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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Visit to Iceland</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Visit to Iceland, by Ida Pfeiffer</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Visit to Iceland, by Ida Pfeiffer
+
+
+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: Visit to Iceland
+ and the Scandinavian North
+
+
+Author: Ida Pfeiffer
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 7, 2007 [eBook #1894]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VISIT TO ICELAND***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1853 Ingram, Cooke, and Co. edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@pglaf.org; second proof by Mike Ruffell.</p>
+<h1>VISIT TO ICELAND<br />
+<span class="smcap">and the</span><br />
+SCANDINAVIAN NORTH</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">translated from the
+german of</span><br />
+MADAME IDA PFEIFFER.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">with</span><br />
+Numerous Explanatory Notes<br />
+<span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+EIGHT TINTED ENGRAVINGS.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">to which are
+added</span><br />
+AN ESSAY ON ICELANDIC POETRY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">from the french of m. bergmann</span>;<br />
+A TRANSLATION OF THE ICELANDIC POEM THE VOLUSPA;<br />
+AND A BRIEF SKETCH OF ICELANDIC HISTORY.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Second Edition.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
+INGRAM, COOKE, AND CO.<br />
+1853</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/titleb.jpg">
+<img alt="Pictorial title page" src="images/titles.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h2>ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION</h2>
+<p>The success which attended the publication in this Series of Illustrated
+Works of <i>A Woman&rsquo;s Journey round the World</i>, has induced the
+publication of the present volume on a country so little known as Iceland,
+and about which so little recent information exists.</p>
+<p>The translation has been carefully made, expressly for this Series, from
+the original work published at Vienna; and the Editor has added a great
+many notes, wherever they seemed necessary to elucidate the text.</p>
+<p>In addition to the matter which appeared in the original work, the
+present volume contains a translation of a valuable Essay on Icelandic
+poetry, by M. Bergmann; a translation of an Icelandic poem, the
+&lsquo;V&ouml;lusp&acirc;;&rsquo; a brief sketch of Icelandic History; and
+a translation of Schiller&rsquo;s ballad, &lsquo;The Diver,&rsquo; which is
+prominently alluded to by Madame Pfeiffer in her description of the
+Geysers. <a name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1"
+class="citation">[1]</a></p>
+<p>The Illustrations have been printed in tints, so as to make the work
+uniform with the <i>Journey round the World</i>.</p>
+<p>London, August 1, 1852.</p>
+<h2>AUTHOR&rsquo;S PREFACE</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Another journey&mdash;a journey, moreover, in regions which every
+one would rather avoid than seek.&nbsp; This woman only undertakes these
+journeys to attract attention.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first journey, for a woman <span class="smcap">alone</span>,
+was certainly rather a bold proceeding.&nbsp; Yet in that instance she
+might still have been excused.&nbsp; Religious motives may perhaps have
+actuated her; and when this is the case, people often go through incredible
+things.&nbsp; At present, however, we can see no just reason which could
+excuse an undertaking of this description.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, and perhaps more harshly still, will the majority judge me.&nbsp;
+And yet they will do me a grievous wrong.&nbsp; I am surely simple and
+harmless enough, and should have fancied any thing in the world rather than
+that it would ever be my fate to draw upon myself in any degree the notice
+of the public.&nbsp; I will merely indicate, as briefly as may be, my
+character and circumstances, and then I have no doubt my conduct will lose
+its appearance of eccentricity, and seem perfectly natural.</p>
+<p>When I was but a little child, I had already a strong desire to see the
+world.&nbsp; Whenever I met a travelling-carriage, I would stop
+involuntarily, and gaze after it until it had disappeared; I used even to
+envy the postilion, for I thought he also must have accomplished the whole
+long journey.</p>
+<p>As I grew to the age of from ten to twelve years, nothing gave me so
+much pleasure as the perusal of voyages and travels.&nbsp; I ceased,
+indeed, to envy the postilions, but envied the more every navigator and
+naturalist.</p>
+<p>Frequently my eyes would fill with tears when, having ascended a
+mountain, I saw others towering before me, and could not gain the
+summit.</p>
+<p>I made several journeys with my parents, and, after my marriage, with my
+husband; and only settled down when it became necessary that my two boys
+should visit particular schools.&nbsp; My husband&rsquo;s affairs demanded
+his entire attention, partly in Lemberg, partly in Vienna.&nbsp; He
+therefore confided the education and culture of the two boys entirely to my
+care; for he knew my firmness and perseverance in all I undertook, and
+doubted not that I would be both father and mother to his children.</p>
+<p>When my sons&rsquo; education had been completed, and I was living in
+peaceful retirement, the dreams and aspirations of my youth gradually awoke
+once more.&nbsp; I thought of strange manners and customs, of distant
+regions, where a new sky would be above me, and new ground beneath my
+feet.&nbsp; I pictured to myself the supreme happiness of treading the land
+once hallowed by the presence of our Saviour, and at length made up my mind
+to travel thither.</p>
+<p>As dangers and difficulties rose before my mind, I endeavoured to wean
+myself from the idea I had formed&mdash;but in vain.&nbsp; For privation I
+cared but little; my health was good and my frame hardy: I did not fear
+death.&nbsp; And moreover, as I was born in the last century, I could
+travel <span class="smcap">alone</span>.&nbsp; Thus every objection was
+overcome; every thing had been duly weighed and considered.&nbsp; I
+commenced my journey to Palestine with a feeling of perfect rapture; and
+behold, I returned in safety.&nbsp; I now feel persuaded that I am neither
+tempting Providence, nor justly incurring the imputation of wishing to be
+talked about, in following the bent of my inclinations, and looking still
+further about me in the world I chose Iceland for my destination, because I
+hoped there to find Nature in a garb such as she wears nowhere else.&nbsp;
+I feel so completely happy, so brought into communion with my Maker, when I
+contemplate sublime natural phenomena, that in my eyes no degree of toil or
+difficulty is too great a price at which to purchase such perfect
+enjoyment.</p>
+<p>And should death overtake me sooner or later during my wanderings, I
+shall await his approach in all resignation, and be deeply grateful to the
+Almighty for the hours of holy beauty in which I have lived and gazed upon
+His wonders.</p>
+<p>And now, dear reader, I would beg thee not to be angry with me for
+speaking so much of myself; it is only because this love of travelling does
+not, according to established notions, seem proper for one of my sex, that
+I have allowed my feelings to speak in my defence.</p>
+<p>Judge me, therefore, not too harshly; but rather grant me the enjoyment
+of a pleasure which hurts no one, while it makes me happy.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">THE AUTHOR.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<p>In the year 1845 I undertook another journey; <a name="citation2"></a><a
+href="#footnote2" class="citation">[2]</a> a journey, moreover, to the far
+North.&nbsp; Iceland was one of those regions towards which, from the
+earliest period of my consciousness, I had felt myself impelled.&nbsp; In
+this country, stamped as it is by Nature with features so peculiar, as
+probably to have no counterpart on the face of the globe, I hoped to see
+things which should fill me with new and inexpressible astonishment.&nbsp;
+How deeply grateful do I feel to Thee, O Thou that hast vouchsafed to me to
+behold the fulfilment of these my cherished dreams!</p>
+<p>The parting from all my dear ones had this time far less bitterness; I
+had found by experience, that a woman of an energetic mind can find her way
+through the world as well as a man, and that good people are to be met with
+every where.&nbsp; To this was added the reflection, that the hardships of
+my present voyage would be of short duration, and that five or six months
+might see me restored to my family.</p>
+<p>I left Vienna at five o&rsquo;clock on the morning of the tenth of
+April.&nbsp; As the Danube had lately caused some devastations, on which
+occasion the railroad had not entirely escaped, we rode for the first four
+miles, as far as Florisdorf, in an omnibus&mdash;not the most agreeable
+mode of travelling.&nbsp; Our omnibuses are so small and narrow, that one
+would suppose they were built for the exclusive accommodation of
+consumptive subjects, and not for healthy, and in some cases portly
+individuals, whose bulk is further increased by a goodly assemblage of
+cloaks, furs, and overcoats.</p>
+<p>At the barriers a new difficulty arose.&nbsp; We delivered up our
+pass-warrants (<i>passirscheine</i>) in turn, with the exception of one
+young man, who was quite astounded at the demand.&nbsp; He had provided
+nothing but his passport and testimonials, being totally unaware that a
+pass-warrant is more indispensable than all the rest.&nbsp; In vain did he
+hasten into the bureau to expostulate with the officials,&mdash;we were
+forced to continue our journey without him.</p>
+<p>We were informed that he was a student, who, at the conclusion of term,
+was about to make holiday for a few weeks at his parents&rsquo; house near
+Prague.&nbsp; Alas, poor youth! he had studied so much, and yet knew so
+little.&nbsp; He had not even an idea of the overwhelming importance of the
+document in question.&nbsp; For this trifling omission he forfeited the
+fare to Prague, which had been paid in advance.</p>
+<p>But to proceed with my journey.</p>
+<p>At Florisdorf a joyful surprise awaited me.&nbsp; I met my brother and
+my son, who had, it appears, preceded me.&nbsp; We entered the train to
+proceed in company to Stockerau, a place between twelve and thirteen miles
+off; but were obliged to alight halfway, and walk a short distance.&nbsp;
+The Embankment had given way.&nbsp; Luckily the weather was favourable,
+inasmuch as we had only a violent storm of wind.&nbsp; Had it rained, we
+should have been wetted to the skin, besides being compelled to wade
+ankle-deep in mud.&nbsp; We were next obliged to remain in the open air,
+awaiting the arrival of the train from Stockerau, which unloaded its
+freight, and received us in exchange.</p>
+<p>At Stockerau I once more took leave of my companions, and was soon
+securely packed in the post-carriage for transmission.</p>
+<p>In travelling this short distance, I had thus entered four carriages; a
+thing sufficiently disagreeable to an unencumbered person, but infinitely
+more so to one who has luggage to watch over.&nbsp; The only advantage I
+could discover in all this was, that we had saved half an hour in coming
+these seventeen miles.&nbsp; For this, instead of 9 fl. 26 kr. from Vienna
+to Prague, we paid 10 fl. 10 kr. from Stockerau to Prague, without
+reckoning expense of omnibus and railway.&nbsp; It was certainly a
+dearly-bought half-hour. <a name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3"
+class="citation">[3]</a></p>
+<p>The little town of Znaim, with its neighbouring convent, is situated on
+a large plain, extending from Vienna to Budwitz, seventeen miles beyond
+Znaim; the monotony of the view is only broken here and there by low
+hills.</p>
+<p>Near Schelletau the scenery begins to improve.&nbsp; On the left the
+view is bounded by a range of high hills, with a ruined castle, suggestive
+of tragical tales of centuries gone by.&nbsp; Fir and pine forests skirt
+the road, and lie scattered in picturesque groups over hill and dale.</p>
+<p>April 11th.</p>
+<p>Yesterday the weather had already begun to be ungracious to us.&nbsp; At
+Znaim we found the valleys still partly covered with snow, and the fog was
+at times so thick, that we could not see a hundred paces in advance; but
+to-day it was incomparably worse.&nbsp; The mist resolved itself into a
+mild rain, which, however, lost so much of its mildness as we passed from
+station to station, that every thing around us was soon under water.&nbsp;
+But not only did we ride through water, we were obliged to sit in it
+also.&nbsp; The roof of our carriage threatened to become a perfect sieve,
+and the rain poured steadily in.&nbsp; Had there been room for such a
+proceeding, we should all have unfurled our umbrellas.</p>
+<p>On occasions like these, I always silently admire the patience of my
+worthy countrymen, who take every thing so good-humouredly.&nbsp; Were I a
+man, I should pursue a different plan, and should certainly not fail to
+complain of such carelessness.&nbsp; But as a woman, I must hold my peace;
+people would only rail at my sex, and call it ill-humoured.&nbsp; Besides,
+I thanked my guardian-angel for these discomforts, looking upon them as a
+preparation for what was to befall me in the far North.</p>
+<p>Passing several small towns and villages, we at length entered the
+Bohemian territory, close behind Iglau.&nbsp; The first town which we saw
+was Czaslau, with its large open square, and a few neat houses; the latter
+provided with so-called arbours (or <i>verandahs</i>), which enable one to
+pass round the square dry-footed, even in the most rainy weather.</p>
+<p>Journeying onwards, we noticed the fine cathedral and town of
+Kuttenberg, once famous for its gold and silver mines. <a
+name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4" class="citation">[4]</a>&nbsp;
+Next comes the great tobacco-manufactory of Sedlitz, near which we first
+see the Elbe, but only for a short time, as it soon takes another
+direction.&nbsp; Passing the small town of Collin, we are whirled close by
+the battle-field where, in the year 1757, the great King Frederick paid his
+score to the Austrians.&nbsp; An obelisk, erected a few years since to the
+memory of General Daun, occupies a small eminence on the right.&nbsp; On
+the left is the plain of Klephorcz, where the Austrian army was drawn up.
+<a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5" class="citation">[5]</a></p>
+<p>At eleven o&rsquo;clock on the same night we reached</p>
+<h3>PRAGUE.</h3>
+<p>As it was my intention to pursue my journey after two days, my first
+walk on the following morning was to the police-office, to procure a
+passport and the all-important pass-warrant; my next to the custom-house,
+to take possession of a small chest, which I had delivered up five days
+before my departure, and which, as the expeditor affirmed, I should find
+ready for me on my arrival at Prague. <a name="citation6"></a><a
+href="#footnote6" class="citation">[6]</a>&nbsp; Ah, Mr. Expeditor! my
+chest was not there.&nbsp; After Saturday comes Sunday; but on Sunday the
+custom-house is closed.&nbsp; So here was a day lost, a day in which I
+might have gone to Dresden, and even visited the opera.</p>
+<p>On Monday morning I once more hastened to the office in anxious
+expectation; the box was not yet there.&nbsp; An array of loaded wagons
+had, however, arrived, and in one of these it might be.&nbsp; Ah, how I
+longed to see my darling little box, in order that I might&mdash;<i>not</i>
+press it to my heart, but unpack it in presence of the excise officer!</p>
+<p>I took merely a cursory glance at Prague, as I had thoroughly examined
+every thing there some years before.&nbsp; The beautiful
+&ldquo;Graben&rdquo; and Horse-market once more excited my
+admiration.&nbsp; It was with a peculiar feeling that I trod the old
+bridge, from which St. John of Nepomuk was cast into the Moldau for
+refusing to publish the confession of King Wenceslaus&rsquo; consort. <a
+name="citation7"></a><a href="#footnote7" class="citation">[7]</a>&nbsp; On
+the opposite bank I mounted the Hradschin, and paid a visit to the
+cathedral, in which a large sarcophagus, surrounded and borne by angels,
+and surmounted by a canopy of crimson damask, is dedicated to the memory of
+the saint.&nbsp; The monument is of silver, and the worth of the metal
+alone is estimated at 80,000 florins.&nbsp; The church itself is not
+spacious, but is built in the noble Gothic style; the lesser altars,
+however, with their innumerable gilded wooden figures, look by contrast
+extremely puny.&nbsp; In the chapel are many sarcophagi, on which repose
+bishops and knights hewn in stone, but so much damaged, that many are
+without hands and feet, while some lack heads.&nbsp; To the right, at the
+entrance of the church, is the celebrated chapel of St. Wenceslaus, with
+its walls ornamented with frescoes, of which the colours and designs are
+now almost obliterated.&nbsp; It is further enriched with costly
+stones.</p>
+<p>Not far from the cathedral is situated the palace of Count Czernin, a
+building particularly favoured with windows, of which it has one for every
+day in the year.&nbsp; I was there in an ordinary year, and saw 365; how
+they manage in leap-year I do not know.&nbsp; The view from the belvedere
+of this palace well repays the observer.&nbsp; It takes in the old and new
+town, the noble river with its two bridges (the ancient venerable-looking
+stone structure, and the graceful suspension-bridge, six hundred paces
+long), and the hills round about, clothed with gardens, among which appear
+neat country-houses.</p>
+<p>The streets of the &ldquo;Kleinseite&rdquo; are not particularly
+attractive, being mostly tortuous, steep, and narrow.&nbsp; They contain,
+however, several remarkable palaces, among which that of Wallenstein Duke
+of Friedland stands pre-eminent. <a name="citation8"></a><a
+href="#footnote8" class="citation">[8]</a></p>
+<p>After visiting St. Nicholas&rsquo; Church, remarkable for the height of
+its spire and its beautifully arched cupola, I betook myself to
+Wimmer&rsquo;s gardens, and thence to the &ldquo;Bastei,&rdquo; a place of
+public resort with the citizens of Prague.</p>
+<p>I could now observe the devastation caused by the rising of the water
+shortly before my arrival.&nbsp; The Moldau had overstepped its banks in so
+turbulent a manner, as to carry along with it several small houses, and
+even a little village not far from Prague, besides damaging all the
+dwellings upon its banks.&nbsp; The water had indeed already fallen, but
+the walls of the houses were soaked through and through; the doors had been
+carried away, and from the broken windows no faces looked out upon the
+passers-by.&nbsp; The water had risen two feet more than in 1784, in which
+year the Moldau had also attained an unusual height.</p>
+<p>From the same tower of observation, I looked down upon the great open
+space bought a few years ago, and intended to be occupied by the termini of
+the Vienna and Dresden railroads.&nbsp; Although several houses were only
+just being pulled down, and the foundations of but few buildings were laid,
+I was assured that within six months every thing would be completed.</p>
+<p>I have still to mention a circumstance which struck me during my morning
+peregrinations, namely, the curious method in which milk, vegetables, and
+other provisions are here brought to town.&nbsp; I could have fancied
+myself transported to Lapland or Greenland, on meeting every where carts to
+which two, three, or four dogs were harnessed.&nbsp; One pair of dogs will
+drag three hundredweight on level ground; but when they encounter a hill,
+the driver must lend a helping hand.&nbsp; These dogs are, besides, careful
+guardians; and I would not advise any one to approach a car of this kind,
+as it stands before the inn-door, while the proprietor is quenching his
+thirst within, on the money he has just earned.</p>
+<p>At five o&rsquo;clock on the morning of the 15th of April I left Prague,
+and rode for fourteen miles in the mail-carriage, as far as Obristwy on the
+Elbe, at which place I embarked for Dresden, on board the steamer Bohemia,
+of fifty-horse power, a miserable old craft, apparently a stranger to
+beauty and comfort from her youth up.&nbsp; The price charged for this
+short passage of eight or nine hours is enormously dear.&nbsp; The
+travellers will, however, soon have their revenge on the extortionate
+proprietors; a railroad is constructing, by means of which this distance
+will be traversed in a much shorter time, and at a great saving of
+expense.</p>
+<p>But at any rate the journey by water is the more agreeable; the way lies
+through very picturesque scenery, and at length through &ldquo;Saxon
+Switzerland&rdquo; itself.&nbsp; The commencement of the journey is,
+however, far from pleasing.&nbsp; On the right are naked hills, and on the
+left large plains, over which, last spring, the swollen stream rolled,
+partly covering the trees and the roofs of the cottages.&nbsp; Here I could
+for the first time see the whole extent of the calamity.&nbsp; Many houses
+had been completely torn down, and the crops, and even the loose alluvial
+earth swept away; as we glided by each dreary scene of devastation, another
+yet more dismal would appear in its place.</p>
+<p>This continued till we reached Melnick, where the trees become higher,
+and groups of houses peer forth from among the innumerable vineyards.&nbsp;
+Opposite this little town the Moldau falls into the Elbe.&nbsp; On the
+left, in the far distance, the traveller can descry St. George&rsquo;s
+Mount, from which, as the story goes, Czech took possession of all
+Bohemia.</p>
+<p>Below the little town of Raudnitz the hills gave place to mountains, and
+as many enthusiasts can only find those regions romantic where the
+mountains are crowned with half-ruined castles and strongholds, good old
+Time has taken care to plant there two fine ruins, Hafenberg and Skalt, for
+the delectation of such sentimental observers.</p>
+<p>Near Leitmeritz, a small town with a handsome castle, and a church and
+convent, the Eger flows into the Elbe, and a high-arched wooden bridge
+connects the two banks.&nbsp; Here our poor sailors had difficult work to
+lower the mast and the funnel.</p>
+<p>The rather pretty village of Gross-Czernoseck is remarkable for its
+gigantic cellars, hewn out of the rock.&nbsp; A post-carriage could easily
+turn round in one of these.&nbsp; The vats are of course proportioned to
+the cellars, particularly the barrels called the &ldquo;twelve
+apostles,&rdquo; each of which holds between three and four thousand
+gallons.&nbsp; It would be no more than fair to stop here awhile, to give
+every hero of the bottle an opportunity to enjoy a sight of these
+palace-cellars, and to offer a libation to the twelve apostles; but the
+steamer passed on, and we were obliged to make the most of the descriptions
+furnished by those who were more at home in these parts, and had no doubt
+frequently emerged in an inspired state from the depths of the cellars in
+question.</p>
+<p>The view now becomes more and more charming: the mountains appear to
+draw closer together, and shut in the bed of the stream; romantic groups of
+rocks, with summits crowned by rains yet more romantic, tower
+between.&nbsp; The ancient but well-preserved castle of Schreckenstein,
+built on a rock rising boldly out of the Elbe, is particularly striking;
+the approaches to it are by serpentine walks hewn out of the rock.</p>
+<p>Near the small town of Aussig we find the most considerable coal-mines
+in Bohemia.&nbsp; In their neighbourhood is situated the little mountain
+estate Paschkal, which produces a kind of wine said to resemble
+champagne.</p>
+<p>The mountains now become higher and higher, but above them all towers
+the gigantic Jungfernsprung (Maiden&rsquo;s Leap).&nbsp; The beauty of this
+region is only surpassed by the situation of the town and castle of
+Tetschen.&nbsp; The castle stands on a rock, between twenty and thirty feet
+high, which seems to rise out of the Elbe; it is surrounded by hot-houses
+and charming gardens, shelving downwards as far as the town, which lies in
+a blooming valley, near a little harbour.&nbsp; The valley itself,
+encompassed by a chain of lofty mountains, seems quite shut out from the
+rest of the world.</p>
+<p>The left bank of the river is here so crowded with masses and walls of
+rock, that there is only room at intervals for an isolated farm or
+hut.&nbsp; Suddenly the tops of masts appear between the high rocks, a
+phenomenon which is soon explained; a large gap in one of the rocky walls
+forms a beautiful basin.</p>
+<p>And now we come to Schandau, a place consisting only of a few houses; it
+is a frontier town of the Saxon dominions.&nbsp; Custom-house officers, a
+race of beings ever associated with frontier towns, here boarded our
+vessel, and rummaged every thing.&nbsp; My daguerreotype apparatus, which I
+had locked up in a small box, was looked upon with an eye of suspicion; but
+upon my assertion that it was exclusively intended for my own use, I and my
+apparatus were graciously dismissed.</p>
+<p>In our onward journey we frequently observed rocks of peculiar shapes,
+which have appropriate names, such as the &ldquo;Zirkelstein,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Lilienstein,&rdquo; &amp;c.&nbsp; The K&ouml;nigstein is a
+collection of jagged masses of rock, on which is built the fortress of the
+same name, used at present as a prison for great criminals.&nbsp; At the
+foot of the rocks lies the little town of K&ouml;nigstein.&nbsp; Not far
+off, on the right bank, a huge rock, resting on others, bears a striking
+resemblance to a human head.&nbsp; The more distant groups of rocks are
+called those of &ldquo;Rathen,&rdquo; but are considered as belonging to
+Saxon Switzerland.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Basteien&rdquo; (Bastions) of this
+Switzerland, close by which we now pass, are most wonderful superpositions
+of lofty and fantastically shaped rocks.&nbsp; Unfortunately, the steamer
+whirled us so rapidly on our way, that whilst we contemplated one bank, the
+beauteous scenes on the opposite side had already glided from our
+view.&nbsp; In much too short a time we had passed the town of Pirna,
+situate at the commencement of this range of mountains.&nbsp; The very
+ancient gate of this town towers far above all the other buildings.</p>
+<p>Lastly we see the great castle Sonnenstein, built on a rock, and now
+used as an asylum for lunatics.</p>
+<p>All the beautiful and picturesque portion of our passage is now past,
+and the royal villa of Pillnitz, with its many Chinese gables, looks
+insignificant enough, after the grand scenes of nature.&nbsp; A chain of
+hills, covered with the country-houses of citizens, adjoins it; and on the
+right extends a large plain, at the far end of which we can dimly descry
+the Saxon metropolis.&nbsp; But what is that in the distance?&nbsp; We have
+hardly time to arrange our luggage, when the anchor is let go near the fine
+old Dresden Bridge.</p>
+<p>This bridge had not escaped unscathed by the furious river.&nbsp; One of
+the centre arches had given way, and the cross and watchbox which
+surmounted it were precipitated into the flood.&nbsp; At first, carriages
+still passed over the bridge; it was not until some time afterwards that
+the full extent of the damage was ascertained, and the passage of carriages
+over the bridge discontinued for many months.</p>
+<p>As I had seen the town of Dresden several years before, and the only
+building new to me was the splendid theatre, I took advantage of the few
+evening hours of my stay to visit this structure.</p>
+<p>Standing in the midst of the beautiful Cathedral-square, its noble
+rotunda-like form at once rivets the attention.&nbsp; The inner theatre is
+surrounded by a superb broad and lofty corridor, with fine bow-windows and
+straight broad staircases, leading in different directions towards the
+galleries.&nbsp; The interior of the theatre is not so spacious as, judging
+from the exterior, one would imagine it to be, but the architecture and
+decorations are truly gorgeous and striking.&nbsp; The boxes are all open,
+being separated from each other merely by a low partition; the walls and
+chairs are covered with heavy silken draperies, and the seats of the third
+and fourth galleries with a mixture of silk and cotton.&nbsp; One single
+circumstance was disagreeable to me in an acoustic point of view&mdash;I
+could hear the slightest whisper of the prompter as distinctly as though
+some one had been behind me reading the play.&nbsp; The curtain had
+scarcely fallen before the whole house was empty, and yet there was no
+crowding to get out.&nbsp; This first drew my attention to the numerous and
+excellently contrived doors.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">April 16th.</p>
+<p>The Dresden omnibuses may be cited as models of comfort; one is certain
+of plenty of room, and there is no occasion to dread either the corpulent
+persons or the furs and cloaks of fellow-passengers.&nbsp; A bell-pull is
+fixed in the interior of the carriage, so that each individual can give the
+coachman a signal when he or she wishes to alight.&nbsp; These omnibuses
+call at the principal inns, and wait for a moment; but the traveller who is
+not ready in advance is left behind.</p>
+<p>At half-past five in the morning it called at our hotel.&nbsp; I was
+ready and waiting, and drove off comfortably to the railway.&nbsp; The
+distance from Dresden to Leipzig is reckoned at fifty-six miles, and the
+journey occupied three hours.</p>
+<p>The first fourteen miles are very agreeable; gardens, fields, and
+meadows, pine-forests in the plain and on the hills, and between these,
+villages, farms, country-houses, and solitary chapels, combine to form a
+very pretty landscape.&nbsp; But the scene soon changes, and the town of
+Meissen (famous for its porcelain manufactory), on the right hand, seems to
+shut out from our view all that is picturesque and beautiful.</p>
+<p>From here to Leipzig we travel through a wearisome monotonous plain,
+enlivened at long intervals by villages and scattered farms.&nbsp; There is
+nothing to see but a great tunnel, and the river Pleisse&mdash;the latter,
+or rather the Elster, is rendered famous by the death of Prince
+Poniatowski. <a name="citation9"></a><a href="#footnote9"
+class="citation">[9]</a></p>
+<p>The town of Leipzig, celebrated far and wide for its fairs, and more for
+its immense publishing trade, presents an appearance of noise and bustle
+proportionate to its commercial importance.&nbsp; I found streets, squares,
+and inns alike crowded. <a name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10"
+class="citation">[10]</a></p>
+<p>Perhaps there does not exist a town with its houses, and consequently
+its streets, so disfigured with announcements, in all sizes and shapes,
+covering its walls, and sometimes projecting several feet, as Leipzig.</p>
+<p>Among the public buildings, those which pleased me most were the
+Augusteum and the B&uuml;rgerschule.&nbsp; The B&uuml;cherhalle (book-hall)
+I should suppose indebted for its celebrity rather to its literary contents
+than to its architectural beauty or its exterior.&nbsp; The hall itself is
+indeed large, and occupies the whole length of the building, while the
+lower story consists of several rooms.&nbsp; The hall, the chambers, and
+the exterior are all plain, and without particular decoration.&nbsp; The
+Tuchhalle (cloth-hall) is simply a large house, with spacious chambers,
+containing supplies of cloth.&nbsp; The Theatre stands on a very large
+square, and does not present a very splendid appearance, whether viewed
+from within or from without.&nbsp; The plan of having stalls in front of
+the boxes in the second and third galleries was a novelty to me.&nbsp; The
+orchestra I could only hear, but could not discover its whereabouts; most
+probably it was posted behind the scenes.&nbsp; On inquiry, I was told that
+this was only done on extraordinary occasions, when the seats in the
+orchestra were converted into stalls, as was the case on the night of my
+visit.&nbsp; The play given was &ldquo;the original Tartuffe,&rdquo; a
+popular piece by Gutzkow.&nbsp; It was capitally performed.</p>
+<p>In the Leipzig theatre I had a second opportunity of observing, that as
+regards the love of eating our good Saxons are not a whit behind the
+much-censured Viennese.&nbsp; In the Dresden theatre I had admired a couple
+of ladies who sat next me.&nbsp; They came provided with a neat bag,
+containing a very sufficient supply of confectionery, to which they
+perseveringly applied themselves between the acts.&nbsp; But at Leipzig I
+found a delicate-looking mother and her son, a lad of fifteen or sixteen
+years, regaling themselves with more solid provisions&mdash;white bread and
+small sausages.&nbsp; I could not believe my eyes, and had made up my mind
+that the sausages were artificially formed out of some kind of
+confectionery&mdash;but alas! my nose came forward but too soon, as a
+potent witness, to corroborate what I was so unwilling to believe!</p>
+<p>Neither did these two episodes take place in the loftiest regions of
+Thalia&rsquo;s temple, but in the stalls of the second tier.</p>
+<p>Beautiful alleys are planted round Leipzig.&nbsp; I took a walk into the
+Rosenthal (Valley of Roses), which also consists of splendid avenues and
+lawns.&nbsp; A pretty coffee-house, with a very handsome alcove, built in a
+semicircular form, invites the weary traveller to rest and refreshment,
+while a band of agreeable music diffuses mirth and good humour around.</p>
+<p>The rest of the scenery around Leipzig presents the appearance of a vast
+and monotonous plain.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">April 17th.</p>
+<p>I had intended to continue my journey to Hamburgh via Berlin, but the
+weather was so cold and stormy, and the rain poured down so heavily, that I
+preferred the shorter way, and proceeded by rail to Magdeburg.&nbsp; Flying
+through the dismal plain past Halle, K&ouml;then, and other towns, of which
+I could only discern groups of houses, we hurriedly recognised the Saale
+and the Elbe; and towards 10 o&rsquo;clock in the morning arrived at
+Magdeburg, having travelled seventy miles in three hours and a quarter.</p>
+<p>As the steamer for Hamburgh was not to start until 3 o&rsquo;clock, I
+had ample time to look at the town.</p>
+<p>Magdeburg is a mixed pattern of houses of ancient, medi&aelig;val, and
+modern dates.&nbsp; Particularly remarkable in this respect is the
+principal street, the &ldquo;Broadway,&rdquo; which runs through the whole
+of the town.&nbsp; Here we can see houses dating their origin from the most
+ancient times; houses that have stood proof against sieges and sackings;
+houses of all colours and forms; some sporting peaked gables, on which
+stone figures may still be seen; others covered from roof to basement with
+arabesques; and in one instance I could even detect the remains of
+frescoes.&nbsp; In the very midst of these relics of antiquity would appear
+a house built in the newest style.&nbsp; I do not remember ever having seen
+a street which produced so remarkable an impression on me.&nbsp; The finest
+building is unquestionably the venerable cathedral.&nbsp; In Italy I had
+already seen numbers of the most beautiful churches; yet I remained
+standing in mute admiration before this masterpiece of Gothic
+architecture.</p>
+<p>The monument with the twelve Apostles in this church is a worthy
+memorial of the celebrated sculptor Vischer.&nbsp; In order to view it, it
+is necessary to obtain the special permission of the commandant.</p>
+<p>The cathedral square is large, symmetrical, and decorated with two
+alleys of trees; it is also used as a drilling-ground for the
+soldiers&rsquo; minor manoeuvres.&nbsp; I was particularly struck with the
+number of military men to be seen here.&nbsp; Go where I would, I was sure
+to meet soldiers and officers, frequently in large companies; in time of
+war it could scarcely have been worse.&nbsp; This was an unmistakeable
+token that I was on Prussian territory.</p>
+<p>The open canals, which come from all the houses, and meander through the
+streets, are a great disfigurement to the town.</p>
+<p>Half-past three o&rsquo;clock came only too quickly, and I betook myself
+on board the steamer <i>Magdeburg</i>, of sixty-horse power, to proceed to
+Hamburgh.&nbsp; Of the passage itself I can say nothing, except that a
+journey on a river through execrable scenery is one of the most miserable
+things that can well be imagined.&nbsp; When, in addition to this, the
+weather is bad, the ship dirty, and one is obliged to pass a night on
+board, the discomfort is increased.&nbsp; It was my lot to endure all this:
+the weather was bad, the ship was dirty, the distance more than 100 miles,
+so that we had the pleasant prospect of a delightful night on board the
+ship.&nbsp; There were, moreover, so many passengers, that we were forced
+to sit crowded together; so there we sat with exemplary patience, stared at
+each other, and sighed bitterly.&nbsp; Order was entirely out of the
+question; no one had time to think of such a thing.&nbsp; Smoking and
+card-playing were perseveringly carried on all day and all night; it can
+easily be imagined that things did not go so quietly as at an English
+whist-party.&nbsp; The incessant rain rendered it impossible to leave the
+cabin even for a short time.&nbsp; The only consolation I had was, that I
+made the acquaintance of the amiable composer Lorzing, a circumstance which
+delighted me the more, as I had always been an admirer of his beautiful
+original music.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<p>Morning dawned at length, and in a short time afterwards we reached the
+great commercial city, which, half destroyed by the dreadful conflagration
+of 1842, had risen grander and more majestic from its ashes. <a
+name="citation11"></a><a href="#footnote11" class="citation">[11]</a>&nbsp;
+I took up my quarters with a cousin, who is married to the Wurtemburg
+consul, the merchant Schmidt, in whose house I spent a most agreeable and
+happy week.&nbsp; My cousin-in-law was polite enough to escort me every
+where himself, and to shew me the lions of Hamburgh.</p>
+<p>First of all we visited the Exchange between the hours of one and two,
+when it is at the fullest, and therefore best calculated to impress a
+stranger with an idea of the extent and importance of the business
+transacted there.&nbsp; The building contains a hall of great size, with
+arcades and galleries, besides many large rooms, which are partly used for
+consultations, partly for the sale of refreshments.&nbsp; The most
+interesting thing of all is, however, to sit in the gallery, and looking
+downwards, to observe the continually increasing crowd passing and
+repassing each other in the immense hall and through the galleries and
+chambers, and to listen to the hubbub and noise of the thousands of eager
+voices talking at once.&nbsp; At half-past one o&rsquo;clock the hall is at
+its fullest, and the noise becomes absolutely deafening; for now they are
+marking up the rates of exchange, by which the merchants regulate their
+monetary transactions.</p>
+<p>Leaving the Exchange, we bent our steps towards the great harbour, and
+entering a small boat, cruised in and about it in all directions.&nbsp; I
+had resolved to count only the three-masted ships; but soon gave it up, for
+their number seemed overwhelming, even without reckoning the splendid
+steamers, brigs, sloops, and craft.&nbsp; In short, I could only gaze and
+wonder, for at least 900 ships lay before me.</p>
+<p>Let any one fancy an excursion amidst 900 ships, great and small, which
+lined both shores of the Elbe in tiers of three deep or more; the passing
+to and fro of countless boats busily employed in loading or unloading these
+vessels; these things, together with the shouting and singing of the
+sailors, the rattling of anchors which are being weighed, and the rush and
+swell of passing steamers, combine to constitute a picture not to be
+surpassed in any city except in that metropolis of the world, London. <a
+name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12" class="citation">[12]</a></p>
+<p>The reason of this unusual activity in the harbour lay in the severity
+of the past winter.&nbsp; Such a winter had not been experienced for
+seventy years: the Elbe and the Baltic lay for months in icy chains, and
+not a ship could traverse the frozen river, not an anchor could be weighed
+or lowered.&nbsp; It was only a short time before my arrival that the
+passage had once more become free.</p>
+<p>In the neighbourhood of the harbour are situated the greater number of
+the so-called &ldquo;yards.&rdquo;&nbsp; I had read concerning them that,
+viewed from the exterior, they look like common houses; but that they
+constitute separate communities, and contain alleys and streets, serving as
+the domicile of innumerable families.&nbsp; I visited several of these
+places, and can assure the reader that I saw nothing extraordinary in
+them.&nbsp; Houses with two large wings, forming an alley of from eighty to
+a hundred paces in length, are to be met with in every large town; and that
+a number of families should inhabit such a house is not remarkable,
+considering that they are all poor, and that each only possesses a single
+small apartment.</p>
+<p>The favourite walk in the town is the &ldquo;Jungfernstieg&rdquo;
+(Maiden&rsquo;s Walk), a broad alley, extending round a spacious and
+beautiful basin of the Alster.&nbsp; On one side are splendid hotels, with
+which Hamburgh is richly provided; on the other, a number of private
+residences of equal pretensions.&nbsp; Other walks are, the
+&ldquo;Wall,&rdquo; surrounding the town, and the &ldquo;Botanical
+Garden,&rdquo; which resembles a fine park.&nbsp; The noblest building,
+distinguished alike as regards luxury, skill, tastefulness of design, and
+stability, is the Bazaar.&nbsp; It is truly a gigantic undertaking, and the
+more to be admired from the fact that it is not built upon shares, but at
+the expense of a single individual, Herr Carl Sillem; the architect&rsquo;s
+name is Overdick.&nbsp; The building itself is constructed entirely of
+stone, and the walls of the great room and of the hall are inlaid with
+marble.&nbsp; A lofty cupola and an immense glazed dome cover both the
+great room and the hall; the upper staircases are ornamented with beautiful
+statues.&nbsp; When in the evening it is brilliantly lighted with gas, and
+further ornamented by a tasteful display of the richest wares, the
+spectator can almost fancy himself transported to a fairy palace.</p>
+<p>Altogether the shops in Hamburgh are very luxurious.&nbsp; The wares lie
+displayed in the most tasteful manner behind huge windows of plate-glass,
+which are often from five to six feet broad, and eight or ten feet high; a
+single sheet frequently costs 600 florins.&nbsp; This plate-glass luxury is
+not confined to shops, but extends to windows generally, not only in
+Hamburgh, but also in Altona, and is also seen in the handsomest
+country-houses of the Hamburghers.&nbsp; Many a pane costs eight or ten
+florins; and the glass is insured in case of breakage, like houses in case
+of fire.</p>
+<p>This display of glass is equalled by the costliness of the furniture,
+which is almost universally of mahogany; a wood which is here in such
+common use, that in some of the most elegant houses the very
+stair-banisters are constructed of it.&nbsp; Even the pilots have often
+mahogany furniture.</p>
+<p>The handsomest and most frequented street is the &ldquo;Neue Wall&rdquo;
+(New Wall).&nbsp; I was particularly struck with the number of shops and
+dwellings underground, to which one descends by a flight of six or eight
+stairs; an iron railing is generally placed before the entrance, to prevent
+the passers-by from falling down.</p>
+<p>A very practical institution is the great slaughterhouse, in which all
+cattle are killed on certain days of the week.</p>
+<p>Concerning the town of Altona, I have only to observe that it appeared
+to me a continuation of Hamburgh; from which town, indeed, it is only
+separated by a wooden door.&nbsp; A very broad, handsome street, or, more
+properly speaking, an elongated square, planted with a double row of large
+trees, is the most remarkable thing about Altona, which belongs to the
+Danish Government, and is considered, after Copenhagen, the most important
+place in the kingdom.</p>
+<p>It is a delicious ride to the village of Blankenese, distant nine miles
+from Hamburgh; the road lies among beautiful country-houses and large
+park-like gardens.&nbsp; Blankenese itself consists of cottages, grouped in
+a picturesque manner round the S&uuml;lberg, a hill from which the
+traveller enjoys a very extended view over the great plain, in which it is
+the only elevated point.&nbsp; The course of the Elbe, as it winds at
+moderate speed towards the sea, is here to be traced almost to its
+embouchure at Cuxhaven.</p>
+<p>The breadth of the Elbe at Blankenese exceeds two miles.</p>
+<p>Another interesting excursion is to the &ldquo;New Mills,&rdquo; a
+little village on the Elbe, not more than half a mile from Altona, and
+inhabited only by fishermen and pilots.&nbsp; Whoever wishes to form an
+idea of Dutch prettiness and cleanliness should come here.</p>
+<p>The houses are mostly one story high, neatly and tastefully built; the
+brightest of brass handles adorn the street-doors; the windows are kept
+scrupulously clean, and furnished with white curtains.</p>
+<p>In Saxony I had found many dwellings of the peasantry tidy and neat
+enough, displaying at any rate more opulence than we are accustomed to find
+with this class of people; but I had seen none to compete with this pretty
+village.</p>
+<p>Among the peasants&rsquo; costumes, I only liked that worn by the women
+from the &ldquo;Vierlanden.&rdquo;&nbsp; They wear short full skirts of
+black stuff, fine white chemisettes with long sleeves, and coloured
+bodices, lightly fastened in front with silk cords or silver buckles.&nbsp;
+Their straw hats have a most comical appearance; the brim of the hat is
+turned up in such a manner that the crown appears to have completely sunk
+in.&nbsp; Many pretty young girls dressed in this manner come to Hamburgh
+to sell flowers, and take up their position in front of the Exchange.</p>
+<p>The 26th of April, the day appointed for my departure, arrived only too
+speedily.&nbsp; To part is the unavoidable fate of the traveller; but
+sometimes we part gladly, sometimes with regret.&nbsp; I need not write
+many pages to describe my feelings at the parting in Hamburgh.&nbsp; I was
+leaving behind me my last relations, my last friends.&nbsp; Now I was going
+into the wide world, and among strangers.</p>
+<p>At eight o&rsquo;clock in the morning I left Altona, and proceeded by
+railway to Kiel.</p>
+<p>I noticed with pleasure that on this railway even the third-class
+carriages were securely covered in, and furnished with glass windows.&nbsp;
+In fact, they only differed from those of the first and second class in
+being painted a different colour, and having the seats uncushioned.</p>
+<p>The whole distance of seventy miles was passed in three hours; a rapid
+journey, but agreeable merely by its rapidity, for the whole neighbourhood
+presents only widely-extended plains, turf-bogs and moorlands, sandy places
+and heaths, interspersed with a little meadow or arable land.&nbsp; From
+the nature of the soil, the water in the ditches and fields looked black as
+ink.</p>
+<p>Near Binneburg we notice a few stunted plantations of trees.&nbsp; From
+Eisholm a branch-line leads to Gl&uuml;ckstadt, and another from
+Neum&uuml;nster, a large place with important cloth-factories, to
+Rendsburg.</p>
+<p>From here there is nothing to be seen but a convent, in which many Dukes
+of Holstein lie buried, and several unimportant lakes; for instance, those
+of Bernsholm, Einfeld, and Schulhof.&nbsp; The little river Eider would
+have passed unnoticed by me, had not some of my fellow-passengers made a
+great feature of it.&nbsp; In the finest countries I have found the natives
+far less enthusiastic about what was really grand and beautiful, than they
+were here in praise of what was neither the one nor the other.&nbsp; My
+neighbour, a very agreeable lady, was untiring in laudation of her
+beautiful native land.&nbsp; In her eyes the crippled wood was a splendid
+park, the waste moorland an inexhaustible field for contemplation, and
+every trifle a matter of real importance.&nbsp; In my heart I wished her
+joy of her fervid imagination; but unfortunately my colder nature would not
+catch the infection.</p>
+<p>Towards Kiel the plain becomes a region of low hills.&nbsp; Kiel itself
+is prettily situated on the Baltic, which, viewed from thence, has the
+appearance of a lake of middling size.&nbsp; The harbour is said to be
+good; but there were not many ships there. <a name="citation13"></a><a
+href="#footnote13" class="citation">[13]</a>&nbsp; Among these was the
+steamer destined to carry me to Copenhagen.&nbsp; Little did I anticipate
+the good reason I should have to remember this vessel.</p>
+<p>Thanks to the affectionate forethought of my cousin Schmidt, I found one
+of his relations, Herr Brauer, waiting for me at the railway.&nbsp; I was
+immediately introduced to his family, and passed the few hours of my stay
+very agreeably in their company.</p>
+<p>Evening approached, and with it the hour of embarkation.&nbsp; My kind
+friends the Brauers accompanied me to the steamer, and I took a grateful
+leave of them.</p>
+<p>I soon discovered the steamer <i>Christian VIII.</i>, of 180-horse
+power, to be a vessel dirtier and more uncomfortable than any with which I
+had become acquainted in my maritime excursions.&nbsp; Scrubbing and
+sweeping seemed things unknown here.&nbsp; The approach to the cabin was by
+a flight of stairs so steep, that great care was requisite to avoid
+descending in an expeditious but disagreeable manner, by a fall from top to
+bottom.&nbsp; In the fore-cabin there was no attempt at separate quarters
+for ladies and gentlemen.&nbsp; In short, the arrangements seemed all to
+have been made with a view of impressing the ship vividly on the
+recollection of every traveller.</p>
+<p>At nine o&rsquo;clock we left Kiel.&nbsp; The day and the twilight are
+here already longer than in the lands lying to the south and the
+west.&nbsp; There was light enough to enable me to see, looming out of the
+surrounding darkness, the fortress &ldquo;Friedrichsort,&rdquo; which we
+passed at about ten o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">April 27th.</p>
+<p>To-day I still rose with the sun; but that will soon be a difficult
+matter to accomplish; for in the north the goddess of light makes amends in
+spring and summer for her shortcomings during the winter.&nbsp; I went on
+deck, and looked on the broad expanse of ocean.&nbsp; No land was to be
+seen; but soon a coast appeared, then disappeared, and then a new and more
+distant one rose out of the sea.&nbsp; Towards noon we reached the island
+of M&ouml;en, which lies about forty <a name="citation14"></a><a
+href="#footnote14" class="citation">[14]</a> miles distant from
+Copenhagen.&nbsp; It forms a beautiful group of rocks, rising boldly from
+the sea.&nbsp; They are white as chalk, and have a smooth and shining
+appearance.&nbsp; The highest of these walls of rock towers 400 feet above
+the level of the surrounding ocean.&nbsp; Soon we saw the coast of Sweden,
+then the island of Malm&ouml;; and at last Copenhagen itself, where we
+landed at four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon.&nbsp; The distance from Kiel
+to Copenhagen is 136 sea-miles.</p>
+<p>I remained seven days at Copenhagen, and should have had ample time to
+see every thing, had the weather been more favourable.&nbsp; But it blew
+and rained so violently, that I was obliged to give up all thoughts of
+visiting the surrounding parks, and was fain to content myself with seeing
+a few of the nearest walks, which I accomplished with some difficulty.</p>
+<p>The first street in Copenhagen which I traversed on coming from the
+harbour generally produces a great impression.&nbsp; It is called the
+&ldquo;Broad Street,&rdquo; and leads from the harbour through the greater
+part of the town.&nbsp; In addition to its breadth it is very long and
+regular, and the splendid palaces and houses on either side give it a
+remarkably grand appearance.</p>
+<p>It is a peculiar sight, when, in the midst of this fine quarter, we come
+suddenly upon a ruin, a giant building resting on huge pillars, but half
+completed, and partly covered with moss and lichens.&nbsp; It was intended
+for a splendid church, and is built entirely of marble; but the soft ground
+would not bear the immense weight.&nbsp; The half-finished building began
+to sink, and the completion of the undertaking became for ever
+impossible.</p>
+<p>Many other streets rival the &ldquo;Broad Street&rdquo; in size and
+magnificence.&nbsp; Foremost among them comes the Amalienstrasse.&nbsp; The
+most bustling, but by far not the finest, are the Oster and
+Gotherstrasse.&nbsp; To walk in these is at first quite a difficult
+undertaking for a stranger.&nbsp; On one side of the pavement, which is
+raised about a foot above the carriage-way, he comes continually in contact
+with stairs, leading sometimes to warehouses above, at others to
+subterranean warehouses below the level of the street.&nbsp; The approaches
+to the latter are not guarded by railings as in Hamburgh.&nbsp; The other
+side of the pavement is bounded by a little unostentatious rivulet, called
+by unpoetical people &ldquo;canal,&rdquo; into which tributaries equally
+sweet pour from all the neighbouring houses.&nbsp; It is therefore
+necessary to take great care, lest you should fall into the traitorous
+depths on the one side, or stumble over the projecting steps on the
+other.&nbsp; The pavement itself is covered with a row of stone slabs, a
+foot and a half wide, on which one walks comfortably enough.&nbsp; But then
+every body contends for the possession of these, to avoid the uneven and
+pointed stones at the side.&nbsp; This, added to the dreadful crowding,
+renders the street one which would scarcely be chosen for a walk, the less
+so as the shops do not contain any thing handsome, the houses are neither
+palace-like nor even tastefully built, and the street itself is neither of
+the broadest nor of the cleanest.</p>
+<p>The squares are all large and regularly built.&nbsp; The finest is the
+Kongensnytorf (King&rsquo;s New Market).&nbsp; Some fine mansions, the
+chief guard-house, the theatre, the chief coffee-houses and inns, the
+academy of the fine arts, and the building belonging to the botanical
+garden, the two last commonly known by the name of
+&ldquo;Charlottenburg,&rdquo; are among the ornaments of this magnificent
+square, in the midst of which stands a beautiful monument, representing
+Christian V. on horseback, and surrounded by several figures.</p>
+<p>Smaller, but more beautiful in its perfect symmetry, is the
+&ldquo;Amalienplatz,&rdquo; containing four royal palaces, built exactly
+alike, and intersected by four broad streets in the form of a cross.&nbsp;
+This square also is decorated by a monument standing in the midst, and
+representing Frederick V.&nbsp; In another fine square, the
+&ldquo;Nytorf&rdquo; (New Market), there is a fountain.&nbsp; Its little
+statue sends forth very meagre jets of water, and the fountain is merely
+noticeable as being the only one I could find at Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>The traveller can hardly fail of being surprised by the number and
+magnificence of the palaces, at sight of which he could fancy himself in
+the metropolis of one of the largest kingdoms.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;Christianensburg&rdquo; is truly imperial; it was completely
+destroyed by fire in the year 1794, but has since been rebuilt with
+increased splendour.&nbsp; The chapel of this palace is very
+remarkable.&nbsp; The interior has the appearance rather of a concert-room
+than of a building devoted to purposes of worship.&nbsp; Tastefully
+decorated boxes, among which we notice that of the king, together with
+galleries, occupy the upper part of the chapel; the lower is filled with
+benches covered with red velvet and silk.&nbsp; The pulpit and altar are so
+entirely without decoration, that, on first entering, they wholly escape
+notice.</p>
+<p>In the &ldquo;Christianensburg&rdquo; is also the &ldquo;Northern
+Museum,&rdquo; peculiarly rich in specimens of the ornaments, weapons,
+musical instruments, and other mementoes of northern nations.</p>
+<p>The Winter Riding-school, in which concerts are frequently given, is
+large and symmetrical.&nbsp; I admired the stalls, and yet more the grey
+horses which occupied them&mdash;descendants of the pure Arabian and wild
+Norwegian breeds&mdash;creatures with long manes and tails of fine silky
+hair.&nbsp; Every one who sees these horses, whether he be a connoisseur or
+one of the uninitiated, must admire them.</p>
+<p>Adjoining the &ldquo;Christianensburg&rdquo; is Thorwaldsen&rsquo;s
+Museum, a square building with fine saloons, lighted from above.&nbsp; When
+I saw it, it was not completed; the walls were being painted in fresco by
+some of the first native artists.&nbsp; The sculptured treasures were
+there, but unfortunately yet unpacked.</p>
+<p>In the midst of the courtyard Thorwaldsen&rsquo;s mausoleum is being
+erected.&nbsp; There his ashes will rest, with his exquisitely finished
+lion as a gravestone above them. <a name="citation15"></a><a
+href="#footnote15" class="citation">[15]</a></p>
+<p>The largest among the churches is the &ldquo;Woman&rsquo;s
+Church.&rdquo;&nbsp; The building has no architectural beauty; the pillars,
+galleries, and cupola are all of wood, covered with a mixture of sand and
+plaster.&nbsp; But whatever may be wanting in outward splendour is
+compensated by its contents, for this church contains the masterpieces of
+Thorwaldsen.&nbsp; At the high altar stands his glorious figure of our
+Saviour, in the niches of the wall his colossal twelve apostles.</p>
+<p>In the contemplation of these works we forget the plainness of the
+building which contains them.&nbsp; May the fates be prosperous, and no
+conflagration reach this church, built as it is half of wood!</p>
+<p>The Catholic Church is small, but tasteful beyond expression.&nbsp; The
+late emperor of Austria presented to it a good full-toned organ, and two
+oil-paintings, one by Kuppelweiser, the other by a pupil of this
+master.</p>
+<p>In the &ldquo;Museum of Arts&rdquo; I was most interested in the ancient
+chair, used in days of yore by Tycho de Brahe. <a name="citation16"></a><a
+href="#footnote16" class="citation">[16]</a></p>
+<p>The Exchange is a curious ancient building.&nbsp; It is very long and
+narrow, and surmounted by nine peaks, from the centre of which protrudes a
+remarkable pointed tower, formed of four crocodiles&rsquo; tails
+intertwined.</p>
+<p>The hall itself is small, low, and dark; it contains a full-length
+portrait in oil of Tycho de Brahe.&nbsp; Nearly all the upper part of the
+building is converted into a kind of bazaar, and the lower portion contains
+a number of small and dingy booths.</p>
+<p>Several canals, having an outlet into the sea, give a peculiar charm to
+the town.&nbsp; They are, in fact, so many markets; for the craft lying in
+them are laden with provisions of all kinds, which are here offered for
+sale.</p>
+<p>The Sailors&rsquo; Town, adjoining Copenhagen, and situated near the
+harbour, is singularly neat and pretty.&nbsp; It consists of three long,
+broad, straight streets, built of houses looking so exactly alike, that on
+a foggy night an accurate knowledge of the locality is requisite to know
+one from the other.&nbsp; It looks as though, on each side of the way,
+there were only one long house of a single floor, with a building one story
+high in the middle.&nbsp; In the latter dwell the commandant and
+overseers.</p>
+<p>The lighting of the streets is managed in Copenhagen in the same way as
+in our smaller German towns.&nbsp; When &ldquo;moonlight&rdquo; is
+announced in the calendar, not a lamp is lighted.&nbsp; If the lady moon
+chooses to hide behind dark clouds, that is her fault.&nbsp; It would be
+insolent to attempt to supply the place of her radiance with miserable
+lamps&mdash;a wise arrangement! (?)</p>
+<p>Of the near walks, the garden of the &ldquo;Rosenburg,&rdquo; within the
+town, pleased me much; as did also the &ldquo;Long Line,&rdquo; an alley of
+beautiful trees extending parallel with the sea, and in which one can
+either walk or ride.&nbsp; A coffee-house, in front of which there is music
+in fine weather, attracts many of the loungers.&nbsp; The most beautiful
+place of all is the &ldquo;Kastell,&rdquo; above the &ldquo;Long
+Line,&rdquo; from whence one can enjoy a beautiful view.&nbsp; The town
+lies displayed below in all its magnificence: the harbour, with its many
+ships; the sparkling blue Sound, which spreads its broad expanse between
+the coasts of Denmark and Sweden, and washes many a beautiful group of
+islands belonging to one or the other of these countries.&nbsp; The
+background of the picture alone is uninteresting, as there is no chain of
+mountains to form a horizon, and the eye wanders over the boundless flats
+of Denmark.</p>
+<p>Among the vessels lying at anchor in the harbour I saw but few
+three-masters, and still fewer steamers.&nbsp; The ships of the fleet
+presented a curious appearance; at the first view they look like great
+houses with flag-staves, for every ship is provided with a roof, out of
+which the masts rise into the air; they are besides very high out of the
+water, so that all the port-holes and the windows of the cabins appear in
+two or three stories, one above the other.</p>
+<p>A somewhat more distant excursion, which can be very conveniently made
+in a capital omnibus, takes you to the royal chateau
+&ldquo;Friedrichsberg,&rdquo; lying before the water-gate, two miles
+distant from the town.&nbsp; Splendid avenues lead to this place, where are
+to be found all the delights that can combine to draw a citizen into the
+country.&nbsp; There are a tivoli, a railway, cabinets, and booths with
+wax-figures, and countless other sights, besides coffee-houses, beer-rooms,
+and music.&nbsp; The gardens are planted at the sides with a number of
+small arbours, each containing a table and chairs, and all open in front,
+so as to shew at one view all the visitors of these pretty natural
+huts.&nbsp; On Sundays, when the gardens are crowded, this is a very
+animated sight.</p>
+<p>On the way to this &ldquo;Prater&rdquo; of Copenhagen, we pass many
+handsome villas, each standing in a fine garden.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p50b.jpg">
+<img alt="Copenhagen: From Frederiesbourg" src="images/p50s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>The royal palace is situated on the summit of a hill, at the end of the
+avenue, and is surrounded by a beautiful park; it commands a view of a
+great portion of the town, with the surrounding country and the sea; still
+I far prefer the prospect from the &ldquo;Kastell.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Park
+contains a considerable island, which, during some part of the year, stands
+in the midst of an extensive lake.&nbsp; This island is appropriated to the
+Court, but the rest of the park is open to the public.</p>
+<p>Immediately outside the water-gate stands an obelisk, remarkable neither
+for its beauty nor for the skill displayed in its erection, for it consists
+of various stones, and is not high, but interesting from the circumstance
+to which it owes its origin.&nbsp; It was erected by his grateful subjects
+in memory of the late king Christian VII., to commemorate the abolition of
+feudal service.&nbsp; Surely no feeling person can contemplate without
+joyful emotion a monument like this.</p>
+<p>I have here given a faithful account of what I saw during my short stay
+at Copenhagen.&nbsp; It only remains for me to describe a few peculiar
+customs of the people, and so I will begin as it were at the end, with the
+burial of the dead.&nbsp; In Denmark, as in fact in the whole of
+Scandinavia, not excepting Iceland, it is customary not to bury the dead
+until eight or ten days have elapsed.&nbsp; In winter-time this is not of
+so much consequence, but in summer it is far from healthy for those under
+the same roof with the corpse.&nbsp; I was present at Copenhagen at the
+funeral of Dr. Brandis, physician to the king.&nbsp; Two of the
+king&rsquo;s carriages and a number of private equipages attended.&nbsp;
+Nearly all these were empty, and the servants walked beside them.&nbsp;
+Among the mourners I did not notice a single woman; I supposed that this
+was only the case at the funerals of gentlemen, but on inquiry I found that
+the same rule is observed at the burial of women.&nbsp; This consideration
+for the weaker sex is carried so far, that on the day of the funeral no
+woman may be seen in the house of mourning.&nbsp; The mourners assemble in
+the house of the deceased, and partake of cold refreshments.&nbsp; At the
+conclusion of the ceremony they are again regaled.&nbsp; What particularly
+pleased me in Copenhagen was, that I never on any occasion saw beggars, or
+even such miserably clad people as are found only too frequently in our
+great cities.&nbsp; Here there are no doubt poor people, as there are such
+every where else in the world, but one does not see them beg.&nbsp; I
+cannot help mentioning an arrangement which certainly deserves to be
+universally carried out;&mdash;I mean, the setting apart of many large
+houses, partly belonging to the royal family, partly to rich private people
+or to companies, for the reception of poor people, who are here lodged at a
+much cheaper rate than is possible in ordinary dwellings.</p>
+<p>The costumes of the peasants did not particularly please me.&nbsp; The
+women wear dresses of green or black woollen stuff, reaching to the ankle,
+and trimmed at the skirt with broad coloured woollen borders.&nbsp; The
+seams of the spenser, and the arm-holes, are also trimmed with smaller
+coloured borders.&nbsp; On their heads they wear a handkerchief, and over
+this a kind of shade, like a bonnet.&nbsp; On Sundays I saw many of them in
+small, pretty caps, worked with silk, with a border of lace of more than a
+hand&rsquo;s breadth, plaited very stiffly; at the back they have large
+bows of fine riband, the ends of which reach half down to their feet.&nbsp;
+I found nothing very remarkable in the dress of the peasants.&nbsp; As far
+as strength and beauty were concerned, I thought these peasants were
+neither more nor less gifted than those of Austria.&nbsp; As regards the
+beauty of the fair sex, I should certainly give the preference to the
+Austrians.&nbsp; Fair hair and blue eyes predominate.</p>
+<p>I saw but few soldiers; their uniforms, particularly those worn by the
+king&rsquo;s life-guards, are very handsome.</p>
+<p>I especially noticed the drummers; they were all little lads of ten or
+twelve years old.&nbsp; One could almost have exclaimed, &ldquo;Drum,
+whither art thou carrying that boy?&rdquo;&nbsp; To march, and to join in
+fatiguing manoeuvres, carrying such a drum, and beating it bravely at the
+same time, is rather cruel work for such young lads.&nbsp; Many a ruined
+constitution may be ascribed to this custom.</p>
+<p>During my stay in Copenhagen I spent many very delightful hours with
+Professor Mariboe and his amiable family, and with the kind clergyman of
+the embassy, Herr Zimmermann.&nbsp; They received me with true politeness
+and hospitality, and drew me into their circle, where I soon felt myself
+quite at ease.&nbsp; I shall never forget their friendship, and shall make
+use of every opportunity to shew them my appreciation of it.&nbsp; Herr
+Edouard Gottschalk and Herr Knudson have also my best thanks.&nbsp; I
+applied to the first of these gentlemen to procure me a passage to Iceland,
+and he was kind enough to use his interest with Herr Knudson on my
+behalf.</p>
+<p>Herr Knudson is one of the first general dealers in Copenhagen, and
+carries on a larger and more extended commerce with Iceland than any other
+house trading thither.&nbsp; He is already beginning to retire, as the
+continual journeys are becoming irksome to him; but he still owns a number
+of great and small vessels, which are partly employed in the fisheries, and
+partly in bringing all kinds of articles of consumption and luxury to the
+different harbours of Iceland.</p>
+<p>He himself goes in one of his ships every year, and stays a few months
+in Iceland to settle his affairs there.&nbsp; On the recommendation of Herr
+Gottschalk, Herr Knudson was kind enough to give me a passage in the ship
+in which he made the journey himself; a favour which I knew how to
+value.&nbsp; It is certainly no small kindness to take a lady passenger on
+such a journey.&nbsp; Herr Knudson knew neither my fortitude nor my
+perseverance; he did not know whether I should be able to endure the
+hardships of a journey to the north, whether I would bear sea-sickness
+philosophically, or even if I had courage enough, in case of storms or bad
+weather, to abstain from annoying the captain by my fears or complaints at
+a time when he would only have too much to harass him.&nbsp; The kind man
+allowed no such considerations to influence him.&nbsp; He believed me when
+I promised to behave courageously come what might, and took me with
+him.&nbsp; Indeed his kindness went so far that it is to him I owe every
+comfort I enjoyed in Iceland, and every assistance in furthering the
+attainment of my journey&rsquo;s object.&nbsp; I could certainly not have
+commenced a voyage under better auspices.</p>
+<p>All ships visiting Iceland leave Copenhagen at the end of April, or at
+the latest in the middle of May.&nbsp; After this time only one ship is
+despatched, to carry the mails of the Danish government.&nbsp; This vessel
+leaves Copenhagen in October, remains in Iceland during the winter months,
+and returns in March.&nbsp; The gain or loss of this expedition is
+distributed in shares among the merchants of Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>Besides this, a French frigate comes to Iceland every spring, and
+cruises among the different harbours until the middle of August.&nbsp; She
+superintends the fishing vessels, which, attracted by the large profits of
+the fisheries, visit these seas in great numbers during the summer. <a
+name="citation17"></a><a href="#footnote17" class="citation">[17]</a></p>
+<p>Opportunities of returning from Iceland occur during the summer until
+the end of September, by means of the merchant-ships, which carry freights
+from the island to Denmark, England, and Spain.</p>
+<p>At length, on Sunday the 4th of May, a favourable wind sprung up.&nbsp;
+Herr Knudson sent me word to be ready to embark at noon on board the fine
+brig <i>John</i>.</p>
+<p>I immediately proceeded on board.&nbsp; The anchor was weighed, and the
+sails, unfolding themselves like giant wings, wafted us gently out of the
+harbour of Copenhagen.&nbsp; No parting from children, relations, or
+old-cherished friends embittered this hour.&nbsp; With a glad heart I bade
+adieu to the city, in the joyful hope soon to see the fulfilment of my
+long-expected journey.</p>
+<p>The bright sky smiled above us, and a most favourable wind filled our
+sails.&nbsp; I sat on deck and revelled in the contemplation of scenes so
+new to me.&nbsp; Behind us lay spread the majestic town; before us the
+Sound, an immense natural basin, which I could almost compare to a great
+Swiss lake; on the right and left were the coasts of Sweden and Denmark,
+which here approach each other so closely that they seem to oppose a
+barrier to the further progress of the adventurous voyager.</p>
+<p>Soon we passed the little Swedish town of Carlscrona, and the desolate
+island Hveen, on which Tycho de Brahe passed the greater portion of his
+life, occupied with stellar observations and calculations.&nbsp; Now came a
+somewhat dangerous part, and one which called into action all the careful
+seamanship of the captain to bring us safely through the confined sea and
+the strong current,&mdash;the entrance of the Sound into the Cattegat.</p>
+<p>The two coasts here approach to within a mile of each other.&nbsp; On
+the Swedish side lies the pretty little town of Helsingborg, on the Danish
+side that of Helsing&ouml;r, and at the extremity of a projecting neck of
+land the fortress Kronburg, which demands a toll of every passing ship, and
+shews a large row of threatening cannon in case of non-compliance.&nbsp;
+Our toll had already been paid before leaving Copenhagen; we had been
+accurately signalled, and sailed fearlessly by. <a name="citation18"></a><a
+href="#footnote18" class="citation">[18]</a></p>
+<p>The entrance once passed, we entered the Cattegat, which already looked
+more like the great ocean: the coasts retired on each side, and most of the
+shifts and barques, which till now had hovered around us on all sides, bade
+us &ldquo;farewell.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some bent their course towards the east,
+others towards the west; and we alone, on the broad desert ocean, set sail
+for the icy north.&nbsp; Twilight did not set in until 9 o&rsquo;clock at
+night; and on the coasts the flaming beacons flashed up, to warn the
+benighted mariner of the proximity of dangerous rocks.</p>
+<p>I now offered up my thanksgiving to Heaven for the protection hitherto
+vouchsafed me, with a humble prayer for its continuance.&nbsp; Then I
+descended to the cabin, where I found a convenient bunk (a kind of crib
+fixed to the side of the ship); I laid myself down, and was soon in a deep
+and refreshing sleep.</p>
+<p>I awoke full of health and spirits, which, however, I enjoyed but for a
+short time.&nbsp; During the night we had left behind us the
+&ldquo;Cattegat&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Skagerrack,&rdquo; and were driving
+through the stormy German Ocean.&nbsp; A high wind, which increased almost
+to a gale, tumbled our poor ship about in such a manner, that none but a
+good dancer could hope to maintain an upright position.&nbsp; I had
+unfortunately been from my youth no votary of Terpsichore, and what was I
+to do?&nbsp; The naiads of this stormy region seized me, and bandied me to
+and fro, until they threw me into the arms of what was, according to my
+experience, if not exactly after Schiller&rsquo;s interpretation,
+&ldquo;the horrible of horrors,&rdquo;&mdash;sea-sickness.&nbsp; At first I
+took little heed of this, thinking that sea-sickness would soon be overcome
+by a traveller like myself, who should be inured to every thing.&nbsp; But
+in vain did I bear up; I became worse and worse, till I was at length
+obliged to remain in my berth with but one consoling thought, namely, that
+we were to-day on the open sea, where there was nothing worthy of
+notice.&nbsp; But the following day the Norwegian coast was in sight, and
+at all hazards I must see it; so I crawled on deck more dead than alive,
+looked at a row of mountains of moderate elevation, their tops at this
+early season still sparkling with their snowy covering, and then hurried
+back, benumbed by the piercing icy wind, to my good warm feather-bed.&nbsp;
+Those who have never experienced it can have no conception of the biting,
+penetrating coldness of a gale of wind in the northern seas.&nbsp; The sun
+shone high in the heavens; the thermometer (I always calculate according to
+Reaumur) stood 3&deg; above zero; I was dressed much more warmly than I
+should have thought necessary when, in my fatherland, the thermometer was
+8&deg; or 10&deg; <i>below</i> zero, and yet I felt chilled to the heart,
+and could have fancied that I had no clothes on at all.</p>
+<p>On the fourth night we sailed safely past the Shetland Islands; and on
+the evening of the fifth day we passed so near the majestic rocky group of
+the Feroe Islands, that we were at one time apprehensive of being cast upon
+the rocks by the unceasing gale. <a name="citation19"></a><a
+href="#footnote19" class="citation">[19]</a></p>
+<p>Already on the seventh day we descried the coast of Iceland.&nbsp; Our
+passage had been unprecedentedly quick; the sailors declared that a
+favourable gale was to be preferred even to steam, and that on our present
+voyage we should certainly have left every steamer in our wake.&nbsp; But
+I, wretched being that I was, would gladly have dispensed with the services
+both of gale and steam for the sake of a few hours&rsquo; rest.&nbsp; My
+illness increased so much, that on the seventh day I thought I must
+succumb.&nbsp; My limbs were bathed in a cold perspiration; I was as weak
+as an infant, and my mouth felt parched and dry.&nbsp; I saw that I must
+now either make a great effort or give up entirely; so I roused myself, and
+with the assistance of the cabin-boy gained a seat, and promised to take
+any and every remedy which should be recommended.&nbsp; They gave me
+hot-water gruel with wine and sugar; but it was not enough to be obliged to
+force this down, I was further compelled to swallow small pieces of raw
+bacon highly peppered, and even a mouthful of rum.&nbsp; I need not say
+what strong determination was required to make me submit to such a
+regimen.&nbsp; I had, however, but one choice, either to conquer my
+repugnance or give myself up a victim to sea-sickness; so with all patience
+and resignation I received the proffered gifts, and found, after a trial of
+many hours, that I could manage to retain a small dose.&nbsp; This
+physicking was continued for two long, long days, and then I began slowly
+to recover.</p>
+<p>I have here circumstantially described both my illness and its cure,
+because so many people are unfortunately victims to the complaint, and when
+under its influence cannot summon resolution to take sustenance.&nbsp; I
+should advise all my friends not to hold out so long as I did, but to take
+food at once, and continue to do so until the system will receive it.</p>
+<p>As I was now convalescent, I tried to recruit my wearied mind by a
+diligent study of the mode of life and customs of the mariners of the
+northern seas.</p>
+<p>Our ship&rsquo;s company consisted of Herr Knudson, Herr Br&uuml;ge (a
+merchant whom we were to land at the Westmann Islands), the captain, the
+mate, and six or seven sailors.&nbsp; Our mode of life in the cabin was as
+follows: in the morning, at seven o&rsquo;clock, we took coffee, but whence
+this coffee came, heaven knows!&nbsp; I drank it for eleven days, and could
+never discover any thing which might serve as a clue in my attempt to
+discover the country of its growth.&nbsp; At ten o&rsquo;clock we had a
+meal consisting of bread and butter and cheese, with cold beef or pork, all
+excellent dishes for those in health; the second course of this morning
+meal was &ldquo;tea-water.&rdquo;&nbsp; In Scandinavia, by the way, they
+never say, &ldquo;I drink <i>tea</i>,&rdquo; the word &ldquo;water&rdquo;
+is always added: &ldquo;I drink <i>tea-water</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Our
+&ldquo;tea-water&rdquo; was, if possible, worse than its predecessor, the
+incomparable coffee.&nbsp; Thus I was beaten at all points; the eatables
+were too strong for me, the drinkables too&mdash;too&mdash;I can find no
+appropriate epithet&mdash;probably too artificial.&nbsp; I consoled myself
+with the prospect of dinner; but, alas, too soon this sweet vision faded
+into thin air!&nbsp; On the sixth day I made my first appearance at the
+covered table, and could not help at once remarking the cloth which had
+been spread over it.&nbsp; At the commencement of our journey it might
+perhaps have been white; now it was most certainly no longer of that snowy
+hue.&nbsp; The continual pitching and rolling of the ship had caused each
+dish to set its peculiar stamp upon the cloth.&nbsp; A sort of wooden
+network was now laid upon it, in the interstices of which the plates and
+glasses were set, and thus secured from falling.&nbsp; But before placing
+it on the table, our worthy cabin-boy took each plate and glass separately,
+and polished it on a towel which hung near, and in colour certainly rather
+resembling the dingy floor of the cabin than the bight-hued rainbow.&nbsp;
+This could still have been endured, but the article in question really did
+duty <i>as a towel</i> in the morning, before extending its salutary
+influence over plates and glasses for the remainder of the day.</p>
+<p>On making discoveries such as these, I would merely turn away my eyes,
+and try to think that perhaps <i>my glass</i> and <i>my plate</i> would be
+more delicately manipulated, or probably escape altogether; and then I
+would turn my whole attention to the expected dishes.</p>
+<p>First came soup; but instead of gravy-soup, it was water-soup, with rice
+and dried plums.&nbsp; This, when mingled with red wine and sugar, formed a
+most exquisite dish for Danish appetites, but it certainly did not suit
+mine.&nbsp; The second and concluding course consisted of a large piece of
+beef, with which I had no fault to find, except that it was too heavy for
+one in my weak state of health.&nbsp; At supper we had the same dishes as
+at dinner, and each meal was followed by &ldquo;tea-water.&rdquo;&nbsp; At
+first I could not fancy this bill of fare at all; but within a few days
+after my convalesence, I had accustomed myself to it, and could bear the
+sea-diet very well. <a name="citation20"></a><a href="#footnote20"
+class="citation">[20]</a></p>
+<p>As the rich owner of the vessel was on board, there was no lack of the
+best wines, and few evenings passed on which a bowl of punch was not
+emptied.&nbsp; There was, however, a reason found why every bottle of wine
+or bowl of punch should be drunk: for instance, at our embarkation, to
+drink the health of the friends we were leaving, and to hope for a quick
+and prosperous voyage; then, when the wind was favourable, its health was
+drunk, with the request that it would remain so; when it was contrary, with
+the request that it would change; when we saw land, we saluted it with a
+glass of wine, or perhaps with several, but I was too ill to count; when we
+lost sight of it, we drank a farewell glass to its health: so that every
+day brought with it three or four distinct and separate occasions for
+drinking wine. <a name="citation21"></a><a href="#footnote21"
+class="citation">[21]</a></p>
+<p>The sailors drank tea-water without sugar every morning and evening,
+with the addition of a glass of brandy; for dinner they had pease, beans,
+barley, or potatoes, with salted cod, bacon, &ldquo;or junk;&rdquo; good
+sea-biscuit they could get whenever they chose.</p>
+<p>The diet is not the worst part of these poor people&rsquo;s
+hardships.&nbsp; Their life may be called a continual fight against the
+elements; for it is precisely during the most dreadful storms, with rain
+and piercing cold, that they have to be continually upon deck.&nbsp; I
+could not sufficiently admire the coolness, or rather the cheerfulness and
+alacrity with which they fulfilled their onerous duties.&nbsp; And what
+reward have they?&nbsp; Scanty pay, for food the diet I have just
+described, and for their sleeping-place the smallest and most inconvenient
+part of the ship, a dark place frequently infested with vermin, and
+smelling offensively from being likewise used as a receptacle for
+oil-colours, varnish, tar, salt-fish, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+<p>To be cheerful in the midst of all this requires a very quiet and
+contented mind.&nbsp; That the Danish sailors are contented, I had many
+opportunities of observing during the voyage of which I am speaking, and on
+several other occasions.</p>
+<p>But after all this long description, it is high time that I should
+return to the journey itself.</p>
+<p>The favourable gale which had thus wafted us to the coast of Iceland
+within seven days, now unfortunately changed its direction, and drove us
+back.&nbsp; We drifted about in the storm-tost ocean, and many a Spanish
+wave <a name="citation22"></a><a href="#footnote22"
+class="citation">[22]</a> broke completely over our ship.&nbsp; Twice we
+attempted to approach the Westmann Islands <a name="citation23"></a><a
+href="#footnote23" class="citation">[23]</a> (a group belonging to Iceland)
+to watch an opportunity of casting anchor, and setting ashore our
+fellow-traveller Herr Br&uuml;ge; but it was in vain, we were driven back
+each time.&nbsp; At length, at the close of the eleventh day, we reached
+Havenfiord, a very good harbour, distant nine miles from Reikjavik, the
+capital of Iceland.</p>
+<p>In spite of the very inopportune change in the direction of the wind, we
+had had an unprecedentedly quick passage.&nbsp; The distance from
+Copenhagen to Iceland, in a straight line, is reckoned at 1200 geographical
+miles; for a sailing vessel, which must tack now and then, and must go as
+much with the wind as possible, 1500 to 1600 miles.&nbsp; Had the strong
+wind, which was at first so favourable, instead of changing on the seventh
+day, held on for thirty or forty hours longer, we should have landed in
+Iceland on the eighth or ninth day&mdash;even the steamer could not have
+accomplished the passage so quickly.</p>
+<p>The shores of Iceland appeared to me quite different from what I had
+supposed them to be from the descriptions I had read.&nbsp; I had fancied
+them naked, without tree or shrub, dreary and desert; but now I saw green
+hills, shrubs, and even what appeared to be groups of stunted trees.&nbsp;
+As we came nearer, however, I was enabled to distinguish objects more
+clearly, and the green hills became human dwellings with small doors and
+windows, while the supposed groups of trees proved in reality to be heaps
+of lava, some ten or twelve feet high, thickly covered with moss and
+grass.&nbsp; Every thing was new and striking to me; I waited in great
+impatience till we could land.</p>
+<p>At length the anchor descended; but it was not till next morning that
+the hour of disembarkation and deliverance came.</p>
+<p>But one more night, and then, every difficulty overcome, I should tread
+the shores of Iceland, the longed-for, and bask as it were in the wonders
+of this island, so poor in the creations of art, so rich in the phenomena
+of Nature.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Before I land in Iceland, I must trouble the reader with a few
+preliminary observations regarding this island.&nbsp; They are drawn from
+Mackenzie&rsquo;s <i>Description of Iceland</i>, a book the sterling value
+of which is appreciated every where. <a name="citation24"></a><a
+href="#footnote24" class="citation">[24]</a></p>
+<p>The discovery of Iceland, about the year of our Lord 860, is attributed
+to the spirit of enterprise of some Swedish and Norwegian pirates, who were
+drifted thither on a voyage to the Feroe Isles.&nbsp; It was not till the
+year 874 that the island was peopled by a number of voluntary emigrants,
+who, feeling unhappy under the dominion of Harold Harfraga (fine hair),
+arrived at the island under the direction of Ingold. <a
+name="citation25"></a><a href="#footnote25" class="citation">[25]</a>&nbsp;
+As the newcomers are said to have found no traces of dwellings, they are
+presumed to be the first who took possession of the island.</p>
+<p>At this time Iceland was still so completely covered with underwood,
+that at some points it was necessary to cut a passage.&nbsp; Bringing with
+them their language, religion, customs, and historical monuments, the
+Norwegians introduced a kind of feudal system, which, about the year 928,
+gave place to a somewhat aristocratic government, retaining, however, the
+name of a republic.&nbsp; The island was divided into four provinces, over
+each of which was placed an hereditary governor or judge.</p>
+<p>The General Assembly of Iceland (called Allthing) was held annually on
+the shores of the Lake Thingvalla.&nbsp; The people possessed an excellent
+code of laws, in which provision had been made for every case which could
+occur.</p>
+<p>This state of things lasted for more than 300 years, a period which may
+be called the golden age of Iceland.&nbsp; Education, literature, and even
+refined poetry flourished among the inhabitants, who took part in commerce
+and in the sea-voyages which the Norwegians undertook for purposes of
+discovery.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;Sagas,&rdquo; or histories of this country, contain many
+tales of personal bravery.&nbsp; Its bards and historians visited other
+climes, became the favourites of monarchs, and returned to their island
+covered with honour and loaded with presents.&nbsp; The <i>Edda</i>, by
+S&auml;mund, is one of the most valued poems of the ancient days of
+Iceland.&nbsp; The second portion of the <i>Edda</i>, called <i>Skalda</i>,
+dates from a later period, and is ascribed by many to the celebrated Snorri
+Sturluson.&nbsp; Isleif, first Bishop of Skalholt, was the earliest
+Icelandic historian; after him came the noted Snorri Sturluson, born in
+1178, who became the richest and mightiest man in Iceland.</p>
+<p>Snorri Sturluson was frequently followed to the General Assembly of
+Iceland by a splendid retinue of 800 armed men.&nbsp; He was a great
+historian and poet, and possessed an accurate knowledge of the Greek and
+Latin tongues, besides being a powerful orator.&nbsp; He was also the
+author of the <i>Heims-kringla</i>.</p>
+<p>The first school was founded at Skalholt, about the middle of the
+eleventh century, under Isleif, first Bishop of Iceland; four other schools
+and several convents soon followed.&nbsp; Poetry and music seem to have
+formed a staple branch of education.</p>
+<p>The climate of Iceland appears to have been less inclement than is now
+the case; corn is said to have grown, and trees and shrubs were larger and
+thicker than we find them at present.&nbsp; The population of Iceland was
+also much more numerous than it is now, although there were neither towns
+nor villages.&nbsp; The people lived scattered throughout the island; and
+the General Assembly was held at Thingvalla, in the open air.</p>
+<p>Fishing constituted the chief employment of the Icelanders.&nbsp; Their
+clothing was woven from the wool of their sheep.&nbsp; Commerce with
+neighbouring countries opened to them another field of occupation.</p>
+<p>The doctrines of Christianity were first introduced into Iceland, in the
+year 981, by Friederich, a Saxon bishop.&nbsp; Many churches were built,
+and tithes established for the maintenance of the clergy.&nbsp; Isleif,
+first Bishop of Skalholt, was ordained in the year 1057.&nbsp; After the
+introduction of Christianity, all the Icelanders enjoyed an unostentatious
+but undisturbed practice of their religion.</p>
+<p>Greenland and the most northern part of America are said to have been
+discovered by Icelanders.</p>
+<p>In the middle of the thirteenth century Iceland came into the power of
+the Norwegian kings.&nbsp; In the year 1380 Norway was united to the crown
+of Denmark; and Iceland incorporated, without resistance, in the Danish
+monarchy.&nbsp; Since the cession of the island to Norway, and then to
+Denmark, peace and security took the place of the internal commotions with
+which, before this time, Iceland had been frequently disturbed; but this
+state of quiet brought forth indolence and apathy.&nbsp; The voyages of
+discovery were interfered with by the new government, and the commerce
+gradually passed into the hands of other nations.&nbsp; The climate appears
+also to have changed; and the lessened industry and want of perseverance in
+the inhabitants have brought agriculture completely into decline.</p>
+<p>In the year 1402 the plague broke out upon the island, and carried off
+two-thirds of the population.</p>
+<p>The first printing-press was established at Hoolum, about the year 1530,
+under the superintendence of the Bishop, John Areson.</p>
+<p>The reformation in the Icelandic Church was not brought about without
+disturbance.&nbsp; It was legally established in the year 1551.</p>
+<p>During the fifteenth century the Icelanders suffered more from the
+piratical incursions of foreigners.&nbsp; As late as the year 1616 the
+French and English nations took part in these enormities.&nbsp; The most
+melancholy occurrence of this kind took place in 1627, in which year a
+great number of Algerine pirates made a descent upon the Icelandic coast,
+murdered about fifty of the inhabitants, and carried off nearly 400 others
+into captivity. <a name="citation26"></a><a href="#footnote26"
+class="citation">[26]</a></p>
+<p>The eighteenth century commenced with a dreadful mortality from the
+smallpox; of which disease more than 16,000 of the inhabitants died.&nbsp;
+In 1757 a famine swept away about 10,000 souls.</p>
+<p>The year 1783 was distinguished by most dreadful volcanic outbreaks in
+the interior of the island.&nbsp; Tremendous streams of lava carried all
+before them; great rivers were checked in their course, and formed
+lakes.&nbsp; For more than a year a thick cloud of smoke and volcanic ashes
+covered the whole of Iceland, and nearly darkened the sunlight.&nbsp;
+Horned cattle, sheep, and horses were destroyed; famine came, with its
+accompanying illnesses; and once more appeared the malignant
+small-pox.&nbsp; In a few years more than 11,000 persons had died; more
+than one-fourth of the whole present population of the island.</p>
+<p>Iceland lies in the Atlantic ocean; its greatest breadth is 240
+geographical miles, and its extreme length from north to south 140
+miles.&nbsp; The number of inhabitants is estimated at 48,000, and the
+superficial extent of the island at 29,800 square miles.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<p>On the morning of the 16th of May I landed in the harbour of Havenfiord,
+and for the first time trod the shores of Iceland.&nbsp; Although I was
+quite bewildered by sea-sickness, and still more by the continual rocking
+of the ship, so that every object round me seemed to dance, and I could
+scarcely make a firm step, still I could not rest in the house of Herr
+Knudson, which he had obligingly placed at my disposal.&nbsp; I must go out
+at once, to see and investigate every thing.&nbsp; I found that Havenfiord
+consisted merely of three wooden houses, a few magazines built of the same
+material, and some peasants&rsquo; cottages.</p>
+<p>The wooden houses are inhabited by merchants or by their factors, and
+consist only of a ground-floor, with a front of four or six windows.&nbsp;
+Two or three steps lead up to the entrance, which is in the centre of the
+building, and opens upon a hall from which doors lead into the rooms to the
+right and left.&nbsp; At the back of the house is situated the kitchen,
+which opens into several back rooms and into the yard.&nbsp; A house of
+this description consists only of five or six rooms on the ground-floor and
+a few small attic bedrooms.</p>
+<p>The internal arrangements are quite European.&nbsp; The
+furniture&mdash;which is often of mahogany,&mdash;the mirrors, the
+cast-iron stoves, every thing, in short, come from Copenhagen.&nbsp;
+Beautiful carpets lie spread before the sofas; neat curtains shade the
+windows; English prints ornament the whitewashed walls; porcelain, plate,
+cut-glass, &amp;c., are displayed on chests and on tables; and flower-pots
+with roses, mignonnette, and pinks spread a delicious fragrance
+around.&nbsp; I even found a grand pianoforte here.&nbsp; If any person
+could suddenly, and without having made the journey, be transported into
+one of these houses, he would certainly fancy himself in some continental
+town, rather than in the distant and barren island of Iceland.&nbsp; And as
+in Havenfiord, so I found the houses of the more opulent classes in
+Reikjavik, and in all the places I visited.</p>
+<p>From these handsome houses I betook myself to the cottages of the
+peasants, which have a more indigenous, Icelandic appearance.&nbsp; Small
+and low, built of lava, with the interstices filled with earth, and the
+whole covered with large pieces of turf, they would present rather the
+appearance of natural mounds of earth than of human dwellings, were it not
+that the projecting wooden chimneys, the low-browed entrances, and the
+almost imperceptible windows, cause the spectator to conclude that they are
+inhabited.&nbsp; A dark narrow passage, about four feet high, leads on one
+side into the common room, and on the other to a few compartments, some of
+which are used as storehouses for provisions, and the rest as winter
+stables for the cows and sheep.&nbsp; At the end of this passage, which is
+purposely built so low, as an additional defence against the cold, the
+fireplace is generally situated.&nbsp; The rooms of the poorer class have
+neither wooden walls nor floors, and are just large enough to admit of the
+inhabitants sleeping, and perhaps turning round in them.&nbsp; The whole
+interior accommodation is comprised in bedsteads with very little covering,
+a small table, and a few drawers.&nbsp; Beds and chests of drawers answer
+the purpose of benches and chairs.&nbsp; Above the beds are fixed rods,
+from which depend clothes, shoes, stockings, &amp;c.&nbsp; A small board,
+on which are arranged a few books, is generally to be observed.&nbsp;
+Stoves are considered unnecessary; for as the space is very confined, and
+the house densely populated, the atmosphere is naturally warm.</p>
+<p>Rods are also placed round the fireplace, and on these the wet clothes
+and fishes are hung up in company to dry.&nbsp; The smoke completely fills
+the room, and slowly finds its way through a few breathing-holes into the
+open air.</p>
+<p>Fire-wood there is none throughout the whole island.&nbsp; The rich
+inhabitants have it brought from Norway or Denmark; the poor burn turf, to
+which they frequently add bones and other offal of fish, which naturally
+engender a most disagreeable smoke.</p>
+<p>On entering one of these cottages, the visitor is at a loss to determine
+which of the two is the more obnoxious&mdash;the suffocating smoke in the
+passage or the poisoned air of the dwelling-room, rendered almost
+insufferable by the crowding together of so many persons.&nbsp; I could
+almost venture to assert, that the dreadful eruption called Lepra, which is
+universal throughout Iceland, owes its existence rather to the total want
+of cleanliness than to the climate of the country or to the food.</p>
+<p>Throughout my subsequent journeys into the interior, I found the
+cottages of the peasants every where alike squalid and filthy.&nbsp; Of
+course I speak of the majority, and not of the exceptions; for here I found
+a few rich peasants, whose dwellings looked cleaner and more habitable, in
+proportion to the superior wealth or sense of decency of the owners.&nbsp;
+My idea is, that the traveller&rsquo;s estimate of a country should be
+formed according to the habits and customs of the generality of its
+inhabitants, and not according to the doings of a few individuals, as is
+often the case.&nbsp; Alas, how seldom did I meet with these creditable
+exceptions!</p>
+<p>The neighbourhood of Havenfiord is formed by a most beautiful and
+picturesque field of lava, at first rising in hills, then sinking into
+hollows, and at length terminating in a great plain which extends to the
+base of the neighbouring mountains.&nbsp; Masses of the most varied forms,
+often black and naked, rise to the height of ten or fifteen feet, forming
+walls, ruined pillars, small grottoes, and hollow spaces.&nbsp; Over these
+latter large slabs often extend, and form bridges.&nbsp; Every thing around
+consists of suddenly cooled heaped-up masses of lava, in some instances
+covered to their summits with grass and moss; this circumstance gives them,
+as already stated, the appearance of groups of stunted trees.&nbsp; Horses,
+sheep, and cows were clambering about, diligently seeking out every green
+place.&nbsp; I also clambered about diligently; I could not tire of gazing
+and wondering at this terribly beautiful picture of destruction.</p>
+<p>After a few hours I had so completely forgotten the hardships of my
+passage, and felt myself so much strengthened, that I began my journey to
+Reikjavik at five o&rsquo;clock on the evening of the same day.&nbsp; Herr
+Knudson seemed much concerned for me; he warned me that the roads were bad,
+and particularly emphasised the dangerous abysses I should be compelled to
+pass.&nbsp; I comforted him with the assurance that I was a good
+horsewoman, and could hardly have to encounter worse roads than those with
+which I had had the honour to become acquainted in Syria.&nbsp; I therefore
+took leave of the kind gentleman, who intended to stay a week or ten days
+in Havenfiord, and mounting a small horse, set out in company of a female
+guide.</p>
+<p>In my guide I made the acquaintance of a remarkable antiquity of
+Iceland, who is well worthy that I should devote a few words to her
+description.&nbsp; She is above seventy years of age, but looks scarcely
+fifty; her head is surrounded by tresses of rich fair hair.&nbsp; She is
+dressed like a man; undertakes, in the capacity of messenger, the longest
+and most fatiguing journeys; rows a boat as skilfully as the most practised
+fisherman; and fulfils all her missions quicker and more exactly than a
+man, for she does not keep up so good an understanding with the
+brandy-bottle.&nbsp; She marched on so sturdily before me, that I was
+obliged to incite my little horse to greater speed with my riding-whip.</p>
+<p>At first the road lay between masses of lava, where it certainly was not
+easy to ride; then over flats and small acclivities, from whence we could
+descry the immense plain in which are situated Havenfiord, Bassast&auml;dt,
+Reikjavik, and other places.&nbsp; Bassast&auml;dt, a town built on a
+promontory jutting out into the sea, contains one of the principal schools,
+a church built of masonry, and a few cottages.&nbsp; The town of Reikjavik
+cannot be seen, as it is hidden behind a hill.&nbsp; The other places
+consist chiefly of a few cottages, and only meet the eye of the traveller
+when he approaches them nearly.&nbsp; Several chains of mountains, towering
+one above the other, and sundry &ldquo;Jokuls,&rdquo; or glaciers, which
+lay still sparkling in their wintry garb, surround this interminable plain,
+which is only open at one end, towards the sea.&nbsp; Some of the plains
+and hills shone with tender green, and I fancied I beheld beautiful
+meadows.&nbsp; On a nearer inspection, however, they proved to be swampy
+places, and hundreds upon hundreds of little acclivities, sometimes
+resembling mole-hills, at others small graves, and covered with grass and
+moss.</p>
+<p>I could see over an area of at least thirty or forty miles, and yet
+could not descry a tree or a shrub, a bit of meadow-land or a friendly
+village.&nbsp; Every thing seemed dead.&nbsp; A few cottages lay scattered
+here and there; at long intervals a bird would hover in the air, and still
+more seldom I heard the kindly greeting of a passing inhabitant.&nbsp;
+Heaps of lava, swamps, and turf-bogs surrounded me on all sides; in all the
+vast expanse not a spot was to be seen through which a plough could be
+driven.</p>
+<p>After riding more than four miles, I reached a hill, from which I could
+see Reikjavik, the chief harbour, and, in fact, the only town on the
+island.&nbsp; But I was deceived in my expectations; the place before me
+was a mere village.</p>
+<p>The distance from Havenfiord to Reikjavik is scarcely nine miles; but as
+I was unwilling to tire my good old guide, I took three hours to accomplish
+it.&nbsp; The road was, generally speaking, very good, excepting in some
+places, where it lay over heaps of lava.&nbsp; Of the much-dreaded dizzy
+abysses I saw nothing; the startling term must have been used to designate
+some unimportant declivities, along the brow of which I rode, in sight of
+the sea; or perhaps the &ldquo;abysses&rdquo; were on the lava-fields,
+where I sometimes noticed small chasms of fifteen or sixteen feet in depth
+at the most.</p>
+<p>Shortly after eight o&rsquo;clock in the evening I was fortunate enough
+to reach Reikjavik safe and well.&nbsp; Through the kind forethought of
+Herr Knudson, a neat little room had been prepared for me in one of his
+houses occupied by the family of the worthy baker Bernh&ouml;ft, and truly
+I could not have been better received any where.</p>
+<p>During my protracted stay the whole family of the Bernh&ouml;fts shewed
+me more kindness and cordiality than it has been my lot frequently to
+find.&nbsp; Many an hour has Herr Bernh&ouml;ft sacrificed to me, in order
+to accompany me in my little excursions.&nbsp; He assisted me most
+diligently in my search for flowers, insects, and shells, and was much
+rejoiced when he could find me a new specimen.&nbsp; His kind wife and dear
+children rivalled him in willingness to oblige.&nbsp; I can only say, may
+Heaven requite them a thousand-fold for their kindness and friendship!</p>
+<p>I had even an opportunity of hearing my native language spoken by Herr
+Bernh&ouml;ft, who was a Holsteiner by birth, and had not quite forgotten
+our dear German tongue, though he had lived for many years partly in
+Denmark, partly in Iceland.</p>
+<p>So behold me now in the only town in Iceland, <a
+name="citation27"></a><a href="#footnote27" class="citation">[27]</a> the
+seat of the so-called cultivated classes, whose customs and mode of life I
+will now lay before my honoured readers.</p>
+<p>Nothing was more disagreeable to me than a certain air of dignity
+assumed by the ladies here; an air which, except when it is natural, or has
+become so from long habit, is apt to degenerate into stiffness and
+incivility.&nbsp; On meeting an acquaintance, the ladies of Reikjavik would
+bend their heads with so stately and yet so careless an air as we should
+scarcely assume towards the humblest stranger.&nbsp; At the conclusion of a
+visit, the lady of the house only accompanies the guest as far as the
+chamber-door.&nbsp; If the husband be present, this civility is carried a
+little further; but when this does not happen to be the case, a stranger
+who does not know exactly through which door he can make his exit, may
+chance to feel not a little embarrassed.&nbsp; Excepting in the house of
+the &ldquo;Stiftsamtmann&rdquo; (the principal official on the island), one
+does not find a footman who can shew the way.&nbsp; In Hamburgh I had
+already noticed the beginnings of this dignified coldness; it increased as
+I journeyed further north, and at length reached its climax in Iceland.</p>
+<p>Good letters of recommendation often fail to render the northern
+grandees polite towards strangers.&nbsp; As an instance of this fact, I
+relate the following trait:</p>
+<p>Among other kind letters of recommendation, I had received one addressed
+to Herr von H---, the &ldquo;Stiftsamtmann&rdquo; of Iceland.&nbsp; On my
+arrival at Copenhagen, I heard that Herr von H--- happened to be
+there.&nbsp; I therefore betook myself to his residence, and was shewn into
+a room where I found two young ladies and three children.&nbsp; I delivered
+my letter, and remained quietly standing for some time.&nbsp; Finding at
+length that no one invited me to be seated, I sat down unasked on the
+nearest chair, never supposing for an instant that the lady of the house
+could be present, and neglect the commonest forms of politeness which
+should be observed towards every stranger.&nbsp; After I had waited for
+some time, Herr von H--- graciously made his appearance, and expressed his
+regret that he should have very little time to spare for me, as he intended
+setting sail for Iceland with his family in a short time, and in the
+interim had a number of weighty affairs to settle at Copenhagen; in
+conclusion, he gave me the friendly advice to abandon my intention of
+visiting Iceland, as the fatigues of travelling in that country were very
+great; finding, however, that I persevered in my intention, he promised, in
+case I set sail for Reikjavik earlier than himself, to give me a letter of
+recommendation.&nbsp; All this was concluded in great haste, and we stood
+during the interview.&nbsp; I took my leave, and at first determined not to
+call again for the letter.&nbsp; On reflection, however, I changed my mind,
+ascribed my unfriendly reception to important and perhaps disagreeable
+business, and called again two days afterwards.&nbsp; Then the letter was
+handed to me by a servant; the high people, whom I could hear conversing in
+the adjoining apartment, probably considered it too much trouble to deliver
+it to me personally.</p>
+<p>On paying my respects to this amiable family in Reikjavik, I was not a
+little surprised to recognise in Frau von H--- one of those ladies who in
+Copenhagen had not had the civility to ask me to be seated.&nbsp; Five or
+six days afterwards, Herr von H--- returned my call, and invited me to an
+excursion to Vatne.&nbsp; I accepted the invitation with much pleasure, and
+mentally asked pardon of him for having formed too hasty an opinion.&nbsp;
+Frau von H---, however, did not find her way to me until the fourth week of
+my stay in Reikjavik; she did not even invite me to visit her again, so of
+course I did not go, and our acquaintance terminated there.&nbsp; As in
+duty bound, the remaining dignitaries of this little town took their tone
+from their chief.&nbsp; My visits were unreturned, and I received no
+invitations, though I heard much during my stay of parties of pleasure,
+dinners, and evening parties.&nbsp; Had I not fortunately been able to
+employ myself, I should have been very badly off.&nbsp; Not one of the
+ladies had kindness and delicacy enough to consider that I was alone here,
+and that the society of educated people might be necessary for my
+comfort.&nbsp; I was less annoyed at the want of politeness in the
+gentlemen; for I am no longer young, and that accounts for every
+thing.&nbsp; When the women were wanting in kindliness, I had no right to
+expect consideration from the gentlemen.</p>
+<p>I tried to discover the reason of this treatment, and soon found that it
+lay in a national characteristic of these people&mdash;their
+selfishness.</p>
+<p>It appears I had scarcely arrived at Reikjavik before diligent inquiries
+were set on foot as to whether I was <i>rich</i>, and should see much
+company at my house, and, in fact, whether much could be got out of me.</p>
+<p>To be well received here it is necessary either to be rich, or else to
+travel as a naturalist.&nbsp; Persons of the latter class are generally
+sent by the European courts to investigate the remarkable productions of
+the country.&nbsp; They make large collections of minerals, birds, &amp;c.;
+they bring with them numerous presents, sometimes of considerable value,
+which they distribute among the dignitaries; they are, moreover, the
+projectors of many an entertainment, and even of many a little ball,
+&amp;c.; they buy up every thing they can procure for their cabinets, and
+they always travel in company; they have much baggage with them, and
+consequently require many horses, which cannot be hired in Iceland, but
+must be bought.&nbsp; On such occasions every one here is a dealer: offers
+of horses and cabinets pour in on all sides.</p>
+<p>The most welcome arrival of all is that of the French frigate, which
+visits Iceland every year; for sometimes there are
+<i>d&eacute;je&ucirc;ners &agrave; la fourchette</i> on board, sometimes
+little evening parties and balls.&nbsp; There is at least something to be
+got besides the rich presents; the &ldquo;Stiftsamtmann&rdquo; even
+receives 600 florins per annum from the French government to defray the
+expense of a few return balls which he gives to the naval officers.</p>
+<p>With me this was not the case: I gave no parties&mdash;I brought no
+presents&mdash;they had nothing to expect from me; and therefore they left
+me to myself. <a name="citation28"></a><a href="#footnote28"
+class="citation">[28]</a></p>
+<p>For this reason I affirm that he only can judge of the character of a
+people who comes among them without claim to their attention, and from whom
+they have nothing to expect.&nbsp; To such a person only do they appear in
+their true colours, because they do not find it worth while to dissemble
+and wear a mask in his presence.&nbsp; In these cases the traveller is
+certainly apt to make painful discoveries; but when, on the other hand, he
+meets with good people, he may be certain of their sincerity; and so I must
+beg my honoured readers to bear with me, when I mention the names of all
+those who heartily welcomed the undistinguished foreigner; it is the only
+way in which I can express my gratitude towards them.</p>
+<p>As I said before, I had intercourse with very few people, so that ample
+time remained for solitary walks, during which I minutely noticed every
+thing around me.</p>
+<p>The little town of Reikjavik consists of a single broad street, with
+houses and cottages scattered around.&nbsp; The number of inhabitants does
+not amount to 500.</p>
+<p>The houses of the wealthier inhabitants are of wood-work, and contain
+merely a ground-floor, with the exception of a single building of one
+story, to which the high school, now held at Bassast&auml;dt, will be
+transferred next year.&nbsp; The house of the &ldquo;Stiftsamtmann&rdquo;
+is built of stone.&nbsp; It was originally intended for a prison; but as
+criminals are rarely to be met with in Iceland, the building was many years
+ago transformed into the residence of the royal officer.&nbsp; A second
+stone building, discernible from Reikjavik, is situated at Langarnes, half
+a mile from the town.&nbsp; It lies near the sea, in the midst of meadows,
+and is the residence of the bishop.</p>
+<p>The church is capable of holding only at the most from 100 to 150
+persons; it is built of stone, with a wooden roof.&nbsp; In the chambers of
+this roof the library, consisting of several thousand volumes, is
+deposited.&nbsp; The church contains a treasure which many a larger and
+costlier edifice might envy,&mdash;a baptismal font by Thorwaldsen, whose
+parents were of Icelandic extraction.&nbsp; The great sculptor himself was
+born in Denmark, and probably wished, by this present, to do honour to the
+birth-place of his ancestors.</p>
+<p>To some of the houses in Reikjavik pieces of garden are attached.&nbsp;
+These gardens are small plots of ground where, with great trouble and
+expense, salad, spinach, parsley, potatoes, and a few varieties of edible
+roots, are cultivated.&nbsp; The beds are separated from each other by
+strips of turf a foot broad, seldom boasting even a few field-flowers.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of Iceland are generally of middle stature, and strongly
+built, with light hair, frequently inclining to red, and blue eyes.&nbsp;
+The men are for the most part ugly; the women are better favoured, and
+among the girls I noticed some very sweet faces.&nbsp; To attain the age of
+seventy or eighty years is here considered an extraordinary circumstance.
