, the landlord never
+makes an unreasonable demand, or attempts to make foreigners pay more than
+natives; whereas in Italy if you are not _spesato_ there are no bounds to
+the rapacity of the innkeepers, witness mine host of Terracina. Both Italy
+and Germany present the greatest convenience for travellers, as the
+_Landkutsche_ or _vetture_ are continually passing from town to town. There
+is however this difference between them, that the Italian _vetturini_ will
+abate their price, if their carriage is full excepting one place, and that
+they must start, whereas the German _Landkutscher_ never abate their price.
+
+I paid for my journey from Vienna to Prague thirty-five florins _Wiener
+Waehrung,_ and we made the journey in five days. Our first day's journey
+brought us to Hoellabrunn, having stoppd to dinner at Stockeran. The road is
+excellent and the several towns and villages we past thro' clean and well
+built. The landscape was either a plain, or gently undulating and extremely
+well cultivated.
+
+Bohemia resembles Moravia, being an exceedingly rich corn country,
+generally open; not many trees about the country near the road side, except
+at the _Chateau_ and farm houses. The language is a dialect of the
+Sclavonic, mixed with some German; but at the inns there is always one or
+two servants who speak German. In Bohemia a traveller not speaking German,
+and who has no interpreter with him, would find himself greatly
+embarrassed. The Bohemians call themselves in their own language
+_Cherschky_, and the Hungarians call themselves _Magyar_.
+
+
+[117] Tasso, _Gerusalemme liberata_, canto XV, ottave 31, 32:
+
+ Un uom della Liguria avra ardimento
+ All' incognito corao esporsi in prima...
+ Tu spiegherai, Colombo, a un nuovo polo
+ Lontane si le fortunate antenne...--ED.
+
+
+[118] Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, XL, 31, 1.--ED.
+
+[119] See reference to Eustace p. 131.
+
+[120] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, XXVIII, 38, 7.--ED.
+
+[121] Boileau, _Satires_, XI, v. 117.
+
+[122] The drama, _Der Wold bei Hermannstadt,_ is the work of Johanna
+ Fraenul von Weissenthurn (1773-1847), a celebrated Viennese actress
+ and authoress. An opera was written on the same text by W. Westmeyer,
+ --ED.
+
+[123] Because I am an Englishman--You are an Englishman? you are certainly
+ a North-German; you speak very correct German.--Gentlemen, I tell you
+ I am an Englishman; many English study and speak the German language
+ and if you had held a long conversation with me, you would soon have
+ perceived from my faults in speaking, that I am not a German.--But you
+ have answered our questions so correctly.--Why not, the same questions
+ have been put to me so often that I have all the necessary answers by
+ heart like a catechism.
+
+[124] Where is my father?
+
+[125] "You wish to know where your father is? He is under arrest; people
+ were well disposed to him; but he is placed under arrest, because he
+ was unruly, and if you are unruly you will be placed under arrest
+ likewise."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+SEPTEMBER 1818-MARCH 1819
+
+The splendid city of Prague--The German expression, "To give the
+basket"--Journey from Prague to Dresden--Journey from Dresden to Berlin--A
+description of Berlin--The Prussian Army--Theatricals--Peasants talk about
+Napoleon--Prussians and French should be allies--Absurd policy of the
+English Tories--Journey from Berlin to Dresden--A description of
+Dresden--The battle of Dresden in 1813--Clubs at Dresden--Theatricals--
+German beds--Saxon scholars--The picture gallery--Tobacco an ally of
+Legitimacy--Saxon women--Meissen--Unjust policy of Europe towards the King
+of Saxony.
+
+
+PRAGUE, 4 Sept.
+
+Prague is a far more striking and splendid city than Vienna, without its
+faubourgs. The streets are broader; and it has a more cheerful and less
+confined appearance than the old town of Vienna. The position of Prague too
+is very romantic and picturesque, part of it lying on a mountain and part
+on a plain; and it stands on the confluent of two rivers, the Mulda and the
+Braun. The upper part of the city, called Oberburg, stands on a height
+called Ratschin, and on this height stands a most magnificent palace and
+other stately buildings. There is a beautiful panoramic view from this part
+of Prague. In this part of the city too is the cathedral of St Wenzel or
+Wenceslaus, who was its founder. His tomb and that of St John Nepomucene, a
+favorite saint of the Bohemians, is in this church. The Cathedral is of
+extreme solidity, but little ornamented, having been plundered by the
+Swedes in 1648. The canopy over the shrine of St John Nepomucene has a
+profusion of votive offerings appended to it. The lower part of Prague is
+divided into two parts by the Mulda. The bridge across the Mulda is one of
+the finest in Europe. It has twenty-four arches, its length is 1700 feet
+and its breadth 35. Among several statues on this bridge is a very
+remarkable one of Jesus Christ, made of bronze gilt, which cost a large sum
+of money to its founder, a Jew! There is a Latin inscription on it which
+explains the paradox. There stood on the same spot a wooden statue of
+Christ in the XVI century. One day an opulent Jew, on passing by, made some
+scoffing or contemptuous remark on it. He was overheard by some of the
+people, accused of blasphemy and condemned to die; but on expressing great
+contrition and offering to pay a fine to any amount, he was pardoned, on
+the condition of his promising to erect a bronze statue gilt of Jesus
+Christ on the same spot, at his own expense, with an inscription explaining
+the reason of its construction; which promise he punctually performed.
+Prague abounds in Jews. Two-thirds at least of its population are of that
+persuasion. In the lower town the most striking edifices are the palace of
+the Wallenstein family, descendants of the famous Wallenstein, so
+distinguished in the Thirty Years war. Annexed to this Palace is a spacious
+garden, which is open to the public as a promenade. It is well laid out.
+There is a large aviary. This Palace covers a vast extent of ground. The
+Colloredo family, who are descended from Wenceslaus, have a superb Palace
+in this city; and there is a stable belonging to it, partly in marble and
+of rich architecture, capable of containing thirty-six horses. No traveller
+who comes to Prague should omit visiting these two Palaces of Wallenstein
+and Colloredo. On the bridge over the Mulda before mentioned, is the statue
+in bronze of St John Nepomucene, on the spot from whence he was thrown into
+the river by his brother saint, King Wenceslaus, for refusing to divulge
+the gallantries of his (Wenceslaus') wife, to whom he was confessor. A
+favorite promenade on Sundays is on the _Faerber Insel_ or Dyers island,
+which is a small island on the Mulda. Here the young men of the town come
+to dance with the _grisettes_ and milliner girls of Prague, who are
+renowned for their beauty and complaisance.
+
+The Jewish burying ground is a curiosity for a person who has never visited
+the Oriental countries. The tombstones are stowed thick together. Everybody
+recollects the anecdote of the ingenious method adopted by Joseph II for
+squeezing a large sum of money from the Jews of Prague, by giving out that
+he intended to claim this cemetery, in order to build therein a Palace. The
+Jews who, like all the Orientals, have the most profound veneration for the
+spot where their ancestors are buried, presented a large sum of money to
+the Emperor, to induce him to renounce his design.
+
+The _Stadt-Haus_ (Hotel de Ville) is a fine building; and the _Marktplatz_
+(market square) is very spacious, and contributes much to the beauty of the
+town. In the centre of it stands an ancient fountain of a dodecagonal form.
+The basin is of red marble, and near it stands a large stone column, with a
+statue of the Virgin, bronze gilt, on its summit. A well supplied market,
+or rather fair, is carried on here every day in the week. The Theatre is a
+fine building and is of immense size. I witnessd the representation of a
+burlesque tragedy called _Die Belagerung von Ypsilon_ (the siege of
+Ypsilon), but I could not at all comprehend the cream of the jest. Madame
+Catalani, who is here, sang at this theatre one night. The theatre was
+completely filled and the price of admission to the boxes and _parterre_ a
+ducat. The street adjoining to the theatre was crowded by people
+endeavoring to catch the sweet sounds. Immense hommage has been paid to
+Catalani by the authorities here.
+
+The balls of the _bourgeoisie_ of Prague are splendid and well attended.
+The _bourgeoisie_ is very opulent in this city. There are but few residents
+_Noblesse_. The expences at the inns here are rather greater than those at
+Vienna, wine being a foreign commodity and beer the national beverage. My
+daily expences here for lodging, dinner, supper and breakfast amounted to
+four florins _Convenzions Muenze_, about nine franks nearly, French money.
+The country environing Prague is rich and abounding in corn; there are
+likewise hops. The walls of Prague still bear the marks made by Frederic's
+shot when he blockaded Prague.
+
+
+PRAGUE, 7th Sept.
+
+To-morrow I shall start for Dresden, The diligence goes off only once a
+week, but I have engaged a car or rather light basket waggon drawn by two
+horses (a vehicle very common in Germany) to convey me to Dresden in two
+days and half. I am to pay for half of the waggon, and another traveller
+will pay for the remaining half.
+
+Before I leave Prague I must tell you that I have found out the origin of
+the German phrases _Jemand den Korb zu geben (to give the basket)_, which
+means a refusal of marriage. Thus when a young lady refuses an offer of
+marriage on the part of her admirer, the phrase is: _Sie hat ihm den Korb
+gegeben_ (_She has given him the basket_). Hitherto I have not met with any
+one who could explain to me satisfactorily the origin of so singular a
+phrase; but on reading lately a volume of the _Volksmaehrchen_ (_Popular
+tales_) I found not only the derivation of this phrase, but also that of
+the name of the city of Prague. Both are connected in the same story, and
+both concern the history of Prague. The story is as follows.
+
+Libussa, Duchess of Bohemia, had three lovers, two of whom were not
+remarkably intelligent, but the third possessed a great deal of talent and
+was her favorite. She was much importuned by the rival suitors. She
+appeared before them one day with a basket filled with plums in her hand;
+and said she would give her hand in marriage to whoever of them should
+guess the following arithmetical riddle. She said: "One of you shall take
+half the plums that are in this basket, and one over: another shall take
+half of what remains, and one over: the third shall take half of what still
+remains and three over, and then all the plums will have been taken. Now
+tell me how many plums there are in the basket." Her favorite was the only
+one who could guess the number of plums which was _thirty_. To him
+therefore she gave her hand and the plums, and to the other suitors the
+empty basket. Hence the phrase. The solution of the question is as follows:
+
+ A takes half of the plums in the basket (30) and one
+ over . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 + 1 = 16
+ B half of what remained (14) and one over . . . . . 7 + 1 = 8
+ C half of what remained (6) and three over . . . . . 3 + 3 = 6
+ ---
+ Total 30
+
+Now with regard to the origin of the city of Prague. The former residence
+was much too small, and Libussa directed her workmen to build a town on the
+spot, where they should find at midday a man making the _best use of his
+teeth_. They began their research and one day at that hour discovered a
+carpenter sawing a block of wood. It struck them that this laborious man
+was making a better use of his teeth (viz., teeth of his saw) than the mere
+feeder and they judged that this ought to be the place where the town
+should be built. They therefore proceeded to trace with a plough the
+circumference of the town. On asking the carpenter what he was about to
+make with the block he was sawing, he said " A threshold for a door," which
+is called _Prah_ or _Praha_ in the Bohemian language and Libussa gave to
+the city the name of _Praha_ or _Prag_.