+<a name="citation29"></a><a href="#footnote29"
+class="citation">[29]</a>&nbsp; The peasants have many children, and yet
+few; many are born, but few survive the first year.&nbsp; The mothers do
+not nurse them, and rear them on very bad food.&nbsp; Those who get over
+the first year look healthy enough; but they have strangely red cheeks,
+almost as though they had an eruption.&nbsp; Whether this appearance is to
+be ascribed to the sharp air, to which the delicate skin is not yet
+accustomed, or to the food, I know not.</p>
+<p>In some places on the coast, when the violent storms prevent the poor
+fishermen for whole weeks from launching their boats, they live almost
+entirely on dried fishes&rsquo; heads. <a name="citation30"></a><a
+href="#footnote30" class="citation">[30]</a>&nbsp; The fishes themselves
+have been salted down and sold, partly to pay the fishermen&rsquo;s taxes,
+and partly to liquidate debts for the necessaries of the past season, among
+which brandy and snuff unfortunately play far too prominent a part.</p>
+<p>Another reason why the population does not increase is to be found in
+the numerous catastrophes attending the fisheries during the stormy season
+of the year.&nbsp; The fishermen leave the shore with songs and mirth, for
+a bright sky and a calm sea promise them good fortune.&nbsp; But, alas,
+tempests and snow-storms too often overtake the unfortunate boatmen!&nbsp;
+The sea is lashed into foam, and mighty waves overwhelm boats and fishermen
+together, and they perish inevitably.&nbsp; It is seldom that the father of
+a family embarks in the same boat with his sons.&nbsp; They divide
+themselves among different parties, in order that, if one boat founder, the
+whole family may not be destroyed.</p>
+<p>I found the cottages of the peasants at Reikjavik smaller, and in every
+respect worse provided, than those at Havenfiord.&nbsp; This seems,
+however, to be entirely owing to the indolence of the peasants themselves;
+for stones are to be had in abundance, and every man is his own
+builder.&nbsp; The cows and sheep live through the winter in a wretched
+den, built either in the cottage itself or in its immediate
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; The horses pass the whole year under the canopy of
+heaven, and must find their own provender.&nbsp; Occasionally only the
+peasant will shovel away the snow from a little spot, to assist the poor
+animals in searching for the grass or moss concealed beneath.&nbsp; It is
+then left to the horses to finish clearing away the snow with their
+feet.&nbsp; It may easily be imagined that this mode of treatment tends to
+render them very hardy; but the wonder is, how the poor creatures manage to
+exist through the winter on such spare diet, and to be strong and fit for
+work late in the spring and in summer.&nbsp; These horses are so entirely
+unused to being fed with oats, that they will refuse them when offered;
+they are not even fond of hay.</p>
+<p>As I arrived in Iceland during the early spring, I had an opportunity of
+seeing the horses and sheep in their winter garments.&nbsp; The horses
+seemed to be covered, not with hair, but with a thick woolly coat; their
+manes and tails are very long, and of surprising thickness.&nbsp; At the
+end of May or the beginning of June the tail and mane are docked and
+thinned, their woolly coat falls of itself, and they then look smooth
+enough.&nbsp; The sheep have also a very thick coat during the
+winter.&nbsp; It is not the custom to shear them, but at the beginning of
+June the wool is picked off piece by piece with the hand.&nbsp; A sheep
+treated in this way sometimes presents a very comical appearance, being
+perfectly naked on one side, while on the other it is still covered with
+wool.</p>
+<p>The horses and cows are considerably smaller than those of our
+country.&nbsp; No one need journey so far north, however, to see stunted
+cattle.&nbsp; Already, in Galicia, the cows and horses of the peasants are
+not a whit larger or stronger than those in Iceland.&nbsp; The Icelandic
+cows are further remarkable only for their peculiarly small horns; the
+sheep are also smaller than ours.</p>
+<p>Every peasant keeps horses.&nbsp; The mode of feeding them is, as
+already shewn, very simple; the distances are long, the roads bad, and
+large rivers, moorlands, and swamps must frequently be passed; so every one
+rides, both men, women, and children.&nbsp; The use of carriages is as
+totally unknown throughout the island as in Syria.</p>
+<p>The immediate vicinity of Reikjavik is pretty enough.&nbsp; Some of the
+townspeople go to much trouble and expense in sometimes collecting and
+sometimes breaking the stones around their dwellings.&nbsp; With the little
+ground thus obtained they mix turf, ashes, and manure, until at length a
+soil is formed on which something will grow.&nbsp; But this is such a
+gigantic undertaking, that the little culture bestowed on the spots wholly
+neglected by nature cannot be wondered at.&nbsp; Herr Bernh&ouml;ft shewed
+me a small meadow which he had leased for thirty years, at an annual rent
+of thirty kreutzers.&nbsp; In order, however, to transform the land he
+bought into a meadow, which yields winter fodder for only one cow, it was
+necessary to expend more than 150 florins, besides much personal labour and
+pains.&nbsp; The rate of wages for peasants is very high when compared with
+the limited wants of these people: they receive thirty or forty kreutzers
+per diem, and during the hay-harvest as much as a florin.</p>
+<p>For a long distance round the town the ground consists of stones, turf,
+and swamps.&nbsp; The latter are mostly covered with hundreds upon hundreds
+of great and small mounds of firm ground.&nbsp; By jumping from one of
+these mounds to the next, the entire swamp may be crossed, not only without
+danger, but dry-footed.</p>
+<p>In spite of all this, one of these swamps put me in a position of much
+difficulty and embarrassment during one of my solitary excursions.&nbsp; I
+was sauntering quietly along, when suddenly a little butterfly fluttered
+past me.&nbsp; It was the first I had seen in this country, and my
+eagerness to catch it was proportionately great.&nbsp; I hastened after it;
+thought neither of swamp nor of danger, and in the heat of the chase did
+not observe that the mounds became every moment fewer and farther
+between.&nbsp; Soon I found myself in the middle of the swamp, and could
+neither advance nor retreat.&nbsp; Not a human being could I descry; the
+very animals were far from me; and this circumstance confirmed me as to the
+dangerous nature of the ground.&nbsp; Nothing remained for me but to fix my
+eyes upon one point of the landscape, and to step out boldly towards
+it.&nbsp; I was often obliged to hazard two or three steps into the swamp
+itself, in order to gain the next acclivity, upon which I would then stand
+triumphantly, to determine my farther progress.&nbsp; So long as I could
+distinguish traces of horses&rsquo; hoofs, I had no fear; but even these
+soon disappeared, and I stood there alone in the morass.&nbsp; I could not
+remain for ever on my tower of observation, and had no resource but to take
+to the swamp once more.&nbsp; I must confess that I experienced a very
+uncomfortable feeling of apprehension when my foot sank suddenly into the
+soft mud; but when I found that it did not rise higher than the ankles, my
+courage returned; I stepped out boldly, and was fortunate enough to escape
+with the fright and a thorough wetting.</p>
+<p>The most arduous posts in the country are those of the medical men and
+clergymen.&nbsp; Their sphere of action is very enlarged, particularly that
+of the medical man, whose practice sometimes extends over a distance of
+eighty to a hundred miles.&nbsp; When we add to this the severity of the
+winter, which lasts for seven or eight months, it seems marvellous that any
+one can be found to fill such a situation.</p>
+<p>In winter the peasants often come with shovels, pickaxes, and horses to
+fetch the doctor.&nbsp; They then go before him, and hastily repair the
+worst part of the road; while the doctor rides sometimes on one horse,
+sometimes on another, that they may not sink under the fatigue.&nbsp; And
+thus the procession travels for many, many miles, through night and fog,
+through storm and snow, for on the doctor&rsquo;s promptitude life and
+death often hang.&nbsp; When he then returns, quite benumbed, and half dead
+with cold, to the bosom of his family, in the expectation of rest and
+refreshment, and to rejoice with his friends over the dangers and hardships
+he has escaped, the poor doctor is frequently compelled to set off at once
+on a new and important journey, before he has even had time to greet the
+dear ones at home.</p>
+<p>Sometimes he is sent for by sea, where the danger is still greater on
+the storm-tost element.</p>
+<p>Though the salary of the medical men is not at all proportionate to the
+hardships they are called upon to undergo, it is still far better than that
+of the priests.</p>
+<p>The smallest livings bring in six to eight florins annually, the richest
+200 florins.&nbsp; Besides this, the government supplies for each priest a
+house, often not much better than a peasant&rsquo;s cottage, a few meadows,
+and some cattle.&nbsp; The peasants are also required to give certain small
+contributions in the way of hay, wool, fish, &amp;c.&nbsp; The greater
+number of priests are so poor, that they and their families dress exactly
+like the peasants, from whom they can scarcely be distinguished.&nbsp; The
+clergyman&rsquo;s wife looks after the cattle, and milks cows and ewes like
+a maid-servant; while her husband proceeds to the meadow, and mows the
+grass with the labourer.&nbsp; The intercourse of the pastor is wholly
+confined to the society of peasants; and this constitutes the chief element
+of that &ldquo;patriarchal life&rdquo; which so many travellers describe as
+charming.&nbsp; I should like to know which of them would wish to lead such
+a life!</p>
+<p>The poor priest has, besides, frequently to officiate in two, three, or
+even four districts, distant from four to twelve miles from his
+residence.&nbsp; Every Sunday he must do duty at one or other of these
+districts, taking them in turn, so that divine service is only performed at
+each place once in every three or four weeks.&nbsp; The journeys of the
+priest, however, are not considered quite so necessary as those of the
+doctor; for if the weather is very bad on Sundays, particularly during the
+winter, he can omit visiting the most distant places.&nbsp; This is done
+the more readily, as but few of the peasants would be at church; all who
+lived at a distance remaining at home.</p>
+<p>The Sysselmann (an officer similar to that of the sheriff of a county)
+is the best off.&nbsp; He has a good salary with little to do, and in some
+places enjoys in addition the &ldquo;strand-right,&rdquo; which is at times
+no inconsiderable privilege, from the quantity of drift timber washed
+ashore from the American continent.</p>
+<p>Fishing and the chase are open to all, with the exception of the
+salmon-fisheries in the rivers; these are farmed by the government.&nbsp;
+Eider-ducks may not be shot, under penalty of a fine.&nbsp; There is no
+military service, for throughout the whole island no soldiers are
+required.&nbsp; Even Reikjavik itself boasts only two police-officers.</p>
+<p>Commerce is also free; but the islanders possess so little commercial
+spirit, that even if they had the necessary capital, they would never
+embark in speculation.</p>
+<p>The whole commerce of Iceland thus lies in the hands of Danish
+merchants, who send their ships to the island every year, and have
+established factories in the different ports where the retail trade is
+carried on.</p>
+<p>These ships bring every thing to Iceland, corn, wood, wines,
+manufactured goods, and colonial produce, &amp;c.&nbsp; The imports are
+free, for it would not pay the government to establish offices, and give
+servants salaries to collect duties upon the small amount of produce
+required for the island.&nbsp; Wine, and in fact all colonial produce, are
+therefore much cheaper than in other countries.</p>
+<p>The exports consist of fish, particularly salted cod, fish-roe, tallow,
+train-oil, eider-down, and feathers of other birds, almost equal to
+eider-down in softness, sheep&rsquo;s wool, and pickled or salted
+lamb.&nbsp; With the exception of the articles just enumerated, the
+Icelanders possess nothing; thirteen years ago, when Herr Knudson
+established a bakehouse, <a name="citation31"></a><a href="#footnote31"
+class="citation">[31]</a> he was compelled to bring from Copenhagen, not
+only the builder, but even the materials for building, stones, lime,
+&amp;c.; for although the island abounds with masses of stone, there are
+none which can be used for building an oven, or which can be burnt into
+lime: every thing is of lava.</p>
+<p>Two or three cottages situated near each other are here dignified by the
+name of a &ldquo;place.&rdquo;&nbsp; These places, as well as the separate
+cottages, are mostly built on little acclivities, surrounded by
+meadows.&nbsp; The meadows are often fenced in with walls of stone or
+earth, two or three feet in height, to prevent the cows, sheep, and horses
+from trespassing upon them to graze.&nbsp; The grass of these meadows is
+made into hay, and laid up as a winter provision for the cows.</p>
+<p>I did not hear many complaints of the severity of the cold in winter;
+the temperature seldom sinks to twenty degrees below zero; the sea is
+sometimes frozen, but only a few feet from the shore.&nbsp; The snowstorms
+and tempests, however, are often so violent, that it is almost impossible
+to leave the house.&nbsp; Daylight lasts only for five or six hours, and to
+supply its place the poor Icelanders have only the northern light, which is
+said to illumine the long nights with a brilliancy truly marvellous.</p>
+<p>The summer I passed in Iceland was one of the finest the inhabitants had
+known for years.&nbsp; During the month of June the thermometer often rose
+at noon to twenty degrees.&nbsp; The inhabitants found this heat so
+insupportable, that they complained of being unable to work or to go on
+messages during the day-time.&nbsp; On such warm days they would only begin
+their hay-making in the evening, and continued their work half the
+night.</p>
+<p>The changes in the weather are very remarkable.&nbsp; Twenty degrees of
+heat on one day would be followed by rain on the next, with a temperature
+of only five degrees; and on the 5th of June, at eight o&rsquo;clock in the
+morning, the thermometer stood at one degree below zero.&nbsp; It is also
+curious that thunderstorms happen in Iceland in winter, and are said never
+to occur during the summer.</p>
+<p>From the 16th or 18th of June to the end of the month there is no
+night.&nbsp; The sun appears only to retire for a short time behind a
+mountain, and forms sunset and morning-dawn at the same time.&nbsp; As on
+one side the last beam fades away, the orb of day re-appears at the
+opposite one with redoubled splendour.</p>
+<p>During my stay in Iceland, from the 15th of May to the 29th of July, I
+never retired to rest before eleven o&rsquo;clock at night, and never
+required a candle.&nbsp; In May, and also in the latter portion of the
+month of July, there was twilight for an hour or two, but it never became
+quite dark.&nbsp; Even during the last days of my stay, I could read until
+half-past ten o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; At first it appeared strange to me to go
+to bed in broad daylight; but I soon accustomed myself to it, and when
+eleven o&rsquo;clock came, no sunlight was powerful enough to cheat me of
+my sleep.&nbsp; I found much pleasure in walking at night, at past ten
+o&rsquo;clock, not in the pale moonshine, but in the broad blaze of the
+sun.</p>
+<p>It was a much more difficult task to accustom myself to the diet.&nbsp;
+The baker&rsquo;s wife was fully competent to superintend the cooking
+according to the Danish and Icelandic schools of the art; but unfortunately
+these modes of cookery differ widely from ours.&nbsp; One thing only was
+good, the morning cup of coffee with cream, with which the most
+accomplished gourmand could have found no fault: since my departure from
+Iceland I have not found such coffee.&nbsp; I could have wished for some of
+my dear Viennese friends to breakfast with me.&nbsp; The cream was so
+thick, that I at first thought my hostess had misunderstood me, and brought
+me curds.&nbsp; The butter made from the milk of Icelandic cows and ewes
+did not look very inviting, and was as white as lard, but the taste was
+good.&nbsp; The Icelanders, however, find the taste not sufficiently
+&ldquo;piquant,&rdquo; and generally qualify it with train-oil.&nbsp;
+Altogether, train-oil plays a very prominent part in the Icelandic kitchen;
+the peasant considers it a most delicious article, and thinks nothing of
+devouring a quantity of it without bread, or indeed any thing else. <a
+name="citation32"></a><a href="#footnote32" class="citation">[32]</a></p>
+<p>I did not at all relish the diet at dinner; this meal consisted of two
+dishes, namely, boiled fish, with vinegar and melted butter instead of oil,
+and boiled potatoes.&nbsp; Unfortunately I am no admirer of fish, and now
+this was my daily food.&nbsp; Ah, how I longed for beef-soup, a piece of
+meat, and vegetables, in vain!&nbsp; As long as I remained in Iceland, I
+was compelled quite to give up my German system of diet.</p>
+<p>After a time I got on well enough with the boiled fish and potatoes, but
+I could not manage the delicacies of the island.&nbsp; Worthy Madame
+Bernh&ouml;ft, it was so kindly meant on her part; and it was surely not
+her fault that the system of cookery in Iceland is different from ours; but
+I could not bring myself to like the Icelandic delicacies.&nbsp; They were
+of different kinds, consisting sometimes of fishes, hard-boiled eggs, and
+potatoes chopped up together, covered with a thick brown sauce, and
+seasoned with pepper, sugar, and vinegar; at others, of potatoes baked in
+butter and sugar.&nbsp; Another delicacy was cabbage chopped very small,
+rendered very thin by the addition of water, and sweetened with sugar; the
+accompanying dish was a piece of cured lamb, which had a very unpleasant
+&ldquo;pickled&rdquo; flavour.</p>
+<p>On Sundays we sometimes had &ldquo;Prothe Gr&uuml;tze,&rdquo; properly a
+Scandinavian dish, composed of fine sago boiled to a jelly, with
+currant-juice or red wine, and eaten with cream or sugar.&nbsp; Tapfen, a
+kind of soft cheese, is also sometimes eaten with cream and sugar.</p>
+<p>In the months of June and July the diet improved materially.&nbsp; We
+could often procure splendid salmon, sometimes roast lamb, and now and then
+birds, among which latter dainties the snipes were particularly good.&nbsp;
+In the evening came butter, cheese, cold fish, smoked lamb, and eggs of
+eider-ducks, which are coarser than hen&rsquo;s eggs.&nbsp; In time I
+became so accustomed to this kind of food, that I no longer missed either
+soup or beef, and felt uncommonly well.</p>
+<p>My drink was always clear fresh water; the gentlemen began their dinner
+with a small glass of brandy, and during the meal all drank beer of Herr
+Bernh&ouml;ft&rsquo;s own brewing, which was very good.&nbsp; On Sundays, a
+bottle of port or Bordeaux sometimes made its appearance at our table; and
+as we fared at Herr Bernh&ouml;ft&rsquo;s, so it was the custom in the
+houses of all the merchants and officials.</p>
+<p>At Reikjavik I had an opportunity of witnessing a great religious
+ceremony.&nbsp; Three candidates of theology were raised to the ministerial
+office.&nbsp; Though the whole community here is Lutheran, the ceremonies
+differ in many respects from those of the continent of Europe, and I will
+therefore give a short sketch of what I saw.&nbsp; The solemnity began at
+noon, and lasted till four o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; I noticed at once that all
+the people covered their faces for a moment on entering the church, the men
+with their hats, and the women with their handkerchiefs.&nbsp; Most of the
+congregation sat with their faces turned towards the altar; but this rule
+had its exceptions.&nbsp; The vestments of the priests were the same as
+those worn by our clergymen, and the commencement of the service also
+closely resembled the ritual of our own Church; but soon this resemblance
+ceased.&nbsp; The bishop stepped up to the altar with the candidates, and
+performed certain ceremonies; then one would mount the pulpit and read part
+of a sermon, or sing a psalm, while the other clergymen sat round on
+chairs, and appeared to listen; then a second and a third ascended the
+pulpit, and afterwards another sermon was preached from the altar, and
+another psalm sung; then a sermon was again read from the pulpit.&nbsp;
+While ceremonies were performed at the altar, the sacerdotal garments were
+often put on and taken off again.&nbsp; I frequently thought the service
+was coming to a close, but it always began afresh, and lasted, as I said
+before, until four o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; The number of forms surprised me
+greatly, as the ritual of the Lutheran Church is in general exceedingly
+simple.</p>
+<p>On this occasion a considerable number of the country people were
+assembled, and I had thus a good opportunity of noticing their
+costumes.&nbsp; The dresses worn by the women and girls are all made of
+coarse black woollen stuffs.&nbsp; The dress consists of a long skirt, a
+spencer, and a coloured apron.&nbsp; On their heads they wear a man&rsquo;s
+nightcap of black cloth, the point turned downwards, and terminating in a
+large tassel of wool or silk, which hangs down to the shoulder.&nbsp; Their
+hair is unbound, and reaches only to the shoulder: some of the women wear
+it slightly curled.&nbsp; I involuntarily thought of the poetical
+descriptions of the northern romancers, who grow enthusiastic in praise of
+ideal &ldquo;angels&rsquo; heads with golden tresses.&rdquo;&nbsp; The hair
+is certainly worn in this manner here, and our poets may have borrowed
+their descriptions from the Scandinavians.&nbsp; But the beautiful faces
+which are said to beam forth from among those golden locks exist only in
+the poet&rsquo;s vivid imagination.</p>
+<p>Ornamental additions to the costume are very rare.&nbsp; In the whole
+assembly I only noticed four women who were dressed differently from the
+others.&nbsp; The cords which fastened their spencers, and also their
+girdles, were ornamented with a garland worked in silver thread.&nbsp;
+Their skirts were of fine black cloth, and decorated with a border of
+coloured silk a few inches broad.&nbsp; Round their necks they wore a kind
+of stiff collar of black velvet with a border of silver thread, and on
+their heads a black silk handkerchief with a very strange addition.&nbsp;
+This appendage consisted of a half-moon fastened to the back of the head,
+and extending five or six inches above the forehead.&nbsp; It was covered
+with white lawn arranged in folds; its breadth at the back of the head did
+not exceed an inch and a half, but in front it widened to five or six
+inches.</p>
+<p>The men, I found, were clothed almost like our peasants.&nbsp; They wore
+small-clothes of dark cloth, jackets and waistcoats, felt hats, or fur
+caps; and instead of boots a kind of shoe of ox-hide, sheep, or seal-skin,
+bound to the feet by a leather strap.&nbsp; The women, and even the
+children of the officials, all wear shoes of this description.</p>
+<p>It was very seldom that I met people so wretchedly and poorly clad as we
+find them but too often in the large continental towns.&nbsp; I never saw
+any one without good warm shoes and stockings.</p>
+<p>The better classes, such as merchants, officials, &amp;c. are dressed in
+the French style, and rather fashionably.&nbsp; There is no lack of silk
+and other costly stuffs.&nbsp; Some of these are brought from England, but
+the greater part come from Denmark.</p>
+<p>On the king&rsquo;s birthday, which is kept every year at the house of
+the Stiftsamtmann, the festivities are said to be very grand; on this
+occasion the matrons appear arrayed in silk, and the maidens in white
+jaconet; the rooms are lighted with wax tapers.</p>
+<p>Some speculative genius or other has also established a sort of club in
+Reikjavik.&nbsp; He has, namely, hired a couple of rooms, where the
+townspeople meet of an evening to discuss &ldquo;tea-water,&rdquo; bread
+and butter, and sometimes even a bottle of wine or a bowl of punch.&nbsp;
+In winter the proprietor gives balls in these apartments, charging 20 kr.
+for each ticket of admission.&nbsp; Here the town grandees and the
+handicraftsmen, in fact all who choose to come, assemble; and the ball is
+said to be conducted in a very republican spirit.&nbsp; The shoemaker leads
+forth the wife of the Stiftsamtmann to the dance, while that official
+himself has perhaps chosen the wife or daughter of the shoemaker or baker
+for his partner.&nbsp; The refreshments consist of &ldquo;tea-water&rdquo;
+and bread and butter, and the room is lighted with tallow candles.&nbsp;
+The music, consisting of a kind of three-stringed violin and a pipe, is
+said to be exquisitely horrible.</p>
+<p>In summer the dignitaries make frequent excursions on horse-back; and on
+these occasions great care is taken that there be no lack of
+provisions.&nbsp; Commonly each person contributes a share: some bring
+wine, others cake; others, again, coffee, and so on.&nbsp; The ladies use
+fine English side-saddles, and wear elegant riding-habits, and pretty felt
+hats with green veils.&nbsp; These jaunts, however, are confined to
+Reikjavik; for, as I have already observed, there is, with the exception of
+this town, no place in Iceland containing more than two or three stores and
+some half-dozen cottages.</p>
+<p>To my great surprise, I found no less than six square piano-fortes
+belonging to different families in Reikjavik, and heard waltzes by our
+favourite composers, besides variations of Herz, and some pieces of Liszt,
+Wilmers, and Thalberg.&nbsp; But such playing!&nbsp; I do not think that
+these talented composers would have recognised their own works.</p>
+<p>In conclusion, I must offer a few remarks relative to the travelling in
+this country.</p>
+<p>The best time to choose for this purpose is from the middle of June to
+the end of August at latest.&nbsp; Until June the rivers are so swollen and
+turbulent, by reason of the melting snows, as to render it very dangerous
+to ride through them.&nbsp; The traveller must also pass over many a field
+of snow not yet melted by the sun, and frequently concealing chasms and
+masses of lava; and this is attended with danger almost as great.&nbsp; At
+every footstep the traveller sinks into the snow; and he may thank his
+lucky stars if the whole rotten surface does not give way.&nbsp; In
+September the violent storms of wind and rain commence, and heavy falls of
+snow may be expected from day to day.</p>
+<p>A tent, provisions, cooking utensils, pillows, bed-clothes, and warm
+garments, are highly necessary for the wayfarer&rsquo;s comfort.&nbsp; This
+paraphernalia would have been too expensive for me to buy, and I was
+unprovided with any thing of the kind; consequently I was forced to endure
+the most dreadful hardships and toil, and was frequently obliged to ride an
+immense distance to reach a little church or a cottage, which would afford
+me shelter for the night.&nbsp; My sole food for eight or ten days together
+was often bread and cheese; and I generally passed the night upon a chest
+or a bench, where the cold would often prevent my closing my eyes all
+night.</p>
+<p>It is advisable to be provided with a waterproof cloak and a
+sailor&rsquo;s tarpaulin hat, as a defence against the rain, which
+frequently falls.&nbsp; An umbrella would be totally useless, as the rain
+is generally accompanied by a storm, or, at any rate, by a strong wind;
+when we add to this, that it is necessary in some places to ride quickly,
+it will easily be seen that holding an umbrella open is a thing not to be
+thought of.</p>
+<p>Altogether I found the travelling in this country attended with far more
+hardship than in the East.&nbsp; For my part, I found the dreadful storms
+of wind, the piercing air, the frequent rain, and the cold, much less
+endurable than the Oriental heat, which never gave me either cracked lips
+or caused scales to appear on my face.&nbsp; In Iceland my lips began to
+bleed on the fifth day; and afterwards the skin came off my face in scales,
+as if I had had the scrofula.&nbsp; Another source of great discomfort is
+to be found in the long riding-habit.&nbsp; It is requisite to be very
+warmly clad; and the heavy skirts, often dripping with rain, coil
+themselves round the feet of the wearer in such a manner, as to render her
+exceedingly awkward either in mounting or dismounting.&nbsp; The worst
+hardship of all, however, is the being obliged to halt to rest the horses
+in a meadow during the rain.&nbsp; The long skirts suck up the water from
+the damp grass, and the wearer has often literally not a dry stitch in all
+her garments.</p>
+<p>Heat and cold appear in this country to affect strangers in a remarkable
+degree.&nbsp; The cold seemed to me more piercing, and the heat more
+oppressive in Iceland, than when the thermometer stood at the same points
+in my native land.</p>
+<p>In summer the roads are marvellously good, so that one can generally
+ride at a pretty quick pace.&nbsp; They are, however, impracticable for
+vehicles, partly because they are too narrow, and partly also on account of
+some very bad places which must occasionally be encountered.&nbsp; On the
+whole island not a single carriage is to be found.</p>
+<p>The road is only dangerous when it leads through swamps and moors, or
+over fields of lava.&nbsp; Among these fields, such as are covered with
+white moss are peculiarly to be feared, for the moss frequently conceals
+very dangerous holes, into which the horse can easily stumble.&nbsp; In
+ascending and descending the hills very formidable spots sometimes oppose
+the traveller&rsquo;s progress.&nbsp; The road is at times so hidden among
+swamps and bogs, that not a trace of it is to be distinguished, and I could
+only wonder how my guide always succeeded in regaining the right
+path.&nbsp; One could almost suppose that on these dangerous paths both
+horse and man are guided by a kind of instinct.</p>
+<p>Travelling is more expensive in Iceland than any where else,
+particularly when one person travels alone, and must bear all the expense
+of the baggage, the guide, ferries, &amp;c.&nbsp; Horses are not let out on
+hire, they must be bought.&nbsp; They are, however, very cheap; a
+pack-horse costs from eighteen to twenty-four florins, and a riding-horse
+from forty to fifty florins.&nbsp; To travel with any idea of comfort it is
+necessary to have several pack-horses, for they must not be heavily laden;
+and an additional servant must likewise be hired, as the guide only looks
+after the saddle-horses, and, at most, one or two of the pack-horses.&nbsp;
+If the traveller, at the conclusion of the journey, wishes to sell the
+horses, such a wretchedly low price is offered, that it is just as well to
+give them away at once.&nbsp; This is a proof of the fact that men are
+every where alike ready to follow up their advantage.&nbsp; These people
+are well aware that the horses must be left behind at any rate, and
+therefore they will not bid for them.&nbsp; I must confess that I found the
+character of the Icelanders in every respect below the estimate I had
+previously formed of it, and still further below the standard given in
+books.</p>
+<p>In spite of their scanty food, the Icelandic horses have a marvellous
+power of endurance; they can often travel from thirty-five to forty miles
+per diem for several consecutive days.&nbsp; But the only difficulty is to
+keep the horse moving.&nbsp; The Icelanders have a habit of continually
+kicking their heels against the poor beast&rsquo;s sides; and the horse at
+last gets so accustomed to this mode of treatment, that it will hardly go
+if the stimulus be discontinued.&nbsp; In passing the bad pieces of road it
+is necessary to keep the bridle tight in hand, or the horse will stumble
+frequently.&nbsp; This and the continual urging forward of the horse render
+riding very fatiguing. <a name="citation33"></a><a href="#footnote33"
+class="citation">[33]</a></p>
+<p>Not a little consideration is certainly required before undertaking a
+journey into the far north; but nothing frightened me,&mdash;and even in
+the midst of the greatest dangers and hardships I did not for one moment
+regret my undertaking, and would not have relinquished it under any
+consideration.</p>
+<p>I made excursions to every part of Iceland, and am thus enabled to place
+before my readers, in regular order, the chief curiosities of this
+remarkable country.&nbsp; I will commence with the immediate neighbourhood
+of Reikjavik.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<p style="text-align: right">May 25th.</p>
+<p>Stiftsamtmann von H--- was to-day kind enough to pay me a visit, and to
+invite me to join his party for a ride to the great lake Vatne.&nbsp; I
+gladly accepted the invitation, for, according to the description given by
+the Stiftsamtmann, I hoped to behold a very Eden, and rejoiced at the
+prospect of observing the recreations of the higher classes, and at the
+same time gaining many acquisitions in specimens of plants, butterflies,
+and beetles.&nbsp; I resolved also to test the capabilities of the
+Icelandic horses more thoroughly than I had been able to do during my first
+ride from Havenfiord to Reikjavik, as I had been obliged on that occasion
+to ride at a foot-pace, on account of my old guide.</p>
+<p>The hour of starting was fixed for two o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; Accustomed
+as I am to strict punctuality, I was ready long before the appointed time,
+and at two o&rsquo;clock was about to hasten to the place of rendezvous,
+when my hostess informed me I had plenty of time, for Herr von H--- was
+still at dinner.&nbsp; Instead of meeting at two o&rsquo;clock, we did not
+assemble until three, and even then another quarter of an hour elapsed
+before the cavalcade started.&nbsp; Oh, Syrian notions of punctuality and
+dispatch!&nbsp; Here, almost at the very antipodes, did I once more greet
+ye.</p>
+<p>The party consisted of the nobility and the town dignitaries.&nbsp;
+Among the former class may be reckoned Stiftsamtmann von H--- and his lady;
+a privy councillor, Herr von B---, who had been sent from Copenhagen to
+attend the &ldquo;Allthing&rdquo; (political assembly); and a Danish baron,
+who had accompanied the councillor.&nbsp; I noticed among the town
+dignitaries the daughter and wife of the apothecary, and the daughters of
+some merchants resident here.</p>
+<p>Our road lay through fields of lava, swamps, and very poor grassy
+patches, in a great valley, swelling here and there into gentle
+acclivities, and shut in on three sides by several rows of mountains,
+towering upwards in the most diversified shapes.&nbsp; In the far distance
+rose several jokuls or glaciers, seeming to look proudly down upon the
+mountains, as though they asked, &ldquo;Why would ye draw men&rsquo;s eyes
+upon you, where we glisten in our silver sheen?&rdquo;&nbsp; In the season
+of the year at which I beheld them, the glaciers were still very beautiful;
+not only their summits, but their entire surface, as far as visible, being
+covered with snow.&nbsp; The fourth side of the valley through which we
+travelled was washed by the ocean, which melted as it were into the horizon
+in immeasurable distance.&nbsp; The coast was dotted with small bays,
+having the appearance of so many lakes.</p>
+<p>As the road was good, we could generally ride forward at a brisk
+pace.&nbsp; Occasionally, however, we met with small tracts on which the
+Icelandic horse could exercise its sagacity and address.&nbsp; My horse was
+careful and free from vice; it carried me securely over masses of stone and
+chasms in the rocks, but I cannot describe the suffering its trot caused
+me.&nbsp; It is said that riding is most beneficial to those who suffer
+from liver-complaints.&nbsp; This may be the case; but I should suppose
+that any one who rode upon an Icelandic horse, with an Icelandic
+side-saddle, every day for the space of four weeks, would find, at the
+expiration of that time, her liver shaken to a pulp, and no part of it
+remaining.</p>
+<p>All the rest of the party had good English saddles, mine alone was of
+Icelandic origin.&nbsp; It consisted of a chair, with a board for the
+back.&nbsp; The rider was obliged to sit crooked upon the horse, and it was
+impossible to keep a firm seat.&nbsp; With much difficulty I trotted after
+the others, for my horse would not be induced to break into a gallop.</p>
+<p>At length, after a ride of an hour and a half, we reached a
+valley.&nbsp; In the midst of a tolerably green meadow I descried what was,
+for Iceland, a farm of considerable dimensions, and not far from this farm
+was a very small lake.&nbsp; I did not dare to ask if this was the
+<i>great</i> lake Vatne, or if this was the delicious prospect I had been
+promised, for my question would have been taken for irony.&nbsp; I could
+not refrain from wonder when Herr von H--- began praising the landscape as
+exquisite, and farther declaring the effect of the lake to be
+bewitching.&nbsp; I was obliged, for politeness&rsquo; sake, to acquiesce,
+and leave them in the supposition that I had never seen a larger lake nor a
+finer prospect.</p>
+<p>We now made a halt, and the whole party encamped in the meadow.&nbsp;
+While the preparations for a social meal were going on, I proceeded to
+satisfy my curiosity.</p>
+<p>The peasant&rsquo;s house first attracted my attention.&nbsp; I found it
+to consist of one large chamber, and two of smaller size, besides a
+storeroom and extensive stables, from which I judged that the proprietor
+was rich in cattle.&nbsp; I afterwards learnt that he owned fifty sheep,
+eight cows, and five horses, and was looked upon as one of the richest
+farmers in the neighbourhood.&nbsp; The kitchen was situated at the extreme
+end of the building, and was furnished with a chimney that seemed intended
+only as a protection against rain and snow, for the smoke dispersed itself
+throughout the whole kitchen, drying the fish which hung from the ceiling,
+and slowly making its exit through an air-hole.</p>
+<p>The large apartment boasted a wooden bookshelf, containing about forty
+volumes.&nbsp; Some of these I turned over, and in spite of my limited
+knowledge of the Danish language, could make out enough to discover that
+they were chiefly on religious subjects.&nbsp; But the farmer seemed also
+to love poetry; among the works of this class in his library, I noticed
+Kleist, M&uuml;ller, and even Homer&rsquo;s <i>Odyssey</i>.&nbsp; I could
+make nothing of the Icelandic books; but on inquiring their contents, I was
+told that they all treated of religious matters.</p>
+<p>After inspecting these, I walked out into the meadow to search for
+flowers and herbs.&nbsp; Flowers I found but few, as it was not the right
+time of the year for them; my search for herbs was more successful, and I
+even found some wild clover.&nbsp; I saw neither beetles nor butterflies;
+but, to my no small surprise, heard the humming of two wild bees, one of
+which I was fortunate enough to catch, and took home to preserve in spirits
+of wine.</p>
+<p>On rejoining my party, I found them encamped in the meadow around a
+table, which had in the meantime been spread with butter, cheese, bread,
+cake, roast lamb, raisins and almonds, a few oranges, and wine.&nbsp;
+Neither chairs nor benches were to be had, for even wealthy peasants only
+possess planks nailed to the walls of their rooms; so we all sat down upon
+the grass, and did ample justice to the capital coffee which made the
+commencement of the meal.&nbsp; Laughter and jokes predominated to such an
+extent, that I could have fancied myself among impulsive Italians instead
+of cold Northmen.</p>
+<p>There was no lack of wit; but to-day I was unfortunately its butt.&nbsp;
+And what was my fault?&mdash;only my stupid modesty.&nbsp; The conversation
+was carried on in the Danish language; some members of our party spoke
+French and others German, but I purposely abstained from availing myself of
+their acquirements, in order not to disturb the hilarity of the
+conversation.&nbsp; I sat silently among them, and was perfectly contented
+in listening to their merriment.&nbsp; But my behaviour was set down as
+proceeding from stupidity, and I soon gathered from their discourse that
+they were comparing me to the &ldquo;stone guest&rdquo; in Mozart&rsquo;s
+<i>Don Giovanni</i>.&nbsp; If these kind people had only surmised the true
+reason of my keeping silence, they would perhaps have thanked me for doing
+so.</p>
+<p>As we sat at our meal, I heard a voice in the farmhouse singing an
+Icelandic song.&nbsp; At a distance it resembled the humming of bees; on a
+nearer approach it sounded monotonous, drawling, and melancholy.</p>
+<p>While we were preparing for our departure, the farmer, his wife, and the
+servants approached, and shook each of us by the hand.&nbsp; This is the
+usual mode of saluting such <i>high</i> people as we numbered among our
+party.&nbsp; The true national salutation is a hearty kiss.</p>
+<p>On my arrival at home the effect of the strong coffee soon began to
+manifest itself.&nbsp; I could not sleep at all, and had thus ample leisure
+to make accurate observations as to the length of the day and of the
+twilight.&nbsp; Until eleven o&rsquo;clock at night I could read ordinary
+print in my room.&nbsp; From eleven till one o&rsquo;clock it was dusk, but
+never so dark as to prevent my reading in the open air.&nbsp; In my room,
+too, I could distinguish the smallest objects, and even tell the time by my
+watch.&nbsp; At one o&rsquo;clock I could again read in my room.</p>
+<h3>EXCURSION TO VID&Ouml;E.</h3>
+<p>The little island of Vid&ouml;e, four miles distant from Reikjavik, is
+described by most travellers as the chief resort of the eider-duck.&nbsp; I
+visited the island on the 8th of June, but was disappointed in my
+expectations.&nbsp; I certainly saw many of these birds on the declivities
+and in the chasms of the rocks, sitting quietly on their nests, but nothing
+approaching the thousands I had been led to expect.&nbsp; On the whole, I
+may perhaps have seen from one hundred to a hundred and fifty nests.</p>
+<p>The most remarkable circumstance connected with the eider-ducks is their
+tameness during the period of incubation.&nbsp; I had always regarded as
+myths the stories told about them in this respect, and should do so still
+had I not convinced myself of the truth of these assertions by laying hands
+upon the ducks myself.&nbsp; I could go quite up to them and caress them,
+and even then they would not often leave their nests.&nbsp; Some few birds,
+indeed, did so when I wished to touch them; but they did not fly up, but
+contented themselves with coolly walking a few paces away from the nest,
+and there sitting quietly down until I had departed.&nbsp; But those which
+already had live young, beat out boldly with their wings when I approached,
+struck at me with their bills, and allowed themselves to be taken up bodily
+rather than leave the nest.&nbsp; They are about the size of our ducks;
+their eggs are of a greenish grey, rather larger than hen&rsquo;s eggs, and
+taste very well.&nbsp; Altogether they lay about eleven eggs.&nbsp; The
+finest down is that with which they line their nests at first; it is of a
+dark grey colour.&nbsp; The Icelanders take away this down, and the first
+nest of eggs.&nbsp; The poor bird now robs herself once more of a quantity
+of down (which is, however, not of so fine a quality as the first), and
+again lays eggs.&nbsp; For the second time every thing is taken from her;
+and not until she has a third time lined the nest with her down is the
+eider-duck left in peace.&nbsp; The down of the second, and that of the
+third quality especially, are much lighter than that of the first.&nbsp; I
+also was sufficiently cruel to take a few eggs and some down out of several
+of the nests. <a name="citation34"></a><a href="#footnote34"
+class="citation">[34]</a></p>
+<p>I did not witness the dangerous operation of collecting this down from
+between the clefts of rocks and from unapproachable precipices, where
+people are let down, or to which they are drawn up, by ropes, at peril of
+their lives.&nbsp; There are, however, none of these break-neck places in
+the neighbourhood of Reikjavik.</p>
+<h3>SALMON FISHERY.</h3>
+<p>I made another excursion to a very short distance (two miles) from
+Reikjavik, in the company of Herr Bernh&ouml;ft and his daughter, to the
+Laxselv (salmon river) to witness the salmon-fishing, which takes place
+every week from the middle of June to the middle of August.&nbsp; It is
+conducted in a very simple manner.&nbsp; The fish come up the river in the
+spawning season; the stream is then dammed up with several walls of stone
+loosely piled to the height of some three feet; and the retreat of the fish
+to the sea is thus cut off.&nbsp; When the day arrives on which the salmon
+are to be caught, a net is spread behind each of these walls.&nbsp; Three
+or four such dams are erected at intervals, of from eighty to a hundred
+paces, so that even if the fishes escape one barrier, they are generally
+caught at the next.&nbsp; The water is now made to run off as much as
+possible; the poor salmon dart to and fro, becoming every moment more and
+more aware of the sinking of the water, and crowd to the weirs, cutting
+themselves by contact with the sharp stones of which they are built.&nbsp;
+This is the deepest part of the water; and it is soon so thronged with
+fish, that men, stationed in readiness, can seize them in their hands and
+fling them ashore.</p>
+<p>The salmon possess remarkable swiftness and strength.&nbsp; The
+fisherman is obliged to take them quickly by the head and tail, and to
+throw them ashore, when they are immediately caught by other men, who fling
+them still farther from the water.&nbsp; If this is not done with great
+quickness and care, many of the fishes escape.&nbsp; It is wonderful how
+these creatures can struggle themselves free, and leap into the air.&nbsp;
+The fishermen are obliged to wear woollen mittens, or they would be quite
+unable to hold the smooth salmon.&nbsp; At every day&rsquo;s fishing, from
+five hundred to a thousand fish are taken, each weighing from five to
+fifteen pounds.&nbsp; On the day when I was present eight hundred were
+killed.&nbsp; This salmon-stream is farmed by a merchant of Reikjavik.</p>
+<p>The fishermen receive very liberal pay,&mdash;in fact, one-half of the
+fish taken.&nbsp; And yet they are dissatisfied, and show so little
+gratitude, as seldom to finish their work properly.&nbsp; So, for instance,
+they only brought the share of the merchant to the harbour of Reikjavik,
+and were far too lazy to carry the salmon from the boat to the warehouse, a
+distance certainly not more than sixty or seventy paces from the
+shore.&nbsp; They sent a message to their employer, bidding him &ldquo;send
+some fresh hands, for they were much too tired.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of course, in
+a case like this, all remonstrance is unavailing.</p>
+<p>As in the rest of the world, so also in Iceland, every occasion that
+offers is seized upon for a feast or a merry-making.&nbsp; The day on which
+I witnessed the salmon-fishing happened to be one of the few fine days that
+occur during a summer in Iceland.&nbsp; It was therefore unanimously
+concluded by several merchants, that the day and the salmon-fishing should
+be celebrated by a <i>d&eacute;je&ucirc;ner &agrave; la
+fourchette</i>.&nbsp; Every one contributed something, and a plentiful and
+elegant breakfast was soon arranged, which quite resembled an entertainment
+of the kind in our country; this one circumstance excepted, that we were
+obliged to seat ourselves on the ground, by reason of a scarcity of tables
+and benches.&nbsp; Spanish and French wines, as well as cold punch, were
+there in plenty, and the greatest hilarity prevailed.</p>
+<p>I made a fourth excursion, but to a very inconsiderable
+distance,&mdash;in fact, only a mile and a half from Reikjavik.&nbsp; It
+was to see a hot and slightly sulphurous spring, which falls into a river
+of cold water.&nbsp; By this lucky meeting of extremes, water can be
+obtained at any temperature, from the boiling almost to the freezing
+point.&nbsp; The townspeople take advantage of this good opportunity in two
+ways, for bathing and for washing clothes.&nbsp; The latter is undoubtedly
+the more important purpose of application, and a hut has been erected, in
+order to shield the poor people from wind and rain while they are at
+work.&nbsp; Formerly this hut was furnished with a good door and with
+glazed windows, and the key was kept at an appointed place in the town,
+whence any one might fetch it.&nbsp; But the servants and peasant girls
+were soon too lazy to go for the key; they burst open the lock, and smashed
+the windows, so that now the hut has a very ruinous appearance, and affords
+but little protection against the weather.&nbsp; How much alike mankind are
+every where, and how seldom they do right, except when it gives them no
+trouble, and then, unfortunately, there is not much merit to be ascribed to
+them, as their doing right is merely the result of a lucky chance!&nbsp;
+Many people also bring fish and potatoes, which they have only to lay in
+the hot water, and in a short time both are completely cooked.</p>
+<p>This spring is but little used for the purpose of bathing; at most
+perhaps by a few children and peasants.&nbsp; Its medicinal virtues, if it
+possesses any, are completely unknown.</p>
+<h3>THE SULPHUR-SPRINGS AND SULPHUR-MOUNTAINS OF KRISUVIK.</h3>
+<p>The 4th of June was fixed for my departure.&nbsp; I had only to pack up
+some bread and cheese, sugar and coffee, then the horses were saddled, and
+at seven o&rsquo;clock the journey was happily commenced.&nbsp; I was alone
+with my guide, who, like the rest of his class, could not be considered as
+a very favourable specimen of humanity.&nbsp; He was very lazy, exceedingly
+self-interested, and singularly loath to devote any part of his attention
+either to me or to the horses, preferring to concentrate it upon brandy, an
+article which can unfortunately be procured throughout the whole
+country.</p>
+<p>I had already seen the district between Reikjavik and Havenfiord at my
+first arrival in Iceland.&nbsp; At the present advanced season of the year
+it wore a less gloomy aspect: strawberry-plants and violets,&mdash;the
+former, however, without blossoms, and the latter inodorous,&mdash;were
+springing up between the blocks of lava, together with beautiful ferns
+eight or ten inches high.&nbsp; In spite of the trifling distance, I
+noticed, as a rule, that vegetation was here more luxuriant than at
+Reikjavik; for at the latter place I had found no strawberry-plants, and
+the violets were not yet in blossom.&nbsp; This difference in the
+vegetation is, I think, to be ascribed to the high walls of lava existing
+in great abundance round Havenfiord; they protect the tender plants and
+ferns from the piercing winds.&nbsp; I noticed that both the grass and the
+plants before mentioned throve capitally in the little hollows formed by
+masses of lava.</p>
+<p>A couple of miles beyond Havenfiord I saw the first birch-trees, which,
+however, did not exceed two or three feet in height, also some
+bilberry-plants.&nbsp; A number of little butterflies, all of one colour,
+and, as it seemed to me, of the same species, fluttered among the shrubs
+and plants.</p>
+<p>The manifold forms and varied outline of the lava-fields present a
+remarkable and really a marvellous appearance.&nbsp; Short as this journey
+is&mdash;for ten hours are amply sufficient for the trip to
+Krisuvik,&mdash;it presents innumerable features for contemplation.&nbsp; I
+could only gaze and wonder.&nbsp; I forgot every thing around me, felt
+neither cold nor storm, and let my horse pick his way as slowly as he
+chose, so that I had once almost become separated from my guide.</p>
+<p>One of the most considerable of the streams of lava lay in a spacious
+broad valley.&nbsp; The lava-stream itself, about two miles long, and of a
+considerable breadth, traversing the whole of the plain, seemed to have
+been called into existence by magic, as there was no mountain to be seen in
+the neighbourhood from which it could have emerged.&nbsp; It appeared to be
+the covering of an immense crater, formed, not of separate stones and
+blocks, but of a single and slightly porous mass of rock ten or twelve feet
+thick, broken here and there by clefts about a foot in breadth.</p>
+<p>Another, and a still larger valley, many miles in circumference, was
+filled with masses of lava shaped like waves, reminding the beholder of a
+petrified sea.&nbsp; From the midst rose a high black mountain, contrasting
+beautifully with the surrounding masses of light-grey lava.&nbsp; At first
+I supposed the lava must have streamed forth from this mountain, but soon
+found that the latter was perfectly smooth on all sides, and terminated in
+a sharp peak.&nbsp; The remaining mountains which shut in the valley were
+also perfectly closed, and I looked in vain for any trace of a crater.</p>
+<p>We now reached a small lake, and soon afterwards arrived at a larger
+one, called Kleinfarvatne.&nbsp; Both were hemmed in by mountains, which
+frequently rose abruptly from the waters, leaving no room for the passage
+of the horses.&nbsp; We were obliged sometimes to climb the mountains by
+fearfully dizzy paths; at others to scramble downwards, almost clinging to
+the face of the rock.&nbsp; At some points we were even compelled to
+dismount from our horses, and scramble forward on our hands and
+knees.&nbsp; In a word, these dangerous points, which extended over a space
+of about seven miles, were certainly quite as bad as any I had encountered
+in Syria; if any thing, they were even more formidable.</p>
+<p>I was, however, assured that I should have no more such places to
+encounter during all my further journeys in Iceland, and this information
+quite reconciled me to the roads in this country.&nbsp; For the rest, the
+path was generally tolerably safe even during this tour, which continually
+led me across fields of lava.</p>
+<p>A journey of some eight-and-twenty miles brought us at length into a
+friendly valley; clouds of smoke, both small and great, were soon
+discovered rising from the surrounding heights, and also from the valley
+itself; these were the sulphur-springs and sulphur-mountains.</p>
+<p>I could hardly restrain my impatience while we traversed the couple of
+miles which separated us from Krisuvik.&nbsp; A few small lakes were still
+to be crossed; and at length, at six o&rsquo;clock in the evening, we
+reached our destination.</p>
+<p>With the exception of a morsel of bread and cheese, I had eaten nothing
+since the morning; still I could not spare time to make coffee, but at once
+dismounted, summoned my guide, and commenced my pilgrimage to the smoking
+mountains.&nbsp; At the outset our way lay across swampy places and meadow
+lands; but soon we had to climb the mountains themselves, a task rendered
+extremely difficult by the elastic, yielding soil, in which every footstep
+imprinted itself deeply, suggesting to the traveller the unpleasant
+possibility of his sinking through,&mdash;a contingency rendered any thing
+but agreeable by the neighbourhood of the boiling springs.&nbsp; At length
+I gained the summit, and saw around me numerous basins filled with boiling
+water, while on all sides, from hill and valley, columns of vapour rose out
+of numberless clefts in the rocks.&nbsp; From a cleft in one rock in
+particular a mighty column of vapour whirled into the air.&nbsp; On the
+windward side I could approach this place very closely.&nbsp; The ground
+was only lukewarm in some places, and I could hold my hand for several
+moments to the gaps from which steam issued.&nbsp; No trace of a crater was
+to be seen.&nbsp; The bubbling and hissing of the steam, added to the noise
+of the wind, occasioned such a deafening clamour, that I was very glad to
+feel firmer ground beneath my feet, and to leave the place in haste.&nbsp;
+It really seemed as if the interior of the mountain had been a boiling
+caldron.&nbsp; The prospect from these mountains is very fine.&nbsp;
+Numerous valleys and mountains innumerable offered themselves to my view,
+and I could even discern the isolated black rock past which I had ridden
+five or six hours previously.</p>
+<p>I now commenced my descent into the valley; at a few hundred paces the
+bubbling and hissing were already inaudible.&nbsp; I supposed that I had
+seen every thing worthy of notice; but much that was remarkable still
+remained.&nbsp; I particularly noticed a basin some five or six feet in
+diameter, filled with boiling mud.&nbsp; This mud has quite the appearance
+of fine clay dissolved in water; its colour was a light grey.</p>
+<p>From another basin, hardly two feet in diameter, a mighty column of
+steam shot continually into the air with so much force and noise that I
+started back half stunned, and could have fancied the vault of heaven would
+burst.&nbsp; This basin is situated in a corner of the valley, closely shut
+in on three sides by hills.&nbsp; In the neighbourhood many hot springs
+gushed forth; but I saw no columns of water, and my guide assured me that
+such a phenomenon was never witnessed here.</p>
+<p>There is more danger in passing these spots than even in traversing the
+mountains.&nbsp; In spite of the greatest precautions, I frequently sank in
+above the ankles, and would then draw back with a start, and find my foot
+covered with hot mud.&nbsp; From the place where I had broken through,
+steam and hot mud, or boiling water, rose into the air.</p>
+<p>Though my guide, who walked before me, carefully probed the ground with
+his stick, he several times sank through half-way to the knee.&nbsp; These
+men are, however, so much accustomed to contingencies of this kind that
+they take little account of them.&nbsp; My guide would quietly repair to
+the next spring and cleanse his clothes from mud.&nbsp; As I was covered
+with it to above the ankles, I thought it best to follow his example.</p>
+<p>For excursions like these it is best to come provided with a few boards,
+five or six feet in length, with which to cover the most dangerous
+places.</p>
+<p>At nine o&rsquo;clock in the evening, but yet in the full glare of the
+sun, we arrived at Krisuvik.&nbsp; I now took time to look at this place,
+which I found to consist of a small church and a few miserable huts.</p>
+<p>I crept into one of these dens; it was so dark that a considerable time
+elapsed before I could distinguish objects, the light was only admitted
+through a very small aperture.&nbsp; I found in this hut a few persons who
+were suffering from the eruption called &ldquo;lepra,&rdquo; a disease but
+too commonly met with in Iceland.&nbsp; Their hands and faces were
+completely covered with this eruption; if it spreads over the whole body
+the patient languishes slowly away, and is lost without remedy.</p>
+<p>Churches are in this country not only used for purposes of public
+worship, but also serve as magazines for provisions, clothes, &amp;c., and
+as inns for travellers.&nbsp; I do not suppose that a parallel instance of
+desecration could be met with even among the most uncivilised
+nations.&nbsp; I was assured, indeed, that these abuses were about to be
+remedied.&nbsp; A reform of this kind ought to have been carried out long
+ago; and even now the matter seems to remain an open point; for wherever I
+came the church was placed at my disposal for the night, and every where I
+found a store of fish, tallow, and other equally odoriferous
+substances.</p>
+<p>The little chapel at Krisuvik is only twenty-two feet long by ten broad;
+on my arrival it was hastily prepared for my reception.&nbsp; Saddles,
+ropes, clothes, hats, and other articles which lay scattered about, were
+hastily flung into a corner; mattresses and some nice soft pillows soon
+appeared, and a very tolerable bed was prepared for me on a large chest in
+which the vestments of the priest, the coverings of the altar, &amp;c.,
+were deposited.&nbsp; I would willingly have locked myself in, eaten my
+frugal supper, and afterwards written a few pages of my diary before
+retiring to rest; but this was out of the question.&nbsp; The entire
+population of the village turned out to see me, old and young hastened to
+the church, and stood round in a circle and gazed at me.</p>
+<p>Irksome as this curiosity was, I was obliged to endure it patiently, for
+I could not have sent these good people away without seriously offending
+them; so I began quietly to unpack my little portmanteau, and proceeded to
+boil my coffee over a spirit-lamp.&nbsp; A whispering consultation
+immediately began; they seemed particularly struck by my mode of preparing
+coffee, and followed every one of my movements with eager eyes.&nbsp; My
+frugal meal dispatched, I resolved to try the patience of my audience, and,
+taking out my journal, began to write.&nbsp; For a few minutes they
+remained quiet, then they began to whisper one to another, &ldquo;She
+writes, she writes,&rdquo; and this was repeated numberless times.&nbsp;
+There was no sign of any disposition to depart; I believe I could have sat
+there till doomsday, and failed to tire my audience out.&nbsp; At length,
+after this scene had lasted a full hour, I could stand it no longer, and
+was fain to request my amiable visitors to retire, as I wished to go to
+bed.</p>
+<p>My sleep that night was none of the sweetest.&nbsp; A certain feeling of
+discomfort always attaches to the fact of sleeping in a church alone, in
+the midst of a grave-yard.&nbsp; Besides this, on the night in question
+such a dreadful storm arose that the wooden walls creaked and groaned as
+though their foundations were giving way.&nbsp; The cold was also rather
+severe, my thermometer inside the church shewing only two degrees above
+zero.&nbsp; I was truly thankful when approaching day brought with it the
+welcome hour of departure.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 5th.</p>
+<p>The heavy sleepiness and extreme indolence of an Icelandic guide render
+departure before seven o&rsquo;clock in the morning a thing not to be
+thought of.&nbsp; This is, however, of little consequence, as there is no
+night in Iceland at this time of year.</p>
+<p>Although the distance was materially increased by returning to Reikjavik
+by way of Grundivik and Keblevik, I chose this route in order to pass
+through the wildest of the inhabited tracts in Iceland.</p>
+<p>The first stage, from Krisuvik to Grundivik, a distance of twelve to
+fourteen miles, lay through fields of lava, consisting mostly of small
+blocks of stone and fragments, filling the valley so completely that not a
+single green spot remained.&nbsp; I here met with masses of lava which
+presented an appearance of singular beauty.&nbsp; They were black mounds,
+ten or twelve feet in height, piled upon each other in the most varied
+forms, their bases covered with a broad band of whitish-coloured moss,
+while the tops were broken into peaks and cones of the most fantastic
+shapes.&nbsp; These lava-streams seem to date from a recent period, as the
+masses are somewhat scaly and glazed.</p>
+<p>Grundivik, a little village of a few wretched cottages, lies like an
+oasis in this desert of lava.</p>
+<p>My guide wished to remain here, asserting that there was no place
+between this and Keblevik where I could pass the night, and that it would
+be impossible for our horses, exhausted as they were with yesterday&rsquo;s
+march, to carry us to Keblevik that night.&nbsp; The true reason of this
+suggestion was that he wished to prolong the journey for another day.</p>
+<p>Luckily I had a good map with me, and by dint of consulting it could
+calculate distances with tolerable accuracy; it was also my custom before
+starting on a journey to make particular inquiries as to how I should
+arrange the daily stages.</p>
+<p>So I insisted upon proceeding at once; and soon we were wending our way
+through fields of lava towards Stad, a small village six or seven miles
+distant from Grundivik.</p>
+<p>On the way I noticed a mountain of most singular appearance.&nbsp; In
+colour it closely resembled iron; its sides were perfectly smooth and
+shining, and streaks of the colour of yellow ochre traversed it here and
+there.</p>
+<p>Stad is the residence of a priest.&nbsp; Contrary to the assertions of
+my guide, I found this place far more cheerful and habitable than
+Grundivik.&nbsp; Whilst our horses were resting, the priest paid me a
+visit, and conducted me, not, as I anticipated, into his house, but into
+the church.&nbsp; Chairs and stools were quickly brought there, and my host
+introduced his wife and children to me, after which we partook of coffee,
+bread and cheese, &amp;c.&nbsp; On the rail surrounding the altar hung the
+clothes of the priest and his family, differing little in texture and make
+from those of the peasants.</p>
+<p>The priest appeared to be a very intelligent, well-read man.&nbsp; I
+could speak the Danish language pretty fluently, and was therefore able to
+converse with him on various subjects.&nbsp; On hearing that I had already
+been in Palestine, he put a number of questions to me, from which I could
+plainly see that he was alike well acquainted with geography, history,
+natural science, &amp;c.&nbsp; He accompanied me several miles on my road,
+and we chatted away the time very pleasantly.</p>
+<p>The distance between Krisuvik and Keblevik is about forty-two
+miles.&nbsp; The road lies through a most dreary landscape, among vast
+desert plains, frequently twenty-five to thirty miles in circumference,
+entirely divested of all traces of vegetation, and covered throughout their
+extreme area by masses of lava&mdash;gloomy monuments of volcanic
+agency.&nbsp; And yet here, at the very heart of the subterranean fire, I
+saw only a single mountain, the summit of which had fallen in, and
+presented the appearance of a crater.&nbsp; The rest were all completely
+closed, terminating sometimes in a beautiful round top, and sometimes in
+sharp peaks; in other instances they formed long narrow chains.</p>
+<p>Who can tell whence these all-destroying masses of lava have poured
+forth, or how many hundred years they have lain in these petrified
+valleys?</p>
+<p>Keblevik lies on the sea-coast; but the harbour is insecure, so that
+ships remain here at anchor only so long as is absolutely necessary; there
+are frequently only two or three ships in the harbour.</p>
+<p>A few wooden houses, two of which belong to Herr Knudson, and some
+peasants&rsquo; cottages, are the only buildings in this little
+village.&nbsp; I was hospitably received, and rested from the toils of the
+day at the house of Herr Siverson, Herr Knudson&rsquo;s manager.</p>
+<p>On the following day (June 6th) I had a long ride to Reikjavik,
+thirty-six good miles, mostly through fields of lava.</p>
+<p>The whole tract of country from Grundivik almost to Havenfiord is called
+&ldquo;The lava-fields of Reikianes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tired and almost benumbed with cold, I arrived in the evening at
+Reikjavik, with no other wish than to retire to rest as fast as
+possible.</p>
+<p>In these three days I had ridden 114 miles, besides enduring much from
+cold, storms, and rain.&nbsp; To my great surprise, the roads had generally
+been good; there were, however, many places highly dangerous and
+difficult.</p>
+<p>But what mattered these fatigues, forgotten, as they were, after a
+single night&rsquo;s rest? what were they in comparison to the unutterably
+beautiful and marvellous phenomena of the north, which will remain ever
+present to my imagination so long as memory shall be spared me?</p>
+<p>The distances of this excursion were: From Reikjavik to Krisuvik, 37
+miles; from Krisuvik to Keblevik, 39 miles; from Keblevik to Reikjavik, 38
+miles: total, 114 miles.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<p>As the weather continued fine, I wished to lose no time in continuing my
+wanderings.&nbsp; I had next to make a tour of some 560 miles; it was
+therefore necessary that I should take an extra horse, partly that it might
+carry my few packages, consisting of a pillow, some rye-bread, cheese,
+coffee, and sugar, but chiefly that I might be enabled to change horses
+every day, as one horse would not have been equal to the fatigue of so long
+a journey.</p>
+<p>My former guide could not accompany me on my present journey, as he was
+unacquainted with most of the roads.&nbsp; My kind protectors, Herr Knudson
+and Herr Bernh&ouml;ft, were obliging enough to provide another guide for
+me; a difficult task, as it is a rare occurrence to find an Icelander who
+understands the Danish language, and who happens to be sober when his
+services are required.&nbsp; At length a peasant was found who suited our
+purpose; but he considered two florins per diem too little pay, so I was
+obliged to give an additional zwanziger.&nbsp; On the other hand, it was
+arranged that the guide should also take two horses, in order that he might
+change every day.</p>
+<p>The 16th of June was fixed for the commencement of our journey.&nbsp;
+From the very first day my guide did not shew himself in an amiable point
+of view.&nbsp; On the morning of our departure his saddle had to be patched
+together, and instead of coming with two horses, he appeared with only
+one.&nbsp; He certainly promised to buy a second when we should have
+proceeded some miles, adding that it would be cheaper to buy one at a
+little distance from the &ldquo;capital.&rdquo;&nbsp; I at once suspected
+this was merely an excuse of the guide&rsquo;s, and that he wished thereby
+to avoid having the care of four horses.&nbsp; The event proved I was
+right; not a single horse could be found that suited, and so my poor little
+animal had to carry the guide&rsquo;s baggage in addition to my own.</p>
+<p>Loading the pack-horses is a business of some difficulty, and is
+conducted in the following manner: sundry large pieces of dried turf are
+laid upon the horse&rsquo;s back, but not fastened; over these is buckled a
+round piece of wood, furnished with two or three pegs.&nbsp; To these pegs
+the chests and packages are suspended.&nbsp; If the weight is not quite
+equally balanced, it is necessary to stop and repack frequently, for the
+whole load at once gets askew.</p>
+<p>The trunks used in this country are massively constructed of wood,
+covered with a rough hide, and strengthened on all sides with nails, as
+though they were intended to last an eternity.&nbsp; The poor horses have a
+considerable weight to bear in empty boxes alone, so that very little real
+luggage can be taken.&nbsp; The weight which a horse has to carry during a
+long journey should never exceed 150lbs.</p>
+<p>It is impossible to remember how many times our baggage had to be
+repacked during a day&rsquo;s journey.&nbsp; The great pieces of turf would
+never stay in their places, and every moment something was wrong.&nbsp;
+Nothing less than a miracle, however, can prevail on an Icelander to depart
+from his regular routine.&nbsp; His ancestors packed in such and such a
+manner, and so he must pack also. <a name="citation35"></a><a
+href="#footnote35" class="citation">[35]</a></p>
+<p>We had a journey of above forty miles before us the first day, and yet,
+on account of the damaged saddle, we could not start before eight
+o&rsquo;clock in the morning.</p>
+<p>The first twelve or fourteen miles of our journey lay through the great
+valley in which Reikjavik is situated; the valley contains many low hills,
+some of which we had to climb.&nbsp; Several rivers, chief among which was
+the Laxselv, opposed our progress, but at this season of the year they
+could be crossed on horseback without danger.&nbsp; Nearly all the valleys
+through which we passed to-day were covered with lava, but nevertheless
+offered many beautiful spots.</p>
+<p>Many of the hills we passed seemed to me to be extinct volcanoes; the
+whole upper portion was covered with colossal slabs of lava, as though the
+crater had been choked up with them.&nbsp; Lava of the same description and
+colour, but in smaller pieces, lay strewed around.</p>
+<p>For the first twelve or fourteen miles the sea is visible from the brow
+of every successive hill.&nbsp; The country is also pretty generally
+inhabited; but afterwards a distance of nearly thirty miles is passed, on
+which there is not a human habitation.&nbsp; The traveller journeys from
+one valley into another, and in the midst of these hill-girt deserts sees a
+single small hut, erected for the convenience of those who, in the winter,
+cannot accomplish the long distance in one day, and must take up their
+quarters for the night in the valley.&nbsp; No one must, however, rashly
+hope to find here a human being in the shape of a host.&nbsp; The little
+house is quite uninhabited, and consists only of a single apartment with
+four naked walls.&nbsp; The visitor must depend on the accommodation he
+carries with him.</p>
+<p>The plains through which we travelled to-day were covered throughout
+with one and the same kind of lava.&nbsp; It occurs in masses, and also in
+smaller stones, is not very porous, of a light grey colour, and mixed, in
+many instances, with sand or earth.</p>
+<p>Some miles from Thingvalla we entered a valley, the soil of which is
+fine, but nevertheless only sparingly covered with grass, and full of
+little acclivities, mostly clothed with delicate moss.&nbsp; I have no
+doubt that the indolence of the inhabitants alone prevents them from
+materially improving many a piece of ground.&nbsp; The worst soil is that
+in the neighbourhood of Reikjavik; yet there we see many a garden, and many
+a piece of meadow-land, wrung, as it were, from the barren earth by labour
+and pains.&nbsp; Why should not the same thing be done here&mdash;the more
+so as nature has already accomplished the preliminary work?</p>
+<p>Thingvalla, our resting-place for to-night, is situate on a lake of the
+same name, and only becomes visible when the traveller is close upon
+it.&nbsp; The lake is rather considerable, being almost three miles in
+length, and at some parts certainly more than two miles in breadth; it
+contains two small islands,&mdash;Sandey and Nesey.</p>
+<p>My whole attention was still riveted by the lake and its naked and
+gloomy circle of mountains, when suddenly, as if by magic, I found myself
+standing on the brink of a chasm, into which I could scarcely look without
+a shudder; involuntarily I thought of Weber&rsquo;s <i>Freysch&uuml;tz</i>
+and the &ldquo;Wolf&rsquo;s Hollow.&rdquo; <a name="citation36"></a><a
+href="#footnote36" class="citation">[36]</a></p>
+<p>The scene is the more startling from the circumstance that the traveller
+approaching Thingvalla in a certain direction sees only the plains beyond
+this chasm, and has no idea of its existence.&nbsp; It was a fissure some
+five or six fathoms broad, but several hundred feet in depth; and we were
+forced to descend by a small, steep, dangerous path, across large fragments
+of lava.&nbsp; Colossal blocks of stone, threatening the unhappy wanderer
+with death and destruction, hang loosely, in the form of pyramids and of
+broken columns, from the lofty walls of lava, which encircle the whole long
+ravine in the form of a gallery.&nbsp; Speechless, and in anxious suspense,
+we descend a part of this chasm, hardly daring to look up, much less to
+give utterance to a single sound, lest the vibration should bring down one
+of these avalanches of stone, to the terrific force of which the rocky
+fragments scattered around bear ample testimony.&nbsp; The distinctness
+with which echo repeats the softest sound and the lightest footfall is
+truly wonderful.</p>
+<p>The appearance presented by the horses, which are allowed to come down
+the ravine after their masters have descended, is most peculiar.&nbsp; One
+could fancy they were clinging to the walls of rock.</p>
+<p>This ravine is known by the name of Almanagiau.&nbsp; Its entire length
+is about a mile, but a small portion only can be traversed; the rest is
+blocked up by masses of lava heaped one upon the other.&nbsp; On the right
+hand, the rocky wall opens, and forms an outlet, over formidable masses of
+lava, into the beautiful valley of Thingvalla.&nbsp; I could have fancied I
+wandered through the depths of a crater, which had piled around itself
+these stupendous barriers during a mighty eruption in times long gone
+by.</p>
+<p>The valley of Thingvalla is considered one of the most beautiful in
+Iceland.&nbsp; It contains many meadows, forming, as it were, a place of
+refuge for the inhabitants, and enabling them to keep many head of
+cattle.&nbsp; The Icelanders consider this little green valley the finest
+spot in the world.&nbsp; Not far from the opening of the ravine, on the
+farther bank of the river Oxer, lies the little village of Thingvalla,
+consisting of three or four cottages and a small chapel.&nbsp; A few
+scattered farms and cottages are situated in the neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>Thingvalla was once one of the most important places in Iceland; the
+stranger is still shewn the meadow, not far from the village, on which the
+Allthing (general assembly) was held annually in the open air.&nbsp; Here
+the people and their leaders met, pitching their tents after the manner of
+nomads.&nbsp; Here it was also that many an opinion and many a decree were
+enforced by the weight of steel.</p>
+<p>The chiefs appeared, ostensibly for peace, at the head of their tribe;
+yet many of them returned not again, but beneath the sword-stroke of their
+enemies obtained that peace which no man seeketh, but which all men
+find.</p>
+<p>On one side the valley is skirted by the lake, on the other it is
+bounded by lofty mountains, some of them still partly covered with
+snow.&nbsp; Not far from the entrance of the ravine, the river Oxer rushes
+over a wall of rock of considerable height, forming a beautiful