+
+
+BERLIN, 24th Sept.
+
+Berlin has a splendid and cheerful appearance, with fine broad streets,
+superb white buildings and Palaces, for the most part in the Grecian taste;
+it has quite the appearance in short of an Italian city. Nearly all the
+streets are at right angles; they are kept very clean and the shops make a
+brilliant display. I felt so much pain in my legs, from the effect of my
+pedestrian journey, that I was obliged to remain in my chamber one entire
+day. There is a very good _table d'hote_ at my bin for twelve _Groschen_.
+Wine is paid for extra, and at the rate of from 12 to 18 _Groschen_ the
+bottle. The sort usually drunk here is the Medoc. The prices of articles of
+prune necessity are dearer in Berlin than either at Dresden or Vienna;
+particularly the article of washing, which is dearer than in any country I
+have yet visited.
+
+The next morning I began my rambles, and directed my course to the favorite
+and fashionable promenade of the _beau monde_, at all hours of the day, I
+mean in the fine street or alley _Unter den Linden_, so called from it
+being planted with lime trees. There is a range of elegant buildings on
+each side, and at the end, near the _Thier Garten_ (Park), is a superb gate
+called the _Brandenburger Thor_ in the shape of a triumphal arch ornamented
+with a statue of Peace, with an olive branch in her hand, standing on a car
+drawn by four horses abreast, the whole groupe being of bronze and of
+exquisite workmanship. The four horses are imitated from the Corinthian
+horses at Venice and yield to them in nothing but antiquity. Indeed they
+have a much more pleasing and striking effect, in being thus attached to a
+car, than standing by themselves, as the Venetian ones do, on the top of
+the facade of a church. This _Brandenburger Thor_ is constructed after the
+model of the Propylaeum of Athens.
+
+The Opera House, a building in the Grecian taste erected by Frederic the
+Great with the inscription _Apollini et Musis_, and after that the Academy
+of the Fine Arts engaged my attention. Both these buildings are remarkable,
+and they are near the _Linden_. The old town is much intersected by canals
+communicating with the Spree which divides it. I call it the old town, to
+distinguish it from the quarter composed of streets of recent construction
+between the former _enceinte_ of the town and the Brandenburger Thor. The
+Hotel of the Invalides, a ponderous building, bears the following
+inscription: _Laesis non victis_. The Bank and the Arsenal next engaged my
+attention, as also a Guard House of recent construction in the shape of a
+Doric temple. The Royal Palace is an immense building, partly in the Gothic
+and partly in the Grecian style. It is very heavy but imposing. The
+interior of this Palace is royally fitted up, except the little room
+occupied by the great Frederic, which is left in the same state as when he
+occupied it; and you know he was not fond of superfluous ornament. In the
+green before the Palace stands the statue of the Prince of Anhalt Dessau,
+the founder of the Prussian Infantry system, and at a short distance from
+this, on the _Lange Bruecke,_ stands the colossal equestrian statue in
+bronze of the Great Elector.
+
+The _Koenigstrasse_ is the principal street and a very fine one it is; next
+to it in point of beauty is the _Franzoesische_ _Strasse_. The _Wilhelm
+Platz_ is adorned with the statues in marble of Schwerin, Seidlitz, Keith,
+Winterfeld, and Ziethen. But I cannot enumerate all the splendid public
+establishments and fine things to be seen in this beautiful city. The most
+striking church is that of St Hedwig. I call it the most striking from its
+resemblance to the Pantheon at Rome. The Cathedral is perhaps a finer
+building. 'Tis in this last that the Electoral and Royal remains are
+deposited.
+
+The streets 'here swarm with military, and indeed the profession of arms
+seems to have too much sway in the Prussian dominions. The subalterns and
+young men of the Prussian Army are said to have republican sentiments, and
+they, in common with all the burghers, desire a constitution. It galls them
+to see one enjoyed by the Bavarians, whom they affect to look upon as
+inferior to them in intelligence, and that it should be refused to them.
+Most of the nobility and the greater part of the General and field officers
+are however inveterate aristocrats.
+
+You have heard, I dare say, of the attempt made by some officers among the
+nobility to exclude from the service, after the peace, those officers who
+were not noble. When it is considered that their best and most zealous
+officers sprung from the burghers, and that Prussia, when abandoned by her
+King and nobles, was saved from permanent subjection only by the
+unparalleled exertions of her burghers and peasantry, one is shocked at
+such ingratitude and absurdity. But the officers of the Royal Guard went so
+far as to draw up a petition to the King, requesting him to dismiss all the
+officers of the corps who were not noble, and Blucher was applied to to
+present this petition to the King. Blucher read the paper and ordered all
+the officers to assemble on the parade and thus addressed them: "Gentlemen,
+I have received your paper and read its contents with the utmost
+astonishment. All the remarks that I shall permit myself to make on the
+subject of this petition, are, that it makes me ashamed of being myself a
+noble." He then tore the petition in pieces and dismissed them.
+
+I have been once at the theatre. _Lodoiska_ was performed. I saw a number
+of fine women in the boxes. Formerly gallantry and pleasure were the order
+of the day at Berlin; but now, the Court assuming the exterior of rigid
+morality and strictly exercised religious devotion, mystic cant and
+dullness is the order of the day. The death of the Queen of Prussia threw a
+great damp over the amusements of the Court. At Charlottenburg, which is a
+short distance from Berlin, in the grounds there, they point out to you her
+favourite spots. She was a most amiable Princess, and united to great
+personal beauty so much grace and fascination and so many good qualities
+that she was beloved by all, and the breath of calumny never ventured to
+assail her.
+
+The alley _Unter den Linden_ in the evening presents a great assemblage of
+Cyprian nymphs, who promenade up and down; they dress well and are
+perfectly well behaved. There is a superb establishment of this kind at
+Berlin, which all strangers should visit out of curiosity. It is not
+indispensably necessary to sacrifice to the Goddess whose worship is
+carried on there; but you may limit yourself to admire the temple, call for
+refreshments and contemplate the priestesses.
+
+There is the utmost moral and political freedom at Berlin, and tho' the
+Government is despotic in form, freedom of speech is allowed. An army of
+200,000 men admirably disciplined and armed, of these a garrison of 15,000
+men in Berlin and as many at Potsdam, are quite sufficient to keep in check
+all attempts to put political theories and speculations into practice.
+Indeed, it would be very difficult to excite a revolt; the various German
+governments are carried on very paternally and the government is scarcely
+felt; habits of obedience have taken deep root among the people, and a
+German peasant as long as he gets enough to eat and drink, does not
+conceive himself unhappy, or thinks of a change. I could not help laughing
+the other day, at a little village near Berlin, when I heard some peasants
+talking of Napoleon; one of them, who seemed to have some partiality for
+him, exclaimed, meaning to blame him for leaving Elba: _Aber warum verliess
+er seine Insel? Er hatte doch zu essen und trinken so viel er wolte_ (Why
+did he leave Elba? He had surely plenty to eat and drink). This good
+peasant could not conceive that a man blessed with these comforts should
+like to change his situation or run any risks to do so.
+
+French as well as German is commonly spoken in Berlin, and I am glad to see
+that the prejudice against the French is wearing off. If the French and
+Prussians could understand one another, and knew their own interests, or if
+the French had a liberal national Government, I mean, one more identified
+with the interests of the people than the present one is, what advantage
+might not rise therefrom? They are natural allies, and united they might be
+able effectually to humble the overbearing insolence and political
+coxcombry of the Czar, shake to its centre the systematic despotism and
+light-fearing leader of Austria, and keep in check the commercial
+greediness, monopolizing spirit and Tory arrogance of England. The German
+political writers duly appreciate the illiberal policy of England towards
+the continental nations, by which she invariably helps to crush liberty on
+the Continent in the hopes of paralysing their energies and industry, in
+order to compel them to buy English manufactures, and in fine to make them
+dependent on England for every article of consumption. England, ever since
+the beginning of the reign of George III to the present day, has been
+always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to perpetuate abuses and to
+rivet the fetters of monarchial, feudal and ecclesiastical tyranny.
+
+These are facts and cannot be denied. The English people have been taxed to
+the last farthing to support a war of privileges against Freedom; and
+Europe is in consequence prostrate at the feet of an unprincipled
+coalition, thro' England's arms and England's gold; and then an English
+minister, and his vile hireling journals, tell you that the continental
+nations are not ripe for and do not deserve liberty. Even the Pope and
+Grand Turk, both so much dreaded by our pious ancestors, have been
+supported, caressed and subsidized, in order to help to put down all
+efforts made to obtain rational liberty, which the courtiers always affect
+to stigmatize with the name of "Jacobinism," while a number of needy
+individual have enriched themselves by the public plunder and byaiding and
+abetting the system, all _novi homines_, men who, had there been more to
+gain on the other side than by espousing Toryism, would not have been
+backward; men who are Jacobins in the real sense of the word, however they
+cloak themselves under the specious names of Church and King men; upholders
+of Pitt and his system, for which they affect a veneration they are far
+from really feeling; men, in fact, whose political scruples of whatever
+nature they be, would soon melt away.
+
+
+DRESDEN, 5th October.
+
+I have been fortunate in getting into very comfortable lodgings, having two
+rooms and as much firing as I chuse for eight _Reichsthalers_ per month.
+Coffee is made for me at home in the morning, and I generally dine and sup
+at a _restaurant_ close by near the bridge. The _Platz_ in the Neustadt is
+close to my lodgings, and being very large and well paved and lined with
+trees, it affords a very agreeable promenade. Rows of elegant houses line
+the sides of this Plata, among which the _Stadthaus_ is particularly
+remarkable. The famous _Japan Palace_, as it is called, is also in the
+_Neustadt_, and but a short distance from the _Platz_. The gardens of Count
+Marcolini afford also a pleasant promenade; but by far the most agreeable
+walk, in my opinion, is on the _Zwinger_, a sort of terrace on the left
+bank of the Elbe in the old town, adjoining the palace and gardens of Count
+Bruhl. From this place you have a noble view of a long reach of the Elbe.
+It is besides the favorite promenade of the ladies. On the _Zwinger_ too is
+a building containing a fine collection of paintings. Here are _cafes_
+likewise and a _restaurant_. The evening promenades are in the gardens of
+the _Linkischer Bad_ (Bath of Link) on the banks of the Elbe, where there
+is a summer theatre. This is the favourite resort of the _bourgeoisie_ on
+Sundays and _jours de fete; gouters_ and supper parties are formed here and
+very good music is heard. The Elbe bridge is of beautiful structure, and
+there is a good regulation with respect to those who pass over this bridge;
+which is that one side of the bridge is reserved for those going from the
+new to the old town, and the other side for those going from the old to the
+new town, and if you attempt to go on the wrong side you are stopped by a
+sentry, so that there is no jostling nor lounging on this bridge. An arch
+of this bridge was blown up by Marshal Davoust in order to arrest the
+progress of the Russians, and a great deal of management was necessary to
+effectuate it, for the worthy Saxons have a great veneration for this
+bridge, and in order to inforce the execution of this resolution on the
+part of the Marshal, the personal order of the King and the employment of
+Saxon troops were necessary. It has been rebuilt since, and no one would
+know that the arch had ever been blown up, but from the extreme whiteness
+of the new arch, contrasting with the darker color of the old ones.
+
+In the old town or Dresden proper, the finest buildings are: the Catholic
+church, standing near the bridge, an edifice yielding in beauty but to few
+in Italy and to none in other countries. Here you hear excellent music
+during the church service; and the King and Royal family, all of whom are
+Catholics, attend constantly. The Royal Palace is very near the church and
+not far from it is the theatre. Saxony being a Lutheran country, the public
+exercise of the Catholic religion was not permitted until Napoleon's time,
+when he proposed an arrangement to permit to the King and all other
+Catholics the public celebration of their religion, which proposition was
+acceded to with universal approbation on the part of the Protestants, and
+now the Host is frequently displayed in the streets. There are however but
+few Catholics in Dresden among the natives. So great is the respect for
+usages and customs in Germany, that the Electors of Saxony, on going over
+to Catholicism, never thought even of requesting the indulgence of
+exercising their religion publicly, and the granting it has produced no
+evil consequence, liberalism and the most unreserved toleration in matters
+of religion being the order of the day.
+
+The Royal Palace is a very fine and extensive building and the interior is
+well worth seeing, particularly the superb _Riesen-Saal_ where Augustus II
+used to give his magnificent _fetes_. One of the last and most brilliant
+_fetes_ given here was that given by the King of Saxony to the Emperor
+Napoleon just before the Russian campaign, at which the Emperor and Empress
+of Austria and most of the Sovereigns of Germany assisted, to do hommage to
+the great Conqueror.
+
+The _Schloss-gasse_ or Castle Street leads from the Palace into the _Markt
+Platz_ where the markets and fairs are held. In this place, in the
+_Schloss-gasse_ and in another street parallel to it, that leads from the
+porcelain Manufactory to the _Grosser Platz_ (_Grande Place_), are the
+finest shops and greatest display of wealth. On the _Grosser Platz_ stands
+the _Frauen-Kirche_, a superb Protestant church, and which may be
+considered as the cathedral church of Dresden. The _Platz_ is large. There
+is great cleanliness in all the streets of Dresden, and the houses are well
+built and uniform; but there are few other very prominent edifices except
+those I have mentioned. On going outside the town by the gate of Pirna
+stands, almost immediately on the right, on turning down a road, the
+Gardens and Palace of Prince Anthony. Leaving this on your right and
+proceeding along the _chaussee_ or high road which is nearly parallel to
+the river, at the distance of three-quarters mile from the Gate, stands the
+Palace and Gardens called _Der Grosse Garten_ (grand garden), which you
+leave on your right, if you continue your route on the _chaussee_ towards
+Pirna. I have not yet visited the _Grosse Garten_. There is likewise a fine
+promenade on the banks of the Elbe, but quite in an opposite direction to
+the Pirna gate, for to arrive at it from this gate, you must traverse the
+Pirna street and _Grosser Platz_; and on arrival near the bridge direct
+your course to the left, which will lead you out of one of the gates into
+an immensely long avenue of elm trees parallel to the river which forms the
+promenade.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Oct. 10th.
+
+I have been to see the Palace and grounds of the _Grosser Garten_. The
+garden and park, for it unites both, is of great extent, and beautifully
+laid out; but a number of fine trees have been knocked down and mutilated
+by cannon shot during the battle of Dresden in 1818, when this garden was
+occupied by the Allied troops and exposed to a heavy fire of fifty pieces
+of cannon, from a battery erected by Napoleon on the opposite side of the
+river, which completely commanded and enfiladed the whole range of the
+garden. How the Palace itself escaped being knocked to pieces is wonderful;
+but I suppose Napoleon must have given orders to spare it as much as
+possible. This Palace is of beautiful structure and in the style of an
+Italian villa; statues of the twelve Caesars and bas-reliefs adorn the
+exterior. The columns and pilasters are of the Corinthian order. As for the
+interior, it is unfurnished, and has been so since the Seven Years' war,
+when it was plundered by the enemy, and has never since been inhabited by
+the Electoral family. There is a superb rectangular basin of water in this
+garden. These gardens are delightfully laid out; why they are not more
+frequented I cannot conceive, but I have hitherto met with very few people
+there, tho' they are open to all the world. They will form my morning's
+promenade, for I prefer solitude to a crowd in a morning walk. But one of
+the gardeners here tells me that on Sunday evening there is generally a
+good deal of company, who come to listen to the music which is played in a
+building fitted up for the purpose at one side of the garden. Wine, coffee,
+beer and other refreshments are to be had; but beer is the favorite
+beverage. Smoking is universal among the young men; the most ardent
+admirers of the fair sex never forget their pipe. During the courtship the
+surest sign that the fair one does not intend to _give_ her lover _the
+basket_ is when she presents him with a bag to hold his tobacco. Her
+consent is implied thereby.
+
+During the battle of Dresden, the slaughter in this garden was immense, and
+the Allies were finally driven out of it. The gardener related to me an
+affecting story of a young lady of Dresden, whose lover was killed in this
+battle and buried in the _Grosser Garten_. She has taken it so much to
+heart that she comes here three or four times in the week to visit this
+grave and strew flowers over it. She remains for some time absorbed in
+silent meditation and then withdraws. She has a settled melancholy, but it
+has not yet affected her understanding.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Oct. 15th.
+
+I met with my old friend, Sir W.I., who was travelling to Berlin, with the
+idea of passing the winter there and of proceeding in the summer to Moscow.
+Thro' the interests of my friends, Col. D------ and Baron de F------ I have
+been ballotted for and admitted a member of a club or society here called
+the _Ressource_. It is held in a large house on the _Markt Platz_, and is
+indeed a most agreeable resource to all foreigners; for 'tis in this
+society that they are likely to meet and form acquaintance with the
+_noblesse_, principal _bourgeoisie_ and _litterati_. It is conducted on the
+most liberal scale and not confined to those of birth and fortune. Good
+character, polite behaviour and litterary requirements will ensure
+admittance to a candidate. This society consists of members and honorary
+members; among the honorary members are foreigners and others whose stay in
+Dresden is short; but whoever remains for more than one year must cease to
+be an honorary member and must be ballotted for in order to become a
+permanent member, and should he be blackballed he ceases to belong to the
+society altogether. This is a very good regulation. A year is a sufficient
+time of proof for the character and conduct of a person, and should he
+during this interval prove himself obnoxious to the members of the society,
+they can at its expiration exclude him for ever afterwards.
+
+No enquiry is made as to the character and conduct of a person who is
+admitted as an honorary member: it is sufficient that he be recommended by
+a permanent member, which is deemed a sufficient guarantee for his
+respectability. In this society there are dining rooms, billiard rooms,
+card rooms, a large reading room. Here too is a small but well chosen
+library and three or four newspapers in every European language; all the
+German newspapers and reviews and the principal periodical works in the
+German, French, English and Italian languages. The English papers taken in
+here are the _Times, Courier_ and _Chronicle_. Of the French, the
+_Moniteur, Journal des Debats, Constitutionel, Journal du Commerce, Gazette
+de France_ and _Gazette de Lausanne_, and of the Italian the _Gazette di
+Milano, di Venezia, di Firenze_ and _di Lugano_. Every German newspaper is,
+I believe, to be found here. The Society lay in their stock of wine, which
+is of the best quality; good cooks and servants are kept. Dinners go
+forward from one to three. You dine _a la carte_ and pay the amount of what
+you call for to the waiters. Coffee, liqueurs and all sorts of refreshments
+are likewise to be had. Supper, likewise _a la carte_, goes forward between
+nine and eleven. The evening before supper may be employed, if you chuse,
+in cards, billiards, or reading. Very pleasant and useful acquaintances are
+made at the _Ressource_, since if a foreigner renders himself agreeable to
+the gentlemen who frequent this society, they generally propose taking him
+to their houses and introducing him to their families. After an
+introduction, you may go at any hour of the evening you please: but morning
+visits are not much in fashion, since the _toilette_ is seldom made till
+after dinner, which is always early in Germany. There is no getting dinner
+after three o'clock in any part of Dresden. Besides the _Ressource_ there
+are several other Clubs here, such as the _Harmonic_ and others. The public
+balls are given at the _Hotel de Pologne_ twice a week, viz., one for the
+_Noblesse_ and one for the _Bourgeoisie_. None of the female _Bourgeoisie_
+are admitted to the balls and societies of the _Noblesse_, and only such of
+the males as occupy posts or employments at Court or under Government such
+as _Koenigs-rath_, _Hof-rath_, or officers of the Army. It is therefore
+usual, when the Sovereign wishes to introduce a person of merit among the
+_Bourgeoisie_ into the upper circles, that he gives him the title of _Rath_
+or Counsellor; but this priviledge of being presentable at Court does not
+extend to their wives and daughters. All the Military officers, from
+whatever class of life they spring, have introduction _de jure_ into the
+balls and societies of the _Noblesse_, and are always in uniform. But when
+they attend the balls of the _Bourgeoisie_, it is the etiquette for them to
+wear plain clothes: at the balls of the _Bourgeoisie_, therefore, not an
+uniform is to be seen. I observed by far the prettiest women at the balls
+of the _Bourgeoisie_, and very many are to be found there who in education
+and accomplishments fully equal those of the _Noblesse_, and this is no
+small merit, for the women in Saxony of the higher classes are extremely
+well educated; most of them are proficient in music and are versed in
+French and Italian litterature. They seem amiable and goodnatured and by no
+means _minaudieres_, as Lady Mary Wortley Montague has rather unjustly
+termed them; for they appear to me to be the most frank, artless creatures
+I ever beheld, and to have no sort of _minauderie_ or _coquetterie_ about
+them. Beauty is the appanage of the Saxon women, hence the proverb in
+rhyme:
+
+ Darauf bin ich gegangen nach Sachsen,
+ Wo die schoenen Maedchen auf den Bauemen wachsen.
+
+In English:
+
+ Behold me landed now on Saxon ground,
+ Where lovely damsels on the trees are found.
+
+A taste for litterature is indeed general throughout the whole nation; and
+this city is considered as the Athens of Germany.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Nov. 8th.
+
+I have been at the theatre and witnessed the representation of a tragedy
+called _Die Schuld_, written by Adolphus Muellner. It is a most interesting
+piece, and the novelty of it has made a striking impression on me. It is
+written in the eight-footed trochaic metre, similar to that in which the
+Spanish tragedies are written. It hinges on a prophecy made by a Gipsey, in
+which the person to whom the prophecy is made, in endeavoring to avert it,
+hastens its accomplishment. The piece is full of interest and the
+versification harmonious. I have been twice at the Italian opera, where I
+saw the _Gazza Ladra_ and _Il Matrimonio secreto_. I came here with the
+idea of giving myself up entirely to the study of the German language; but
+such is the beauty of the country environing Dresden that, though winter
+has commenced I employ the greatest part of the day in long walks. For
+instance I have been to Pillnitz, which is on the right bank of the Elbe
+about seven miles from Dresden, ascending the river. The road is on the
+bank of the river the whole way. The Palace at Pillnitz is vast and well
+built. During a part of the year the Royal family reside there. Pillnitz
+will remain "damn'd to everlasting fame" as the place where the famous
+treaty was signed, the object of which was to put down the French
+Revolution, which Mr Pitt and the British ministry knew of and sanctioned,
+tho' they pretended ignorance of it and professed to have no desire to
+interfere with the affairs of France.