+waterfall.</p>
+<p>It was still fine clear daylight when I reached Thingvalla, and the sky
+rose pure and cloudless over the far distance.&nbsp; It seemed therefore
+the more singular to me to see a few clouds skimming over the surface of
+the mountains, now shrouding a part of them in vapour, now wreathing
+themselves round their summits, now vanishing entirely, to reappear again
+at a different point.</p>
+<p>This is a phenomenon frequently observed in Iceland during the finest
+days, and one I had often noticed in the neighbourhood of Reikjavik.&nbsp;
+Under a clear and cloudless sky, a light mist would appear on the brow of a
+mountain,&mdash;in a moment it would increase to a large cloud, and after
+remaining stationary for a time, it frequently vanished suddenly, or soared
+slowly away.&nbsp; However often it may be repeated, this appearance cannot
+fail to interest the observer.</p>
+<p>Herr Beck, the clergyman at Thingvalla, offered me the shelter of his
+hut for the night; as the building, however, did not look much more
+promising than the peasants&rsquo; cottages by which it was surrounded, I
+preferred quartering myself in the church, permission to do so being but
+too easily obtained on all occasions.&nbsp; This chapel is not much larger
+than that at Krisuvik, and stands at some distance from the few surrounding
+cottages.&nbsp; This was perhaps the reason why I was not incommoded by
+visitors.&nbsp; I had already conquered any superstitious fears derived
+from the proximity of my silent neighbours in the churchyard, and passed
+the night quietly on one of the wooden chests of which I found several
+scattered about.&nbsp; Habit is certainly every thing; after a few nights
+of gloomy solitude one thinks no more about the matter.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 17th.</p>
+<p>Our journey of to-day was more formidable than that of yesterday.&nbsp;
+I was assured that Reikholt (also called Reikiadal) was almost fifty miles
+distant.&nbsp; Distances cannot always be accurately measured by the map;
+impassable barriers, only to be avoided by circuitous routes, often oppose
+the traveller&rsquo;s progress.&nbsp; This was the case with us
+to-day.&nbsp; To judge from the map, the distance from Thingvalla to
+Reikholt seemed less by a great deal than that from Reikjavik to
+Thingvalla, and yet we were full fourteen hours accomplishing it&mdash;two
+hours longer than on our yesterday&rsquo;s journey.</p>
+<p>So long as our way lay through the valley of Thingvalla there was no
+lack of variety.&nbsp; At one time there was an arm of the river Oxer to
+cross, at another we traversed a cheerful meadow; sometimes we even passed
+through little shrubberies,&mdash;that is to say, according to the
+Icelandic acceptation of the term.&nbsp; In my country these lovely
+shrubberies would have been cleared away as useless underwood.&nbsp; The
+trees trail along the ground, seldom attaining a height of more than two
+feet.&nbsp; When one of these puny stems reaches four feet in height, it is
+considered a gigantic tree.&nbsp; The greater portion of these miniature
+forests grow on the lava with which the valley is covered.</p>
+<p>The formation of the lava here assumes a new character.&nbsp; Up to this
+point it has mostly appeared either in large masses or in streams lying in
+strata one above the other; but here the lava covered the greater portion
+of the ground in the form of immense flat slabs or blocks of rock, often
+split in a vertical direction.&nbsp; I saw long fissures of eight or ten
+feet in breadth, and from ten to fifteen feet in depth.&nbsp; In these
+clefts the flowers blossom earlier, and the fern grows taller and more
+luxuriantly, than in the boisterous upper world.</p>
+<p>After the valley of Thingvalla has been passed the journey becomes very
+monotonous.&nbsp; The district beyond is wholly uninhabited, and we
+travelled many miles without seeing a single cottage.&nbsp; From one desert
+valley we passed into another; all were alike covered with light-grey or
+yellowish lava, and at intervals also with fine sand, in which the horses
+sunk deeply at every step.&nbsp; The mountains surrounding these valleys
+were none of the highest, and it was seldom that a jokul or glacier shone
+forth from among them.&nbsp; The mountains had a certain polished
+appearance, their sides being perfectly smooth and shining.&nbsp; In some
+instances, however, masses of lava formed beautiful groups, bearing a great
+resemblance to ruins of ancient buildings, and standing out in peculiarly
+fine relief from the smooth walls.</p>
+<p>These mountains are of different colours; they are black or brown, grey
+or yellow, &amp;c.; and the different shades of these colours are displayed
+with marvellous effect in the brilliant sunshine.</p>
+<p>Nine hours of uninterrupted riding brought us into a large tract of
+moorland, very scantily covered with moss.&nbsp; Yet this was the first and
+only grazing-place to be met with in all the long distance from
+Thingvalla.&nbsp; We therefore made a halt of two hours, to let our poor
+horses pick a scanty meal.&nbsp; Large swarms of minute gnats, which seemed
+to fly into our eyes, nose, and mouth, annoyed us dreadfully during our
+stay in this place.</p>
+<p>On this moor there was also a small lake; and here I saw for the first
+time a small flock of swans.&nbsp; Unfortunately these creatures are so
+very timid, that the most cautious approach of a human being causes them to
+rise with the speed of lightning into the air.&nbsp; I was therefore
+obliged perforce to be content with a distant view of these proud
+birds.&nbsp; They always keep in pairs, and the largest flock I saw did not
+consist of more than four such pairs.</p>
+<p>Since my first arrival in Iceland I had considered the inhabitants an
+indolent race of people; to-day I was strengthened in my opinion by the
+following slight circumstance.&nbsp; The moorland on which we halted to
+rest was separated from the adjoining fields of lava by a narrow ditch
+filled with water.&nbsp; Across this ditch a few stones and slabs had been
+laid, to form a kind of bridge.&nbsp; Now this bridge was so full of holes
+that the horses could not tell where to plant their feet, and refused
+obstinately to cross it, so that in the end we were obliged to dismount and
+lead them across.&nbsp; We had scarcely passed this place, and sat down to
+rest, when a caravan of fifteen horses, laden with planks, dried fish,
+&amp;c. arrived at the bridge.&nbsp; Of course the poor creatures observed
+the dangerous ground, and could only be driven by hard blows to
+advance.&nbsp; Hardly twenty paces off there were stones in abundance; but
+rather than devote a few minutes to filling up the holes, these lazy people
+beat their horses cruelly, and exposed them to the risk of breaking their
+legs.&nbsp; I pitied the poor animals, which would be compelled to recross
+the bridge, so heartily, that, after they are gone, I devoted a part of my
+resting-time to collecting stones and filling up the holes,&mdash;a
+business which scarcely occupied me a quarter of an hour.</p>
+<p>It is interesting to notice how the horses know by instinct the
+dangerous spots in the stony wastes, and in the moors and swamps.&nbsp; On
+approaching these places they bend their heads towards the earth, and look
+sharply round on all sides.&nbsp; If they cannot discover a firm
+resting-place for the feet, they stop at once, and cannot be urged forward
+without many blows.</p>
+<p>After a halt of two hours we continued our journey, which again led us
+across fields of lava.&nbsp; At past nine o&rsquo;clock in the evening we
+reached an elevated plain, after traversing which for half an hour we saw
+stretched at our feet the valley of Reikholt or Reikiadal; it is fourteen
+to seventeen miles long, of a good breadth, and girt round by a row of
+mountains, among which several jokuls sparkle in their icy garments.</p>
+<p>A sunset seen in the sublime wildness of Icelandic scenery has a
+peculiarly beautiful effect.&nbsp; Over these vast plains, divested of
+trees or shrubs, covered with dark lava, and shut in by mountains almost of
+a sable hue, the parting sun sheds an almost magical radiance.&nbsp; The
+peaks of the mountains shine in the bright parting rays, the jokuls are
+shrouded in the most delicate roseate hue, while the lower parts of the
+mountains lie in deep shadow, and frown darkly on the valleys, which
+resemble a sheet of dark blue water, with an atmosphere of a bluish-red
+colour floating above it.&nbsp; The most impressive feature of all is the
+profound silence and solitude; not a sound can be heard, not a living
+creature is to be seen; every thing appears dead.&nbsp; Throughout the
+broad valleys not a town nor a village, no, not even a solitary house or a
+tree or shrub, varies the prospect.&nbsp; The eye wanders over the vast
+desert, and finds not one familiar object on which it can rest.</p>
+<p>To-night, as at past eleven o&rsquo;clock we reached the elevated plain,
+I saw a sunset which I shall never forget.&nbsp; The sun disappeared behind
+the mountains, and in its stead a gorgeous ruddy gleam lighted up hill and
+valley and glacier.&nbsp; It was long ere I could turn away my eyes from
+the glittering heights, and yet the valley also offered much that was
+striking and beautiful.</p>
+<p>Throughout almost its entire length this valley formed a meadow, from
+the extremities of which columns of smoke and boiling springs burst
+forth.&nbsp; The mists had almost evaporated, and the atmosphere was bright
+and clear, more transparent even than I had seen it in any other
+country.&nbsp; I now for the first time noticed, that in the valley itself
+the radiance was almost as clear as the light of day, so that the most
+minute objects could be plainly distinguished.&nbsp; This was, however,
+extremely necessary, for steep and dangerous paths lead over masses of lava
+into the valley.&nbsp; On one side ran a little river, forming many
+picturesque waterfalls, some of them above thirty feet in height.</p>
+<p>I strained my eyes in vain to discover any where, in this great valley,
+a little church, which, if it only offered me a hard bench for a couch,
+would at any rate afford me a shelter from the sharp night-wind; for it is
+really no joke to ride for fifteen hours, with nothing to eat but bread and
+cheese, and then not even to have the pleasant prospect of a hotel
+<i>&agrave; la villa de Londres</i> or <i>de Paris</i>.&nbsp; Alas, my
+wishes were far more modest.&nbsp; I expected no porter at the gate to give
+the signal of my arrival, no waiter, and no chambermaid; I only desired a
+little spot in the neighbourhood of the dear departed Icelanders.&nbsp; I
+was suddenly recalled from these happy delusions by the voice of the guide,
+who cried out: &ldquo;Here we are at our destination for
+to-night.&rdquo;&nbsp; I looked joyfully round; alas! I could only see a
+few of those cottages which are never observed until you almost hit your
+nose against one of them, as the grass-covered walls can hardly be
+distinguished from the surrounding meadow.</p>
+<p>It was already midnight.&nbsp; We stopped, and turned our horses loose,
+to seek supper and rest in the nearest meadow.&nbsp; Our lot was a less
+fortunate one.&nbsp; The inhabitants were already buried in deep slumbers,
+from which even the barking set up by the dogs at our approach failed to
+arouse them.&nbsp; A cup of coffee would certainly have been very
+acceptable to me; yet I was loath to rouse any one merely for this.&nbsp; A
+piece of bread satisfied my hunger, and a draught of water from the nearest
+spring tasted most deliciously with it.&nbsp; After concluding my frugal
+meal, I sought out a corner beside a cottage, where I was partially
+sheltered from the too-familiar wind; and wrapping my cloak around me, lay
+down on the ground, having wished myself, with all my heart, a good
+night&rsquo;s rest and pleasant dreams, in the broad daylight, <a
+name="citation37"></a><a href="#footnote37" class="citation">[37]</a> under
+the canopy of heaven.&nbsp; Just dropping off to sleep, I was surprised by
+a mild rain, which, of course, at once put to flight every idea of
+repose.&nbsp; Thus, after all, I was obliged to wake some one up, to obtain
+the shelter of a roof.</p>
+<p>The best room, <i>i.e.</i> the store-room, was thrown open for my
+accommodation, and a small wooden bedstead placed at my disposal.&nbsp;
+Chambers of this kind are luckily found wherever two or three cottages lie
+contiguous to each other; they are certainly far from inviting, as dried
+fish, train-oil, tallow, and many other articles of the same description
+combine to produce a most unsavoury atmosphere.&nbsp; Yet they are
+infinitely preferable to the dwellings of the peasants, which, by the by,
+are the most filthy dens that can be imagined.&nbsp; Besides being redolent
+of every description of bad odour, these cottages are infested with vermin
+to a degree which can certainly not be surpassed, except in the dwellings
+of the Greenlanders and Laplanders.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 18th.</p>
+<p>Yesterday we had been forced to put upon our poor horses a wearisome
+distance of more than fifty miles, as the last forty miles led us through
+desert and uninhabited places, boasting not even a single cottage.&nbsp;
+To-day, however, our steeds had a light duty to perform, for we only
+proceeded seven miles to the little village of Reikiadal, where I halted
+to-day, in order to visit the celebrated springs.</p>
+<p>The inconsiderable village called Reikiadal, consisting only of a church
+and a few cottages, is situated amidst pleasant meadows.&nbsp; Altogether
+this valley is rich in beautiful meadow-lands; consequently one sees many
+scattered homesteads and cottages, with fine herds of sheep, and a
+tolerable number of horses; cows are less plentiful.</p>
+<p>The church at Reikiadal is among the neatest and most roomy of those
+which came under my observation.&nbsp; The dwelling of the priest too,
+though only a turf-covered cottage, is large enough for the comfort of the
+occupants.&nbsp; This parish extends over a considerable area, and is not
+thinly inhabited.</p>
+<p>My first care on my arrival was to beg the clergyman, Herr Jonas
+Jonason, to procure for me, as expeditiously as possible, fresh horses and
+a guide, in order that I might visit the springs.&nbsp; He promised to
+provide me with both within half an hour; and yet it was not until three
+hours had been wasted, that, with infinite pains, I saw my wish
+fulfilled.&nbsp; Throughout my stay in Iceland, nothing annoyed me more
+than the slowness and unconcern displayed by the inhabitants in all their
+undertakings.&nbsp; Every wish and every request occupies a long time in
+its fulfilment.&nbsp; Had I not been continually at the good pastor&rsquo;s
+side, I believe I should scarcely have attained my object.&nbsp; At length
+every thing was ready, and the pastor himself was kind enough to be my
+guide.</p>
+<p>We rode about four miles through this beautiful vale, and in this short
+distance were compelled at least six times to cross the river Sidumule,
+which rolls its most tortuous course through the entire valley.&nbsp; At
+length the first spring was reached; it emerges from a rock about six feet
+in height, standing in the midst of a moor.&nbsp; The upper cavity of the
+natural reservoir, in which the water continually boils and seethes, is
+between two and three feet in diameter.&nbsp; This spring never stops; the
+jet of water rises two, and sometimes even four feet high, and is about
+eighteen inches thick.&nbsp; It is possible to increase the volume of the
+jet for a few seconds, by throwing large stones or lumps of earth into the
+opening, and thus stirring up the spring.&nbsp; The stones are cast
+forcibly forth, and the lumps of earth, dissolved by the action of the
+water, impart to the latter a dingy colour.</p>
+<p>Whoever has seen the jet of water at Carlsbad, in Bohemia, can well
+imagine the appearance of this spring, which closely resembles that of
+Carlsbad. <a name="citation38"></a><a href="#footnote38"
+class="citation">[38]</a></p>
+<p>In the immediate neighbourhood of the spring is an abyss, in which water
+is continually seething, but never rises into the air.&nbsp; At a little
+distance, on a high rock, rising out of the river Sidumule, not far from
+the shore, are other springs.&nbsp; They are three in number, each at a
+short distance from the next, and occupy nearly the entire upper surface of
+the rock.&nbsp; Lower down we find a reservoir of boiling water; and at the
+foot of the rock, and on the nearest shore, are many more hot springs; but
+most of these are inconsiderable.&nbsp; Many of these hot springs emerge
+almost from the cold river itself.</p>
+<p>The chief group, however, lies still farther off, on a rock which may be
+about twenty feet in height, and fifty in length.&nbsp; It is called Tunga
+Huer, and rises from the midst of a moor.&nbsp; On this rock there are no
+less than sixteen springs, some emerging from its base, others rather above
+the middle, but none from the top of the rock.</p>
+<p>The construction of the basins and the height and diameter of the jets
+were precisely similar to those I have already described.&nbsp; All these
+sixteen springs are so near each other that they do not even occupy two
+sides of the rock.&nbsp; It is impossible to form an idea of the
+magnificence of this singular spectacle, which becomes really fairy-like,
+if the beholder have the courage to climb the rock itself, a proceeding of
+some danger, though of little difficulty.&nbsp; The upper stratum of the
+rock is soft and warm, presenting almost the appearance of mud thickened
+with sand and small stones.&nbsp; Every footstep leaves a trace behind it,
+and the visitor has continually before his eyes the fear of breaking
+through, and falling into a hot spring hidden from view by a thin
+covering.&nbsp; The good pastor walked in advance of me, with a stick, and
+probed the dangerous surface as much as possible.&nbsp; I was loath to stay
+behind, and suddenly we found ourselves at the summit of the rock.&nbsp;
+Here we could take in, at one view, the sixteen springs gushing from both
+its sides.&nbsp; If the view from below had been most interesting and
+singular, how shall I describe its appearance as seen from above?&nbsp;
+Sixteen jets of water seen at one glance, sixteen reservoirs, in all their
+diversity of form and construction, opening at once beneath the feet of the
+beholder, seemed almost too wonderful a sight.&nbsp; Forgetting all
+pusillanimous feelings, I stood and honoured the Creator in these his
+marvellous works.&nbsp; For a long time I stood, and could not tire of
+gazing into the abysses from whose darkness the masses of white and foaming
+water sprung hissing into the air, to fall again, and hasten in quiet union
+towards the neighbouring river.&nbsp; The good pastor found it necessary to
+remind me several times that our position here was neither of the safest
+nor of the most comfortable, and that it was therefore high time to abandon
+it.&nbsp; I had ceased to think of the insecurity of the ground we trod,
+and scarcely noticed the mighty clouds of hot vapour which frequently
+surrounded and threatened to suffocate us, obliging us to step suddenly
+back with wetted faces.&nbsp; It was fortunate that these waters contain
+but a very small quantity of brimstone, otherwise we could scarcely have
+long maintained our elevated position.</p>
+<p>The rock from which these springs rise is formed of a reddish mass, and
+the bed of the river into which the water flows is also completely covered
+with little stones of the same colour.</p>
+<p>On our way back we noticed, near a cottage, another remarkable
+phenomenon.&nbsp; It was a basin, in whose depths the water boils and
+bubbles violently; and near this basin are two unsightly holes, from which
+columns of smoke periodically rise with a great noise.&nbsp; Whilst this is
+going on, the basin fills itself more and more with water, but never so
+much as to overflow, or to force a jet of water into the air; then the
+steam and the noise cease in both cavities, and the water in the reservoir
+sinks several feet.</p>
+<p>This strange phenomenon generally lasts about a minute, and is repeated
+so regularly, that a bet could almost be made, that the rising and falling
+of the water, and the increased and lessened noise of the steam, shall be
+seen and heard sixty or sixty-five times within an hour.</p>
+<p>In communication with this basin is another, situate at a distance of
+about a hundred paces in a small hollow, and filled like the former with
+boiling water.&nbsp; As the water in the upper basin gradually sinks, and
+ceases to seethe, it begins to rise in the lower one, and is at length
+forced two or three feet into the air; then it falls again, and thus the
+phenomenon is continually repeated in the upper and the lower basin
+alternately.</p>
+<p>At the upper spring there is also a vapour-bath.&nbsp; This is formed by
+a small chamber situate hard by the basin, built of stones and roofed with
+turf.&nbsp; It is further provided with a small and narrow entrance, which
+cannot be passed in an upright position.&nbsp; The floor is composed of
+stone slabs, probably covering a hot spring, for they are very warm.&nbsp;
+The person wishing to use this bath betakes himself to this room, and
+carefully closes every cranny; a suffocating heat, which induces violent
+perspiration over the whole frame, is thus generated.&nbsp; The people,
+however, seldom avail themselves of this bath.</p>
+<p>On my return I had still to visit a basin with a jet of water, in a fine
+meadow near the church; a low wall of stone has been erected round this
+spring to prevent the cattle from scalding themselves if they should
+approach too near in the ardour of grazing.&nbsp; Some eighty paces off is
+to be seen the wool-bath erected by Snorri Sturluson.&nbsp; It consists of
+a stone basin three or four feet in depth, and eighteen or twenty in
+diameter.&nbsp; The approach is by a few steps leading to a low stone
+bench, which runs round the basin.&nbsp; The water is obtained from the
+neighbouring spring, but is of so high a temperature that it is impossible
+to bathe without previously cooling it.&nbsp; The bath stands in the open
+air, and no traces are left of the building which once covered it.&nbsp; It
+is now used for clothes and sheep&rsquo;s wool.</p>
+<p>I had now seen all the interesting springs on this side of the
+valley.&nbsp; Some columns of vapour, which may be observed from the
+opposite end of the valley, proceed from thermal springs, that offer no
+remarkable feature save their heat.</p>
+<p>On our return the priest took me to the churchyard, which lay at some
+distance from his dwelling, and showed me the principal graves.&nbsp;
+Though I thought the sight very impressive, it was not calculated to
+invigorate me, when I considered that I must pass the approaching night
+alone in the church, amidst these resting-places of the departed.</p>
+<p>The mound above each grave is very high, and the greater part of them
+are surmounted by a kind of wooden coffin, which at first sight conveys the
+impression that the dead person is above ground.&nbsp; I could not shake
+off a feeling of discomfort; and such is the power of prejudice,
+that&mdash;I acknowledge my weakness&mdash;I was even induced to beg that
+the priest would remove one of the covers.&nbsp; Though I knew full well
+that the dead man was slumbering deep in the earth, and not in this coffin,
+I felt a shudder pass over me as the lid was removed, and I saw&mdash;as
+the priest had assured me I should do&mdash;merely a tombstone with the
+usual inscription, which this coffin-like covering is intended to protect
+against the rude storms of the winter.</p>
+<p>Close beside the entrance to the church is the mound beneath which rest
+the bones of Snorri Sturluson, the celebrated poet; <a
+name="citation39"></a><a href="#footnote39" class="citation">[39]</a> over
+this grave stands a small runic stone of the length of the mound
+itself.&nbsp; This stone is said to have once been completely covered with
+runic characters; but all trace of these has been swept away by the storms
+of five hundred winters, against which the tomb had no protecting
+coffin.&nbsp; The stone, too, is split throughout its entire length into
+two pieces.&nbsp; The mound above the grave is often renewed, so that the
+beholder could often fancy he saw a new-made grave.&nbsp; I picked all the
+buttercups I could find growing on the grave, and preserved them carefully
+in a book.&nbsp; Perhaps I may be able to give pleasure to several of my
+countrywomen by offering them a floweret from the grave of the greatest of
+Icelandic poets.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 19th.</p>
+<p>In order to pursue my journey without interruption, I hired fresh
+horses, and allowed my own, which were rather fatigued, to accompany us
+unloaded.&nbsp; My object in this further excursion was to visit the very
+remarkable cavern of Surthellir, distant a good thirty-three miles from
+this place.&nbsp; The clergyman was again kind enough to make the necessary
+arrangements for me, and even to act as my Mentor on the journey.</p>
+<p>Though we were only three strong, we departed with a retinue of seven
+horses, and for nearly ten miles rode back the same way by which I had come
+from Reikholt on the preceding morning; then we turned off to the left, and
+crossing hills and acclivities, reached other valleys, which were partly
+traversed by beautiful streams of lava, and partly interspersed with
+forests&mdash;<i>forests</i>, as I have already said, according to
+Icelandic notions.&nbsp; The separate stems were certainly slightly higher
+than those in the valley of Thingvalla.</p>
+<p>At Kalmannstunga we left the spare horses, and took with us a man to
+serve as guide in the cavern, from which we were now still some seven miles
+distant.&nbsp; The great valley in which this cavern lies is reckoned among
+the most remarkable in Iceland.&nbsp; It is a most perfect picture of
+volcanic devastation.&nbsp; The most beautiful masses of lava, in the most
+varied and picturesque forms, occupy the whole immeasurable valley.&nbsp;
+Lava is to be seen there in a rough glassy state, forming exquisite flames
+and arabesques; and in immense slabs, lying sometimes scattered, sometimes
+piled in strata one above the other, as though they had been cast there by
+a flood.&nbsp; Among these, again, lie mighty isolated streams, which must
+have been frozen in the midst of their course.&nbsp; From the different
+colours of the lava, and their transitions from light grey to black, we can
+judge of the eruptions which have taken place at different periods.&nbsp;
+The mountains surrounding this valley are mostly of a sombre hue; some are
+even black, forming a striking contrast to the neighbouring jokuls, which,
+in their large expanse, present the appearance almost of a sea of
+ice.&nbsp; I found one of these jokuls of a remarkable size; its shining
+expanse extended far down into the valley, and its upper surface was almost
+immeasurable.</p>
+<p>The other mountains were all smooth, as though polished by art; in the
+foreground I only noticed one which was covered with wonderful forms of
+dried lava.&nbsp; A deathlike silence weighed on the whole country round,
+on hill and on valley alike.&nbsp; Every thing seemed dead, all round was
+barren and desert, so that the effect was truly Icelandic.&nbsp; The
+greater portion of Iceland might be with justice designated the
+&ldquo;Northern Desert.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The cavern of Surthellir lies on a slightly elevated extended plain,
+where it would certainly not be sought for, as we are accustomed to see
+natural phenomena of this description only in the bowels of rocks.&nbsp; It
+is, therefore, with no little surprise that the traveller sees suddenly
+opening before him a large round basin about fifteen fathoms in diameter,
+and four in depth.&nbsp; It was with a feeling of awe that I looked
+downwards on the countless blocks of rock piled one upon the other,
+extending on one side to the edge of the hollow, across which the road led
+to the dark ravines farther on.</p>
+<p>We were compelled to scramble forward on our hands and knees, until we
+reached a long broad passage, which led us at first imperceptibly
+downwards, and then ran underneath the plain, which formed a rocky cavern
+above our heads.&nbsp; I estimated the different heights of this roof at
+not less than from eighteen to sixty feet; but it seldom reached a greater
+elevation than the latter.&nbsp; Both roof and walls are in some places
+very pointed and rough: a circumstance to be ascribed to the stalactites
+which adhere to them, without, however, forming figures or long sharp
+points.</p>
+<p>From this principal path several smaller ones lead far into the interior
+of this stony region; but they do not communicate with each other, and one
+is compelled to return from each side-path into the main road.&nbsp; Some
+of these by-paths are short, narrow, and low; others, on the contrary, are
+long, broad, and lofty.</p>
+<p>In one of the most retired of these by-paths I was shewn a great number
+of bones, which, I was told, were those of slaughtered sheep and other
+animals.&nbsp; I could gather, from the account given by the priest of the
+legend concerning them, that, in days of yore, this cave was the resort of
+a mighty band of robbers.&nbsp; This must have been a long, long time ago,
+as this is related as a legend or a fable.</p>
+<p>For my part, I could not tell what robbers had to do in Iceland.&nbsp;
+Pirates had often come to the island; but for these gentry this cavern was
+too far from the sea.&nbsp; I cannot even imagine beasts of prey to have
+been there; for the whole country round about is desert and uninhabited, so
+that they could have found nothing to prey upon.&nbsp; In fact, I turned
+over in my mind every probability, and can only say that it appeared to me
+a most remarkable circumstance to find in this desert place, so far from
+any living thing, a number of bones, which, moreover, looked as fresh as if
+the poor animals to whom they once belonged had been eaten but a short time
+ago.&nbsp; Unfortunately I could obtain no satisfactory information on this
+point.</p>
+<p>It is difficult to imagine any thing more laborious than to wander about
+in this cavern.&nbsp; As the road had shewed itself at the entrance of the
+cavern, so it continued throughout its whole extent.&nbsp; The path
+consisted entirely of loose fragments of lava heaped one upon the other,
+over which we had to clamber with great labour.&nbsp; None of us could
+afford to help the others; each one was fully occupied with himself.&nbsp;
+There was not a single spot to be seen on which we could have stood without
+holding fast at the same time with our hands.&nbsp; We were sometimes
+obliged to seat ourselves on a stone, and so to slide down; at others, to
+take hands and pull one another to the top of high blocks of stone.</p>
+<p>We came to several immense basins, or craters, which opened above our
+heads, but were inaccessible, the sides being too steep for us to
+climb.&nbsp; The light which entered through these openings was scarcely
+enough to illumine the principal path, much less the numerous by-paths.</p>
+<p>At Kalmannstunga I had endeavoured to procure torches, but was obliged
+to consider myself fortunate in getting a few tapers.&nbsp; It is necessary
+to provide oneself with torches at Reikjavik.</p>
+<p>The parts of the cavern beneath the open craters were still covered with
+a considerable quantity of snow, by which our progress was rendered very
+dangerous.&nbsp; We frequently sunk in, and at other times caught our feet
+between the stones, so that we could scarcely maintain our balance.&nbsp;
+In the by-paths situated near these openings an icy rind had formed itself,
+which was now covered with water.&nbsp; Farther on, the ice had melted; but
+it was generally very dirty, as a stratum of sand mixed with water lay
+there in place of the stones.&nbsp; The chief path alone was covered with
+blocks of lava; in the smaller paths I found only strata of sand and small
+pieces of lava.</p>
+<p>The magical illumination produced by the sun&rsquo;s rays shining
+through one of these craters into the cavern produced a splendid
+effect.&nbsp; The sun shone perpendicularly through the opening, spread a
+dazzling radiance over the snow, and diffused a pale delicate light around
+us.&nbsp; The effect of this point of dazzling light was the more
+remarkable from its contrasting strongly with the two dark chasms, from the
+first of which we had emerged to continue our journey through the obscurity
+of the second.</p>
+<p>This subterranean labyrinth is said to extend in different directions
+for many miles.&nbsp; We explored a portion of the chief path and several
+by-paths, and after a march of two hours returned heartily tired to the
+upper world.&nbsp; We then rested a quarter of an hour, and afterwards
+returned at a good round pace to Kalmannstunga.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately I do not possess sufficient geognostic knowledge to be
+able to set this cavern down as an extinct volcano.&nbsp; But in travelling
+in a country where every hill and mountain, every thing around, in fact,
+consists of lava, even the uninitiated in science seeks to discover the
+openings whence these immense masses have poured.&nbsp; The stranger
+curiously regards the top of each mountain, thinking every where to behold
+a crater, but both hill and dale appear smooth and closed.&nbsp; With what
+joy then does he hail the thought of having discovered, in this cavern,
+something to throw light upon the sources of these things!&nbsp; I, at
+least, fancied myself walking on the hearth of an extinct volcano; for all
+I saw, from the masses of stone piled beneath my feet and the immense basin
+above my head, were both of lava.&nbsp; If I am right in my conjecture, I
+do not know; I only speak according to my notions and my views.</p>
+<p>I was obliged to pass this night in a cottage.&nbsp; Kalmannstunga
+contains three such cottages, but no chapel.&nbsp; Luckily I found one of
+these houses somewhat larger and more cleanly than its neighbours; it could
+almost come under the denomination of a farm.&nbsp; The occupants, too, had
+been employed during my ride to the cavern in cleansing the best chamber,
+and preparing it, as far as possible, for my reception.&nbsp; The room in
+question was eleven feet long by seven broad; the window was so small and
+so covered with dirt that, although the sun was shining in its full glory,
+I could scarcely see to write.&nbsp; The walls, and even the floor, were
+boarded&mdash;a great piece of luxury in a country where wood is so
+scarce.&nbsp; The furniture consisted of a broad bedstead, two chests of
+drawers, and a small table.&nbsp; Chairs and benches are a kind of <i>terra
+incognita</i> in the dwellings of the Icelandic peasantry; besides, I do
+not know where such articles could be stowed in a room of such dimensions
+as that which I occupied.</p>
+<p>My hostess, the widow of a wealthy peasant, introduced to me her four
+children, who were very handsome, and very neatly dressed.&nbsp; I begged
+the good mother to tell me the names of the young ones, so that I might at
+least know a few Icelandic names.&nbsp; She appeared much flattered at my
+request, and gave me the names as follows: Sigrudur, Gudrun, Ingeb&ouml;r,
+and Lars.</p>
+<p>I should have felt tolerably comfortable in my present quarters,
+accustomed as I am to bear privations of all kinds with indifference, if
+they would but have left me in peace.&nbsp; But the reader may fancy my
+horror when the whole population, not only of the cottage itself, but also
+of the neighbouring dwellings, made their appearance, and, planting
+themselves partly in my chamber and partly at the door, held me in a far
+closer state of siege than even at Krisuvik.&nbsp; I was, it appeared,
+quite a novel phenomenon in the eyes of these good people, and so they came
+one and all and stared at me; the women and children were, in particular,
+most unpleasantly familiar; they felt my dress, and the little ones laid
+their dirty little countenances in my lap.&nbsp; Added to this, the
+confined atmosphere from the number of persons present, their lamentable
+want of cleanliness, and their filthy habit of spitting, &amp;c., all
+combined to form a most dreadful whole.&nbsp; During these visits I did
+more penance than by the longest fasts; and fasting, too, was an exercise I
+seldom escaped, as I could touch few Icelandic dishes.&nbsp; The cookery of
+the Icelandic peasants is wholly confined to the preparation of dried fish,
+with which they eat fermented milk that has often been kept for months; on
+very rare occasions they have a preparation of barley-meal, which is eaten
+with flat bread baked from Icelandic moss ground fine.</p>
+<p>I could not but wonder at the fact that most of these people expected to
+find me acquainted with a number of things generally studied only by men;
+they seemed to have a notion that in foreign parts women should be as
+learned as men.&nbsp; So, for instance, the priests always inquired if I
+spoke Latin, and seemed much surprised on finding that I was unacquainted
+with the language.&nbsp; The common people requested my advice as to the
+mode of treating divers complaints; and once, in the course of one of my
+solitary wanderings about Reikjavik, on my entering a cottage, they brought
+before me a being whom I should scarcely have recognised as belonging to
+the same species as myself, so fearfully was he disfigured by the eruption
+called &ldquo;lepra.&rdquo;&nbsp; Not only the face, but the whole body
+also was covered with it; the patient was quite emaciated, and some parts
+of his body were covered with sores.&nbsp; For a surgeon this might have
+been an interesting sight, but I turned away in disgust.</p>
+<p>But let us turn from this picture.&nbsp; I would rather tell of the
+angel&rsquo;s face I saw in Kalmannstunga.&nbsp; It was a girl, ten or
+twelve years of age, beautiful and lovely beyond description, so that I
+wished I had been a painter.&nbsp; How gladly would I have taken home with
+me to my own land, if only on canvass, the delicate face, with its roguish
+dimples and speaking eyes!&nbsp; But perhaps it is better as it is; the
+picture might by some unlucky chance have fallen into the hands of some
+too-susceptible youth, who, like Don Sylvio de Rosalva, in Wieland&rsquo;s
+<i>Comical Romance</i>, would immediately have proceeded to travel through
+half the world to find the original of this enchanting portrait.&nbsp; His
+spirit of inquiry would scarcely have carried him to Iceland, as such an
+apparition would never be suspected to exist in such a country, and thus
+the unhappy youth would be doomed to endless wandering.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 20th.</p>
+<p>The distance from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla is fifty-two miles, and
+the journey is certainly one of the most dreary and fatiguing of all that
+can be made in Iceland.&nbsp; The traveller passes from one desert valley
+into another; he is always surrounded by high mountains and still higher
+glaciers, and wherever he turns his eyes, nature seems torpid and
+dead.&nbsp; A feeling of anxious discomfort seizes upon the wanderer, he
+hastens with redoubled speed through the far-stretched deserts, and eagerly
+ascends the mountains piled up before him, in the hope that better things
+lie beyond.&nbsp; It is in vain; he only sees the same solitudes, the same
+deserts, the same mountains.</p>
+<p>On the elevated plateaux several places were still covered with snow;
+these we were obliged to cross, though we could frequently hear the rushing
+of the water beneath its snowy covering.&nbsp; We were compelled also to
+pass over coatings of ice spread lightly over rivers, and presenting that
+blue colour which is a certain sign of danger.</p>
+<p>Our poor horses were sometimes very restive; but it was of no use; they
+were beaten without mercy until they carried us over the dangerous
+places.&nbsp; The pack-horse was always driven on in front with many blows;
+it had to serve as pioneer, and try if the road was practicable.&nbsp; Next
+came my guide, and I brought up the rear.&nbsp; Our poor horses frequently
+sank up to their knees in the snow, and twice up to the
+saddle-girths.&nbsp; This was one of the most dangerous rides I have ever
+had.&nbsp; I could not help continually thinking what I should do if my
+guide were to sink in so deeply that he could not extricate himself; my
+strength would not have been sufficient to rescue him, and whither should I
+turn to seek for help?&nbsp; All around us was nothing but a desert and
+snow.&nbsp; Perhaps my lot might have been to die of hunger.&nbsp; I should
+have wandered about seeking dwellings and human beings, and have entangled
+myself so completely among these wastes that I could never have found my
+way.</p>
+<p>When at a distance I descried a new field of snow (and unfortunately we
+came upon them but too frequently), I felt very uncomfortable; those alone
+who have themselves been in a similar situation can estimate the whole
+extent of my anxiety.</p>
+<p>If I had been travelling in company with others, these fears would not
+have disturbed me; for there reciprocal assistance can be rendered, and the
+consciousness of this fact seems materially to diminish the danger.</p>
+<p>During the season in which the snow ceases to form a secure covering,
+this road is but little travelled.&nbsp; We saw nowhere a trace of
+footsteps, either of men or animals; we were the only living beings in this
+dreadful region.&nbsp; I certainly scolded my guide roundly for bringing me
+by such a road.&nbsp; But what did I gain by this?&nbsp; It would have been
+as dangerous to turn back as to go on.</p>
+<p>A change in the weather, which till now had been rather favourable,
+increased the difficulties of this journey.&nbsp; Already when we left
+Kalmannstunga, the sky began to be overcast, and the sun enlivened us with
+its rays only for a few minutes at a time.&nbsp; On our reaching the higher
+mountains the weather became worse; for here we encountered clouds and fog,
+which wreaked their vengeance upon us, and which only careered by to make
+room for others.&nbsp; An icy storm from the neighbouring glaciers was
+their constant companion, and made me shiver so much that I could scarcely
+keep my saddle.&nbsp; We had now ridden above thirteen hours.&nbsp; The
+rain poured down incessantly, and we were half dead with cold and wet; so I
+at length determined to halt for the night at the first cottage: at last we
+found one between two or three miles from Thingvalla.&nbsp; I had now a
+roof above my head; but beyond this I had gained nothing.&nbsp; The cottage
+consisted of a single room, and was almost completely filled by four broad
+bedsteads.&nbsp; I counted seven adults and three children, who had all to
+be accommodated in these four beds.&nbsp; In addition to this, the kvef, a
+kind of croup, prevailed this spring to such an extent that scarcely any
+one escaped it.&nbsp; Wherever I went, I found the people afflicted with
+this complaint; and here this was also the case; the noise of groaning and
+coughing on all sides was quite deplorable.&nbsp; The floor, moreover, was
+revoltingly dirty.</p>
+<p>The good people were so kind as immediately to place one of their beds
+at my disposal; but I would rather have passed the night on the threshold
+of the door than in this disgusting hole.&nbsp; I chose for my
+lodging-place the narrow passage which separated the kitchen from the room;
+I found there a couple of blocks, across which a few boards had been laid,
+and this constituted the milk-room: it might have been more properly called
+the smoke-room; for in the roof were a few air-holes, through which the
+smoke escaped.&nbsp; In this smoke or milk-room&mdash;whichever it may be
+called&mdash;I prepared to pass the night as best I could.&nbsp; My cloak
+being wet through, I had been compelled to hang it on a stick to dry; and
+thus found myself under the necessity of borrowing a mattress from these
+unhealthy people.&nbsp; I laid myself down boldly, and pretended
+sleepiness, in order to deliver myself from the curiosity of my
+entertainers.&nbsp; They retired to their room, and so I was alone and
+undisturbed.&nbsp; But yet I could not sleep; the cold wind, blowing in
+upon me through the air-holes, chilled and wetted as I already was, kept me
+awake against my will.&nbsp; I had also another misfortune to endure.&nbsp;
+As often as I attempted to sit upright on my luxurious couch, my head would
+receive a severe concussion.&nbsp; I had forgotten the poles which are
+fixed across each of these antechambers, for the purpose of hanging up fish
+to dry, &amp;c.&nbsp; Unfortunately I could not bear this arrangement in
+mind until after I had received half a dozen salutations of this
+description.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 21st.</p>
+<p>At length the morning so long sighed for came; the rain had indeed
+ceased; but the clouds still hung about the mountains, and promised a
+speedy fall; I nevertheless resolved rather to submit myself to the fury of
+the elements than to remain longer in my present quarters, and so ordered
+the horses to be saddled.</p>
+<p>Before my departure roast lamb and butter were offered me.&nbsp; I
+thanked my entertainers; but refrained from tasting any thing, excusing
+myself on the plea of not feeling hungry, which was in reality the case;
+for if I only looked at the dirty people who surrounded me, my appetite
+vanished instantly.&nbsp; So long as my stock of bread and cheese lasted, I
+kept to it, and ate nothing else.</p>
+<p>Taking leave of my good hosts, we continued our journey to Reikjavik, by
+the same road on which I had travelled on my journey hither.&nbsp; This had
+not been my original plan on starting from Reikjavik; I had intended to
+proceed from Thingvalla directly to the Geyser, to Hecla, &amp;c.; but the
+horses were already exhausted, and the weather so dreadfully bad, without
+prospect of speedy amendment, that I preferred returning to Reikjavik, and
+waiting for better times in my pleasant little room at the house of the
+good baker.</p>
+<p>We rode on as well as we could amidst ceaseless storms of wind and
+rain.&nbsp; The most disagreeable circumstance of all was our being obliged
+to spend the hours devoted to rest in the open air, under a by no means
+cloudless sky, as during our whole day&rsquo;s journey we saw not a single
+hut, save the solitary one in the lava desert, which serves as a
+resting-place for travellers during the winter.&nbsp; So we continued our
+journey until we reached a scanty meadow.&nbsp; Here I had my choice either
+to walk about for two hours, or to sit down upon the wet grass.&nbsp; I
+could find nothing better to do than to turn my back upon the wind and
+rain, to remain standing on one spot, to have patience, and for amusement
+to observe the direction in which the clouds scudded by.&nbsp; At the same
+time I discussed my frugal meal, more for want of something to do than from
+hunger; if I felt thirsty, I had only to turn round and open my mouth.</p>
+<p>If there are natures peculiarly fitted for travelling, I am fortunate in
+being blessed with such an one.&nbsp; No rain or wind was powerful enough
+to give me even a cold.&nbsp; During this whole excursion I had tasted no
+warm or nourishing food; I had slept every night upon a bench or a chest;
+had ridden nearly 255 miles in six days; and had besides scrambled about
+bravely in the cavern of Surthellir; and, in spite of all this privation
+and fatigue, I arrived at Reikjavik in good health and spirits.</p>
+<p>Short summary of this journey:</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Miles</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>First day, from Reikjavik to Thingvalla</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>46</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Second day, from Thingvalla to Reikholt</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>51</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Third day, from Reikholt to the different springs, and back again</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>19</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Fourth day, from Reikholt to Surthellir, and back to Kalmannstunga</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>40</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Fifth day, from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>51</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sixth day, from Thingvalla to Reikjavik</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>46</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Total</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>253</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<p>The weather soon cleared up, and I continued my journey to the Geyser
+and to Mount Hecla on the 24th June.&nbsp; On the first day, when we rode
+to Thingvalla, we passed no new scenery, but saw instead an extremely
+beautiful atmospheric phenomenon.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p0b.jpg">
+<img alt="The Geysers" src="images/p0s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>As we approached the lake, some thin mist-clouds lowered over it and
+over the earth, so that it seemed as if it would rain.&nbsp; One portion of
+the firmament glowed with the brightest blue; while the other part was
+obscured by thick clouds, through which the sun was just breaking.&nbsp;
+Some of its rays reached the clouds of mist, and illuminated them in a
+wonderfully beautiful manner.&nbsp; The most delicate shades of colour
+seemed breathed, as it were, over them like a dissolving rainbow, whose
+glowing colours were intermingled and yet singly perceptible.&nbsp; This
+play of colours continued for half an hour, then faded gradually till it
+vanished entirely, and the ordinary atmosphere took its place.&nbsp; It was
+one of the most beautiful appearances I had ever witnessed.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 25th.</p>
+<p>The roads separate about a mile behind the little town of Thingvalla;
+the one to the left goes to Reikholt, the right-hand one leads to the
+Geyser.&nbsp; We rode for some time along the shores of the lake, and found
+at the end of the valley an awful chasm in the rock, similar to the one of
+Almanagiau, which we had passed on such a wretched road.</p>
+<p>The contiguous valley bore a great resemblance to that of Thingvalla;
+but the third one was again fearful.&nbsp; Lava covered it, and was quite
+overgrown with that whitish moss, which has a beautiful appearance when it
+only covers a portion of the lava, and when black masses rise above it, but
+which here presented a most monotonous aspect.</p>
+<p>We also passed two grottoes which opened at our feet.&nbsp; At the
+entrance of one stood a pillar of rock supporting an immense slab of lava,
+which formed an awe-inspiring portal.&nbsp; I had unfortunately not known
+of the existence of these caves, and was consequently unprepared to visit
+them.&nbsp; Torches, at least, would have been requisite.&nbsp; But I
+subsequently heard that they were not at all deep, and contained nothing of
+interest.</p>
+<p>In the course of the day we passed through valleys such as I had seen
+nowhere else in Iceland.&nbsp; Beautiful meadow-lawns, perfectly level,
+covered the country for miles.&nbsp; These rich valleys were, of course,
+tolerably well populated; we frequently passed three or four contiguous
+cottages, and saw horses, cows, and sheep grazing on these fields in
+considerable numbers.</p>
+<p>The mountains which bounded these valleys on the left seemed to me very
+remarkable; they were partly brown, black, or dark blue, like the others;
+but the bulk of which they were composed I considered to be fine loam-soil
+layers, if I may trust my imperfect mineralogical knowledge.&nbsp; Some of
+these mountains were topped by large isolated lava rocks, real giants; and
+it seemed inexplicable to me how they could stand on the soft soil
+beneath.</p>
+<p>In one of these valleys we passed a considerable lake, on and around
+which rose circling clouds of steam proceeding from hot springs, but of no
+great size.&nbsp; But after we had already travelled about twenty-five
+miles, we came to the most remarkable object I had ever met with; this was
+a river with a most peculiar bed.</p>
+<p>This river-bed is broad and somewhat steep; it consists of lava strata,
+and is divided lengthwise in the middle by a cleft eighteen to twenty feet
+deep, and fifteen to eighteen feet broad, towards which the bubbling and
+surging waters rush, so that the sound is heard at some distance.&nbsp; A
+little wooden bridge, which stands in the middle of the stream, and over
+which the high waves constantly play, leads over the chasm.&nbsp; Any one
+not aware of the fact can hardly explain this appearance to himself, nor
+understand the noise and surging of the stream.&nbsp; The little bridge in
+the centre would be taken for the ruins of a fallen bridge, and the chasm
+is not seen from the shore, because the foaming waves overtop it.&nbsp; An
+indescribable fear would seize upon the traveller when he beheld the
+venturous guide ride into the stream, and was obliged to follow without
+pity or mercy.</p>
+<p>The priest of Thingvalla had prepared me for the scene, and had advised
+me to <i>walk</i> over the bridge; but as the water at this season stood so
+high that the waves from both sides dashed two feet above the bridge, I
+could not descend from my horse, and was obliged to ride across.</p>
+<p>The whole passage through the stream is so peculiar, that it must be
+seen, and can scarcely be described.&nbsp; The water gushes and plays on
+all sides with fearful force; it rushes into the chasm with impetuous
+violence, forms waterfalls on both sides, and breaks itself on the
+projecting rocks.&nbsp; Not far from the bridge the cleft terminates; and
+the whole breadth of the waters falls over rocks thirty to forty feet
+high.&nbsp; The nearer we approached the centre, the deeper, more violent,
+and impetuous grew the stream, and the more deafening was the noise.&nbsp;
+The horses became restless and shy; and when we came to the bridge, they
+began to tremble, they reared, they turned to all sides but the right one,
+and refused to obey the bridle.&nbsp; With infinite trouble we at last
+succeeded in bringing them across this dangerous place.</p>
+<p>The valley which is traversed by this peculiar river is narrow, and
+quite enclosed by lava mountains and hills; the inanimate, silent nature
+around is perfectly adapted to imprint this scene for ever on the
+traveller&rsquo;s memory.</p>
+<p>This remarkable stream had been the last difficulty; and now we
+proceeded quietly and safely through the beautiful valleys till we
+approached the Geyser, which a projecting hillock enviously concealed from
+my anxiously curious gaze.&nbsp; At last this hillock was passed; and I saw
+the Geyser with its surrounding scenery, with its immense steam pillars,
+and the clouds and cloudlets rising from it.&nbsp; The hill was about two
+miles distant from the Geyser and the other hot springs.&nbsp; There they
+were, boiling and bubbling all around, and through the midst lay the road
+to the basin.&nbsp; Eighty paces from it we halted.</p>
+<p>And now I stood before the chief object of my journey; I saw it, it was
+so near me, and yet I did not venture to approach it.&nbsp; But a peasant
+who had followed us from one of the neighbouring cottages, and had probably
+guessed my anxiety and my fear, took me by the hand and constituted himself
+my cicerone.&nbsp; He had unfortunately, it being Sunday, paid too great a
+devotion to the brandy-bottle, so that he staggered rather than walked, and
+I hesitated to trust myself to the guidance of this man, not knowing
+whether he had reason enough left to distinguish how far we might with
+safety venture.&nbsp; My guide, who had accompanied me from Reikjavik,
+assured me indeed that I might trust him in spite of his intoxication, and
+that he would himself go with us to translate the peasant&rsquo;s Icelandic
+jargon into Danish; but nevertheless I followed with great trepidation.</p>
+<p>He led me to the margin of the basin of the great Geyser, which lies on
+the top of a gentle elevation of about ten feet, and contains the outer and
+the inner basins.&nbsp; The diameter of the outer basin may be about thirty
+feet; that of the inner one six to seven feet.&nbsp; Both were filled to
+the brim, the water was pure as crystal, but boiled and bubbled only
+slightly.&nbsp; We soon left this spot; for when the basins are quite
+filled with water it is very dangerous to approach them, as they may empty
+themselves any moment by an eruption.&nbsp; We therefore went to inspect
+the other springs.</p>
+<p>My unsteady guide pointed those out which we might unhesitatingly
+approach, and warned me from the others.&nbsp; Then we returned to the
+great Geyser, where he gave me some precautionary rules, in case of an
+intervening eruption, and then left me to prepare some accommodation for my
+stay.&nbsp; I will briefly enumerate the rules he gave me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The pillar of water always rises perpendicularly, and the
+overflowing water has its chief outlets on one and the same side.&nbsp; The
+water does indeed escape on the other side, but only in inconsiderable
+quantities, and in shapeless little ducts, which one may easily
+evade.&nbsp; On this side one may therefore approach within forty paces
+even during the most violent eruptions.&nbsp; The eruption announces itself
+by a dull roaring; and as soon as this is heard, the traveller must hastily
+retire to the above-named distance, as the eruption always follows very
+quickly after the noise.&nbsp; The water, however, does not rise high every
+time, often only very inconsiderably, so that, to see a very fine
+explosion, it is often necessary to stay some days here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The French scholar, M. P. Geimard, has provided for the accommodation of
+travellers with a truly noble disinterestedness.&nbsp; He traversed the
+whole of Iceland some years ago and left two large tents behind him; one
+here, and the other in Thingvalla.&nbsp; The one here is particularly
+appropriate, as travellers are frequently obliged, as stated above, to wait
+several days for a fine eruption.&nbsp; Every traveller certainly owes M.
+Geimard the warmest thanks for this convenience.&nbsp; A peasant, the same
+who guides travellers to the springs, has the charge of it, and is bound to
+pitch it for any one for a fee of one or two florins.</p>
+<p>When my tent was ready it was nearly eleven o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; My
+companions retired, and I remained alone.</p>
+<p>It is usual to watch through the night in order not to miss an
+eruption.&nbsp; Now, although an alternate watching is no very arduous
+matter for several travellers, it became a very hard task for me alone, and
+an Icelandic peasant cannot be trusted; an eruption of Mount Hecla would
+scarcely arouse him.</p>
+<p>I sat sometimes before and sometimes in my tent, and listened with
+anxious expectation for the coming events; at last, after
+midnight&mdash;the witching hour&mdash;I heard some hollow sounds, as if a
+cannon were being fired at a great distance, and its echoing sounds were
+borne by the breeze.&nbsp; I rushed from my tent and expected subterranean
+noises, violent cracking and trembling of the earth, according to the
+descriptions I had read.&nbsp; I could scarcely repress a slight sensation
+of fear.&nbsp; To be alone at midnight in such a scene is certainly no
+joke.</p>
+<p>Many of my friends may remember my telling them, before my departure,
+that I expected I should need the most courage on my Icelandic journey
+during the nights at the Geyser.</p>
+<p>These hollow sounds were repeated, at very short intervals, thirteen
+times; and each time the basin overflowed and ejected a considerable
+quantity of water.&nbsp; The sounds did not seem to proceed from
+subterranean ragings, but from the violent agitation of the waters.&nbsp;
+In a minute and a half all was over; the water no longer overflowed, the
+caldron and basin remained filled, and I returned to my tent disappointed
+in every way.&nbsp; This phenomenon was repeated every two hours and a
+half, or, at the latest, every three hours and a half.&nbsp; I saw and
+heard nothing else all night, the next day, or the second night.&nbsp; I
+waited in vain for an eruption.</p>
+<p>When I had accustomed myself to these temporary effusions of my
+neighbour, I either indulged in a gentle slumber in the intermediate time,
+or I visited the other springs and explored.&nbsp; I wished to discover the
+boiling vapour and the coloured springs which many travellers assert they
+have seen here.</p>
+<p>All the hot-springs are united with a circumference of 800 to 900 paces:
+several of them are very remarkable, but the majority insignificant.</p>
+<p>They are situated in the angle of an immense valley at the foot of a
+hill, behind which extends a chain of mountains.&nbsp; The valley is
+entirely covered with grass, and the vegetation only decreases a little in
+the immediate vicinity of the springs.&nbsp; Cottages are built every where
+in the neighbourhood; the nearest to the springs are only about 700 to 800
+paces distant.</p>
+<p>I counted twelve large basins with boiling and gushing springs; of
+smaller ones there were many more.</p>
+<p>Among the gushing springs the Strokker is the most remarkable.&nbsp; It
+boils and bubbles with most extraordinary violence at a depth of about
+twenty feet, shoots up suddenly, and projects its waters into the
+air.&nbsp; Its eruptions sometimes last half an hour, and the column
+occasionally ascends to a height of forty feet.&nbsp; I witnessed several
+of its eruptions; but unfortunately not one of the largest.&nbsp; The
+highest I saw could not have been above thirty feet, and did not last more
+than a quarter of an hour.&nbsp; The Strokker is the only spring, except
+the Geyser, which has to be approached with great caution.&nbsp; The
+eruptions sometimes succeed each other quickly, and sometimes cease for a
+few hours, and are not preceded by any sign.&nbsp; Another spring spouts
+constantly, but never higher than three to four feet.&nbsp; A third one
+lies about four or five feet deep, in a rather broad basin, and produces
+only a few little bubbles.&nbsp; But this calmness is deceptive: it seldom
+lasts more than half a minute, rarely two or three minutes; then the spring
+begins to bubble, to boil, and to wave and spout to a height of two or
+three feet; without, however, reaching the level of the basin.&nbsp; In
+some springs I heard boiling and foaming like a gentle bellowing; but saw
+no water, sometimes not even steam, rising.</p>
+<p>Two of the most remarkable springs which can perhaps be found in the
+world are situated immediately above the Geyser, in two openings, which are
+separated by a wall of rock scarcely a foot wide.&nbsp; This partition does
+not rise above the surface of the soil, but descends into the earth; the
+water boils slowly, and has an equable, moderate discharge.&nbsp; The
+beauty of these springs consists in their remarkable transparency.&nbsp;
+All the varied forms and caves, the projecting peaks, and edges of rock,
+are visible far down, until the eye is lost in the depths of
+darkness.&nbsp; But the greatest beauty of the spring is the splendid
+colouring proceeding from the rock; it is of the tenderest, most
+transparent, pale blue and green, and resembles the reflection of a Bengal
+flame.&nbsp; But what is most strange is, that this play of colour proceeds
+from the rock, and only extends eight to ten inches from it, while the
+other water is colourless as common water, only more transparent, and
+purer.</p>
+<p>I could not believe it at first, and thought it must be occasioned by
+the sun; I therefore visited the springs at different times, sometimes when
+the sun shone brightly, sometimes when it was obscured by clouds, once even
+after its setting; but the colouring always remained the same.</p>
+<p>One may fearlessly approach the brink of these springs.&nbsp; The
+platform which projects directly from them, and under which one can see in
+all directions, is indeed only a thin ledge of rock, but strong enough to
+prevent any accident.&nbsp; The beauty consists, as I have said, in the
+magical illumination, and in the transparency, by which all the caves and
+grottoes to the greatest depths become visible to the eye.&nbsp;
+Involuntarily I thought of Schiller&rsquo;s <i>Diver</i>. <a
+name="citation40"></a><a href="#footnote40" class="citation">[40]</a>&nbsp;
+I seemed to see the goblet hang on the peaks and jags of the rock; I could
+fancy I saw the monsters rise from the bottom.&nbsp; It must be a peculiar
+pleasure to read this splendid poem in such an appropriate spot.</p>
+<p>I found scarcely any basins of Brodem or coloured waters.&nbsp; The only
+one of the kind which I saw was a small basin, in which a brownish-red
+substance, rather denser than water, was boiling.&nbsp; Another smaller
+spring, with dirty brown water, I should have quite overlooked, if I had
+not so industriously searched for these curiosities.</p>
+<p>At last, after long waiting, on the second day of my stay, on the 27th
+June, at half-past eight in the morning, I was destined to see an eruption
+of the Geyser in its greatest perfection.&nbsp; The peasant, who came daily
+in the morning and in the evening to inquire whether I had already seen an
+eruption, was with me when the hollow sounds which precede it were again
+heard.&nbsp; We hastened out, and I again despaired of seeing any thing;
+the water only overflowed as usual, and the sound was already
+ceasing.&nbsp; But all at once, when the last sounds had scarcely died
+away, the explosion began.&nbsp; Words fail me when I try to describe it:
+such a magnificent and overpowering sight can only be seen once in a
+lifetime.</p>
+<p>All my expectations and suppositions were far surpassed.&nbsp; The water
+spouted upwards with indescribable force and bulk; one pillar rose higher
+than the other; each seemed to emulate the other.&nbsp; When I had in some
+measure recovered from the surprise, and regained composure, I looked at
+the tent.&nbsp; How little, how dwarfish it seemed as compared to the
+height of these pillars of water!&nbsp; And yet it was about twenty feet
+high.&nbsp; It did, indeed, lie ten feet lower than the basin of the
+Geyser; but if tent had been raised above tent, these ten feet could only
+be deducted once, and I calculated, though my calculation may not be
+correct, that one would need to pile up five or six tents to have the
+height of one of the pillars.&nbsp; Without exaggeration, I think the
+largest spout rose above one hundred feet high, and was three to four feet
+in diameter.</p>
+<p>Fortunately I had looked at my watch at the beginning of the hollow
+sounds, the forerunners of the eruption, for during its continuance I
+should probably have forgotten to do so.&nbsp; The whole lasted four
+minutes, of which the greater half must have been taken up by the eruption
+itself.</p>
+<p>When this wonderful scene was over, the peasant accompanied me to the
+basin.&nbsp; We could now approach it and the boiler without danger, and
+examine both at leisure.&nbsp; There was now nothing to fear; the water had
+entirely disappeared from the outer basin.&nbsp; We entered it and
+approached the inner basin, in which the water had sunk seven or eight
+feet, where it boiled and bubbled fiercely.</p>
+<p>With a hammer I broke some crust out of the outer as well as out of the
+inner basin; the former was white, the latter brown.&nbsp; I also tasted
+the water; it had not an unpleasant taste, and can only contain an
+inconsiderable proportion of sulphur, as the steam does not even smell of
+it.</p>
+<p>I went to the basin of the Geyser every half hour to observe how much
+time was required to fill it again.&nbsp; After an hour I could still
+descend into the outer basin; but half an hour later the inner basin was
+already full, and commenced to overflow.&nbsp; As long as the water only
+filled the inner basin it boiled violently; but the higher it rose in the
+outer one, the less it boiled, and nearly ceased when the basin was filled:
+it only threw little bubbles here and there.</p>
+<p>After a lapse of two hours&mdash;it was just noon&mdash;the basin was
+filled nearly to the brim; and while I stood beside it the water began
+again to bubble violently, and to emit the hollow sounds.&nbsp; I had
+scarcely time to retreat, for the pillars of water rose immediately.&nbsp;
+This time they spouted during the noise, and were more bulky than those of
+the first explosion, which might proceed from their not rising so high, and
+therefore remaining more compact.&nbsp; Their height may have been from
+forty to fifty feet.&nbsp; The basins this time remained nearly as full
+after the eruption as before.</p>
+<p>I had now seen two eruptions of the Geyser, and felt amply compensated
+for my persevering patience and watchfulness.&nbsp; But I was destined to
+be more fortunate, and to experience its explosions in all their
+variety.&nbsp; The spring spouted again at seven o&rsquo;clock in the
+evening, ascended higher than at noon, and brought up some stones, which
+looked like black spots and points in the white frothy water-column.&nbsp;
+And during the third night it presented itself under another phase: the
+water rose in dreadful, quickly-succeeding waves, without throwing rays;
+the basin overflowed violently, and generated such a mass of steam as is
+rarely seen.&nbsp; The wind accidentally blew it to the spot where I stood,
+and it enveloped me so closely that I could scarcely see a few feet
+off.&nbsp; But I perceived neither smell nor oppression, merely a slight
+degree of warmth.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 28th.</p>
+<p>As I had now seen the Geyser play so often and so beautifully, I ordered
+my horses for nine o&rsquo;clock this morning, to continue my
+journey.&nbsp; I made the more haste to leave, as a Dutch prince was
+expected, who had lately arrived at Reikjavik, with a large retinue, in a
+splendid man-of-war.</p>
+<p>I had the luck to see another eruption before my departure at half-past
+eight o&rsquo;clock; and this one was nearly as beautiful as the
+first.&nbsp; This time also the outer basin was entirely emptied, and the
+inner one to a depth of six or seven feet.&nbsp; I could therefore again
+descend into the basin, and bid farewell to the Geyser at the very brink of
+the crater, which, of course, I did.</p>
+<p>I had now been three nights and two days in the immediate vicinity of
+the Geyser, and had witnessed five eruptions, of which two were of the most
+considerable that had ever been known.&nbsp; But I can assure my readers
+that I did not find every thing as I had anticipated it according to the
+descriptions and accounts I had read.&nbsp; I never heard a greater noise
+than I have mentioned, and never felt any trembling of the earth, although
+I paid the greatest attention to every little circumstance, and held my
+head to the ground during an eruption.</p>
+<p>It is singular how many people repeat every thing they hear from
+others&mdash;how some, with an over-excited imagination, seem to see, hear,
+and feel things which do not exist; and how others, again, tell the most
+unblushing falsehoods.&nbsp; I met an example of this in Reikjavik, in the
+house of the apothecary M&ouml;ller, in the person of an officer of a
+French frigate, who asserted that he had &ldquo;ridden to the very edge of
+the crater of Mount Vesuvius.&rdquo;&nbsp; He probably did not anticipate
+meeting any one in Reikjavik who had also been to the crater of
+Vesuvius.&nbsp; Nothing irritates me so much as such falsehoods and
+boastings; and I could not therefore resist asking him how he had managed
+that feat.&nbsp; I told him that I had been there, and feared danger as
+little as he could do; but that I had been compelled to descend from my
+donkey near the top of the mountain, and let my feet carry me the remainder
+of the journey.&nbsp; He seemed rather embarrassed, and pretended he had
+meant to say <i>nearly</i> to the crater; but I feel convinced he will tell
+this story so often that he will at last believe it himself.</p>
+<p>I hope I do not weary my readers by dwelling so long on the subject of
+the Geyser.&nbsp; I will now vary the subject by relating a few
+circumstances that came under my notice, which, though trifling in
+themselves, were yet very significant.&nbsp; The most unimportant facts of
+an almost unknown country are often interesting, and are often most
+conclusive evidences of the general character of the nation.</p>
+<p>I have already spoken of my intoxicated guide.&nbsp; It is yet
+inexplicable to me how he could have conducted me so safely in such a
+semi-conscious state; and had he not been the only one, I should certainly
+not have trusted myself to his guidance.</p>
+<p>Of the want of cleanliness of the Icelanders, no one who has not
+witnessed it can have any idea; and if I attempted to describe some of
+their nauseous habits, I might fill volumes.&nbsp; They seem to have no
+feeling of propriety, and I must, in this respect, rank them as far
+inferior to the Bedouins and Arabs&mdash;even to the Greenlanders.&nbsp; I
+can, therefore, not conceive how this nation could once have been
+distinguished for wealth, bravery, and civilisation.</p>
+<p>On this day I proceeded on my journey about twenty-eight miles farther
+to Skalholt.</p>
+<p>For the first five miles we retraced our former road; then we turned to
+the left and traversed the beautiful long valley in which the Geyser is
+situated.&nbsp; For many miles we could see its clouds of steam rising to
+the sky.&nbsp; The roads were tolerable only when they passed along the
+sides of hills and mountains; in the plains they were generally marshy and
+full of water.&nbsp; We sometimes lost all traces of a road, and only
+pushed on towards the quarter in which the place of our destination was
+situated; and feared withal to sink at every pace into the soft and
+unresisting soil.</p>
+<p>I found the indolence of the Icelandic peasants quite
+unpardonable.&nbsp; All the valleys through which we passed were large
+morasses richly overgrown with grass.&nbsp; If the single parishes would
+unite to dig trenches and drain the soil, they would have the finest
+meadows.&nbsp; This is proved near the many precipices where the water has
+an outlet; in these spots the grass grows most luxuriantly, and daisies and
+herbs flourish there, and even wild clover.&nbsp; A few cottages are
+generally congregated on these oases.</p>
+<p>Before arriving at the village of Thorfast&auml;dir, we already
+perceived Hecla surrounded by the beautiful jokuls.</p>
+<p>I arrived at Thorfast&auml;dir while a funeral was going on.&nbsp; As I
+entered the church the mourners were busily seeking courage and consolation
+in the brandy-bottle.&nbsp; The law commands, indeed, that this be not done
+in the church; but if every one obeyed the law, what need would there be of
+judges?&nbsp; The Icelanders must think so, else they would discontinue the
+unseemly practice.</p>
+<p>When the priest came, a psalm or a prayer&mdash;I could not tell which
+it was, being Icelandic&mdash;was so earnestly shouted by peasants under
+the leadership of the priest and elders, that the good people waxed quite
+warm and out of breath.&nbsp; Then the priest placed himself before the
+coffin, which, for want of room, had been laid on the backs of the seats,
+and with a very loud voice read a prayer which lasted more than half an
+hour.&nbsp; With this the ceremony within the church was concluded, and the
+coffin was carried round the church to the grave, followed by the priest
+and the rest of the company.&nbsp; This grave was deeper than any I had
+ever seen.&nbsp; When the coffin had been lowered, the priest threw three
+handfuls of earth upon it, but none of the mourners followed his
+example.&nbsp; Among the earth which had been dug out of the grave I
+noticed four skulls, several human bones, and a board of a former
+coffin.&nbsp; These were all thrown in again upon the coffin, and the grave
+filled in presence of the priest and the people.&nbsp; One man trod the
+soil firm, then a little mound was made and covered with grass-plots which
+were lying ready.&nbsp; The whole business was completed with miraculous
+speed.</p>
+<p>The little town of Skalholt, my station this night, was once as
+celebrated in religious matters as Thingvalla had been politically
+famous.&nbsp; Here, soon after the introduction of Christianity, the first
+bishopric was founded in 1098, and the church is said to have been one of
+the largest and richest.&nbsp; Now Skalholt is a miserable place, and
+consists of three or four cottages, and a wretched wooden church, which may
+perhaps contain a hundred persons; it has not even its own priest, but
+belongs to Thorfast&auml;dir.</p>
+<p>My first business on arriving was to inspect the yet remaining relics of
+past ages.&nbsp; First I was shewn an oil-picture which hangs in the
+church, and is said to represent the first bishop of Skalholt, Thorlakur,
+who was worshipped almost as a saint for his strict and pious life.</p>
+<p>After this, preparations were made to clear away the steps of the altar
+and several boards of the flooring.&nbsp; I stood expectantly looking on,
+thinking that I should now have to descend into a vault to inspect the
+embalmed body of the bishop.&nbsp; I must confess this prospect was not the
+most agreeable, when I thought of the approaching night which I should have
+to spend in this church, perhaps immediately over the grave of the old
+skeleton.&nbsp; I had besides already had too much to do with the dead for
+one day, and could not rid myself of the unpleasant grave-odour which I had
+imbibed in Thorfast&auml;dir, and which seemed to cling to my dress and my
+nose. <a name="citation41"></a><a href="#footnote41"
+class="citation">[41]</a>&nbsp; I was therefore not a little pleased when,
+instead of the dreaded vault and mummy, I was only shewn a marble slab, on
+which were inscribed the usual notifications of the birth, death, &amp;c.