+
+Every thing pleases me at Dresden except the beds. I wish it were the
+fashion to use blankets and _edredons_ for the upper covering instead of
+the _lits de plumes_; for they are too heavy and promote rather too intense
+a perspiration, and if you become impatient of the heat, and throw them off
+you catch an intense cold. You know how partial I am to the Germans, and
+can even put up with their eternal smoking, tho' no smoker myself, but to
+their beds I shall never be reconciled. A German bed is as follows: a
+_paillasse_, over that a mattress, then a featherbed with a sheet fastened
+to it, and over that again another featherbed with a sheet fastened to it;
+and thus you lie between two featherbeds; but these are not always of
+sufficient length, and you are often obliged to coil up your legs or be
+exposed to have them frozen by their extending beyond the featherbeds; for
+the cold is very great during the winter.
+
+The more I see of the people here, the more I like them. The national
+character of the Germans is integrity, tho' sometimes cloaked under a rough
+exterior as in Bavaria and Austria; but here in Saxony it is combined with
+a suavity of manners that is very striking, for the Saxons are the Tuscans
+of Germany in point of politeness, and they are far more accomplished
+because they take more pains in cultivating their minds.
+
+A savant in Italy is a man who writes a volume about a coin, filled with
+hypotheses, when, with all his learning forced into the service, he proves
+nothing; and this very man is probably ignorant in the extreme of modern
+political history, and that of his own times, and has more pedantry than
+taste. Such a man is often however in Italy termed a _Portento_, but in
+Dresden and in most of the capitals of Germany where there are so many of
+science and deep research, a man must not only be well read in antiquities,
+but also well versed in political economy and in analysis before he can
+venture to give a work to the public. Latin quotations, unsupported by
+reason and philosophical argument will avail him nothing, for the German is
+a terrible _Erforscher_ and wishes to know the _what_, the _how_ and the
+_when_ of every thing; besides an Italian _savant_ is seldom versed in any
+other tongue than his own and the Latin, with perhaps a slight knowledge of
+French; whereas in Germany it is not only very common to find a knowledge
+of French, English, Italian, Latin and Greek united in the same person, but
+very many add Hebrew, Arabic and even Sanscrit to their stock of Philology.
+As a specimen for instance of German industry, I have seen, at the club of
+the _Ressource_, odes on the Peace in thirty-six different languages, and
+all of them written by native Saxons. This shows to what an extent
+philology is cultivated in Germany; indeed, it is quite a passion and a
+very useful one it is. I know that many people regard it as a loss of time,
+and say that you acquire only new words, and no new ideas; but I deny this.
+I maintain that every new language learned gives you new ideas, as it puts
+you at once more _au fait_ of the manners and customs of the people, which
+can only be thoroughly learned by reading popular authors in their original
+language: for there are several authors of the merit of whose style it is
+impossible to form an adequate idea in a translation, however correct and
+excellent it be. Indeed I wonder that the study of the German language is
+not more attended to in England, France, and Italy; but to the English,
+methinks, it is indispensable. All the customs and manners of Europe are
+taken from the German; all modern Europe bears the Teutonic stamp. We are
+all the descendants of the Teutonic hordes who subjugated the Roman Empire
+and changed the face of Europe; 'tis they who have given and laid down the
+grand and distinguishing feature between modern Europe and ancient Europe
+and Asia: I mean the respect paid to women. To what nation, I say, is due
+the chivalrous respect to women which is the surest sign of civilization,
+and which was unknown to the ancient Greeks and Romans, except to the
+Germans, who even in their most uncivilized state paid such veneration to
+their women as to consult them as oracles on all occasions and to admit
+them to their councils? Tacitus particularly mentions this; and speaking of
+the Germans of his time, he says, "They have an idea that there is
+something divine about a woman."[126] It is this feeling, handed down to us
+from our Teutonic ancestors, that contributes mainly to make the European
+so superior to all the Asiatic nations, where woman still remains a
+degraded being, and 'tis this feeling that gives to us the palm above all
+Greek and Roman glory. What are the modern European nations, the English,
+French, Italians, Switzers, even Spanish and Portuguese, but the
+descendants of these warlike Teutonic tribes who swept away the effeminate
+Romans from the face of the earth? and do we not see the Teutonic policy
+and usages, defective and degenerated as they sometimes are, the best
+safeguard of liberty against the insidious interpretation of the Roman law,
+which is founded on the pretended superiority of one nation, the inferred
+inferiority of all the rest?
+
+With regard to theatricals, I have witnessed the representation of a
+tragedy, lately published, called _Sappho_, by a young poet of the name of
+Grillparzer. This tragedy is strictly on the Greek model. Its versification
+in iambics is so beautiful that it is regarded as the triumph of the
+_Classics_ over the _Romantics_; and by this piece Grillparzer has proved
+the universality of his genius; for he wrote a short time ago a dramatic
+piece in the _romantic_ style and in the eight rhymed trochaic metre called
+_die Anhfrau_ (the ancestress) where supernatural agency is introduced.
+This I have read; it is a piece full of interest; still it was thought too
+_outre_ by the _Classiker_. It was supposed that this was the peculiar
+style of the author, and that he adopted it from inability to compose in
+the classic taste, when behold! by way of proving the contrary, he has
+given us a drama simple in its plot, where all the unities are preserved,
+and where the subject one would think was too well known to produce much
+interest; he has given, I say, to this piece (Sappho), from the extreme
+harmony of its versification and the pathos of the sentiments expressed
+therein, an effect which I doubt any tragedy of Euripides or Sophocles
+surpasses. The character of Sappho and her passion for Phaon; his
+indifference to her and attachment to the young Melitta, an attendant and
+slave of Sappho's, and Sappho throwing herself into the sea after uniting
+Phaon and Melitta, constitute the plot of the drama. But simple as the
+plot, and old as the story is, it excites the greatest interest, and never
+fails to draw tears from the audience. What can be more artless and
+pathetic, for instance, than these lines of the young Melitta when she
+regrets her expatriatioa:
+
+ Kein Busen schlaegt mlr bier in diesem Lande,
+ Und meine Freunden wohnen weit von hier.
+
+In English:
+
+ No bosom beats for me in this strange land,
+ And far from here my friends and parents dwell.
+
+I have no doubt that some of these days _Sappho_ will be translated into
+the idiom of modern Greece and acted in that country. The actress, who did
+the part of Sappho, gave it full effect, and the part of the young Melitta
+was fairly performed; but I did not approve of the acting of the performer
+who played Phaon. He overstepped the modesty of nature and the intention of
+the author; for he was in his gesture and manner grossly rude and insolent
+to poor Sappho, whereas, tho' his love to Melitta was paramount, he ought
+to have shown no ordinary struggle in stifling his gratitude to his
+benefactress Sappho.
+
+I admire the German word _Gebieterinn_ (mistress). It is majestic and
+harmonious, and the only word, in any modern language that I know of,
+poetic enough to render aptly the Greek word [Greek: Despoina].
+
+
+DRESDEN, Decr. 1st.
+
+I have been to visit the famous Gallery of paintings here; but you must not
+expect from me a description. I shall send you a catalogue. It would be
+endless to describe the various _chefs-d'oeuvre_ which are contained in
+this valuable collection. Dresden has always been considered as the
+Florence of Germany and has always been renowned for its Gallery of
+paintings; hence the almost innate taste of the Saxons for the _Beaux Arts_
+and the great encouragement given to them at all tunes by this Government.
+It is here and at Meissen that the best German is thought to be spoken,
+tho' Hanover disputes this prerogative with Dresden.
+
+I have been to see the antiquities and curiosities of the _Japanischer
+Palast_ (Palace of Japan), as it is called. In this Palace is a quantity of
+ancient armour and the most superb collection of porcelain I believe in
+Europe. The collection of precious stones is also immense; and I never in
+my life saw such a profusion of diamonds, emeralds, turquoises, sapphirs,
+amethysts and topazes. In this Museum are three statues found in
+Herculaneum on its first discovery or excavation, viz., an Athlete, an
+Esculapius, and a Venus. Here too, and from this circumstance, the Palace
+takes its name, is a collection of Japanese antiquities and ornaments,
+lacker work in gold and silver, which is unique in the world. From the
+Royal Library, a foreigner, on being recommended, may have at his own house
+all such books to read as can be replaced if lost or spoiled; but the
+manuscripts and scarce and valuable editions are not permitted to be taken
+out of the Library. Any person once admitted on recommendation may go to
+read in this Library at stated hours and may consult any book or manuscript
+he pleases on applying to the librarian.
+
+A person fond of music will be in a continual state of enjoyment at
+Dresden. Besides the fine music in the Royal Chapel, the band of the King's
+Guard is composed of first rate musicians, who attend regularly at Guard
+mounting and play for an hour together. There is also a band of music every
+evening during the summer months that plays in the gardens of the
+_Linkischer Bad_. Then there are various other places of recreation and
+amusement, at all of which musicians are in attendance; for a Saxon cannot
+enjoy his repast or his pipe without music and good music too to facilitate
+his digestion. There is a custom in Dresden that on the occasion of the
+death of a person the young choristers of the Cathedral are sent for to
+sing hymns, standing in a semi-circle round the door of the house of the
+defunct. These choristers are all dressed in black and their style of
+singing is melodious, solemn and impressive.
+
+Smoking is so prevalent here and in all parts of Germany that if you wish
+to denote one of the male sex, _smoker_ would be quite a synonymous word.
+Such is the passion for this enjoyment that even at the balls the young
+men, the moment they have finished the waltz, quit the hands of their
+partners and rush into another room in order to smoke; nor would the beauty
+of Venus nor the wit of Minerva be powerful enough to restrain the young
+German from giving way to his darling practise. Smoking tobacco has I think
+this visible effect, that it serves to calm all tumultuous passions, and
+what confirms me in this idea is, that most young Germans, in commencing
+life as adults, are full of enthusiastic and even exaggerated notions of
+liberty and equality. They are romantic to a degree that is difficult to be
+conceived, and seem to be restrained by no selfish or worldly ideas. This
+you would suppose would tend to render them rather turbulent subjects,
+under an autocratical government; but all this _Schwaermerey_ evaporates
+literally in smoke: they take to their pipe, and by degrees the fumes of
+tobacco cause all these lofty ideas to dissipate: the pipe becomes more and
+more necessary to their existence, and consoles them for their wrongs real
+or imaginary; and in three or four years they sit down contentedly to their
+several occupations, as strait-forward, painstaking, plodding men, quite
+satisfied to follow the routine chalked out for them, and either totally
+forget all ambitious views, or become too indolent to make any sacrifice to
+obtain them, and this _virtue comes from tobacco_!! The German Hippogriff
+becomes an Ox, dull and domestic, and treads out the corn placed before
+him, content to have his share thereof in peace and quietness.