+of this great bishop.&nbsp; Besides this, I saw an old embroidered stole
+and a simple golden chalice, both of which are said to be relics of the age
+of Thorlakar.</p>
+<p>Then we ascended into the so-called store-room, which is only separated
+from the lower portion of the church by a few boards, and which extends to
+the altar.&nbsp; Here are kept the bells and the organ, if the church
+possesses one, the provisions, and a variety of tools.&nbsp; They opened an
+immense chest for me there, which seemed to contain only large pieces of
+tallow made in the form of cheeses; but under this tallow I found the
+library, where I discovered an interesting treasure.&nbsp; This was,
+besides several very old books in the Icelandic tongue, three thick folio
+volumes, which I could read very easily; they were German, and contained
+Luther&rsquo;s doctrines, letters, epistles, &amp;c.</p>
+<p>I had now seen all there was to be seen, and began to satisfy my
+physical wants by calling for some hot water to make coffee, &amp;c.&nbsp;
+As usual, all the inhabitants of the place ranged themselves in and before
+the church, probably to increase their knowledge of the human race by
+studying my peculiarities.&nbsp; I soon, however, closed the door, and
+prepared a splendid couch for myself.&nbsp; At my first entrance into the
+church, I had noticed a long box, quite filled with sheep&rsquo;s
+wool.&nbsp; I threw my rugs over this, and slept as comfortably as in the
+softest bed.&nbsp; In the morning I carefully teased the wool up again, and
+no one could then have imagined where I had passed the night.</p>
+<p>Nothing amused me more, when I had lodgings of this description, than
+the curiosity of the people, who would rush in every morning, as soon as I
+opened the door.&nbsp; The first thing they said to each other was always,
+&ldquo;Krar hefur hun sovid&rdquo; (Where can she have slept?).&nbsp; The
+good people could not conceive how it was possible to spend a night
+<i>alone</i> in a church surrounded by a churchyard; they perhaps
+considered me an evil spirit or a witch, and would too gladly have
+ascertained how such a creature slept.&nbsp; When I saw their disappointed
+faces, I had to turn away not to laugh at them.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">June 29th.</p>
+<p>Early the next morning I continued my journey.&nbsp; Not far from
+Skalholt we came to the river Thiorsa, which is deep and rapid.&nbsp; We
+crossed in a boat; but the horses had to swim after us.&nbsp; It is often
+very troublesome to make the horses enter these streams; they see at once
+that they will have to swim.&nbsp; The guide and boatmen cannot leave the
+shore till the horses have been forced into the stream; and even then they
+have to throw stones, to threaten them with the whip, and to frighten them
+by shouts and cries, to prevent them from returning.</p>
+<p>When we had made nearly twelve miles on marshy roads, we came to the
+beautiful waterfall of the Huitha.&nbsp; This fall is not so remarkable for
+its height, which is scarcely more than fifteen to twenty feet, as for its
+breadth, and for its quantity of water.&nbsp; Some beautiful rocks are so
+placed at the ledge of the fall, that they divide it into three parts; but
+it unites again immediately beneath them.&nbsp; The bed of the river, as
+well as its shores, is of lava.</p>
+<p>The colour of the water is also a remarkable feature in this river; it
+inclines so much to milky white, that, when the sun shines on it, it
+requires no very strong imaginative power to take the whole for milk.</p>
+<p>Nearly a mile above the fall we had to cross the Huitha, one of the
+largest rivers in Iceland.&nbsp; Thence the road lies through meadows,
+which are less marshy than the former ones, till it comes to a broad stream
+of lava, which announces the vicinity of the fearful volcano of Hecla.</p>
+<p>I had hitherto not passed over such an expanse of country in Iceland as
+that from the Geyser to this place without coming upon streams of
+lava.&nbsp; And this lava-stream seemed to have felt some pity for the
+beautiful meadows, for it frequently separated into two branches, and thus
+enclosed the verdant plain.&nbsp; But it could not withstand the violence
+of the succeeding masses; it had been carried on, and had spread death and
+destruction everywhere.&nbsp; The road to it, through plains covered with
+dark sand, and over steep hills intervening, was very fatiguing and
+laborious.</p>
+<p>We proceeded to the little village of Struvellir, where we stopped to
+give our horses a few hours&rsquo; rest.&nbsp; Here we found a large
+assembly of men and animals. <a name="citation42"></a><a href="#footnote42"
+class="citation">[42]</a>&nbsp; It happened to be Sunday, and a warm sunny
+day, and so a very full service was held in the pretty little church.&nbsp;
+When it was over, I witnessed an amusing rural scene.&nbsp; The people
+poured out of the church,&mdash;I counted ninety-six, which is an
+extraordinarily numerous assemblage for Iceland,&mdash;formed into little
+groups, chatting and joking, not forgetting, however, to moisten their
+throats with brandy, of which they had taken care to bring an ample
+supply.&nbsp; Then they bridled their horses and prepared for departure;
+now the kisses poured in from all sides, and there was no end of
+leave-taking, for the poor people do not know whether they shall ever meet
+again, and when.</p>
+<p>In all Iceland welcome and farewell is expressed by a loud kiss,&mdash;a
+practice not very delightful for a non-Icelander, when one considers their
+ugly, dirty faces, the snuffy noses of the old people, and the filthy
+little children.&nbsp; But the Icelanders do not mind this.&nbsp; They all
+kissed the priest, and the priest kissed them; and then they kissed each
+other, till the kissing seemed to have no end.&nbsp; Rank is not considered
+in this ceremony; and I was not a little surprised to see how my guide, a
+common farm-labourer, kissed the six daughters of a judge, or the wife and
+children of a priest, or a judge and the priest themselves, and how they
+returned the compliment without reserve.&nbsp; Every country has its
+peculiar customs!</p>
+<p>The religious ceremonies generally begin about noon, and last two or
+three hours.&nbsp; There being no public inn in which to assemble, and no
+stable in which the horses can be fastened, all flock to the open space in
+front of the church, which thus becomes a very animated spot.&nbsp; All
+have to remain in the open air.</p>
+<p>When the service was over, I visited the priest, Herr Horfuson; he was
+kind enough to conduct me to the S&auml;lsun, nine miles distant,
+principally to engage a guide to Hecla for me.</p>
+<p>I was doubly rejoiced to have this good man at my side, as we had to
+cross a dangerous stream, which was very rapid, and so deep that the water
+rose to the horses&rsquo; breasts.&nbsp; Although we raised our feet as
+high as possible, we were yet thoroughly wet.&nbsp; This wading across
+rivers is one of the most unpleasant modes of travelling.&nbsp; The horse
+swims more than it walks, and this creates a most disagreeable sensation;
+one does not know whither to direct one&rsquo;s eyes; to look into the
+stream would excite giddiness, and the sight of the shore is not much
+better, for that seems to move and to recede, because the horse, by the
+current, is forced a little way down the river.&nbsp; To my great comfort
+the priest rode by my side to hold me, in case I should not be able to keep
+my seat.&nbsp; I passed fortunately through this probation; and when we
+reached the other shore, Herr Horfuson pointed out to me how far the
+current had carried us down the river.</p>
+<p>The valley in which S&auml;lsun and the Hecla are situated is one of
+those which are found only in Iceland.&nbsp; It contains the greatest
+contrasts.&nbsp; Here are charming fields covered with a rich green carpet
+of softest grass, and there again hills of black, shining lava; even the
+fertile plains are traversed by streams of lava and spots of sand.&nbsp;
+Mount Hecla notoriously has the blackest lava and the blackest sand; and it
+may be imagined how the country looks in its immediate neighbourhood.&nbsp;
+One hill only to the left of Hecla is reddish brown, and covered with sand
+and stones of a similar colour.&nbsp; The centre is much depressed, and
+seems to form a large crater.&nbsp; Mount Hecla is directly united with the
+lava-mountains piled round it, and seems from the plain only as a higher
+point.&nbsp; It is surrounded by several glaciers, whose dazzling fields of
+snow descend far down, and whose brilliant plains have probably never been
+trod by human feet; several of its sides were also covered with snow.&nbsp;
+To the left of the valley near S&auml;lsun, and at the foot of a lava-hill,
+lies a lovely lake, on whose shores a numerous flock of sheep were
+grazing.&nbsp; Near it rises another beautiful hill, so solitary and
+isolated, that it looks as if it had been cast out by its neighbours and
+banished hither.&nbsp; Indeed, the whole landscape here is so peculiarly
+Icelandic, so strange and remarkable, that it will ever remain impressed on
+my memory.</p>
+<p>S&auml;lsun lies at the foot of Mount Hecla, but is not seen before one
+reaches it.</p>
+<p>Arrived at S&auml;lsun, our first care was to seek a guide, and to
+bargain for every thing requisite for the ascension of the mountain.&nbsp;
+The guide was to procure a horse for me, and to take me and my former guide
+to the summit of Hecla.&nbsp; He demanded five thaler and two marks (about
+fifteen shillings), a most exorbitant sum, on which he could live for a
+month.&nbsp; But what could we do?&nbsp; He knew very well that there was
+no other guide to be had, and so I was forced to acquiesce.&nbsp; When all
+was arranged, my kind companion left me, wishing me success on my arduous
+expedition.</p>
+<p>I now looked out for a place in which I could spend the night, and a
+filthy hole fell to my lot.&nbsp; A bench, rather shorter that my body, was
+put into it, to serve as my bed; beside it hung a decayed fish, which had
+infected the whole room with its smell.&nbsp; I could scarcely breathe; and
+as there was no other outlet, I was obliged to open the door, and thus
+receive the visits of the numerous and amiable inhabitants.&nbsp; What a
+strengthening and invigorating preparation for the morrow&rsquo;s
+expedition!</p>
+<p>At the foot of Mount Hecla, and especially in this village, every thing
+seems to be undermined.&nbsp; Nowhere, not even on Mount Vesuvius, had I
+heard such hollow, droning sounds as here,&mdash;the echoes of the heavy
+footsteps of the peasants.&nbsp; These sounds made a very awful impression
+on me as I lay all night alone in that dark hole.</p>
+<p>My Hecla guide, as I shall call him to distinguish him from my other
+guide, advised me to start at two o&rsquo;clock in the morning, to which I
+assented, well knowing, however, that we should not have mounted our horses
+before five o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>As I had anticipated, so it happened.&nbsp; At half-past five we were
+quite prepared and ready for departure.&nbsp; Besides bread and cheese, a
+bottle of water for myself, and one of brandy for my guides, we were also
+provided with long sticks, tipped with iron points to sound the depth of
+the snow, and to lean upon.</p>
+<p>We were favoured by a fine warm sunny morning, and galloped briskly over
+the fields and the adjoining plains of sand.&nbsp; My guide considered the
+fine weather a very lucky omen, and told me that M. Geimard, the
+before-mentioned French scholar, had been compelled to wait three days for
+fine weather.&nbsp; Nine years had elapsed, and no one had ascended the
+mountain since then.&nbsp; A prince of Denmark, who travelled through
+Iceland some years before, had been there, but had returned without
+effecting his purpose.</p>
+<p>Our road at first led us through beautiful fields, and then over plains
+of black sand enclosed on all sides by streams, hillocks, and mountains of
+piled-up lava.&nbsp; Closer and closer these fearful masses approach, and
+scarcely permit a passage through a narrow cleft; we had to climb over
+blocks and hills of lava, where it is difficult to find a firm
+resting-place for the foot.&nbsp; The lava rolled beside and behind us, and
+we had to proceed carefully not to fall or be hit by the rolling
+lava.&nbsp; But most dangerous were the chasms filled with snow over which
+we had to pass; the snow had been softened by the warmth of the season, so
+that we sank into it nearly every step, or, what was worse, slipped back
+more than we had advanced.&nbsp; I scarcely think there can be another
+mountain whose ascent offers so many difficulties.</p>
+<p>After a labour of about three hours and a half we neared the summit of
+the mountain, where we were obliged to leave our horses.&nbsp; I should,
+indeed, have preferred to do so long before, as I was apprehensive of the
+poor animals falling as they climbed over these precipices&mdash;one might
+almost call them rolling mountains&mdash;but my guide would not permit
+it.&nbsp; Sometimes we came to spots where they were useful, and then he
+maintained that I must ride as far as possible to reserve my strength for
+the remaining difficulties.&nbsp; And he was right; I scarcely believe I
+should have been able to go through it on foot, for when I thought we were
+near the top, hills of lava again rose between us, and we seemed farther
+from our journey&rsquo;s end than before.</p>
+<p>My guide told me that he had never taken any one so far on horseback,
+and I can believe it.&nbsp; Walking was bad enough&mdash;riding was
+fearful.</p>
+<p>At every fresh declivity new scenes of deserted, melancholy districts
+were revealed to us; every thing was cold and dead, every where there was
+black burnt lava.&nbsp; It was a painful feeling to see so much, and behold
+nothing but a stony desert, an immeasurable chaos.</p>
+<p>There were still two declivities before us,&mdash;the last, but the
+worst.&nbsp; We had to climb steep masses of lava, sharp and pointed, which
+covered the whole side of the mountain.&nbsp; I do not know how often I
+fell and cut my hands on the jagged points of the lava.&nbsp; It was a
+fearful journey!</p>
+<p>The dazzling whiteness of the snow contrasted with the bright black lava
+beside it had an almost blinding effect.&nbsp; When crossing fields of snow
+I did not look at the lava; for having tried to do so once or twice, I
+could not see my way afterwards, and had nearly grown snow-blind.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p164b.jpg">
+<img alt="Hecla" src="images/p164s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>After two hours&rsquo; more labour we reached the summit of the
+mountain.&nbsp; I stood now on Mount Hecla, and eagerly sought the crater
+on the snowless top, but did not find it.&nbsp; I was the more surprised,
+as I had read detailed accounts of it in several descriptions of
+travel.</p>
+<p>I traversed the whole summit of the mountain and climbed to the
+adjoining jokul, but did not perceive an opening, a fissure, a depressed
+space, nor any sign of a crater.&nbsp; Lower down in the sides of the
+mountain, but not in the real cone, I saw some clefts and fissures from
+which the streams of lava probably poured.&nbsp; The height of the mountain
+is said to be 4300 feet.</p>
+<p>During the last hour of our ascent the sun had grown dim.&nbsp; Clouds
+of mist blown from the neighbouring glaciers enshrouded the hill-tops, and
+soon enveloped us so closely that we could scarcely see ten paces before
+us.&nbsp; At last they dissolved, fortunately not in rain but in snow,
+which profusely covered the black uneven lava.&nbsp; The snow remained on
+the ground, and the thermometer stood at one degree of cold.</p>
+<p>In a little while the clear blue sky once more was visible, and the sun
+again shone over us.&nbsp; I remained on the top till the clouds had
+separated beneath us, and afforded me a better distant view over the
+country.</p>
+<p>My pen is unfortunately too feeble to bring vividly before my readers
+the picture such as I beheld it here, and to describe to them the
+desolation, the extent and height of these lava-masses.&nbsp; I seemed to
+stand in a crater, and the whole country appeared only a burnt-out
+fire.&nbsp; Here lava was piled up in steep inaccessible mountains; there
+stony rivers, whose length and breadth seemed immeasurable, filled the
+once-verdant fields.&nbsp; Every thing was jumbled together, and yet the
+course of the last eruption could be distinctly traced.</p>
+<p>I stood there, in the centre of horrible precipices, caves, streams,
+valleys, and mountains, and scarcely comprehended how it was possible to
+penetrate so far, and was overcome with terror at the thought which
+involuntarily obtruded itself&mdash;the possibility of never finding my way
+again out of these terrible labyrinths.</p>
+<p>Here, from the top of Mount Hecla, I could see far into the uninhabited
+country, the picture of a petrified creation, dead and motionless, and yet
+magnificent,&mdash;a picture which once seen can never again fade from the
+memory, and which alone amply compensates for all the previous troubles and
+dangers.&nbsp; A whole world of glaciers, lava-mountains, snow and
+ice-fields, rivers and lakes, into which no human foot has ever ventured to
+penetrate.&nbsp; How nature must have laboured and raged till these forms
+were created!&nbsp; And is it over now?&nbsp; Has the destroying element
+exhausted itself; or does it only rest, like the hundred-headed Hydra, to
+break forth with renewed strength, and desolate those regions which, pushed
+to the verge of the sea-shore, encircle the sterile interior as a modest
+wreath?&nbsp; I thank God that he has permitted me to behold this chaos in
+his creation; but I thank him more heartily that he has placed me to dwell
+in regions where the sun does more than merely give light; where it
+inspires and fertilises animals and plants, and fills the human heart with
+joy and thankfulness towards its Creator. <a name="citation43"></a><a
+href="#footnote43" class="citation">[43]</a></p>
+<p>The Westmann Isles, which are said to be visible from the top of Hecla,
+I could not see; they were probably covered by clouds.</p>
+<p>During the ascent of the Hecla I had frequently touched
+lava,&mdash;sometimes involuntarily, when I fell; sometimes voluntarily, to
+find a hot or at least a warm place.&nbsp; I was unfortunate enough only to
+find cold ones.&nbsp; The falling snow was therefore most welcome, and I
+looked anxiously around to see a place where the subterranean heat would
+melt it.&nbsp; I should then have hastened thither and found what I
+sought.&nbsp; But unfortunately the snow remained unmelted every
+where.&nbsp; I could neither see any clouds of smoke, although I gazed
+steadily at the mountain for hours, and could from my post survey it far
+down the sides.</p>
+<p>As we descended we found the snow melting at a depth of 500 to 600 feet;
+lower down, the whole mountain smoked, which I thought was the consequence
+of the returning warmth of the sun, for my thermometer now stood at nine
+degrees of heat.&nbsp; I have noticed the same circumstance often on
+unvolcanic mountains.&nbsp; The spots from which the smoke rose were also
+cold.</p>
+<p>The smooth jet-black, bright, and dense lava is only found on the
+mountain itself and in its immediate vicinity.&nbsp; But all lava is not
+the same: there is jagged, glassy, and porous lava; the former is black,
+and so is the sand which covers one side of Hecla.&nbsp; The farther the
+lava and sand are from the mountain, the more they lose this blackness, and
+their colour plays into iron-colour and even into light-grey; but the
+lighter-coloured lava generally retains the brightness and smoothness of
+the black lava.</p>
+<p>After a troublesome descent, having spent twelve hours on this
+excursion, we arrived safely at S&auml;lsun; and I was on the point of
+returning to my lodging, somewhat annoyed at the prospect of spending
+another night in such a hole, when my guide surprised me agreeably by the
+proposition to return to Struvellir at once.&nbsp; The horses, he said,
+were sufficiently rested, and I could get a good room there in the
+priest&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; I soon packed, and in a short time we were
+again on horseback.&nbsp; The second time I came to the deep Rangaa, I rode
+across fearlessly, and needed no protection at any side.&nbsp; Such is man:
+danger only alarms him the first time; when he has safely surmounted it
+once, he scarcely thinks of it the second time, and wonders how he can have
+felt any fear.</p>
+<p>I saw five little trees standing in a field near the stream.&nbsp; The
+stems of these, which, considering the scarcity of trees in Iceland, may be
+called remarkable phenomena, were crooked and knotty, but yet six or seven
+feet high, and about four or five inches in diameter.</p>
+<p>As my guide had foretold, I found a very comfortable room and a good bed
+in the priest&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; Herr Horfuson is one of the best men I
+have ever met with.&nbsp; He eagerly sought opportunities for giving me
+pleasure, and to him I owe several fine minerals and an Icelandic book of
+the year 1601.&nbsp; May God reward his kindness and benevolence!</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">July 1st.</p>
+<p>We retraced our steps as far as the river Huitha, over which we rowed,
+and then turned in another direction.&nbsp; Our journey led us through
+beautiful valleys, many of them producing abundance of grass; but
+unfortunately so much moss grew among it, that these large plains were not
+available for pastures, and only afforded comfort to travellers by their
+aspect of cheerfulness.&nbsp; They were quite dry.</p>
+<p>The valley in which Hjalmholm, our resting-place for this night, was
+situated, is traversed by a stream of lava, which had, however, been modest
+enough not to fill up the whole valley, but to leave a space for the pretty
+stream Elvas, and for some fields and hillocks, on which many cottages
+stood.&nbsp; It was one of the most populous valleys I had seen in
+Iceland.</p>
+<p>Hjalmholm is situated on a hill.&nbsp; In it lives the Sysselmann of the
+Rangaar district, in a large and beautiful house such as I saw no where in
+Iceland except in Reikjavik.&nbsp; He had gone to the capital of the island
+as member of the Allthing; but his daughters received me very hospitably
+and kindly.</p>
+<p>We talked and chatted much; I tried to display my knowledge of the
+Danish language before them, and must often have made use of curious
+phrases, for the girls could not contain their laughter.&nbsp; But that did
+not abash me; I laughed with them, applied to my dictionary, which I
+carried with me, and chatted on.&nbsp; They seemed to gather no very high
+idea of the beauty of my countrywomen from my personal appearance; for
+which I humbly crave the forgiveness of my countrywomen, assuring them that
+no one regrets the fact more than I do.&nbsp; But dame Nature always treats
+people of my years very harshly, and sets a bad example to youth of the
+respect due to age.&nbsp; Instead of honouring us and giving us the
+preference, she patronises the young folks, and every maiden of sixteen can
+turn up her nose at us venerable matrons.&nbsp; Besides my natural
+disqualifications, the sharp air and the violent storms to which I had been
+subjected had disfigured my face very much.&nbsp; They had affected me more
+than the burning heat of the East.&nbsp; I was very brown, my lips were
+cracked, and my nose, alas, even began to rebel against its ugly
+colour.&nbsp; It seemed anxious to possess a new, dazzling white, tender
+skin, and was casting off the old one in little bits.</p>
+<p>The only circumstance which reinstated me in the good opinion of the
+young girls was, that having brushed my hair unusually far out of my face,
+a white space became visible.&nbsp; The girls all cried out simultaneously,
+quite surprised and delighted: &ldquo;Hun er quit&rdquo; (she is
+white).&nbsp; I could not refrain from laughing, and bared my arm to prove
+to them that I did not belong to the Arab race.</p>
+<p>A great surprise was destined me in this house; for, as I was ransacking
+the Sysselmann&rsquo;s book-case, I found Rotteck&rsquo;s Universal
+History, a German Lexicon, and several poems and writings of German
+poets.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">July 2d.</p>
+<p>The way from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla leads over nothing but lava,
+and the one to-day went entirely through marshes.&nbsp; As soon as we had
+crossed one, another was before us.&nbsp; Lava seemed to form the soil
+here, for little portions of this mineral rose like islands out of the
+marshes.</p>
+<p>The country already grew more open, and we gradually lost sight of the
+glaciers.&nbsp; The high mountains on the left seemed like hills in the
+distance, and the nearer ones were really hills.&nbsp; After riding about
+nine miles we crossed the large stream of Elvas in a boat, and then had to
+tread carefully across a very long, narrow bank, over a meadow which was
+quite under water.&nbsp; If a traveller had met us on this bank, I do not
+know what we should have done; to turn round would have been as dangerous
+as to sink into the morass.&nbsp; Fortunately one never meets any
+travellers in Iceland.</p>
+<p>Beyond the dyke the road runs for some miles along the mountains and
+hills, which all consist of lava, and are of a very dark, nearly black
+colour.&nbsp; The stones on these hills were very loose; in the plain below
+many colossal pieces were lying, which must have fallen down; and many
+others threatened to fall every moment.&nbsp; We passed the dangerous spot
+safely, without having had to witness such a scene.</p>
+<p>I often heard a hollow sound among these hills; I at first took it for
+distant thunder, and examined the horizon to discover the approaching
+storm.&nbsp; But when I saw neither clouds nor lightning, I perceived that
+I must seek the origin of the sounds nearer, and that they proceeded from
+the falling portions of rock.</p>
+<p>The higher mountains to the left fade gradually more and more from view;
+but the river Elvas spreads in such a manner, and divides into so many
+branches, that one might mistake it for a lake with many islands.&nbsp; It
+flows into the neighbouring sea, whose expanse becomes visible after
+surmounting a few more small hills.</p>
+<p>The vale of Reikum, which we now entered, is, like that of Reikholt,
+rich in hot springs, which are congregated partly in the plain, partly on
+or behind the hills, in a circumference of between two and three miles.</p>
+<p>When we had reached the village of Reikum I sent my effects at once to
+the little church, took a guide, and proceeded to the boiling
+springs.&nbsp; I found very many, but only two remarkable ones; these,
+however, belong to the most noteworthy of their kind.&nbsp; The one is
+called the little Geyser, the other the Bogensprung.</p>
+<p>The little Geyser has an inner basin of about three feet diameter.&nbsp;
+The water boils violently at a depth of from two to three feet, and remains
+within its bounds till it begins to spout, when it projects a beautiful
+voluminous steam of from 20 to 30 feet high.</p>
+<p>At half-past eight in the evening I had the good fortune to see one of
+these eruptions, and needed not, as I had done at the great Geyser, to
+bivouac near it for days and nights.&nbsp; The eruption lasted some time,
+and was tolerably equable; only sometimes the column of water sank a
+little, to rise to its former height with renewed force.&nbsp; After forty
+minutes it fell quite down into the basin again.&nbsp; The stones we threw
+in, it rejected at once, or in a few seconds, shivered into pieces, to a
+height of about 12 to 15 feet.&nbsp; Its bulk must have been 1 to 1&frac12;
+feet in diameter.&nbsp; My guide assured me that this spring generally
+plays only twice, rarely thrice, in twenty-four hours, and not, as I have
+seen it stated, every six minutes.&nbsp; I remained near it till midnight,
+but saw no other eruption.</p>
+<p>This spring very much resembles the Strukker near the great Geyser, the
+only difference being that the water sinks much lower in the latter.</p>
+<p>The second of the two remarkable springs, the arched spring, is situated
+near the little Geyser, on the declivity of a hill.&nbsp; I had never seen
+such a curious formation for the bed of a spring as this is.&nbsp; It has
+no basin, but lies half open at your feet, in a little grotto, which is
+separated into various cavities and holes, and which is half-surrounded by
+a wall of rock bending over it slightly at a height of about 2 feet, and
+then rises 10 to 12 feet higher.&nbsp; This spring never is at rest more
+than a minute; then it begins to rise and boil quickly, and emits a
+voluminous column, which, striking against the projecting rock, is
+flattened by it, and rises thence like an arched fan.&nbsp; The height of
+this peculiarly-spread jet of water may be about 12 feet, the arch it
+describes 15 to 20 feet, and its breadth 3 to 8 feet.&nbsp; The time of
+eruption is often longer than that of repose.&nbsp; After an eruption the
+water always sinks a few feet into the cave, and for 15 or 20 seconds
+admits of a glance into this wonderful grotto.&nbsp; But it rises again
+immediately, fills the grotto and the basin, which is only a continuation
+of the grotto, and springs again.</p>
+<p>I watched this miraculous play of nature for more than an hour, and
+could not tear myself from it.&nbsp; This spring, which is certainly the
+only one of its kind, gratified me much more than the little Geyser.</p>
+<p>There is another spring called the roaring Geyser; but it is nothing
+more than a misshapen hole, in which one hears the water boil, but cannot
+see it.&nbsp; The noise is, also, not at all considerable.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">July 3d.</p>
+<p>Near Reikum we crossed a brook into which all the hot springs flow, and
+which has a pretty fall.&nbsp; We then ascended the adjoining mountain, and
+rode full two hours on the high plain.&nbsp; The plain itself was
+monotonous, as it was only covered with lava-stones and moss, but the
+prospect into the valley was varied and beautiful.&nbsp; Vale and sea were
+spread before me, and I saw the Westmann Islands, with their beautiful
+hills, which the envious clouds had concealed from me on the Hecla, lying
+in the distance.&nbsp; Below me stood some houses in the port-town,
+Eierbach, and near them the waters of the Elvas flow into the sea.</p>
+<p>At the end of this mountain-level a valley was situated, which was also
+filled with lava, but with that jagged black lava which presents such a
+beautiful appearance.&nbsp; Immense streams crossed it from all sides, so
+that it almost resembled a black lake separated from the sea by a chain of
+equally black mountains.</p>
+<p>We descended into this sombre vale through piles of lava and fields of
+snow, and went on through valleys and chasms, over fields of lava, plains
+of meadow-land, past dark mountains and hills, till we reached the chief
+station of my Icelandic journey, the town of Reikjavik.</p>
+<p>The whole country between Reikum and Reikjavik, a distance of 45 to 50
+miles, is, for the most part, uninhabited.&nbsp; Here and there, in the
+fields of lava, stand little pyramids of the same substance, which serve as
+landmarks; and there are two houses built for such persons as are obliged
+to travel during the winter.&nbsp; But we found much traffic on the road,
+and often overtook caravans of 15 to 20 horses.&nbsp; Being the beginning
+of August, it was the time of trade and traffic in Iceland.&nbsp; Then the
+country people travel to Reikjavik from considerable distances, to change
+their produce and manufactures, partly for money, partly for necessaries
+and luxuries.&nbsp; At this period the merchants and factors have not hands
+enough to barter the goods or close the accounts which the peasants wish to
+settle for the whole year.</p>
+<p>At this season an unusual commotion reigns in Reikjavik.&nbsp; Numerous
+groups of men and horses fill the streets; goods are loaded and unloaded;
+friends who have not met for a year or more welcome each other, others take
+leave.&nbsp; On one spot curious tents <a name="citation44"></a><a
+href="#footnote44" class="citation">[44]</a> are erected, before which
+children play; on another drunken men stagger along, or gallop on
+horseback, so that one is terrified, and fears every moment to see them
+fall.</p>
+<p>This unusual traffic unfortunately only lasts six or eight days.&nbsp;
+The peasant hastens home to his hay-harvest; the merchant must quickly
+regulate the produce and manufactures he has purchased, and load his ships
+with them, so that they may sail and reach their destination before the
+storms of the autumnal equinox.</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Miles.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Reikjavik to Thingvalla is</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>45</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Thingvalla to the Geyser</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>36</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From the Geyser to Skalholt</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>28</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Skalholt to S&auml;lsun</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>36</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From S&auml;lsun to Struvellir</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>9</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Struvellir to Hjalmholm</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>28</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Hjalmholm to Reikum</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>32</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Reikum to Reikjavik</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>45</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>259</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<p>During my travels in Iceland I had of course the opportunity of becoming
+acquainted with its inhabitants, their manners and customs.&nbsp; I must
+confess that I had formed a higher estimate of the peasants.&nbsp; When we
+read in the history of that country that the first inhabitants had
+emigrated thither from civilised states; that they had brought knowledge
+and religion with them; when we hear of the simple good-hearted people, and
+their patriarchal mode of life in the accounts of former travellers, and
+which we know that nearly every peasant in Iceland can read and write, and
+that at least a Bible, but generally other religions books also, are found
+in every cot,&mdash;one feels inclined to consider this nation the best and
+most civilised in Europe.&nbsp; I deemed their morality sufficiently
+secured by the absence of foreign intercourse, by their isolated position,
+and the poverty of the country.&nbsp; No large town there affords
+opportunity for pomp or gaiety, or for the commission of smaller or greater
+sins.&nbsp; Rarely does a foreigner enter the island, whose remoteness,
+severe climate, inhospitality, and poverty, are uninviting.&nbsp; The
+grandeur and peculiarity of its natural formation alone makes it
+interesting, and that does not suffice for the masses.</p>
+<p>I therefore expected to find Iceland a real Arcadia in regard to its
+inhabitants, and rejoiced at the anticipation of seeing such an Idyllic
+life realised.&nbsp; I felt so happy when I set foot on the island that I
+could have embraced humanity.&nbsp; But I was soon undeceived.</p>
+<p>I have often been impatient at my want of enthusiasm, which must be
+great, as I see every thing in a more prosaic form than other
+travellers.&nbsp; I do not maintain that my view is <i>right</i>, but I at
+least possess the virtue of describing facts as I see them, and do not
+repeat them from the accounts of others.</p>
+<p>I have already described the impoliteness and heartlessness of the
+so-called higher classes, and soon lost the good opinion I had formed of
+them.&nbsp; I now came to the working classes in the vicinity of
+Reikjavik.&nbsp; The saying often applied to the Swiss people, &ldquo;No
+money, no Swiss,&rdquo; one may also apply to the Icelanders.&nbsp; And of
+this fact I can cite several examples.</p>
+<p>Scarcely had they heard that I, a foreigner, had arrived, than they
+frequently came to me, and brought quite common objects, such as can be
+found any where in Iceland, and expected me to pay dearly for them.&nbsp;
+At first I purchased from charity, or to be rid of their importunities, and
+threw the things away again; but I was soon obliged to give this up, as I
+should else have been besieged from morning to night.&nbsp; Their anxiety
+to gain money without labour annoyed me less than the extortionate prices
+with which they tried to impose on a stranger.&nbsp; For a beetle, such as
+could be found under every stone, they asked 5 kr. (about 2d.); as much for
+a caterpillar, of which thousands were lying on the beach; and for a common
+bird&rsquo;s egg, 10 to 20 kr. (4d. to 8d.)&nbsp; Of course, when I
+declined buying, they reduced their demand, sometimes to less than half the
+original sum; but this was certainly not in consequence of their
+honesty.&nbsp; The baker in whose house I lodged also experienced the
+selfishness of these people.&nbsp; He had engaged a poor labourer to tar
+his house, who, when he had half finished his task, heard of other
+employment.&nbsp; He did not even take the trouble to ask the baker to
+excuse him for a few days; he went away, and did not return to finish the
+interrupted work for a whole week.&nbsp; This conduct was the more
+inexcusable as his children received bread, and even butter, twice a week
+from the baker.</p>
+<p>I was fortunate enough to experience similar treatment.&nbsp; Herr
+Knudson had engaged a guide for me, with whom I was to take my departure in
+a few days.&nbsp; But it happened that the magistrate wished also to take a
+trip, and sent for my guide.&nbsp; The latter expected to be better paid by
+him, and went; he did not come to me to discharge himself, but merely sent
+me word on the eve of my departure, that he was ill, and could therefore
+not go with me.&nbsp; I could enumerate many more such examples, which do
+not much tend to give a high estimate of Icelandic morality.</p>
+<p>I consoled myself with the hope of finding simplicity and honesty in the
+more retired districts, and therefore anticipated a twofold pleasure from
+my journey into the interior.&nbsp; I found many virtues, but unfortunately
+so many faults, that I am no longer inclined to exalt the Icelandic
+peasants as examples.</p>
+<p>The best of their virtues is their honesty.&nbsp; I could leave my
+baggage unguarded any where for hours, and never missed the least article,
+for they did not even permit their children to touch any thing.&nbsp; In
+this point they are so conscientious, that if a peasant comes from a
+distance, and wishes to rest in a cottage, he never fails to knock at the
+door, even if it is open.&nbsp; If no one calls &ldquo;come in,&rdquo; he
+does not enter.&nbsp; One might fearlessly sleep with open doors.</p>
+<p>Crimes are of such rare occurrence here, that the prison of Reikjavik
+was changed into a dwelling-house for the chief warden many years
+since.&nbsp; Small crimes are punished summarily, either in Reikjavik or at
+the seat of the Sysselmann.&nbsp; Criminals of a deeper dye are sent to
+Copenhagen, and are sentenced and punished there.</p>
+<p>My landlord at Reikjavik, the master-baker Bernh&ouml;ft, told me that
+only one crime had been committed in Iceland during the thirteen years that
+he had resided there.&nbsp; This was the murder of an illegitimate child
+immediately after its birth.&nbsp; The most frequently occurring crime is
+cow-stealing.</p>
+<p>I was much surprised to find that nearly all the Icelanders can read and
+write.&nbsp; The latter quality only was somewhat rarer with the
+women.&nbsp; Youths and men often wrote a firm, good hand.&nbsp; I also
+found books in every cottage, the Bible always, and frequently poems and
+stories, sometimes even in the Danish language.</p>
+<p>They also comprehend very quickly; when I opened my map before them,
+they soon understood its use and application.&nbsp; Their quickness is
+doubly surprising, if we consider that every father instructs his own
+children, and sometimes the neighbouring orphans.&nbsp; This is of course
+only done in the winter; but as winter lasts eight months in Iceland, it is
+long enough.</p>
+<p>There is only one school in the whole island, which originally was in
+Bessestadt, but has been removed to Reikjavik since 1846.&nbsp; In this
+school only youths who can read and write are received, and they are either
+educated for priests, and may complete their studies here, or for doctors,
+apothecaries, or judges, when they must complete their studies in
+Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>Besides theology, geometry, geography, history, and several languages,
+such as Latin, Danish, and, since 1846, German and also French, are taught
+in the school of Reikjavik.</p>
+<p>The chief occupation of the Icelandic peasants consists in fishing,
+which is most industriously pursued in February, March, and April.&nbsp;
+Then the inhabitants of the interior come to the coasting villages and hire
+themselves to the dwellers on the beach, the real fishermen, as assistants,
+taking a portion of the fish as their wages.&nbsp; Fishing is attended to
+at other times also, but then exclusively by the real fishermen.&nbsp; In
+the months of July and August many of the latter go into the interior and
+assist in the hay-harvest, for which they receive butter, sheep&rsquo;s
+wool, and salt lamb.&nbsp; Others ascend the mountains and gather the
+Iceland moss, of which they make a decoction, which they drink mixed with
+milk, or they grind it to flour, and bake flat cakes of it, which serve
+them in place of bread.</p>
+<p>The work of the women consists in the preparation of the fish for
+drying, smoking, or salting; in tending the cattle, in knitting, sometimes
+in gathering moss.&nbsp; In winter both men and women knit and weave.</p>
+<p>As regards the hospitality of the Icelanders, <a
+name="citation45"></a><a href="#footnote45" class="citation">[45]</a> I do
+not think one can give them so very much credit for it.&nbsp; It is true
+that priests and peasants gladly receive any European traveller, and treat
+him to every thing in their power; but they know well that the traveller
+who comes to their island is neither an adventurer nor a beggar, and will
+therefore pay them well.&nbsp; I did not meet one peasant or priest who did
+not accept the proffered gift without hesitation.&nbsp; But I must say of
+the priests that they were every where obliging and ready to serve me, and
+satisfied with the smallest gift; and their charges, when I required horses
+for my excursions, were always moderate.&nbsp; I only found the peasant
+less interested in districts where a traveller scarcely ever appeared; but
+in such places as were more visited, their charges were often
+exorbitant.&nbsp; For example, I had to pay 20 to 30 kr. (8d. to 1s.) for
+being ferried over a river; and then my guide and I only were rowed in the
+boat, and the horses had to swim.&nbsp; The guide who accompanied me on the
+Hecla also overcharged me; but he knew that I was forced to take him, as
+there is no choice of guides, and one does not give up the ascent for the
+sake of a little money.</p>
+<p>This conduct shows that the character of the Icelanders does not belong
+to the best; and that they take advantage of travellers with as much
+shrewdness as the landlords and guides on the continent.</p>
+<p>A besetting sin of the Icelanders is their drunkenness.&nbsp; Their
+poverty would probably not be so great if they were less devoted to brandy,
+and worked more industriously.&nbsp; It is dreadful to see what deep root
+this vice has taken.&nbsp; Not only on Sundays, but also on week-days, I
+met peasants who were so intoxicated that I was surprised how they could
+keep in their saddle.&nbsp; I am, however, happy to say that I never saw a
+woman in this degrading condition.</p>
+<p>Another of their passions is snuff.&nbsp; They chew and snuff tobacco
+with the same infatuation as it is smoked in other countries.&nbsp; But
+their mode of taking it is very peculiar.&nbsp; Most of the peasants, and
+even many of the priests, have no proper snuff-box, but only a box turned
+of bone, shaped like a powder-flask.&nbsp; When they take snuff, they throw
+back their head, insert the point of the flask in their nose, and shake a
+dose of tobacco into it.&nbsp; They then, with the greatest amiability,
+offer it to their neighbour, he to his, and so it goes round till it
+reaches the owner again.</p>
+<p>I think, indeed, that the Icelanders are second to no nation in
+uncleanliness; not even to the Greenlanders, Esquimaux, or
+Laplanders.&nbsp; If I were to describe a portion only of what I
+experienced, my readers would think me guilty of gross exaggeration; I
+prefer, therefore, to leave it to their imagination; merely saying that
+they cannot conceive any thing too dirty for Iceland delicacy.</p>
+<p>Beside this very estimable quality, they are also insuperably
+lazy.&nbsp; Not far from the coast are immense meadows, so marshy that it
+is dangerous to cross them.&nbsp; The fault lies less in the soil than the
+people.&nbsp; If they would only make ditches, and thus dry the ground,
+they would have the most splendid grass.&nbsp; That this would grow
+abundantly is proved by the little elevations which rise from above the
+marshes, and which are thickly covered with grass, herbage, and wild
+clover.&nbsp; I also passed large districts covered with good soil, and
+some where the soil was mixed with sand.</p>
+<p>I frequently debated with Herr Boge, who has lived in Iceland for forty
+years, and is well versed in farming matters, whether it would not be
+possible to produce important pasture-grounds and hay-fields with industry
+and perseverance.&nbsp; He agreed with me, and thought that even
+potato-fields might be reclaimed, if only the people were not so lazy,
+preferring to suffer hunger and resign all the comforts of cleanliness
+rather than to work.&nbsp; What nature voluntarily gives, they are
+satisfied with, and it never occurs to them to force more from her.&nbsp;
+If a few German peasants were transported hither, what a different
+appearance the country would soon have!</p>
+<p>The best soil in Iceland is on the Norderland.&nbsp; There are a few
+potato-grounds there, and some little trees, which, without any
+cultivation, have reached a height of seven to eight feet.&nbsp; Herr Boge,
+established here for thirty years, had planted some mountain-ash and
+birch-trees, which had grown to a height of sixteen feet.</p>
+<p>In the Norderland, and every where except on the coast, the people live
+by breeding cattle.&nbsp; Many a peasant there possesses from two to four
+hundred sheep, ten to fifteen cows, and ten to twelve horses.&nbsp; There
+are not many who are so rich, but at all events they are better off than
+the inhabitants of the sea-coast.&nbsp; The soil there is for the most part
+bad, and they are therefore nearly all compelled to have recourse to
+fishing.</p>
+<p>Before quitting Iceland, I must relate a tradition told me by many
+Icelanders, not only by peasants, but also by people of the so-called
+higher classes, and who all implicitly believe it.</p>
+<p>It is asserted that the inhospitable interior is likewise populated, but
+by a peculiar race of men, to whom alone the paths through these deserts
+are known.&nbsp; These savages have no intercourse with their
+fellow-countrymen during the whole year, and only come to one of the ports
+in the beginning of July, for one day at the utmost, to buy several
+necessaries, for which they pay in money.&nbsp; They then vanish suddenly,
+and no one knows in which direction they are gone.&nbsp; No one knows them;
+they never bring their wives or children with them, and never reply to the
+question whence they come.&nbsp; Their language, also, is said to be more
+difficult than that of the other inhabitants of Iceland.</p>
+<p>One gentleman, whom I do not wish to name, expressed a wish to have the
+command of twenty to twenty-five well-armed soldiers, to search for these
+wild men.</p>
+<p>The people who maintain that they have seen these children of nature,
+assert that they are taller and stronger than other Icelanders; that their
+horses&rsquo; hoofs, instead of being shod earth iron, have shoes of horn;
+and that they have much money, which they can only have acquired by
+pillage.&nbsp; When I inquired what respectable inhabitants of Iceland had
+been robbed by these savages, and when and where, no one could give me an
+answer.&nbsp; For my part, I scarcely think that one man, certainly not a
+whole race, could live by pillage in Iceland.</p>
+<h3>DEPARTURE FROM ICELAND.&mdash;JOURNEY TO COPENHAGEN.</h3>
+<p>I had seen all there was to be seen in Iceland, had finished all my
+excursions, and awaited with inexpressible impatience the sailing of the
+vessel which was destined to bring me nearer my beloved home.&nbsp; But I
+had to stay four very long weeks in Reikjavik, my patience being more
+exhausted from day to day, and had after this long delay to be satisfied
+with the most wretched accommodation.</p>
+<p>The delay was the more tantalising, as several ships left the port in
+the mean time, and Herr Knudson, with whom I had crossed over from
+Copenhagen, invited me to accompany him on his return; but all the vessels
+went to England or to Spain, and I did not wish to visit either of these
+countries.&nbsp; I was waiting for an opportunity to go to Scandinavia, to
+have at least a glance at these picturesque districts.</p>
+<p>At last there were two sloops which intended to sail towards the end of
+July.&nbsp; The better of the two went to Altona; the destination of the
+other was Copenhagen.&nbsp; I had intended to travel in the former; but a
+merchant of Reikjavik had already engaged the only berth,&mdash;for there
+rarely is more than one in such a small vessel,&mdash;and I deemed myself
+lucky to obtain the one in the other ship.&nbsp; Herr Bernh&ouml;ft
+thought, indeed, that the vessel might be too bad for such a long journey,
+and proposed to examine it, and report on its condition.&nbsp; But as I had
+quite determined to go to Denmark, I requested him to waive the
+examination, and agree with the captain about my passage.&nbsp; If, as I
+anticipated, he found the vessel too wretched, his warnings might have
+shaken my resolution, and I wished to avoid that contingency.</p>
+<p>We heard, soon, that a young Danish girl, who had been in service in
+Iceland, wished to return by the same vessel.&nbsp; She had been suffering
+so much from home-sickness, that she was determined, under any
+circumstances, to see her beloved fatherland again.&nbsp; If, thought I to
+myself, the home-sickness is powerful enough to make this girl indifferent
+to the danger, longing must take its place in my breast and effect the same
+result.</p>
+<p>Our sloop bore the consolatory name of Haabet (hope), and belonged to
+the merchant Fromm, in Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>Our departure had been fixed for the 26th of July, and after that day I
+scarcely dared to leave my house, being in constant expectation of a
+summons on board.&nbsp; Violent storms unfortunately prevented our
+departure, and I was not called till the 29th of July, when I had to bid
+farewell to Iceland.</p>
+<p>This was comparatively easy.&nbsp; Although I had seen many wonderful
+views, many new and interesting natural phenomena, I yet longed for my
+accustomed fields, in which we do not find magnificent and overpowering
+scenes, but lovelier and more cheerful ones.&nbsp; The separation from Herr
+Knudson and the family of Bernh&ouml;ft was more difficult.&nbsp; I owed
+all the kindness I had experienced in the island, every good advice and
+useful assistance in my travels, only to them.&nbsp; My gratitude to these
+kind and good people will not easily fade from my heart.</p>
+<p>At noon I was already on board, and had leisure to admire all the gay
+flags and streamers with which the French frigate anchoring here had been
+decked, to celebrate the anniversary of the July revolution.</p>
+<p>I endeavoured to turn my attention as much as possible to exterior
+objects, and not to look at our ship, for all that I had involuntarily seen
+had not impressed me very favourably.&nbsp; I determined also not to enter
+the cabin till we were in the open sea and the pilots had left our sloop,
+so that all possibility of return would be gone.</p>
+<p>Our crew consisted of captain, steersman, two sailors, and a cabin-boy,
+who bore the title of cook; we added that of valet, as he was appointed to
+wait on us.</p>
+<p>When the pilots had left us, I sought the entrance of the
+cabin,&mdash;the only, and therefore the common apartment.&nbsp; It
+consisted of a hole two feet broad, which gaped at my feet, and in which a
+perpendicular ladder of five steps was inserted.&nbsp; I stood before it
+puzzled to know which would be the best mode of descent, but knew no other
+way than to ask our host the captain.&nbsp; He shewed it me at once, by
+sitting at the entrance and letting his feet down.&nbsp; Let the reader
+imagine such a proceeding with our long dresses, and, above all, in bad
+weather, when the ship was pitched about by storms.&nbsp; But the thought
+that many other people are worse off, and can get on, was always the anchor
+of consolation to which I held; I argued with myself that I was made of the
+same stuff as other human beings, only spoiled and pampered, but that I
+could bear what they bore.&nbsp; In consequence of this self-arguing, I sat
+down at once, tried the new sliding-ladder, and arrived below in
+safety.</p>
+<p>I had first to accustom my eyes to the darkness which reigned here, the
+hatches being constructed to admit the light very sparingly.&nbsp; I soon,
+however, saw too much; for all was raggedness, dirt, and disorder.&nbsp;
+But I will describe matters in the order in which they occurred to me; for,
+as I flatter myself that many of my countrywomen will in spirit make this
+journey with me, and as many of them probably never had the opportunity of
+being in such a vessel, I wish to describe it to them very
+accurately.&nbsp; All who are accustomed to the sea will testify that I
+have adhered strictly to the truth.&nbsp; But to return to the sloop.&nbsp;
+Its age emulated mine, she being a relic of the last century.&nbsp; At that
+time little regard was paid to the convenience of passengers, and the space
+was all made available for freight; a fact which cannot surprise us, as the
+seaman&rsquo;s life is passed on deck, and the ship was not built for
+travellers.&nbsp; The entire length of the cabin from one berth to the
+other was ten feet; the breadth was six feet.&nbsp; The latter space was
+made still narrower by a box on one side, and by a little table and two
+little seats on the other, so that only sufficient space remained to pass
+through.</p>
+<p>At dinner or supper, the ladies&mdash;the Danish girl and
+myself&mdash;sat on the little benches, where we were so squeezed, that we
+could scarcely move; the two cavaliers&mdash;the captain and the
+steersman&mdash;were obliged to stand before the table, and eat their meals
+in that position.&nbsp; The table was so small that they were obliged to
+hold their plates in their hands.&nbsp; In short, every thing shewed the
+cabin was made only for the crew, not for the passengers.</p>
+<p>The air in this enclosure was also not of the purest; for, besides that
+it formed our bed-room, dining-room, and drawing-room, it was also used as
+store-room, for in the side cupboards provisions of various kinds were
+stored, also oil-colours, and a variety of other matter.&nbsp; I preferred
+to sit on the deck, exposed to the cold and the storm, or to be bathed by a
+wave, than to be half stifled below.&nbsp; Sometimes, however, I was
+obliged to descend, either when rain and storms were too violent, or when
+the ship was so tossed by contrary winds that the deck was not safe.&nbsp;
+The rolling and pitching of our little vessel was often so terrible, that
+we ladies could neither sit nor stand, and were therefore obliged to lie
+down in the miserable berths for many a weary day.&nbsp; How I envied my
+companion! she could sleep day and night, which I could not.&nbsp; I was
+nearly always awake, much to my discomfort; for the hatches and the
+entrance were closed during the storm, and an Egyptian darkness, as well as
+a stifling atmosphere, filled the cabin.</p>
+<p>In regard to food, all passengers, captain and crew, ate of the same
+dish.&nbsp; The morning meal consisted of miserable tea, or rather of
+nauseous water having the colour of tea.&nbsp; The sailors imbibed theirs
+without sugar, but the captain and the steersman took a small piece of
+candied sugar, which does not melt so quickly as the refined sugar, in
+their mouth, and poured down cup after cup of tea, and ate ship&rsquo;s
+biscuit and butter to it.</p>
+<p>The dinner fare varied.&nbsp; The first day we had salt meat, which is
+soaked the evening before, and boiled the next day in sea-water.&nbsp; It
+was so salt, so hard, and so tough, that only a sailor&rsquo;s palate can
+possibly enjoy it.&nbsp; Instead of soup, vegetables, and pudding, we had
+pearl-barley boiled in water, without salt or butter; to which treacle and
+vinegar was added at the dinner-table.&nbsp; All the others considered this
+a delicacy, and marvelled at my depraved taste when I declared it to be
+unpalatable.</p>
+<p>The second day brought a piece of bacon, boiled in sea-water, with the
+barley repeated.&nbsp; On the third we had cod-fish with peas.&nbsp;
+Although the latter were boiled hard and without butter, they were the most
+eatable of all the dishes.&nbsp; On the fourth day the bill of fare of the
+first was repeated, and the same course followed again.&nbsp; At the end of
+every dinner we had black coffee.&nbsp; The supper was like the
+breakfast,&mdash;tea-water, ship&rsquo;s biscuit and butter.</p>
+<p>I wished to have provided myself with some chickens, eggs, and potatoes
+in Reikjavik, but I could not obtain any of these luxuries.&nbsp; Very few
+chickens are kept&mdash;only the higher officials or merchants have them;
+eggs of eider-ducks and other birds may often be had, but more are never
+collected than are wanted for the daily supply, and then only in spring;
+for potatoes the season was not advanced enough.&nbsp; My readers have now
+a picture of the luxurious life I led on board the ship.&nbsp; Had I been
+fortunate enough to voyage in a better vessel, where the passengers are
+more commodiously lodged and better fed, the seasickness would certainly
+not have attacked me; but in consequence of the stifling atmosphere of the
+cabin and the bad food, I suffered from it the first day.&nbsp; But on the
+second I was well again, regained my appetite, and ate salt meat, bacon,
+and peas as well as a sailor; the stockfish, the barley, and the coffee and
+tea, I left untouched.</p>
+<p>A real sailor never drinks water; and this observation of mine was
+confirmed by our captain and steersman: instead of beer or wine, they took
+tea, and, except at meals, cold tea.</p>
+<p>On Sunday evenings we had a grand supper, for the captain had eight
+eggs, which he had brought from Denmark, boiled for us four people.&nbsp;
+The crew had a few glasses of punch-essence mixed in their tea.</p>
+<p>As my readers are now acquainted with the varied bill of fare in such a
+ship, I will say a few words of the table-linen.&nbsp; This consisted only
+of an old sailcloth, which was spread over the table, and looked so dirty
+and greasy that I thought it would be much better and more agreeable to
+leave the table uncovered.&nbsp; But I soon repented the unwise thought,
+and discovered how important this cloth was.&nbsp; One morning I saw our
+valet treating a piece of sailcloth quite outrageously: he had spread it
+upon the deck, stood upon it, and brushed it clean with the ship&rsquo;s
+broom.&nbsp; I recognised our tablecloth by the many spots of dirt and
+grease, and in the evening found the table bare.&nbsp; But what was the
+consequence?&nbsp; Scarcely had the tea-pot been placed on the table than
+it began to slip off; had not the watchful captain quickly caught it, it
+would have fallen to the ground and bathed our feet with its
+contents.&nbsp; Nothing could stand on the polished table, and I sincerely
+pitied the captain that he had not another tablecloth.</p>
+<p>My readers will imagine that what I have described would have been quite
+sufficient to make my stay in the vessel any thing but agreeable; but I
+discovered another circumstance, which even made it alarming.&nbsp; This
+was nothing less than that our little vessel was constantly letting in a
+considerable quantity of water, which had to be pumped out every few
+hours.&nbsp; The captain tried to allay my uneasiness by asserting that
+every ship admitted water, and ours only leaked a little more because it
+was so old.&nbsp; I was obliged to be content with his explanation, as it
+was now too late to think of a change.&nbsp; Fortunately we did not meet
+with any storms, and therefore incurred less danger.</p>
+<p>Our journey lasted twenty days, during twelve of which we saw no land;
+the wind drove us too far east to see the Feroe or the Shetland
+Isles.&nbsp; I should have cared less for this, had I seen some of the
+monsters of the deep instead, but we met with scarcely any of these amiable
+animals.&nbsp; I saw the ray of water which a whale emitted from his
+nostrils, and which exactly resembled a fountain; the animal itself was
+unfortunately too far from our ship for us to see its body.&nbsp; A shark
+came a little nearer; it swam round our vessel for a few moments, so that I
+could easily look at him: it must have been from sixteen to eighteen feet
+long.</p>
+<p>The so-called flying-fish afforded a pretty sight.&nbsp; The sea was as
+calm as a mirror, the evening mild and moonlight; and so we remained on
+deck till late, watching the gambols of these animals.&nbsp; As far as we
+could see, the water was covered with them.&nbsp; We could recognise the
+younger fishes by their higher springs; they seemed to be three to four
+feet long, and rose five to six feet above the surface of the sea.&nbsp;
+Their leaping looked like an attempt at flying, but their gills did not do
+them good service in the trial, and they fell back immediately.&nbsp; The
+old fish did not seem to have the same elasticity; they only described a
+small arch like the dolphins, and only rose so far above the water that we
+could see the middle part of their body.</p>
+<p>These fish are not caught; they have little oil, and an unpleasant
+taste.</p>
+<p>On the thirteenth day we again saw land.&nbsp; We had entered the
+Skagerrak, and saw the peninsula of J&uuml;tland, with the town of
+Skaggen.&nbsp; The peninsula looks very dreary from this side; it is flat
+and covered with sand.</p>
+<p>On the sixteenth day we entered the Cattegat.&nbsp; For some time past
+we had always either been becalmed or had had contrary winds, and had been
+tossed about in the Skagerrak, the Cattegat, and the Sound for nearly a
+week.&nbsp; On some days we scarcely made fifteen to twenty leagues a
+day.&nbsp; On such calm days I passed the time with fishing; but the fish
+were wise enough not to bite my hook.&nbsp; I was daily anticipating a
+dinner of mackerel, but caught only one.</p>
+<p>The multitude of vessels sailing into the Cattegat afforded me more
+amusement; I counted above seventy.&nbsp; The nearer we approached the
+entrance of the Sound, the more imposing was the sight, and the more
+closely were the vessels crowded together.&nbsp; Fortunately we were
+favoured by a bright moonlight; in a dark or stormy night we should not
+with the greatest precaution and skill have been able to avoid a
+collision.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of more southern regions have no idea of the
+extraordinary clearness and brilliancy of a northern moonlight night; it
+seems almost as if the moon had borrowed a portion of the sun&rsquo;s
+lustre.&nbsp; I have seen splendid nights on the coast of Asia, on the
+Mediterranean; but here, on the shores of Scandinavia, they were lighter
+and brighter.</p>
+<p>I remained on deck all night; for it pleased me to watch the forests of
+masts crowded together here, and endeavouring simultaneously to gain the
+entrance to the Sound.&nbsp; I should now be able to form a tolerable idea
+of a fleet, for this number of ships must surely resemble a
+merchant-fleet.</p>
+<p>On the twentieth day of our journey we entered the port of
+Helsing&ouml;r.&nbsp; The Sound dues have to be paid here, or, as the
+sailor calls it, the ship must be cleared.&nbsp; This is a very tedious
+interruption, and the stopping and restarting of the ship very
+incommodious.&nbsp; The sails have to be furled, the anchor cast, the boat
+lowered, and the captain proceeds on shore; hours sometimes elapse before
+he has finished.&nbsp; When he returns to the ship, the boat has to be
+hoisted again, the anchor raised, and the sails unfurled.&nbsp; Sometimes
+the wind has changed in the mean time; and in consequence of these
+formalities, the port of Copenhagen cannot be reached at the expected
+time.</p>
+<p>If a ship is unfortunate enough to reach Helsing&ouml;r on a dark night,
+she may not enter at all for fear of a collision.&nbsp; She has to anchor
+in the Cattegat, and thus suffer two interruptions.&nbsp; If she arrives at
+Helsing&ouml;r in the night before four o&rsquo;clock, she has to wait, as
+the custom-house is not opened till that time.</p>
+<p>The skipper is, however, at liberty to proceed direct to Copenhagen, but
+this liberty costs five thalers (fifteen shillings).&nbsp; If, however, the
+toll may thus be paid in Copenhagen just as easily, the obligation to stop
+at Helsing&ouml;r is only a trick to gain the higher toll; for if a captain
+is in haste, or the wind is too favourable to be lost, he forfeits the five
+thalers, and sails on to Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>Our captain cared neither for time nor trouble; he cleared the ship
+here, and so we did not reach Copenhagen until two o&rsquo;clock in the
+afternoon.&nbsp; After my long absence, it seemed so familiar, so beautiful
+and grand, as if I had seen nothing so beautiful in my whole life.&nbsp; My
+readers must bear in mind, however, where I came from, and how long I had
+been imprisoned in a vessel in which I scarcely had space to move.&nbsp;
+When I put foot on shore again, I could have imitated Columbus, and
+prostrated myself to kiss the earth.</p>
+<h3>DEPARTURE FROM COPENHAGEN.&mdash;CHRISTIANIA.</h3>
+<p>On the 19th August, the day after my arrival from Iceland, at two
+o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon, I had already embarked again; this time in
+the fine royal Norwegian steamer <i>Christiania</i>, of 170 horsepower,
+bound for the town of Christiania, distant 304 sea-miles from
+Copenhagen.&nbsp; We had soon passed through the Sound and arrived safely
+in the Cattegat, in which we steered more to the right than on the journey
+to Iceland; for we not only intended to see Norway and Sweden, but to cast
+anchor on the coast.</p>
+<p>We could plainly see the fine chain of mountains which bound the
+Cattegat on the right, and whose extreme point, the Kulm, runs into the sea
+like a long promontory.&nbsp; Lighthouses are erected here, and on the
+other numerous dangerous spots of the coast, and their lights shine all
+around in the dark night.&nbsp; Some of the lights are movable, and some
+stationary, and point out to the sailor which places to avoid.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 20th.</p>
+<p>Bad weather is one of the greatest torments of a traveller, and is more
+disagreeable when one passes through districts remarkable for beauty and
+originality.&nbsp; Both grievances were united to-day; it rained, almost
+incessantly; and yet the passage of the Swedish coast and of the little
+fiord to the port of Gottenburg was of peculiar interest.&nbsp; The sea
+here was more like a broad stream which is bounded by noble rocks, and
+interspersed by small and large rocks and shoals, over which the waters
+dashed finely.&nbsp; Near the harbour, some buildings lie partly on and
+partly between the rocks; these contain the celebrated royal Swedish
+iron-foundry, called the new foundry.&nbsp; Even numerous American ships
+were lying here to load this metal. <a name="citation46"></a><a
+href="#footnote46" class="citation">[46]</a></p>
+<p>The steamer remains more than four hours in the port of Gottenburg, and
+we had therefore time to go into the town, distant about two miles, and
+whose suburbs extend as far as the port.&nbsp; On the landing-quay a
+captain lives who has always a carriage and two horses ready to drive
+travellers into the town.&nbsp; There are also one-horse vehicles, and even
+an omnibus.&nbsp; The former were already engaged; the latter, we were
+told, drives so slowly, that nearly the whole time is lost on the road; so
+I and two travelling companions hired the captain&rsquo;s carriage.&nbsp;
+The rain poured in torrents on our heads; but this did not disturb us
+much.&nbsp; My two companions had business to transact, and curiosity
+attracted me.&nbsp; I did not at that time know that I should have occasion
+to visit this pretty little town again, and would not leave without seeing
+it.</p>
+<p>The suburbs are built entirely of wood, and contain many pretty
+one-story houses, surrounded, for the most part, by little gardens.&nbsp;
+The situation of the suburbs is very peculiar.&nbsp; Rocks, or little
+fields and meadows, often lie between the houses; the rocks even now and
+then cross the streets, and had to be blasted to form a road.&nbsp; The
+view from one of the hills over which the road to the town lies is truly
+beautiful.</p>
+<p>The town has two large squares: on the smaller one stands the large
+church; on the larger one the town-hall, the post-office, and many pretty
+houses.&nbsp; In the town every thing is built of bricks.&nbsp; The river
+Ham flows through the large square, and increases the traffic by the many
+ships and barks running into it from the sea, and bringing provisions, but
+principally fuel, to market.&nbsp; Several bridges cross it.&nbsp; A visit
+to the well-stocked fish-market is also an interesting feature in a short
+visit to this town.</p>
+<p>I entered a Swedish house for the first time here.&nbsp; I remarked that
+the floor was strewed over with the fine points of the fir-trees, which had
+an agreeable odour, a more healthy one probably than any artificial
+perfume.&nbsp; I found this custom prevalent all over Sweden and Norway,
+but only in hotels and in the dwellings of the poorer classes.</p>
+<p>About eleven o&rsquo;clock in the forenoon we continued our
+journey.&nbsp; We steered safely through the many rocks and shoals, and
+soon reached the open sea again.&nbsp; We did not stand out far from the
+shore, and saw several telegraphs erected on the rocks.&nbsp; We soon lost
+sight of Denmark on the left, and arrived at the fortress Friedrichsver
+towards evening, but could not see much of it.&nbsp; Here the so-called
+Scheren begin, which extend sixty leagues, and form the Christian&rsquo;s
+Sound.&nbsp; By what I could see in the dim twilight, the scene was
+beautiful.&nbsp; Numerous islands, some merely consisting of bare rocks,
+others overgrown with slender pines, surrounded us on all sides.&nbsp; But
+our pilot understood his business perfectly, and steered us safely through
+to Sandesund, spite of the dark night.&nbsp; Here we anchored, for it would
+have been too dangerous to proceed.&nbsp; We had to wait here for the
+steamer from Bergen, which exchanged passengers with us.&nbsp; The sea was
+very rough, and this exchange was therefore extremely difficult to
+effect.&nbsp; Neither of the steamers would lower a boat; at last our
+steamer gave way, after midnight, and the terrified and wailing passengers
+were lowered into it.&nbsp; I pitied them from my heart, but fortunately no
+accident happened.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 21st</p>
+<p>I could see the situation of Sandesund better by day; and found it to
+consist only of a few houses.&nbsp; The water is so hemmed in here that it
+scarcely attains the breadth of a stream; but it soon widens again, and
+increases in beauty and variety with every yard.&nbsp; We seemed to ride on
+a beautiful lake; for the islands lie so close to the mountains in the
+background, that they look like a continent, and the bays they form like
+the mouths of rivers.&nbsp; The next moment the scene changes to a
+succession of lakes, one coming close on the other; and when the ship
+appears to be hemmed in, a new opening is suddenly presented to the eye
+behind another island.&nbsp; The islands themselves are of a most varied
+character: some only consist of bare rocks, with now and then a pine; some
+are richly covered with fields and groves; and the shore presents so many
+fine scenes, that one hardly knows where to look in order not to miss any
+of the beauties of the scenery.&nbsp; Here are high mountains overgrown
+from the bottom to the summit with dark pine-groves; there again lovely
+hills, with verdant meadows, fertile fields, pretty farmsteads and yards;
+and on another side the mountains separate and form a beautiful perspective
+of precipices and valleys.&nbsp; Sometimes I could follow the bend of a bay
+till it mingled with the distant clouds; at others we passed the most
+beautiful valleys, dotted with little villages and towns.&nbsp; I cannot
+describe the beauties of the scenery in adequate terms: my words are too
+weak, and my knowledge too insignificant; and I can only give an idea of my
+emotions, but not describe them.</p>
+<p>Near Walloe the country grows less beautiful; the mountains decrease
+into hills, and the water is not studded with islands.&nbsp; The little
+town itself is almost concealed behind the hills.&nbsp; A remarkable
+feature is the long row of wooden huts and houses adjoining, which all
+belong to a salt-work established there.</p>
+<p>We entered one of the many little arms of the sea to reach the town of
+Moss.&nbsp; Its situation is beautiful, being built amphi-theatrically on a
+hillock which leans against a high mountain.&nbsp; A fine building on the
+sea-shore, whose portico rests upon pillars, is used for a bathing
+institution.</p>
+<p>A dock-yard, in which men-of-war are built at the expense of the state,
+is situated near the town of Horten, which is also picturesquely
+placed.&nbsp; There does not seem to be much work doing here, for I only
+saw one ship lying at anchor, and none on the stocks.&nbsp; About eight
+leagues beyond Horten a mountain rises in the middle of the sea, and
+divides it into two streams, uniting again beyond it, and forming a pretty
+view.</p>
+<p>We did not see Christiania till we were only ten leagues from it.&nbsp;
+The town, the suburbs, the fortress, the newly-erected royal palace, the
+freemasons&rsquo; lodge, &amp;c., lie in a semicircle round the port, and
+are bounded by fields, meadows, woods, and hills, forming a delightful
+<i>coup-d&rsquo;oeil</i>.&nbsp; It seems as if the sea could not part from
+such a lovely view, and runs in narrow streams, through hills and plains,
+to a great distance beyond the town.</p>
+<p>Towards eleven o&rsquo;clock in the forenoon we reached the port of
+Christiania.&nbsp; We had come from Sandesund in seven hours, and had
+stopped four times on the way; but the boats with new-comers, with
+merchandise and letters, had always been ready, had been received, and we
+had proceeded without any considerable delay.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<p>My first care on arriving in this town was to find a countrywoman of
+mine who had been married to a lawyer here.&nbsp; It is said of the
+Viennese that they cannot live away from their Stephen&rsquo;s steeple; but
+here was a proof of the contrary, for there are few couples living so
+happily as these friends, and yet they were nearly one thousand miles from
+St. Stephen&rsquo;s steeple. <a name="citation47"></a><a href="#footnote47"
+class="citation">[47]</a></p>
+<p>I passed through the whole town on the way from the quay to the hotel,
+and thence to my friend.&nbsp; The town is not large, and not very
+pretty.&nbsp; The newly-built portion is the best, for it at least has
+broad, tolerably long streets, in which the houses are of brick, and
+sometimes large.&nbsp; In the by-streets I frequently found wooden barracks
+ready to fall.&nbsp; The square is large, but irregular; and as it is used
+as a general market-place, it is also very dirty.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p196b.jpg">
+<img alt="Christiania" src="images/p196s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>In the suburbs the houses are mostly built of wood.&nbsp; There are some
+rather pretty public buildings; the finest among them are the royal castle
+and the fortress.&nbsp; They are built on little elevations, and afford a
+beautiful view.&nbsp; The old royal palace is in the town, but not at all
+distinguishable from a common private house.&nbsp; The house in which the
+Storthing <a name="citation48"></a><a href="#footnote48"
+class="citation">[48]</a> assembles is large, and its portico rests on
+pillars; but the steps are of wood, as in all stone houses in
+Scandinavia.&nbsp; The theatre seemed large enough for the population; but
+I did not enter it.&nbsp; The freemasons&rsquo; lodge is one of the most
+beautiful buildings in the town; it contains two large saloons, which are
+used for assemblies or festivities of various kinds, besides serving as the
+meeting-place of the freemasons.&nbsp; The university seemed almost too
+richly built; it is not finished yet, but is so beautiful that it would be
+an ornament to the largest capital.&nbsp; The butchers&rsquo; market is
+also very pretty.&nbsp; It is of a semi-circular shape, and is surrounded
+by arched passages, in which the buyers stand, sheltered from the
+weather.&nbsp; The whole edifice is built of bricks, left in their natural
+state, neither stuccoed with mortar nor whitewashed.&nbsp; There are not
+many other palaces or fine public buildings, and most of the houses are
+one-storied.</p>
+<p>One of the features of the place&mdash;a custom which is of great use to
+the traveller, and prevails in all Scandinavian towns&mdash;is, that the
+names of the streets are affixed at every corner, so that the passer-by
+always knows where he is, without the necessity of asking his way.</p>
+<p>Open canals run through the town; and on such nights as the almanac
+announces a full or bright moon the streets are not lighted.</p>
+<p>Wooden quays surround the harbour, on which several large warehouses,
+likewise built of wood, are situated; but, like most of the houses, they
+are roofed with tiles.</p>
+<p>The arrangement and display of the stores are simple, and the wares very
+beautiful, though not of home manufacture.&nbsp; Very few factories exist
+here, and every thing has to be imported.</p>
+<p>I was much shocked at the raggedly-clad people I met every where in the
+streets; the young men especially looked very ragged.&nbsp; They rarely
+begged; but I should not have been pleased to meet them alone in a retired
+street.</p>
+<p>I was fortunate enough to be in Christiania at the time when the
+Storthing was sitting.&nbsp; This takes place every three years; the
+sessions commence in January or February, and usually last three months;
+but so much business had this time accumulated, that the king proposed to
+extend the length of the session.&nbsp; To this fortunate accident I owed
+the pleasure of witnessing some of the meetings.&nbsp; The king was
+expected to close the proceedings in September. <a name="citation49"></a><a
+href="#footnote49" class="citation">[49]</a></p>
+<p>The hall of meeting is long and large.&nbsp; Four rows of tapestried
+seats, one rising above the other, run lengthways along the hall, and
+afford room for eighty legislators.&nbsp; Opposite the benches a table
+stands on a raised platform, and at this table the president and secretary
+sit.&nbsp; A gallery, which is open to the public, runs round the upper
+portion of the hall.</p>
+<p>Although I understood but little of the Norwegian language, I attended
+the meetings daily for an hour.&nbsp; I could at least distinguish whether
+long or short speeches were made, or whether the orator spoke
+fluently.&nbsp; Unfortunately, the speakers I heard spoke the few words
+they mustered courage to deliver so slowly and hesitatingly, that I could
+not form a very favourable idea of Norwegian eloquence.&nbsp; I was told
+that the Storthing only contained three or four good speakers, and they did
+not display their talents during my stay.</p>
+<p>I have never seen such a variety of carriages as I met with here.&nbsp;
+The commonest and most incommodious are called Carriols.&nbsp; A carriol
+consists of a narrow, long, open box, resting between two immensely high
+wheels, and provided with a very small seat.&nbsp; You are squeezed into
+this contrivance, and have to stretch your feet forward.&nbsp; You are then
+buckled in with a leather apron as high as the hips, and must remain in
+this position, without moving a limb, from the beginning to the end of your
+ride.&nbsp; A board is hung on behind the box for the coachman; and from
+this perch he, in a kneeling or standing position, directs the horses,
+unless the temporary resident of the box should prefer to take the reins
+himself.&nbsp; As it is very unpleasant to hear the quivering of the reins
+on one side and the smacking of the whip on the other, every one, men and
+women, can drive.&nbsp; Besides these carriols, there are phaetons,
+droschkas, but no closed vehicles.</p>
+<p>The carts which are used for the transport of beer are of a very
+peculiar construction.&nbsp; The consumption of beer in Christiania is very
+great, and it is at once bottled when made, and not sold in casks.&nbsp;
+The carts for the transport of these bottles consist of roomy covered boxes
+a foot and a half high, which are divided into partitions like a cellaret,
+in which many bottles can be easily and safely transported from one part to
+another.</p>
+<p>Another species of basket, which the servants use to carry such articles
+as are damp or dirty, and which my readers will excuse my describing, is
+made of fine white tin, and provided with a handle.&nbsp; Straw baskets are
+only used for bread, and for dry and clean provisions.</p>
+<p>There are no public gardens or assemblies in Christiania, but numerous
+promenades; indeed, every road from the town leads to the most beautiful
+scenery, and every hill in the neighbourhood affords the most delightful
+prospects.</p>
+<p>Ladegardoen is the only spot which is often resorted to by the citizens
+by carriage or on foot.&nbsp; It affords many and splendid views of the sea
+and its islands, of the surrounding mountains, valleys, and pine and fir
+groves.&nbsp; The majority of the country-houses are built here.&nbsp; They
+are generally small, but pretty, and surrounded by flower-gardens and
+orchards.&nbsp; While there, I seemed to be far in the south, so green and
+verdant was the scenery.&nbsp; The corn-fields alone betrayed the
+north.&nbsp; Not that the corn was poor; on the contrary, I found many ears
+bending to the ground under their weight; but now, towards the end of
+August, most of it was standing uncut in the fields.</p>
+<p>Near the town stands a pine-grove, from which one has splendid views;
+two monuments are raised in it, but neither of them are of importance: one
+is raised to the memory of a crown-prince of Sweden, Christian Augustus;
+the other to Count Hermann Wenel Jarlsberg.</p>
+<h3>JOURNEY TO DELEMARKEN.</h3>
+<p>All I had hitherto seen in Norway had gratified me so much, that I could
+not resist the temptation of a journey to the wildly romantic regions of
+Delemarken.&nbsp; I was indeed told that it would be a difficult
+undertaking for a female, alone and almost entirely ignorant of the
+language, to make her way through the peasantry.&nbsp; But I found no one
+to accompany me, and was determined to go; so I trusted to fate, and went
+alone.</p>
+<p>According to the inquires I had instituted in respect to this journey, I
+anticipated that my greatest difficulties would arise from the absence of
+all institutions for the speedy and comfortable progress of
+travellers.&nbsp; One is forced to possess a carriage, and to hire horses
+at every station.&nbsp; It is sometimes possible to hire a vehicle, but
+this generally consists only of a miserable peasant&rsquo;s cart.&nbsp; I
+hired, therefore, a carriol for the whole journey, and a horse to the next
+station, the townlet of Drammen, distant about twenty-four miles.</p>
+<p>On the 25th August, at three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon, I left
+Christiania, squeezed myself into my carriage, and, following the example
+of Norwegian dames, I seized the reins.&nbsp; I drove as if I had been used
+to it from infancy.&nbsp; I turned right and left, and my horse galloped
+and trotted gaily on.</p>
+<p>The road to Drammen is exquisite, and would afford rich subjects for an
+artist.&nbsp; All the beauties of nature are here combined in most perfect
+harmony.&nbsp; The richness and variety of the scenery are almost
+oppressive, and would be an inexhaustible subject for the painter.&nbsp;
+The vegetation is much richer than I had hoped to find it so far north;
+every hill, every rock, is shaded by verdant foliage; the green of the
+meadows was of incomparable freshness; the grass was intermingled with
+flowers and herbs, and the corn-fields bent under their golden weight.</p>
+<p>I have been in many countries, and have seen beautiful districts; I have
+been in Switzerland, in Tyrol, in Italy, and in Salzburg; but I never saw
+such peculiarly beautiful scenery as I found here: the sea every where
+intruding and following us to Drammen; here forming a lovely lake on which
+boats were rocking, there a stream rushing through hills and meadows; and
+then again, the splendid expanse dotted with proud three-masters and with
+countless islets.&nbsp; After a five hours&rsquo; ride through rich valleys
+and splendid groves, I reached the town of Drammen, which lies on the
+shores of the sea and the river Storri Elf, and whose vicinity was
+announced by the beautiful country-houses ornamenting the approach to
+it.</p>
+<p>A long, well-built wooden bridge, furnished with beautiful iron
+palisadings, leads over the river.&nbsp; The town of Drammen has pretty
+streets and houses, and above 6000 inhabitants.&nbsp; The hotel where I
+lodged was pretty and clean.&nbsp; My bedroom was a large room, with which
+the most fastidious might have been contented.&nbsp; The supper which they
+provided for me was, however, most frugal, consisting only of soft-boiled
+eggs.&nbsp; They gave me neither salt nor bread with them, nor a spoon;
+nothing but a knife and fork.&nbsp; And it is a mystery to me how soft eggs
+can be eaten without bread, and with a knife and fork.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 25th.</p>
+<p>I hired a fresh horse here, with which I proceeded to Kongsberg,
+eighteen miles farther.&nbsp; The first seven miles afforded a repetition
+of the romantic scenery of the previous day, with the exception of the
+sea.&nbsp; But instead I had the beautiful river, until I had ascended a
+hill, from whose summit I overlooked a large and apparently populous
+valley, filled with groups of houses and single farms.&nbsp; It is strange
+that there are very few large towns in Norway; every peasant builds his
+house in the midst of his fields.</p>
+<p>Beyond this hill the scenery grows more monotonous.&nbsp; The mountains
+are lower, the valley narrower, and the road is enclosed by wood or
+rocks.&nbsp; One peculiarity of Norwegian rocks is their humidity.&nbsp;
+The water penetrates through countless fissures, but only in such small
+quantities as to cover the stones with a kind of veil.&nbsp; When the sun
+shines on these wet surfaces of rock, of which there are many and large
+ones, they shine like mirrors.</p>
+<p>Delemarken seems to be tolerably populous.&nbsp; I often met with
+solitary peasant-huts in the large gloomy forests, and they gave some life
+to the monotonous landscape.&nbsp; The industry of the Norwegian peasant is
+very great; for every spot of earth, even on the steepest precipices, bore
+potatoes, barley, or oats; their houses also look cheerful, and were
+painted for the most part of a brick-red colour.</p>
+<p>I found the roads very good, especially the one from Christiania to
+Drammen; and the one from Drammen to Kongsberg was not very
+objectionable.&nbsp; There is such an abundance of wood in Norway, that the
+streets on each side are fenced by wooden enclosures; and every field and
+meadow is similarly protected against the intrusion of cattle, and the
+miserable roads through the woods are even covered with round trunks of
+trees.</p>
+<p>The peasantry in this district have no peculiar costume; only the
+head-covering of the females is curious.&nbsp; They wear a lady&rsquo;s
+hat, such as was fashionable in the last century, ornamented with a bunch
+behind, and with an immense shade in front.&nbsp; They are made of any
+material, generally of the remains of old garments; and only on Sundays
+better ones, and sometimes even silk ones, make their appearance.</p>
+<p>In the neighbourhood of Kongsberg this head-dress is no longer
+worn.&nbsp; There they wear little caps like the Suabian peasantry,
+petticoats commencing under the shoulders, and very short spencers: a very
+ugly costume, the whole figure being spoilt by the short waist.</p>
+<p>The town of Kongsberg is rather extended, and is beautifully situated on
+a hill in the centre of a splendid wooded valley.&nbsp; It is, like all the
+towns in Norway except Christiania, built of wood; but it has many pretty,
+neat houses and some broad streets.</p>
+<p>The stream Storri Elf flows past the town, and forms a small but very
+picturesque waterfall a little below the bridge.&nbsp; What pleased me most
+was the colour of the water as it surged over the rock.&nbsp; It was about
+noon as I drove across the bridge; the sun illuminated the whole country
+around, and the waves breaking against the rocks seemed by this light of a
+beautiful pale-yellow colour, so that they resembled thick masses of pure
+transparent amber.</p>
+<p>Two remarkable sights claimed my attention at Kongsberg,&mdash;a rich
+silver-mine, and a splendid waterfall called the Labrafoss.&nbsp; But as my
+time was limited and I could only remain a few hours in Kongsberg, I
+preferred to see the waterfall and believe the accounts of the silver-mine;
+which were, that the deepest shaft was eight hundred feet below the
+surface, and that it was most difficult to remain there, as the cold, the
+smoke, and the powder-smell had a very noxious effect on the traveller
+accustomed to light and air.</p>
+<p>I therefore hired a horse and drove to the fall, which is situated in a
+narrow pass about four miles from Kongsberg.&nbsp; The river collects in a
+quiet calm basin a little distance above the fall, and then rushes over the
+steep precipice with a sudden bound.&nbsp; The considerable depth of the
+fall and the quality of water make it a very imposing sight.&nbsp; This is
+increased by a gigantic rock planted like a wall in the lower basin, and
+opposing its body to the progress of the hurrying waters.&nbsp; The waves
+rebound from the rock, and, collecting in mighty masses, rush over it,
+forming several smaller waterfalls in their course.</p>
+<p>I watched it from a high rock, and was nevertheless covered by the spray
+to such a degree, that I sometimes could scarcely open my eyes.&nbsp; My
+guide then took me to the lower part of the fall, so that I might have a
+view of it from all sides; and each view seemed different and more
+splendid.&nbsp; I perceived the same yellow transparent colour which I had
+remarked in the fall at Kongsberg in the waters which dashed over the rock
+and were illuminated by the sun.&nbsp; I imagine it arises from the rock,
+which is every where of a brownish-red colour, for the water itself was
+clear and pure.</p>
+<p>At four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon I left Kongsberg, and drove to
+Bolkesoe, a distance of eighteen miles.&nbsp; It was by no means a
+beautiful or an agreeable drive; for the road was very bad, and took me
+through passes and valleys, across woods and over steep mountains, while
+the night was dark and unilluminated by the moon.&nbsp; The thought
+involuntarily entered my mind, how easily my guide, who sat close behind me
+on the vehicle, could put me out of the world by a gentle blow, and take
+possession of my effects.&nbsp; But I had confidence in the upright
+character of the Norwegians, and drove on quietly, devoting my attention
+entirely to the reins of my little steed, which I had to lead with a sure
+hand over hill and valley, over ruts and stones, and along
+precipices.&nbsp; I heard no sound but the rushing of the mountain-river,
+which leaped, close beside us, over the rocks, and was heard rushing in the
+far distance.</p>
+<p>We did not arrive at Bolkesoe until ten o&rsquo;clock at night.&nbsp;
+When we stopped before an insignificant-looking peasant&rsquo;s cot, and I
+remembered my Icelandic night-accommodations, whose exterior this
+resembled, my courage failed me; but I was agreeably disappointed when the
+peasant&rsquo;s wife led me up a broad staircase into a large clean chamber
+furnished with several good beds, some benches, a table, a box, and an iron
+stove.&nbsp; I found equal comforts on all the stations of my journey.</p>
+<p>There are no proper hotels or posthouses on the little-frequented
+Norwegian roads; but the wealthy peasants undertake the duties of
+both.&nbsp; I would, however, advise every traveller to provide himself
+with bread and other provisions for the trip; for his peasant-host rarely
+can furnish him with these.&nbsp; His cows are on the hills during the
+summer; fowls are far too great a luxury for him; and his bread is scarcely
+eatable: it consists of large round cakes, scarcely half an inch thick, and
+very hard; or of equally large cakes scarcely as thick as a knife, and
+quite dry.&nbsp; The only eatables I found were fish and potatoes; and
+whenever I could stay for several hours, they fetched milk for me from the
+hills.</p>
+<p>The travelling conveniences are still more unattainable; but these I
+will mention in a future chapter, when my experience will be a little more
+extensive.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 26th.</p>
+<p>I could not see the situation of the town of Bolkesoe till daylight
+to-day, for when I arrived the darkness of night concealed it.&nbsp; It is
+situated in a pretty wooded vale, on a little hill at whose foot lies a
+beautiful lake of the same name.</p>
+<p>The road from here to Tindosoe, about sixteen miles, is not practicable
+for vehicles, and I therefore left my carriol here and proceeded on
+horseback.&nbsp; The country grows more quiet and uninhabited, and the
+valleys become real chasms.&nbsp; Two lakes of considerable size form an
+agreeable variety to the wildness of the scenery.&nbsp; The larger one,
+called the Foelsoe, is of a regular form, and above two miles in diameter;
+it is encircled by picturesque mountains.&nbsp; The effect of the shadows
+which the pine-covered mountain-tops throw on the lakes is particularly
+attractive.&nbsp; I rode along its shores for more than an hour, and had
+leisure to see and examine every thing very accurately, for the horses here
+travel at a very slow pace.&nbsp; The reason of this is partly that the
+guide has no horse, and walks beside you in a very sleepy manner; the horse
+knows its master&rsquo;s peculiarities by long experience, and is only too
+willing to encourage him in his slow, dull pace.&nbsp; I spent more than
+five hours in reaching Tindosoe.&nbsp; My next object of interest was the
+celebrated waterfall of Rykanfoss, to reach which we had to cross a large
+lake.&nbsp; Although it had rained incessantly for an hour, and the sky
+looked threatening, I at once hired a boat with two rowers to continue my
+journey without interruption; for I anticipated a storm, and then I should
+not have found a boatman who would have ventured a voyage of four or five
+hours on this dangerous lake.&nbsp; In two hours my boat was ready, and I
+started in the pouring rain, but rejoiced at least at the absence of fog,
+which would have concealed the beauties of nature which surrounded
+me.&nbsp; The lake is eighteen miles long, but in many parts only from two
+to three miles wide.&nbsp; It is surrounded by mountains, which rise in
+terraces without the least gap to admit a distant view.&nbsp; As the
+mountains are nearly all covered with dark fir-groves, and overshadow the
+whole breadth of the narrow lake, the water seems quite dark, and almost
+black.&nbsp; This lake is dangerous to navigate on account of the many
+rocks rising perpendicularly out of the water, which, in a storm, shatter a
+boat dashed against them to pieces, and the passengers would find an
+inevitable grave in the deep waters.&nbsp; We had a flesh and a favourable
+breeze, which blew us quickly to our destination.&nbsp; One of the rocks on
+the coast has a very loud echo.</p>
+<p>An island about a mile long divides the lake into equal parts; and when
+we had passed it, the landscape became quite peculiar.&nbsp; The mountains
+seemed to push before each other, and try whose foot should extend farthest
+into the sea.&nbsp; This forms numerous lovely bays; but few of them are
+adapted for landing, as the dangerous rocks seem to project every
+where.</p>
+<p>The little dots of field and meadow which seem to hang against the rock,
+and the modest cottages of the peasants, which are built on the points of
+the most dangerous precipices, and over which rocks and stones tower as
+mountains, present a very curious appearance.&nbsp; The most fearful rocks
+hang over the huts, and threaten to crush them by falling, which would
+inevitably carry cottage and field with them into the sea.&nbsp; It is
+difficult to say whether the boldness or the stupidity of the peasants
+induces them to choose such localities for their dwellings.</p>
+<p>From the mountains many rivers flow into the lake, and form beautiful
+falls.&nbsp; This might only have been the case at that time, because it
+was raining incessantly, and the water poured down from all sides, so that
+the mountains seemed embroidered with silver threads.&nbsp; It was a
+beautiful sight; but I would willingly have relinquished it for a day of
+sunshine.&nbsp; It is no trifle to be exposed to such a shower-bath from
+morning till night; I was wet through, and had no hope for better weather,
+as the sky was clouded all round.&nbsp; My perseverance was nearly
+exhausted; and I was on the point of relinquishing the purpose of my
+journey,&mdash;the sight of the highest Norwegian waterfall,&mdash;when it
+occurred to me that the bad weather was most favourable for my plan, as
+each drop of water would increase the splendour of the waterfall.</p>
+<p>After three hours and a half&rsquo;s rowing we reached Haukaness-am-See,
+where it is usual to stop a night as there is a pretty farm here, and the
+distance from the fall is still considerable.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 27th.</p>
+<p>My first care in the morning was the weather; it was unchanged, and the
+experienced peasants prophesied that it would remain wet.&nbsp; As I would
+not return nor wait for better weather, I could only take to my boat again,
+put on my half-dried cloak, and row on boldly.</p>
+<p>The termination of the lake, which we soon reached, was already
+sufficient to compensate for my perseverance.&nbsp; A high mountain
+advances into the lake, and divides it into two beautiful bays.&nbsp; We
+entered the left bay, and landed at Mael, which lies at the mouth of the
+river Rykaness.&nbsp; The distance from Haukaness is a little more than two
+miles.&nbsp; I had to mount a horse to reach the waterfall, which was yet
+eleven miles distant.&nbsp; The road runs through a narrow valley, which
+gradually narrows still more until it can only contain the river; and the
+traveller is obliged to ascend the heights and grope on along the sides of
+the mountains.&nbsp; Below in the vale he sees the foam of the waves
+surging against the rocks; they flow like a narrow band of silver in the
+deep chasm.&nbsp; Sometimes the path is so high that one neither sees nor
+hears the river.&nbsp; The last half mile has to be journeyed on foot, and
+goes past spots which are really dangerous; numerous waterfalls rush from
+the mountain-sides, and have to be crossed on paths of tree-trunks laid
+alongside each other; and roads scarcely a foot wide lead along giddy
+precipices.&nbsp; But the traveller may trust unhesitatingly to his
+guide&rsquo;s arm, who has hitherto led every one in safety to his
+destination.</p>
+<p>The road from Haukaness to the waterfall must be the finest that can be
+imagined on a bright sunny day; for I was enchanted with the
+wildly-romantic scenery in spite of the incessant rain and my wet clothes,
+and would on no consideration have missed this sight.&nbsp; Unfortunately
+the bad weather increased, and thick fogs rolled down into the
+valleys.&nbsp; The water flowed down from the mountains, and transformed
+our narrow path into a brook, through which we had to wade ankle-deep in
+water.&nbsp; At last we reached the spot which afforded the best view of
+the fall.&nbsp; It was yet free from mist, and I could still admire the
+extraordinary beauty of the fall and its quantity of water.&nbsp; I saw the
+immense mountain-rock which closes the valley, the tremendous pillar of
+water which dashes over it, and rebounds from the rock projecting in the
+centre of the fall, filling the whole valley with clouds of spray, and
+concealing the depth to which it descends.&nbsp; I saw this, one of the
+rarest and of the most magnificent of natural beauties; but alas, I saw it
+only for a moment, and had scarcely time to recover from the surprise of
+the first view when I lost it for ever!&nbsp; I was not destined to see the
+single grandeurs of the fall and of the surrounding scenery, and was fain
+to be content with one look, one glance.&nbsp; Impenetrable mists rolled
+from all sides into the wild glen, and shrouded every thing in complete
+darkness; I sat on a piece of rock, and gazed for two hours stedfastly at
+the spot where a faint outline of the fall was scarcely distinguishable
+through the mist sometimes this faint trace even was lost, and I could
+perceive its vicinity only by the dreadful sounds of the fall, and by the
+trembling of the rock beneath my feet.</p>
+<p>After I had gazed, and hoped, and raised my eyes entreatingly to heaven
+for a single ray of sunshine, all in vain, I had at last to determine on my
+return.&nbsp; I left my post almost with tears in my eyes, and turned my
+head more backwards than forwards as we left the spot.&nbsp; At the least
+indication of a clearing away of the fog I should have returned.</p>
+<p>But I retired farther and farther from it till I reached Mael again,
+where I sadly entered my boat, and proceeded uninterruptedly to
+Tindosoe.&nbsp; I arrived there towards ten o&rsquo;clock at night.&nbsp;
+The wet, the cold, the want of food, and, above all, the depressed and
+disappointed state of my mind, had so affected me, that I went to bed with
+a slight attack of fever, and feared that I should not be able to continue
+my journey on the following day.&nbsp; But my strong constitution triumphed
+over every thing, and at five o&rsquo;clock in the morning I was ready to
+continue my journey to Bolkesoe on horseback.</p>
+<p>I was obliged to hurry for fear of missing the departure of the steamer
+from Christiania.&nbsp; The journey to Delemarken had been represented to
+me as much shorter than I found it in reality; for the constant waiting for
+horses, boats, guides, &amp;c. takes up very much time.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 28th.</p>
+<p>I had ordered my horse to be ready at five o&rsquo;clock, but was
+obliged to wait for it until seven o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>Although I made only a short trip into the interior, I had sufficient
+opportunities for experiencing the extortions and inconveniences to which a
+traveller is liable in Norway.&nbsp; No country in Europe is so much in its
+infancy as regards all conveniences for locomotion.&nbsp; It is true that
+horses, carriages, boats, &amp;c. can be had at every station, and the law
+has fixed the price of these commodities; but every thing is in the hands
+of the peasants and the publicans, and they are so skilled in tormenting
+the traveller by their intentional slowness, that he is compelled to pay
+the two-fold tax, in order to proceed a little more quickly.&nbsp; The
+stations are short, being rarely above five or six miles, and one is
+therefore constantly changing horses.&nbsp; Arrived at a station, it either
+happens that there is really no horse to be had, or that this is an
+ostensible excuse.&nbsp; The traveller is told that the horse has to be
+fetched from the mountain, and that he can be served in one and a half or
+two hours.&nbsp; Thus he rides one hour, and waits two.&nbsp; It is also
+necessary to keep the tariff, as every trifle, the saddle, the carriage,
+the harness, fetching the horse, the boat, &amp;c., has to be paid for
+extra; and when the traveller does not know the fixed prices, he is certain
+to be dreadfully imposed upon.&nbsp; At every station a book lies,
+containing the legal prices; but it is written in the language of the
+district, and utterly unintelligible to the stranger.&nbsp; Into this book,
+which is examined by the judge of the district every month, one may enter
+complaints against the peasant or publican; but they do not seem to fear
+it, for the guide who accompanied me to the fall of Rykanfoss endeavoured
+to cheat me twice in the most barefaced manner, by charging me six-fold for
+the use of the saddles and the fetching of the horse.&nbsp; When I
+threatened to inscribe my complaint in the book, he seemed not to care, and
+insisted on his demand, till I was obliged to pay him.&nbsp; On my return
+to Mael, I kept my word, asked for the book, and entered my complaint,
+although I was alone with all the peasants.&nbsp; It was not so much the
+money which annoyed me, as the shameless imposition.&nbsp; I am of opinion
+that every one should complain when he is wronged; if it does not benefit
+him, it will make the matter more easy for his successor.</p>
+<p>I must confess, in justice to the peasants, that they were very
+indignant when I told them of the dishonesty of their countryman, and did
+not attempt to prevent my complaint.</p>
+<p>To conclude my journey, I need only remark that, although the rain had
+ceased, the sky was still covered with clouds, and the country shrouded in
+mist.&nbsp; I therefore took the shorter road to Christiania, by which I
+had come, although I thereby missed a beautiful district, where I should,
+as I was told, have seen the most splendid perspective views in
+Norway.&nbsp; This would have been on the road from Kongsberg over
+Kroxleben to Christiania.&nbsp; The finest part is near Kroxleben.</p>
+<p>But the time was too short to take this round, and I returned by way of
+Drammen.&nbsp; In the village of Muni, about five miles from Kongsberg,
+where I arrived at seven o&rsquo;clock in the evening, the amiable host
+wished to keep me waiting again two hours for a horse; and as this would
+probably have happened at every station, I was obliged to hire a horse for
+the whole distance to Christiania, at a threefold price.&nbsp; I slept here
+for a few hours, left in the night at one o&rsquo;clock, and arrived at
+Christiania the following afternoon at two.</p>
+<p>On this journey I found all those people very kind and obliging with
+whom I came into no sort of pecuniary relation; but the hosts, the boatmen,
+the drivers, the guides, were as selfish and grasping as in any other
+country.&nbsp; I believe that kindness and disinterestedness would only be
+found in any district by him who has the good fortune to be the first
+traveller.</p>
+<p>This little excursion was very dear; and yet I think I could now travel
+cheaply even in this country, universally acknowledged to be dear.&nbsp; I
+would go with the steamer along the coast to Hammerfest, buy a little
+vehicle and a good horse there, and then travel pleasantly, and without
+annoyance, through the whole country.&nbsp; But for a family who wished to
+travel in a comfortable covered carriage, it would be incalculably dear,
+and in many parts impossible, on account of the bad roads.</p>
+<p>The Norwegian peasantry are strong and robust, but their features are
+not the most comely, and they seemed neither wealthy nor cleanly.&nbsp;
+They were generally very poorly clad, and always barefooted.&nbsp; Their
+cottages, built of wood and covered with tiles, are more roomy than those
+of the Icelanders; but they are nevertheless dirty and wretched.&nbsp; A
+weakness of the Norwegians is their fondness for coffee, which they drink
+without milk or sugar.&nbsp; The old women, as well as the men, smoke their
+pipes morning and night.</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Miles.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Christiania to Kongsberg is about</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>41</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Kongsberg to the waterfall Labrafoss</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>5</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Kongsberg to Bolkosoe</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>14</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Bolkosoe to Tindosoe</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>16</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Tindosoe across the lake to Mael</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>16</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From Mael to the waterfall Rykanfoss</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>11</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>103</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 30th.</p>
+<p>At seven o&rsquo;clock this morning I left Christiania, accompanied by
+the good wishes of my countrywoman and her husband, and went back to
+Gottenburg by the same steamer which had brought me thence ten days
+before.&nbsp; I need only mention the splendid view of a portion of
+Christian&rsquo;s Sound&mdash;also called Fiord&mdash;which I lost on the
+former journey from the darkness of the night.&nbsp; We passed it in the
+afternoon.&nbsp; The situation of the little town of Lauervig is
+superb.&nbsp; It is built on a natural terrace, bordered in the background
+by beautiful mountains.&nbsp; In front, the fortress of Friedrichsver lies
+on a mountain surrounded by rocks, on which little watch-towers are
+erected; to the left lies the vast expanse of sea.</p>
+<p>We were delayed an hour at Friedrichsver to transfer the travellers for
+Bergen <a name="citation50"></a><a href="#footnote50"
+class="citation">[50]</a> to a vessel waiting for them, as we had stopped
+on our previous journey at Sandesund for the same purpose.</p>
+<p>This is the last view in the fiord; for now we steered into the open
+sea, and in a few hours we had lost sight of land.&nbsp; We saw nothing but
+land and water till we arrived the next morning at the Scheren, and steered
+for Gottenburg.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">August 31st.</p>
+<p>The sea had been rough all night, and we therefore reached Gottenburg
+three hours later than usual.&nbsp; In this agitated sea, the surging of
+the breakers against the many rocks and islets near Gottenburg has a very
+curious effect.</p>
+<p>The few travellers who could keep on their feet, who did not suffer from
+sea-sickness, and remained on deck, spoke much of the dangerous
+storm.&nbsp; I had frequently marvelled to hear people who had made a
+journey, if it were even only a short one of forty to sixty leagues, relate
+of some fearful storm they had witnessed.&nbsp; Now I comprehended the
+reason, when I heard the travellers beside me call the brisk breeze, which
+only occasioned what seamen call a little swell, a dreadful storm; and they
+will probably tell at home of the dangers they have passed.&nbsp; Storms
+are, fortunately, not so frequent.&nbsp; I have travelled many thousand
+leagues, and have often met with stormy weather, especially on the passage
+from Copenhagen to Iceland; but I only experienced one real storm, but a
+violent and dangerous one, as I was crossing the Black Sea to
+Constantinople in April 1842.</p>
+<p>We arrived at Gottenburg at nine instead of at six o&rsquo;clock in the
+morning.&nbsp; I landed at once, to make the celebrated trip through the
+locks, over the waterfalls of Trollh&auml;tta, with the next Stockholm
+steamer.&nbsp; By the junction of the river G&ouml;tha with some of the
+interior lakes, this great construction crosses the whole country, and
+connects the North Sea with the Baltic.</p>
+<p>I found the town of Gottenburg very animated, on account of the presence
+of the king of Sweden, who was spending a few days here on his way to
+Christiania to prorogue the Storthing.&nbsp; I arrived on a Sunday, and the
+king, with his son, were in the church.&nbsp; The streets swarmed with
+human beings, all crowding towards the cathedral to catch a glimpse of his
+majesty on his departure.&nbsp; I, of course, mingled with the crowd, and
+was fortunate enough to see the king and prince come out of the church,
+enter their carriage, and drive away very near to me.&nbsp; Both were
+handsome, amiable-looking men.&nbsp; The people rushed after the carriage,
+and eagerly caught the friendly bows of the intelligent father and his
+hopeful son; they followed him to his palace, and stationed themselves in
+front of it, impatiently longing for the moment when the royal pair would
+appear at a window.</p>
+<p>I could not have arrived at a more favourable time; for every one was in
+holiday attire, and the military, the clergy, the officials, citizens and
+people, were all exerting themselves to the utmost to do honour to their
+king.</p>
+<p>I noticed two peasant-girls among the crowd who were peculiarly
+dressed.&nbsp; They wore black petticoats reaching half way down the calf
+of the leg, red stockings, red spensers, and white chemises, with long
+white sleeves; a kerchief was tied round the head.&nbsp; Some of the
+citizens&rsquo; wives wore caps like the Suabian caps, covered by a little
+black, embroidered veil, which, however, left the face free.</p>
+<p>Here, as in Copenhagen, I noticed boys of ten to twelve years of age
+among the drummers, and in the bands of the military.</p>
+<p>The king remained this day and the next in Gottenburg, and continued his
+journey on the Tuesday.&nbsp; On the two evenings of his stay the windows
+in the town were ornamented with wreaths of fresh flowers, interspersed
+with lighted tapers.&nbsp; Some houses displayed transparencies, which,
+however, did not place the inventive powers of the amiable Gottenburgers in
+a very favourable light.&nbsp; They were all alike, consisting of a
+tremendous O (Oscar), surmounted by a royal crown.</p>
+<p>I was detained four days in Gottenburg; and small consideration seems to
+be paid to the speedy transport of travellers in Sweden.&nbsp; The steamer
+for Stockholm started on the day I arrived from Christiania, but
+unfortunately at five o&rsquo;clock in the morning; and as in the month of
+September only two steamers go in the week to Stockholm, I was compelled to
+wait till Thursday.&nbsp; The time hung heavily on my hands; for I had seen
+the town itself, and the splendid views on the hills between the suburbs,
+during my former visit to the town, and the other portions only consisted
+of bare rocks and cliffs, which were of no interest.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 4th.</p>
+<p>The press of travellers was so great this time, that two days before the
+departure the cabins were all engaged; several ladies and gentlemen who
+would not wait for the next steamer were compelled to be satisfied with the
+deck, and I was among them; for the probability of such a crowd of
+passengers had not occurred to me, and I applied for a place only two days
+before our departure.&nbsp; During the journey fresh passengers were taken
+in at every station, and the reader may conceive the misery of the poor
+citizens unused to such hardships.&nbsp; Every one sought a shelter for the
+night, and the little cabins of the engineer and steersman were given up to
+some, while others crept into the passages, or squatted down on the steps
+of the stairs leading to the cabins.&nbsp; A place was offered to me in the
+engineer&rsquo;s cabin; but as three or four other persons were to share
+the apartment calculated only for one person, I preferred to bivouac night
+and day upon deck.&nbsp; One of the gentlemen was kind enough to lend me a
+thick cloak, in which I could wrap myself; and so I slept much more
+comfortably under the high canopy of heaven than my companions did in their
+sweating-room.</p>
+<p>The arrangements in the vessels navigating the G&ouml;tha canal are by
+no means the best.&nbsp; The first class is very comfortable, and the
+cabin-place is divided into pretty light divisions for two persons; but the
+second class is all the more uncomfortable: its cabin is used for a common
+dining-room by day, and by night hammocks are slung up in it for sleeping
+accommodation.&nbsp; The arrangements for the luggage are worse
+still.&nbsp; The canal-boats, having only a very small hold, trunks, boxes,
+portmanteaus, &amp;c. are heaped up on the deck, not fastened at all, and
+very insufficiently protected against rain.&nbsp; The consequence of this
+carelessness on a journey of five or six days was, that the rain and the
+high waves of the lakes frequently put the after-deck several inches under
+water, and then the luggage was wetted through.&nbsp; It was worse still in
+a squall on the Wenner lake; for while the ship was rather roughly tossed
+about, many a trunk lost its equilibrium and fell from its high position,
+frequently endangering the safety of the passengers&rsquo; heads.&nbsp; The
+fares are, however, very cheap, which seemed doubly strange, as the many
+locks must cause considerable expense.</p>
+<p>And now for the journey itself.&nbsp; We started at five o&rsquo;clock
+in the morning, and soon arrived in the river G&ouml;tha, whose shores for
+the first few miles are flat and bare.&nbsp; The valley itself is bounded
+by bare, rocky hills.&nbsp; After about nine miles we came to the town of
+Kongelf, which is said to have 1000 inhabitants.&nbsp; It is so situated
+among rocks, that it is almost hidden from view.&nbsp; On a rock opposite
+the town are the ruins of the fortress Bogus.&nbsp; Now the scenery begins
+to be a little more diversified, and forests are mingled with the bleak
+rocks; little valleys appear on both the shores; and the river itself, here
+divided by an islet, frequently expands to a considerable breadth.&nbsp;
+The peasants&rsquo; cottages were larger and better than those in Norway;
+they are generally painted brick-red, and are often built in groups.</p>
+<p>The first lock is at Lilla Edet: there are five here; and while the ship
+passes through them, the passengers have leisure to admire the contiguous
+low, but broad and voluminous fall of the G&ouml;tha.</p>
+<p>This first batch of locks in the canal extends over some distance past
+the fall, and they are partly blasted out of the rock, or built of
+stone.&nbsp; The river past Akestron flows as through a beautiful park; the
+valley is hemmed in by fertile hills, and leaves space only for the stream
+and some picturesque paths winding along its shores, and through the
+pine-groves descending to its banks.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon we arrived at the celebrated locks near
+Trollh&auml;tta.&nbsp; They are of gigantic construction, which the largest
+states would be honoured in completing, and which occasion surprise when
+found in a country ranking high neither in extent nor in influence.&nbsp;
+There are eleven locks here, which rise 112 feet in a space of 3500
+feet.&nbsp; They are broad, deep, blasted out of the rock, and walled round
+with fine freestone.&nbsp; They resemble the single steps of a
+giant&rsquo;s staircase; and by this name they might fitly rank as one of
+the wonders of the world.&nbsp; Lock succeeds lock, mighty gates close
+them, and the large vessel rises miraculously to the giddy heights in a
+wildly romantic country.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p219b.jpg">
+<img alt="Falls of Trollhatta" src="images/p219s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Scarcely arrived at the locks, the traveller is surrounded by a crowd of
+boys, who offer their services as guides to the waterfalls near
+Trollh&auml;tta.&nbsp; There is abundance of time for this excursion; for
+the passage of the ship through the many locks occupies three to four
+hours, and the excursion can be made in half the time.&nbsp; Before
+starting, it is, however, advisable to climb the rock to which the locks
+ascend.&nbsp; A pavilion is erected on its summit, and the view from it
+down over all the locks is exceedingly fine.</p>
+<p>Pretty paths hewn out of the wood lead to Trollh&auml;tta, which is
+charmingly situated in a lovely valley, surrounded by woods and hills, on
+the shore of a river, whose white foaming waves contrast strongly with the
+dark foliage of the overshadowing groves.&nbsp; The canal, which describes
+a large semicircle round the chief stream, glitters in the distance; but
+the highest locks are quite concealed behind rocks; we could neither
+observe the opening of the gates nor the rising of the water in them, and
+were therefore surprised when suddenly the masts and then the ship itself
+rose from the depth.&nbsp; An invisible hand seemed to raise it up between
+the rocks.</p>
+<p>The falls of the river are less distinguished for their height than for
+their diversity and their volumes of water.&nbsp; The principal arm of the
+river is divided at the point of decline into two equal falls by a little
+island of rock.&nbsp; A long narrow suspension-bridge leads to this island,
+and hangs over the fall; but it is such a weak, frail construction, that
+one person only can cross it at a time.&nbsp; The owner of this dangerous
+path keeps it private, and imposes a toll of about 3&frac12;d. on all
+passengers.</p>
+<p>A peculiar sensation oppresses the traveller crossing the slender
+path.&nbsp; He sees the stream tearing onwards, breaking itself on the
+projecting rock, and fall surging into the abyss; he sees the boiling waves
+beneath, and feels the bridge vibrate at every footstep, and timidly
+hastens to reach the island, not taking breath to look around until he has
+found footing; on the firm island.&nbsp; A solid rock projects a little
+over the fall, and affords him a safe position, whence he sees not only the
+two falls on either side, but also several others formed above and below
+his point of view.&nbsp; The scene is so enchanting, that it is difficult
+to tear oneself away.</p>
+<p>Beyond Trollh&auml;tta the river expands almost to a lake, and is
+separated into many arms by the numerous islands.&nbsp; The shores lose
+their beauty, being flat and uninteresting.</p>
+<p>We unfortunately did not reach the splendid Wennersee, which is from
+forty-five to sixty-five miles long, and proportionally broad, until
+evening, when it was already too dark to admire the scenery.&nbsp; Our ship
+remained some hours before the insignificant village Wennersborg.</p>
+<p>We had met six or seven steamers on our journey, which all belonged to
+Swedish or Norwegian merchants; and it afforded us a peculiarly interesting
+sight to see these ships ascend and descend in the high locks.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 5th.</p>
+<p>As we were leaving Wennersborg late on the previous night, and were
+cruising about the sea, a contrary wind, or rather a squall, arose, which
+would have signified little to a good vessel, but to which our small ship
+was not equal.&nbsp; The poor captain tried in vain to navigate the steamer
+across the lake; he was at last compelled to give up the attempt, to return
+and to cast anchor.&nbsp; We lost our boat during this storm; a high wave
+dashed over the deck and swept it away: it had probably been as well
+fastened as our boxes and trunks.</p>
+<p>Though it was but nine o&rsquo;clock in the morning, our captain
+declared that he could not proceed during the day, but that if the weather
+became more favourable, he would start again about midnight.&nbsp;
+Fortunately a fishing-boat ventured to come alongside, and some of the
+passengers landed.&nbsp; I was among them, and made use of this opportunity
+to visit some cottages lying at the edge of a wood near the lake.&nbsp;
+They were very small, but consisted of two chambers, which contained
+several beds and other furniture; the people were also somewhat better clad
+than the Norwegians.&nbsp; Their food too was not so unpalatable; they
+boiled a thick mess of coarse black flour, which was eaten with sweet
+milk.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 6th.</p>
+<p>We raised anchor at one o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and in about five
+hours arrived at the island Eken, which consists entirely of rock, and is
+surrounded by a multitude of smaller islets and cliffs.&nbsp; This is one
+of the most important stations in the lake.&nbsp; A large wooden warehouse
+stands on the shore, and in it is stored the merchandise of the vicinity
+intended for export; and in return it receives the cargo from the
+ships.&nbsp; There are always several vessels lying at anchor here.</p>
+<p>We had now to wind through a cluster of islands, till we again reached
+the open lake, which, however, was only remarkable for its size.&nbsp; Its
+shores are bare and monotonous, and only dotted here and there with woods
+or low hills; the distant view even is not at all noteworthy.&nbsp; One of
+the finest views is the tolerably large castle of Leko, which lies on a
+rock, and is surrounded by fertile groves.</p>
+<p>Further off rises the Kinne Kulle, <a name="citation51"></a><a
+href="#footnote51" class="citation">[51]</a> to which the traveller&rsquo;s
+attention is directed, because it is said to afford an extended view, not
+only over the lake, but far into the country.&nbsp; A curious grotto is
+said to exist in this hill; but unfortunately one loses these sights since
+the establishment of steamers, for we fly past every object of interest,
+and the longest journey will soon be described in a few words.</p>
+<p>A large glass-factory is established at Bromoe, which fabricates
+window-glass exclusively.&nbsp; We stopped a short time, and took a
+considerable cargo of the brittle material on board.</p>
+<p>The factory and the little dwellings attached to it are prettily
+situated on the undulating ground.</p>
+<p>Near Sjotorp we entered the river again through several locks.&nbsp; The
+passage of the Wennersee is calculated at about ten or eleven hours.</p>
+<p>The river at first winds through woods; and while the ship slowly passes
+through the locks, it is pleasanter to walk a portion of the distance in
+their shade.&nbsp; Farther on it flows through broad valleys, which,
+however, present no very attractive features.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 7th.</p>
+<p>Early in the morning we crossed the pretty Vikensee, which distinguishes
+itself, like all Swedish lakes, by the multitude of its islands, cliffs,
+and rocks.&nbsp; These islands are frequently covered with trees, which
+make the view more interesting.</p>
+<p>The lake is 306 feet above the level of the North Sea, and is the
+highest point of the journey; from thence the locks begin to descend.&nbsp;
+The number of ascending and descending locks amounts to seventy-two.</p>
+<p>A short canal leads into the Boltensee, which is comparatively free from
+islands.&nbsp; The passage across this little lake is very charming; the
+shores are diversified by hills, woods, meadows, and fields.&nbsp; After it
+comes the Weltersee, which can be easily defended by the beautiful fortress
+of Karlsborg.&nbsp; This lake has two peculiarities: one being the
+extraordinary purity and transparency of its waters; the other, the number
+of storms which prevail in it.&nbsp; I was told that it frequently raged
+and stormed on the lake while the surrounding country remained calm and
+free.&nbsp; The storm sometimes overtakes the ship so suddenly and
+violently, that escape is impossible; and the sagas and fables told of the
+deceitful tricks of these waves are innumerable.</p>
+<p>We fortunately escaped, and crossed its surface cheerfully and
+merrily.&nbsp; On its shores are situated the beautiful ladies&rsquo;
+pensionary, Wadstena, and the celebrated mountain Omberg, at whose foot a
+battle was fought.</p>
+<p>The next canal is short, and leads through a lovely wood into the little
+lake of Norbysee.&nbsp; It is customary to walk this distance, and inspect
+the simple monument of Count Platen, who made the plans for the locks and
+canals,&mdash;a lasting, colossal undertaking.&nbsp; The monument is
+surrounded by an iron railing, and consists of a slab bearing an
+inscription, simply stating in Swedish his name, the date of his death,
+&amp;c.&nbsp; Nearly opposite the monument, on the other side of the canal,
+is the town of Motala, distinguished principally for its large iron
+factories, in which the spacious work-rooms are especially remarkable.</p>
+<p>Fifteen locks lead from the Norbysee into the Roxersee, which is a
+descent of 116 feet.&nbsp; The canal winds gracefully through woods and
+meadows, crossed by pretty roads, and studded with elegant little houses
+and larger edifices.&nbsp; Distant church-steeples point out the village of
+Norby, which sometimes peeps forth behind little forests, and then vanishes
+again from the view of the traveller.&nbsp; When the sun shines on the
+waters of this canal, it has a beautiful, transparent, pea-green colour,
+like the purest chrysolite.</p>
+<p>The view from the hill which rises immediately before the lake of Roxen
+is exceedingly fine.&nbsp; It looks down upon an immense valley, covered
+with the most beautiful woods and rocks, and upon the broad lake, whose arm
+flows far in land.&nbsp; The evening sun shed its last rays over a little
+town on the lake-shore, and its newly-painted tiles shone brightly in its
+light beams.</p>
+<p>While the ship descended through the many locks, we visited the
+neighbouring church of the village of Vretakloster, which contains the
+skeletons of several kings in beautifully-made metal coffins.</p>
+<p>We then crossed the lake, which is from four to five miles broad, and
+remained all night before the entrance of the canal leading into a bay of
+the Baltic.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 8th.</p>
+<p>This canal is one of the longest; its environs are very pretty, and the
+valley through which it runs is one of the largest we had passed.&nbsp; The
+town of S&ouml;derk&ouml;ping is situated at the foot of high, picturesque
+groups of rocks, which extend to a considerable distance.</p>
+<p>Every valley and every spot of soil in Sweden are carefully
+cultivated.</p>
+<p>The people in general are well dressed, and inhabit small but very
+pretty houses, whose windows are frequently decorated with clean white
+draperies.&nbsp; I visited several of these houses, as we had abundance of
+time for such excursions while the ship was going through the locks.&nbsp;
+I think one might walk the whole distance from Gottenburg to Stockholm in
+the same time that the ship takes for the journey.&nbsp; We lose some hours
+daily with the locks, and are obliged to lie still at night on their
+account.&nbsp; The distance is calculated at from 180 to 250 miles, and the
+journey takes five days.</p>
+<p>In the evening we approached the Baltic, which has the same character as
+the Scheren of the North Sea.&nbsp; The ship threads its way through a
+shoal of islands and islets, of rocks and cliffs; and it is as difficult to
+imagine here as there how it is possible to avoid all the projecting
+cliffs, and guide the ship so safely through them.&nbsp; The sea divides
+itself into innumerable arms and bays, into small and large lakes, which
+are formed between the islands and rocks, and are hemmed in by beautiful
+hills.&nbsp; But nothing can exceed the beauty of the view of the castle
+Storry Husby, which lies on a high mountain, in a bay.&nbsp; In front of
+the mountain a beautiful meadow-lawn reaches to the shores of the sea,
+while the back is surrounded in the distance by a splendid
+pine-forest.&nbsp; Near this picturesque castle a steeple rises on a
+neighbouring island, which is all that remains of the ancient castle of
+Stegeborg.&nbsp; Nothing can be more romantic than the scenery here, and on
+the whole journey over the fiord; for it presents itself in ever-varying
+pictures to the traveller&rsquo;s notice.</p>
+<p>But gradually the hills become lower, the islands more rare; the sea
+supersedes every thing, and seems jealously anxious to exclude other
+objects from the traveller&rsquo;s attention, as if it wished to monopolise
+it.&nbsp; Now we were in the open sea, and saw only water and sky; and then
+again we were so hemmed in by the rocks and cliffs, that it would be
+impossible to extricate the ship without the assistance of an experienced
+pilot.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 9th.</p>
+<p>We left the sea, and entered another lake, the M&auml;larsee, celebrated
+for its numerous islands, by a short canal.&nbsp; The town of Sotulje lies
+at its entrance, charmingly situated in a narrow valley at the foot of a
+rather steep hill.&nbsp; This lake at first resembles a broad river, but
+widens at every step, and soon shews itself in its whole expanse.&nbsp; The
+passage of the M&auml;larsee takes four hours, and is one of the most
+charming excursions that can be made.&nbsp; It is said to contain about a
+thousand islets of various sizes; and it may be imagined how varied in form
+and feature the scenery must be, and, like the fiord of the Baltic, what a
+constant succession of new scenes it must present.</p>
+<p>The shores also are very beautiful: in some spots hills descend sharply
+to the water&rsquo;s edge, the steep rocks forming dangerous points; on
+others dark, sombre pine-forests grow; and again there are gay valleys and
+meadows, with villages or single cottages.&nbsp; Many travellers assert
+that this lake is, after all, very monotonous; but I cannot agree with
+their opinion.&nbsp; I found it so attractive, that I could repeat the
+journey many times without wearying of this lovely sameness.&nbsp; It
+certainly has not the majestic backgrounds of the Swiss lakes; but this
+profusion of small islands is a pleasing peculiarity which can be found on
+no other lake.</p>
+<p>On the summit of a steep precipice of the shore the hat of the
+unfortunate Eric is hoisted, fastened to a long pole.&nbsp; History tells
+that this king fled from the enemy in a battle; that one of his soldiers
+pursued him, and reproached him for his cowardice, whereupon Eric, filled
+with shame and despair, gave spurs to his horse and leaped into the fearful
+abyss.&nbsp; At his fall his hat was blown from his head, and was left on
+this spot.</p>
+<p>Not far from this point the suburbs of Stockholm make their appearance,
+being spread round one of the broad arms of the lake.&nbsp; With increasing
+curiosity we gazed towards the town as we gradually approached it.&nbsp;
+Many of the pretty villas, which are situated in the valleys or on the
+sides of the hills as forerunners of the town, come into view, and the
+suburbs rise amphi-theatrically on the steep shores.&nbsp; The town itself
+closes the prospect by occupying the whole upper shore of the lake, and is
+flanked by the suburbs at either side.&nbsp; The Ritterholm church, with
+its cast-iron perforated towers, and the truly grand royal palace, which is
+built entirely in the Italian style, can be seen and admired from this
+distance.</p>
+<p>We had scarcely cast anchor in the port of Stockholm, when a number of
+Herculean women came and offered us their services as porters.&nbsp; They
+were Delekarliers, <a name="citation52"></a><a href="#footnote52"
+class="citation">[52]</a> who frequently come to Stockholm to earn a
+livelihood as porters, water-carriers, boatwomen, &amp;c.&nbsp; They easily
+find employment, because they possess two excellent qualities: they are
+said to be exceedingly honest and hard-working, and, at the same time, have
+the strength and perseverance of men.</p>
+<p>Their dress consists of black petticoats, which come half way over the
+calf of the leg, red bodices, white chemises with long sleeves, short
+narrow aprons of two colours, red stockings, and shoes with wooden soles an
+inch thick.&nbsp; They twist a handkerchief round their head, or put on a
+little close black cap, which fits close on the back part of the head.</p>
+<p>In Stockholm there are entire houses, as well as single rooms, which, as
+in a hotel, are let by the day.&nbsp; They are much cheaper than hotels,
+and are therefore more in demand.&nbsp; I at once hired one of these rooms,
+which was very clean and bright, and for which, with breakfast, I only paid
+one riksdaler, which is about one shilling.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<p>As my journey was ostensibly only to Iceland, and as I only paid a
+flying visit to this portion of Scandinavia, my readers will pardon me if I
+treat it briefly.&nbsp; This portion of Europe has been so frequently and
+so excellently described by other travellers, that my observations would be
+of little importance.</p>
+<p>I remained in Stockholm six days, and made as good use of my time as I
+could.&nbsp; The town is situated on the shores of the Baltic Sea and the
+M&auml;lar lake.&nbsp; These two waters are connected by a short canal, on
+whose shores the most delightful houses are erected.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p230b.jpg">
+<img alt="Stockholm" src="images/p230s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>My first visit was to the beautiful church of Ritterholm, which is used
+more for a cemetery and an armory than for a place of worship.&nbsp; The
+vaults serve as burial-places for the kings, and their monuments are
+erected in the side-chapels.&nbsp; On each side of the nave of the church
+are placed effigies of armed knights on horseback, whose armour belonged to
+the former kings of Sweden.&nbsp; The walls and angles of the church are
+profusely decorated with flags and standards, said to number five
+thousand.&nbsp; In addition to this, the keys of conquered towns and
+fortresses hang along the side-walls, and drums are piled upon the floor;
+trophies taken from different nations with which Sweden has been at
+war.</p>
+<p>Besides these curiosities, several coats of armour and garments of
+Swedish regents are displayed behind glass-cases in the side-chapels.&nbsp;
+Among them, the dress which Charles XII. wore on the day of his death, and
+his hat perforated by a ball, interested me most.&nbsp; His riding-boots
+stand on the ground beside it.&nbsp; The modern dress and hat, embroidered
+with gold and ornamented with feathers, of the last king, the founder of
+the new dynasty, is not less interesting, partly perhaps from the great
+contrast.</p>
+<p>The church of St. Nicholas stands on the same side of the canal, and is
+one of the finest Protestant churches I had seen; it is very evident that
+it was built in Catholic times, and that its former decorations have been
+allowed to remain.&nbsp; It contains several large and small oil-paintings,
+some ancient and some modern monuments, and a profusion of gilding.&nbsp;
+The organ is fine and large; flanking the entrance of the church are
+beautiful reliefs, hewn in stone; and above it, carved in wood, a statue of
+the archangel Michael, larger than life, sitting on horseback on a bridge,
+in the act of killing the dragon.</p>
+<p>Near the church is situated the royal palace, which needs a more fluent
+pen than mine to describe it.&nbsp; It would fill a volume were I to
+enumerate and describe the treasures, curiosities, and beauties of its
+construction, or its interior arrangement; I can only say that I never saw
+any thing to equal it, except the royal palace of Naples.&nbsp; Such an
+edifice is the more surprising in the north, and in a country which has
+never been overstocked with wealth.</p>
+<p>The church of Shifferholm is remarkable only for its position and its
+temple-like form; it stands on the ledge of a rock facing the royal palace,
+on the opposite shore of the same indentation of the Baltic.&nbsp; A long
+bridge of boats leads from the one to the other.</p>
+<p>The church of St. Catharine is large and beautiful.&nbsp; In an outer
+angle of the church is shewn the stone on which one of the brothers Sturre
+was beheaded. <a name="citation53"></a><a href="#footnote53"
+class="citation">[53]</a></p>
+<p>On the Ritterplatz stands the Ritterhouse, a very fine palace; also the
+old royal palace, and several other royal and private mansions; but they
+are not nearly so numerous nor so fine as in Copenhagen, and the streets
+and squares also cannot be compared with those of the capital of
+Denmark.</p>
+<p>The finest prospect is from a hill in one of the suburbs called the
+Great Mosbecken; it affords a magnificent view of the sea and the lake, of
+the town and its suburbs, as far as the points of the mountains, and of the
+lovely country-houses which border the shores of lake and sea.&nbsp; The
+town and its environs are so interspersed with islets and rocks, that these
+seem to be part of the town; and this gives Stockholm such a curious
+appearance, that I can compare it to no other city I have seen.&nbsp;
+Wooded hills and naked rocks prolong the view, and their ridges extend into
+the far distance; while level fields and lawns take up but a very small
+proportion of the magnificent scenery.</p>
+<p>On descending from this hill the traveller should not fail to go to
+S&ouml;dermalm, and to inspect the immense iron-stores, where iron is
+heaped up in countless bars.&nbsp; The corn-market of Stockholm is
+insignificant.&nbsp; The principal buildings besides those already
+enumerated are, the bank, the mint, the guard-house, the palace of the
+crown-prince, the theatre, &amp;c.&nbsp; The latter is interesting, partly
+because Gustavus III. was shot in it.&nbsp; He fell on the stage, while a
+grand masquerade was taking place, for which the theatre had been changed
+into a ball-room.&nbsp; The king was shot by a mask, and died in a few
+hours.</p>
+<p>There is not a representation in the theatre every night; and on the one
+evening of performance during my visit a festival was to be celebrated in
+the hall of antiquities.&nbsp; The esteemed artist Vogelberg, a native of
+Sweden, had beautifully sculptured the three heathen gods, Thor, Balder,
+and Odin, in colossal size, and brought them over from Rome.&nbsp; The
+statues had only been lately placed, and a large company had been invited
+to meet in the illuminated saloon, and do honour to the artist.&nbsp;
+Solemn hymns were to be sung at the uncovering of the statues, beside other
+festivities.&nbsp; I was fortunate enough to receive an invitation to this
+festival, which was to commence a little past seven.&nbsp; Before that I
+went to the theatre, which, I was told, would open at half-past six.&nbsp;
+I intended to remain there half an hour, and then drive to the palace,
+where my friends would meet me to accompany me to the festival.&nbsp; I
+went to the theatre at six, and anxiously waited half an hour for the
+commencement of the overture; it was after half-past six, and no signs of
+the commencement.&nbsp; I looked again at the bill, and saw, to my
+annoyance, that the opera did not begin till seven.&nbsp; But as I would
+not leave until I had seen the stage, I spent the time in looking at the
+theatre itself.&nbsp; It is tolerably large, and has five tiers of boxes,
+but is neither tastefully nor richly decorated.&nbsp; I was most surprised
+at the exorbitant price and the variety of seats.&nbsp; I counted
+twenty-six different kinds; it seems that every row has a different price,
+else I don&rsquo;t understand how they could make such a variety.</p>
+<p>At last the overture began; I listened to it, saw the curtain rise,
+looked at the fatal spot, and left after the first air.&nbsp; The
+door-keeper followed me, took my arm, and wished to give me a
+return-ticket; and when I told him that I did not require one, as I did not
+intend to return, he said that it had only just commenced, and that I ought
+to stop, and not have spent all the money for nothing.&nbsp; I was
+unfortunately too little acquainted with the Swedish language to explain
+the reason of my departure, so I could give him no answer, but went
+away.&nbsp; I, however, heard him say to some one, &ldquo;I never met with
+such a woman before; she sat an hour looking at the curtain, and goes away
+as soon as it rises.&rdquo;&nbsp; I looked round and saw how he shook his
+head thoughtfully, and pointed with his forefinger to his forehead.&nbsp; I
+could not refrain from smiling, and enjoyed the scene as much as I should
+have done the second act of Mozart&rsquo;s <i>Don Giovanni</i>.</p>
+<p>I called for my friends at the royal palace, and spent the evening very
+agreeably in the brilliantly-illuminated galleries of antiquities and of
+pictures.&nbsp; I had the pleasure also of being introduced to Herr
+Vogelberg.&nbsp; His modest, unpretending manners must inspire every one
+with respect, even if one does not know what distinguished talent he
+possesses.</p>
+<p>The royal park is one of the finest sights in the neighbourhood of
+Stockholm, and is one of the best of its kind.&nbsp; It is a fine large
+natural park, with an infinity of groves, meadows, hills, and rocks; here
+and there lies a country-house with its fragrant flower-garden, or tasteful
+coffee and refreshment houses, which on fine Sundays are filled with
+visitors from the town.&nbsp; Good roads are made through the park, and
+commodious paths lead to the finest points of view over sea and land.</p>
+<p>The bust of the popular poet Bellmann stands on an open sunny spot, and
+an annual festival is given here in his honour.</p>
+<p>Deeper in the park lies the so-called Rosenthal (Rose valley), a real
+Eden.&nbsp; The late king was so partial to this spot, that he spent many
+hours in the little royal country-house here, which is built on a retired
+spot in the midst of groves and flower-beds.&nbsp; In front of the palace
+stands a splendid vase made of a single piece of porphyry.&nbsp; I was told
+that it was the largest in Europe, but I consider the one in the Museum of
+Naples much larger.</p>
+<p>I spent the last hours of my visit to Stockholm in this spot, with the
+amiable family of Herr Boje from Finnland, whose acquaintance I had made on
+the journey from Gottenburg to Stockholm.&nbsp; I shall therefore never
+forget this beautiful park and the agreeable associations connected with
+it.</p>
+<p>I made a very agreeable excursion also to the royal palace of Haga, to
+the large cemetery, and to the military school Karlberg.</p>
+<p>The royal castle of Haga is surrounded by a magnificent park, which owes
+little to art; it contains some of the finest trees, with here and there a
+hill, and is crossed by majestic alleys and well-kept roads for driving and
+walking.&nbsp; The palace itself is so small, that I could not but admire
+the moderation of the royal family; but I was informed that this is the
+smallest of their summer palaces.</p>
+<p>Nearly opposite to this park is the great cemetery; but as it has only
+existed for about seventeen years, the trees in it are yet rather
+young.&nbsp; This would be of little consequence in other countries, but in
+Sweden the cemeteries serve as promenades, and are crossed by alleys,
+ornamented with groves, and provided with seats for the accommodation of
+visitors.&nbsp; This cemetery is surrounded by a dark pine-forest, and
+really seems quite shut off from the outer world.&nbsp; It is the only
+burial-place out of the town; the others all lie between the churches and
+the neighbouring houses, whose fronts often form the immediate
+boundary.&nbsp; Burials take place there constantly, so that the
+inhabitants are quite familiar with the aspect of death.</p>
+<p>From the great cemetery a road leads to the neighbouring Karlberg, which
+is the academy for military and naval cadets.&nbsp; The extensive buildings
+attached to this seminary are built on the slope of a mountain, which is
+washed on one side by the waters of the lake, and surrounded on the other
+by the beautiful park-plantations.</p>
+<p>Before leaving Stockholm I had the honour of being introduced to her
+majesty the Queen of Sweden.&nbsp; She had heard of my travels, and took a
+particular interest in my account of Palestine.&nbsp; In consequence of
+this favour, I received the special permission to inspect the whole
+interior of the palace.&nbsp; Although it was inhabited, I was conducted,
+not only through the state-rooms, but through all the private rooms of the
+court.&nbsp; It would be impossible to describe the splendour which reigns
+here, the treasures of art, the magnificent appointments, and the evident
+taste every where displayed.&nbsp; I was delighted with all the treasures
+and splendour, but still more with the warm interest with which her majesty
+conversed with me about Palestine.&nbsp; This interview will ever dwell on
+my memory as the bright salient point of my northern expedition.</p>
+<h3>EXCURSION TO THE OLD ROYAL CASTLE OF GRIPTHOLM ON THE MALARSEE</h3>
+<p>Every Sunday morning, at eight o&rsquo;clock, a little steamer leaves
+Stockholm for this castle; the distance is about forty-five miles, and is
+passed in four hours; four hours more are allowed for the stay, and in the
+evening the steamer returns to Stockholm.&nbsp; This excursion is very
+interesting, although we pass the greater part of the time on that portion
+of the lake which we had seen on our arrival, but for the last few miles
+the ship turned into a pretty bay, at whose apex the castle is
+situated.&nbsp; It is distinguished for its size, its architecture, and its
+colossal turrets.&nbsp; It is unfortunately, however, painted with the
+favourite brick-red colour of the Swedes.</p>
+<p>Two immense cannons, which the Swedes once gained in battle from the
+Russians, stand in the courtyard.&nbsp; The apartments in the castle, which
+are kept in good condition, display neither splendour nor profusion of
+appointments, indeed almost the contrary.&nbsp; The pretty theatre is,
+however, an exception: for its walls are inlaid from top to bottom with
+mirrors, its pillars are gilt, and the royal box tapestried with rich red
+velvet.&nbsp; There has been no performance here since the death of
+Gustavus III.</p>
+<p>The immensely massive walls are a remarkable feature of this palace, and
+must measure about three yards in thickness in the lower stories.</p>
+<p>The upper apartments are all large and high, and afford a splendid view
+of the lake from their windows.&nbsp; But it is impossible to enjoy these
+beautiful scenes when one thinks of the sad events which have taken place
+here.</p>
+<p>Two kings, John III. and Eric XIV., the latter with four of his
+ministers, who were subsequently beheaded, were imprisoned here for many
+years.&nbsp; The captivity of John III. would not have been so bad, if
+captivity were not bad enough in itself.&nbsp; He was confined in a large
+splendid saloon, but which he was not permitted to quit, and which he would
+therefore probably have gladly exchanged for the poorest hut and
+liberty.&nbsp; His wife inhabited two smaller apartments adjoining; she was
+not treated as a prisoner, and could leave the castle at will.&nbsp; His
+son Sigismund was born here in the year 1566, and the room and bed in which
+he was born are still shewn as curiosities.</p>
+<p>Eric&rsquo;s fate was much more unfortunate, for he was kept in narrow
+and dark confinement.&nbsp; A small rudely-furnished apartment, with
+narrow, iron-barred windows, in one of the little turrets was his
+prison.&nbsp; The entrance was closed by a solid oaken door, in which a
+small opening had been made, through which his food was given him.&nbsp;
+For greater security this oaken door was covered by an iron one.&nbsp;
+Round the outside of the apartment a narrow gallery had been made, on which
+the guards were posted, and could at all times see their prisoner through
+the barred windows.&nbsp; The spot is still shewn at one of the windows
+where the king sat for hours looking into the distance, his head leaning on
+his hand.&nbsp; What must have been his feelings as he gazed on the bright
+sky, the verdant turf, and the smiling lake!&nbsp; How many sighs must have
+been echoed from these walls, how many sleepless nights must he have passed
+during those two long years in anxious expectation of the future!</p>
+<p>The guide who took us round the castle maintained that the floor was
+more worn on this spot than any where else, and that the window-sash had
+been hollowed by the elbow of the miserable king; but I could not perceive
+any difference.&nbsp; Eric was kept imprisoned here for two years, and was
+then taken to another prison.</p>
+<p>There is a large picture-gallery in this castle; but it contains
+principally portraits of kings, not only of Sweden, but of other countries,
+from the Middle Ages down to the present time; also portraits of ministers,
+generals, painters, poets, and learned men; of celebrated Swedish females,
+who have sacrificed themselves for their country, and of the most
+celebrated female beauties.&nbsp; The name and date of birth of each person
+are affixed to his or her portrait, so that each visitor may find his
+favourite without guide or catalogue.&nbsp; In many of them the colouring
+and drawing are wretched enough, but we will hope that the resemblance is
+all the more striking.</p>
+<p>On our return several gentlemen were kind enough to direct my attention
+to the most interesting points of the lake.&nbsp; Among these I must
+mention Kakeholm, its broadest point; the island of Esmoi, on which a
+Swedish female gained a battle; Norsberg, also celebrated for a battle
+which took place there; and Sturrehof, the property of a great Swedish
+family.&nbsp; Near Bjarkesoe a simple cross is erected, ostensibly on the
+spot where Christianity was first introduced.&nbsp; Indeed the
+M&auml;larsee has so many historical associations, in addition to the
+attractions of its scenery, that it is one of the most interesting seas not
+only of Sweden but of Europe.</p>
+<h3>JOURNEY FROM STOCKHOLM TO UPSALA AND TO THE IRON-MINES OF DANEMORA</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 12th.</p>
+<p>The intercourse between Stockholm and Upsala is very considerable.&nbsp;
+A steamer leaves both places every day except Sunday, and traverses the
+distance in six hours.</p>
+<p>Tempted by this convenient opportunity of easily and quickly reaching
+the celebrated town of Upsala, and by the unusually fine weather, I took my
+passage one evening, and was greatly disappointed when, on the following
+morning, the rain poured down in torrents.&nbsp; But if travellers paid
+much attention to the weather, they would not go far; so I nevertheless
+embarked at half-past seven, and arrived safely in Upsala.&nbsp; I remained
+in the cabin during the passage, and could not even enjoy the prospect from
+the cabin-windows, for the rain beat on them from the outside, while inside
+they were obscured by the heat.&nbsp; But I did not venture on deck, hoping
+to be favoured by better weather on my return.</p>
+<p>At last, about three o&rsquo;clock, when I had been in Upsala more than
+an hour, the weather cleared up, and I sallied out to see the sights.</p>
+<p>First I visited the cathedral.&nbsp; I entered, and stood still with
+astonishment at the chief portal, on looking up at the high roof resting on
+two rows of pillars, and covering the whole church.&nbsp; It is formed in
+one beautiful straight line, unbroken by a single arch.&nbsp; The church
+itself is simple: behind the grand altar a handsome chapel is erected, the
+ceiling of which is painted azure blue, embossed with golden stars.&nbsp;
+In this chapel Gustavus I. is interred between his two wives.&nbsp; The
+monument which covers the grave is large, and made of marble, but clumsy
+and void of taste.&nbsp; It represents a sarcophagus, on which three
+bodies, the size of life, are laid; a marble canopy is raised over
+them.&nbsp; The walls of the chapel are covered with pretty frescoes,
+representing the most remarkable scenes in the life of this monarch.&nbsp;
+The most interesting among them are, one in which he enters a
+peasant&rsquo;s hut in peasant&rsquo;s attire, at the same moment that his
+pursuers are eagerly inquiring after him in front of the hut; the other,
+when he stands on a barrel, also dressed as a peasant, and harangues his
+people.&nbsp; Two large tablets in a broad gold frame contain in Swedish,
+and not in the Latin language, the explanation of the different pictures,
+so that every Swede may easily learn the monarch&rsquo;s history.</p>
+<p>Several other monuments are erected in the side-chapels; those of
+Catharine Magelone, John III., Gustavus Erichson, who was beheaded, and of
+the two brothers Sturre, who were murdered.&nbsp; The monument of
+Archbishop Menander, in white marble, is a tasteful and artistic modern
+production.&nbsp; The great Linn&aelig;us is buried under a simple marble
+slab in this church; but his monument is in one of the side-chapels, and
+not over his grave, and consists of a beautiful dark-brown porphyry slab,
+on which his portrait is sculptured in relief.</p>
+<p>The splendid organ, which reaches nearly to the roof of the church, also
+deserves special attention.&nbsp; The treasure-chamber does not contain
+great treasures; the blood-stained and dagger-torn garments of the
+unfortunate brothers Sturre are kept in a glass case here; and here also
+stands a wooden statue of the heathen god Thor.&nbsp; This wooden affair
+seems to have originally been an Ecce Homo, which was perhaps the ornament
+of some village church, then carried off by some unbeliever, and made more
+shapeless than its creator, not proficient in art, had made it.&nbsp; It
+has a greater resemblance now to a frightful scarecrow than to any thing
+else.</p>
+<p>The churchyard near the church is distinguished for its size and
+beauty.&nbsp; It is surrounded by a wall of stone two feet high, surmounted
+by an iron palisading of equal height, broken by stone pillars.&nbsp; On
+several sides, steps are made into the burying-ground over this
+partition.&nbsp; In this cemetery, as in the one of Stockholm, one seems to
+be in a lovely garden, laid out with alleys, arbours, lawns, &amp;c.; but
+it is more beautiful than the other, because it is older.&nbsp; The graves
+are half concealed by arbours; many were ornamented with flowers and
+wreaths, or hedged by rose-bushes.&nbsp; The whole aspect of this cemetery,
+or rather of this garden, seems equally adapted for the amusement of the
+living or the repose of the dead.</p>
+<p>The monuments are in no way distinguished; only two are rather
+remarkable, for they consist of tremendous pieces of rock in their natural
+condition, standing upright on the graves.&nbsp; One of these monuments
+resembles a mountain; it covers the ashes of a general, and is large enough
+to have covered his whole army; his relatives probably took the graves of
+Troy as a specimen for their monument.&nbsp; It is moreover inscribed by
+very peculiar signs, which seemed to me to be runic characters.&nbsp; The
+good people have united in this monument two characteristics of the
+ancients of two entirely distinct empires.</p>
+<p>The university or library building in Upsala is large and beautiful; it
+is situated on a little hill, with a fine front facing the town.&nbsp; The
+park, which is, however, still somewhat young, forms the background. <a
+name="citation54"></a><a href="#footnote54" class="citation">[54]</a></p>
+<p>Near this building, on the same hill, stands a royal palace, conspicuous
+for its brick-red colour.&nbsp; It is very large, and the two wings are
+finished by massive round towers.</p>
+<p>In the centre of the courtyard, behind the castle, is placed a colossal
+bust of Gustavus I., and a few paces from it two artificial hills serve as
+bastions, on which cannons are planted.&nbsp; This being the highest point
+of the town, affords the best view over it, and over the surrounding
+country.</p>
+<p>The town itself is built half of wood and half of stone, and is very
+pretty, being crossed by broad streets, and ornamented with tastefully
+laid-out gardens.&nbsp; It has one disadvantage, which is the dark
+brownish-red colour of the houses, which has a peculiarly sombre appearance
+in the setting sun.</p>
+<p>An immense and fertile plain, diversified by dark forests contrasting
+with the bright green meadows and the yellow stubble-fields, surrounds the
+town, and in the distance the silvery river Fyris flows towards the
+sea.&nbsp; Forests close the distant view with their dark shadows.&nbsp; I
+saw but few villages; they may, however, have been hidden by the trees, for
+that they exist seems to be indicated by the well-kept high roads crossing
+the plain in all directions.</p>
+<p>Before quitting my position on the bastions of the royal palace I cast a
+glance on the castle-gardens, which were lying lower down the hill, and are
+separated from the castle by a road; they do not seem to be large, but are
+very pretty.</p>
+<p>I should have wished to be able to visit the botanic garden near the
+town, which was the favourite resort of Linn&aelig;us, whose
+splendidly-sculptured bust is said to be its chief ornament; but the sun
+was setting behind the mountains, and I repaired to my chamber, to prepare
+for my journey to Danemora.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 13th.</p>
+<p>I left Upsala at four o&rsquo;clock in the morning, to proceed to the
+far-famed iron-mines of Danemora, upwards of thirty miles distant, and
+where I wished to arrive before twelve, as the blasting takes place at that
+hour, after which the pits are closed.&nbsp; As I had been informed how
+slowly travelling is done in this country, and how tedious the delays are
+when the horses are changed, I determined to allow time enough for all
+interruptions, and yet arrive at the appointed hour.</p>
+<p>A few miles behind Upsala lies Old Upsala (Gamla Upsala).&nbsp; I saw
+the old church and the grave-hills in passing; three of the latter are
+remarkably large, the others smaller.&nbsp; It is presumed that the higher
+ones cover the graves of kings.&nbsp; I saw similar tumuli during my
+journey to Greece, on the spot where Troy is said to have stood.&nbsp; The
+church is not honoured as a ruin; it has yet to do service; and it grieved
+me to see the venerable building propped up and covered with fresh mortar
+on many a time-worn spot.</p>
+<p>Half way between Upsala and Danemora we passed a large castle, not
+distinguished for its architecture, its situation, or any thing else.&nbsp;
+Then we neared the river Fyris, and the long lake of Danemora; both are
+quite overgrown with reeds and grass, and have flat uninteresting shores;
+indeed the whole journey offers little variety, as the road lies through a
+plain, only diversified by woods, fields, and pieces of rock.&nbsp; These
+are interesting features, because one cannot imagine how they came there,
+the mountains being at a great distance, and the soil by no means
+rocky.</p>
+<p>The little town of Danemora lies in the midst of a wood, and only
+consists of a church and a few large and small detached houses.&nbsp; The
+vicinity of the mines is indicated before arriving at the place by immense
+heaps of stones, which are brought by horse-gins from the pits, and which
+cover a considerable space.</p>
+<p>I had fortunately arrived in time to see the blastings.&nbsp; Those in
+the great pit are the most interesting; for its mouth is so very large,
+that it is not necessary to descend in order to see the pit-men work; all
+is visible from above.&nbsp; This is a very peculiar and interesting
+sight.&nbsp; The pit, 480 feet deep, with its colossal doors and entrances
+leading into the galleries, looks like a picture of the lower world, from
+which bridges of rocks, projections, arches and caverns formed in the
+walls, ascend to the upper world.&nbsp; The men look like pigmies, and one
+cannot follow their movements until the eye has accustomed itself to the
+depth and to the darkness prevailing below.&nbsp; But the darkness is not
+very dense; I could distinguish most of the ladders, which seemed to me
+like children&rsquo;s toys.</p>
+<p>It was nearly twelve, and the workmen left the pits, with the exception
+of those in charge of the mines.&nbsp; They ascended by means of little
+tubs hanging by ropes, and were raised by a windlass.&nbsp; It is a
+terrible sight to see the men soaring up on the little machine, especially
+when two or three ascend at once; for then one man stands in the centre,
+while the other two ride on the edge of the tub.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p244b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mines of Danemora" src="images/p244s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>I should have liked to descend into the great pit, but it was too late
+on this day, and I would not wait another.&nbsp; I should not have feared
+the descent, as I was familiar with such adventures, having explored the
+salt-mines of Wieliczka and Bochnia, in Gallicia, some years before, in
+which I had had to let myself down by a rope, which is a much more
+dangerous method than the tub.</p>
+<p>With the stroke of twelve, four blasting trains in the large pit were
+fired.&nbsp; The man whose business it was to apply the match ran away in
+great haste, and sheltered himself behind a wall of rock.&nbsp; In a few
+moments the powder flashed, some stones fell, and then a fearful crash was
+heard all around, followed by the rolling and falling of the blasted
+masses.&nbsp; Repeated echoes announced the fearful explosion in the
+interior of the pits: the whole left a terrible impression on me.&nbsp;
+Scarcely had one mine ceased to rage, when the second began, then the
+third, and so on.&nbsp; These blastings take place daily in different
+mines.</p>
+<p>The other pits are deeper, the deepest being 600 feet; but the mouths
+are smaller, and the shafts not perpendicular, so that the eye is lost in
+darkness, which is a still more unpleasant sensation.&nbsp; I gazed with
+oppressed chest into the dark space, vainly endeavouring to distinguish
+something.&nbsp; I should not like to be a miner; I could not endure life
+without the light of day; and when I turned from the dark pits, I cast my
+eyes thankfully on the cheerful landscape basking in the sun.</p>
+<p>I returned to Upsala on the same day, having made this little journey by
+post.&nbsp; I can merely narrate the facts, without giving an opinion on
+the good or bad conveniences for locomotion, as this was more a
+pleasure-trip than a journey.</p>
+<p>As I had hired no carriage, I had a different vehicle at every station,
+and these vehicles consisted of ordinary two-wheeled wooden carts.&nbsp; My
+seat was a truss of hay covered with the horse-cloth.&nbsp; If the roads
+had not been so extremely good, these carts would have shaken terribly; but
+as it was, I must say that I rode more comfortably than in the carriols of
+the Norwegians, although they were painted and vanished; for in them I had
+to be squeezed in with my feet stretched out, and could not change my
+position.</p>
+<p>The stations are unequal,&mdash;sometimes long, sometimes short.&nbsp;
+The post-horses are provided here, as in Norway, by wealthy peasants,
+called Dschns-peasants.&nbsp; These have to collect a certain number of
+horses every evening for forwarding the travellers the next morning.&nbsp;
+At every post-house a book is kept, in which the traveller can see how many
+horses the peasant has, how many have already been hired, and how many are
+left in the stable.&nbsp; He must then inscribe his name, the hour of his
+departure, and the number of horses he requires.&nbsp; By this arrangement
+deception and extortion are prevented, as every thing is open, and the
+prices fixed. <a name="citation55"></a><a href="#footnote55"
+class="citation">[55]</a></p>
+<p>Patience is also required here, though not so much as in Norway.&nbsp; I
+had always to wait from fifteen to twenty minutes before the carriage was
+brought and the horses and harness prepared, but never longer; and I must
+admit that the Swedish post-masters hurried as much as possible, and never
+demanded double fare, although they must have known that I was in
+haste.&nbsp; The pace of the horse depends on the will of the coachman and
+the powers of his steed; but in no other country did I see such
+consideration paid to the strength of the horses.&nbsp; It is quite
+ridiculous to see what small loads of corn, bricks, or wood, are allotted
+to two horses, and how slowly and sleepily they draw their burdens.</p>
+<p>The number of wooden gates, which divide the roads into as many parts as
+there are common grounds on it, are a terrible nuisance to
+travellers.&nbsp; The coachman has often to dismount six or eight times in
+an hour to open and close these gates.&nbsp; I was told that these
+delectable gates even exist on the great high road, only not quite in such
+profusion as on the by-roads.</p>
+<p>Wood must be as abundant here as in Norway, for every thing is enclosed;
+even fields which seem so barren as not to be worth the labour or the
+wood.</p>
+<p>The villages through which I passed were generally pretty and cheerful,
+and I found the cottages, which I entered while the horses were changed,
+neatly and comfortably furnished.</p>
+<p>The peasants of this district wear a peculiar costume.&nbsp; The men,
+and frequently also the boys, wear long dark-blue cloth surtouts, and cloth
+caps on their heads; so that, at a distance, they look like gentlemen in
+travelling dress.&nbsp; It seems curious to a foreigner to see these
+apparent gentlemen following the plough or cutting grass.&nbsp; At a nearer
+view, of course the aspect changes, and the rents and dirt appear, or the
+leathern apron worn beneath the coat, like carpenters in Austria, becomes
+visible.&nbsp; The female costume was peculiar only in so far that it was
+poor and ragged.&nbsp; In dress and shoes the Norwegian and Swedes are
+behind the Icelanders, but they surpass them in the comfort of their
+dwellings.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 14th.</p>
+<p>To-day I returned to Stockholm on the M&auml;larsee, and the weather
+being more favourable than on my former passage, I could remain on deck the
+whole time.&nbsp; I saw now that we sailed for several miles on the river
+Fyris, which flows through woods and fields into the lake.</p>
+<p>The large plain on which old and new Upsala lie was soon out of sight,
+and after passing two bridges, we turned into the M&auml;lar.&nbsp; At
+first there are no islands on its flat expanse, and its shores are studded
+with low tree-covered hills; but we soon, however, arrived at the region of
+islands, where the passage becomes more interesting, and the beauty of the
+shores increases.&nbsp; The first fine view we saw was the pretty estate
+Krusenberg, whose castle is romantically situated on a fertile hill.&nbsp;
+But much more beautiful and surprising is the splendid castle of
+Skukloster, a large, beautiful, and regular pile, ornamented with four
+immense round turrets at the four corners, and with gardens stretching down
+to the water&rsquo;s edge.</p>
+<p>From this place the scenery is full of beauty and variety; every moment
+presents another and a more lovely view.&nbsp; Sometimes the waters expand,
+sometimes they are hemmed in by islands, and become as narrow as
+canals.&nbsp; I was most charmed with those spots where the islands lie so
+close together that no outlet seems possible, till another turn shews an
+opening between them, with a glimpse of the lake beyond.&nbsp; The hills on
+the shores are higher, and the promontories larger, the farther the ship
+advances; and the islands appear to be merely projections of the continent,
+till a nearer approach dispels the illusion.</p>
+<p>The village of Sixtun&auml; lies in a picturesque and charming little
+valley, filled with ruins, principally of round towers, which are said to
+be the remains of the Roman town of Sixtum; the name being retained by the
+new town with a slight modification.</p>
+<p>After this follow cliffs and rocks rising perpendicularly from the sea,
+and whose vicinity would be by no means desirable in a storm.&nbsp; Of the
+castle of Rouse only three beautiful domes rise above the trees; a frowning
+bleak hill conceals the rest from the eye.&nbsp; Then comes a palace, the
+property of a private individual, only remarkable for its size.&nbsp; The
+last of the notabilities is the Rokeby bridge, said to be one of the
+longest in Sweden.&nbsp; It unites the firm land with the island on which
+the royal castle of Drottingholm stands.&nbsp; The town of Stockholm now
+becomes visible; we turn into the portion of the lake on which it lies, and
+arrive there again at two o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon.</p>
+<h3>FROM STOCKHOLM TO TRAVEMUNDE AND HAMBURGH</h3>
+<p>I bade farewell to Stockholm on the 18th September, and embarked in the
+steamer <i>Svithiold</i>, of 100-horse power, at twelve o&rsquo;clock at
+noon, to go to Travem&uuml;nde.</p>
+<p>Few passages can be more expensive than this one is.&nbsp; The distance
+is five hundred leagues, and the journey generally occupies two and a half
+to three days; for this the fare, without food, is four pounds.&nbsp; The
+food is also exorbitantly dear; in addition to which the captain is the
+purveyor; so that there is no appeal for the grossest extortion or
+insufficiency.</p>
+<p>It pained me much when one of the poorer travellers, who suffered
+greatly from sea-sickness, having applied for some soup to the steward, who
+referred him to the amiable captain, to hear him declare he would make no
+exception, and that a basin of soup would be charged the whole price of a
+complete dinner.&nbsp; The poor man was to do without the soup, of which he
+stood so much in need, or scrape every farthing together to pay a few
+shillings daily for his dinner.&nbsp; Fortunately for him some benevolent
+persons on deck paid for his meals.&nbsp; Some of the gentlemen brought
+their own wine with them, for which they had to pay as much duty to the
+captain as the wine was worth.</p>
+<p>To these pleasures of travelling must be added the fact, that a Swedish
+vessel does not advance at all if the weather is unfavourable.&nbsp; Most
+of the passengers considered that the engines were inefficient.&nbsp;
+However this may be, we were delayed twenty-four hours at the first half of
+our journey, from Stockholm to Calmar, although we had only a slight breeze
+against us and a rather high sea, but no storm.&nbsp; In Calmar we cast
+anchor, and waited for more favourable wind.&nbsp; Several gentlemen, whose
+business in Lubeck was pressing, left the steamer, and continued their
+journey by land.</p>
+<p>At first the Baltic very much resembles the M&auml;larsee; for islands,
+rocks, and a variety of scenery make it interesting.&nbsp; To the right we
+saw the immensely long wooden bridge of Lindenborg, which unites one of the
+larger islands with the continent.</p>
+<p>At the end of one of the turns of the sea lies the town of Wachsholm;
+and opposite to it, upon a little rocky island, a splendid fortress with a
+colossal round tower.&nbsp; Judging by the number of cannons planted along
+the walls, this fortress must be of great importance.&nbsp; A few hours
+later we passed a similar fortress, Friedrichsborg; it is not in such an
+open situation as the other, but is more surrounded by forests.&nbsp; We
+passed at a considerable distance, and could not see much of it, nor of the
+castle lying on the opposite side, which seems to be very magnificent, and
+is also surrounded by woods.</p>
+<p>The boundaries of the right shore now disappear, but then again appear
+as a terrible heap of naked rocks, at whose extreme edge is situated the
+fine fortress Dolero.&nbsp; Near it groups of houses are built on the bare
+rocks projecting into the sea, and form an extensive town.</p>
+<p>September 19th.</p>
+<p>To-day we were on the open, somewhat stormy sea.&nbsp; Towards noon we
+arrived at the Calmar Sound, formed by the flat, uniform shores of the long
+island Oland on the left, and on the right by Schmoland.&nbsp; In front
+rose the mountain-island the Jungfrau, to which every Swede points with
+self-satisfied pride.&nbsp; Its height is only remarkable compared with the
+flatness around; beside the proud giant-mountain of the same name in
+Switzerland it would seem like a little hill.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 20th.</p>
+<p>On account of the contrary wind, we had cast anchor here last night, and
+this morning continued the journey to Calmar, where we arrived about two in
+the forenoon.&nbsp; The town is situated on an immense plain, and is not
+very interesting.&nbsp; A few hours may be agreeably spent here in visiting
+the beautiful church and the antiquated castle, and we had more than enough
+leisure for it.&nbsp; Wind and weather seemed to have conspired against us,
+and the captain announced an indefinite stay at this place.&nbsp; At first
+we could not land, as the waves were too high; but at last one of the
+larger boats came alongside, and the more curious among us ventured to row
+to the land in the unsteady vessel.</p>
+<p>The exterior of the church resembles a fine antiquated castle from its
+four corner towers and the lowness of its dome, which rises very little
+above the building, and also because the other turrets here and there
+erected for ornament are scarcely perceptible.&nbsp; The interior of the
+church is remarkable for its size, its height, and a particularly fine
+echo.&nbsp; The tones of the organ are said to produce a most striking
+effect.&nbsp; We sent for the organist, but he was nowhere to be found; so
+we had to content ourselves with the echo of our own voices.&nbsp; We went
+from this place to the old royal castle built by Queen Margaret in the
+sixteenth century.&nbsp; The castle is so dilapidated inside that a
+tarrying in the upper chambers is scarcely advisable.&nbsp; The lower rooms
+of the castle have been repaired, and are used as prisons; and as we
+passed, arms were stretched forth from some of the barred windows, and
+plaintive voices entreated the passers-by to bestow some trifle upon the
+poor inmates.&nbsp; Upwards of 140 prisoners are said to be confined here.
+<a name="citation56"></a><a href="#footnote56"
+class="citation">[56]</a></p>
+<p>About three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon the wind abated, and we
+continued our journey.&nbsp; The passage is very uniform, and we saw only
+flat, bare shores; a group of trees even was a rarity.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 21st.</p>
+<p>When I came on deck this morning the Sound was far behind us.&nbsp; To
+the left we had the open sea; on the right, instead of the bleak Schmoland,
+we had the bleaker Schonen, which was so barren, that we hardly saw a
+paltry fishing-village between the low sterile hills.</p>
+<p>At nine o&rsquo;clock in the morning we anchored in the port of
+Ystadt.&nbsp; The town is pretty, and has a large square, in which stand
+the house of the governor, the theatre, and the town-hall.&nbsp; The
+streets are broad, and the houses partly of wood and partly of stone.&nbsp;
+The most interesting feature is the ancient church, and in it a
+much-damaged wooden altar-piece, which is kept in the vestry.&nbsp; Though
+the figures are coarse and disproportionate, one must admire the
+composition and the carving.&nbsp; The reliefs on the pulpit, and a
+beautiful monument to the right of the altar, also deserve
+admiration.&nbsp; These are all carved in wood.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon we passed the Danish island Malm&ouml;.</p>
+<p>At last, after having been nearly four days on the sea instead of two
+days and a half, we arrived safely in the harbour of Travem&uuml;nde on the
+22d September at two o&rsquo;clock in the morning.&nbsp; And now my
+sea-journeys were over; I parted sorrowfully from the salt waters, for it
+is so delightful to see the water&rsquo;s expanse all around, and traverse
+its mirror-like surface.&nbsp; The sea presents a beautiful picture, even
+when it storms and rages, when waves tower upon waves, and threaten to dash
+the vessel to pieces or to engulf it&mdash;when the ship alternately dances
+on their points, or shoots into the abyss; and I frequently crept for hours
+in a corner, or held fast to the sides of the ship, and let the waves dash
+over me.&nbsp; I had overcome the terrible sea-sickness during my numerous
+journeys, and could therefore freely admire these fearfully beautiful
+scenes of excited nature, and adore God in His grandest works.</p>
+<p>We had scarcely cast anchor in the port when a whole array of coachmen
+surrounded us, volunteering to drive us overland to Hamburgh, a journey of
+thirty-six miles, which it takes eight hours to accomplish.</p>
+<p>Travem&uuml;nde is a pretty spot, which really consists of only one
+street, in which the majority of the houses are hotels.&nbsp; The country
+from here to Lubeck, a distance of ten miles, is very pretty.&nbsp; A
+splendid road, on which the carriages roll smoothly along, runs through a
+charming wood past a cemetery, whose beauty exceeds that of Upsala; but for
+the monuments, one might take it for one of the most splendid parks or
+gardens.</p>
+<p>I regretted nothing so much as being unable to spend a day in Lubeck,
+for I felt very much attracted by this old Hanse town, with its
+pyramidically-built houses, its venerable dome, and other beautiful
+churches, its spacious squares, &amp;c.; but I was obliged to proceed, and
+could only gaze at and admire it as I hurried through.&nbsp; The pavement
+of the streets is better than I had seen it in any northern town; and on
+the streets, in front of the houses, I saw many wooden benches, on which
+the inhabitants probably spend their summer evenings.&nbsp; I saw here for
+the first time again the gay-looking street-mirrors used in Hamburgh.&nbsp;
+The Trave, which flows between Travem&uuml;nde and Lubeck, has to be
+crossed by boat.&nbsp; Near Oldesloe are the salt-factories, with large
+buildings and immensely high chimneys; an old romantic castle, entirely
+surrounded by water, lies near Arensburg.</p>
+<p>Past Arensburg the country begins to be uninteresting, and remains so as
+far as Hamburgh; but it seems to be very fertile, as there is an abundance
+of green fields and fine meadows.</p>
+<p>The little journey from Lubeck to Hamburgh is rather dear, on account of
+the almost incredible number of tolls and dues the poor coachmen have to
+pay.&nbsp; They have first to procure a license to drive from Lubeck into
+Hamburgh territory, which costs about 1<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i>; then mine had
+to pay twice a double toll of 8<i>d.</i>, because we passed through before
+five o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and the gates, which are not opened till
+five o&rsquo;clock, were unfastened especially for us; besides these, there
+was a penny toll on nearly every mile.</p>
+<p>This dreadful annoyance of the constant stopping and the toll-bars is
+unknown in Norway and in Sweden.&nbsp; There, an annual tax is paid for
+every horse, and the owner can then drive freely through the whole country,
+as no toll-bars are erected.</p>
+<p>The farm-houses here are very large and far-spread, but the reason is,
+that stable, barn, and shippen are under the same roof: the walls of the
+houses are of wood filled in with bricks.</p>
+<p>After passing Arensburg, we saw the steeples of Wandsbeck and Hamburgh
+in the distance; the two towns seem to be one, and are, in fact, only
+separated by pretty country-houses.&nbsp; But Wandsbeck compared to
+Hamburgh is a village, not a town.</p>
+<p>I arrived in Hamburgh about two o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon; and my
+relatives were so astonished at my arrival, that they almost took me for a
+ghost.&nbsp; I was at first startled by their reception, but soon
+understood the reason of it.</p>
+<p>At the time I left Iceland another vessel went to Altona, by which I
+sent a box of minerals and curiosities to my cousin in Hamburgh.&nbsp; The
+sailor who brought the box gave such a description of the wretched vessel
+in which I had gone to Copenhagen, that, after having heard nothing of me
+for two months, he thought I must have gone to the bottom of the sea with
+the ship.&nbsp; I had indeed written from Copenhagen, but the letter had
+been lost; and hence their surprise and delight at my arrival.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<p>I had not much time to spare, so that I could only stay a few days with
+my relatives in Hamburgh; on the 26th September, I went in a little steamer
+from Hamburgh to Harburg, where we arrived in three quarters of an
+hour.&nbsp; From thence I proceeded in a stage-carriage to Celle, about
+sixty-five miles.</p>
+<p>The country is not very interesting; it consists for the most part of
+plains, which degenerate into heaths and marshes; but there are a few
+fertile spots peeping out here and there.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">September 27th.</p>
+<p>We arrived at Celle in the night.&nbsp; From here to Lehrte, a distance
+of about seven miles, I had to hire a private conveyance, but from Lehrte
+the railway goes direct to Berlin. <a name="citation57"></a><a
+href="#footnote57" class="citation">[57]</a>&nbsp; Many larger and smaller
+towns are passed on this road; but we saw little of them, as the stations
+all lie at some distance, and the railway-train only stops a few
+minutes.</p>
+<p>The first town we passed was Brunswick.&nbsp; Immediately beyond the
+town lies the pretty ducal palace, built in the Gothic style, in the centre
+of a fine park.&nbsp; Wolfenb&uuml;ttel seems to be a considerable town,
+judging by the quantity of houses and church-steeples.&nbsp; A pretty
+wooden bridge, with an elegantly-made iron balustrade, is built here across
+the Ocker.&nbsp; From the town, a beautiful lane leads to a gentle hill, on
+whose top stands a lovely building, used as a coffee-house.</p>
+<p>As soon as one has passed the Hanoverian domains the country, though it
+is not richer in natural curiosities, is less abundant in marshes and
+heaths, and is very well-cultivated land.&nbsp; Many villages are spread
+around, and many a charming town excites the wish to travel through at a
+slower pace.</p>
+<p>We passed Schepenstadt, Jersheim, and Wegersleben, which latter town
+already belongs to Prussia.&nbsp; In Ashersleben and in Magdeburg we
+changed carriages.&nbsp; Near Salze we saw some fine buildings which belong
+to the extensive saltworks existing here.&nbsp; Jernaudau is a colony of
+Moravians.&nbsp; I should have wished to visit the town of
+K&ouml;tten,&mdash;for nothing can be more charming than the situation of
+the town in the midst of fragrant gardens,&mdash;but we unfortunately only
+stopped there a few minutes.&nbsp; The town of Dessau is also surrounded by
+pretty scenery: several bridges cross the various arms of the Elbe; that
+over the river itself rests on solid stone columns.&nbsp; Of Wittenberg we
+only saw house tops and church-steeples; the same of J&uuml;terbog, which
+looks as if it were newly built.&nbsp; Near Lukewalde the regions of sand
+begin, and the uniformity is only broken by a little ridge of wooded hills
+near Trebbin; but when these are past, the railway passes on to Berlin
+through a melancholy, unmitigated desert of sand.</p>
+<p>I had travelled from six o&rsquo;clock this morning until seven in the
+evening, over a distance of about two hundred and twenty miles, during
+which time we had frequently changed carriages.</p>
+<p>The number of passengers we had taken up on the road was very great, on
+account of the Leipzic fairs; sometimes the train had thirty-five to forty
+carriages, three locomotives, and seven to eight hundred passengers; and
+yet the greatest order had prevailed.&nbsp; It is a great convenience that
+one can take a ticket from Lehrte to Berlin, although the railway passes
+through so many different states, because then one needs not look after the
+luggage or any thing else.&nbsp; The officials on the railway are all very
+civil.&nbsp; As soon as the train stopped, the guards announced with a loud
+voice the time allowed, however long or short it might be; so that the
+passengers could act accordingly, and take refreshments in the neighbouring
+hotels.&nbsp; The arrangements for alighting are very convenient: the
+carriages run into deep rails at the stations, so that the ground is level
+with the carriages, and the entrance and exit easy.&nbsp; The carriages are
+like broad coaches; two seats ran breadthwise across them, with a large
+door at each side.&nbsp; The first and second class contain eight persons
+in each division, the third class ten.&nbsp; The carriages are all
+numbered, so that every passenger can easily find his seat.</p>
+<p>By these simple arrangements the traveller may descend and walk about a
+little, even though the train should only stop two minutes, or even
+purchase some refreshments, without any confusion or crowding.</p>
+<p>These conveniences are, of course, impossible when the carriages have
+the length of a house, and contain sixty or seventy persons within locked
+doors, and where the doors are opened by the guards, who only call out the
+name of the station without announcing how long the stay is.&nbsp; In such
+railways it is not advisable for travellers to leave their seats; for
+before they can pass from one end of the carriage to the other, through the
+narrow door and down the steep steps, the horn is sounded, and at the same
+time the train moves on; the sound being the signal for the engine-driver,
+the passengers having none.</p>
+<p>In these states there was also not the least trouble with the passport
+and the intolerable pass-tickets.&nbsp; No officious police-soldier comes
+to the carriage, and prevents the passengers alighting before they have
+answered all his questions.&nbsp; If passports had to be inspected on this
+journey, it would take a few days, for they must always be taken to the
+passport-office, as they are never examined on the spot.</p>
+<p>Such annoying interruptions often occur several times in the same
+state.&nbsp; And one need not even come from abroad to experience them, as
+a journey from a provincial to a capital town affords enough scope for
+annoyance.</p>
+<p>I had no reason to complain of such annoyances in any of the countries
+through which I had hitherto passed.&nbsp; My passport was only demanded in
+my hotel in the capitals of the countries, if I intended to remain several
+days.&nbsp; In Stockholm, however, I found a curious arrangement; every
+foreigner there is obliged to procure a Swedish passport, and pay
+half-a-crown for it, if he only remains a few hours in the town.&nbsp; This
+is, in reality, only a polite way of taking half-a-crown from the
+strangers, as they probably do not like to charge so much for a simple
+<i>vis&eacute;</i>!</p>
+<h3>STAY IN BERLIN&mdash;RETURN TO VIENNA</h3>
+<p>I have never seen a town more beautifully or regularly built than
+Berlin,&mdash;I mean, the town of Berlin itself,&mdash;only the finest
+streets, palaces, and squares of Copenhagen would bear a comparison with
+it.</p>
+<p>I spent but a few days here, and had therefore scarcely time to see the
+most remarkable and interesting sights.</p>
+<p>The splendid royal palace, the extensive buildings for the
+picture-gallery and museums, the great dome&mdash;all these are situated
+very near each other.</p>
+<p>The Dome church is large and regularly built; a chapel, surrounded by an
+iron enclosure, stands at each side of the entrance.&nbsp; Several kings
+are buried here, and antiquated sarcophagi cover their remains, known as
+the kings&rsquo; graves.&nbsp; Near them stands a fine cast-iron monument,
+beneath which Count Brandenburg lies.</p>
+<p>The Catholic church is built in the style of the Rotunda in Rome; but,
+unlike it, the light falls from windows made around the walls, and not from
+above.&nbsp; Beautiful statues and a simple but tasteful altar are the only
+ornaments of this church.&nbsp; The portico is ornamented by beautiful
+reliefs.</p>
+<p>The Werder church is a modern erection, built in the Gothic style, and
+its turrets are ornamented by beautiful bronze reliefs.&nbsp; The walls
+inside are inlaid with coloured wood up to the galleries, where they
+terminate in Gothic scroll-work.&nbsp; The organ has a full, clear tone; in
+front of it stands a painting which, at first sight, resembles a scene from
+heathen mythology more than a sacred subject.&nbsp; A number of cupids soar
+among wreaths of flowers, and surround three beautiful female figures.</p>
+<p>The mint and the architectural college stand near this church.&nbsp; The
+former is covered with fine sculptures; the latter is square, of a
+brick-red colour, without any architectural embellishment, and perfectly
+resembling an unusually large private house.&nbsp; The ground-floor is
+turned into fine shops.</p>
+<p>Near the palace lies the Opera Square, in which stand the celebrated
+opera-house, the arsenal, the university, the library, the academy, the
+guardhouse, and several royal palaces.&nbsp; Three statues ornament the
+square: those of General Count B&uuml;lov, General Count Scharnhorst, and
+General Prince Bl&uuml;cher.&nbsp; They are all three beautifully
+sculptured, but the drapery did not please me; it consisted of the long
+military cloth cloak, which, opening in front, afforded a glimpse of the
+splendid uniforms.</p>
+<p>The arsenal is one of the finest buildings in Berlin, and forms a
+square; at the time of my stay some repairs were being made, so that it was
+closed.&nbsp; I had to be content with glimpses through the windows of the
+first floor, which showed me immense saloons filled by tremendous cannons,
+ranged in rows.</p>
+<p>The guardhouse is contiguous, and resembles a pretty temple, with its
+portico of columns.</p>
+<p>The opera-house forms a long detached square.&nbsp; It would have a much
+better effect if the entrances were not so wretched.&nbsp; The one at the
+grand portal looks like a narrow, miserable church-door, low and
+gloomy.&nbsp; The other entrances are worse still, and one would not
+suppose that they could lead to such a splendid interior, whose
+appointments are indescribably luxurious and commodious.&nbsp; The pit is
+filled by rows of comfortably-cushioned chairs with cushioned backs,
+numbered, but not barred.&nbsp; The boxes are divided by very low
+partitions, so that the aristocratic world seems to sit on a tribune.&nbsp;
+The seats in the pit and the first and second tiers are covered with
+dark-red silk damask; the royal box is a splendid saloon, the floor of
+which is covered with the finest carpets.&nbsp; Beautiful oil-paintings, in
+tasteful gold frames, ornament the plafond; but the magnificent chandelier
+is the greatest curiosity.&nbsp; It looks so massively worked in bronze,
+that it is painful to see the heavy mass hang so loosely over the heads of
+the spectators.&nbsp; But it is only a delusion; for it is made of
+paste-board, and bronzed over.&nbsp; Innumerable lamps light the place; but
+one thing which I miss in such elegant modern theatres is a clock, which
+has a place in nearly every Italian theatre.</p>
+<p>The other buildings on this square are also distinguished for their size
+and the beauty of their architecture.</p>
+<p>An unusually broad stone bridge, with a finely-made iron balustrade, is
+built over a little arm of the Spree, and unites the square of the opera
+with that on which the palace stands.</p>
+<p>The royal museum is one of the finest architectural piles, and its high
+portal is covered with beautiful frescoes.&nbsp; The picture-gallery
+contains many <i>chefs-d&rsquo;oeuvre</i>; and I regretted that I had not
+more time to examine it and the hall of antiquities, having only three
+hours for the two.</p>
+<p>From the academy runs a long street lined with lime-trees, and which is
+therefore called Under-the-limes (<i>unter den Linden</i>).&nbsp; This
+alley forms a cheerful walk to the Brandenburg-gate, beyond which the
+pleasure-gardens are situated.&nbsp; The longest and finest streets which
+run into the lime-alley are the Friedrichs Street and the Wilhelms
+Street.&nbsp; The Leipziger Street also belongs to the finest, but does not
+run into this promenade.</p>
+<p>The Gens-d&rsquo;arme Square is distinguished by the French and German
+churches, at least by their exterior,&mdash;by their high domes, columns,
+and porticoes.&nbsp; The interiors are small and insignificant.&nbsp; On
+this square stands also the royal theatre, a tasteful pile of great beauty,
+with many pillars, and statues of muses and deities.</p>
+<p>I ascended the tower on which the telegraph works, on account of the
+view over the town and the flat neighbourhood.&nbsp; A very civil official
+was polite enough to explain the signs of the telegraph to me, and to
+permit me to look at the other telegraphs through his telescope.</p>
+<p>The K&ouml;nigstadt, situated on the opposite shore of the Spree, not
+far from the royal palace, contains nothing remarkable.&nbsp; Its chief
+street, the K&ouml;nigsstrasse, is long, but narrow and dirty.&nbsp; Indeed
+it forms a great contrast to the town of Berlin in every thing; the streets
+are narrow, short, and winding.&nbsp; The post-office and the theatres are
+the most remarkable buildings.</p>
+<p>The luxury displayed in the shop-windows is very great.&nbsp; Many a
+mirror and many a plate-glass window reminded me of Hamburgh&rsquo;s
+splendour, which surpasses that of Berlin considerably.</p>
+<p>There are not many excursions round Berlin, as the country is flat and
+sandy.&nbsp; The most interesting are to the pleasure-gardens,
+Charlottenburg, and, since the opening of the railway, to Potsdam.</p>
+<p>The park or pleasure-garden is outside the Brandenburg-gate; it is
+divided into several parts, one of which reminded me of our fine Prater in
+Vienna.&nbsp; The beautiful alleys were filled with carriages, riders, and
+pedestrians; pretty coffee-houses enlivened the woody portions, and merry
+children gambolled on the green lawns.&nbsp; I felt so much reminded of my
+beloved Prater, that I expected every moment to see a well-known face, or
+receive a friendly greeting.&nbsp; Kroll&rsquo;s Casino, sometimes called
+the Winter-garden, is built on this side of the park.&nbsp; I do not know
+how to describe this building; it is quite a fairy palace.&nbsp; All the
+splendour which fancy can invent in furniture, gilding, painting, or
+tapestry, is here united in the splendid halls, saloons, temples,
+galleries, and boxes.&nbsp; The dining-room, which will dine 1800 persons,
+is not lighted by windows, but by a glass roof vaulted over it.&nbsp; Rows
+of pillars support the galleries, or separate the larger and smaller
+saloons.&nbsp; In the niches, and in the corners, round the pillars, abound
+fragrant flowers, and plants in chaste vases or pots, which transform this
+place into a magical garden in winter.&nbsp; Concerts and
+<i>r&eacute;unions</i> take place here every Sunday, and the press of
+visitors is extraordinary, although smoking is prohibited.&nbsp; This place
+will accommodate 5000 persons.</p>
+<p>That side of the park which lies in the direction of the Potsdam-gate
+resembles an ornamental garden, with its well-kept alleys, flower-beds,
+terraces, islets, and gold-fish ponds.&nbsp; A handsome monument to the
+memory of Queen Louise is erected on the Louise island here.</p>
+<p>On this side, the coffee-house Odeon is the best, but cannot be compared
+to Kroll&rsquo;s casino.&nbsp; Here also are rows of very elegant
+country-houses, most of which are built in the Italian style.</p>
+<h3>CHARLOTTENBURG</h3>
+<p>This place is about half an hour&rsquo;s distance from the
+Brandenburg-gate, where the omnibuses that depart every minute are
+stationed.&nbsp; The road leads through the park, beyond which lies a
+pretty village, and adjoining it is the royal country-palace of
+Charlottenburg.&nbsp; The palace is built in two stories, of which the
+upper one is very low, and is probably only used for the domestics.&nbsp;
+The palace is more broad than deep; the roof is terrace-shaped, and in its
+centre rises a pretty dome.&nbsp; The garden is simple, and not very large,
+but contains a considerable orangery.&nbsp; In a dark grove stands a little
+building, the mausoleum in which the image of Queen Louise has been
+excellently executed by the famed artist Rauch.&nbsp; Here also rest the
+ashes of the late king.&nbsp; There is also an island with statues in the
+midst of a large pond, on which some swans float proudly.&nbsp; It is a
+pity that dirt does not stick to these white-feathered animals, else they
+would soon be black swans; for the pond or river surrounding the island is
+one of the dirtiest ditches I have ever seen.</p>
+<p>Fatigue would be very intolerable in this park, for there are very few
+benches, but an immense quantity of gnats.</p>
+<h3>POTSDAM.</h3>
+<p>The distance from Berlin to Potsdam is eighteen miles, which is passed
+by the railroad in three-quarters of an hour.&nbsp; The railway is very
+conveniently arranged; the carriages are marked with the names of the
+station, and the traveller enters the carriage on which the place of his
+destination is marked.&nbsp; Thus, the passengers are never annoyed by the
+entrance or exit of passengers, as all occupying the same carriage descend
+at the same time.</p>
+<p>The road is very uninteresting; but this is compensated for by Potsdam
+itself, for which a day is scarcely sufficient.</p>
+<p>Immediately in front of the town flows the river Havel, crossed by a
+long, beautiful bridge, whose pillars are of stone, and the rest of the
+bridge of iron.&nbsp; The large royal palace lies on the opposite shore,
+and is surrounded by a garden.&nbsp; The garden is not very extensive, but
+large enough for the town, and is open to the public.&nbsp; The palace is
+built in a splendid style, but is unfortunately quite useless, as the court
+has beautiful summer-palaces in the neighbourhood of Potsdam, and spends
+the winter in Berlin.</p>
+<p>The castle square is not very good; it is neither large nor regular, and
+not even level.&nbsp; On it stands the large church, which is not yet
+completed, but promises to be a fine structure.&nbsp; The town is tolerably
+large, and has many fine houses.&nbsp; The streets, especially the Nauner
+Street, are wide and long, but badly paved; the stones are laid with the
+pointed side upwards, and for foot-passengers there is a stone pavement two
+feet broad on one side of the street only.&nbsp; The promenade of the
+townspeople is called Am Kanal (beside the canal), and is a fine square,
+through which the canal flows, and is ornamented with trees.</p>
+<p>Of the royal pleasure-palaces I visited that of Sans Souci first.&nbsp;
+It is surrounded by a pretty park, and lies on a hill, which is divided
+into six terraces.&nbsp; Large conservatories stand on each side of these;
+and in front of them are long alleys of orange and lemon-trees.</p>
+<p>The palace has only a ground floor, and is surrounded by arbours, trees,
+and vines, so that it is almost concealed from view.&nbsp; I could not
+inspect the interior, as the royal family was living there.</p>
+<p>A side-path leads from here to the Ruinenberg, on which the ruins of a
+larger and a smaller temple, raised by the hand of art, are tastefully
+disposed.&nbsp; The top of the hill is taken up by a reservoir of
+water.&nbsp; From this point one can see the back of the palace of Sans
+Souci, and the so-called new palace, separated from the former by a small
+park, and distant only about a quarter of an hour.</p>
+<p>The new palace, built by Frederick the Great, is as splendid as one can
+imagine.&nbsp; It forms a lengthened square, with arabesques and flat
+columns, and has a flat roof, which is surrounded by a stone balustrade,
+and ornamented by statues.</p>
+<p>The apartments are high and large, and splendidly painted, tapestried,
+and furnished.&nbsp; Oil-paintings, many of them very good, cover the
+walls.&nbsp; One might fill a volume with the description of all the
+wonders of this place, which is, however, not inhabited.</p>
+<p>Behind the palace, and separated from it by a large court, are two
+beautiful little palaces, connected by a crescent-shaped hall of pillars;
+broad stone steps lead to the balconies surrounding the first story of the
+edifices.&nbsp; They are used as barracks, and are, as such, the most
+beautiful I have ever seen.</p>
+<p>From here a pleasant walk leads to the lovely palace of
+Charlottenburg.&nbsp; Coming from the large new palace it seemed too small
+for the dwelling even of the crown-prince.&nbsp; I should have taken it for
+a splendid pavilion attached to the new palace, to which the royal family
+sometimes walked, and perhaps remained there to take refreshment.&nbsp; But
+when I had inspected it more closely, and seen all the comfortable little
+rooms, furnished with such tasteful luxury, I felt that the crown-prince
+could not have made a better choice.</p>
+<p>Beautiful fountains play on the terraces; the walls of the corridors and
+anterooms are covered with splendid frescoes, in imitation of those found
+in Pompeii.&nbsp; The rooms abound in excellent engravings, paintings, and
+other works of art; and the greatest taste and splendour is displayed even
+in the minor arrangements.</p>
+<p>A pretty Chinese chiosque, filled with good statues, which have been
+unfortunately much damaged and broken, stands near the palace.</p>
+<p>These three beautiful royal residences are situated in parks, which are
+so united that they seem only as one.&nbsp; The parks are filled with fine
+trees, and verdant fields crossed by well-kept paths and drives; but I saw
+very few flower-beds in them.</p>
+<p>When I had contemplated every thing at leisure, I returned to the palace
+of Sans Souci, to see the beautiful fountains, which play twice a week, on
+Tuesday and Friday, from noon till evening.&nbsp; The columns projected
+from the basin in front of the castle are so voluminous, and rise with such
+force, that I gazed in amazement at the artifice.&nbsp; It is real pleasure
+to be near the basin when the sun shines in its full splendour, forming the
+most beautiful rainbows in the falling shower of drops.&nbsp; Equally
+beautiful is a fountain rising from a high vase, enwreathed by living
+flowers, and falling over it, so that it forms a quick, brisk fountain,
+transparent, and pure as the finest crystal.&nbsp; The lid of the vase,
+also enwreathed with growing flowers, rises above the fountain.&nbsp; The
+Neptune&rsquo;s grotto is of no great beauty; the water falls from an urn
+placed over it, and forms little waterfalls as it flows over
+nautilus-shells.</p>
+<p>The marble palace lies on the other side of Potsdam, and is half an
+hour&rsquo;s distance from these palaces; but I had time enough to visit
+it.</p>
+<p>Entering the park belonging to this palace, a row of neat
+peasants&rsquo; cottages is seen on the left; they are all alike, but
+separated by fruit, flower, or kitchen-gardens.&nbsp; The palace lies at
+the extreme end of the park, on a pretty lake formed by the river
+Havel.&nbsp; It certainly has some right to the name of marble palace; but
+it seems presumption to call it so when compared to the marble palaces of
+Venice, or the marble mosques of Constantinople.</p>
+<p>The walls of the building are of brick left in its natural colour.&nbsp;
+The lower and upper frame-work, the window-sashes, and the portals, are all
+of marble.&nbsp; The palace is partly surrounded by a gallery supported on
+marble columns.&nbsp; The stairs are of fine white marble, and many of the
+apartments are laid with this mineral.&nbsp; The interior is not nearly so
+luxurious as the other palaces.</p>
+<p>This was the last of the sights I saw in Potsdam or the environs of
+Berlin; for I continued my journey to Vienna on the following day.</p>
+<p>Before quitting Berlin, I must mention an arrangement which is
+particularly convenient for strangers&mdash;namely, the fares for
+hackney-carriages. One need ask no questions, but merely enter the
+carriage, tell the coachman where to drive, and pay him six-pence.&nbsp;
+This moderate fare is for the whole town, which is somewhat
+extensive.&nbsp; At all the railway stations there are numbers of these
+vehicles, which will drive to any hotel, however far it may be from the
+station, for the same moderate fare.&nbsp; If only all cab-drivers were so
+accommodating!</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">October 1st.</p>
+<p>The railway goes through Leipzic to Dresden, where I took the mail-coach
+for Prague at eight o&rsquo;clock the same evening, and arrived there in
+eighteen hours.</p>
+<p>As it was night when we passed, we did not enjoy the beautiful views of
+the Nollendorf mountain.&nbsp; In the morning we passed two handsome
+monuments, one of them, a pyramid fifty-four feet high, to the memory of
+Count Colloredo, the other to the memory of the Russian troops who had
+fallen here; both have been erected since the wars of Napoleon.</p>
+<p>On we went through charming districts to the famed bathing-place
+Teplitz, which is surrounded by the most beautiful scenery; and can bear
+comparison with the finest bathing-places of the world.</p>
+<p>Further on we passed a solitary basaltic rock, Boren, which deserves
+attention for its beauty and as a natural curiosity.&nbsp; We unfortunately
+hurried past it, as we wished to reach Prague before six o&rsquo;clock, so
+that we might not miss the train to Vienna.</p>
+<p>My readers may imagine our disappointment on arriving at the gates of
+Prague, when our passports were taken from us and not returned.&nbsp; In
+vain we referred to the <i>vis&eacute;</i> of the boundary-town
+Peterswalde; in vain we spoke of our haste.&nbsp; The answer always was,
+&ldquo;That is nothing to us; you can have your papers back to-morrow at
+the police-office.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus we were put off, and lost twenty-four
+hours.</p>
+<p>I must mention a little joke I had on the ride from Dresden to
+Prague.&nbsp; Two gentlemen and a lady beside myself occupied the
+mail-coach; the lady happened to have read my diary of Palestine, and asked
+me, when she heard my name, if I were that traveller.&nbsp; When I had
+acknowledged I was that same person, our conversation turned on that and on
+my present journey.&nbsp; One of the gentlemen, Herr Katze, was very
+intelligent, and conversed in a most interesting manner on countries,
+nationalities, and scientific subjects.&nbsp; The other gentleman was
+probably equally well informed, but he made less use of his
+acquirements.&nbsp; Herr Katze remained in Teplitz, and the other gentleman
+proceeded with us to Vienna.&nbsp; Before arriving at our destination, he
+asked me if Herr Katze had not requested me to mention his name in my next
+book, and added, that if I would promise to do the same, he would tell me
+his name.&nbsp; I could not refrain from smiling, but assured him that Herr
+Katze had not thought of such a thing, and begged him not to communicate
+his name to me, so that he might see that we females were not so curious as
+we are said to be.&nbsp; But the poor man could not refrain from giving me
+his name&mdash;Nicholas B.&mdash;before we parted.&nbsp; I do not insert it
+for two reasons: first, because I did not promise to name him; and
+secondly, because I do not think it would do him any service.</p>
+<p>The railway from Prague to Vienna goes over Olm&uuml;tz, and makes such
+a considerable round, that the distance is now nearly 320 miles, and the
+arrangements on the railway are very imperfect.</p>
+<p>There were no hotels erected on the road, and we had to be content with
+fruit, beer, bread, and butter, &amp;c. the whole time.&nbsp; And these
+provisions were not easily obtained, as we could not venture to leave the
+carriages.&nbsp; The conductor called out at every station that we should
+go on directly, although the train frequently stood upwards of half an
+hour; but as we did not know that before, we were obliged to remain on our
+seats.&nbsp; The conductors were not of the most amiable character, which
+may perhaps be ascribed to the climate; for when we approached the boundary
+of the Austrian states at Peterswalde, the inspector received us very
+gruffly.&nbsp; We wished him good evening twice, but he took no notice of
+it, and demanded our papers in a loud and peremptory tone; he probably
+thought us as deaf as we thought him.&nbsp; At G&auml;nserndorf,
+twenty-five miles from Vienna, they took our papers from us in a very
+uncivil, uncourteous manner.</p>
+<p>On the 4th of October, 1845, after an absence of six months, I arrived
+again in sight of the dear Stephen&rsquo;s steeple, as most of my
+countrywomen would say.</p>
+<p>I had suffered many hardships; but my love of travelling would not have
+been abated, nor would my courage have failed me, had they been ten times
+greater.&nbsp; I had been amply compensated for all.&nbsp; I had seen
+things which never occur in our common life, and had met with people as
+they are rarely met with&mdash;in their natural state.&nbsp; And I brought
+back with me the recollections of my travels, which will always remain, and
+which will afford me renewed pleasure for years.</p>
+<p>And now I take leave of my dear readers, requesting them to accept with
+indulgence my descriptions, which are always true, though they may not be
+amusing.&nbsp; If I have, as I can scarcely hope, afforded them some
+amusement, I trust they will in return grant me a small corner in their
+memories.</p>
+<p>In conclusion, I beg to add an Appendix, which may not be uninteresting
+to many of my readers, namely:</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; A document which I procured in Reikjavik, giving the salaries
+of the royal Danish officials, and the sources from whence they are
+paid.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; A list of Icelandic insects, butterflies, flowers, and plants,
+which I collected and brought home with me.</p>
+<h2>APPENDIX A</h2>
+<h3>Salaries of the Royal Danish Officials in Iceland, which they receive
+from the Icelandic land-revenues.</h3>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Florins <a name="citation58"></a><a href="#footnote58"
+class="citation">[58]</a></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The Governor of Iceland</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Office expenses</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>600</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The deputy for the western district</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1586</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Office expenses</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>400</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Rent</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>200</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The deputy for the northern and eastern districts</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1286</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Office expenses</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>400</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The bishop of Iceland, who draws his salary from the school-revenues,
+has paid him from this treasury</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>800</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The members of the Supreme Court:</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; One judge</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1184</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; First assessor</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>890</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Second assessor</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>740</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The land-bailiff of Iceland</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>600</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Office expenses</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>200</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Rent</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>150</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The town-bailiff of Reikjavik</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>300</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The first police-officer of Reikjavik, who is at the same time gaoler,
+and therefore has 50 <i>fl.</i> more than the second officer</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>200</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The second police-officer</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>150</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The mayor of Reikjavik only draws from this treasury his house-rent,
+which is</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>150</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The sysselman of the Westmanns Islands</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>296</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>The other sysselmen, each</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>230</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Medical department and midwifery:</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The physician</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>900</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; House-rent</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>150</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Apothecary of Reikjavik</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>185</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; House-rent</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>150</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The second apothecary at Sikkisholm</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>90</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Six surgeons in the country, each</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>300</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; House-rent for some</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>30</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; For others</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>25</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; A medical practitioner on the Northland</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>110</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Reikjavik has two midwives, each receives</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>50</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The other midwives in Iceland, amounting to thirty, each
+receives</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>100</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; These midwives are instructed and examined by the land
+physician, who has the charge of paying them annually.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Organist of Reikjavik</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>100</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>From the school-revenues</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The bishop receives</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1200</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The teachers at the high school:</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The teacher of theology</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>800</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The head assistant, besides free lodging</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>500</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The second assistant</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>500</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; House-rent</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>50</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The third assistant</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>500</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; House-rent</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>50</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; The resident at the school</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>170</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<h3>LIST OF INVERTEBRATED ANIMALS collected in Iceland</h3>
+<p>1.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Crustacea</span>.</p>
+<p>Pagarus Bernhardus, <i>Linn&aelig;us</i>.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Insecta</span>.</p>
+<p>a.&nbsp; <i>Coleoptera</i>.&nbsp; Nebria rubripes, <i>Dejean</i>.&nbsp;
+Patrobus hyperboreus.&nbsp; Calathus melanocephalus, <i>Fabr</i>.&nbsp;
+Notiophilus aquaticus.&nbsp; Amara vulgaris, <i>Duftsihm</i>.&nbsp; Ptinus
+fur, <i>Linn</i>.&nbsp; Aphodius Lapponum, <i>Schh</i>.&nbsp; Otiorhynchus
+l&aelig;vigatus, <i>Dhl</i>.&nbsp; Otiorhynchus Pinastri,
+<i>Fabr</i>.&nbsp; Otiorhynchus ovatus.&nbsp; Staphylinus maxillosus.&nbsp;
+Byrrhus pillula.</p>
+<p>b.&nbsp; <i>Neuroptera</i>.&nbsp; Limnophilus lineola,
+<i>Schrank</i>.</p>
+<p>c.&nbsp; <i>Hymenoptera</i>.&nbsp; Pimpla instigator,
+<i>Gravh</i>.&nbsp; Bombus subterraneus, <i>Linn</i>.</p>
+<p>d.&nbsp; <i>Lepidoptera</i>.&nbsp; Geometra russata, H&uuml;b.&nbsp;
+Geom. alche millata.&nbsp; Geom. spec. nov.</p>
+<p>e.&nbsp; <i>Diptera</i>.&nbsp; Tipula lunata, <i>Meig</i>.&nbsp;
+Scatophaga stercoraria.&nbsp; Musca vomitaria.&nbsp; Musca mortuorum.&nbsp;
+Helomyza serrata.&nbsp; Lecogaster islandicus, <i>Scheff</i>. <a
+name="citation59"></a><a href="#footnote59" class="citation">[59]</a>&nbsp;
+Anthomyia decolor, <i>Fallin</i>.</p>
+<h3>LIST OF ICELANDIC PLANTS <i>collected by Ida Pfeiffer in the Summer of
+the year</i> 1845</h3>
+<p><i>Felices</i>.&nbsp; Cystopteris fragilis.</p>
+<p><i>Equisetace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Equisetum Teltamegra.</p>
+<p><i>Gramin&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Festuca uniglumis.</p>
+<p><i>Cyperace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Carea filiformis.&nbsp; Carea
+c&aelig;spitosa.&nbsp; Eriophorum c&aelig;spitosum.</p>
+<p><i>Juncace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Luzula spicata.&nbsp; Luzula
+campestris.</p>
+<p><i>Salicine&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Salix polaris.</p>
+<p><i>Polygone&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Remux arifolus.&nbsp; Oxyria
+reniformes.</p>
+<p><i>Plumbagine&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Armeria alpina (in the interior
+mountainous districts).</p>
+<p><i>Composit&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Chrysanthemum maritimum (on the sea-shore,
+and on marshy fields).&nbsp; Hieracium alpinum (on grassy plains).&nbsp;
+Taraxacum alpinum.&nbsp; Erigeron uniflorum (west of Havenfiord, on rocky
+soil).</p>
+<p><i>Rubiace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Gallium pusillum.&nbsp; Gallium verum.</p>
+<p><i>Labiat&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Thynus serpyllum.</p>
+<p><i>Asperifoli&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Myosotis alpestris.&nbsp; Myosotis
+scorpioicles.</p>
+<p><i>Scrophularine&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Bartsia alpina (in the interior
+north-western valleys).&nbsp; Rhinanthus alpestris.</p>
+<p><i>Utricularie&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Pinguicula alpina.&nbsp; Pinguicula
+vulgaris.</p>
+<p><i>Umbellifer&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Archangelica officinalis
+(Havenfiord).</p>
+<p><i>Saxifrage&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Saxifraga c&aelig;spitosa (the real
+Linn&aelig;an plant: on rocks round Hecla).</p>
+<p><i>Ranunculace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Ranunculus auricomus.&nbsp; Ranunculus
+nivalis.&nbsp; Thalictrum alpinum (growing between lava, near
+Reikjavik).&nbsp; Caltha palustris.</p>
+<p><i>Crucifer&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Draba verna.&nbsp; Cardamine
+pratensis.</p>
+<p><i>Violarice&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Viola hirta.</p>
+<p><i>Caryophylle&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Sagina stricta.&nbsp; Cerastium
+semidecandrum.&nbsp; Lepigonum rubrum.&nbsp; Silene maritima.&nbsp; Lychnis
+alpina (on the mountain-fields round Reikjavik).</p>
+<p><i>Empetre&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Empetrum nigrum.</p>
+<p><i>Geraniace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Geranium sylvaticum (in pits near
+Thingvalla).</p>
+<p><i>Troseace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Parnassia palustris.</p>
+<p><i>&OElig;nothere&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Epilobium latifolium (in clefts of
+the mountain at the foot of Hecla).&nbsp; Epilobium alpinum (in Reiker
+valley, west of Havenfiord).</p>
+<p><i>Rosace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Rubus arcticus.&nbsp; Potentilla
+anserina.&nbsp; Potentilla gronlandica (on rocks near Kallmanstunga and
+Kollismola).&nbsp; Alchemilla montana.&nbsp; Sanguisorba officinalis.&nbsp;
+Geum rivale.&nbsp; Dryas octopela (near Havenfiord).</p>
+<p><i>Papilionace&aelig;</i>.&nbsp; Trifolium repens.</p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1"
+class="footnote">[1]</a>&nbsp; In this Gutenberg eText only Madame
+Pfeiffer&rsquo;s work appears&mdash;DP.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2"
+class="footnote">[2]</a>&nbsp; Madame Pfeiffer&rsquo;s first journey was to
+the Holy Land in 1842; and on her return from Iceland she started in 1846
+on a &ldquo;Journey round the World,&rdquo; from which she returned in the
+end of 1848.&nbsp; This adventurous lady is now (1853) travelling among the
+islands of the Eastern Archipelago.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3"
+class="footnote">[3]</a>&nbsp; A florin is worth about 2<i>s.</i>
+1<i>d.</i>; sixty kreutzers go to a florin.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4"
+class="footnote">[4]</a>&nbsp; At Kuttenberg the first silver groschens
+were coined, in the year 1300.&nbsp; The silver mines are now exhausted,
+though other mines, of copper, zinc, &amp;c. are wrought in the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; The population is only half of what it once was.