+
+The German Governments, which are mild and paternal, are fully aware of
+this and allow the utmost liberty of speech; well knowing that, thanks to
+that friend and ally of Legitimacy, tobacco, the romantic visionary and
+somewhat refractory youth will subside into a tranquil _ganz alltaeglicher
+Mann_ and become totally averse to any innovation which demands the
+sacrifice of repose.
+
+The pipe which has this sedative effect on political effervescence, has a
+still stronger similar effect, it is said, on the passion of love; hence
+the German husbands are proverbially sluggish. But the ladies, none of whom
+smoke, preserve their romanticity during their whole lives, and would, if
+they had their choice, give their hands to foreigners, who are more
+attentive to them than their own countrymen.
+
+The young ladies here are, 'tis said, extremely romantic in their ideas of
+love and capable of the strongest attachment. They think that any thing
+should be pardoned to sincere passion. It has been related to me that some
+time ago a young man, who was devotedly attached to a girl, on the father
+refusing his consent to the marriage, stabbed the girl and then himself. An
+immense number of young ladies attended their funeral, to throw flowers
+over the grave of the two lovers. Assuredly the young man was only a
+noviciate in smoking.
+
+Everybody must, I think, admire the Saxon women. They are in general
+handsome and have fine shapes; they are warm hearted and affectionate; and
+they are almost universally well educated. Indeed the whole Saxon people
+are so amiable that foreigners find themselves so happy here that they are
+unwilling to quit the country. Very many form matrimonial attachments. In
+short, this people fully merit the epithet a celebrated English traveller
+(Sherlock)[127] has bestowed on them when he called them a _herrliches
+Volk_.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Jan. 8d, 1819.
+
+I have made an excursion to Meissen which lies on the same bank of the
+river with the old town of Dresden at a distance of twelve miles. As there
+is no road on the left bank of the river to Meissen, you must cross the
+river twice to arrive at it, viz., once at Neustadt and once at Meissen,
+the road being on the right bank. I put up at the _Hirsch_ (Stag), a very
+comfortable inn. I went to Meissen with a view of seeing the Russian
+contingent pass the Elbe on their return from France, which has been
+evacuated in consequence of the arrangement at Aix-la-Chapelle. They
+appeared a fine body of men, clothed _a la francaise_ and seemed in high
+spirits. They seem to have imbibed liberal ideas during their residence in
+France, for some of the officers who dined at the inn at Meissen spoke very
+freely on passing events.
+
+The return of the Saxon contingent is expected in Dresden in a day or two,
+and there will no doubt be a great deal of rejoicing among the military and
+their relations to meet their old comrades and friends; and potent
+libations of _Doppel Bier_ will no doubt be made. Meissen is said to be
+famous for the beauty of its women and the few that I saw in the streets
+did not contradict this reputation.
+
+
+DRESDEN, Jany. 5th, 1819.
+
+We have had several balls here. Waltzing is the only sort of dance in
+fashion at Dresden, excepting now and then a Polonaise.
+
+I have witnessed an interesting spectacle in the _Grosser Garten_. The pond
+or basin is completely frozen over, and a Russian Prince, Gallitzin, who is
+here, has fitted up a sort of _Montagnes Russes_ as they are called. Blocks
+of ice are placed on an inclined plane to the top of which you mount by
+means of a staircase; and then, seating yourself in a sort of sledge, you
+slide down the inclined plane with immense velocity. The Prince often
+persuades a lady to sit on this sleigh on his lap and descend together; and
+this no doubt serves to _break the ice_ of many an amorous intrigue. This
+construction of the Prince Gallitzin has contributed to fill the _Grosser
+Garten_ with the _beau monde_, every day from twelve to two o'clock; so
+that you see we are in no want of amusements at Dresden.
+
+The King frequently attends the theatre; he is a tall, fine looking man,
+and is usually dressed in the uniform of his Foot-Guards, which is scarlet
+faced with yellow. The poor King has taken much to heart the injustice with
+which he has been treated by the coalition, and no doubt will not easily
+forget the ill-bred and insolent letter of Castlereagh to the Congress,
+wherein he said that the King of Saxony deserved to lose his dominions for
+adhering to Napoleon. But how the King of Saxony could act otherwise I am
+at a loss to find: so little could he possibly deserve this treatment for
+adhering to Napoleon, that had his advice been taken in the year 1805, the
+French would never have been able to extend their conquests so far, nor to
+dictate laws to Germany. But Lord Castlereagh seems to have either never
+known or wilfully forgotten the anterior political conduct of Saxony. Had
+he been more versed in German affairs, or had studied with more accuracy
+the events passing before his eyes, it would have been a check upon his
+arrogance; but here was a genuine disciple of the Pitt school (that school
+of ignorance and insolence), who sets himself up as the moral regenerator
+of nations and as a distributor of provinces, while he is grossly ignorant
+of the political system of the country on whose destinies he pretends to
+decide so peremptorily. Had Castlereagh paid attention to what was going
+forward in Germany in 1805, he would have seen too that of all powers
+Prussia was the very _last_ who with any _shadow of justice_ could pretend
+to an indemnification at the expense of Saxony. In the year 1805, the King,
+then Elector of Saxony, strongly advised the Prussian Cabinet to forget its
+ancient rivalry and jealousy of Austria and to coalesce with the latter
+power, in resisting the encroachments of Napoleon, in order to prevent the
+latter from attempting the overthrow of the whole fabric of the
+constitution of the Holy Roman Empire, with the intricacy and fragility of
+which no prince in Germany was better acquainted than the Elector of
+Saxony. Prussia however was still reluctant to engage in the contest and
+gave no support whatever to Austria. Napoleon defeats the Austrians at
+Austerlitz and dictates peace. Six months after the Prussian Cabinet,
+excited by a patriotic but rash and ill-calculating party, has recourse to
+arms, not from any generous policy, but because she sees herself outwitted
+by Napoleon, who refuses to cede to her Hanover in perpetuity. Prussia
+begins the war and calls on Saxony, who always moved in her orbit, to join
+her. To the Elector of Saxony this war (in 1806) appeared then ill-timed
+and too late; but with that good faith, nevertheless, which invariably
+characterized him, he remained faithful to his engagement and furnished his
+quota of troops to Prussia. The Saxon troops fought nobly at the battle of
+Jena. This battle annihilates all the power of Prussia, and lays Saxony
+entirely at the mercy of the Conqueror; but Napoleon not only treats Saxony
+with moderation, but with rare generosity; he does not take from her a
+single village, but aggrandizes her and gives to her the Duchy of Warsaw
+and to her Sovereign the title of King. Saxony becomes in consequence a
+member of the confederation of the Rhine and is bound to support the
+Protector in all his wars offensive and defensive. The Russian war in 1812
+begins: every German state, Austria and Prussia in the number, furnishes
+its contingent of troops. The campaign is unsuccessful, the climate of
+Russia having annihilated the French Army, and Napoleon returns to Paris.
+Saxony is now exposed to invasion and harassed by the incursions of the
+Cossacks. The King of Saxony is perplexed in what manner to act, so as to
+ensure to his subjects that protection which was ever uppermost in his
+thoughts; feeling however with his usual sagacity that every thing would
+ultimately depend on the dispositions of Austria, he repairs himself to
+Prague, in order to have an interview with one of the Austrian ministers,
+and to sound that Cabinet. Austria however still vacillates and declines
+stating what her intentions are. Napoleon returns from Paris, defeats the
+Prussians and Russians at Bautzen and re-occupies all Saxony. He then
+writes to the King of Saxony to desire him to return immediately to his
+dominions and to fulfil his engagements. What was the King to do? Austria
+still refusing to declare herself, was he to sacrifice his crown and
+dominions uselessly to the vengeance of Napoleon, to please the Emperor of
+Russia and King of Prussia, who for aught he knew might patch up a peace
+the next day? and this was the more probable from their having been beaten
+at Bautzen, which circumstance also might with equal probability induce
+Austria to coalesce with, instead of against France. All the other members
+of the Confederation of the Rhine remained staunch to Napoleon and poured
+their contingents into Saxony; was he to be the only unfaithful ally and
+towards a Monarch who had always treated him with the strongest marks of
+attachment and regard? and when neither Russia nor Prussia were likely to
+give him the least assistance? He therefore returned to Dresden; and
+Napoleon took up his grand position the whole length of the Elbe, from the
+mountains of Bohemia to Hamburgh, thus covering the whole of Saxony with
+his army. Austria however at last comes forward to join the coalition.
+Fortune changes; the Saxon troops, tired of beholding their country the
+perpetual theatre of war and trusting to the generosity of the Allies, go
+over to them in the middle of a battle, and decide, thereby, the fate of
+the day at Leipzig. The King of Saxony is made a prisoner, and then he is
+punished for what he could not help. Why was he to be punished more than
+any other member of the Confederation of the Rhine? One would think that
+the seasonable defection of his troops at Leipzig should have induced the
+Allies to treat him with moderation. The other States of the Confederation
+did not abandon Napoleon until after he was completely beaten at Leipzig;
+and Austria refused to accede to the coalition until a _carte blanche_ was
+given her to help herself in Italy.
+
+Let every impartial man therefore review the whole of this proceeding and
+then say whether the King of Saxony, so proverbial for his probity, so
+adored by his subjects, deserved to be insulted by such an unfeeling letter
+as that of Castlereagh. No! the King of Saxony better deserves to reign
+than any King of them all. Would they had even a small share of his
+virtues! Another proof and a still stronger one of the great integrity and
+honor of this excellent Prince, is, that when Napoleon offered to mediatize
+in his favor the various ducal Houses in Saxony, such as Weimar, Gotha,
+Cobourg, etc., and to annex these countries to his dominions, he declined
+the offer. Would Prussia, Austria, or Hanover have been so scrupulous?
+
+The young ladies here, tho' well versed and delighting in various branches
+of litterature, cannot overcome that strong national propensity to tales
+and romances wherein the _terrific and supernatural_ abounds; in all their
+romances accordingly this taste prevails strongly; nay, even in some of the
+romances, where the scene is laid in later times, there is some such
+anachronism as the story of a spectre.
+
+I recollect reading a novel, the scene of which is laid in Italy about the
+time of the battle of Marengo, wherein a ghost is introduced who
+contributes mainly to the unravelling of the piece. A young lady here of
+considerable talent and of general information confessed to me, when I
+asked her, what subjects pleased her most in the way of reading, that
+nothing gave her so much delight as "_Geistergeschichten_." Lewis' romance
+of "_The Monk_" is a great favorite in Germany.[128] By the bye, his
+poetical tale of _Alonzo and Imogen_ is evidently taken from a similar
+subject in the _Volks-maehrchen_.