+&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5"
+class="footnote">[5]</a>&nbsp; The expression of Madame Pfeiffer&rsquo;s
+about Frederick &ldquo;paying his score to the Austrians,&rdquo; is
+somewhat vague.&nbsp; The facts are these.&nbsp; In 1757 Frederick the
+Great of Prussia invaded Bohemia, and laid siege to Prague.&nbsp; Before
+this city an Austrian army lay, who were attacked with great impetuosity by
+Frederick, and completely defeated.&nbsp; But the town was defended with
+great valour; and during the time thus gained the Austrian general Daun
+raised fresh troops, with which he took the field at Collin.&nbsp; Here he
+was attacked by Frederick, who was routed, and all his baggage and cannon
+captured.&nbsp; This loss was &ldquo;paying his score;&rdquo; and the
+defeat was so complete, that the great monarch sat down by the side of a
+fountain, and tracing figures in the sand, was lost for a long time in
+meditation on the means to be adopted to retrieve his fortune.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6"
+class="footnote">[6]</a>&nbsp; I mention this little incident to warn the
+traveller against parting with his effects.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7"
+class="footnote">[7]</a>&nbsp; The true version of this affair is as
+follows.&nbsp; John of Nepomuk was a priest serving under the Archbishop of
+Prague.&nbsp; The king, Wenceslaus, was a hasty, cruel tyrant, who was
+detested by all his subjects, and hated by the rest of Germany.&nbsp; Two
+priests were guilty of some crime, and one of the court chamberlains,
+acting under royal orders, caused the priests to be put to death.&nbsp; The
+archbishop, indignant at this, placed the chamberlain under an
+interdict.&nbsp; This so roused the king that he attempted to seize the
+archbishop, who took refuge in flight.&nbsp; John of Nepomuk, however, and
+another priest, were seized and put to the torture to confess what were the
+designs of the archbishop.&nbsp; The king seems to have suspected that the
+queen was in some way connected with the line of conduct pursued by the
+archbishop.&nbsp; John of Nepomuk, however, refused, even though the King
+with his own hand burned him with a torch.&nbsp; Irritated by his obstinate
+silence, the king caused the poor monk to be cast over the bridge into the
+Moldau.&nbsp; This monk was afterwards canonised, and made the patron saint
+of bridges.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8"
+class="footnote">[8]</a>&nbsp; Albert von Wallenstein (or Waldstein), the
+famous Duke of Friedland, is celebrated as one of the ablest commanders of
+the imperial forces during the protracted religious contest known in German
+history as the &ldquo;Thirty Years&rsquo; War.&rdquo;&nbsp; During its
+earlier period Wallenstein greatly distinguished himself, and was created
+by the Emperor Ferdinand Duke of Friedland and generalissimo of the
+imperial forces.&nbsp; In the course of a few months Wallenstein raised an
+army of forty thousand men in the Emperor&rsquo;s service.&nbsp; The
+strictest discipline was preserved <i>within</i> his camp, but his troops
+supported themselves by a system of rapine and plunder unprecedented even
+in those days of military license.&nbsp; Merit was rewarded with princely
+munificence, and the highest offices were within the reach of every common
+soldier who distinguished himself;&mdash;trivial breaches of discipline
+were punished with death.&nbsp; The dark and ambitious spirit of
+Wallenstein would not allow him to rest satisfied with the rewards and
+dignities heaped upon him by his imperial master.&nbsp; He temporised and
+entered into negotiations with the enemy; and during an interview with a
+Swedish general (Arnheim), is even said to have proposed an alliance to
+&ldquo;hunt the Emperor to the devil.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is supposed that he
+aspired to the sovereignty of Bohemia.&nbsp; Ferdinand was informed of the
+ambitious designs of his general, and at length determined that Wallenstein
+should die.&nbsp; He despatched one of his generals, Gallas, to the
+commander-in-chief, with a mandate depriving him of his dignity of
+generalissimo, and nominating Gallas as his successor.&nbsp; Surprised
+before his plans were ripe, and deserted by many on whose support he had
+relied, Wallenstein retired hastily upon Egra.&nbsp; During a banquet in
+the castle, three of his generals who remained faithful to their leader
+were murdered in the dead of night.&nbsp; Roused by the noise, Wallenstein
+leapt from his bed, and encountered three soldiers who had been hired to
+despatch him.&nbsp; Speechless with astonishment and indignation, he
+stretched forth his arms, and receiving in his breast the stroke of a
+halbert, fell dead without a groan, in the fifty-first year of his age.</p>
+<p>The following anecdote, curiously illustrative of the state of affairs
+in Wallenstein&rsquo;s camp, is related by Schiller in his <i>History of
+the Thirty Years&rsquo; War</i>, a work containing a full account of the
+life and actions of this extraordinary man.&nbsp; &ldquo;The extortions of
+Wallenstein&rsquo;s soldiers from the peasants had at one period reached
+such a pitch, that severe penalties were denounced against all marauders;
+and every soldier who should be convicted of theft was threatened with a
+halter.&nbsp; Shortly afterwards, it chanced that Wallenstein himself met a
+soldier straying in the field, whom he caused to be seized, as having
+violated the law, and condemned to the gallows without a trial, by his
+usual word of doom: &ldquo;Let the rascal be hung!&rdquo;&nbsp; The soldier
+protested, and proved his innocence.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then let them hang the
+innocent,&rdquo; cried the inhuman Wallenstein; &ldquo;and the guilty will
+tremble the more.&rdquo;&nbsp; The preparations for carrying this sentence
+into effect had already commenced, when the soldier, who saw himself lost
+without remedy, formed the desperate resolution that he would not die
+unrevenged.&nbsp; Rushing furiously upon his leader, he was seized and
+disarmed by the bystanders before he could carry his intention into
+effect.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now let him go,&rdquo; said Wallenstein; &ldquo;it
+will excite terror enough.&rdquo;&rdquo;&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9"
+class="footnote">[9]</a>&nbsp; Poniatowski was the commander of the Polish
+legion in the armies of Napoleon, by whom he was highly respected.&nbsp; At
+the battle of Leipzig, fought in October 1813, Poniatowski and Marshal
+MacDonald were appointed to command the rear of Napoleon&rsquo;s army,
+which, after two days hard fighting, was compelled to retreat before the
+Allies.&nbsp; These generals defended the retreat of the army so gallantly,
+that all the French troops, except those under their immediate command, had
+evacuated the town.&nbsp; The rear-guard was preparing to follow, when the
+only bridge over the Elster that remained open to them was destroyed,
+through some mistake.&nbsp; This effectually barred the escape of the rear
+of Napoleon&rsquo;s army.&nbsp; A few, among whom was Marshal MacDonald,
+succeeded in swimming across; but Poniatowski, after making a brave
+resistance, and refusing to surrender, was drowned in making the same
+attempt.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10"
+class="footnote">[10]</a>&nbsp; Leipzig has long been famous as the chief
+book-mart of Germany.&nbsp; At the great Easter meetings, publishers from
+all the different states assemble at the &ldquo;Buchh&auml;ndler
+B&ouml;rse,&rdquo; and a large amount of business is done.&nbsp; The fairs
+of Leipzig have done much towards establishing the position of this city as
+one of the first trading towns in Germany.&nbsp; They take place three
+times annually: at New-year, at Easter, and at Michaelmas; but the Easter
+fair is by far the most important.&nbsp; These commercial meetings last
+about three weeks, and during this time the town presents a most animated
+appearance, as the streets are thronged with the costumes of almost every
+nation, the smart dress of the Tyrolese contrasting gaily with the sombre
+garb of the Polish Jews.&nbsp; The amount of business transacted at these
+fairs is very considerable; on several occasions, above twenty thousand
+dealers have assembled.&nbsp; The trade is principally in woollen cloths;
+but lighter wares, and even ornaments of every description, are sold to a
+large extent.&nbsp; The manner in which every available place is taken
+advantage of is very curious: archways, cellars, passages, and courtyards
+are alike filled with merchandise, and the streets are at times so crowded
+as to be almost impassable.&nbsp; When the three weeks have passed, the
+wooden booths which have been erected in the market-place and the principal
+streets are taken down, the buyers and sellers vanish together, and the
+visitor would scarcely recognise in the quiet streets around him the
+bustling busy city of a few days ago.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote11"></a><a href="#citation11"
+class="footnote">[11]</a>&nbsp; The fire broke out on 4th May 1842, and
+raged with the utmost fury for three days.&nbsp; Whole streets were
+destroyed, and at least 2000 houses burned to the ground.&nbsp; Nearly half
+a million of money was raised in foreign countries to assist in rebuilding
+the city, of which about a tenth was contributed by Britain.&nbsp; Such
+awful fires, fearful though they are at the time, seem absolutely necessary
+to great towns, as they cause needful improvements to be made, which the
+indolence or selfishness of the inhabitants would otherwise prevent.&nbsp;
+There is not a great city that has not at one time or another suffered
+severely from fire, and has risen out of the ruins greater than
+before.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12"
+class="footnote">[12]</a>&nbsp; There are no docks at Hamburgh,
+consequently all the vessels lie in the river Elbe, and both receive and
+discharge their cargoes there.&nbsp; Madame Pfeiffer, however, is mistaken
+in supposing that only London could show a picture of so many ships and so
+much commercial activity surpassing that of Hamburgh.&nbsp; Such a picture,
+more impressive even than that seen in the Elbe, is exhibited every day in
+the Mersey or the Hudson.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote13"></a><a href="#citation13"
+class="footnote">[13]</a>&nbsp; Kiel, however, is a place of considerable
+trade; and doubtless the reason why Madame Pfeiffer saw so few vessels at
+it was precisely the same reason why she saw so many at Hamburgh.&nbsp;
+Kiel contains an excellent university.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote14"></a><a href="#citation14"
+class="footnote">[14]</a>&nbsp; At sea I calculate by sea-miles, of which
+sixty go to a degree.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote15"></a><a href="#citation15"
+class="footnote">[15]</a>&nbsp; This great Danish sculptor was born of poor
+parents at Copenhagen, on the 19th November, 1770; his father was an
+Icelander, and earned his living by carving figure-heads for ships.&nbsp;
+Albert, or &ldquo;Bertel,&rdquo; as he is more generally called, was
+accustomed during his youth to assist his father in his labours on the
+wharf.&nbsp; At an early age he visited the Academy at Copenhagen, where
+his genius soon began to make itself conspicuous.&nbsp; At the age of
+sixteen he had won a silver, and at twenty a gold medal.&nbsp; Two years
+later he carried off the &ldquo;great&rdquo; gold medal, and was sent to
+study abroad at the expense of the Academy.&nbsp; In 1797 we find him
+practising his art at Rome under the eye of Zoega the Dane, who does not,
+however, seem to have discovered indications of extraordinary genius in the
+labours of his young countryman.&nbsp; But a work was soon to appear which
+should set all questions as to Thorwaldsen&rsquo;s talent for ever at
+rest.&nbsp; In 1801 he produced his celebrated statue of
+&ldquo;Jason,&rdquo; which was at once pronounced by the great Canova to be
+&ldquo;a work in a new and a grand style.&rdquo;&nbsp; After this period
+the path of fame lay open before the young sculptor; his bas-reliefs of
+&ldquo;Summer&rdquo; and &ldquo;Autumn,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Dance of the
+Muses,&rdquo; &ldquo;Cupid and Psyche,&rdquo; and numerous other works,
+followed each other in rapid succession; and at length, in 1812,
+Thorwaldsen produced his extraordinary work, &ldquo;The Triumph of
+Alexander.&rdquo;&nbsp; In 1819 Thorwaldsen returned rich and famous to the
+city he had quitted as a youth twenty-three years before; he was received
+with great honour, and many feasts and rejoicings were held to celebrate
+his arrival.&nbsp; After a sojourn of a year Thorwaldsen again visited
+Rome, where he continued his labours until 1838, when, wealthy and
+independent, he resolved to rest in his native country.&nbsp; This time his
+welcome to Copenhagen was even more enthusiastic than in 1819.&nbsp; The
+whole shore was lined with spectators, and amid thundering acclamations the
+horses were unharnessed from his carriage, and the sculptor was drawn in
+triumph by the people to his <i>atelier</i>.&nbsp; During the remainder of
+his life Thorwaldsen passed much of his time on the island of Nys&ouml;,
+where most of his latest works were executed.&nbsp; On Sunday, March 9th,
+1842, he had been conversing with a circle of friends in perfect
+health.&nbsp; Halm&rsquo;s tragedy of <i>Griselda</i> was announced for the
+evening, and Thorwaldsen proceeded to the theatre to witness the
+performance.&nbsp; During the overture he rose to allow a stranger to pass,
+then resumed his seat, and a moment afterwards his head sunk on his
+breast&mdash;he was dead!</p>
+<p>His funeral was most sumptuous.&nbsp; Rich and poor united to do honour
+to the memory of the great man, who had endeared himself to them by his
+virtues as by his genius.&nbsp; The crown-prince followed the coffin, and
+the people of Copenhagen stood in two long rows, and uncovered their heads
+as the coffin of the sculptor was carried past.&nbsp; The king himself took
+part in the solemnity.&nbsp; At the time of his decease Thorwaldsen had
+completed his seventy-second year.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote16"></a><a href="#citation16"
+class="footnote">[16]</a>&nbsp; Tycho de Brahe was a distinguished
+astronomer, who lived between 1546 and 1601.&nbsp; He was a native of
+Denmark.&nbsp; His whole life may be said to have been devoted to
+astronomy.&nbsp; A small work that he published when a young man brought
+him under the notice of the King of Denmark, with whose assistance he
+constructed, on the small island of Hulln, a few miles north of Copenhagen,
+the celebrated Observatory of Uranienburg.&nbsp; Here, seated in &ldquo;the
+ancient chair&rdquo; referred to in the text, and surrounded by numerous
+assistants, he directed for seventeen years a series of observations, that
+have been found extremely accurate and useful.&nbsp; On the death of his
+patron he retired to Prague in Bohemia, where he was employed by Rodolph
+II. then Emperor of Germany.&nbsp; Here he was assisted by the great
+Kepler, who, on Tycho&rsquo;s death in 1601, succeeded him.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote17"></a><a href="#citation17"
+class="footnote">[17]</a>&nbsp; The fisheries of Iceland have been very
+valuable, and indeed the chief source of the commerce of the country ever
+since it was discovered.&nbsp; The fish chiefly caught are cod and the tusk
+or cat-fish.&nbsp; They are exported in large quantities, cured in various
+ways.&nbsp; Since the discovery of Newfoundland, however, the fisheries of
+Iceland have lost much of their importance.&nbsp; So early as 1415, the
+English sent fishing vessels to the Icelandic coast, and the sailors who
+were on board, it would appear, behaved so badly to the natives that Henry
+V. had to make some compensation to the King of Denmark for their
+conduct.&nbsp; The greatest number of fishing vessels from England that
+ever visited Iceland was during the reign of James I., whose marriage with
+the sister of the Danish king might probably make England at the time the
+most favoured nation.&nbsp; It was in his time that an English pirate,
+&ldquo;Gentleman John,&rdquo; as he was called, committed great ravages in
+Iceland, for which James had afterwards to make compensation.&nbsp; The
+chief markets for the fish are in the Catholic countries of Europe.&nbsp;
+In the seventeenth century, a great traffic in fish was carried on between
+Iceland and Spain.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote18"></a><a href="#citation18"
+class="footnote">[18]</a>&nbsp; The dues charged by the Danish Government
+on all vessels passing through the Sound have been levied since 1348, and
+therefore enjoy a prescriptive right of more than five hundred years.&nbsp;
+They bring to the Danish Government a yearly revenue of about a quarter of
+a million; and, in consideration of the dues, the Government has to support
+certain lighthouses, and otherwise to render safe and easy the navigation
+of this great entrance to the Baltic.&nbsp; Sound-dues were first paid in
+the palmy commercial days of the Hanseatic League.&nbsp; That powerful
+combination of merchants had suffered severely from the ravages of Danish
+pirates, royal and otherwise; but ultimately they became so powerful that
+the rich merchant could beat the royal buccaneer, and tame his ferocity so
+effectually as to induce him to build and maintain those beacon-lights on
+the shores of the Sound, for whose use they and all nations and merchants
+after them have agreed to pay certain duties.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote19"></a><a href="#citation19"
+class="footnote">[19]</a>&nbsp; The Feroe Islands consist of a great many
+islets, some of them mere rocks, lying about halfway between the north
+coast of Scotland and Iceland.&nbsp; At one time they belonged to Norway,
+but came into the possession of Denmark at the same time as Iceland.&nbsp;
+They are exceedingly mountainous, some of the mountains attaining an
+elevation of about 2800 feet.&nbsp; The largest town or village does not
+contain more than 1500 or 1600 inhabitants.&nbsp; The population live
+chiefly on the produce of their large flocks of sheep, and on the down
+procured, often at great risk to human life, from the eider-duck and other
+birds by which the island is frequented.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote20"></a><a href="#citation20"
+class="footnote">[20]</a>&nbsp; I should be truly sorry if, in this
+description of our &ldquo;life aboard ship,&rdquo; I had said any thing
+which could give offence to my kind friend Herr Knudson.&nbsp; I have,
+however, presumed that every one is aware that the mode of life at sea is
+different to life in families.&nbsp; I have only to add, that Herr Knudson
+lived most agreeably not only in Copenhagen, but what is far more
+remarkable, in Iceland also, and was provided with every comfort procurable
+in the largest European towns.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote21"></a><a href="#citation21"
+class="footnote">[21]</a>&nbsp; It is not only at sea that ingenious
+excuses for drinking are invented.&nbsp; The lovers of good or bad liquor
+on land find these reasons as &ldquo;plenty as blackberries,&rdquo; and
+apply them with a marvellous want of stint or scruple.&nbsp; In warm
+climates the liquor is drank to keep the drinker cool, in cold to keep him
+warm; in health to prevent him from being sick, in sickness to bring him
+back to health.&nbsp; Very seldom is the real reason, &ldquo;because I like
+it,&rdquo; given; and all these excuses and reasons must be regarded as
+implying some lingering sense of shame at the act, and as forming part of
+&ldquo;the homage that vice always pays to virtue.&rdquo;&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote22"></a><a href="#citation22"
+class="footnote">[22]</a>&nbsp; The sailors call those waves
+&ldquo;Spanish&rdquo; which, coming from the west, distinguish themselves
+by their size.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote23"></a><a href="#citation23"
+class="footnote">[23]</a>&nbsp; These islands form a rocky group, only one
+of which is inhabited, lying about fifteen miles from the coast.&nbsp; They
+are said to derive their name from some natives of Ireland, called
+West-men, who visited Iceland shortly after its discovery by the
+Norwegians.&nbsp; In this there is nothing improbable, for we know that
+during the ninth and tenth centuries the Danes and Normans, called
+Easterlings, made many descents on the Irish coast; and one Norwegian chief
+is reported to have assumed sovereign power in Ireland about the year 866,
+though he was afterwards deposed, and flung into a lough, where he was
+drowned: rather an ignominious death for a
+&ldquo;sea-king.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote24"></a><a href="#citation24"
+class="footnote">[24]</a>&nbsp; This work, which Madame Pfeiffer does not
+praise too highly, was first published in 1810.&nbsp; After passing through
+two editions, it was reprinted in 1841, at a cheap price, in the valuable
+people&rsquo;s editions of standard works, published by Messrs. Chambers of
+Edinburgh.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote25"></a><a href="#citation25"
+class="footnote">[25]</a>&nbsp; It is related of Ingold that he carried
+with him on his voyage the door of his former house in Ireland, and that
+when he approached the coast he cast it into the sea, watching the point of
+land which it touched; and on that land he fixed his future home.&nbsp;
+This land is the same on which the town of Reikjavik now stands.&nbsp;
+These old sea-kings, like the men of Athens, were &ldquo;in all things too
+superstitious.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote26"></a><a href="#citation26"
+class="footnote">[26]</a>&nbsp; These sea-rovers, that were to the nations
+of Europe during the middle ages what the Danes, Norwegians, and other
+northmen were at an earlier period, enjoyed at this time the full flow of
+their lawless prosperity.&nbsp; Their insolence and power were so great
+that many nations, our own included, were glad to purchase, by a yearly
+payment, exemption from the attacks of these sea-rovers.&nbsp; The
+Americans paid this tribute so late as 1815.&nbsp; The unfortunate
+Icelanders who were carried off in the seventeenth century nearly all died
+as captives in Algiers.&nbsp; At the end of ten years they were liberated;
+but of the four hundred only thirty-seven were alive when the joyful
+intelligence reached the place of their captivity; and of these twenty-four
+died before rejoining their native land.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote27"></a><a href="#citation27"
+class="footnote">[27]</a>&nbsp; This town, the capital of Iceland, and the
+seat of government, is built on an arm of the sea called the Faxefiord, in
+the south-west part of the island.&nbsp; The resident population does not
+exceed 500, but this is greatly increased during the annual fairs.&nbsp; It
+consists mainly of two streets at right angles to each other.&nbsp; It
+contains a large church built of stone, roofed with tiles; an observatory;
+the residences of the governor and the bishop, and the prison, which is
+perhaps the most conspicuous building in the town.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote28"></a><a href="#citation28"
+class="footnote">[28]</a>&nbsp; As Madame Pfeiffer had thus no opportunity
+of attending a ball in Iceland, the following description of one given by
+Sir George Mackenzie may be interesting to the reader.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We gave a ball to the ladies of Reikjavik and the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; The company began to assemble about nine
+o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; We were shewn into a small low-roofed room, in which
+were a number of men, but to my surprise I saw no females.&nbsp; We soon
+found them, however, in one adjoining, where it is the custom for them to
+wait till their partners go to hand them out.&nbsp; On entering this
+apartment, I felt considerable disappointment at not observing a single
+woman dressed in the Icelandic costume.&nbsp; The dresses had some
+resemblance to those of English chambermaids, but were not so smart.&nbsp;
+An old lady, the wife of the man who kept the tavern, was habited like the
+pictures of our great-grandmothers.&nbsp; Some time after the dancing
+commenced, the bishop&rsquo;s lady, and two others, appeared in the proper
+dress of the country.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We found ourselves extremely awkward in dancing what the ladies
+were pleased to call English country dances.&nbsp; The music, which came
+from a solitary ill-scraped fiddle, accompanied by the rumbling of the same
+half-rotten drum that had summoned the high court of justice, and by the
+jingling of a rusty triangle, was to me utterly unintelligible.&nbsp; The
+extreme rapidity with which it was necessary to go through many complicated
+evolutions in proper time, completely bewildered us; and our mistakes, and
+frequent collisions with our neighbours, afforded much amusement to our
+fair partners, who found it for a long time impracticable to keep us in the
+right track.&nbsp; When allowed to breathe a little, we had an opportunity
+of remarking some singularities in the state of society and manners among
+the Danes of Reikjavik.&nbsp; While unengaged in the dance, the men drink
+punch, and walk about with tobacco-pipes in their mouths, spitting
+plentifully on the floor.&nbsp; The unrestrained evacuation of saliva seems
+to be a fashion all over Iceland; but whether the natives learned it from
+the Danes, or the Danes from the natives, we did not ascertain.&nbsp;
+Several ladies whose virtue could not bear a very strict scrutiny were
+pointed out to us.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;During the dances, tea and coffee were handed about; and negus
+and punch were ready for those who chose to partake of them.&nbsp; A cold
+supper was provided, consisting of hams, beef, cheese, &amp;c., and
+wine.&nbsp; While at table, several of the ladies sang, and acquitted
+themselves tolerably well.&nbsp; But I could not enjoy the performance, on
+account of the incessant talking, which was as fashionable a rudeness in
+Iceland as it is now in Britain.&nbsp; This, however, was not considered as
+in the least unpolite.&nbsp; One of the songs was in praise of the donors
+of the entertainment; and, during the chorus, the ceremony of touching each
+other&rsquo;s glasses was performed.&nbsp; After supper, waltzes were
+danced, in a style that reminded me of soldiers marching in cadence to the
+dead march in Saul.&nbsp; Though there was no need of artificial light, a
+number of candles were placed in the rooms.&nbsp; When the company broke
+up, about three o&rsquo;clock, the sun was high above the
+horizon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote29"></a><a href="#citation29"
+class="footnote">[29]</a>&nbsp; A man of eighty years of age is seldom seen
+on the island.&mdash;<i>Kerguelen</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote30"></a><a href="#citation30"
+class="footnote">[30]</a>&nbsp; Kerguelen (writing in 1768) says:
+&ldquo;They live during the summer principally on cod&rsquo;s heads.&nbsp;
+A common family make a meal of three or four cods&rsquo; heads boiled in
+sea-water.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote31"></a><a href="#citation31"
+class="footnote">[31]</a>&nbsp; This bakehouse is the only one in Iceland,
+and produces as good bread and biscuit as any that can be procured in
+Denmark.&nbsp; [In Kerguelen&rsquo;s time (1768) bread was very uncommon in
+Iceland.&nbsp; It was brought from Copenhagen, and consisted of broad thin
+cakes, or sea-biscuits, made of rye-flour, and extremely black.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote32"></a><a href="#citation32"
+class="footnote">[32]</a>&nbsp; In all high latitudes fat oily substances
+are consumed to a vast extent by the natives.&nbsp; The desire seems to be
+instinctive, not acquired.&nbsp; A different mode of living would
+undoubtedly render them more susceptible to the cold of these inclement
+regions.&nbsp; Many interesting anecdotes are related of the fondness of
+these hyperborean races for a kind of food from which we would turn in
+disgust.&nbsp; Before gas was introduced into Edinburgh, and the city was
+lighted by oil-lamps, several Russian noblemen visited that metropolis; and
+it is said that their longing for the luxury of train-oil became one
+evening so intense, that, unable to procure the delicacy in any other way,
+they emptied the oil-lamps.&nbsp; Parry relates that when he was wintering
+in the Arctic regions, one of the seamen, who had been smitten with the
+charms of an Esquimaux lady, wished to make her a present, and knowing the
+taste peculiar to those regions, he gave her with all due honours a pound
+of candles, six to the pound!&nbsp; The present was so acceptable to the
+lady, that she eagerly devoured the lot in the presence of her wondering
+admirer.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote33"></a><a href="#citation33"
+class="footnote">[33]</a>&nbsp; An American travelling in Iceland in 1852
+thus describes, in a letter to the <i>Boston Post</i>, the mode of
+travelling:&mdash;&ldquo;All travel is on horseback.&nbsp; Immense numbers
+of horses are raised in the country, and they are exceedingly cheap.&nbsp;
+As for travelling on foot, even short journeys, no one ever thinks of
+it.&nbsp; The roads are so bad for walking, and generally so good for
+riding that shoe-leather, to say nothing of fatigue, would cost nearly as
+much as horse-flesh.&nbsp; Their horses are small, compact, hardy little
+animals, a size larger than Shetland ponies, but rarely exceeding from 12
+or 13&frac12; hands high.&nbsp; A stranger in travelling must always have a
+&lsquo;guide,&rsquo; and if he does go equipped for a good journey and
+intends to make good speed, he wants as many as six horses; one for
+himself, one for the guide, one for the luggage, and three relay
+horses.&nbsp; Then when one set of horses are tired the saddles are
+exchanged to the others.&nbsp; The relay horses are tied together and are
+either led or driven before the others.&nbsp; A tent is often carried,
+unless a traveller chooses to chance it for his lodgings.&nbsp; Such an
+article as an hotel is not kept in Iceland out of the capital.&nbsp; You
+must also carry your provisions with you, as you will be able to get but
+little on your route.&nbsp; Plenty of milk can be had, and some fresh-water
+fish.&nbsp; The luggage is carried in trunks that are hung on each side of
+the horse, on a rude frame that serves as a pack-saddle.&nbsp; Under this,
+broad pieces of turf are placed to prevent galling the horse&rsquo;s
+back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote34"></a><a href="#citation34"
+class="footnote">[34]</a>&nbsp; The down of the eider-duck forms a most
+important and valuable article of Icelandic commerce.&nbsp; It is said that
+the weight of down procurable from each nest is about half a pound, which
+is reduced one-half by cleansing.&nbsp; The down is sold at about twelve
+shillings per pound, so that the produce of each nest is about three
+shillings.&nbsp; The eider-duck is nearly as large as the common goose; and
+some have been found on the Fern Islands, off the coast of
+Northumberland.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote35"></a><a href="#citation35"
+class="footnote">[35]</a>&nbsp; The same remark applies with equal force to
+many people who are not Icelanders.&nbsp; It was once the habit among a
+portion of the population of Lancashire, on returning from market, to carry
+their goods in a bag attached to one end of a string slung over their
+shoulders, which was balanced by a bag containing a stone at the
+other.&nbsp; Some time ago, it was pointed out to a worthy man thus
+returning from market, that it would be easier for him to throw away the
+stone, and make half of his load balance the other half, but the advice was
+rejected with disdain; the plan he had adopted was that of his forefathers,
+and he would on no account depart from it.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote36"></a><a href="#citation36"
+class="footnote">[36]</a>&nbsp; The description of the Wolf&rsquo;s Hollow
+occurs in the second act of <i>Der Freysch&uuml;tz</i>, when Rodolph
+sings:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;How horrid, dark, and wild, and drear,<br />
+Doth this gaping gulf appear!<br />
+It seems the hue of hell to wear.<br />
+The bellowing thunder bursts yon clouds,<br />
+&nbsp; The moon with blood has stained her light!<br />
+What forms are those in misty shrouds,<br />
+&nbsp; That stalk before my sight?<br />
+And now, hush! hush!<br />
+The owl is hooting in yon bush;<br />
+How yonder oak-tree&rsquo;s blasted arms<br />
+&nbsp; Upon me seem to frown!<br />
+My heart recoils, but all alarms<br />
+&nbsp; Are vain: fate calls, I must down, down.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><a name="footnote37"></a><a href="#citation37"
+class="footnote">[37]</a>&nbsp; The reader must bear in mind that, during
+the season of which I speak, there is no twilight, much less night, in
+Iceland.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote38"></a><a href="#citation38"
+class="footnote">[38]</a>&nbsp; The springs of Carlsbad are said to have
+been unknown until about five hundred years ago, when a hunting-dog
+belonging to one of the emperors of Germany fell in, and by his howling
+attracted the hunters to the spot.&nbsp; The temperature of the chief
+spring is 165&deg;.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote39"></a><a href="#citation39"
+class="footnote">[39]</a>&nbsp; History tells of this great Icelandic poet,
+that owing to his treachery the free island of Iceland came beneath the
+Norwegian sceptre.&nbsp; For this reason he could never appear in Iceland
+without a strong guard, and therefore visited the Allthing under the
+protection of a small army of 600 men.&nbsp; Being at length surprised by
+his enemies in his house at Reikiadal, he fell beneath their blows, after a
+short and ineffectual resistance.&nbsp; [Snorri Sturluson, the most
+distinguished name of which Iceland can boast, was born, in 1178, at
+Hoam.&nbsp; In his early years he was remarkably fortunate in his worldly
+affairs.&nbsp; The fortune he derived from his father was small, but by
+means of a rich marriage, and by inheritance, he soon became proprietor of
+large estates in Iceland.&nbsp; Some writers say that his guard of 600 men,
+during his visit to the Allthing, was intended not as a defence, as
+indicated in Madame Pfeiffer&rsquo;s note, but for the purposes of display,
+and to impress the inhabitants with forcible ideas of his influence and
+power.&nbsp; He was invited to the court of the Norwegian king, and there
+he either promised or was bribed to bring Iceland under the Norwegian
+power.&nbsp; For this he has been greatly blamed, and stigmatised as a
+traitor; though it would appear from some historians that he only undertook
+to do by peaceable means what otherwise the Norwegian kings would have
+effected by force, and thus saved his country from a foreign
+invasion.&nbsp; But be this as it may, it is quite clear that he sunk in
+the estimation of his countrymen, and the feeling against him became so
+strong, that he was obliged to fly to Norway.&nbsp; He returned, however,
+in 1239, and in two years afterwards he was assassinated by his own
+son-in-law.&nbsp; The work by which he is chiefly known is the
+<i>Heimskringla</i>, or Chronicle of the Sea-Kings of Norway, one of the
+most valuable pieces of northern history, which has been admirably
+translated into English by Mr. Samuel Laing.&nbsp; This curious name of
+Heimskringla was given to the work because it contains the words with which
+begins, and means literally <i>the circle of the world</i>.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote40"></a><a href="#citation40"
+class="footnote">[40]</a>&nbsp; A translation of this poem will be found in
+the Appendix.&nbsp; [Not included in this Gutenberg eText&mdash;DP]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote41"></a><a href="#citation41"
+class="footnote">[41]</a>&nbsp; In Iceland, as in Denmark, it is the custom
+to keep the dead a week above ground.&nbsp; It may be readily imagined that
+to a non-Icelandic sense of smell, it is an irksome task to be present at a
+burial from beginning to end, and especially in summer.&nbsp; But I will
+not deny that the continued sensation may have partly proceeded from
+imagination.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote42"></a><a href="#citation42"
+class="footnote">[42]</a>&nbsp; Every one in Iceland rides.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote43"></a><a href="#citation43"
+class="footnote">[43]</a>&nbsp; I cannot forbear mentioning a curious
+circumstance here.&nbsp; When I was at the foot of Mount Etna in 1842, the
+fiery element was calmed; some months after my departure it flamed with
+renewed force.&nbsp; When, on my return from Hecla, I came to Reikjavik, I
+said jocularly that it would be most strange if this Etna of the north
+should also have an eruption now.&nbsp; Scarcely had I left Iceland more
+than five weeks when an eruption, more violent than the former one, really
+took place.&nbsp; This circumstance is the more remarkable, as it had been
+in repose for eighty years, and was already looked upon as a burnt-out
+volcano.&nbsp; If I were to return to Iceland now, I should be looked upon
+as a prophetess of evil, and my life would scarcely be safe.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote44"></a><a href="#citation44"
+class="footnote">[44]</a>&nbsp; Every peasant in tolerably good
+circumstances carries a little tent with him when he leaves home for a few
+days.&nbsp; These tents are, at the utmost, three feet high, five or six
+feet long, and three broad.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote45"></a><a href="#citation45"
+class="footnote">[45]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Though their poverty disables them
+from imitating the hospitality of their ancestors in all respects, yet the
+desire of doing it still exists: they cheerfully give away the little they
+have to spare, and express the utmost joy and satisfaction if you are
+pleased with the gift.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>Uno von Troil</i>, 1772.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote46"></a><a href="#citation46"
+class="footnote">[46]</a>&nbsp; The presence of American ships in the port
+of Gottenburg is not to be wondered at, seeing that nearly three-fourths of
+all the iron exported from Gottenburg is to America.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote47"></a><a href="#citation47"
+class="footnote">[47]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;St. Stephen&rsquo;s steeple&rdquo;
+is 450 feet high, being about 40 feet higher than St. Paul&rsquo;s, and
+forms part of St. Stephen&rsquo;s Cathedral in Vienna, a magnificent Gothic
+building, that dates as far back as the twelfth century.&nbsp; It has a
+great bell, that weighs about eighteen tons, being more than double the
+weight of the bell in St. Peter&rsquo;s at Rome, and four times the weight
+of the &ldquo;Great Tom of Lincoln.&rdquo;&nbsp; The metal used consisted
+of cannons taken from the Turks during their memorable sieges of
+Vienna.&nbsp; The cathedral is 350 feet long and 200 wide, being less than
+St. Paul&rsquo;s in London, which is 510 feet long and 282
+wide.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote48"></a><a href="#citation48"
+class="footnote">[48]</a>&nbsp; The <i>Storthing</i> is the name given to
+the Norwegian parliament, which assembles once every three years at
+Christiania.&nbsp; The time and place of meeting are fixed by law, and the
+king has no power to prevent or postpone its assembly.&nbsp; It consists of
+about a hundred members, who divide themselves into two houses.&nbsp; The
+members must not be under thirty years of age, and must have lived for ten
+years in Norway.&nbsp; The electors are required to be twenty-five years of
+age, and to be either burgesses of a town, or to possess property of the
+annual value of 30<i>l.</i>&nbsp; The members must possess the same
+qualification.&nbsp; The members of the Storthing are usually plain-spoken,
+sensible men, who have no desire to shine as orators, but who despatch with
+great native sagacity the business brought before them.&nbsp; This
+Storthing is the most independent legislative assembly in Europe; for not
+only has the king no power to prevent its meeting at the appointed time,
+but should he refuse to assent to any laws that are passed, these laws come
+into force without his assent, provided they are passed by three successive
+parliaments.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote49"></a><a href="#citation49"
+class="footnote">[49]</a>&nbsp; The present king of Sweden and Norway is
+Oscar, one of the few fortunate scions of those lowly families that were
+raised to royal power and dignity by Napoleon.&nbsp; His father,
+Bernadotte, was the son of an advocate, and entered the French army as a
+common soldier; in that service he rose to the rank of marshal, and then
+became crown-prince, and ultimately king of Sweden.&nbsp; He died in
+1844.&nbsp; The mother of Oscar was D&eacute;sir&eacute;e Clary, a sister
+of Julie Clary, wife of Joseph Bonaparte, the elder brother of
+Napoleon.&nbsp; This lady was asked in marriage by Napoleon himself, but
+her father refused his assent; and instead of becoming an unfortunate
+empress of France, she became a fortunate queen of Sweden and Norway.&nbsp;
+Oscar was born at Paris in 1799, and received his education chiefly in
+Hanover.&nbsp; He accompanied his father to Sweden in 1810, and ascended
+the throne on his father&rsquo;s death in 1844.&nbsp; In 1824 he married
+Josephine Beauharnois, daughter of Prince Eugene, and granddaughter of the
+brilliant and fascinating Josephine, the first and best wife of
+Napoleon.&nbsp; Oscar is much beloved by his subjects; his administration
+is mild, just, and equable; and his personal abilities and acquirements are
+far beyond the average of crowned heads.&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote50"></a><a href="#citation50"
+class="footnote">[50]</a>&nbsp; Bergen is a town of about twenty-five
+thousand inhabitants, situated near the Kons Fiord, on the west coast of
+Norway, and distant about 350 miles from Christiania.&nbsp; It is the seat
+of a bishopric, and a place of very considerable trade, its exports being
+chiefly fish.&nbsp; It has given its name to a county and a township in the
+state of New Jersey.&nbsp; There are three other Bergens,&mdash;one in the
+island of Rugen, one in the Netherlands, and another in the electorate of
+Hesse.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote51"></a><a href="#citation51"
+class="footnote">[51]</a>&nbsp; <i>Kulle</i> is the Swedish for hill.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote52"></a><a href="#citation52"
+class="footnote">[52]</a>&nbsp; Delekarlien is a Swedish province, situated
+ninety or one hundred miles north of Stockholm.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote53"></a><a href="#citation53"
+class="footnote">[53]</a>&nbsp; The family of Sturre was one of the most
+distinguished in Sweden.&nbsp; Sten Sturre introduced printing into Sweden,
+founded the University of Upsala, and induced many learned men to come
+over.&nbsp; He was mortally wounded in a battle against the Danes, and died
+in 1520.</p>
+<p>His successors as governors, Suante, Nilson Sturre, and his son, Sten
+Sturre the younger, still live in the memory of the Swedish nation, and are
+honoured for their patriotism and valour.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote54"></a><a href="#citation54"
+class="footnote">[54]</a>&nbsp; The University of Upsala is the most
+celebrated in the north.&nbsp; It owes its origin to Sten Sturre, the
+regent of the kingdom, by whom it was founded in 1476, on the same plan as
+the University of Paris.&nbsp; Through the influence of the Jesuits, who
+wished to establish a new academy in Stockholm, it was dissolved in 1583,
+but re-established in 1598.&nbsp; Gustavus Vasa, who was educated at
+Upsala, gave it many privileges, and much encouragement; and Gustavus
+Adolphus reconstituted it, and give it very liberal endowments.&nbsp; There
+are twenty-four professors, and the number of students is between four and
+five hundred.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote55"></a><a href="#citation55"
+class="footnote">[55]</a>&nbsp; See novel of <i>Ivar</i>, <i>the Skjuts
+Boy</i>, by Miss Emilie Carlen.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote56"></a><a href="#citation56"
+class="footnote">[56]</a>&nbsp; At Calmar was concluded, in 1397, the
+famous treaty which bears its name, by which Denmark, Sweden, and Norway
+were united under one crown, that crown placed nominally on the head of
+Eric Duke of Pomerania, but virtually on that of his aunt Margaret, who has
+received the name of &ldquo;the Semiramis of the North.&rdquo; &mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote57"></a><a href="#citation57"
+class="footnote">[57]</a>&nbsp; There is now a railway direct from Hamburgh
+to Berlin.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
+<p><a name="footnote58"></a><a href="#citation58"
+class="footnote">[58]</a>&nbsp; A florin is about two shillings
+sterling.&mdash;<i>Tr.</i></p>
+<p><a name="footnote59"></a><a href="#citation59"
+class="footnote">[59]</a>&nbsp; Herr T. Scheffer of M&ouml;dling, near
+Vienna, gives the following characteristic of this new dipteral animal,
+which belongs to the family muscid&aelig;, and resembles the species
+borborus:</p>
+<p><i>Antenn&aelig;</i> deflex&aelig;, breves, triarticulat&aelig;,
+articulo ultimo phoereco; seda nuda.</p>
+<p><i>Hypoctoma</i> subprominulum, fronte lata, setosa.&nbsp; <i>Oculi</i>
+rotundi, remoti.&nbsp; Abdomen quinque annulatum, dorso nudo.&nbsp;
+<i>Tarsi</i> simplices.&nbsp; <i>Al&aelig;</i> incumbentes, abdomine
+longiores, nervo primo simplici.</p>
+<p>Niger, abdomine nitido, antennis pedibusque rufopiceis.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VISIT TO ICELAND***</p>
+<pre>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Visit to Iceland, by Ida Pfeiffer
+
+
+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: Visit to Iceland
+ and the Scandinavian North
+
+
+Author: Ida Pfeiffer
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 7, 2007 [eBook #1894]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VISIT TO ICELAND***
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1853 Ingram, Cooke, and Co. edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@pglaf.org; second proof by Mike Ruffell.
+
+
+
+
+
+VISIT TO ICELAND
+AND THE
+SCANDINAVIAN NORTH
+
+
+ TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN OF
+ MADAME IDA PFEIFFER.
+
+ WITH
+ Numerous Explanatory Notes
+ AND
+ EIGHT TINTED ENGRAVINGS.
+
+ TO WHICH ARE ADDED
+ AN ESSAY ON ICELANDIC POETRY,
+ FROM THE FRENCH OF M. BERGMANN;
+ A TRANSLATION OF THE ICELANDIC POEM THE VOLUSPA;
+ AND A BRIEF SKETCH OF ICELANDIC HISTORY.
+
+ Second Edition.
+
+ LONDON:
+ INGRAM, COOKE, AND CO.
+ 1853
+
+ [Picture: Pictorial title page]
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION
+
+
+The success which attended the publication in this Series of Illustrated
+Works of _A Woman's Journey round the World_, has induced the publication
+of the present volume on a country so little known as Iceland, and about
+which so little recent information exists.
+
+The translation has been carefully made, expressly for this Series, from
+the original work published at Vienna; and the Editor has added a great
+many notes, wherever they seemed necessary to elucidate the text.
+
+In addition to the matter which appeared in the original work, the
+present volume contains a translation of a valuable Essay on Icelandic
+poetry, by M. Bergmann; a translation of an Icelandic poem, the
+'Voluspa;' a brief sketch of Icelandic History; and a translation of
+Schiller's ballad, 'The Diver,' which is prominently alluded to by Madame
+Pfeiffer in her description of the Geysers. {1}
+
+The Illustrations have been printed in tints, so as to make the work
+uniform with the _Journey round the World_.
+
+London, August 1, 1852.
+
+
+
+
+AUTHOR'S PREFACE
+
+
+"Another journey--a journey, moreover, in regions which every one would
+rather avoid than seek. This woman only undertakes these journeys to
+attract attention."
+
+"The first journey, for a woman ALONE, was certainly rather a bold
+proceeding. Yet in that instance she might still have been excused.
+Religious motives may perhaps have actuated her; and when this is the
+case, people often go through incredible things. At present, however, we
+can see no just reason which could excuse an undertaking of this
+description."
+
+Thus, and perhaps more harshly still, will the majority judge me. And
+yet they will do me a grievous wrong. I am surely simple and harmless
+enough, and should have fancied any thing in the world rather than that
+it would ever be my fate to draw upon myself in any degree the notice of
+the public. I will merely indicate, as briefly as may be, my character
+and circumstances, and then I have no doubt my conduct will lose its
+appearance of eccentricity, and seem perfectly natural.
+
+When I was but a little child, I had already a strong desire to see the
+world. Whenever I met a travelling-carriage, I would stop involuntarily,
+and gaze after it until it had disappeared; I used even to envy the
+postilion, for I thought he also must have accomplished the whole long
+journey.
+
+As I grew to the age of from ten to twelve years, nothing gave me so much
+pleasure as the perusal of voyages and travels. I ceased, indeed, to
+envy the postilions, but envied the more every navigator and naturalist.
+
+Frequently my eyes would fill with tears when, having ascended a
+mountain, I saw others towering before me, and could not gain the summit.
+
+I made several journeys with my parents, and, after my marriage, with my
+husband; and only settled down when it became necessary that my two boys
+should visit particular schools. My husband's affairs demanded his
+entire attention, partly in Lemberg, partly in Vienna. He therefore
+confided the education and culture of the two boys entirely to my care;
+for he knew my firmness and perseverance in all I undertook, and doubted
+not that I would be both father and mother to his children.
+
+When my sons' education had been completed, and I was living in peaceful
+retirement, the dreams and aspirations of my youth gradually awoke once
+more. I thought of strange manners and customs, of distant regions,
+where a new sky would be above me, and new ground beneath my feet. I
+pictured to myself the supreme happiness of treading the land once
+hallowed by the presence of our Saviour, and at length made up my mind to
+travel thither.
+
+As dangers and difficulties rose before my mind, I endeavoured to wean
+myself from the idea I had formed--but in vain. For privation I cared
+but little; my health was good and my frame hardy: I did not fear death.
+And moreover, as I was born in the last century, I could travel ALONE.
+Thus every objection was overcome; every thing had been duly weighed and
+considered. I commenced my journey to Palestine with a feeling of
+perfect rapture; and behold, I returned in safety. I now feel persuaded
+that I am neither tempting Providence, nor justly incurring the
+imputation of wishing to be talked about, in following the bent of my
+inclinations, and looking still further about me in the world I chose
+Iceland for my destination, because I hoped there to find Nature in a
+garb such as she wears nowhere else. I feel so completely happy, so
+brought into communion with my Maker, when I contemplate sublime natural
+phenomena, that in my eyes no degree of toil or difficulty is too great a
+price at which to purchase such perfect enjoyment.
+
+And should death overtake me sooner or later during my wanderings, I
+shall await his approach in all resignation, and be deeply grateful to
+the Almighty for the hours of holy beauty in which I have lived and gazed
+upon His wonders.
+
+And now, dear reader, I would beg thee not to be angry with me for
+speaking so much of myself; it is only because this love of travelling
+does not, according to established notions, seem proper for one of my
+sex, that I have allowed my feelings to speak in my defence.
+
+Judge me, therefore, not too harshly; but rather grant me the enjoyment
+of a pleasure which hurts no one, while it makes me happy.
+
+ THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+In the year 1845 I undertook another journey; {2} a journey, moreover, to
+the far North. Iceland was one of those regions towards which, from the
+earliest period of my consciousness, I had felt myself impelled. In this
+country, stamped as it is by Nature with features so peculiar, as
+probably to have no counterpart on the face of the globe, I hoped to see
+things which should fill me with new and inexpressible astonishment. How
+deeply grateful do I feel to Thee, O Thou that hast vouchsafed to me to
+behold the fulfilment of these my cherished dreams!
+
+The parting from all my dear ones had this time far less bitterness; I
+had found by experience, that a woman of an energetic mind can find her
+way through the world as well as a man, and that good people are to be
+met with every where. To this was added the reflection, that the
+hardships of my present voyage would be of short duration, and that five
+or six months might see me restored to my family.
+
+I left Vienna at five o'clock on the morning of the tenth of April. As
+the Danube had lately caused some devastations, on which occasion the
+railroad had not entirely escaped, we rode for the first four miles, as
+far as Florisdorf, in an omnibus--not the most agreeable mode of
+travelling. Our omnibuses are so small and narrow, that one would
+suppose they were built for the exclusive accommodation of consumptive
+subjects, and not for healthy, and in some cases portly individuals,
+whose bulk is further increased by a goodly assemblage of cloaks, furs,
+and overcoats.
+
+At the barriers a new difficulty arose. We delivered up our
+pass-warrants (_passirscheine_) in turn, with the exception of one young
+man, who was quite astounded at the demand. He had provided nothing but
+his passport and testimonials, being totally unaware that a pass-warrant
+is more indispensable than all the rest. In vain did he hasten into the
+bureau to expostulate with the officials,--we were forced to continue our
+journey without him.
+
+We were informed that he was a student, who, at the conclusion of term,
+was about to make holiday for a few weeks at his parents' house near
+Prague. Alas, poor youth! he had studied so much, and yet knew so
+little. He had not even an idea of the overwhelming importance of the
+document in question. For this trifling omission he forfeited the fare
+to Prague, which had been paid in advance.
+
+But to proceed with my journey.
+
+At Florisdorf a joyful surprise awaited me. I met my brother and my son,
+who had, it appears, preceded me. We entered the train to proceed in
+company to Stockerau, a place between twelve and thirteen miles off; but
+were obliged to alight halfway, and walk a short distance. The
+Embankment had given way. Luckily the weather was favourable, inasmuch
+as we had only a violent storm of wind. Had it rained, we should have
+been wetted to the skin, besides being compelled to wade ankle-deep in
+mud. We were next obliged to remain in the open air, awaiting the
+arrival of the train from Stockerau, which unloaded its freight, and
+received us in exchange.
+
+At Stockerau I once more took leave of my companions, and was soon
+securely packed in the post-carriage for transmission.
+
+In travelling this short distance, I had thus entered four carriages; a
+thing sufficiently disagreeable to an unencumbered person, but infinitely
+more so to one who has luggage to watch over. The only advantage I could
+discover in all this was, that we had saved half an hour in coming these
+seventeen miles. For this, instead of 9 fl. 26 kr. from Vienna to
+Prague, we paid 10 fl. 10 kr. from Stockerau to Prague, without reckoning
+expense of omnibus and railway. It was certainly a dearly-bought
+half-hour. {3}
+
+The little town of Znaim, with its neighbouring convent, is situated on a
+large plain, extending from Vienna to Budwitz, seventeen miles beyond
+Znaim; the monotony of the view is only broken here and there by low
+hills.
+
+Near Schelletau the scenery begins to improve. On the left the view is
+bounded by a range of high hills, with a ruined castle, suggestive of
+tragical tales of centuries gone by. Fir and pine forests skirt the
+road, and lie scattered in picturesque groups over hill and dale.
+
+April 11th.
+
+Yesterday the weather had already begun to be ungracious to us. At Znaim
+we found the valleys still partly covered with snow, and the fog was at
+times so thick, that we could not see a hundred paces in advance; but
+to-day it was incomparably worse. The mist resolved itself into a mild
+rain, which, however, lost so much of its mildness as we passed from
+station to station, that every thing around us was soon under water. But
+not only did we ride through water, we were obliged to sit in it also.
+The roof of our carriage threatened to become a perfect sieve, and the
+rain poured steadily in. Had there been room for such a proceeding, we
+should all have unfurled our umbrellas.
+
+On occasions like these, I always silently admire the patience of my
+worthy countrymen, who take every thing so good-humouredly. Were I a
+man, I should pursue a different plan, and should certainly not fail to
+complain of such carelessness. But as a woman, I must hold my peace;
+people would only rail at my sex, and call it ill-humoured. Besides, I
+thanked my guardian-angel for these discomforts, looking upon them as a
+preparation for what was to befall me in the far North.
+
+Passing several small towns and villages, we at length entered the
+Bohemian territory, close behind Iglau. The first town which we saw was
+Czaslau, with its large open square, and a few neat houses; the latter
+provided with so-called arbours (or _verandahs_), which enable one to
+pass round the square dry-footed, even in the most rainy weather.
+
+Journeying onwards, we noticed the fine cathedral and town of Kuttenberg,
+once famous for its gold and silver mines. {4} Next comes the great
+tobacco-manufactory of Sedlitz, near which we first see the Elbe, but
+only for a short time, as it soon takes another direction. Passing the
+small town of Collin, we are whirled close by the battle-field where, in
+the year 1757, the great King Frederick paid his score to the Austrians.
+An obelisk, erected a few years since to the memory of General Daun,
+occupies a small eminence on the right. On the left is the plain of
+Klephorcz, where the Austrian army was drawn up. {5}
+
+At eleven o'clock on the same night we reached
+
+
+
+PRAGUE.
+
+
+As it was my intention to pursue my journey after two days, my first walk
+on the following morning was to the police-office, to procure a passport
+and the all-important pass-warrant; my next to the custom-house, to take
+possession of a small chest, which I had delivered up five days before my
+departure, and which, as the expeditor affirmed, I should find ready for
+me on my arrival at Prague. {6} Ah, Mr. Expeditor! my chest was not
+there. After Saturday comes Sunday; but on Sunday the custom-house is
+closed. So here was a day lost, a day in which I might have gone to
+Dresden, and even visited the opera.
+
+On Monday morning I once more hastened to the office in anxious
+expectation; the box was not yet there. An array of loaded wagons had,
+however, arrived, and in one of these it might be. Ah, how I longed to
+see my darling little box, in order that I might--_not_ press it to my
+heart, but unpack it in presence of the excise officer!
+
+I took merely a cursory glance at Prague, as I had thoroughly examined
+every thing there some years before. The beautiful "Graben" and
+Horse-market once more excited my admiration. It was with a peculiar
+feeling that I trod the old bridge, from which St. John of Nepomuk was
+cast into the Moldau for refusing to publish the confession of King
+Wenceslaus' consort. {7} On the opposite bank I mounted the Hradschin,
+and paid a visit to the cathedral, in which a large sarcophagus,
+surrounded and borne by angels, and surmounted by a canopy of crimson
+damask, is dedicated to the memory of the saint. The monument is of
+silver, and the worth of the metal alone is estimated at 80,000 florins.
+The church itself is not spacious, but is built in the noble Gothic
+style; the lesser altars, however, with their innumerable gilded wooden
+figures, look by contrast extremely puny. In the chapel are many
+sarcophagi, on which repose bishops and knights hewn in stone, but so
+much damaged, that many are without hands and feet, while some lack
+heads. To the right, at the entrance of the church, is the celebrated
+chapel of St. Wenceslaus, with its walls ornamented with frescoes, of
+which the colours and designs are now almost obliterated. It is further
+enriched with costly stones.
+
+Not far from the cathedral is situated the palace of Count Czernin, a
+building particularly favoured with windows, of which it has one for
+every day in the year. I was there in an ordinary year, and saw 365; how
+they manage in leap-year I do not know. The view from the belvedere of
+this palace well repays the observer. It takes in the old and new town,
+the noble river with its two bridges (the ancient venerable-looking stone
+structure, and the graceful suspension-bridge, six hundred paces long),
+and the hills round about, clothed with gardens, among which appear neat
+country-houses.
+
+The streets of the "Kleinseite" are not particularly attractive, being
+mostly tortuous, steep, and narrow. They contain, however, several
+remarkable palaces, among which that of Wallenstein Duke of Friedland
+stands pre-eminent. {8}
+
+After visiting St. Nicholas' Church, remarkable for the height of its
+spire and its beautifully arched cupola, I betook myself to Wimmer's
+gardens, and thence to the "Bastei," a place of public resort with the
+citizens of Prague.
+
+I could now observe the devastation caused by the rising of the water
+shortly before my arrival. The Moldau had overstepped its banks in so
+turbulent a manner, as to carry along with it several small houses, and
+even a little village not far from Prague, besides damaging all the
+dwellings upon its banks. The water had indeed already fallen, but the
+walls of the houses were soaked through and through; the doors had been
+carried away, and from the broken windows no faces looked out upon the
+passers-by. The water had risen two feet more than in 1784, in which
+year the Moldau had also attained an unusual height.
+
+From the same tower of observation, I looked down upon the great open
+space bought a few years ago, and intended to be occupied by the termini
+of the Vienna and Dresden railroads. Although several houses were only
+just being pulled down, and the foundations of but few buildings were
+laid, I was assured that within six months every thing would be
+completed.
+
+I have still to mention a circumstance which struck me during my morning
+peregrinations, namely, the curious method in which milk, vegetables, and
+other provisions are here brought to town. I could have fancied myself
+transported to Lapland or Greenland, on meeting every where carts to
+which two, three, or four dogs were harnessed. One pair of dogs will
+drag three hundredweight on level ground; but when they encounter a hill,
+the driver must lend a helping hand. These dogs are, besides, careful
+guardians; and I would not advise any one to approach a car of this kind,
+as it stands before the inn-door, while the proprietor is quenching his
+thirst within, on the money he has just earned.
+
+At five o'clock on the morning of the 15th of April I left Prague, and
+rode for fourteen miles in the mail-carriage, as far as Obristwy on the
+Elbe, at which place I embarked for Dresden, on board the steamer
+Bohemia, of fifty-horse power, a miserable old craft, apparently a
+stranger to beauty and comfort from her youth up. The price charged for
+this short passage of eight or nine hours is enormously dear. The
+travellers will, however, soon have their revenge on the extortionate
+proprietors; a railroad is constructing, by means of which this distance
+will be traversed in a much shorter time, and at a great saving of
+expense.
+
+But at any rate the journey by water is the more agreeable; the way lies
+through very picturesque scenery, and at length through "Saxon
+Switzerland" itself. The commencement of the journey is, however, far
+from pleasing. On the right are naked hills, and on the left large
+plains, over which, last spring, the swollen stream rolled, partly
+covering the trees and the roofs of the cottages. Here I could for the
+first time see the whole extent of the calamity. Many houses had been
+completely torn down, and the crops, and even the loose alluvial earth
+swept away; as we glided by each dreary scene of devastation, another yet
+more dismal would appear in its place.
+
+This continued till we reached Melnick, where the trees become higher,
+and groups of houses peer forth from among the innumerable vineyards.
+Opposite this little town the Moldau falls into the Elbe. On the left,
+in the far distance, the traveller can descry St. George's Mount, from
+which, as the story goes, Czech took possession of all Bohemia.
+
+Below the little town of Raudnitz the hills gave place to mountains, and
+as many enthusiasts can only find those regions romantic where the
+mountains are crowned with half-ruined castles and strongholds, good old
+Time has taken care to plant there two fine ruins, Hafenberg and Skalt,
+for the delectation of such sentimental observers.
+
+Near Leitmeritz, a small town with a handsome castle, and a church and
+convent, the Eger flows into the Elbe, and a high-arched wooden bridge
+connects the two banks. Here our poor sailors had difficult work to
+lower the mast and the funnel.
+
+The rather pretty village of Gross-Czernoseck is remarkable for its
+gigantic cellars, hewn out of the rock. A post-carriage could easily
+turn round in one of these. The vats are of course proportioned to the
+cellars, particularly the barrels called the "twelve apostles," each of
+which holds between three and four thousand gallons. It would be no more
+than fair to stop here awhile, to give every hero of the bottle an
+opportunity to enjoy a sight of these palace-cellars, and to offer a
+libation to the twelve apostles; but the steamer passed on, and we were
+obliged to make the most of the descriptions furnished by those who were
+more at home in these parts, and had no doubt frequently emerged in an
+inspired state from the depths of the cellars in question.
+
+The view now becomes more and more charming: the mountains appear to draw
+closer together, and shut in the bed of the stream; romantic groups of
+rocks, with summits crowned by rains yet more romantic, tower between.
+The ancient but well-preserved castle of Schreckenstein, built on a rock
+rising boldly out of the Elbe, is particularly striking; the approaches
+to it are by serpentine walks hewn out of the rock.
+
+Near the small town of Aussig we find the most considerable coal-mines in
+Bohemia. In their neighbourhood is situated the little mountain estate
+Paschkal, which produces a kind of wine said to resemble champagne.
+
+The mountains now become higher and higher, but above them all towers the
+gigantic Jungfernsprung (Maiden's Leap). The beauty of this region is
+only surpassed by the situation of the town and castle of Tetschen. The
+castle stands on a rock, between twenty and thirty feet high, which seems
+to rise out of the Elbe; it is surrounded by hot-houses and charming
+gardens, shelving downwards as far as the town, which lies in a blooming
+valley, near a little harbour. The valley itself, encompassed by a chain
+of lofty mountains, seems quite shut out from the rest of the world.
+
+The left bank of the river is here so crowded with masses and walls of
+rock, that there is only room at intervals for an isolated farm or hut.
+Suddenly the tops of masts appear between the high rocks, a phenomenon
+which is soon explained; a large gap in one of the rocky walls forms a
+beautiful basin.
+
+And now we come to Schandau, a place consisting only of a few houses; it
+is a frontier town of the Saxon dominions. Custom-house officers, a race
+of beings ever associated with frontier towns, here boarded our vessel,
+and rummaged every thing. My daguerreotype apparatus, which I had locked
+up in a small box, was looked upon with an eye of suspicion; but upon my
+assertion that it was exclusively intended for my own use, I and my
+apparatus were graciously dismissed.
+
+In our onward journey we frequently observed rocks of peculiar shapes,
+which have appropriate names, such as the "Zirkelstein," "Lilienstein,"
+&c. The Konigstein is a collection of jagged masses of rock, on which is
+built the fortress of the same name, used at present as a prison for
+great criminals. At the foot of the rocks lies the little town of
+Konigstein. Not far off, on the right bank, a huge rock, resting on
+others, bears a striking resemblance to a human head. The more distant
+groups of rocks are called those of "Rathen," but are considered as
+belonging to Saxon Switzerland. The "Basteien" (Bastions) of this
+Switzerland, close by which we now pass, are most wonderful
+superpositions of lofty and fantastically shaped rocks. Unfortunately,
+the steamer whirled us so rapidly on our way, that whilst we contemplated
+one bank, the beauteous scenes on the opposite side had already glided
+from our view. In much too short a time we had passed the town of Pirna,
+situate at the commencement of this range of mountains. The very ancient
+gate of this town towers far above all the other buildings.
+
+Lastly we see the great castle Sonnenstein, built on a rock, and now used
+as an asylum for lunatics.
+
+All the beautiful and picturesque portion of our passage is now past, and
+the royal villa of Pillnitz, with its many Chinese gables, looks
+insignificant enough, after the grand scenes of nature. A chain of
+hills, covered with the country-houses of citizens, adjoins it; and on
+the right extends a large plain, at the far end of which we can dimly
+descry the Saxon metropolis. But what is that in the distance? We have
+hardly time to arrange our luggage, when the anchor is let go near the
+fine old Dresden Bridge.
+
+This bridge had not escaped unscathed by the furious river. One of the
+centre arches had given way, and the cross and watchbox which surmounted
+it were precipitated into the flood. At first, carriages still passed
+over the bridge; it was not until some time afterwards that the full
+extent of the damage was ascertained, and the passage of carriages over
+the bridge discontinued for many months.
+
+As I had seen the town of Dresden several years before, and the only
+building new to me was the splendid theatre, I took advantage of the few
+evening hours of my stay to visit this structure.
+
+Standing in the midst of the beautiful Cathedral-square, its noble
+rotunda-like form at once rivets the attention. The inner theatre is
+surrounded by a superb broad and lofty corridor, with fine bow-windows
+and straight broad staircases, leading in different directions towards
+the galleries. The interior of the theatre is not so spacious as,
+judging from the exterior, one would imagine it to be, but the
+architecture and decorations are truly gorgeous and striking. The boxes
+are all open, being separated from each other merely by a low partition;
+the walls and chairs are covered with heavy silken draperies, and the
+seats of the third and fourth galleries with a mixture of silk and
+cotton. One single circumstance was disagreeable to me in an acoustic
+point of view--I could hear the slightest whisper of the prompter as
+distinctly as though some one had been behind me reading the play. The
+curtain had scarcely fallen before the whole house was empty, and yet
+there was no crowding to get out. This first drew my attention to the
+numerous and excellently contrived doors.
+
+ April 16th.
+
+The Dresden omnibuses may be cited as models of comfort; one is certain
+of plenty of room, and there is no occasion to dread either the corpulent
+persons or the furs and cloaks of fellow-passengers. A bell-pull is
+fixed in the interior of the carriage, so that each individual can give
+the coachman a signal when he or she wishes to alight. These omnibuses
+call at the principal inns, and wait for a moment; but the traveller who
+is not ready in advance is left behind.
+
+At half-past five in the morning it called at our hotel. I was ready and
+waiting, and drove off comfortably to the railway. The distance from
+Dresden to Leipzig is reckoned at fifty-six miles, and the journey
+occupied three hours.
+
+The first fourteen miles are very agreeable; gardens, fields, and
+meadows, pine-forests in the plain and on the hills, and between these,
+villages, farms, country-houses, and solitary chapels, combine to form a
+very pretty landscape. But the scene soon changes, and the town of
+Meissen (famous for its porcelain manufactory), on the right hand, seems
+to shut out from our view all that is picturesque and beautiful.
+
+From here to Leipzig we travel through a wearisome monotonous plain,
+enlivened at long intervals by villages and scattered farms. There is
+nothing to see but a great tunnel, and the river Pleisse--the latter, or
+rather the Elster, is rendered famous by the death of Prince Poniatowski.
+{9}
+
+The town of Leipzig, celebrated far and wide for its fairs, and more for
+its immense publishing trade, presents an appearance of noise and bustle
+proportionate to its commercial importance. I found streets, squares,
+and inns alike crowded. {10}
+
+Perhaps there does not exist a town with its houses, and consequently its
+streets, so disfigured with announcements, in all sizes and shapes,
+covering its walls, and sometimes projecting several feet, as Leipzig.
+
+Among the public buildings, those which pleased me most were the
+Augusteum and the Burgerschule. The Bucherhalle (book-hall) I should
+suppose indebted for its celebrity rather to its literary contents than
+to its architectural beauty or its exterior. The hall itself is indeed
+large, and occupies the whole length of the building, while the lower
+story consists of several rooms. The hall, the chambers, and the
+exterior are all plain, and without particular decoration. The Tuchhalle
+(cloth-hall) is simply a large house, with spacious chambers, containing
+supplies of cloth. The Theatre stands on a very large square, and does
+not present a very splendid appearance, whether viewed from within or
+from without. The plan of having stalls in front of the boxes in the
+second and third galleries was a novelty to me. The orchestra I could
+only hear, but could not discover its whereabouts; most probably it was
+posted behind the scenes. On inquiry, I was told that this was only done
+on extraordinary occasions, when the seats in the orchestra were
+converted into stalls, as was the case on the night of my visit. The
+play given was "the original Tartuffe," a popular piece by Gutzkow. It
+was capitally performed.
+
+In the Leipzig theatre I had a second opportunity of observing, that as
+regards the love of eating our good Saxons are not a whit behind the
+much-censured Viennese. In the Dresden theatre I had admired a couple of
+ladies who sat next me. They came provided with a neat bag, containing a
+very sufficient supply of confectionery, to which they perseveringly
+applied themselves between the acts. But at Leipzig I found a
+delicate-looking mother and her son, a lad of fifteen or sixteen years,
+regaling themselves with more solid provisions--white bread and small
+sausages. I could not believe my eyes, and had made up my mind that the
+sausages were artificially formed out of some kind of confectionery--but
+alas! my nose came forward but too soon, as a potent witness, to
+corroborate what I was so unwilling to believe!
+
+Neither did these two episodes take place in the loftiest regions of
+Thalia's temple, but in the stalls of the second tier.
+
+Beautiful alleys are planted round Leipzig. I took a walk into the
+Rosenthal (Valley of Roses), which also consists of splendid avenues and
+lawns. A pretty coffee-house, with a very handsome alcove, built in a
+semicircular form, invites the weary traveller to rest and refreshment,
+while a band of agreeable music diffuses mirth and good humour around.
+
+The rest of the scenery around Leipzig presents the appearance of a vast
+and monotonous plain.
+
+ April 17th.
+
+I had intended to continue my journey to Hamburgh via Berlin, but the
+weather was so cold and stormy, and the rain poured down so heavily, that
+I preferred the shorter way, and proceeded by rail to Magdeburg. Flying
+through the dismal plain past Halle, Kothen, and other towns, of which I
+could only discern groups of houses, we hurriedly recognised the Saale
+and the Elbe; and towards 10 o'clock in the morning arrived at Magdeburg,
+having travelled seventy miles in three hours and a quarter.
+
+As the steamer for Hamburgh was not to start until 3 o'clock, I had ample
+time to look at the town.
+
+Magdeburg is a mixed pattern of houses of ancient, mediaeval, and modern
+dates. Particularly remarkable in this respect is the principal street,
+the "Broadway," which runs through the whole of the town. Here we can
+see houses dating their origin from the most ancient times; houses that
+have stood proof against sieges and sackings; houses of all colours and
+forms; some sporting peaked gables, on which stone figures may still be
+seen; others covered from roof to basement with arabesques; and in one
+instance I could even detect the remains of frescoes. In the very midst
+of these relics of antiquity would appear a house built in the newest
+style. I do not remember ever having seen a street which produced so
+remarkable an impression on me. The finest building is unquestionably
+the venerable cathedral. In Italy I had already seen numbers of the most
+beautiful churches; yet I remained standing in mute admiration before
+this masterpiece of Gothic architecture.
+
+The monument with the twelve Apostles in this church is a worthy memorial
+of the celebrated sculptor Vischer. In order to view it, it is necessary
+to obtain the special permission of the commandant.
+
+The cathedral square is large, symmetrical, and decorated with two alleys
+of trees; it is also used as a drilling-ground for the soldiers' minor
+manoeuvres. I was particularly struck with the number of military men to
+be seen here. Go where I would, I was sure to meet soldiers and
+officers, frequently in large companies; in time of war it could scarcely
+have been worse. This was an unmistakeable token that I was on Prussian
+territory.
+
+The open canals, which come from all the houses, and meander through the
+streets, are a great disfigurement to the town.
+
+Half-past three o'clock came only too quickly, and I betook myself on
+board the steamer _Magdeburg_, of sixty-horse power, to proceed to
+Hamburgh. Of the passage itself I can say nothing, except that a journey
+on a river through execrable scenery is one of the most miserable things
+that can well be imagined. When, in addition to this, the weather is
+bad, the ship dirty, and one is obliged to pass a night on board, the
+discomfort is increased. It was my lot to endure all this: the weather
+was bad, the ship was dirty, the distance more than 100 miles, so that we
+had the pleasant prospect of a delightful night on board the ship. There
+were, moreover, so many passengers, that we were forced to sit crowded
+together; so there we sat with exemplary patience, stared at each other,
+and sighed bitterly. Order was entirely out of the question; no one had
+time to think of such a thing. Smoking and card-playing were
+perseveringly carried on all day and all night; it can easily be imagined
+that things did not go so quietly as at an English whist-party. The
+incessant rain rendered it impossible to leave the cabin even for a short
+time. The only consolation I had was, that I made the acquaintance of
+the amiable composer Lorzing, a circumstance which delighted me the more,
+as I had always been an admirer of his beautiful original music.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Morning dawned at length, and in a short time afterwards we reached the
+great commercial city, which, half destroyed by the dreadful
+conflagration of 1842, had risen grander and more majestic from its
+ashes. {11} I took up my quarters with a cousin, who is married to the
+Wurtemburg consul, the merchant Schmidt, in whose house I spent a most
+agreeable and happy week. My cousin-in-law was polite enough to escort
+me every where himself, and to shew me the lions of Hamburgh.
+
+First of all we visited the Exchange between the hours of one and two,
+when it is at the fullest, and therefore best calculated to impress a
+stranger with an idea of the extent and importance of the business
+transacted there. The building contains a hall of great size, with
+arcades and galleries, besides many large rooms, which are partly used
+for consultations, partly for the sale of refreshments. The most
+interesting thing of all is, however, to sit in the gallery, and looking
+downwards, to observe the continually increasing crowd passing and
+repassing each other in the immense hall and through the galleries and
+chambers, and to listen to the hubbub and noise of the thousands of eager
+voices talking at once. At half-past one o'clock the hall is at its
+fullest, and the noise becomes absolutely deafening; for now they are
+marking up the rates of exchange, by which the merchants regulate their
+monetary transactions.
+
+Leaving the Exchange, we bent our steps towards the great harbour, and
+entering a small boat, cruised in and about it in all directions. I had
+resolved to count only the three-masted ships; but soon gave it up, for
+their number seemed overwhelming, even without reckoning the splendid
+steamers, brigs, sloops, and craft. In short, I could only gaze and
+wonder, for at least 900 ships lay before me.
+
+Let any one fancy an excursion amidst 900 ships, great and small, which
+lined both shores of the Elbe in tiers of three deep or more; the passing
+to and fro of countless boats busily employed in loading or unloading
+these vessels; these things, together with the shouting and singing of
+the sailors, the rattling of anchors which are being weighed, and the
+rush and swell of passing steamers, combine to constitute a picture not
+to be surpassed in any city except in that metropolis of the world,
+London. {12}
+
+The reason of this unusual activity in the harbour lay in the severity of
+the past winter. Such a winter had not been experienced for seventy
+years: the Elbe and the Baltic lay for months in icy chains, and not a
+ship could traverse the frozen river, not an anchor could be weighed or
+lowered. It was only a short time before my arrival that the passage had
+once more become free.
+
+In the neighbourhood of the harbour are situated the greater number of
+the so-called "yards." I had read concerning them that, viewed from the
+exterior, they look like common houses; but that they constitute separate
+communities, and contain alleys and streets, serving as the domicile of
+innumerable families. I visited several of these places, and can assure
+the reader that I saw nothing extraordinary in them. Houses with two
+large wings, forming an alley of from eighty to a hundred paces in
+length, are to be met with in every large town; and that a number of
+families should inhabit such a house is not remarkable, considering that
+they are all poor, and that each only possesses a single small apartment.
+
+The favourite walk in the town is the "Jungfernstieg" (Maiden's Walk), a
+broad alley, extending round a spacious and beautiful basin of the
+Alster. On one side are splendid hotels, with which Hamburgh is richly
+provided; on the other, a number of private residences of equal
+pretensions. Other walks are, the "Wall," surrounding the town, and the
+"Botanical Garden," which resembles a fine park. The noblest building,
+distinguished alike as regards luxury, skill, tastefulness of design, and
+stability, is the Bazaar. It is truly a gigantic undertaking, and the
+more to be admired from the fact that it is not built upon shares, but at
+the expense of a single individual, Herr Carl Sillem; the architect's
+name is Overdick. The building itself is constructed entirely of stone,
+and the walls of the great room and of the hall are inlaid with marble.
+A lofty cupola and an immense glazed dome cover both the great room and
+the hall; the upper staircases are ornamented with beautiful statues.
+When in the evening it is brilliantly lighted with gas, and further
+ornamented by a tasteful display of the richest wares, the spectator can
+almost fancy himself transported to a fairy palace.
+
+Altogether the shops in Hamburgh are very luxurious. The wares lie
+displayed in the most tasteful manner behind huge windows of plate-glass,
+which are often from five to six feet broad, and eight or ten feet high;
+a single sheet frequently costs 600 florins. This plate-glass luxury is
+not confined to shops, but extends to windows generally, not only in
+Hamburgh, but also in Altona, and is also seen in the handsomest
+country-houses of the Hamburghers. Many a pane costs eight or ten
+florins; and the glass is insured in case of breakage, like houses in
+case of fire.
+
+This display of glass is equalled by the costliness of the furniture,
+which is almost universally of mahogany; a wood which is here in such
+common use, that in some of the most elegant houses the very
+stair-banisters are constructed of it. Even the pilots have often
+mahogany furniture.
+
+The handsomest and most frequented street is the "Neue Wall" (New Wall).
+I was particularly struck with the number of shops and dwellings
+underground, to which one descends by a flight of six or eight stairs; an
+iron railing is generally placed before the entrance, to prevent the
+passers-by from falling down.
+
+A very practical institution is the great slaughterhouse, in which all
+cattle are killed on certain days of the week.
+
+Concerning the town of Altona, I have only to observe that it appeared to
+me a continuation of Hamburgh; from which town, indeed, it is only
+separated by a wooden door. A very broad, handsome street, or, more
+properly speaking, an elongated square, planted with a double row of
+large trees, is the most remarkable thing about Altona, which belongs to
+the Danish Government, and is considered, after Copenhagen, the most
+important place in the kingdom.
+
+It is a delicious ride to the village of Blankenese, distant nine miles
+from Hamburgh; the road lies among beautiful country-houses and large
+park-like gardens. Blankenese itself consists of cottages, grouped in a
+picturesque manner round the Sulberg, a hill from which the traveller
+enjoys a very extended view over the great plain, in which it is the only
+elevated point. The course of the Elbe, as it winds at moderate speed
+towards the sea, is here to be traced almost to its embouchure at
+Cuxhaven.
+
+The breadth of the Elbe at Blankenese exceeds two miles.
+
+Another interesting excursion is to the "New Mills," a little village on
+the Elbe, not more than half a mile from Altona, and inhabited only by
+fishermen and pilots. Whoever wishes to form an idea of Dutch prettiness
+and cleanliness should come here.
+
+The houses are mostly one story high, neatly and tastefully built; the
+brightest of brass handles adorn the street-doors; the windows are kept
+scrupulously clean, and furnished with white curtains.
+
+In Saxony I had found many dwellings of the peasantry tidy and neat
+enough, displaying at any rate more opulence than we are accustomed to
+find with this class of people; but I had seen none to compete with this
+pretty village.
+
+Among the peasants' costumes, I only liked that worn by the women from
+the "Vierlanden." They wear short full skirts of black stuff, fine white
+chemisettes with long sleeves, and coloured bodices, lightly fastened in
+front with silk cords or silver buckles. Their straw hats have a most
+comical appearance; the brim of the hat is turned up in such a manner
+that the crown appears to have completely sunk in. Many pretty young
+girls dressed in this manner come to Hamburgh to sell flowers, and take
+up their position in front of the Exchange.
+
+The 26th of April, the day appointed for my departure, arrived only too
+speedily. To part is the unavoidable fate of the traveller; but
+sometimes we part gladly, sometimes with regret. I need not write many
+pages to describe my feelings at the parting in Hamburgh. I was leaving
+behind me my last relations, my last friends. Now I was going into the
+wide world, and among strangers.
+
+At eight o'clock in the morning I left Altona, and proceeded by railway
+to Kiel.
+
+I noticed with pleasure that on this railway even the third-class
+carriages were securely covered in, and furnished with glass windows. In
+fact, they only differed from those of the first and second class in
+being painted a different colour, and having the seats uncushioned.
+
+The whole distance of seventy miles was passed in three hours; a rapid
+journey, but agreeable merely by its rapidity, for the whole
+neighbourhood presents only widely-extended plains, turf-bogs and
+moorlands, sandy places and heaths, interspersed with a little meadow or
+arable land. From the nature of the soil, the water in the ditches and
+fields looked black as ink.
+
+Near Binneburg we notice a few stunted plantations of trees. From
+Eisholm a branch-line leads to Gluckstadt, and another from Neumunster, a
+large place with important cloth-factories, to Rendsburg.
+
+From here there is nothing to be seen but a convent, in which many Dukes
+of Holstein lie buried, and several unimportant lakes; for instance,
+those of Bernsholm, Einfeld, and Schulhof. The little river Eider would
+have passed unnoticed by me, had not some of my fellow-passengers made a
+great feature of it. In the finest countries I have found the natives
+far less enthusiastic about what was really grand and beautiful, than
+they were here in praise of what was neither the one nor the other. My
+neighbour, a very agreeable lady, was untiring in laudation of her
+beautiful native land. In her eyes the crippled wood was a splendid
+park, the waste moorland an inexhaustible field for contemplation, and
+every trifle a matter of real importance. In my heart I wished her joy
+of her fervid imagination; but unfortunately my colder nature would not
+catch the infection.
+
+Towards Kiel the plain becomes a region of low hills. Kiel itself is
+prettily situated on the Baltic, which, viewed from thence, has the
+appearance of a lake of middling size. The harbour is said to be good;
+but there were not many ships there. {13} Among these was the steamer
+destined to carry me to Copenhagen. Little did I anticipate the good
+reason I should have to remember this vessel.
+
+Thanks to the affectionate forethought of my cousin Schmidt, I found one
+of his relations, Herr Brauer, waiting for me at the railway. I was
+immediately introduced to his family, and passed the few hours of my stay
+very agreeably in their company.
+
+Evening approached, and with it the hour of embarkation. My kind friends
+the Brauers accompanied me to the steamer, and I took a grateful leave of
+them.
+
+I soon discovered the steamer _Christian VIII._, of 180-horse power, to
+be a vessel dirtier and more uncomfortable than any with which I had
+become acquainted in my maritime excursions. Scrubbing and sweeping
+seemed things unknown here. The approach to the cabin was by a flight of
+stairs so steep, that great care was requisite to avoid descending in an
+expeditious but disagreeable manner, by a fall from top to bottom. In
+the fore-cabin there was no attempt at separate quarters for ladies and
+gentlemen. In short, the arrangements seemed all to have been made with
+a view of impressing the ship vividly on the recollection of every
+traveller.
+
+At nine o'clock we left Kiel. The day and the twilight are here already
+longer than in the lands lying to the south and the west. There was
+light enough to enable me to see, looming out of the surrounding
+darkness, the fortress "Friedrichsort," which we passed at about ten
+o'clock.
+
+ April 27th.
+
+To-day I still rose with the sun; but that will soon be a difficult
+matter to accomplish; for in the north the goddess of light makes amends
+in spring and summer for her shortcomings during the winter. I went on
+deck, and looked on the broad expanse of ocean. No land was to be seen;
+but soon a coast appeared, then disappeared, and then a new and more
+distant one rose out of the sea. Towards noon we reached the island of
+Moen, which lies about forty {14} miles distant from Copenhagen. It
+forms a beautiful group of rocks, rising boldly from the sea. They are
+white as chalk, and have a smooth and shining appearance. The highest of
+these walls of rock towers 400 feet above the level of the surrounding
+ocean. Soon we saw the coast of Sweden, then the island of Malmo; and at
+last Copenhagen itself, where we landed at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+The distance from Kiel to Copenhagen is 136 sea-miles.
+
+I remained seven days at Copenhagen, and should have had ample time to
+see every thing, had the weather been more favourable. But it blew and
+rained so violently, that I was obliged to give up all thoughts of
+visiting the surrounding parks, and was fain to content myself with
+seeing a few of the nearest walks, which I accomplished with some
+difficulty.
+
+The first street in Copenhagen which I traversed on coming from the
+harbour generally produces a great impression. It is called the "Broad
+Street," and leads from the harbour through the greater part of the town.
+In addition to its breadth it is very long and regular, and the splendid
+palaces and houses on either side give it a remarkably grand appearance.
+
+It is a peculiar sight, when, in the midst of this fine quarter, we come
+suddenly upon a ruin, a giant building resting on huge pillars, but half
+completed, and partly covered with moss and lichens. It was intended for
+a splendid church, and is built entirely of marble; but the soft ground
+would not bear the immense weight. The half-finished building began to
+sink, and the completion of the undertaking became for ever impossible.
+
+Many other streets rival the "Broad Street" in size and magnificence.
+Foremost among them comes the Amalienstrasse. The most bustling, but by
+far not the finest, are the Oster and Gotherstrasse. To walk in these is
+at first quite a difficult undertaking for a stranger. On one side of
+the pavement, which is raised about a foot above the carriage-way, he
+comes continually in contact with stairs, leading sometimes to warehouses
+above, at others to subterranean warehouses below the level of the
+street. The approaches to the latter are not guarded by railings as in
+Hamburgh. The other side of the pavement is bounded by a little
+unostentatious rivulet, called by unpoetical people "canal," into which
+tributaries equally sweet pour from all the neighbouring houses. It is
+therefore necessary to take great care, lest you should fall into the
+traitorous depths on the one side, or stumble over the projecting steps
+on the other. The pavement itself is covered with a row of stone slabs,
+a foot and a half wide, on which one walks comfortably enough. But then
+every body contends for the possession of these, to avoid the uneven and
+pointed stones at the side. This, added to the dreadful crowding,
+renders the street one which would scarcely be chosen for a walk, the
+less so as the shops do not contain any thing handsome, the houses are
+neither palace-like nor even tastefully built, and the street itself is
+neither of the broadest nor of the cleanest.
+
+The squares are all large and regularly built. The finest is the
+Kongensnytorf (King's New Market). Some fine mansions, the chief
+guard-house, the theatre, the chief coffee-houses and inns, the academy
+of the fine arts, and the building belonging to the botanical garden, the
+two last commonly known by the name of "Charlottenburg," are among the
+ornaments of this magnificent square, in the midst of which stands a
+beautiful monument, representing Christian V. on horseback, and
+surrounded by several figures.
+
+Smaller, but more beautiful in its perfect symmetry, is the
+"Amalienplatz," containing four royal palaces, built exactly alike, and
+intersected by four broad streets in the form of a cross. This square
+also is decorated by a monument standing in the midst, and representing
+Frederick V. In another fine square, the "Nytorf" (New Market), there is
+a fountain. Its little statue sends forth very meagre jets of water, and
+the fountain is merely noticeable as being the only one I could find at
+Copenhagen.
+
+The traveller can hardly fail of being surprised by the number and
+magnificence of the palaces, at sight of which he could fancy himself in
+the metropolis of one of the largest kingdoms. The "Christianensburg" is
+truly imperial; it was completely destroyed by fire in the year 1794, but
+has since been rebuilt with increased splendour. The chapel of this
+palace is very remarkable. The interior has the appearance rather of a
+concert-room than of a building devoted to purposes of worship.
+Tastefully decorated boxes, among which we notice that of the king,
+together with galleries, occupy the upper part of the chapel; the lower
+is filled with benches covered with red velvet and silk. The pulpit and
+altar are so entirely without decoration, that, on first entering, they
+wholly escape notice.
+
+In the "Christianensburg" is also the "Northern Museum," peculiarly rich
+in specimens of the ornaments, weapons, musical instruments, and other
+mementoes of northern nations.
+
+The Winter Riding-school, in which concerts are frequently given, is
+large and symmetrical. I admired the stalls, and yet more the grey
+horses which occupied them--descendants of the pure Arabian and wild
+Norwegian breeds--creatures with long manes and tails of fine silky hair.
+Every one who sees these horses, whether he be a connoisseur or one of
+the uninitiated, must admire them.
+
+Adjoining the "Christianensburg" is Thorwaldsen's Museum, a square
+building with fine saloons, lighted from above. When I saw it, it was
+not completed; the walls were being painted in fresco by some of the
+first native artists. The sculptured treasures were there, but
+unfortunately yet unpacked.
+
+In the midst of the courtyard Thorwaldsen's mausoleum is being erected.
+There his ashes will rest, with his exquisitely finished lion as a
+gravestone above them. {15}
+
+The largest among the churches is the "Woman's Church." The building has
+no architectural beauty; the pillars, galleries, and cupola are all of
+wood, covered with a mixture of sand and plaster. But whatever may be
+wanting in outward splendour is compensated by its contents, for this
+church contains the masterpieces of Thorwaldsen. At the high altar
+stands his glorious figure of our Saviour, in the niches of the wall his
+colossal twelve apostles.
+
+In the contemplation of these works we forget the plainness of the
+building which contains them. May the fates be prosperous, and no
+conflagration reach this church, built as it is half of wood!
+
+The Catholic Church is small, but tasteful beyond expression. The late
+emperor of Austria presented to it a good full-toned organ, and two
+oil-paintings, one by Kuppelweiser, the other by a pupil of this master.
+
+In the "Museum of Arts" I was most interested in the ancient chair, used
+in days of yore by Tycho de Brahe. {16}
+
+The Exchange is a curious ancient building. It is very long and narrow,
+and surmounted by nine peaks, from the centre of which protrudes a
+remarkable pointed tower, formed of four crocodiles' tails intertwined.
+
+The hall itself is small, low, and dark; it contains a full-length
+portrait in oil of Tycho de Brahe. Nearly all the upper part of the
+building is converted into a kind of bazaar, and the lower portion
+contains a number of small and dingy booths.
+
+Several canals, having an outlet into the sea, give a peculiar charm to
+the town. They are, in fact, so many markets; for the craft lying in
+them are laden with provisions of all kinds, which are here offered for
+sale.
+
+The Sailors' Town, adjoining Copenhagen, and situated near the harbour,
+is singularly neat and pretty. It consists of three long, broad,
+straight streets, built of houses looking so exactly alike, that on a
+foggy night an accurate knowledge of the locality is requisite to know
+one from the other. It looks as though, on each side of the way, there
+were only one long house of a single floor, with a building one story
+high in the middle. In the latter dwell the commandant and overseers.
+
+The lighting of the streets is managed in Copenhagen in the same way as
+in our smaller German towns. When "moonlight" is announced in the
+calendar, not a lamp is lighted. If the lady moon chooses to hide behind
+dark clouds, that is her fault. It would be insolent to attempt to
+supply the place of her radiance with miserable lamps--a wise
+arrangement! (?)
+
+Of the near walks, the garden of the "Rosenburg," within the town,
+pleased me much; as did also the "Long Line," an alley of beautiful trees
+extending parallel with the sea, and in which one can either walk or
+ride. A coffee-house, in front of which there is music in fine weather,
+attracts many of the loungers. The most beautiful place of all is the
+"Kastell," above the "Long Line," from whence one can enjoy a beautiful
+view. The town lies displayed below in all its magnificence: the
+harbour, with its many ships; the sparkling blue Sound, which spreads its
+broad expanse between the coasts of Denmark and Sweden, and washes many a
+beautiful group of islands belonging to one or the other of these
+countries. The background of the picture alone is uninteresting, as
+there is no chain of mountains to form a horizon, and the eye wanders
+over the boundless flats of Denmark.
+
+Among the vessels lying at anchor in the harbour I saw but few
+three-masters, and still fewer steamers. The ships of the fleet
+presented a curious appearance; at the first view they look like great
+houses with flag-staves, for every ship is provided with a roof, out of
+which the masts rise into the air; they are besides very high out of the
+water, so that all the port-holes and the windows of the cabins appear in
+two or three stories, one above the other.
+
+A somewhat more distant excursion, which can be very conveniently made in
+a capital omnibus, takes you to the royal chateau "Friedrichsberg," lying
+before the water-gate, two miles distant from the town. Splendid avenues
+lead to this place, where are to be found all the delights that can
+combine to draw a citizen into the country. There are a tivoli, a
+railway, cabinets, and booths with wax-figures, and countless other
+sights, besides coffee-houses, beer-rooms, and music. The gardens are
+planted at the sides with a number of small arbours, each containing a
+table and chairs, and all open in front, so as to shew at one view all
+the visitors of these pretty natural huts. On Sundays, when the gardens
+are crowded, this is a very animated sight.
+
+On the way to this "Prater" of Copenhagen, we pass many handsome villas,
+each standing in a fine garden.
+
+ [Picture: Copenhagen: From Frederiesbourg]
+
+The royal palace is situated on the summit of a hill, at the end of the
+avenue, and is surrounded by a beautiful park; it commands a view of a
+great portion of the town, with the surrounding country and the sea;
+still I far prefer the prospect from the "Kastell." The Park contains a
+considerable island, which, during some part of the year, stands in the
+midst of an extensive lake. This island is appropriated to the Court,
+but the rest of the park is open to the public.
+
+Immediately outside the water-gate stands an obelisk, remarkable neither
+for its beauty nor for the skill displayed in its erection, for it
+consists of various stones, and is not high, but interesting from the
+circumstance to which it owes its origin. It was erected by his grateful
+subjects in memory of the late king Christian VII., to commemorate the
+abolition of feudal service. Surely no feeling person can contemplate
+without joyful emotion a monument like this.
+
+I have here given a faithful account of what I saw during my short stay
+at Copenhagen. It only remains for me to describe a few peculiar customs
+of the people, and so I will begin as it were at the end, with the burial
+of the dead. In Denmark, as in fact in the whole of Scandinavia, not
+excepting Iceland, it is customary not to bury the dead until eight or
+ten days have elapsed. In winter-time this is not of so much
+consequence, but in summer it is far from healthy for those under the
+same roof with the corpse. I was present at Copenhagen at the funeral of
+Dr. Brandis, physician to the king. Two of the king's carriages and a
+number of private equipages attended. Nearly all these were empty, and
+the servants walked beside them. Among the mourners I did not notice a
+single woman; I supposed that this was only the case at the funerals of
+gentlemen, but on inquiry I found that the same rule is observed at the
+burial of women. This consideration for the weaker sex is carried so
+far, that on the day of the funeral no woman may be seen in the house of
+mourning. The mourners assemble in the house of the deceased, and
+partake of cold refreshments. At the conclusion of the ceremony they are
+again regaled. What particularly pleased me in Copenhagen was, that I
+never on any occasion saw beggars, or even such miserably clad people as
+are found only too frequently in our great cities. Here there are no
+doubt poor people, as there are such every where else in the world, but
+one does not see them beg. I cannot help mentioning an arrangement which
+certainly deserves to be universally carried out;--I mean, the setting
+apart of many large houses, partly belonging to the royal family, partly
+to rich private people or to companies, for the reception of poor people,
+who are here lodged at a much cheaper rate than is possible in ordinary
+dwellings.
+
+The costumes of the peasants did not particularly please me. The women
+wear dresses of green or black woollen stuff, reaching to the ankle, and
+trimmed at the skirt with broad coloured woollen borders. The seams of
+the spenser, and the arm-holes, are also trimmed with smaller coloured
+borders. On their heads they wear a handkerchief, and over this a kind
+of shade, like a bonnet. On Sundays I saw many of them in small, pretty
+caps, worked with silk, with a border of lace of more than a hand's
+breadth, plaited very stiffly; at the back they have large bows of fine
+riband, the ends of which reach half down to their feet. I found nothing
+very remarkable in the dress of the peasants. As far as strength and
+beauty were concerned, I thought these peasants were neither more nor
+less gifted than those of Austria. As regards the beauty of the fair
+sex, I should certainly give the preference to the Austrians. Fair hair
+and blue eyes predominate.
+
+I saw but few soldiers; their uniforms, particularly those worn by the
+king's life-guards, are very handsome.
+
+I especially noticed the drummers; they were all little lads of ten or
+twelve years old. One could almost have exclaimed, "Drum, whither art
+thou carrying that boy?" To march, and to join in fatiguing manoeuvres,
+carrying such a drum, and beating it bravely at the same time, is rather
+cruel work for such young lads. Many a ruined constitution may be
+ascribed to this custom.
+
+During my stay in Copenhagen I spent many very delightful hours with
+Professor Mariboe and his amiable family, and with the kind clergyman of
+the embassy, Herr Zimmermann. They received me with true politeness and
+hospitality, and drew me into their circle, where I soon felt myself
+quite at ease. I shall never forget their friendship, and shall make use
+of every opportunity to shew them my appreciation of it. Herr Edouard
+Gottschalk and Herr Knudson have also my best thanks. I applied to the
+first of these gentlemen to procure me a passage to Iceland, and he was
+kind enough to use his interest with Herr Knudson on my behalf.
+
+Herr Knudson is one of the first general dealers in Copenhagen, and
+carries on a larger and more extended commerce with Iceland than any
+other house trading thither. He is already beginning to retire, as the
+continual journeys are becoming irksome to him; but he still owns a
+number of great and small vessels, which are partly employed in the
+fisheries, and partly in bringing all kinds of articles of consumption
+and luxury to the different harbours of Iceland.
+
+He himself goes in one of his ships every year, and stays a few months in
+Iceland to settle his affairs there. On the recommendation of Herr
+Gottschalk, Herr Knudson was kind enough to give me a passage in the ship
+in which he made the journey himself; a favour which I knew how to value.
+It is certainly no small kindness to take a lady passenger on such a
+journey. Herr Knudson knew neither my fortitude nor my perseverance; he
+did not know whether I should be able to endure the hardships of a
+journey to the north, whether I would bear sea-sickness philosophically,
+or even if I had courage enough, in case of storms or bad weather, to
+abstain from annoying the captain by my fears or complaints at a time
+when he would only have too much to harass him. The kind man allowed no
+such considerations to influence him. He believed me when I promised to
+behave courageously come what might, and took me with him. Indeed his
+kindness went so far that it is to him I owe every comfort I enjoyed in
+Iceland, and every assistance in furthering the attainment of my
+journey's object. I could certainly not have commenced a voyage under
+better auspices.
+
+All ships visiting Iceland leave Copenhagen at the end of April, or at
+the latest in the middle of May. After this time only one ship is
+despatched, to carry the mails of the Danish government. This vessel
+leaves Copenhagen in October, remains in Iceland during the winter
+months, and returns in March. The gain or loss of this expedition is
+distributed in shares among the merchants of Copenhagen.
+
+Besides this, a French frigate comes to Iceland every spring, and cruises
+among the different harbours until the middle of August. She
+superintends the fishing vessels, which, attracted by the large profits
+of the fisheries, visit these seas in great numbers during the summer.
+{17}
+
+Opportunities of returning from Iceland occur during the summer until the
+end of September, by means of the merchant-ships, which carry freights
+from the island to Denmark, England, and Spain.
+
+At length, on Sunday the 4th of May, a favourable wind sprung up. Herr
+Knudson sent me word to be ready to embark at noon on board the fine brig
+_John_.
+
+I immediately proceeded on board. The anchor was weighed, and the sails,
+unfolding themselves like giant wings, wafted us gently out of the
+harbour of Copenhagen. No parting from children, relations, or
+old-cherished friends embittered this hour. With a glad heart I bade
+adieu to the city, in the joyful hope soon to see the fulfilment of my
+long-expected journey.
+
+The bright sky smiled above us, and a most favourable wind filled our
+sails. I sat on deck and revelled in the contemplation of scenes so new
+to me. Behind us lay spread the majestic town; before us the Sound, an
+immense natural basin, which I could almost compare to a great Swiss
+lake; on the right and left were the coasts of Sweden and Denmark, which
+here approach each other so closely that they seem to oppose a barrier to
+the further progress of the adventurous voyager.
+
+Soon we passed the little Swedish town of Carlscrona, and the desolate
+island Hveen, on which Tycho de Brahe passed the greater portion of his
+life, occupied with stellar observations and calculations. Now came a
+somewhat dangerous part, and one which called into action all the careful
+seamanship of the captain to bring us safely through the confined sea and
+the strong current,--the entrance of the Sound into the Cattegat.
+
+The two coasts here approach to within a mile of each other. On the
+Swedish side lies the pretty little town of Helsingborg, on the Danish
+side that of Helsingor, and at the extremity of a projecting neck of land
+the fortress Kronburg, which demands a toll of every passing ship, and
+shews a large row of threatening cannon in case of non-compliance. Our
+toll had already been paid before leaving Copenhagen; we had been
+accurately signalled, and sailed fearlessly by. {18}
+
+The entrance once passed, we entered the Cattegat, which already looked
+more like the great ocean: the coasts retired on each side, and most of
+the shifts and barques, which till now had hovered around us on all
+sides, bade us "farewell." Some bent their course towards the east,
+others towards the west; and we alone, on the broad desert ocean, set
+sail for the icy north. Twilight did not set in until 9 o'clock at
+night; and on the coasts the flaming beacons flashed up, to warn the
+benighted mariner of the proximity of dangerous rocks.
+
+I now offered up my thanksgiving to Heaven for the protection hitherto
+vouchsafed me, with a humble prayer for its continuance. Then I
+descended to the cabin, where I found a convenient bunk (a kind of crib
+fixed to the side of the ship); I laid myself down, and was soon in a
+deep and refreshing sleep.
+
+I awoke full of health and spirits, which, however, I enjoyed but for a
+short time. During the night we had left behind us the "Cattegat" and
+the "Skagerrack," and were driving through the stormy German Ocean. A
+high wind, which increased almost to a gale, tumbled our poor ship about
+in such a manner, that none but a good dancer could hope to maintain an
+upright position. I had unfortunately been from my youth no votary of
+Terpsichore, and what was I to do? The naiads of this stormy region
+seized me, and bandied me to and fro, until they threw me into the arms
+of what was, according to my experience, if not exactly after Schiller's
+interpretation, "the horrible of horrors,"--sea-sickness. At first I
+took little heed of this, thinking that sea-sickness would soon be
+overcome by a traveller like myself, who should be inured to every thing.
+But in vain did I bear up; I became worse and worse, till I was at length
+obliged to remain in my berth with but one consoling thought, namely,
+that we were to-day on the open sea, where there was nothing worthy of
+notice. But the following day the Norwegian coast was in sight, and at
+all hazards I must see it; so I crawled on deck more dead than alive,
+looked at a row of mountains of moderate elevation, their tops at this
+early season still sparkling with their snowy covering, and then hurried
+back, benumbed by the piercing icy wind, to my good warm feather-bed.
+Those who have never experienced it can have no conception of the biting,
+penetrating coldness of a gale of wind in the northern seas. The sun
+shone high in the heavens; the thermometer (I always calculate according
+to Reaumur) stood 3 degrees above zero; I was dressed much more warmly
+than I should have thought necessary when, in my fatherland, the
+thermometer was 8 or 10 degrees _below_ zero, and yet I felt chilled to
+the heart, and could have fancied that I had no clothes on at all.
+
+On the fourth night we sailed safely past the Shetland Islands; and on
+the evening of the fifth day we passed so near the majestic rocky group
+of the Feroe Islands, that we were at one time apprehensive of being cast
+upon the rocks by the unceasing gale. {19}
+
+Already on the seventh day we descried the coast of Iceland. Our passage
+had been unprecedentedly quick; the sailors declared that a favourable
+gale was to be preferred even to steam, and that on our present voyage we
+should certainly have left every steamer in our wake. But I, wretched
+being that I was, would gladly have dispensed with the services both of
+gale and steam for the sake of a few hours' rest. My illness increased
+so much, that on the seventh day I thought I must succumb. My limbs were
+bathed in a cold perspiration; I was as weak as an infant, and my mouth
+felt parched and dry. I saw that I must now either make a great effort
+or give up entirely; so I roused myself, and with the assistance of the
+cabin-boy gained a seat, and promised to take any and every remedy which
+should be recommended. They gave me hot-water gruel with wine and sugar;
+but it was not enough to be obliged to force this down, I was further
+compelled to swallow small pieces of raw bacon highly peppered, and even
+a mouthful of rum. I need not say what strong determination was required
+to make me submit to such a regimen. I had, however, but one choice,
+either to conquer my repugnance or give myself up a victim to
+sea-sickness; so with all patience and resignation I received the
+proffered gifts, and found, after a trial of many hours, that I could
+manage to retain a small dose. This physicking was continued for two
+long, long days, and then I began slowly to recover.
+
+I have here circumstantially described both my illness and its cure,
+because so many people are unfortunately victims to the complaint, and
+when under its influence cannot summon resolution to take sustenance. I
+should advise all my friends not to hold out so long as I did, but to
+take food at once, and continue to do so until the system will receive
+it.
+
+As I was now convalescent, I tried to recruit my wearied mind by a
+diligent study of the mode of life and customs of the mariners of the
+northern seas.
+
+Our ship's company consisted of Herr Knudson, Herr Bruge (a merchant whom
+we were to land at the Westmann Islands), the captain, the mate, and six
+or seven sailors. Our mode of life in the cabin was as follows: in the
+morning, at seven o'clock, we took coffee, but whence this coffee came,
+heaven knows! I drank it for eleven days, and could never discover any
+thing which might serve as a clue in my attempt to discover the country
+of its growth. At ten o'clock we had a meal consisting of bread and
+butter and cheese, with cold beef or pork, all excellent dishes for those
+in health; the second course of this morning meal was "tea-water." In
+Scandinavia, by the way, they never say, "I drink _tea_," the word
+"water" is always added: "I drink _tea-water_." Our "tea-water" was, if
+possible, worse than its predecessor, the incomparable coffee. Thus I
+was beaten at all points; the eatables were too strong for me, the
+drinkables too--too--I can find no appropriate epithet--probably too
+artificial. I consoled myself with the prospect of dinner; but, alas,
+too soon this sweet vision faded into thin air! On the sixth day I made
+my first appearance at the covered table, and could not help at once
+remarking the cloth which had been spread over it. At the commencement
+of our journey it might perhaps have been white; now it was most
+certainly no longer of that snowy hue. The continual pitching and
+rolling of the ship had caused each dish to set its peculiar stamp upon
+the cloth. A sort of wooden network was now laid upon it, in the
+interstices of which the plates and glasses were set, and thus secured
+from falling. But before placing it on the table, our worthy cabin-boy
+took each plate and glass separately, and polished it on a towel which
+hung near, and in colour certainly rather resembling the dingy floor of
+the cabin than the bight-hued rainbow. This could still have been
+endured, but the article in question really did duty _as a towel_ in the
+morning, before extending its salutary influence over plates and glasses
+for the remainder of the day.
+
+On making discoveries such as these, I would merely turn away my eyes,
+and try to think that perhaps _my glass_ and _my plate_ would be more
+delicately manipulated, or probably escape altogether; and then I would
+turn my whole attention to the expected dishes.
+
+First came soup; but instead of gravy-soup, it was water-soup, with rice
+and dried plums. This, when mingled with red wine and sugar, formed a
+most exquisite dish for Danish appetites, but it certainly did not suit
+mine. The second and concluding course consisted of a large piece of
+beef, with which I had no fault to find, except that it was too heavy for
+one in my weak state of health. At supper we had the same dishes as at
+dinner, and each meal was followed by "tea-water." At first I could not
+fancy this bill of fare at all; but within a few days after my
+convalesence, I had accustomed myself to it, and could bear the sea-diet
+very well. {20}
+
+As the rich owner of the vessel was on board, there was no lack of the
+best wines, and few evenings passed on which a bowl of punch was not
+emptied. There was, however, a reason found why every bottle of wine or
+bowl of punch should be drunk: for instance, at our embarkation, to drink
+the health of the friends we were leaving, and to hope for a quick and
+prosperous voyage; then, when the wind was favourable, its health was
+drunk, with the request that it would remain so; when it was contrary,
+with the request that it would change; when we saw land, we saluted it
+with a glass of wine, or perhaps with several, but I was too ill to
+count; when we lost sight of it, we drank a farewell glass to its health:
+so that every day brought with it three or four distinct and separate
+occasions for drinking wine. {21}
+
+The sailors drank tea-water without sugar every morning and evening, with
+the addition of a glass of brandy; for dinner they had pease, beans,
+barley, or potatoes, with salted cod, bacon, "or junk;" good sea-biscuit
+they could get whenever they chose.
+
+The diet is not the worst part of these poor people's hardships. Their
+life may be called a continual fight against the elements; for it is
+precisely during the most dreadful storms, with rain and piercing cold,
+that they have to be continually upon deck. I could not sufficiently
+admire the coolness, or rather the cheerfulness and alacrity with which
+they fulfilled their onerous duties. And what reward have they? Scanty
+pay, for food the diet I have just described, and for their
+sleeping-place the smallest and most inconvenient part of the ship, a
+dark place frequently infested with vermin, and smelling offensively from
+being likewise used as a receptacle for oil-colours, varnish, tar,
+salt-fish, &c. &c.
+
+To be cheerful in the midst of all this requires a very quiet and
+contented mind. That the Danish sailors are contented, I had many
+opportunities of observing during the voyage of which I am speaking, and
+on several other occasions.
+
+But after all this long description, it is high time that I should return
+to the journey itself.
+
+The favourable gale which had thus wafted us to the coast of Iceland
+within seven days, now unfortunately changed its direction, and drove us
+back. We drifted about in the storm-tost ocean, and many a Spanish wave
+{22} broke completely over our ship. Twice we attempted to approach the
+Westmann Islands {23} (a group belonging to Iceland) to watch an
+opportunity of casting anchor, and setting ashore our fellow-traveller
+Herr Bruge; but it was in vain, we were driven back each time. At
+length, at the close of the eleventh day, we reached Havenfiord, a very
+good harbour, distant nine miles from Reikjavik, the capital of Iceland.
+
+In spite of the very inopportune change in the direction of the wind, we
+had had an unprecedentedly quick passage. The distance from Copenhagen
+to Iceland, in a straight line, is reckoned at 1200 geographical miles;
+for a sailing vessel, which must tack now and then, and must go as much
+with the wind as possible, 1500 to 1600 miles. Had the strong wind,
+which was at first so favourable, instead of changing on the seventh day,
+held on for thirty or forty hours longer, we should have landed in
+Iceland on the eighth or ninth day--even the steamer could not have
+accomplished the passage so quickly.
+
+The shores of Iceland appeared to me quite different from what I had
+supposed them to be from the descriptions I had read. I had fancied them
+naked, without tree or shrub, dreary and desert; but now I saw green
+hills, shrubs, and even what appeared to be groups of stunted trees. As
+we came nearer, however, I was enabled to distinguish objects more
+clearly, and the green hills became human dwellings with small doors and
+windows, while the supposed groups of trees proved in reality to be heaps
+of lava, some ten or twelve feet high, thickly covered with moss and
+grass. Every thing was new and striking to me; I waited in great
+impatience till we could land.
+
+At length the anchor descended; but it was not till next morning that the
+hour of disembarkation and deliverance came.
+
+But one more night, and then, every difficulty overcome, I should tread
+the shores of Iceland, the longed-for, and bask as it were in the wonders
+of this island, so poor in the creations of art, so rich in the phenomena
+of Nature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before I land in Iceland, I must trouble the reader with a few
+preliminary observations regarding this island. They are drawn from
+Mackenzie's _Description of Iceland_, a book the sterling value of which
+is appreciated every where. {24}
+
+The discovery of Iceland, about the year of our Lord 860, is attributed
+to the spirit of enterprise of some Swedish and Norwegian pirates, who
+were drifted thither on a voyage to the Feroe Isles. It was not till the
+year 874 that the island was peopled by a number of voluntary emigrants,
+who, feeling unhappy under the dominion of Harold Harfraga (fine hair),
+arrived at the island under the direction of Ingold. {25} As the
+newcomers are said to have found no traces of dwellings, they are
+presumed to be the first who took possession of the island.
+
+At this time Iceland was still so completely covered with underwood, that
+at some points it was necessary to cut a passage. Bringing with them
+their language, religion, customs, and historical monuments, the
+Norwegians introduced a kind of feudal system, which, about the year 928,
+gave place to a somewhat aristocratic government, retaining, however, the
+name of a republic. The island was divided into four provinces, over
+each of which was placed an hereditary governor or judge.
+
+The General Assembly of Iceland (called Allthing) was held annually on
+the shores of the Lake Thingvalla. The people possessed an excellent
+code of laws, in which provision had been made for every case which could
+occur.
+
+This state of things lasted for more than 300 years, a period which may
+be called the golden age of Iceland. Education, literature, and even
+refined poetry flourished among the inhabitants, who took part in
+commerce and in the sea-voyages which the Norwegians undertook for
+purposes of discovery.
+
+The "Sagas," or histories of this country, contain many tales of personal
+bravery. Its bards and historians visited other climes, became the
+favourites of monarchs, and returned to their island covered with honour
+and loaded with presents. The _Edda_, by Samund, is one of the most
+valued poems of the ancient days of Iceland. The second portion of the
+_Edda_, called _Skalda_, dates from a later period, and is ascribed by
+many to the celebrated Snorri Sturluson. Isleif, first Bishop of
+Skalholt, was the earliest Icelandic historian; after him came the noted
+Snorri Sturluson, born in 1178, who became the richest and mightiest man
+in Iceland.
+
+Snorri Sturluson was frequently followed to the General Assembly of
+Iceland by a splendid retinue of 800 armed men. He was a great historian
+and poet, and possessed an accurate knowledge of the Greek and Latin
+tongues, besides being a powerful orator. He was also the author of the
+_Heims-kringla_.
+
+The first school was founded at Skalholt, about the middle of the
+eleventh century, under Isleif, first Bishop of Iceland; four other
+schools and several convents soon followed. Poetry and music seem to
+have formed a staple branch of education.
+
+The climate of Iceland appears to have been less inclement than is now
+the case; corn is said to have grown, and trees and shrubs were larger
+and thicker than we find them at present. The population of Iceland was
+also much more numerous than it is now, although there were neither towns
+nor villages. The people lived scattered throughout the island; and the
+General Assembly was held at Thingvalla, in the open air.
+
+Fishing constituted the chief employment of the Icelanders. Their
+clothing was woven from the wool of their sheep. Commerce with
+neighbouring countries opened to them another field of occupation.
+
+The doctrines of Christianity were first introduced into Iceland, in the
+year 981, by Friederich, a Saxon bishop. Many churches were built, and
+tithes established for the maintenance of the clergy. Isleif, first
+Bishop of Skalholt, was ordained in the year 1057. After the
+introduction of Christianity, all the Icelanders enjoyed an
+unostentatious but undisturbed practice of their religion.
+
+Greenland and the most northern part of America are said to have been
+discovered by Icelanders.
+
+In the middle of the thirteenth century Iceland came into the power of
+the Norwegian kings. In the year 1380 Norway was united to the crown of
+Denmark; and Iceland incorporated, without resistance, in the Danish
+monarchy. Since the cession of the island to Norway, and then to
+Denmark, peace and security took the place of the internal commotions
+with which, before this time, Iceland had been frequently disturbed; but
+this state of quiet brought forth indolence and apathy. The voyages of
+discovery were interfered with by the new government, and the commerce
+gradually passed into the hands of other nations. The climate appears
+also to have changed; and the lessened industry and want of perseverance
+in the inhabitants have brought agriculture completely into decline.
+
+In the year 1402 the plague broke out upon the island, and carried off
+two-thirds of the population.
+
+The first printing-press was established at Hoolum, about the year 1530,
+under the superintendence of the Bishop, John Areson.
+
+The reformation in the Icelandic Church was not brought about without
+disturbance. It was legally established in the year 1551.
+
+During the fifteenth century the Icelanders suffered more from the
+piratical incursions of foreigners. As late as the year 1616 the French
+and English nations took part in these enormities. The most melancholy
+occurrence of this kind took place in 1627, in which year a great number
+of Algerine pirates made a descent upon the Icelandic coast, murdered
+about fifty of the inhabitants, and carried off nearly 400 others into
+captivity. {26}
+
+The eighteenth century commenced with a dreadful mortality from the
+smallpox; of which disease more than 16,000 of the inhabitants died. In
+1757 a famine swept away about 10,000 souls.
+
+The year 1783 was distinguished by most dreadful volcanic outbreaks in
+the interior of the island. Tremendous streams of lava carried all
+before them; great rivers were checked in their course, and formed lakes.
+For more than a year a thick cloud of smoke and volcanic ashes covered
+the whole of Iceland, and nearly darkened the sunlight. Horned cattle,
+sheep, and horses were destroyed; famine came, with its accompanying
+illnesses; and once more appeared the malignant small-pox. In a few
+years more than 11,000 persons had died; more than one-fourth of the
+whole present population of the island.
+
+Iceland lies in the Atlantic ocean; its greatest breadth is 240
+geographical miles, and its extreme length from north to south 140 miles.
+The number of inhabitants is estimated at 48,000, and the superficial
+extent of the island at 29,800 square miles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+On the morning of the 16th of May I landed in the harbour of Havenfiord,
+and for the first time trod the shores of Iceland. Although I was quite
+bewildered by sea-sickness, and still more by the continual rocking of
+the ship, so that every object round me seemed to dance, and I could
+scarcely make a firm step, still I could not rest in the house of Herr
+Knudson, which he had obligingly placed at my disposal. I must go out at
+once, to see and investigate every thing. I found that Havenfiord
+consisted merely of three wooden houses, a few magazines built of the
+same material, and some peasants' cottages.
+
+The wooden houses are inhabited by merchants or by their factors, and
+consist only of a ground-floor, with a front of four or six windows. Two
+or three steps lead up to the entrance, which is in the centre of the
+building, and opens upon a hall from which doors lead into the rooms to
+the right and left. At the back of the house is situated the kitchen,
+which opens into several back rooms and into the yard. A house of this
+description consists only of five or six rooms on the ground-floor and a
+few small attic bedrooms.
+
+The internal arrangements are quite European. The furniture--which is
+often of mahogany,--the mirrors, the cast-iron stoves, every thing, in
+short, come from Copenhagen. Beautiful carpets lie spread before the
+sofas; neat curtains shade the windows; English prints ornament the
+whitewashed walls; porcelain, plate, cut-glass, &c., are displayed on
+chests and on tables; and flower-pots with roses, mignonnette, and pinks
+spread a delicious fragrance around. I even found a grand pianoforte
+here. If any person could suddenly, and without having made the journey,
+be transported into one of these houses, he would certainly fancy himself
+in some continental town, rather than in the distant and barren island of
+Iceland. And as in Havenfiord, so I found the houses of the more opulent
+classes in Reikjavik, and in all the places I visited.
+
+From these handsome houses I betook myself to the cottages of the
+peasants, which have a more indigenous, Icelandic appearance. Small and
+low, built of lava, with the interstices filled with earth, and the whole
+covered with large pieces of turf, they would present rather the
+appearance of natural mounds of earth than of human dwellings, were it
+not that the projecting wooden chimneys, the low-browed entrances, and
+the almost imperceptible windows, cause the spectator to conclude that
+they are inhabited. A dark narrow passage, about four feet high, leads
+on one side into the common room, and on the other to a few compartments,
+some of which are used as storehouses for provisions, and the rest as
+winter stables for the cows and sheep. At the end of this passage, which
+is purposely built so low, as an additional defence against the cold, the
+fireplace is generally situated. The rooms of the poorer class have
+neither wooden walls nor floors, and are just large enough to admit of
+the inhabitants sleeping, and perhaps turning round in them. The whole
+interior accommodation is comprised in bedsteads with very little
+covering, a small table, and a few drawers. Beds and chests of drawers
+answer the purpose of benches and chairs. Above the beds are fixed rods,
+from which depend clothes, shoes, stockings, &c. A small board, on which
+are arranged a few books, is generally to be observed. Stoves are
+considered unnecessary; for as the space is very confined, and the house
+densely populated, the atmosphere is naturally warm.
+
+Rods are also placed round the fireplace, and on these the wet clothes
+and fishes are hung up in company to dry. The smoke completely fills the
+room, and slowly finds its way through a few breathing-holes into the
+open air.
+
+Fire-wood there is none throughout the whole island. The rich
+inhabitants have it brought from Norway or Denmark; the poor burn turf,
+to which they frequently add bones and other offal of fish, which
+naturally engender a most disagreeable smoke.
+
+On entering one of these cottages, the visitor is at a loss to determine
+which of the two is the more obnoxious--the suffocating smoke in the
+passage or the poisoned air of the dwelling-room, rendered almost
+insufferable by the crowding together of so many persons. I could almost
+venture to assert, that the dreadful eruption called Lepra, which is
+universal throughout Iceland, owes its existence rather to the total want
+of cleanliness than to the climate of the country or to the food.
+
+Throughout my subsequent journeys into the interior, I found the cottages
+of the peasants every where alike squalid and filthy. Of course I speak
+of the majority, and not of the exceptions; for here I found a few rich
+peasants, whose dwellings looked cleaner and more habitable, in
+proportion to the superior wealth or sense of decency of the owners. My
+idea is, that the traveller's estimate of a country should be formed
+according to the habits and customs of the generality of its inhabitants,
+and not according to the doings of a few individuals, as is often the
+case. Alas, how seldom did I meet with these creditable exceptions!
+
+The neighbourhood of Havenfiord is formed by a most beautiful and
+picturesque field of lava, at first rising in hills, then sinking into
+hollows, and at length terminating in a great plain which extends to the
+base of the neighbouring mountains. Masses of the most varied forms,
+often black and naked, rise to the height of ten or fifteen feet, forming
+walls, ruined pillars, small grottoes, and hollow spaces. Over these
+latter large slabs often extend, and form bridges. Every thing around
+consists of suddenly cooled heaped-up masses of lava, in some instances
+covered to their summits with grass and moss; this circumstance gives
+them, as already stated, the appearance of groups of stunted trees.
+Horses, sheep, and cows were clambering about, diligently seeking out
+every green place. I also clambered about diligently; I could not tire
+of gazing and wondering at this terribly beautiful picture of
+destruction.
+
+After a few hours I had so completely forgotten the hardships of my
+passage, and felt myself so much strengthened, that I began my journey to
+Reikjavik at five o'clock on the evening of the same day. Herr Knudson
+seemed much concerned for me; he warned me that the roads were bad, and
+particularly emphasised the dangerous abysses I should be compelled to
+pass. I comforted him with the assurance that I was a good horsewoman,
+and could hardly have to encounter worse roads than those with which I
+had had the honour to become acquainted in Syria. I therefore took leave
+of the kind gentleman, who intended to stay a week or ten days in
+Havenfiord, and mounting a small horse, set out in company of a female
+guide.
+
+In my guide I made the acquaintance of a remarkable antiquity of Iceland,
+who is well worthy that I should devote a few words to her description.
+She is above seventy years of age, but looks scarcely fifty; her head is
+surrounded by tresses of rich fair hair. She is dressed like a man;
+undertakes, in the capacity of messenger, the longest and most fatiguing
+journeys; rows a boat as skilfully as the most practised fisherman; and
+fulfils all her missions quicker and more exactly than a man, for she
+does not keep up so good an understanding with the brandy-bottle. She
+marched on so sturdily before me, that I was obliged to incite my little
+horse to greater speed with my riding-whip.
+
+At first the road lay between masses of lava, where it certainly was not
+easy to ride; then over flats and small acclivities, from whence we could
+descry the immense plain in which are situated Havenfiord, Bassastadt,
+Reikjavik, and other places. Bassastadt, a town built on a promontory
+jutting out into the sea, contains one of the principal schools, a church
+built of masonry, and a few cottages. The town of Reikjavik cannot be
+seen, as it is hidden behind a hill. The other places consist chiefly of
+a few cottages, and only meet the eye of the traveller when he approaches
+them nearly. Several chains of mountains, towering one above the other,
+and sundry "Jokuls," or glaciers, which lay still sparkling in their
+wintry garb, surround this interminable plain, which is only open at one
+end, towards the sea. Some of the plains and hills shone with tender
+green, and I fancied I beheld beautiful meadows. On a nearer inspection,
+however, they proved to be swampy places, and hundreds upon hundreds of
+little acclivities, sometimes resembling mole-hills, at others small
+graves, and covered with grass and moss.
+
+I could see over an area of at least thirty or forty miles, and yet could
+not descry a tree or a shrub, a bit of meadow-land or a friendly village.
+Every thing seemed dead. A few cottages lay scattered here and there; at
+long intervals a bird would hover in the air, and still more seldom I
+heard the kindly greeting of a passing inhabitant. Heaps of lava,
+swamps, and turf-bogs surrounded me on all sides; in all the vast expanse
+not a spot was to be seen through which a plough could be driven.
+
+After riding more than four miles, I reached a hill, from which I could
+see Reikjavik, the chief harbour, and, in fact, the only town on the
+island. But I was deceived in my expectations; the place before me was a
+mere village.
+
+The distance from Havenfiord to Reikjavik is scarcely nine miles; but as
+I was unwilling to tire my good old guide, I took three hours to
+accomplish it. The road was, generally speaking, very good, excepting in
+some places, where it lay over heaps of lava. Of the much-dreaded dizzy
+abysses I saw nothing; the startling term must have been used to
+designate some unimportant declivities, along the brow of which I rode,
+in sight of the sea; or perhaps the "abysses" were on the lava-fields,
+where I sometimes noticed small chasms of fifteen or sixteen feet in
+depth at the most.
+
+Shortly after eight o'clock in the evening I was fortunate enough to
+reach Reikjavik safe and well. Through the kind forethought of Herr
+Knudson, a neat little room had been prepared for me in one of his houses
+occupied by the family of the worthy baker Bernhoft, and truly I could
+not have been better received any where.
+
+During my protracted stay the whole family of the Bernhofts shewed me
+more kindness and cordiality than it has been my lot frequently to find.
+Many an hour has Herr Bernhoft sacrificed to me, in order to accompany me
+in my little excursions. He assisted me most diligently in my search for
+flowers, insects, and shells, and was much rejoiced when he could find me
+a new specimen. His kind wife and dear children rivalled him in
+willingness to oblige. I can only say, may Heaven requite them a
+thousand-fold for their kindness and friendship!
+
+I had even an opportunity of hearing my native language spoken by Herr
+Bernhoft, who was a Holsteiner by birth, and had not quite forgotten our
+dear German tongue, though he had lived for many years partly in Denmark,
+partly in Iceland.
+
+So behold me now in the only town in Iceland, {27} the seat of the
+so-called cultivated classes, whose customs and mode of life I will now
+lay before my honoured readers.
+
+Nothing was more disagreeable to me than a certain air of dignity assumed
+by the ladies here; an air which, except when it is natural, or has
+become so from long habit, is apt to degenerate into stiffness and
+incivility. On meeting an acquaintance, the ladies of Reikjavik would
+bend their heads with so stately and yet so careless an air as we should
+scarcely assume towards the humblest stranger. At the conclusion of a
+visit, the lady of the house only accompanies the guest as far as the
+chamber-door. If the husband be present, this civility is carried a
+little further; but when this does not happen to be the case, a stranger
+who does not know exactly through which door he can make his exit, may
+chance to feel not a little embarrassed. Excepting in the house of the
+"Stiftsamtmann" (the principal official on the island), one does not find
+a footman who can shew the way. In Hamburgh I had already noticed the
+beginnings of this dignified coldness; it increased as I journeyed
+further north, and at length reached its climax in Iceland.
+
+Good letters of recommendation often fail to render the northern grandees
+polite towards strangers. As an instance of this fact, I relate the
+following trait:
+
+Among other kind letters of recommendation, I had received one addressed
+to Herr von H---, the "Stiftsamtmann" of Iceland. On my arrival at
+Copenhagen, I heard that Herr von H--- happened to be there. I therefore
+betook myself to his residence, and was shewn into a room where I found
+two young ladies and three children. I delivered my letter, and remained
+quietly standing for some time. Finding at length that no one invited me
+to be seated, I sat down unasked on the nearest chair, never supposing
+for an instant that the lady of the house could be present, and neglect
+the commonest forms of politeness which should be observed towards every
+stranger. After I had waited for some time, Herr von H--- graciously
+made his appearance, and expressed his regret that he should have very
+little time to spare for me, as he intended setting sail for Iceland with
+his family in a short time, and in the interim had a number of weighty
+affairs to settle at Copenhagen; in conclusion, he gave me the friendly
+advice to abandon my intention of visiting Iceland, as the fatigues of
+travelling in that country were very great; finding, however, that I
+persevered in my intention, he promised, in case I set sail for Reikjavik
+earlier than himself, to give me a letter of recommendation. All this
+was concluded in great haste, and we stood during the interview. I took
+my leave, and at first determined not to call again for the letter. On
+reflection, however, I changed my mind, ascribed my unfriendly reception
+to important and perhaps disagreeable business, and called again two days
+afterwards. Then the letter was handed to me by a servant; the high
+people, whom I could hear conversing in the adjoining apartment, probably
+considered it too much trouble to deliver it to me personally.
+
+On paying my respects to this amiable family in Reikjavik, I was not a
+little surprised to recognise in Frau von H--- one of those ladies who in
+Copenhagen had not had the civility to ask me to be seated. Five or six
+days afterwards, Herr von H--- returned my call, and invited me to an
+excursion to Vatne. I accepted the invitation with much pleasure, and
+mentally asked pardon of him for having formed too hasty an opinion.
+Frau von H---, however, did not find her way to me until the fourth week
+of my stay in Reikjavik; she did not even invite me to visit her again,
+so of course I did not go, and our acquaintance terminated there. As in
+duty bound, the remaining dignitaries of this little town took their tone
+from their chief. My visits were unreturned, and I received no
+invitations, though I heard much during my stay of parties of pleasure,
+dinners, and evening parties. Had I not fortunately been able to employ
+myself, I should have been very badly off. Not one of the ladies had
+kindness and delicacy enough to consider that I was alone here, and that
+the society of educated people might be necessary for my comfort. I was
+less annoyed at the want of politeness in the gentlemen; for I am no
+longer young, and that accounts for every thing. When the women were
+wanting in kindliness, I had no right to expect consideration from the
+gentlemen.
+
+I tried to discover the reason of this treatment, and soon found that it
+lay in a national characteristic of these people--their selfishness.
+
+It appears I had scarcely arrived at Reikjavik before diligent inquiries
+were set on foot as to whether I was _rich_, and should see much company
+at my house, and, in fact, whether much could be got out of me.
+
+To be well received here it is necessary either to be rich, or else to
+travel as a naturalist. Persons of the latter class are generally sent
+by the European courts to investigate the remarkable productions of the
+country. They make large collections of minerals, birds, &c.; they bring
+with them numerous presents, sometimes of considerable value, which they
+distribute among the dignitaries; they are, moreover, the projectors of
+many an entertainment, and even of many a little ball, &c.; they buy up
+every thing they can procure for their cabinets, and they always travel
+in company; they have much baggage with them, and consequently require
+many horses, which cannot be hired in Iceland, but must be bought. On
+such occasions every one here is a dealer: offers of horses and cabinets
+pour in on all sides.
+
+The most welcome arrival of all is that of the French frigate, which
+visits Iceland every year; for sometimes there are _dejeuners a la
+fourchette_ on board, sometimes little evening parties and balls. There
+is at least something to be got besides the rich presents; the
+"Stiftsamtmann" even receives 600 florins per annum from the French
+government to defray the expense of a few return balls which he gives to
+the naval officers.
+
+With me this was not the case: I gave no parties--I brought no
+presents--they had nothing to expect from me; and therefore they left me
+to myself. {28}
+
+For this reason I affirm that he only can judge of the character of a
+people who comes among them without claim to their attention, and from
+whom they have nothing to expect. To such a person only do they appear
+in their true colours, because they do not find it worth while to
+dissemble and wear a mask in his presence. In these cases the traveller
+is certainly apt to make painful discoveries; but when, on the other
+hand, he meets with good people, he may be certain of their sincerity;
+and so I must beg my honoured readers to bear with me, when I mention the
+names of all those who heartily welcomed the undistinguished foreigner;
+it is the only way in which I can express my gratitude towards them.
+
+As I said before, I had intercourse with very few people, so that ample
+time remained for solitary walks, during which I minutely noticed every
+thing around me.
+
+The little town of Reikjavik consists of a single broad street, with
+houses and cottages scattered around. The number of inhabitants does not
+amount to 500.
+
+The houses of the wealthier inhabitants are of wood-work, and contain
+merely a ground-floor, with the exception of a single building of one
+story, to which the high school, now held at Bassastadt, will be
+transferred next year. The house of the "Stiftsamtmann" is built of
+stone. It was originally intended for a prison; but as criminals are
+rarely to be met with in Iceland, the building was many years ago
+transformed into the residence of the royal officer. A second stone
+building, discernible from Reikjavik, is situated at Langarnes, half a
+mile from the town. It lies near the sea, in the midst of meadows, and
+is the residence of the bishop.
+
+The church is capable of holding only at the most from 100 to 150
+persons; it is built of stone, with a wooden roof. In the chambers of
+this roof the library, consisting of several thousand volumes, is
+deposited. The church contains a treasure which many a larger and
+costlier edifice might envy,--a baptismal font by Thorwaldsen, whose
+parents were of Icelandic extraction. The great sculptor himself was
+born in Denmark, and probably wished, by this present, to do honour to
+the birth-place of his ancestors.
+
+To some of the houses in Reikjavik pieces of garden are attached. These
+gardens are small plots of ground where, with great trouble and expense,
+salad, spinach, parsley, potatoes, and a few varieties of edible roots,
+are cultivated. The beds are separated from each other by strips of turf
+a foot broad, seldom boasting even a few field-flowers.
+
+The inhabitants of Iceland are generally of middle stature, and strongly
+built, with light hair, frequently inclining to red, and blue eyes. The
+men are for the most part ugly; the women are better favoured, and among
+the girls I noticed some very sweet faces. To attain the age of seventy
+or eighty years is here considered an extraordinary circumstance. {29}
+The peasants have many children, and yet few; many are born, but few
+survive the first year. The mothers do not nurse them, and rear them on
+very bad food. Those who get over the first year look healthy enough;
+but they have strangely red cheeks, almost as though they had an
+eruption. Whether this appearance is to be ascribed to the sharp air, to
+which the delicate skin is not yet accustomed, or to the food, I know
+not.
+
+In some places on the coast, when the violent storms prevent the poor
+fishermen for whole weeks from launching their boats, they live almost
+entirely on dried fishes' heads. {30} The fishes themselves have been
+salted down and sold, partly to pay the fishermen's taxes, and partly to
+liquidate debts for the necessaries of the past season, among which
+brandy and snuff unfortunately play far too prominent a part.
+
+Another reason why the population does not increase is to be found in the
+numerous catastrophes attending the fisheries during the stormy season of
+the year. The fishermen leave the shore with songs and mirth, for a
+bright sky and a calm sea promise them good fortune. But, alas, tempests
+and snow-storms too often overtake the unfortunate boatmen! The sea is
+lashed into foam, and mighty waves overwhelm boats and fishermen
+together, and they perish inevitably. It is seldom that the father of a
+family embarks in the same boat with his sons. They divide themselves
+among different parties, in order that, if one boat founder, the whole
+family may not be destroyed.
+
+I found the cottages of the peasants at Reikjavik smaller, and in every
+respect worse provided, than those at Havenfiord. This seems, however,
+to be entirely owing to the indolence of the peasants themselves; for
+stones are to be had in abundance, and every man is his own builder. The
+cows and sheep live through the winter in a wretched den, built either in
+the cottage itself or in its immediate neighbourhood. The horses pass
+the whole year under the canopy of heaven, and must find their own
+provender. Occasionally only the peasant will shovel away the snow from
+a little spot, to assist the poor animals in searching for the grass or
+moss concealed beneath. It is then left to the horses to finish clearing
+away the snow with their feet. It may easily be imagined that this mode
+of treatment tends to render them very hardy; but the wonder is, how the
+poor creatures manage to exist through the winter on such spare diet, and
+to be strong and fit for work late in the spring and in summer. These
+horses are so entirely unused to being fed with oats, that they will
+refuse them when offered; they are not even fond of hay.
+
+As I arrived in Iceland during the early spring, I had an opportunity of
+seeing the horses and sheep in their winter garments. The horses seemed
+to be covered, not with hair, but with a thick woolly coat; their manes
+and tails are very long, and of surprising thickness. At the end of May
+or the beginning of June the tail and mane are docked and thinned, their
+woolly coat falls of itself, and they then look smooth enough. The sheep
+have also a very thick coat during the winter. It is not the custom to
+shear them, but at the beginning of June the wool is picked off piece by
+piece with the hand. A sheep treated in this way sometimes presents a
+very comical appearance, being perfectly naked on one side, while on the
+other it is still covered with wool.
+
+The horses and cows are considerably smaller than those of our country.
+No one need journey so far north, however, to see stunted cattle.
+Already, in Galicia, the cows and horses of the peasants are not a whit
+larger or stronger than those in Iceland. The Icelandic cows are further
+remarkable only for their peculiarly small horns; the sheep are also
+smaller than ours.
+
+Every peasant keeps horses. The mode of feeding them is, as already
+shewn, very simple; the distances are long, the roads bad, and large
+rivers, moorlands, and swamps must frequently be passed; so every one
+rides, both men, women, and children. The use of carriages is as totally
+unknown throughout the island as in Syria.
+
+The immediate vicinity of Reikjavik is pretty enough. Some of the
+townspeople go to much trouble and expense in sometimes collecting and
+sometimes breaking the stones around their dwellings. With the little
+ground thus obtained they mix turf, ashes, and manure, until at length a
+soil is formed on which something will grow. But this is such a gigantic
+undertaking, that the little culture bestowed on the spots wholly
+neglected by nature cannot be wondered at. Herr Bernhoft shewed me a
+small meadow which he had leased for thirty years, at an annual rent of
+thirty kreutzers. In order, however, to transform the land he bought
+into a meadow, which yields winter fodder for only one cow, it was
+necessary to expend more than 150 florins, besides much personal labour
+and pains. The rate of wages for peasants is very high when compared
+with the limited wants of these people: they receive thirty or forty
+kreutzers per diem, and during the hay-harvest as much as a florin.
+
+For a long distance round the town the ground consists of stones, turf,
+and swamps. The latter are mostly covered with hundreds upon hundreds of
+great and small mounds of firm ground. By jumping from one of these
+mounds to the next, the entire swamp may be crossed, not only without
+danger, but dry-footed.
+
+In spite of all this, one of these swamps put me in a position of much
+difficulty and embarrassment during one of my solitary excursions. I was
+sauntering quietly along, when suddenly a little butterfly fluttered past
+me. It was the first I had seen in this country, and my eagerness to
+catch it was proportionately great. I hastened after it; thought neither
+of swamp nor of danger, and in the heat of the chase did not observe that
+the mounds became every moment fewer and farther between. Soon I found
+myself in the middle of the swamp, and could neither advance nor retreat.
+Not a human being could I descry; the very animals were far from me; and
+this circumstance confirmed me as to the dangerous nature of the ground.
+Nothing remained for me but to fix my eyes upon one point of the
+landscape, and to step out boldly towards it. I was often obliged to
+hazard two or three steps into the swamp itself, in order to gain the
+next acclivity, upon which I would then stand triumphantly, to determine
+my farther progress. So long as I could distinguish traces of horses'
+hoofs, I had no fear; but even these soon disappeared, and I stood there
+alone in the morass. I could not remain for ever on my tower of
+observation, and had no resource but to take to the swamp once more. I
+must confess that I experienced a very uncomfortable feeling of
+apprehension when my foot sank suddenly into the soft mud; but when I
+found that it did not rise higher than the ankles, my courage returned; I
+stepped out boldly, and was fortunate enough to escape with the fright
+and a thorough wetting.
+
+The most arduous posts in the country are those of the medical men and
+clergymen. Their sphere of action is very enlarged, particularly that of
+the medical man, whose practice sometimes extends over a distance of
+eighty to a hundred miles. When we add to this the severity of the
+winter, which lasts for seven or eight months, it seems marvellous that
+any one can be found to fill such a situation.
+
+In winter the peasants often come with shovels, pickaxes, and horses to
+fetch the doctor. They then go before him, and hastily repair the worst
+part of the road; while the doctor rides sometimes on one horse,
+sometimes on another, that they may not sink under the fatigue. And thus
+the procession travels for many, many miles, through night and fog,
+through storm and snow, for on the doctor's promptitude life and death
+often hang. When he then returns, quite benumbed, and half dead with
+cold, to the bosom of his family, in the expectation of rest and
+refreshment, and to rejoice with his friends over the dangers and
+hardships he has escaped, the poor doctor is frequently compelled to set
+off at once on a new and important journey, before he has even had time
+to greet the dear ones at home.
+
+Sometimes he is sent for by sea, where the danger is still greater on the
+storm-tost element.
+
+Though the salary of the medical men is not at all proportionate to the
+hardships they are called upon to undergo, it is still far better than
+that of the priests.
+
+The smallest livings bring in six to eight florins annually, the richest
+200 florins. Besides this, the government supplies for each priest a
+house, often not much better than a peasant's cottage, a few meadows, and
+some cattle. The peasants are also required to give certain small
+contributions in the way of hay, wool, fish, &c. The greater number of
+priests are so poor, that they and their families dress exactly like the
+peasants, from whom they can scarcely be distinguished. The clergyman's
+wife looks after the cattle, and milks cows and ewes like a maid-servant;
+while her husband proceeds to the meadow, and mows the grass with the
+labourer. The intercourse of the pastor is wholly confined to the
+society of peasants; and this constitutes the chief element of that
+"patriarchal life" which so many travellers describe as charming. I
+should like to know which of them would wish to lead such a life!
+
+The poor priest has, besides, frequently to officiate in two, three, or
+even four districts, distant from four to twelve miles from his
+residence. Every Sunday he must do duty at one or other of these
+districts, taking them in turn, so that divine service is only performed
+at each place once in every three or four weeks. The journeys of the
+priest, however, are not considered quite so necessary as those of the
+doctor; for if the weather is very bad on Sundays, particularly during
+the winter, he can omit visiting the most distant places. This is done
+the more readily, as but few of the peasants would be at church; all who
+lived at a distance remaining at home.
+
+The Sysselmann (an officer similar to that of the sheriff of a county) is
+the best off. He has a good salary with little to do, and in some places
+enjoys in addition the "strand-right," which is at times no
+inconsiderable privilege, from the quantity of drift timber washed ashore
+from the American continent.
+
+Fishing and the chase are open to all, with the exception of the
+salmon-fisheries in the rivers; these are farmed by the government.
+Eider-ducks may not be shot, under penalty of a fine. There is no
+military service, for throughout the whole island no soldiers are
+required. Even Reikjavik itself boasts only two police-officers.
+
+Commerce is also free; but the islanders possess so little commercial
+spirit, that even if they had the necessary capital, they would never
+embark in speculation.
+
+The whole commerce of Iceland thus lies in the hands of Danish merchants,
+who send their ships to the island every year, and have established
+factories in the different ports where the retail trade is carried on.
+
+These ships bring every thing to Iceland, corn, wood, wines, manufactured
+goods, and colonial produce, &c. The imports are free, for it would not
+pay the government to establish offices, and give servants salaries to
+collect duties upon the small amount of produce required for the island.
+Wine, and in fact all colonial produce, are therefore much cheaper than
+in other countries.
+
+The exports consist of fish, particularly salted cod, fish-roe, tallow,
+train-oil, eider-down, and feathers of other birds, almost equal to
+eider-down in softness, sheep's wool, and pickled or salted lamb. With
+the exception of the articles just enumerated, the Icelanders possess
+nothing; thirteen years ago, when Herr Knudson established a bakehouse,
+{31} he was compelled to bring from Copenhagen, not only the builder, but
+even the materials for building, stones, lime, &c.; for although the
+island abounds with masses of stone, there are none which can be used for
+building an oven, or which can be burnt into lime: every thing is of
+lava.
+
+Two or three cottages situated near each other are here dignified by the
+name of a "place." These places, as well as the separate cottages, are
+mostly built on little acclivities, surrounded by meadows. The meadows
+are often fenced in with walls of stone or earth, two or three feet in
+height, to prevent the cows, sheep, and horses from trespassing upon them
+to graze. The grass of these meadows is made into hay, and laid up as a
+winter provision for the cows.
+
+I did not hear many complaints of the severity of the cold in winter; the
+temperature seldom sinks to twenty degrees below zero; the sea is
+sometimes frozen, but only a few feet from the shore. The snowstorms and
+tempests, however, are often so violent, that it is almost impossible to
+leave the house. Daylight lasts only for five or six hours, and to
+supply its place the poor Icelanders have only the northern light, which
+is said to illumine the long nights with a brilliancy truly marvellous.
+
+The summer I passed in Iceland was one of the finest the inhabitants had
+known for years. During the month of June the thermometer often rose at
+noon to twenty degrees. The inhabitants found this heat so
+insupportable, that they complained of being unable to work or to go on
+messages during the day-time. On such warm days they would only begin
+their hay-making in the evening, and continued their work half the night.
+
+The changes in the weather are very remarkable. Twenty degrees of heat
+on one day would be followed by rain on the next, with a temperature of
+only five degrees; and on the 5th of June, at eight o'clock in the
+morning, the thermometer stood at one degree below zero. It is also
+curious that thunderstorms happen in Iceland in winter, and are said
+never to occur during the summer.
+
+From the 16th or 18th of June to the end of the month there is no night.
+The sun appears only to retire for a short time behind a mountain, and
+forms sunset and morning-dawn at the same time. As on one side the last
+beam fades away, the orb of day re-appears at the opposite one with
+redoubled splendour.
+
+During my stay in Iceland, from the 15th of May to the 29th of July, I
+never retired to rest before eleven o'clock at night, and never required
+a candle. In May, and also in the latter portion of the month of July,
+there was twilight for an hour or two, but it never became quite dark.
+Even during the last days of my stay, I could read until half-past ten
+o'clock. At first it appeared strange to me to go to bed in broad
+daylight; but I soon accustomed myself to it, and when eleven o'clock
+came, no sunlight was powerful enough to cheat me of my sleep. I found
+much pleasure in walking at night, at past ten o'clock, not in the pale
+moonshine, but in the broad blaze of the sun.
+
+It was a much more difficult task to accustom myself to the diet. The
+baker's wife was fully competent to superintend the cooking according to
+the Danish and Icelandic schools of the art; but unfortunately these
+modes of cookery differ widely from ours. One thing only was good, the
+morning cup of coffee with cream, with which the most accomplished
+gourmand could have found no fault: since my departure from Iceland I
+have not found such coffee. I could have wished for some of my dear
+Viennese friends to breakfast with me. The cream was so thick, that I at
+first thought my hostess had misunderstood me, and brought me curds. The
+butter made from the milk of Icelandic cows and ewes did not look very
+inviting, and was as white as lard, but the taste was good. The
+Icelanders, however, find the taste not sufficiently "piquant," and
+generally qualify it with train-oil. Altogether, train-oil plays a very
+prominent part in the Icelandic kitchen; the peasant considers it a most
+delicious article, and thinks nothing of devouring a quantity of it
+without bread, or indeed any thing else. {32}
+
+I did not at all relish the diet at dinner; this meal consisted of two
+dishes, namely, boiled fish, with vinegar and melted butter instead of
+oil, and boiled potatoes. Unfortunately I am no admirer of fish, and now
+this was my daily food. Ah, how I longed for beef-soup, a piece of meat,
+and vegetables, in vain! As long as I remained in Iceland, I was
+compelled quite to give up my German system of diet.
+
+After a time I got on well enough with the boiled fish and potatoes, but
+I could not manage the delicacies of the island. Worthy Madame Bernhoft,
+it was so kindly meant on her part; and it was surely not her fault that
+the system of cookery in Iceland is different from ours; but I could not
+bring myself to like the Icelandic delicacies. They were of different
+kinds, consisting sometimes of fishes, hard-boiled eggs, and potatoes
+chopped up together, covered with a thick brown sauce, and seasoned with
+pepper, sugar, and vinegar; at others, of potatoes baked in butter and
+sugar. Another delicacy was cabbage chopped very small, rendered very
+thin by the addition of water, and sweetened with sugar; the accompanying
+dish was a piece of cured lamb, which had a very unpleasant "pickled"
+flavour.
+
+On Sundays we sometimes had "Prothe Grutze," properly a Scandinavian
+dish, composed of fine sago boiled to a jelly, with currant-juice or red
+wine, and eaten with cream or sugar. Tapfen, a kind of soft cheese, is
+also sometimes eaten with cream and sugar.
+
+In the months of June and July the diet improved materially. We could
+often procure splendid salmon, sometimes roast lamb, and now and then
+birds, among which latter dainties the snipes were particularly good. In
+the evening came butter, cheese, cold fish, smoked lamb, and eggs of
+eider-ducks, which are coarser than hen's eggs. In time I became so
+accustomed to this kind of food, that I no longer missed either soup or
+beef, and felt uncommonly well.
+
+My drink was always clear fresh water; the gentlemen began their dinner
+with a small glass of brandy, and during the meal all drank beer of Herr
+Bernhoft's own brewing, which was very good. On Sundays, a bottle of
+port or Bordeaux sometimes made its appearance at our table; and as we
+fared at Herr Bernhoft's, so it was the custom in the houses of all the
+merchants and officials.
+
+At Reikjavik I had an opportunity of witnessing a great religious
+ceremony. Three candidates of theology were raised to the ministerial
+office. Though the whole community here is Lutheran, the ceremonies
+differ in many respects from those of the continent of Europe, and I will
+therefore give a short sketch of what I saw. The solemnity began at
+noon, and lasted till four o'clock. I noticed at once that all the
+people covered their faces for a moment on entering the church, the men
+with their hats, and the women with their handkerchiefs. Most of the
+congregation sat with their faces turned towards the altar; but this rule
+had its exceptions. The vestments of the priests were the same as those
+worn by our clergymen, and the commencement of the service also closely
+resembled the ritual of our own Church; but soon this resemblance ceased.
+The bishop stepped up to the altar with the candidates, and performed
+certain ceremonies; then one would mount the pulpit and read part of a
+sermon, or sing a psalm, while the other clergymen sat round on chairs,
+and appeared to listen; then a second and a third ascended the pulpit,
+and afterwards another sermon was preached from the altar, and another
+psalm sung; then a sermon was again read from the pulpit. While
+ceremonies were performed at the altar, the sacerdotal garments were
+often put on and taken off again. I frequently thought the service was
+coming to a close, but it always began afresh, and lasted, as I said
+before, until four o'clock. The number of forms surprised me greatly, as
+the ritual of the Lutheran Church is in general exceedingly simple.
+
+On this occasion a considerable number of the country people were
+assembled, and I had thus a good opportunity of noticing their costumes.
+The dresses worn by the women and girls are all made of coarse black
+woollen stuffs. The dress consists of a long skirt, a spencer, and a
+coloured apron. On their heads they wear a man's nightcap of black
+cloth, the point turned downwards, and terminating in a large tassel of
+wool or silk, which hangs down to the shoulder. Their hair is unbound,
+and reaches only to the shoulder: some of the women wear it slightly
+curled. I involuntarily thought of the poetical descriptions of the
+northern romancers, who grow enthusiastic in praise of ideal "angels'
+heads with golden tresses." The hair is certainly worn in this manner
+here, and our poets may have borrowed their descriptions from the
+Scandinavians. But the beautiful faces which are said to beam forth from
+among those golden locks exist only in the poet's vivid imagination.
+
+Ornamental additions to the costume are very rare. In the whole assembly
+I only noticed four women who were dressed differently from the others.
+The cords which fastened their spencers, and also their girdles, were
+ornamented with a garland worked in silver thread. Their skirts were of
+fine black cloth, and decorated with a border of coloured silk a few
+inches broad. Round their necks they wore a kind of stiff collar of
+black velvet with a border of silver thread, and on their heads a black
+silk handkerchief with a very strange addition. This appendage consisted
+of a half-moon fastened to the back of the head, and extending five or
+six inches above the forehead. It was covered with white lawn arranged
+in folds; its breadth at the back of the head did not exceed an inch and
+a half, but in front it widened to five or six inches.
+
+The men, I found, were clothed almost like our peasants. They wore
+small-clothes of dark cloth, jackets and waistcoats, felt hats, or fur
+caps; and instead of boots a kind of shoe of ox-hide, sheep, or
+seal-skin, bound to the feet by a leather strap. The women, and even the
+children of the officials, all wear shoes of this description.
+
+It was very seldom that I met people so wretchedly and poorly clad as we
+find them but too often in the large continental towns. I never saw any
+one without good warm shoes and stockings.
+
+The better classes, such as merchants, officials, &c. are dressed in the
+French style, and rather fashionably. There is no lack of silk and other
+costly stuffs. Some of these are brought from England, but the greater
+part come from Denmark.
+
+On the king's birthday, which is kept every year at the house of the
+Stiftsamtmann, the festivities are said to be very grand; on this
+occasion the matrons appear arrayed in silk, and the maidens in white
+jaconet; the rooms are lighted with wax tapers.
+
+Some speculative genius or other has also established a sort of club in
+Reikjavik. He has, namely, hired a couple of rooms, where the
+townspeople meet of an evening to discuss "tea-water," bread and butter,
+and sometimes even a bottle of wine or a bowl of punch. In winter the
+proprietor gives balls in these apartments, charging 20 kr. for each
+ticket of admission. Here the town grandees and the handicraftsmen, in
+fact all who choose to come, assemble; and the ball is said to be
+conducted in a very republican spirit. The shoemaker leads forth the
+wife of the Stiftsamtmann to the dance, while that official himself has
+perhaps chosen the wife or daughter of the shoemaker or baker for his
+partner. The refreshments consist of "tea-water" and bread and butter,
+and the room is lighted with tallow candles. The music, consisting of a
+kind of three-stringed violin and a pipe, is said to be exquisitely
+horrible.
+
+In summer the dignitaries make frequent excursions on horse-back; and on
+these occasions great care is taken that there be no lack of provisions.