+
+The weather has set in very cold and the Elbe is nearly frozen over. It is
+impossible to go out of the house without a _Pelz_ or cloak lined with fur;
+for otherwise, on leaving a room heated by a stove, the effect of the cold
+is almost instantaneous and brings on an ague fit. This I attribute to the
+excessive heat kept up in the rooms and houses by the stoves. As smoking is
+so prevalent here, this contributes much also to keeping the body in a
+praeternatural heat and rendering it still more obnoxious to cold on
+removal from a room to the open air. It has been remarked by a medical
+author, in the Russian campaign in 1812, that the soldiers of the southern
+nations and provinces, viz., Provencaux, Gascons, Italians, Spaniards, and
+Portuguese, endured the cold much better and suffered less from it than the
+Germans and Hollanders. The reason is sufficiently obvious: the former live
+in the open air even in the middle of winter and seldom make use of a fire
+to warm themselves; whereas the Germans and Dutch live in an atmosphere of
+stove-heat and smoke and seldom like to stir abroad in the open air during
+winter, unless necessity obliges them. Hence they become half-baked, as it
+were; their nerves are unstrung, their flesh flabby and they become so
+chilly, as to suffer from the smallest exposure to the atmosphere. In the
+houses in Germany, on account of the stoves, the cold is never felt,
+whereas it is very severely in Italy and Spain where many of the houses
+have no fireplaces. On this account I prefer Germany as a winter residence,
+for I think there is no sensation so disagreeable as to feel cold in the
+house. In the open air I do not care a fig for it, for my cloak lined with
+bearskin protects me amply. The climate here in winter is a dry cold, which
+is much more salubrious and agreeable to me than the changeable, humid
+climate of Great Britain, where, though the cold is not so great, it is
+much more severely felt.
+
+
+[126] Tacitus, _Germania_, C, VIII.--ED.
+
+[127] Martin Sherlock (d. 1797), author of _Lettres d'un voyageur anglais_,
+ which were published in Paris 1779 and, the year after, in London.
+
+[128] Matthew Gregory Lewis, 1775-1818, published _Ambrosio or the Monk_ in
+ 1795.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+MARCH-APRIL 1819
+
+Journey from Dresden to Leipzig--The University of Leipzig--Liberal
+spirit--The English disliked in Saxony--The English Government hostile to
+liberty--Journey to Frankfort--From Frankfort to Metz and Paris--A.F.
+Lemaitre--_Bon voyage_ to the Allies--Return to England.
+
+I left Dresden on the 2nd March, 1819. A _Landkutsche_ conveyed me as far
+as Leipzig in a day and half, stopping the first night at Oschaly, where
+there is a good inn. At Leipzig I put up at the _Hotel de Baviere_ and
+remained five days. Leipzig is a fine old Gothic city. It is, as everybody
+knows, famous for its University and its Fair, which is held twice a year,
+in spring and in autumn, and which is the greatest mart for books perhaps
+in the world. The University of Leipzig and indeed all the Universities of
+Germany are in bad repute among the _Obscuranten_ and _eteignoirs_ of the
+day, on account of the liberal ideas professed by the teachers and
+scholars. In the University of Leipzig every thing may be learned by those
+who chuse to apply, but those who prefer remaining idle may do so, as there
+is less compulsion than at the English Universities. There is however such
+a national enthusiasm for learning, in all parts of Germany, that the most
+careless and ill-disposed youth would never be about to support the
+ridicule of his fellow students were he backward in obtaining prizes, but
+after all I have heard of the dissipation, lawlessness, and want of
+discipline at Leipzig, I can safely affirm that all these stories are
+grossly exaggerated: and I fancy there is little other dissipation going
+forward than amours with _Stubenmaedchen_. I do not hear of any drunkenness,
+gaming or horse racing; nor do the professors themselves, who ought to be
+the best judges of what is going on, complain of the insubordination of
+their pupils. But what I principally admire in this, and indeed in other
+German Universities, is that there are no distinctions of rank, such as
+gold tassels, etc., no servile attention paid to sprigs of nobility, as in
+the Universities in England, where the Heads of Colleges and Fellows are
+singularly condescending to the son of a Peer, a Minister, or a Bishop.
+Perfect equality prevails in Leipzig and the son of the proudest
+_Reichsgraf_ is allowed no more priviledges than the son of a barber; nor
+do the professors make the least difference between them. In fact, in spite
+of the vulgar belief in England respecting the _hauteur_ of the German
+_noblesse_ and the vassalage of the other classes, I must say, from
+experience, that the German nobility show far less _hauteur_ and have in
+general more really liberal ideas than most part of our English
+aristocracy, and a German burgher or shop-keeper would disdain to cringe
+before a nobleman as many shopkeepers, aye, and even gentry, are sometimes
+known to do in England. Another circumstance too proves on how much more
+liberal a footing Leipzig and other German Universities are than our
+English ones, which is, that in England none but those who profess the
+religion of the Church of England, or conform to its ritual, are admitted;
+but here all sects are tolerated and admitted, and all live in perfect
+harmony with each other. The students are at liberty to chuse their place
+of worship and the sermons that are preached in the Catholic as well as the
+Protestant churches are such as sensible men of whatever opinion might
+listen to with profit, and without being shocked by absurdities or
+intolerant ideas.
+
+Mysteries, theologic sophistry and politics are carefully avoided, and a
+pure morality, a simple theosophy, comprehensible to the meanest
+understanding, pervades these simple discourses. The consequence of this
+toleration and liberal spirit is that an union between the Lutheran and
+Calvinistic churches has been effected.
+
+I met a number of mercantile people at the _table d'hote_ at Leipzig in the
+_Hotel de Baviere_, and I entered a good deal into conversation with them;
+but when they discovered I was an Englishman, I could see a sudden coldness
+and restraint in their demeanour, for we are very unpopular in Germany,
+owing to the conduct of our Cabinet, and they have a great distrust of us.
+The Saxons complain terribly of our Government for sanctioning the
+dismemberment of their country and of the insolent letter of Castlereagh.
+It is singular enough that Saxony is the only country where English goods
+are allowed to be imported free of duty; but our great and good ally the
+King of Prussia (as these goods must pass thro' his territory) has imposed
+a tolerably heavy transit duty. I am glad of it; this is as it should be. I
+rejoice at any obstacles that are put to British commerce; I rejoice when I
+hear of our merchants suffering and I quite delight to hear of a
+bankruptcy. They, the English merchants, contributed with their gold to
+uphold the corrupt system of Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and
+liberticide wars. Yes! it is perfectly fit and proper that the despotic
+governments they have contributed to restore should make them feel their
+gratitude. If the French since their Revolution have not always fought for
+liberty, they have done so invariably for science; and wherever they
+carried their victorious arms, abuses were abolished, ameliorations of all
+kinds followed, and the arts of life were improved. Our Government since
+the accession of George III has never raised its arm except in favor of old
+abuses, to uphold despotism and unfair privileges, or to establish
+commercial monopoly. Our victories so far from being of beneficial effect
+to the countries wherein we gained them, have been their curse. We can
+interfere and be prodigal of money and blood to crush any attempt of the
+continental nations towards obtaining their liberty; but when it is
+necessary to intercede in favour of oppressed patriots, then we are told
+that we have no right to interfere with the domestic policy of other
+nations. We can send ships to protect and carry off in safety a worthless
+Royal family, as at Naples in 1799, but we can view with heartless
+indifference, and even complacency, the murders committed in Spain by the
+infamous Ferdinand and his severities against those to whom he owes his
+crown, all of whom had the strongest daim to our protection as having
+fought with us in the same cause and contributed to our success.
+
+The _Platz_ at Leipzig is large and here it is that the fair is held. The
+theatre is an elegant building and lies just outside one of the gates of
+the city. Innumerable shops of booksellers are here and it is astonishing
+at how cheap a rate printing in all languages is carried forward.
+
+There are some pleasant promenades in the environs of Leipzig; but this is
+not a time of the year to judge of the beauty of the country. I went,
+however, to view the house occupied by Napoleon on the eve of the battle of
+Leipzig. A monument is to be erected to the memory of Poniatowsky in the
+spot where he perished.
+
+I started from Leipzig on 7th March at eleven o'clock. I was five days en
+route from Leipzig to Frankfort, tho' the distance does not exceed
+forty-five German miles. I travelled in the diligence, but had I known that
+the arrangements were so uncomfortable, I should have preferred going in a
+_Landkutsche_, which would have made the journey in seven days and afforded
+me an opportunity of stopping every night to repose; whereas in the
+diligence, tho' they go _en poste_, they travel exceedingly slow and it is
+impossible to persuade the postillion to accelerate his usual pace. He is
+far more careful of his horses than of his passengers. This I however
+excuse; but it is of the frequent stoppages and bad arrangement of them
+that I complain. Instead of stopping at some town for one whole night or
+two whole nights out of the five, they stop almost at every town for three,
+four and five hours; so that these short stoppages do not give you time
+enough to go to bed and they are besides generally made in the day time or
+early in the morning and evening. We passed thro' the following cities and
+places of eminence, viz., Lutzen; the spot where Gustavus Adolphus was
+killed is close to the road on the left hand with a plain stone and the
+initials G.A. inscribed on it. Weimar is a very neat city and where I
+should like much to have staid; but I had only time to view the outside of
+the Palace and the _Stadthaus_. Erfurt and Gotha are both fine looking
+cities. In Gotha I had only time to see the outside of the _Residenz
+Schloss_ or Ducal Palace, which is agreeably situated on an eminence, and
+to remark in the _Neumarkt Kirche_ the portrait of Duke Bernard of Saxe
+Weimar and the monuments of the princes of that family. At Erfurt there is
+the tomb of a Count Gleichen who was made prisoner in the Holy Land, in the
+time of the Crusades, and was released by a Mahometan Princess on condition
+of his espousing her. The Count was already married in Germany and there he
+had left his wife; but such was his gratitude to the fair Musulmane, that
+he married her with the full consent of his German wife and they all three
+lived happily together. Fulda, where we stopped four hours, appears a fine
+city, and is situated on an eminence commanding a noble view of a very
+fertile and extensive plain. The Episcopal Palace and the churches are
+magnificent, and the general appearance of the town is striking. The
+Bishopric of Fulda was formerly an independent ecclesiastical state, but
+was secularised at the treaty of Luneville and now forms part of the
+territory of Hesse-Cassel.
+
+The _Feld-zeichen_ of Hesse-Cassel is green and red. After passing thro'
+Hanau, where we halted three hours, which gave me an opportunity of viewing
+the field of battle there, we proceeded to Frankfort and arrived there at
+twelve o'clock the 12th of March. I put up at the _Swan_ inn. In summer
+time the country about Fulda and in general between Fulda and Frankfort
+must be very pleasing from the variety of the features of the ground. We
+lived very well and very cheap on the road. The price of the diligence from
+Leipzig to Frankfort was eleven _Reichsthaler_.
+
+After remaining three days to repose at Frankfort I took my place to
+Mayence and from thence to Metz and Paris. In the diligence from Mayence
+and indeed all the way to Paris I found a very amusing society. There were
+two physicians and M. L[emaitre], a most entertaining man and of
+inexhaustible colloquial talent; for, except when he slept, he never ceased
+to talk. His conversation was however always interesting and entertaining,
+for he had figured in the early part of the French Revolution and was well
+known in the political and litterary world as the editor of a famous
+journal called _Le Bonhomme Richard_.[129]
+
+Metz is a large, well built and strongly fortified city. Verdun, thro'
+which we passed, became quite an English colony during the war from the
+number of _detenus_ of that nation who were compelled to reside there. At
+Epernay we drank a few bottles of Champagne and a toast was given by one of
+the company, which met with general applause. It was _Bon voyage_ to the
+Allies who have now finally evacuated France to the great joy of the whole
+nation, except of the towns where they were cantoned, where they
+contributed much towards enriching the shopkeepers and inhabitants.
+
+I remained in Paris six days and then proceeded to England.
+
+
+[129] _Le bonhomme Richard aux bonnes gens_ was not a "famous journal," as
+ only two numbers appeared in 1790 (M. Tourneux, _Bibliographie de
+ l'histoire de Paris pendant la Revolution_, vol. 11, p. 585, n. 10,
+ 511). The publisher, Antoine-Francois Lemaitre, whom Major Erye
+ mentions in this passage, was the author of some other revolutionary
+ pamphlets, e.g., _Lettres bougrement patriotiques_, etc.--ED.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Acheron, Lake.
+Adam, Major-General commands Light Brigade of General
+ Sir H. Clinton's division.
+Aix-la-Chapelle:
+ Hotel-de-Ville;
+ Cathedral;
+ relics of Charlemagne;
+ Napoleon's benefactions;
+ overbearing demeanour of Prussian soldiers;
+ Faro bank;
+ interesting Tyrolese girl;
+ baths.
+Albanot Villa Doria,
+ ancient monument.
+Albany, Countess of,
+ her claim to be the legitimate Queen of England;
+ Alfieri's attachment to.
+Alexandria: Austrian Government destroys fortifications of
+Alfieri: compared with Shakespeare, Schiller, and Voltaire,
+ monument erected to, by Canova;
+ his sonnet to Countess of Albany.
+Alsace-Lorraine: severance of, from France anticipated by Prussian
+ officers.
+Andernach: ruins of palace of Kings of Austrasia,
+ church containing embalmed body of Emperor Valentinian;
+ crossing of Rhine by Julius Caesar at.
+Angouleme, Duchesse d': temperament and religious fanaticism of.
+Antwerp: English families fly from Brussels to.
+Archenholz: historian of the Seven Years' War.
+Army of the Loire: exemplary conduct of, when disbanded.
+Arona: colossal statue of St Charles Borromeus at.
+Austria: fluctuations in the value of the paper currency of
+ Napoleon's policy as regarded.
+Avernus, Lake.
+
+Baciocchi, Princess Elise: sister of Napoleon and Sovereign of Lucca.
+Baffo, Venetian poet.
+Baiae: baths of Nero,
+ ruins of temples;
+ the Styx;
+ Elysian Fields.
+Belgium:
+ dislike to severance from France;
+ feeling towards Holland;
+ attachment to Napoleon;
+ preparations for the Campaign;
+ all inhabitants requisitioned for the repair of fortifications.
+Berlin: occupation of, after Jena,
+ excellent conduct of French troops of occupation;
+ excesses committed by troops of Rhenish Confederation;
+ insolent conduct of troops raised by Prince of Isenburg;
+ art treasures of, respected by French Republican Armies;
+ Unter den Linden;
+ Brandenburger Thor;
+ public buildings;
+ streets;
+ statues of great men in the Wilhelm Platz;
+ Churches;
+ the officers of the Army;
+ anecdote of Blucher.
+Bern: attempts in 1815 to regain possession of the Canton de Vaud.
+Bigottini: fine performance at the Grand Opera, Paris.
+Bingen: Mausethurm,
+ Bishop Hatto.
+Blacas, Vicomte de: at Court of Louis XVIII at Ghent.
+Blucher: popularity of, in London,
+ encourages the excesses of his soldiery;
+ nicknames of;
+ narrowly escapes capture at Ligny;
+ saves English at Hougoumont;
+ anecdote related of.
+Bohemia: dialect of.
+Bologna: arcades,
+ remarkable picture in gallery of Count Marescalchi;
+ leaning tower;
+ lady-professor of Greek;
+ Carbonari;
+ theatre;
+ women;
+ barbarous dialect.
+Bonn:
+ Electoral palace;
+ Roman antiquity;
+ legends of the Sieben Gebirge;
+ Das Heimliche Gericht.
+Bordas, M, politics of.
+Borgo San Donino, remarkable highway robbery at.
+Borromean Islands, splendid villa in Isola Bella.
+Bourbons, the: want of patriotism of the Duc de Berri,
+ their injudicious conduct;
+ Louis XVIII and Monsieur at Ghent;
+ amusing nickname of Louis XVIII;
+ dislike of the French people to;
+ their atrocious policy;
+ send emissaries to South of France from Coblentz;
+ unpopularity of;
+ fulsome adulation of;
+ cause removal of Sismondi from Geneva;
+ character of royal families of France, Spain, and Naples.
+Brussels: description of,
+ historical associations;
+ Place du Sablon, celebrated fountain;
+ theatres;
+ humanity of inhabitants of, to the wounded after Waterloo.
+
+Caffarelli, Statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Canova, works of, in St Peter's,
+ master-pieces in his atelier in Rome;
+ character of his genius.
+Capellen, Baron de,
+ proclamation of, to the inhabitants of Brussels.
+Capua,
+ thievishness of lower classes of.
+Carbonari, degrees and initiation,
+ object;
+ meaning of name.
+Castlereagh, Lord: insolent letter of, respecting King of Saxony.
+Catalani: singing of.
+Ceylon: Frye's travels in.
+Chalon: affection felt for Napoleon in,
+ Austrian officers in.
+Charleroy: defeat of Prussian army at.
+Chateaubriand: at the Court of Louis XVIII at Ghent.
+Chatham, Earl of: indignation of, at employment of Indians in the War
+ of Independence.
+Clermont: Peter the Hermit preaches First Crusade in,
+ petrifying well;
+ Swiss regiment;
+ anonymous denunciations;
+ method of cleansing town.
+Coblentz: monument to Marceau,
+ Bourbon intrigues with Jacobins and Brissotins.
+Code Napoleon: simplicity and advantages of, as compared with
+ English criminal law.
+Cologne: Cathedral,
+ the three kings;
+ the eleven thousand virgins;
+ etymology of the name;
+ Jean-Marie Farina.
+Cremona: Gothic buildings,
+ Campanile of Cathedral.
+Consalvi, Cardinal: character and abilities of.
+Campagna: limbs of quartered malefactors hung up on roadsides,
+ armed peasants;
+ the malaria.
+
+David: pictures by, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+De l'Epee, Abbe: founder of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_.
+Dessaix: Statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+De Watteville: disbands his army.
+Delille, Abbe, his poetry.
+De Boigne, General: his great services to Scindiah,
+ unjustly accused of treachery towards Tippoo Sahb.
+Didier: handed over by the Sardinian Government to the French,
+ his execution at Grenoble.
+Dijon: the town,
+ manufactories of.
+Dionigi, Mme: literary and artistic attainments of.
+D'Orfei, Mme.
+Dresden: The Japanischer Palast,
+ music in;
+ Prince Galhitzin;
+ the King;
+ bridge over the Elbe;
+ Marshal Davoust;
+ Grosser Garten;
+ Ressource Club;
+ etiquette;
+ title of "Rath";
+ theatres;
+ beds;
+ scholars.
+Duchesnois, Mlle: fine acting of.
+
+Egypt: striking testimony to the good done by the French in.
+Ehrenbreitstein: flying bridge,
+ great natural strength;
+ beauty of women of.
+Ellis, Col. Sir H.: perishes at Waterloo.
+Emigres, the:
+ incorrigibility of;
+ ingratitude to Napoleon;
+ their foolish expectations;
+ efforts to cause restoration of lands formerly theirs.
+Ens:
+ whirlpool;
+ the Waternixie.
+Erfurt: legend of Count Gleichen.
+Espinassy, General: republican principles of.
+Eton: principles instilled into boys at.
+Eustace, Mr: examples of his credulity and bigotry.
+
+Ferrara:
+ Hugo and Parisina;
+ the Po;
+ relics of Ariosto;
+ MSS of Ariosto, Tasso, Guarini;
+ Hospital of St Anna.
+Firmin: acting of.
+Fleurus: Prussian army defeated at.
+Florence:
+ the Duomo;
+ Battisterio;
+ il Sasso di Dante;
+ theatres;
+ public buildings;
+ statues;
+ Gallery;
+ Venus;
+ de Medici;
+ paintings and sculpture;
+ portraits of sovereigns;
+ Roman antiquities;
+ remarkable imitations in wax of human anatomy;
+ Ponte Vecchio;
+ street paving;
+ thickness of walls of houses;
+ Palazzo Pitti;
+ Canova's Venus;
+ Boboli Gardens;
+ Cascino;
+ beauty of the women;
+ Pegasus;
+ Italian fondness for gaudy colours;
+ Canova's monument to Alfieri;
+ Church of Santa Croce;
+ the Florentine Westminster Abbey;
+ academies;
+ La Crusca;
+ English travellers;
+ Lord Dillon;
+ story illustrating Florentine life.
+Fouche: complains of the conduct of the Allies.
+Frankfort:
+ Venus Vulgivaga;
+ Jews;
+ cathedral;
+ inauguration of Roman Caesars in the Roemer;
+ the Golden Bull;
+ portraits of the Emperors;
+ theatre;
+ adaptation of German language to music;
+ political opinion in;
+ dislike to Austria.
+French Revolution: worst excesses of, surpassed.
+
+Galileo: monument erected to, in church of Santa Croce.
+Gauthier, M.: exiled to Lausanne.
+Geneva: scenery,
+ Fort de l'Ecluse;
+ arcades;
+ J.J. Rousseau;
+ Calvin;
+ Servetus;
+ sentiments of Genevese towards Napoleon and the Revolution;
+ literary aptitude of Genevese;
+ attachment to their country;
+ the women;
+ French refugees refused an asylum in;
+ admitted into Helvetic Confederation.
+Genoa: the women of,
+ peculiarities of the streets;
+ ducal palace;
+ Columbus;
+ bridge of Carignano;
+ churches.
+Georges, Mlle: fine acting of,
+ her rendering of "Agrippina";
+ plays the part of "Clytemnestra," supported by her sister as "Iphigenie".
+Ghent: Court of Louis XVIII at.
+Girolamo, Signor: anecdote of.
+Godesberg: interesting ruins near.
+Granet: remarkable pictures by.
+Grassini: singing of.
+Grillparzer, author of the tragedy "Sappho".
+Grotto of Pausilippo.
+Grotto del Cane.
+Guerin: pictures by, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Guillotine, the.
+
+Helvetic Confederation: guaranteed by the Allied Powers in 1814,
+ Geneva admitted into.
+Herculaneum.
+Hockheim; Rhenish wines.
+Holland: feeling towards the House of Orange,
+ regret at loss of Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon.
+Hougoumont: Bulow and Blucher march to the assistance of the English at
+ devastation of.
+Hulin, General: cashiers a Prussian officer in the French service.
+
+India: Frye's travels in.
+Innspruck: the Hofkirche,
+ statues of kings and princes connected with Maximilian I.
+
+Kleber: statue of, in Palais du Luxembourg.
+Klingmann, Philipp: plot of his tragedy "Faust".
+
+Labedoyere: execution of.
+Lacoste: acts as Napoleon's guide at Waterloo.
+Lafayette: rebukes British Commissioner at the Conference.
+Lafond: acting of.
+Lafontaine, Augustus: comparison of works of, with the "Nouvelle Heloise"
+ of Rousseau.
+La Harpe, General: influences Emperor of Russia in favour of the Vaudois.
+Lamarque: sent by the Convention to arrest Dumouriez,
+ delivered over to the Austrians;
+ votes for Napoleon.
+Landshut: Church of St Martin at.
+Language: influence of, upon the poetry and plays of Italy, France,
+ England and Germany.
+Lausanne: steep ascents,
+ beauty of environs;
+ Republican principles of;
+ intolerant discourse of minister.
+Leipzig: Saxon troops go over to the Mies during the battle of,
+ the University;
+ unpopularity of the English in.
+Leghorn: Hebrew families in,
+ Don Felipe III;
+ Smollett's tomb.
+Liege: situation of,
+ coal-pits near;
+ commerce with Holland;
+ fortifications;
+ destroyed by Joseph II.
+Linz: beauty of the women,
+ curious incident;
+ learned innkeepers.
+Lodi: interesting model in the Hotel des Invalides of battle of.
+Louvre: works of art in,
+ stripping of, by the Allies.
+Lucca: female servants,
+ the amoroso;
+ Dante's mountain.
+Lyons: buildings,
+ scenery;
+ feelings towards Napoleon;
+ character of inhabitants;
+ manufactures.
+
+Maastricht: situation,
+ Montagne de St Pierre.
+Machiavelli: entombed in church of Santa Croce.
+Macon: quai,
+ wine;
+ grisettes.
+Maffei: his "Polyphonte" compared with that of Voltaire.
+Maitland, Captain: Napolean surrenders to.
+Mantua: situation,
+ Cathedral;
+ monuments of the Gonzagas;
+ the T palace and gardens.
+Marengo: the Battle of,
+ Commemoration column thrown down.
+Maria Louisa: ordered to quit papal territory,
+ enthusiastic reception of, at Bologna;
+ victim of a strange theft.
+Mars, Mlle: graceful acting of.
+Massieu: pupil of the Abbe Sicard.
+Mayence: Cathedral,
+ Citadel.
+Michel Angelo: anecdote of.
+Milan: _Teatro della Scala_,
+ the _Duomo_;
+ the women of;
+ dialect;
+ the _Zecca_;
+ palace;
+ Ambrosian Library;
+ hospital;
+ _Teatro Olimpico_;
+ Porta del Sempione;
+ Italian comedy and audiences;
+ Teatro Girolamo;
+ Milanese twang;
+ ballet;
+ acting of La Pallerini.
+Mittenwald: great raft,
+ interesting journey.
+Moelk: tradition of the Devil's Wall,
+ ruins of Castle of Dierenstein;
+ Richard Coeur de Lion.
+Mont Cenis: description of the Chaussee.
+Mont St. Jean: dreadful sight on plateau of.
+Montefiascone: story of the _Vino d'Est_.
+Morice, Colonel: death at Waterloo.
+Munich: the King,
+ national theatre;
+ social life in;
+ female head-dress.
+Murat: Italian opinion of.
+
+Namur: situation of,
+ Citadel demolished by Joseph II;
+ complaints against.
+Prussian soldiery.
+Napoleon: takes tribute of works of art from vanquished Governments,
+ calumniated by the _emigres_;
+ unjust aspersions on;
+ narrow escape from capture;
+ confident of success before Waterloo;
+ constructs Chaussee of Mont Cenis.
+Naples:
+ life of a man of fashion in;
+ Etruscan vases and papyri in museum;
+ theatres;
+ _Pulcinello_;
+ social advantages;
+ lazzaroni;
+ dialect;
+ effect of general ignorance.
+Nelson, Lord: conduct towards Caraccioli,
+Neuwied: University of.
+Ney, Marshall: Wellington and Emperor of Russia refuse to interfere
+ in favour of
+
+Padua:
+ University;
+ Church of St Anthony;
+ Palazzo della Giustizia;
+ tomb of Livy.
+Paris: Louis XVIII in,
+ Kotzebue on the _Palais Royal_;
+ Cafe Montausier;
+ the Louvre;
+ statues and paintings collected by the French Government;
+ productions at the Grand Opera;
+ Column of the _Place Vendome_;
+ Gardens of the Tuileries;
+ Chamber of Deputies;
+ the _Invalides_;
+ models of the fortresses of France;
+ Picture Gallery of the Palais du Luxembourg;
+ frequency of quarrels between French and Prussian officers in the;
+ _Palais Royal_;
+ behaviour of English officers in;
+ masterpieces performed in the _Theatre francais_;
+ Ney shot in the Gardens of the Luxembourg.
+Parma: "L'Amfiteatro Farnese",
+ paintings;
+ birthplace of Cassius.
+Passau: junction of the Danube, Inn and Illst.
+Perugia.
+Pescia,
+ advantages of living in.
+Picton, Lieut-Genl Sir T.: perishes at Waterloo.
+Piedmont: character of the lower classes of.
+Pillnitz:
+ the palace;
+ Treaty of.
+Pisa.
+Pitt: credited with the invention of the sinking fund.
+Pius VII: character and virtues of.
+Pompeii:
+ amphitheatre;
+ houses;
+ Temple of Isis;
+ Praetorium;
+ antiquities removed to Museum of Portici.
+Pontine Marshes.
+Prague: situation,
+ bridge over the Mulda;
+ remarkable statue;
+ Jews;
+ palaces of the Wallensteins and Colloredos;
+ St John Nepomucene;
+ Joseph II's ingenious method of extorting money from the Jews;
+ Catalani;
+ story of the Duchess Libussa.
+
+Rafaelli: mosaic work of.
+Rho: ancient tree.
+Rome: censorship of books at the Dogana,
+ Coliseum;
+ Arch of Constantine;
+ _Via Sacra_--excavations;
+ Tarpeian Rock;
+ Capitol;
+ St Peter's;
+ anecdote of Michel Angelo;
+ statue of St Peter;
+ masterpieces of sculpture in Capitoline Museum;
+ Transteverini;
+ effect of the settling of foreign artists in;
+ Santa Maria Maggiore;
+ Church of St John Lateran;
+ Egyptian obelisk;
+ La Scala Santa;
+ Quirinal;
+ fountains;
+ Column of Trajan;
+ baths of Diocletian;
+ theatres;
+ masterpieces of art in the Vatican Museum;
+ statue of Jupiter Capitolinus;
+ stanze di Rafaello;
+ Appian Road;
+ social life in;
+ the _Avvocati_;
+ Papal Government;
+ post office defalcations;
+ the Carnival;
+ races in the Corso;
+ masquerades;
+ Sovereigns and persons of distinction living in Rome in 1818;
+ Easter in;
+ Swiss Guard;
+ Noble Guard;
+ papal benediction;
+ illumination of St Peter's;
+ fireworks from Castle of St Angelo;
+ the brigand Barbone;
+ his wife.
+
+Savoy: character of inhabitants of.
+Schoenbrunn: anecdote of Napoleon's son.
+Schuyler, General: his reproof of General Burgoyne.
+Scindiah: career of.
+Sgricci, Signor: his genius for improvisation.
+Sicard, Abbee; director of the Institution of the _Sourds-Muets_,
+eulogises Sir Sidney Smith.
+Sienna: cathedral,
+ Piccolomini monument;
+ dialect.
+Simplon: road over the,
+ Chaussee;
+ _maisons de refuge_.
+Sismondi,
+ the historian banished from Geneva.
+Smith, Lucius F.: friend of De Boigne.
+Smith, Sir Sidney: his eulogy of the Abbe Sicard.
+Spoleto: ruins of ancient buildings.
+St Cloud: favourite residence of Napoleon.
+St Eustatius: pillaged by Admiral Rodney.
+St Germain: depot for articles plundered by Prussian officers.
+St Helena: injustice of Napoleon's banishment to.
+Stewart, Lord: conduct of, at Conference of French Commissioners
+ with the Allies.
+
+Taddei, Rosa: her talent for improvisation.
+Talma, his ailing at the Theatre Francais.
+Thorwaldsen: character of his genius.
+Tivoli: the Villa d'Este,
+ Adrian's Villa.
+Toelz: remarkable groups of figures in wood, representing
+ history of Christ.
+Tournay,
+ citadel of.
+Trevoux: scenery on the road between Macon and,
+ hotel-keeper's beautiful daughter.
+Turin: Chapelle du Saint Suaire,
+ remarkable works of art in;
+ the King of Sardinia.
+Tuscany: contrast with papal dominions,
+ pronunciation;
+ peasantry;
+ fondness of Tuscan women for dress;
+ feeling towards Napoleon in;
+ character of the people;
+ house of Americo Vespucci.
+Tyrol, the: general description of,
+ dress of the peasant women.
+
+Valais: cretins of.
+Vaud, Canton de: character of inhabitants of,
+ gratitude to France;
+ democratic spirit;
+ La Harpe;
+ defends its independence;
+ hatred of French Royalists to.
+Velino: remarkable cascade.
+Venice: Canale Grande,
+ Rialto;
+ palaces of great families;
+ the Merceria;
+ water-fete;
+ Piazza di San Marco;
+ Church of St Mark;
+ Campanile;
+ variety of costumes in;
+ dialect;
+ social life in;
+ Doge's palace;
+ theatres;
+ gondolas.
+Verbruggen, H.: work of, in church of St Gudule, Brussels.
+Verona: amphitheatre,
+ Palladio;
+ Scala family;
+ social advantages in.
+Versailles: magnificence of.
+"Vertraute Briefe" the.
+Vesuvius: eruptions,
+ lava.
+Vicenza.
+Vienna: Art treasures of, respected by French Republican armies,
+ great raft;
+ streets;
+ Cathedral;
+ Hofburg;
+ Congress of;
+ Wechselbank;
+ Belvedere Palace;
+ Prater;
+ theatres.
+Visconte, Galeazzo: builds church of the Certosa.
+Volnais, Mlle: Acting of.
+Voltaire: his play, "Merope",
+ his benefactions to Ferney;
+ relics of;
+ portraits of contemporaries in his chateau.
+
+Walker, Adam: his lectures to Etonians stopped.
+Wardle, Col.: republican principles of,
+ anonymous denunciation of.
+Waterloo: French officer's remarks on.
+Wellington: his confidence in the result of the campaign,
+ gallantry of;
+ checks frequency of corporal punishment in the army.
+Wilson, Maj.-Genl: accompanies Frye on a tour through the theatre of War.
+Wilson, Sir R.: his charges against Napoleon.
+Wirion: removed from office by Napoleon.
+
+York, Duke of,
+ opposes frequent corporal punishment in the Army.
+
+Zedera, Chevalier: political dispute with Genevese,
+ his journey with Frye to Italy;
+ his parting with Frye.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo: Reminiscences of
+European Travel 1815-1819, by Major W. E Frye
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