+Commonly each person contributes a share: some bring wine, others cake;
+others, again, coffee, and so on. The ladies use fine English
+side-saddles, and wear elegant riding-habits, and pretty felt hats with
+green veils. These jaunts, however, are confined to Reikjavik; for, as I
+have already observed, there is, with the exception of this town, no
+place in Iceland containing more than two or three stores and some
+half-dozen cottages.
+
+To my great surprise, I found no less than six square piano-fortes
+belonging to different families in Reikjavik, and heard waltzes by our
+favourite composers, besides variations of Herz, and some pieces of
+Liszt, Wilmers, and Thalberg. But such playing! I do not think that
+these talented composers would have recognised their own works.
+
+In conclusion, I must offer a few remarks relative to the travelling in
+this country.
+
+The best time to choose for this purpose is from the middle of June to
+the end of August at latest. Until June the rivers are so swollen and
+turbulent, by reason of the melting snows, as to render it very dangerous
+to ride through them. The traveller must also pass over many a field of
+snow not yet melted by the sun, and frequently concealing chasms and
+masses of lava; and this is attended with danger almost as great. At
+every footstep the traveller sinks into the snow; and he may thank his
+lucky stars if the whole rotten surface does not give way. In September
+the violent storms of wind and rain commence, and heavy falls of snow may
+be expected from day to day.
+
+A tent, provisions, cooking utensils, pillows, bed-clothes, and warm
+garments, are highly necessary for the wayfarer's comfort. This
+paraphernalia would have been too expensive for me to buy, and I was
+unprovided with any thing of the kind; consequently I was forced to
+endure the most dreadful hardships and toil, and was frequently obliged
+to ride an immense distance to reach a little church or a cottage, which
+would afford me shelter for the night. My sole food for eight or ten
+days together was often bread and cheese; and I generally passed the
+night upon a chest or a bench, where the cold would often prevent my
+closing my eyes all night.
+
+It is advisable to be provided with a waterproof cloak and a sailor's
+tarpaulin hat, as a defence against the rain, which frequently falls. An
+umbrella would be totally useless, as the rain is generally accompanied
+by a storm, or, at any rate, by a strong wind; when we add to this, that
+it is necessary in some places to ride quickly, it will easily be seen
+that holding an umbrella open is a thing not to be thought of.
+
+Altogether I found the travelling in this country attended with far more
+hardship than in the East. For my part, I found the dreadful storms of
+wind, the piercing air, the frequent rain, and the cold, much less
+endurable than the Oriental heat, which never gave me either cracked lips
+or caused scales to appear on my face. In Iceland my lips began to bleed
+on the fifth day; and afterwards the skin came off my face in scales, as
+if I had had the scrofula. Another source of great discomfort is to be
+found in the long riding-habit. It is requisite to be very warmly clad;
+and the heavy skirts, often dripping with rain, coil themselves round the
+feet of the wearer in such a manner, as to render her exceedingly awkward
+either in mounting or dismounting. The worst hardship of all, however,
+is the being obliged to halt to rest the horses in a meadow during the
+rain. The long skirts suck up the water from the damp grass, and the
+wearer has often literally not a dry stitch in all her garments.
+
+Heat and cold appear in this country to affect strangers in a remarkable
+degree. The cold seemed to me more piercing, and the heat more
+oppressive in Iceland, than when the thermometer stood at the same points
+in my native land.
+
+In summer the roads are marvellously good, so that one can generally ride
+at a pretty quick pace. They are, however, impracticable for vehicles,
+partly because they are too narrow, and partly also on account of some
+very bad places which must occasionally be encountered. On the whole
+island not a single carriage is to be found.
+
+The road is only dangerous when it leads through swamps and moors, or
+over fields of lava. Among these fields, such as are covered with white
+moss are peculiarly to be feared, for the moss frequently conceals very
+dangerous holes, into which the horse can easily stumble. In ascending
+and descending the hills very formidable spots sometimes oppose the
+traveller's progress. The road is at times so hidden among swamps and
+bogs, that not a trace of it is to be distinguished, and I could only
+wonder how my guide always succeeded in regaining the right path. One
+could almost suppose that on these dangerous paths both horse and man are
+guided by a kind of instinct.
+
+Travelling is more expensive in Iceland than any where else, particularly
+when one person travels alone, and must bear all the expense of the
+baggage, the guide, ferries, &c. Horses are not let out on hire, they
+must be bought. They are, however, very cheap; a pack-horse costs from
+eighteen to twenty-four florins, and a riding-horse from forty to fifty
+florins. To travel with any idea of comfort it is necessary to have
+several pack-horses, for they must not be heavily laden; and an
+additional servant must likewise be hired, as the guide only looks after
+the saddle-horses, and, at most, one or two of the pack-horses. If the
+traveller, at the conclusion of the journey, wishes to sell the horses,
+such a wretchedly low price is offered, that it is just as well to give
+them away at once. This is a proof of the fact that men are every where
+alike ready to follow up their advantage. These people are well aware
+that the horses must be left behind at any rate, and therefore they will
+not bid for them. I must confess that I found the character of the
+Icelanders in every respect below the estimate I had previously formed of
+it, and still further below the standard given in books.
+
+In spite of their scanty food, the Icelandic horses have a marvellous
+power of endurance; they can often travel from thirty-five to forty miles
+per diem for several consecutive days. But the only difficulty is to
+keep the horse moving. The Icelanders have a habit of continually
+kicking their heels against the poor beast's sides; and the horse at last
+gets so accustomed to this mode of treatment, that it will hardly go if
+the stimulus be discontinued. In passing the bad pieces of road it is
+necessary to keep the bridle tight in hand, or the horse will stumble
+frequently. This and the continual urging forward of the horse render
+riding very fatiguing. {33}
+
+Not a little consideration is certainly required before undertaking a
+journey into the far north; but nothing frightened me,--and even in the
+midst of the greatest dangers and hardships I did not for one moment
+regret my undertaking, and would not have relinquished it under any
+consideration.
+
+I made excursions to every part of Iceland, and am thus enabled to place
+before my readers, in regular order, the chief curiosities of this
+remarkable country. I will commence with the immediate neighbourhood of
+Reikjavik.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ May 25th.
+
+Stiftsamtmann von H--- was to-day kind enough to pay me a visit, and to
+invite me to join his party for a ride to the great lake Vatne. I gladly
+accepted the invitation, for, according to the description given by the
+Stiftsamtmann, I hoped to behold a very Eden, and rejoiced at the
+prospect of observing the recreations of the higher classes, and at the
+same time gaining many acquisitions in specimens of plants, butterflies,
+and beetles. I resolved also to test the capabilities of the Icelandic
+horses more thoroughly than I had been able to do during my first ride
+from Havenfiord to Reikjavik, as I had been obliged on that occasion to
+ride at a foot-pace, on account of my old guide.
+
+The hour of starting was fixed for two o'clock. Accustomed as I am to
+strict punctuality, I was ready long before the appointed time, and at
+two o'clock was about to hasten to the place of rendezvous, when my
+hostess informed me I had plenty of time, for Herr von H--- was still at
+dinner. Instead of meeting at two o'clock, we did not assemble until
+three, and even then another quarter of an hour elapsed before the
+cavalcade started. Oh, Syrian notions of punctuality and dispatch!
+Here, almost at the very antipodes, did I once more greet ye.
+
+The party consisted of the nobility and the town dignitaries. Among the
+former class may be reckoned Stiftsamtmann von H--- and his lady; a privy
+councillor, Herr von B---, who had been sent from Copenhagen to attend
+the "Allthing" (political assembly); and a Danish baron, who had
+accompanied the councillor. I noticed among the town dignitaries the
+daughter and wife of the apothecary, and the daughters of some merchants
+resident here.
+
+Our road lay through fields of lava, swamps, and very poor grassy
+patches, in a great valley, swelling here and there into gentle
+acclivities, and shut in on three sides by several rows of mountains,
+towering upwards in the most diversified shapes. In the far distance
+rose several jokuls or glaciers, seeming to look proudly down upon the
+mountains, as though they asked, "Why would ye draw men's eyes upon you,
+where we glisten in our silver sheen?" In the season of the year at
+which I beheld them, the glaciers were still very beautiful; not only
+their summits, but their entire surface, as far as visible, being covered
+with snow. The fourth side of the valley through which we travelled was
+washed by the ocean, which melted as it were into the horizon in
+immeasurable distance. The coast was dotted with small bays, having the
+appearance of so many lakes.
+
+As the road was good, we could generally ride forward at a brisk pace.
+Occasionally, however, we met with small tracts on which the Icelandic
+horse could exercise its sagacity and address. My horse was careful and
+free from vice; it carried me securely over masses of stone and chasms in
+the rocks, but I cannot describe the suffering its trot caused me. It is
+said that riding is most beneficial to those who suffer from
+liver-complaints. This may be the case; but I should suppose that any
+one who rode upon an Icelandic horse, with an Icelandic side-saddle,
+every day for the space of four weeks, would find, at the expiration of
+that time, her liver shaken to a pulp, and no part of it remaining.
+
+All the rest of the party had good English saddles, mine alone was of
+Icelandic origin. It consisted of a chair, with a board for the back.
+The rider was obliged to sit crooked upon the horse, and it was
+impossible to keep a firm seat. With much difficulty I trotted after the
+others, for my horse would not be induced to break into a gallop.
+
+At length, after a ride of an hour and a half, we reached a valley. In
+the midst of a tolerably green meadow I descried what was, for Iceland, a
+farm of considerable dimensions, and not far from this farm was a very
+small lake. I did not dare to ask if this was the _great_ lake Vatne, or
+if this was the delicious prospect I had been promised, for my question
+would have been taken for irony. I could not refrain from wonder when
+Herr von H--- began praising the landscape as exquisite, and farther
+declaring the effect of the lake to be bewitching. I was obliged, for
+politeness' sake, to acquiesce, and leave them in the supposition that I
+had never seen a larger lake nor a finer prospect.
+
+We now made a halt, and the whole party encamped in the meadow. While
+the preparations for a social meal were going on, I proceeded to satisfy
+my curiosity.
+
+The peasant's house first attracted my attention. I found it to consist
+of one large chamber, and two of smaller size, besides a storeroom and
+extensive stables, from which I judged that the proprietor was rich in
+cattle. I afterwards learnt that he owned fifty sheep, eight cows, and
+five horses, and was looked upon as one of the richest farmers in the
+neighbourhood. The kitchen was situated at the extreme end of the
+building, and was furnished with a chimney that seemed intended only as a
+protection against rain and snow, for the smoke dispersed itself
+throughout the whole kitchen, drying the fish which hung from the
+ceiling, and slowly making its exit through an air-hole.
+
+The large apartment boasted a wooden bookshelf, containing about forty
+volumes. Some of these I turned over, and in spite of my limited
+knowledge of the Danish language, could make out enough to discover that
+they were chiefly on religious subjects. But the farmer seemed also to
+love poetry; among the works of this class in his library, I noticed
+Kleist, Muller, and even Homer's _Odyssey_. I could make nothing of the
+Icelandic books; but on inquiring their contents, I was told that they
+all treated of religious matters.
+
+After inspecting these, I walked out into the meadow to search for
+flowers and herbs. Flowers I found but few, as it was not the right time
+of the year for them; my search for herbs was more successful, and I even
+found some wild clover. I saw neither beetles nor butterflies; but, to
+my no small surprise, heard the humming of two wild bees, one of which I
+was fortunate enough to catch, and took home to preserve in spirits of
+wine.
+
+On rejoining my party, I found them encamped in the meadow around a
+table, which had in the meantime been spread with butter, cheese, bread,
+cake, roast lamb, raisins and almonds, a few oranges, and wine. Neither
+chairs nor benches were to be had, for even wealthy peasants only possess
+planks nailed to the walls of their rooms; so we all sat down upon the
+grass, and did ample justice to the capital coffee which made the
+commencement of the meal. Laughter and jokes predominated to such an
+extent, that I could have fancied myself among impulsive Italians instead
+of cold Northmen.
+
+There was no lack of wit; but to-day I was unfortunately its butt. And
+what was my fault?--only my stupid modesty. The conversation was carried
+on in the Danish language; some members of our party spoke French and
+others German, but I purposely abstained from availing myself of their
+acquirements, in order not to disturb the hilarity of the conversation.
+I sat silently among them, and was perfectly contented in listening to
+their merriment. But my behaviour was set down as proceeding from
+stupidity, and I soon gathered from their discourse that they were
+comparing me to the "stone guest" in Mozart's _Don Giovanni_. If these
+kind people had only surmised the true reason of my keeping silence, they
+would perhaps have thanked me for doing so.
+
+As we sat at our meal, I heard a voice in the farmhouse singing an
+Icelandic song. At a distance it resembled the humming of bees; on a
+nearer approach it sounded monotonous, drawling, and melancholy.
+
+While we were preparing for our departure, the farmer, his wife, and the
+servants approached, and shook each of us by the hand. This is the usual
+mode of saluting such _high_ people as we numbered among our party. The
+true national salutation is a hearty kiss.
+
+On my arrival at home the effect of the strong coffee soon began to
+manifest itself. I could not sleep at all, and had thus ample leisure to
+make accurate observations as to the length of the day and of the
+twilight. Until eleven o'clock at night I could read ordinary print in
+my room. From eleven till one o'clock it was dusk, but never so dark as
+to prevent my reading in the open air. In my room, too, I could
+distinguish the smallest objects, and even tell the time by my watch. At
+one o'clock I could again read in my room.
+
+
+
+EXCURSION TO VIDOE.
+
+
+The little island of Vidoe, four miles distant from Reikjavik, is
+described by most travellers as the chief resort of the eider-duck. I
+visited the island on the 8th of June, but was disappointed in my
+expectations. I certainly saw many of these birds on the declivities and
+in the chasms of the rocks, sitting quietly on their nests, but nothing
+approaching the thousands I had been led to expect. On the whole, I may
+perhaps have seen from one hundred to a hundred and fifty nests.
+
+The most remarkable circumstance connected with the eider-ducks is their
+tameness during the period of incubation. I had always regarded as myths
+the stories told about them in this respect, and should do so still had I
+not convinced myself of the truth of these assertions by laying hands
+upon the ducks myself. I could go quite up to them and caress them, and
+even then they would not often leave their nests. Some few birds,
+indeed, did so when I wished to touch them; but they did not fly up, but
+contented themselves with coolly walking a few paces away from the nest,
+and there sitting quietly down until I had departed. But those which
+already had live young, beat out boldly with their wings when I
+approached, struck at me with their bills, and allowed themselves to be
+taken up bodily rather than leave the nest. They are about the size of
+our ducks; their eggs are of a greenish grey, rather larger than hen's
+eggs, and taste very well. Altogether they lay about eleven eggs. The
+finest down is that with which they line their nests at first; it is of a
+dark grey colour. The Icelanders take away this down, and the first nest
+of eggs. The poor bird now robs herself once more of a quantity of down
+(which is, however, not of so fine a quality as the first), and again
+lays eggs. For the second time every thing is taken from her; and not
+until she has a third time lined the nest with her down is the eider-duck
+left in peace. The down of the second, and that of the third quality
+especially, are much lighter than that of the first. I also was
+sufficiently cruel to take a few eggs and some down out of several of the
+nests. {34}
+
+I did not witness the dangerous operation of collecting this down from
+between the clefts of rocks and from unapproachable precipices, where
+people are let down, or to which they are drawn up, by ropes, at peril of
+their lives. There are, however, none of these break-neck places in the
+neighbourhood of Reikjavik.
+
+
+
+SALMON FISHERY.
+
+
+I made another excursion to a very short distance (two miles) from
+Reikjavik, in the company of Herr Bernhoft and his daughter, to the
+Laxselv (salmon river) to witness the salmon-fishing, which takes place
+every week from the middle of June to the middle of August. It is
+conducted in a very simple manner. The fish come up the river in the
+spawning season; the stream is then dammed up with several walls of stone
+loosely piled to the height of some three feet; and the retreat of the
+fish to the sea is thus cut off. When the day arrives on which the
+salmon are to be caught, a net is spread behind each of these walls.
+Three or four such dams are erected at intervals, of from eighty to a
+hundred paces, so that even if the fishes escape one barrier, they are
+generally caught at the next. The water is now made to run off as much
+as possible; the poor salmon dart to and fro, becoming every moment more
+and more aware of the sinking of the water, and crowd to the weirs,
+cutting themselves by contact with the sharp stones of which they are
+built. This is the deepest part of the water; and it is soon so thronged
+with fish, that men, stationed in readiness, can seize them in their
+hands and fling them ashore.
+
+The salmon possess remarkable swiftness and strength. The fisherman is
+obliged to take them quickly by the head and tail, and to throw them
+ashore, when they are immediately caught by other men, who fling them
+still farther from the water. If this is not done with great quickness
+and care, many of the fishes escape. It is wonderful how these creatures
+can struggle themselves free, and leap into the air. The fishermen are
+obliged to wear woollen mittens, or they would be quite unable to hold
+the smooth salmon. At every day's fishing, from five hundred to a
+thousand fish are taken, each weighing from five to fifteen pounds. On
+the day when I was present eight hundred were killed. This salmon-stream
+is farmed by a merchant of Reikjavik.
+
+The fishermen receive very liberal pay,--in fact, one-half of the fish
+taken. And yet they are dissatisfied, and show so little gratitude, as
+seldom to finish their work properly. So, for instance, they only
+brought the share of the merchant to the harbour of Reikjavik, and were
+far too lazy to carry the salmon from the boat to the warehouse, a
+distance certainly not more than sixty or seventy paces from the shore.
+They sent a message to their employer, bidding him "send some fresh
+hands, for they were much too tired." Of course, in a case like this,
+all remonstrance is unavailing.
+
+As in the rest of the world, so also in Iceland, every occasion that
+offers is seized upon for a feast or a merry-making. The day on which I
+witnessed the salmon-fishing happened to be one of the few fine days that
+occur during a summer in Iceland. It was therefore unanimously concluded
+by several merchants, that the day and the salmon-fishing should be
+celebrated by a _dejeuner a la fourchette_. Every one contributed
+something, and a plentiful and elegant breakfast was soon arranged, which
+quite resembled an entertainment of the kind in our country; this one
+circumstance excepted, that we were obliged to seat ourselves on the
+ground, by reason of a scarcity of tables and benches. Spanish and
+French wines, as well as cold punch, were there in plenty, and the
+greatest hilarity prevailed.
+
+I made a fourth excursion, but to a very inconsiderable distance,--in
+fact, only a mile and a half from Reikjavik. It was to see a hot and
+slightly sulphurous spring, which falls into a river of cold water. By
+this lucky meeting of extremes, water can be obtained at any temperature,
+from the boiling almost to the freezing point. The townspeople take
+advantage of this good opportunity in two ways, for bathing and for
+washing clothes. The latter is undoubtedly the more important purpose of
+application, and a hut has been erected, in order to shield the poor
+people from wind and rain while they are at work. Formerly this hut was
+furnished with a good door and with glazed windows, and the key was kept
+at an appointed place in the town, whence any one might fetch it. But
+the servants and peasant girls were soon too lazy to go for the key; they
+burst open the lock, and smashed the windows, so that now the hut has a
+very ruinous appearance, and affords but little protection against the
+weather. How much alike mankind are every where, and how seldom they do
+right, except when it gives them no trouble, and then, unfortunately,
+there is not much merit to be ascribed to them, as their doing right is
+merely the result of a lucky chance! Many people also bring fish and
+potatoes, which they have only to lay in the hot water, and in a short
+time both are completely cooked.
+
+This spring is but little used for the purpose of bathing; at most
+perhaps by a few children and peasants. Its medicinal virtues, if it
+possesses any, are completely unknown.
+
+
+
+THE SULPHUR-SPRINGS AND SULPHUR-MOUNTAINS OF KRISUVIK.
+
+
+The 4th of June was fixed for my departure. I had only to pack up some
+bread and cheese, sugar and coffee, then the horses were saddled, and at
+seven o'clock the journey was happily commenced. I was alone with my
+guide, who, like the rest of his class, could not be considered as a very
+favourable specimen of humanity. He was very lazy, exceedingly
+self-interested, and singularly loath to devote any part of his attention
+either to me or to the horses, preferring to concentrate it upon brandy,
+an article which can unfortunately be procured throughout the whole
+country.
+
+I had already seen the district between Reikjavik and Havenfiord at my
+first arrival in Iceland. At the present advanced season of the year it
+wore a less gloomy aspect: strawberry-plants and violets,--the former,
+however, without blossoms, and the latter inodorous,--were springing up
+between the blocks of lava, together with beautiful ferns eight or ten
+inches high. In spite of the trifling distance, I noticed, as a rule,
+that vegetation was here more luxuriant than at Reikjavik; for at the
+latter place I had found no strawberry-plants, and the violets were not
+yet in blossom. This difference in the vegetation is, I think, to be
+ascribed to the high walls of lava existing in great abundance round
+Havenfiord; they protect the tender plants and ferns from the piercing
+winds. I noticed that both the grass and the plants before mentioned
+throve capitally in the little hollows formed by masses of lava.
+
+A couple of miles beyond Havenfiord I saw the first birch-trees, which,
+however, did not exceed two or three feet in height, also some
+bilberry-plants. A number of little butterflies, all of one colour, and,
+as it seemed to me, of the same species, fluttered among the shrubs and
+plants.
+
+The manifold forms and varied outline of the lava-fields present a
+remarkable and really a marvellous appearance. Short as this journey
+is--for ten hours are amply sufficient for the trip to Krisuvik,--it
+presents innumerable features for contemplation. I could only gaze and
+wonder. I forgot every thing around me, felt neither cold nor storm, and
+let my horse pick his way as slowly as he chose, so that I had once
+almost become separated from my guide.
+
+One of the most considerable of the streams of lava lay in a spacious
+broad valley. The lava-stream itself, about two miles long, and of a
+considerable breadth, traversing the whole of the plain, seemed to have
+been called into existence by magic, as there was no mountain to be seen
+in the neighbourhood from which it could have emerged. It appeared to be
+the covering of an immense crater, formed, not of separate stones and
+blocks, but of a single and slightly porous mass of rock ten or twelve
+feet thick, broken here and there by clefts about a foot in breadth.
+
+Another, and a still larger valley, many miles in circumference, was
+filled with masses of lava shaped like waves, reminding the beholder of a
+petrified sea. From the midst rose a high black mountain, contrasting
+beautifully with the surrounding masses of light-grey lava. At first I
+supposed the lava must have streamed forth from this mountain, but soon
+found that the latter was perfectly smooth on all sides, and terminated
+in a sharp peak. The remaining mountains which shut in the valley were
+also perfectly closed, and I looked in vain for any trace of a crater.
+
+We now reached a small lake, and soon afterwards arrived at a larger one,
+called Kleinfarvatne. Both were hemmed in by mountains, which frequently
+rose abruptly from the waters, leaving no room for the passage of the
+horses. We were obliged sometimes to climb the mountains by fearfully
+dizzy paths; at others to scramble downwards, almost clinging to the face
+of the rock. At some points we were even compelled to dismount from our
+horses, and scramble forward on our hands and knees. In a word, these
+dangerous points, which extended over a space of about seven miles, were
+certainly quite as bad as any I had encountered in Syria; if any thing,
+they were even more formidable.
+
+I was, however, assured that I should have no more such places to
+encounter during all my further journeys in Iceland, and this information
+quite reconciled me to the roads in this country. For the rest, the path
+was generally tolerably safe even during this tour, which continually led
+me across fields of lava.
+
+A journey of some eight-and-twenty miles brought us at length into a
+friendly valley; clouds of smoke, both small and great, were soon
+discovered rising from the surrounding heights, and also from the valley
+itself; these were the sulphur-springs and sulphur-mountains.
+
+I could hardly restrain my impatience while we traversed the couple of
+miles which separated us from Krisuvik. A few small lakes were still to
+be crossed; and at length, at six o'clock in the evening, we reached our
+destination.
+
+With the exception of a morsel of bread and cheese, I had eaten nothing
+since the morning; still I could not spare time to make coffee, but at
+once dismounted, summoned my guide, and commenced my pilgrimage to the
+smoking mountains. At the outset our way lay across swampy places and
+meadow lands; but soon we had to climb the mountains themselves, a task
+rendered extremely difficult by the elastic, yielding soil, in which
+every footstep imprinted itself deeply, suggesting to the traveller the
+unpleasant possibility of his sinking through,--a contingency rendered
+any thing but agreeable by the neighbourhood of the boiling springs. At
+length I gained the summit, and saw around me numerous basins filled with
+boiling water, while on all sides, from hill and valley, columns of
+vapour rose out of numberless clefts in the rocks. From a cleft in one
+rock in particular a mighty column of vapour whirled into the air. On
+the windward side I could approach this place very closely. The ground
+was only lukewarm in some places, and I could hold my hand for several
+moments to the gaps from which steam issued. No trace of a crater was to
+be seen. The bubbling and hissing of the steam, added to the noise of
+the wind, occasioned such a deafening clamour, that I was very glad to
+feel firmer ground beneath my feet, and to leave the place in haste. It
+really seemed as if the interior of the mountain had been a boiling
+caldron. The prospect from these mountains is very fine. Numerous
+valleys and mountains innumerable offered themselves to my view, and I
+could even discern the isolated black rock past which I had ridden five
+or six hours previously.
+
+I now commenced my descent into the valley; at a few hundred paces the
+bubbling and hissing were already inaudible. I supposed that I had seen
+every thing worthy of notice; but much that was remarkable still
+remained. I particularly noticed a basin some five or six feet in
+diameter, filled with boiling mud. This mud has quite the appearance of
+fine clay dissolved in water; its colour was a light grey.
+
+From another basin, hardly two feet in diameter, a mighty column of steam
+shot continually into the air with so much force and noise that I started
+back half stunned, and could have fancied the vault of heaven would
+burst. This basin is situated in a corner of the valley, closely shut in
+on three sides by hills. In the neighbourhood many hot springs gushed
+forth; but I saw no columns of water, and my guide assured me that such a
+phenomenon was never witnessed here.
+
+There is more danger in passing these spots than even in traversing the
+mountains. In spite of the greatest precautions, I frequently sank in
+above the ankles, and would then draw back with a start, and find my foot
+covered with hot mud. From the place where I had broken through, steam
+and hot mud, or boiling water, rose into the air.
+
+Though my guide, who walked before me, carefully probed the ground with
+his stick, he several times sank through half-way to the knee. These men
+are, however, so much accustomed to contingencies of this kind that they
+take little account of them. My guide would quietly repair to the next
+spring and cleanse his clothes from mud. As I was covered with it to
+above the ankles, I thought it best to follow his example.
+
+For excursions like these it is best to come provided with a few boards,
+five or six feet in length, with which to cover the most dangerous
+places.
+
+At nine o'clock in the evening, but yet in the full glare of the sun, we
+arrived at Krisuvik. I now took time to look at this place, which I
+found to consist of a small church and a few miserable huts.
+
+I crept into one of these dens; it was so dark that a considerable time
+elapsed before I could distinguish objects, the light was only admitted
+through a very small aperture. I found in this hut a few persons who
+were suffering from the eruption called "lepra," a disease but too
+commonly met with in Iceland. Their hands and faces were completely
+covered with this eruption; if it spreads over the whole body the patient
+languishes slowly away, and is lost without remedy.
+
+Churches are in this country not only used for purposes of public
+worship, but also serve as magazines for provisions, clothes, &c., and as
+inns for travellers. I do not suppose that a parallel instance of
+desecration could be met with even among the most uncivilised nations. I
+was assured, indeed, that these abuses were about to be remedied. A
+reform of this kind ought to have been carried out long ago; and even now
+the matter seems to remain an open point; for wherever I came the church
+was placed at my disposal for the night, and every where I found a store
+of fish, tallow, and other equally odoriferous substances.
+
+The little chapel at Krisuvik is only twenty-two feet long by ten broad;
+on my arrival it was hastily prepared for my reception. Saddles, ropes,
+clothes, hats, and other articles which lay scattered about, were hastily
+flung into a corner; mattresses and some nice soft pillows soon appeared,
+and a very tolerable bed was prepared for me on a large chest in which
+the vestments of the priest, the coverings of the altar, &c., were
+deposited. I would willingly have locked myself in, eaten my frugal
+supper, and afterwards written a few pages of my diary before retiring to
+rest; but this was out of the question. The entire population of the
+village turned out to see me, old and young hastened to the church, and
+stood round in a circle and gazed at me.
+
+Irksome as this curiosity was, I was obliged to endure it patiently, for
+I could not have sent these good people away without seriously offending
+them; so I began quietly to unpack my little portmanteau, and proceeded
+to boil my coffee over a spirit-lamp. A whispering consultation
+immediately began; they seemed particularly struck by my mode of
+preparing coffee, and followed every one of my movements with eager eyes.
+My frugal meal dispatched, I resolved to try the patience of my audience,
+and, taking out my journal, began to write. For a few minutes they
+remained quiet, then they began to whisper one to another, "She writes,
+she writes," and this was repeated numberless times. There was no sign
+of any disposition to depart; I believe I could have sat there till
+doomsday, and failed to tire my audience out. At length, after this
+scene had lasted a full hour, I could stand it no longer, and was fain to
+request my amiable visitors to retire, as I wished to go to bed.
+
+My sleep that night was none of the sweetest. A certain feeling of
+discomfort always attaches to the fact of sleeping in a church alone, in
+the midst of a grave-yard. Besides this, on the night in question such a
+dreadful storm arose that the wooden walls creaked and groaned as though
+their foundations were giving way. The cold was also rather severe, my
+thermometer inside the church shewing only two degrees above zero. I was
+truly thankful when approaching day brought with it the welcome hour of
+departure.
+
+ June 5th.
+
+The heavy sleepiness and extreme indolence of an Icelandic guide render
+departure before seven o'clock in the morning a thing not to be thought
+of. This is, however, of little consequence, as there is no night in
+Iceland at this time of year.
+
+Although the distance was materially increased by returning to Reikjavik
+by way of Grundivik and Keblevik, I chose this route in order to pass
+through the wildest of the inhabited tracts in Iceland.
+
+The first stage, from Krisuvik to Grundivik, a distance of twelve to
+fourteen miles, lay through fields of lava, consisting mostly of small
+blocks of stone and fragments, filling the valley so completely that not
+a single green spot remained. I here met with masses of lava which
+presented an appearance of singular beauty. They were black mounds, ten
+or twelve feet in height, piled upon each other in the most varied forms,
+their bases covered with a broad band of whitish-coloured moss, while the
+tops were broken into peaks and cones of the most fantastic shapes.
+These lava-streams seem to date from a recent period, as the masses are
+somewhat scaly and glazed.
+
+Grundivik, a little village of a few wretched cottages, lies like an
+oasis in this desert of lava.
+
+My guide wished to remain here, asserting that there was no place between
+this and Keblevik where I could pass the night, and that it would be
+impossible for our horses, exhausted as they were with yesterday's march,
+to carry us to Keblevik that night. The true reason of this suggestion
+was that he wished to prolong the journey for another day.
+
+Luckily I had a good map with me, and by dint of consulting it could
+calculate distances with tolerable accuracy; it was also my custom before
+starting on a journey to make particular inquiries as to how I should
+arrange the daily stages.
+
+So I insisted upon proceeding at once; and soon we were wending our way
+through fields of lava towards Stad, a small village six or seven miles
+distant from Grundivik.
+
+On the way I noticed a mountain of most singular appearance. In colour
+it closely resembled iron; its sides were perfectly smooth and shining,
+and streaks of the colour of yellow ochre traversed it here and there.
+
+Stad is the residence of a priest. Contrary to the assertions of my
+guide, I found this place far more cheerful and habitable than Grundivik.
+Whilst our horses were resting, the priest paid me a visit, and conducted
+me, not, as I anticipated, into his house, but into the church. Chairs
+and stools were quickly brought there, and my host introduced his wife
+and children to me, after which we partook of coffee, bread and cheese,
+&c. On the rail surrounding the altar hung the clothes of the priest and
+his family, differing little in texture and make from those of the
+peasants.
+
+The priest appeared to be a very intelligent, well-read man. I could
+speak the Danish language pretty fluently, and was therefore able to
+converse with him on various subjects. On hearing that I had already
+been in Palestine, he put a number of questions to me, from which I could
+plainly see that he was alike well acquainted with geography, history,
+natural science, &c. He accompanied me several miles on my road, and we
+chatted away the time very pleasantly.
+
+The distance between Krisuvik and Keblevik is about forty-two miles. The
+road lies through a most dreary landscape, among vast desert plains,
+frequently twenty-five to thirty miles in circumference, entirely
+divested of all traces of vegetation, and covered throughout their
+extreme area by masses of lava--gloomy monuments of volcanic agency. And
+yet here, at the very heart of the subterranean fire, I saw only a single
+mountain, the summit of which had fallen in, and presented the appearance
+of a crater. The rest were all completely closed, terminating sometimes
+in a beautiful round top, and sometimes in sharp peaks; in other
+instances they formed long narrow chains.
+
+Who can tell whence these all-destroying masses of lava have poured
+forth, or how many hundred years they have lain in these petrified
+valleys?
+
+Keblevik lies on the sea-coast; but the harbour is insecure, so that
+ships remain here at anchor only so long as is absolutely necessary;
+there are frequently only two or three ships in the harbour.
+
+A few wooden houses, two of which belong to Herr Knudson, and some
+peasants' cottages, are the only buildings in this little village. I was
+hospitably received, and rested from the toils of the day at the house of
+Herr Siverson, Herr Knudson's manager.
+
+On the following day (June 6th) I had a long ride to Reikjavik,
+thirty-six good miles, mostly through fields of lava.
+
+The whole tract of country from Grundivik almost to Havenfiord is called
+"The lava-fields of Reikianes."
+
+Tired and almost benumbed with cold, I arrived in the evening at
+Reikjavik, with no other wish than to retire to rest as fast as possible.
+
+In these three days I had ridden 114 miles, besides enduring much from
+cold, storms, and rain. To my great surprise, the roads had generally
+been good; there were, however, many places highly dangerous and
+difficult.
+
+But what mattered these fatigues, forgotten, as they were, after a single
+night's rest? what were they in comparison to the unutterably beautiful
+and marvellous phenomena of the north, which will remain ever present to
+my imagination so long as memory shall be spared me?
+
+The distances of this excursion were: From Reikjavik to Krisuvik, 37
+miles; from Krisuvik to Keblevik, 39 miles; from Keblevik to Reikjavik,
+38 miles: total, 114 miles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+As the weather continued fine, I wished to lose no time in continuing my
+wanderings. I had next to make a tour of some 560 miles; it was
+therefore necessary that I should take an extra horse, partly that it
+might carry my few packages, consisting of a pillow, some rye-bread,
+cheese, coffee, and sugar, but chiefly that I might be enabled to change
+horses every day, as one horse would not have been equal to the fatigue
+of so long a journey.
+
+My former guide could not accompany me on my present journey, as he was
+unacquainted with most of the roads. My kind protectors, Herr Knudson
+and Herr Bernhoft, were obliging enough to provide another guide for me;
+a difficult task, as it is a rare occurrence to find an Icelander who
+understands the Danish language, and who happens to be sober when his
+services are required. At length a peasant was found who suited our
+purpose; but he considered two florins per diem too little pay, so I was
+obliged to give an additional zwanziger. On the other hand, it was
+arranged that the guide should also take two horses, in order that he
+might change every day.
+
+The 16th of June was fixed for the commencement of our journey. From the
+very first day my guide did not shew himself in an amiable point of view.
+On the morning of our departure his saddle had to be patched together,
+and instead of coming with two horses, he appeared with only one. He
+certainly promised to buy a second when we should have proceeded some
+miles, adding that it would be cheaper to buy one at a little distance
+from the "capital." I at once suspected this was merely an excuse of the
+guide's, and that he wished thereby to avoid having the care of four
+horses. The event proved I was right; not a single horse could be found
+that suited, and so my poor little animal had to carry the guide's
+baggage in addition to my own.
+
+Loading the pack-horses is a business of some difficulty, and is
+conducted in the following manner: sundry large pieces of dried turf are
+laid upon the horse's back, but not fastened; over these is buckled a
+round piece of wood, furnished with two or three pegs. To these pegs the
+chests and packages are suspended. If the weight is not quite equally
+balanced, it is necessary to stop and repack frequently, for the whole
+load at once gets askew.
+
+The trunks used in this country are massively constructed of wood,
+covered with a rough hide, and strengthened on all sides with nails, as
+though they were intended to last an eternity. The poor horses have a
+considerable weight to bear in empty boxes alone, so that very little
+real luggage can be taken. The weight which a horse has to carry during
+a long journey should never exceed 150lbs.
+
+It is impossible to remember how many times our baggage had to be
+repacked during a day's journey. The great pieces of turf would never
+stay in their places, and every moment something was wrong. Nothing less
+than a miracle, however, can prevail on an Icelander to depart from his
+regular routine. His ancestors packed in such and such a manner, and so
+he must pack also. {35}
+
+We had a journey of above forty miles before us the first day, and yet,
+on account of the damaged saddle, we could not start before eight o'clock
+in the morning.
+
+The first twelve or fourteen miles of our journey lay through the great
+valley in which Reikjavik is situated; the valley contains many low
+hills, some of which we had to climb. Several rivers, chief among which
+was the Laxselv, opposed our progress, but at this season of the year
+they could be crossed on horseback without danger. Nearly all the
+valleys through which we passed to-day were covered with lava, but
+nevertheless offered many beautiful spots.
+
+Many of the hills we passed seemed to me to be extinct volcanoes; the
+whole upper portion was covered with colossal slabs of lava, as though
+the crater had been choked up with them. Lava of the same description
+and colour, but in smaller pieces, lay strewed around.
+
+For the first twelve or fourteen miles the sea is visible from the brow
+of every successive hill. The country is also pretty generally
+inhabited; but afterwards a distance of nearly thirty miles is passed, on
+which there is not a human habitation. The traveller journeys from one
+valley into another, and in the midst of these hill-girt deserts sees a
+single small hut, erected for the convenience of those who, in the
+winter, cannot accomplish the long distance in one day, and must take up
+their quarters for the night in the valley. No one must, however, rashly
+hope to find here a human being in the shape of a host. The little house
+is quite uninhabited, and consists only of a single apartment with four
+naked walls. The visitor must depend on the accommodation he carries
+with him.
+
+The plains through which we travelled to-day were covered throughout with
+one and the same kind of lava. It occurs in masses, and also in smaller
+stones, is not very porous, of a light grey colour, and mixed, in many
+instances, with sand or earth.
+
+Some miles from Thingvalla we entered a valley, the soil of which is
+fine, but nevertheless only sparingly covered with grass, and full of
+little acclivities, mostly clothed with delicate moss. I have no doubt
+that the indolence of the inhabitants alone prevents them from materially
+improving many a piece of ground. The worst soil is that in the
+neighbourhood of Reikjavik; yet there we see many a garden, and many a
+piece of meadow-land, wrung, as it were, from the barren earth by labour
+and pains. Why should not the same thing be done here--the more so as
+nature has already accomplished the preliminary work?
+
+Thingvalla, our resting-place for to-night, is situate on a lake of the
+same name, and only becomes visible when the traveller is close upon it.
+The lake is rather considerable, being almost three miles in length, and
+at some parts certainly more than two miles in breadth; it contains two
+small islands,--Sandey and Nesey.
+
+My whole attention was still riveted by the lake and its naked and gloomy
+circle of mountains, when suddenly, as if by magic, I found myself
+standing on the brink of a chasm, into which I could scarcely look
+without a shudder; involuntarily I thought of Weber's _Freyschutz_ and
+the "Wolf's Hollow." {36}
+
+The scene is the more startling from the circumstance that the traveller
+approaching Thingvalla in a certain direction sees only the plains beyond
+this chasm, and has no idea of its existence. It was a fissure some five
+or six fathoms broad, but several hundred feet in depth; and we were
+forced to descend by a small, steep, dangerous path, across large
+fragments of lava. Colossal blocks of stone, threatening the unhappy
+wanderer with death and destruction, hang loosely, in the form of
+pyramids and of broken columns, from the lofty walls of lava, which
+encircle the whole long ravine in the form of a gallery. Speechless, and
+in anxious suspense, we descend a part of this chasm, hardly daring to
+look up, much less to give utterance to a single sound, lest the
+vibration should bring down one of these avalanches of stone, to the
+terrific force of which the rocky fragments scattered around bear ample
+testimony. The distinctness with which echo repeats the softest sound
+and the lightest footfall is truly wonderful.
+
+The appearance presented by the horses, which are allowed to come down
+the ravine after their masters have descended, is most peculiar. One
+could fancy they were clinging to the walls of rock.
+
+This ravine is known by the name of Almanagiau. Its entire length is
+about a mile, but a small portion only can be traversed; the rest is
+blocked up by masses of lava heaped one upon the other. On the right
+hand, the rocky wall opens, and forms an outlet, over formidable masses
+of lava, into the beautiful valley of Thingvalla. I could have fancied I
+wandered through the depths of a crater, which had piled around itself
+these stupendous barriers during a mighty eruption in times long gone by.
+
+The valley of Thingvalla is considered one of the most beautiful in
+Iceland. It contains many meadows, forming, as it were, a place of
+refuge for the inhabitants, and enabling them to keep many head of
+cattle. The Icelanders consider this little green valley the finest spot
+in the world. Not far from the opening of the ravine, on the farther
+bank of the river Oxer, lies the little village of Thingvalla, consisting
+of three or four cottages and a small chapel. A few scattered farms and
+cottages are situated in the neighbourhood.
+
+Thingvalla was once one of the most important places in Iceland; the
+stranger is still shewn the meadow, not far from the village, on which
+the Allthing (general assembly) was held annually in the open air. Here
+the people and their leaders met, pitching their tents after the manner
+of nomads. Here it was also that many an opinion and many a decree were
+enforced by the weight of steel.
+
+The chiefs appeared, ostensibly for peace, at the head of their tribe;
+yet many of them returned not again, but beneath the sword-stroke of
+their enemies obtained that peace which no man seeketh, but which all men
+find.
+
+On one side the valley is skirted by the lake, on the other it is bounded
+by lofty mountains, some of them still partly covered with snow. Not far
+from the entrance of the ravine, the river Oxer rushes over a wall of
+rock of considerable height, forming a beautiful waterfall.
+
+It was still fine clear daylight when I reached Thingvalla, and the sky
+rose pure and cloudless over the far distance. It seemed therefore the
+more singular to me to see a few clouds skimming over the surface of the
+mountains, now shrouding a part of them in vapour, now wreathing
+themselves round their summits, now vanishing entirely, to reappear again
+at a different point.
+
+This is a phenomenon frequently observed in Iceland during the finest
+days, and one I had often noticed in the neighbourhood of Reikjavik.
+Under a clear and cloudless sky, a light mist would appear on the brow of
+a mountain,--in a moment it would increase to a large cloud, and after
+remaining stationary for a time, it frequently vanished suddenly, or
+soared slowly away. However often it may be repeated, this appearance
+cannot fail to interest the observer.
+
+Herr Beck, the clergyman at Thingvalla, offered me the shelter of his hut
+for the night; as the building, however, did not look much more promising
+than the peasants' cottages by which it was surrounded, I preferred
+quartering myself in the church, permission to do so being but too easily
+obtained on all occasions. This chapel is not much larger than that at
+Krisuvik, and stands at some distance from the few surrounding cottages.
+This was perhaps the reason why I was not incommoded by visitors. I had
+already conquered any superstitious fears derived from the proximity of
+my silent neighbours in the churchyard, and passed the night quietly on
+one of the wooden chests of which I found several scattered about. Habit
+is certainly every thing; after a few nights of gloomy solitude one
+thinks no more about the matter.
+
+ June 17th.
+
+Our journey of to-day was more formidable than that of yesterday. I was
+assured that Reikholt (also called Reikiadal) was almost fifty miles
+distant. Distances cannot always be accurately measured by the map;
+impassable barriers, only to be avoided by circuitous routes, often
+oppose the traveller's progress. This was the case with us to-day. To
+judge from the map, the distance from Thingvalla to Reikholt seemed less
+by a great deal than that from Reikjavik to Thingvalla, and yet we were
+full fourteen hours accomplishing it--two hours longer than on our
+yesterday's journey.
+
+So long as our way lay through the valley of Thingvalla there was no lack
+of variety. At one time there was an arm of the river Oxer to cross, at
+another we traversed a cheerful meadow; sometimes we even passed through
+little shrubberies,--that is to say, according to the Icelandic
+acceptation of the term. In my country these lovely shrubberies would
+have been cleared away as useless underwood. The trees trail along the
+ground, seldom attaining a height of more than two feet. When one of
+these puny stems reaches four feet in height, it is considered a gigantic
+tree. The greater portion of these miniature forests grow on the lava
+with which the valley is covered.
+
+The formation of the lava here assumes a new character. Up to this point
+it has mostly appeared either in large masses or in streams lying in
+strata one above the other; but here the lava covered the greater portion
+of the ground in the form of immense flat slabs or blocks of rock, often
+split in a vertical direction. I saw long fissures of eight or ten feet
+in breadth, and from ten to fifteen feet in depth. In these clefts the
+flowers blossom earlier, and the fern grows taller and more luxuriantly,
+than in the boisterous upper world.
+
+After the valley of Thingvalla has been passed the journey becomes very
+monotonous. The district beyond is wholly uninhabited, and we travelled
+many miles without seeing a single cottage. From one desert valley we
+passed into another; all were alike covered with light-grey or yellowish
+lava, and at intervals also with fine sand, in which the horses sunk
+deeply at every step. The mountains surrounding these valleys were none
+of the highest, and it was seldom that a jokul or glacier shone forth
+from among them. The mountains had a certain polished appearance, their
+sides being perfectly smooth and shining. In some instances, however,
+masses of lava formed beautiful groups, bearing a great resemblance to
+ruins of ancient buildings, and standing out in peculiarly fine relief
+from the smooth walls.
+
+These mountains are of different colours; they are black or brown, grey
+or yellow, &c.; and the different shades of these colours are displayed
+with marvellous effect in the brilliant sunshine.
+
+Nine hours of uninterrupted riding brought us into a large tract of
+moorland, very scantily covered with moss. Yet this was the first and
+only grazing-place to be met with in all the long distance from
+Thingvalla. We therefore made a halt of two hours, to let our poor
+horses pick a scanty meal. Large swarms of minute gnats, which seemed to
+fly into our eyes, nose, and mouth, annoyed us dreadfully during our stay
+in this place.
+
+On this moor there was also a small lake; and here I saw for the first
+time a small flock of swans. Unfortunately these creatures are so very
+timid, that the most cautious approach of a human being causes them to
+rise with the speed of lightning into the air. I was therefore obliged
+perforce to be content with a distant view of these proud birds. They
+always keep in pairs, and the largest flock I saw did not consist of more
+than four such pairs.
+
+Since my first arrival in Iceland I had considered the inhabitants an
+indolent race of people; to-day I was strengthened in my opinion by the
+following slight circumstance. The moorland on which we halted to rest
+was separated from the adjoining fields of lava by a narrow ditch filled
+with water. Across this ditch a few stones and slabs had been laid, to
+form a kind of bridge. Now this bridge was so full of holes that the
+horses could not tell where to plant their feet, and refused obstinately
+to cross it, so that in the end we were obliged to dismount and lead them
+across. We had scarcely passed this place, and sat down to rest, when a
+caravan of fifteen horses, laden with planks, dried fish, &c. arrived at
+the bridge. Of course the poor creatures observed the dangerous ground,
+and could only be driven by hard blows to advance. Hardly twenty paces
+off there were stones in abundance; but rather than devote a few minutes
+to filling up the holes, these lazy people beat their horses cruelly, and
+exposed them to the risk of breaking their legs. I pitied the poor
+animals, which would be compelled to recross the bridge, so heartily,
+that, after they are gone, I devoted a part of my resting-time to
+collecting stones and filling up the holes,--a business which scarcely
+occupied me a quarter of an hour.
+
+It is interesting to notice how the horses know by instinct the dangerous
+spots in the stony wastes, and in the moors and swamps. On approaching
+these places they bend their heads towards the earth, and look sharply
+round on all sides. If they cannot discover a firm resting-place for the
+feet, they stop at once, and cannot be urged forward without many blows.
+
+After a halt of two hours we continued our journey, which again led us
+across fields of lava. At past nine o'clock in the evening we reached an
+elevated plain, after traversing which for half an hour we saw stretched
+at our feet the valley of Reikholt or Reikiadal; it is fourteen to
+seventeen miles long, of a good breadth, and girt round by a row of
+mountains, among which several jokuls sparkle in their icy garments.
+
+A sunset seen in the sublime wildness of Icelandic scenery has a
+peculiarly beautiful effect. Over these vast plains, divested of trees
+or shrubs, covered with dark lava, and shut in by mountains almost of a
+sable hue, the parting sun sheds an almost magical radiance. The peaks
+of the mountains shine in the bright parting rays, the jokuls are
+shrouded in the most delicate roseate hue, while the lower parts of the
+mountains lie in deep shadow, and frown darkly on the valleys, which
+resemble a sheet of dark blue water, with an atmosphere of a bluish-red
+colour floating above it. The most impressive feature of all is the
+profound silence and solitude; not a sound can be heard, not a living
+creature is to be seen; every thing appears dead. Throughout the broad
+valleys not a town nor a village, no, not even a solitary house or a tree
+or shrub, varies the prospect. The eye wanders over the vast desert, and
+finds not one familiar object on which it can rest.
+
+To-night, as at past eleven o'clock we reached the elevated plain, I saw
+a sunset which I shall never forget. The sun disappeared behind the
+mountains, and in its stead a gorgeous ruddy gleam lighted up hill and
+valley and glacier. It was long ere I could turn away my eyes from the
+glittering heights, and yet the valley also offered much that was
+striking and beautiful.
+
+Throughout almost its entire length this valley formed a meadow, from the
+extremities of which columns of smoke and boiling springs burst forth.
+The mists had almost evaporated, and the atmosphere was bright and clear,
+more transparent even than I had seen it in any other country. I now for
+the first time noticed, that in the valley itself the radiance was almost
+as clear as the light of day, so that the most minute objects could be
+plainly distinguished. This was, however, extremely necessary, for steep
+and dangerous paths lead over masses of lava into the valley. On one
+side ran a little river, forming many picturesque waterfalls, some of
+them above thirty feet in height.
+
+I strained my eyes in vain to discover any where, in this great valley, a
+little church, which, if it only offered me a hard bench for a couch,
+would at any rate afford me a shelter from the sharp night-wind; for it
+is really no joke to ride for fifteen hours, with nothing to eat but
+bread and cheese, and then not even to have the pleasant prospect of a
+hotel _a la villa de Londres_ or _de Paris_. Alas, my wishes were far
+more modest. I expected no porter at the gate to give the signal of my
+arrival, no waiter, and no chambermaid; I only desired a little spot in
+the neighbourhood of the dear departed Icelanders. I was suddenly
+recalled from these happy delusions by the voice of the guide, who cried
+out: "Here we are at our destination for to-night." I looked joyfully
+round; alas! I could only see a few of those cottages which are never
+observed until you almost hit your nose against one of them, as the
+grass-covered walls can hardly be distinguished from the surrounding
+meadow.
+
+It was already midnight. We stopped, and turned our horses loose, to
+seek supper and rest in the nearest meadow. Our lot was a less fortunate
+one. The inhabitants were already buried in deep slumbers, from which
+even the barking set up by the dogs at our approach failed to arouse
+them. A cup of coffee would certainly have been very acceptable to me;
+yet I was loath to rouse any one merely for this. A piece of bread
+satisfied my hunger, and a draught of water from the nearest spring
+tasted most deliciously with it. After concluding my frugal meal, I
+sought out a corner beside a cottage, where I was partially sheltered
+from the too-familiar wind; and wrapping my cloak around me, lay down on
+the ground, having wished myself, with all my heart, a good night's rest
+and pleasant dreams, in the broad daylight, {37} under the canopy of
+heaven. Just dropping off to sleep, I was surprised by a mild rain,
+which, of course, at once put to flight every idea of repose. Thus,
+after all, I was obliged to wake some one up, to obtain the shelter of a
+roof.
+
+The best room, _i.e._ the store-room, was thrown open for my
+accommodation, and a small wooden bedstead placed at my disposal.
+Chambers of this kind are luckily found wherever two or three cottages
+lie contiguous to each other; they are certainly far from inviting, as
+dried fish, train-oil, tallow, and many other articles of the same
+description combine to produce a most unsavoury atmosphere. Yet they are
+infinitely preferable to the dwellings of the peasants, which, by the by,
+are the most filthy dens that can be imagined. Besides being redolent of
+every description of bad odour, these cottages are infested with vermin
+to a degree which can certainly not be surpassed, except in the dwellings
+of the Greenlanders and Laplanders.
+
+ June 18th.
+
+Yesterday we had been forced to put upon our poor horses a wearisome
+distance of more than fifty miles, as the last forty miles led us through
+desert and uninhabited places, boasting not even a single cottage.
+To-day, however, our steeds had a light duty to perform, for we only
+proceeded seven miles to the little village of Reikiadal, where I halted
+to-day, in order to visit the celebrated springs.
+
+The inconsiderable village called Reikiadal, consisting only of a church
+and a few cottages, is situated amidst pleasant meadows. Altogether this
+valley is rich in beautiful meadow-lands; consequently one sees many
+scattered homesteads and cottages, with fine herds of sheep, and a
+tolerable number of horses; cows are less plentiful.
+
+The church at Reikiadal is among the neatest and most roomy of those
+which came under my observation. The dwelling of the priest too, though
+only a turf-covered cottage, is large enough for the comfort of the
+occupants. This parish extends over a considerable area, and is not
+thinly inhabited.
+
+My first care on my arrival was to beg the clergyman, Herr Jonas Jonason,
+to procure for me, as expeditiously as possible, fresh horses and a
+guide, in order that I might visit the springs. He promised to provide
+me with both within half an hour; and yet it was not until three hours
+had been wasted, that, with infinite pains, I saw my wish fulfilled.
+Throughout my stay in Iceland, nothing annoyed me more than the slowness
+and unconcern displayed by the inhabitants in all their undertakings.
+Every wish and every request occupies a long time in its fulfilment. Had
+I not been continually at the good pastor's side, I believe I should
+scarcely have attained my object. At length every thing was ready, and
+the pastor himself was kind enough to be my guide.
+
+We rode about four miles through this beautiful vale, and in this short
+distance were compelled at least six times to cross the river Sidumule,
+which rolls its most tortuous course through the entire valley. At
+length the first spring was reached; it emerges from a rock about six
+feet in height, standing in the midst of a moor. The upper cavity of the
+natural reservoir, in which the water continually boils and seethes, is
+between two and three feet in diameter. This spring never stops; the jet
+of water rises two, and sometimes even four feet high, and is about
+eighteen inches thick. It is possible to increase the volume of the jet
+for a few seconds, by throwing large stones or lumps of earth into the
+opening, and thus stirring up the spring. The stones are cast forcibly
+forth, and the lumps of earth, dissolved by the action of the water,
+impart to the latter a dingy colour.
+
+Whoever has seen the jet of water at Carlsbad, in Bohemia, can well
+imagine the appearance of this spring, which closely resembles that of
+Carlsbad. {38}
+
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the spring is an abyss, in which water
+is continually seething, but never rises into the air. At a little
+distance, on a high rock, rising out of the river Sidumule, not far from
+the shore, are other springs. They are three in number, each at a short
+distance from the next, and occupy nearly the entire upper surface of the
+rock. Lower down we find a reservoir of boiling water; and at the foot
+of the rock, and on the nearest shore, are many more hot springs; but
+most of these are inconsiderable. Many of these hot springs emerge
+almost from the cold river itself.
+
+The chief group, however, lies still farther off, on a rock which may be
+about twenty feet in height, and fifty in length. It is called Tunga
+Huer, and rises from the midst of a moor. On this rock there are no less
+than sixteen springs, some emerging from its base, others rather above
+the middle, but none from the top of the rock.
+
+The construction of the basins and the height and diameter of the jets
+were precisely similar to those I have already described. All these
+sixteen springs are so near each other that they do not even occupy two
+sides of the rock. It is impossible to form an idea of the magnificence
+of this singular spectacle, which becomes really fairy-like, if the
+beholder have the courage to climb the rock itself, a proceeding of some
+danger, though of little difficulty. The upper stratum of the rock is
+soft and warm, presenting almost the appearance of mud thickened with
+sand and small stones. Every footstep leaves a trace behind it, and the
+visitor has continually before his eyes the fear of breaking through, and
+falling into a hot spring hidden from view by a thin covering. The good
+pastor walked in advance of me, with a stick, and probed the dangerous
+surface as much as possible. I was loath to stay behind, and suddenly we
+found ourselves at the summit of the rock. Here we could take in, at one
+view, the sixteen springs gushing from both its sides. If the view from
+below had been most interesting and singular, how shall I describe its
+appearance as seen from above? Sixteen jets of water seen at one glance,
+sixteen reservoirs, in all their diversity of form and construction,
+opening at once beneath the feet of the beholder, seemed almost too
+wonderful a sight. Forgetting all pusillanimous feelings, I stood and
+honoured the Creator in these his marvellous works. For a long time I
+stood, and could not tire of gazing into the abysses from whose darkness
+the masses of white and foaming water sprung hissing into the air, to
+fall again, and hasten in quiet union towards the neighbouring river.
+The good pastor found it necessary to remind me several times that our
+position here was neither of the safest nor of the most comfortable, and
+that it was therefore high time to abandon it. I had ceased to think of
+the insecurity of the ground we trod, and scarcely noticed the mighty
+clouds of hot vapour which frequently surrounded and threatened to
+suffocate us, obliging us to step suddenly back with wetted faces. It
+was fortunate that these waters contain but a very small quantity of
+brimstone, otherwise we could scarcely have long maintained our elevated
+position.
+
+The rock from which these springs rise is formed of a reddish mass, and
+the bed of the river into which the water flows is also completely
+covered with little stones of the same colour.
+
+On our way back we noticed, near a cottage, another remarkable
+phenomenon. It was a basin, in whose depths the water boils and bubbles
+violently; and near this basin are two unsightly holes, from which
+columns of smoke periodically rise with a great noise. Whilst this is
+going on, the basin fills itself more and more with water, but never so
+much as to overflow, or to force a jet of water into the air; then the
+steam and the noise cease in both cavities, and the water in the
+reservoir sinks several feet.
+
+This strange phenomenon generally lasts about a minute, and is repeated
+so regularly, that a bet could almost be made, that the rising and
+falling of the water, and the increased and lessened noise of the steam,
+shall be seen and heard sixty or sixty-five times within an hour.
+
+In communication with this basin is another, situate at a distance of
+about a hundred paces in a small hollow, and filled like the former with
+boiling water. As the water in the upper basin gradually sinks, and
+ceases to seethe, it begins to rise in the lower one, and is at length
+forced two or three feet into the air; then it falls again, and thus the
+phenomenon is continually repeated in the upper and the lower basin
+alternately.
+
+At the upper spring there is also a vapour-bath. This is formed by a
+small chamber situate hard by the basin, built of stones and roofed with
+turf. It is further provided with a small and narrow entrance, which
+cannot be passed in an upright position. The floor is composed of stone
+slabs, probably covering a hot spring, for they are very warm. The
+person wishing to use this bath betakes himself to this room, and
+carefully closes every cranny; a suffocating heat, which induces violent
+perspiration over the whole frame, is thus generated. The people,
+however, seldom avail themselves of this bath.
+
+On my return I had still to visit a basin with a jet of water, in a fine
+meadow near the church; a low wall of stone has been erected round this
+spring to prevent the cattle from scalding themselves if they should
+approach too near in the ardour of grazing. Some eighty paces off is to
+be seen the wool-bath erected by Snorri Sturluson. It consists of a
+stone basin three or four feet in depth, and eighteen or twenty in
+diameter. The approach is by a few steps leading to a low stone bench,
+which runs round the basin. The water is obtained from the neighbouring
+spring, but is of so high a temperature that it is impossible to bathe
+without previously cooling it. The bath stands in the open air, and no
+traces are left of the building which once covered it. It is now used
+for clothes and sheep's wool.
+
+I had now seen all the interesting springs on this side of the valley.
+Some columns of vapour, which may be observed from the opposite end of
+the valley, proceed from thermal springs, that offer no remarkable
+feature save their heat.
+
+On our return the priest took me to the churchyard, which lay at some
+distance from his dwelling, and showed me the principal graves. Though I
+thought the sight very impressive, it was not calculated to invigorate
+me, when I considered that I must pass the approaching night alone in the
+church, amidst these resting-places of the departed.
+
+The mound above each grave is very high, and the greater part of them are
+surmounted by a kind of wooden coffin, which at first sight conveys the
+impression that the dead person is above ground. I could not shake off a
+feeling of discomfort; and such is the power of prejudice, that--I
+acknowledge my weakness--I was even induced to beg that the priest would
+remove one of the covers. Though I knew full well that the dead man was
+slumbering deep in the earth, and not in this coffin, I felt a shudder
+pass over me as the lid was removed, and I saw--as the priest had assured
+me I should do--merely a tombstone with the usual inscription, which this
+coffin-like covering is intended to protect against the rude storms of
+the winter.
+
+Close beside the entrance to the church is the mound beneath which rest
+the bones of Snorri Sturluson, the celebrated poet; {39} over this grave
+stands a small runic stone of the length of the mound itself. This stone
+is said to have once been completely covered with runic characters; but
+all trace of these has been swept away by the storms of five hundred
+winters, against which the tomb had no protecting coffin. The stone,
+too, is split throughout its entire length into two pieces. The mound
+above the grave is often renewed, so that the beholder could often fancy
+he saw a new-made grave. I picked all the buttercups I could find
+growing on the grave, and preserved them carefully in a book. Perhaps I
+may be able to give pleasure to several of my countrywomen by offering
+them a floweret from the grave of the greatest of Icelandic poets.
+
+ June 19th.
+
+In order to pursue my journey without interruption, I hired fresh horses,
+and allowed my own, which were rather fatigued, to accompany us unloaded.
+My object in this further excursion was to visit the very remarkable
+cavern of Surthellir, distant a good thirty-three miles from this place.
+The clergyman was again kind enough to make the necessary arrangements
+for me, and even to act as my Mentor on the journey.
+
+Though we were only three strong, we departed with a retinue of seven
+horses, and for nearly ten miles rode back the same way by which I had
+come from Reikholt on the preceding morning; then we turned off to the
+left, and crossing hills and acclivities, reached other valleys, which
+were partly traversed by beautiful streams of lava, and partly
+interspersed with forests--_forests_, as I have already said, according
+to Icelandic notions. The separate stems were certainly slightly higher
+than those in the valley of Thingvalla.
+
+At Kalmannstunga we left the spare horses, and took with us a man to
+serve as guide in the cavern, from which we were now still some seven
+miles distant. The great valley in which this cavern lies is reckoned
+among the most remarkable in Iceland. It is a most perfect picture of
+volcanic devastation. The most beautiful masses of lava, in the most
+varied and picturesque forms, occupy the whole immeasurable valley. Lava
+is to be seen there in a rough glassy state, forming exquisite flames and
+arabesques; and in immense slabs, lying sometimes scattered, sometimes
+piled in strata one above the other, as though they had been cast there
+by a flood. Among these, again, lie mighty isolated streams, which must
+have been frozen in the midst of their course. From the different
+colours of the lava, and their transitions from light grey to black, we
+can judge of the eruptions which have taken place at different periods.
+The mountains surrounding this valley are mostly of a sombre hue; some
+are even black, forming a striking contrast to the neighbouring jokuls,
+which, in their large expanse, present the appearance almost of a sea of
+ice. I found one of these jokuls of a remarkable size; its shining
+expanse extended far down into the valley, and its upper surface was
+almost immeasurable.
+
+The other mountains were all smooth, as though polished by art; in the
+foreground I only noticed one which was covered with wonderful forms of
+dried lava. A deathlike silence weighed on the whole country round, on
+hill and on valley alike. Every thing seemed dead, all round was barren
+and desert, so that the effect was truly Icelandic. The greater portion
+of Iceland might be with justice designated the "Northern Desert."
+
+The cavern of Surthellir lies on a slightly elevated extended plain,
+where it would certainly not be sought for, as we are accustomed to see
+natural phenomena of this description only in the bowels of rocks. It
+is, therefore, with no little surprise that the traveller sees suddenly
+opening before him a large round basin about fifteen fathoms in diameter,
+and four in depth. It was with a feeling of awe that I looked downwards
+on the countless blocks of rock piled one upon the other, extending on
+one side to the edge of the hollow, across which the road led to the dark
+ravines farther on.
+
+We were compelled to scramble forward on our hands and knees, until we
+reached a long broad passage, which led us at first imperceptibly
+downwards, and then ran underneath the plain, which formed a rocky cavern
+above our heads. I estimated the different heights of this roof at not
+less than from eighteen to sixty feet; but it seldom reached a greater
+elevation than the latter. Both roof and walls are in some places very
+pointed and rough: a circumstance to be ascribed to the stalactites which
+adhere to them, without, however, forming figures or long sharp points.
+
+From this principal path several smaller ones lead far into the interior
+of this stony region; but they do not communicate with each other, and
+one is compelled to return from each side-path into the main road. Some
+of these by-paths are short, narrow, and low; others, on the contrary,
+are long, broad, and lofty.
+
+In one of the most retired of these by-paths I was shewn a great number
+of bones, which, I was told, were those of slaughtered sheep and other
+animals. I could gather, from the account given by the priest of the
+legend concerning them, that, in days of yore, this cave was the resort
+of a mighty band of robbers. This must have been a long, long time ago,
+as this is related as a legend or a fable.
+
+For my part, I could not tell what robbers had to do in Iceland. Pirates
+had often come to the island; but for these gentry this cavern was too
+far from the sea. I cannot even imagine beasts of prey to have been
+there; for the whole country round about is desert and uninhabited, so
+that they could have found nothing to prey upon. In fact, I turned over
+in my mind every probability, and can only say that it appeared to me a
+most remarkable circumstance to find in this desert place, so far from
+any living thing, a number of bones, which, moreover, looked as fresh as
+if the poor animals to whom they once belonged had been eaten but a short
+time ago. Unfortunately I could obtain no satisfactory information on
+this point.
+
+It is difficult to imagine any thing more laborious than to wander about
+in this cavern. As the road had shewed itself at the entrance of the
+cavern, so it continued throughout its whole extent. The path consisted
+entirely of loose fragments of lava heaped one upon the other, over which
+we had to clamber with great labour. None of us could afford to help the
+others; each one was fully occupied with himself. There was not a single
+spot to be seen on which we could have stood without holding fast at the
+same time with our hands. We were sometimes obliged to seat ourselves on
+a stone, and so to slide down; at others, to take hands and pull one
+another to the top of high blocks of stone.
+
+We came to several immense basins, or craters, which opened above our
+heads, but were inaccessible, the sides being too steep for us to climb.
+The light which entered through these openings was scarcely enough to
+illumine the principal path, much less the numerous by-paths.
+
+At Kalmannstunga I had endeavoured to procure torches, but was obliged to
+consider myself fortunate in getting a few tapers. It is necessary to
+provide oneself with torches at Reikjavik.
+
+The parts of the cavern beneath the open craters were still covered with
+a considerable quantity of snow, by which our progress was rendered very
+dangerous. We frequently sunk in, and at other times caught our feet
+between the stones, so that we could scarcely maintain our balance. In
+the by-paths situated near these openings an icy rind had formed itself,
+which was now covered with water. Farther on, the ice had melted; but it
+was generally very dirty, as a stratum of sand mixed with water lay there
+in place of the stones. The chief path alone was covered with blocks of
+lava; in the smaller paths I found only strata of sand and small pieces
+of lava.
+
+The magical illumination produced by the sun's rays shining through one
+of these craters into the cavern produced a splendid effect. The sun
+shone perpendicularly through the opening, spread a dazzling radiance
+over the snow, and diffused a pale delicate light around us. The effect
+of this point of dazzling light was the more remarkable from its
+contrasting strongly with the two dark chasms, from the first of which we
+had emerged to continue our journey through the obscurity of the second.
+
+This subterranean labyrinth is said to extend in different directions for
+many miles. We explored a portion of the chief path and several
+by-paths, and after a march of two hours returned heartily tired to the
+upper world. We then rested a quarter of an hour, and afterwards
+returned at a good round pace to Kalmannstunga.
+
+Unfortunately I do not possess sufficient geognostic knowledge to be able
+to set this cavern down as an extinct volcano. But in travelling in a
+country where every hill and mountain, every thing around, in fact,
+consists of lava, even the uninitiated in science seeks to discover the
+openings whence these immense masses have poured. The stranger curiously
+regards the top of each mountain, thinking every where to behold a
+crater, but both hill and dale appear smooth and closed. With what joy
+then does he hail the thought of having discovered, in this cavern,
+something to throw light upon the sources of these things! I, at least,
+fancied myself walking on the hearth of an extinct volcano; for all I
+saw, from the masses of stone piled beneath my feet and the immense basin
+above my head, were both of lava. If I am right in my conjecture, I do
+not know; I only speak according to my notions and my views.
+
+I was obliged to pass this night in a cottage. Kalmannstunga contains
+three such cottages, but no chapel. Luckily I found one of these houses
+somewhat larger and more cleanly than its neighbours; it could almost
+come under the denomination of a farm. The occupants, too, had been
+employed during my ride to the cavern in cleansing the best chamber, and
+preparing it, as far as possible, for my reception. The room in question
+was eleven feet long by seven broad; the window was so small and so
+covered with dirt that, although the sun was shining in its full glory, I
+could scarcely see to write. The walls, and even the floor, were
+boarded--a great piece of luxury in a country where wood is so scarce.
+The furniture consisted of a broad bedstead, two chests of drawers, and a
+small table. Chairs and benches are a kind of _terra incognita_ in the
+dwellings of the Icelandic peasantry; besides, I do not know where such
+articles could be stowed in a room of such dimensions as that which I
+occupied.
+
+My hostess, the widow of a wealthy peasant, introduced to me her four
+children, who were very handsome, and very neatly dressed. I begged the
+good mother to tell me the names of the young ones, so that I might at
+least know a few Icelandic names. She appeared much flattered at my
+request, and gave me the names as follows: Sigrudur, Gudrun, Ingebor, and
+Lars.
+
+I should have felt tolerably comfortable in my present quarters,
+accustomed as I am to bear privations of all kinds with indifference, if
+they would but have left me in peace. But the reader may fancy my horror
+when the whole population, not only of the cottage itself, but also of
+the neighbouring dwellings, made their appearance, and, planting
+themselves partly in my chamber and partly at the door, held me in a far
+closer state of siege than even at Krisuvik. I was, it appeared, quite a
+novel phenomenon in the eyes of these good people, and so they came one
+and all and stared at me; the women and children were, in particular,
+most unpleasantly familiar; they felt my dress, and the little ones laid
+their dirty little countenances in my lap. Added to this, the confined
+atmosphere from the number of persons present, their lamentable want of
+cleanliness, and their filthy habit of spitting, &c., all combined to
+form a most dreadful whole. During these visits I did more penance than
+by the longest fasts; and fasting, too, was an exercise I seldom escaped,
+as I could touch few Icelandic dishes. The cookery of the Icelandic
+peasants is wholly confined to the preparation of dried fish, with which
+they eat fermented milk that has often been kept for months; on very rare
+occasions they have a preparation of barley-meal, which is eaten with
+flat bread baked from Icelandic moss ground fine.
+
+I could not but wonder at the fact that most of these people expected to
+find me acquainted with a number of things generally studied only by men;
+they seemed to have a notion that in foreign parts women should be as
+learned as men. So, for instance, the priests always inquired if I spoke
+Latin, and seemed much surprised on finding that I was unacquainted with
+the language. The common people requested my advice as to the mode of
+treating divers complaints; and once, in the course of one of my solitary
+wanderings about Reikjavik, on my entering a cottage, they brought before
+me a being whom I should scarcely have recognised as belonging to the
+same species as myself, so fearfully was he disfigured by the eruption
+called "lepra." Not only the face, but the whole body also was covered
+with it; the patient was quite emaciated, and some parts of his body were
+covered with sores. For a surgeon this might have been an interesting
+sight, but I turned away in disgust.
+
+But let us turn from this picture. I would rather tell of the angel's
+face I saw in Kalmannstunga. It was a girl, ten or twelve years of age,
+beautiful and lovely beyond description, so that I wished I had been a
+painter. How gladly would I have taken home with me to my own land, if
+only on canvass, the delicate face, with its roguish dimples and speaking
+eyes! But perhaps it is better as it is; the picture might by some
+unlucky chance have fallen into the hands of some too-susceptible youth,
+who, like Don Sylvio de Rosalva, in Wieland's _Comical Romance_, would
+immediately have proceeded to travel through half the world to find the
+original of this enchanting portrait. His spirit of inquiry would
+scarcely have carried him to Iceland, as such an apparition would never
+be suspected to exist in such a country, and thus the unhappy youth would
+be doomed to endless wandering.
+
+ June 20th.
+
+The distance from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla is fifty-two miles, and the
+journey is certainly one of the most dreary and fatiguing of all that can
+be made in Iceland. The traveller passes from one desert valley into
+another; he is always surrounded by high mountains and still higher
+glaciers, and wherever he turns his eyes, nature seems torpid and dead.
+A feeling of anxious discomfort seizes upon the wanderer, he hastens with
+redoubled speed through the far-stretched deserts, and eagerly ascends
+the mountains piled up before him, in the hope that better things lie
+beyond. It is in vain; he only sees the same solitudes, the same
+deserts, the same mountains.
+
+On the elevated plateaux several places were still covered with snow;
+these we were obliged to cross, though we could frequently hear the
+rushing of the water beneath its snowy covering. We were compelled also
+to pass over coatings of ice spread lightly over rivers, and presenting
+that blue colour which is a certain sign of danger.
+
+Our poor horses were sometimes very restive; but it was of no use; they
+were beaten without mercy until they carried us over the dangerous
+places. The pack-horse was always driven on in front with many blows; it
+had to serve as pioneer, and try if the road was practicable. Next came
+my guide, and I brought up the rear. Our poor horses frequently sank up
+to their knees in the snow, and twice up to the saddle-girths. This was
+one of the most dangerous rides I have ever had. I could not help
+continually thinking what I should do if my guide were to sink in so
+deeply that he could not extricate himself; my strength would not have
+been sufficient to rescue him, and whither should I turn to seek for
+help? All around us was nothing but a desert and snow. Perhaps my lot
+might have been to die of hunger. I should have wandered about seeking
+dwellings and human beings, and have entangled myself so completely among
+these wastes that I could never have found my way.
+
+When at a distance I descried a new field of snow (and unfortunately we
+came upon them but too frequently), I felt very uncomfortable; those
+alone who have themselves been in a similar situation can estimate the
+whole extent of my anxiety.
+
+If I had been travelling in company with others, these fears would not
+have disturbed me; for there reciprocal assistance can be rendered, and
+the consciousness of this fact seems materially to diminish the danger.
+
+During the season in which the snow ceases to form a secure covering,
+this road is but little travelled. We saw nowhere a trace of footsteps,
+either of men or animals; we were the only living beings in this dreadful
+region. I certainly scolded my guide roundly for bringing me by such a
+road. But what did I gain by this? It would have been as dangerous to
+turn back as to go on.
+
+A change in the weather, which till now had been rather favourable,
+increased the difficulties of this journey. Already when we left
+Kalmannstunga, the sky began to be overcast, and the sun enlivened us
+with its rays only for a few minutes at a time. On our reaching the
+higher mountains the weather became worse; for here we encountered clouds
+and fog, which wreaked their vengeance upon us, and which only careered
+by to make room for others. An icy storm from the neighbouring glaciers
+was their constant companion, and made me shiver so much that I could
+scarcely keep my saddle. We had now ridden above thirteen hours. The
+rain poured down incessantly, and we were half dead with cold and wet; so
+I at length determined to halt for the night at the first cottage: at
+last we found one between two or three miles from Thingvalla. I had now
+a roof above my head; but beyond this I had gained nothing. The cottage
+consisted of a single room, and was almost completely filled by four
+broad bedsteads. I counted seven adults and three children, who had all
+to be accommodated in these four beds. In addition to this, the kvef, a
+kind of croup, prevailed this spring to such an extent that scarcely any
+one escaped it. Wherever I went, I found the people afflicted with this
+complaint; and here this was also the case; the noise of groaning and
+coughing on all sides was quite deplorable. The floor, moreover, was
+revoltingly dirty.
+
+The good people were so kind as immediately to place one of their beds at
+my disposal; but I would rather have passed the night on the threshold of
+the door than in this disgusting hole. I chose for my lodging-place the
+narrow passage which separated the kitchen from the room; I found there a
+couple of blocks, across which a few boards had been laid, and this
+constituted the milk-room: it might have been more properly called the
+smoke-room; for in the roof were a few air-holes, through which the smoke
+escaped. In this smoke or milk-room--whichever it may be called--I
+prepared to pass the night as best I could. My cloak being wet through,
+I had been compelled to hang it on a stick to dry; and thus found myself
+under the necessity of borrowing a mattress from these unhealthy people.
+I laid myself down boldly, and pretended sleepiness, in order to deliver
+myself from the curiosity of my entertainers. They retired to their
+room, and so I was alone and undisturbed. But yet I could not sleep; the
+cold wind, blowing in upon me through the air-holes, chilled and wetted
+as I already was, kept me awake against my will. I had also another
+misfortune to endure. As often as I attempted to sit upright on my
+luxurious couch, my head would receive a severe concussion. I had
+forgotten the poles which are fixed across each of these antechambers,
+for the purpose of hanging up fish to dry, &c. Unfortunately I could not
+bear this arrangement in mind until after I had received half a dozen
+salutations of this description.
+
+ June 21st.
+
+At length the morning so long sighed for came; the rain had indeed
+ceased; but the clouds still hung about the mountains, and promised a
+speedy fall; I nevertheless resolved rather to submit myself to the fury
+of the elements than to remain longer in my present quarters, and so
+ordered the horses to be saddled.
+
+Before my departure roast lamb and butter were offered me. I thanked my
+entertainers; but refrained from tasting any thing, excusing myself on
+the plea of not feeling hungry, which was in reality the case; for if I
+only looked at the dirty people who surrounded me, my appetite vanished
+instantly. So long as my stock of bread and cheese lasted, I kept to it,
+and ate nothing else.
+
+Taking leave of my good hosts, we continued our journey to Reikjavik, by
+the same road on which I had travelled on my journey hither. This had
+not been my original plan on starting from Reikjavik; I had intended to
+proceed from Thingvalla directly to the Geyser, to Hecla, &c.; but the
+horses were already exhausted, and the weather so dreadfully bad, without
+prospect of speedy amendment, that I preferred returning to Reikjavik,
+and waiting for better times in my pleasant little room at the house of
+the good baker.
+
+We rode on as well as we could amidst ceaseless storms of wind and rain.
+The most disagreeable circumstance of all was our being obliged to spend
+the hours devoted to rest in the open air, under a by no means cloudless
+sky, as during our whole day's journey we saw not a single hut, save the
+solitary one in the lava desert, which serves as a resting-place for
+travellers during the winter. So we continued our journey until we
+reached a scanty meadow. Here I had my choice either to walk about for
+two hours, or to sit down upon the wet grass. I could find nothing
+better to do than to turn my back upon the wind and rain, to remain
+standing on one spot, to have patience, and for amusement to observe the
+direction in which the clouds scudded by. At the same time I discussed
+my frugal meal, more for want of something to do than from hunger; if I
+felt thirsty, I had only to turn round and open my mouth.
+
+If there are natures peculiarly fitted for travelling, I am fortunate in
+being blessed with such an one. No rain or wind was powerful enough to
+give me even a cold. During this whole excursion I had tasted no warm or
+nourishing food; I had slept every night upon a bench or a chest; had
+ridden nearly 255 miles in six days; and had besides scrambled about
+bravely in the cavern of Surthellir; and, in spite of all this privation
+and fatigue, I arrived at Reikjavik in good health and spirits.
+
+Short summary of this journey:
+
+
+ Miles
+First day, from Reikjavik to 46
+Thingvalla
+Second day, from Thingvalla to 51
+Reikholt
+Third day, from Reikholt to the 19
+different springs, and back again
+Fourth day, from Reikholt to 40
+Surthellir, and back to
+Kalmannstunga
+Fifth day, from Kalmannstunga to 51
+Thingvalla
+Sixth day, from Thingvalla to 46
+Reikjavik
+Total 253
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+The weather soon cleared up, and I continued my journey to the Geyser and
+to Mount Hecla on the 24th June. On the first day, when we rode to
+Thingvalla, we passed no new scenery, but saw instead an extremely
+beautiful atmospheric phenomenon.
+
+ [Picture: The Geysers]
+
+As we approached the lake, some thin mist-clouds lowered over it and over
+the earth, so that it seemed as if it would rain. One portion of the
+firmament glowed with the brightest blue; while the other part was
+obscured by thick clouds, through which the sun was just breaking. Some
+of its rays reached the clouds of mist, and illuminated them in a
+wonderfully beautiful manner. The most delicate shades of colour seemed
+breathed, as it were, over them like a dissolving rainbow, whose glowing
+colours were intermingled and yet singly perceptible. This play of
+colours continued for half an hour, then faded gradually till it vanished
+entirely, and the ordinary atmosphere took its place. It was one of the
+most beautiful appearances I had ever witnessed.
+
+ June 25th.
+
+The roads separate about a mile behind the little town of Thingvalla; the
+one to the left goes to Reikholt, the right-hand one leads to the Geyser.
+We rode for some time along the shores of the lake, and found at the end
+of the valley an awful chasm in the rock, similar to the one of
+Almanagiau, which we had passed on such a wretched road.
+
+The contiguous valley bore a great resemblance to that of Thingvalla; but
+the third one was again fearful. Lava covered it, and was quite
+overgrown with that whitish moss, which has a beautiful appearance when
+it only covers a portion of the lava, and when black masses rise above
+it, but which here presented a most monotonous aspect.
+
+We also passed two grottoes which opened at our feet. At the entrance of
+one stood a pillar of rock supporting an immense slab of lava, which
+formed an awe-inspiring portal. I had unfortunately not known of the
+existence of these caves, and was consequently unprepared to visit them.
+Torches, at least, would have been requisite. But I subsequently heard
+that they were not at all deep, and contained nothing of interest.
+
+In the course of the day we passed through valleys such as I had seen
+nowhere else in Iceland. Beautiful meadow-lawns, perfectly level,
+covered the country for miles. These rich valleys were, of course,
+tolerably well populated; we frequently passed three or four contiguous
+cottages, and saw horses, cows, and sheep grazing on these fields in
+considerable numbers.
+
+The mountains which bounded these valleys on the left seemed to me very
+remarkable; they were partly brown, black, or dark blue, like the others;
+but the bulk of which they were composed I considered to be fine
+loam-soil layers, if I may trust my imperfect mineralogical knowledge.
+Some of these mountains were topped by large isolated lava rocks, real
+giants; and it seemed inexplicable to me how they could stand on the soft
+soil beneath.
+
+In one of these valleys we passed a considerable lake, on and around
+which rose circling clouds of steam proceeding from hot springs, but of
+no great size. But after we had already travelled about twenty-five
+miles, we came to the most remarkable object I had ever met with; this
+was a river with a most peculiar bed.
+
+This river-bed is broad and somewhat steep; it consists of lava strata,
+and is divided lengthwise in the middle by a cleft eighteen to twenty
+feet deep, and fifteen to eighteen feet broad, towards which the bubbling
+and surging waters rush, so that the sound is heard at some distance. A
+little wooden bridge, which stands in the middle of the stream, and over
+which the high waves constantly play, leads over the chasm. Any one not
+aware of the fact can hardly explain this appearance to himself, nor
+understand the noise and surging of the stream. The little bridge in the
+centre would be taken for the ruins of a fallen bridge, and the chasm is
+not seen from the shore, because the foaming waves overtop it. An
+indescribable fear would seize upon the traveller when he beheld the
+venturous guide ride into the stream, and was obliged to follow without
+pity or mercy.
+
+The priest of Thingvalla had prepared me for the scene, and had advised
+me to _walk_ over the bridge; but as the water at this season stood so
+high that the waves from both sides dashed two feet above the bridge, I
+could not descend from my horse, and was obliged to ride across.
+
+The whole passage through the stream is so peculiar, that it must be
+seen, and can scarcely be described. The water gushes and plays on all
+sides with fearful force; it rushes into the chasm with impetuous
+violence, forms waterfalls on both sides, and breaks itself on the
+projecting rocks. Not far from the bridge the cleft terminates; and the
+whole breadth of the waters falls over rocks thirty to forty feet high.
+The nearer we approached the centre, the deeper, more violent, and
+impetuous grew the stream, and the more deafening was the noise. The
+horses became restless and shy; and when we came to the bridge, they
+began to tremble, they reared, they turned to all sides but the right
+one, and refused to obey the bridle. With infinite trouble we at last
+succeeded in bringing them across this dangerous place.
+
+The valley which is traversed by this peculiar river is narrow, and quite
+enclosed by lava mountains and hills; the inanimate, silent nature around
+is perfectly adapted to imprint this scene for ever on the traveller's
+memory.
+
+This remarkable stream had been the last difficulty; and now we proceeded
+quietly and safely through the beautiful valleys till we approached the
+Geyser, which a projecting hillock enviously concealed from my anxiously
+curious gaze. At last this hillock was passed; and I saw the Geyser with
+its surrounding scenery, with its immense steam pillars, and the clouds
+and cloudlets rising from it. The hill was about two miles distant from
+the Geyser and the other hot springs. There they were, boiling and
+bubbling all around, and through the midst lay the road to the basin.
+Eighty paces from it we halted.
+
+And now I stood before the chief object of my journey; I saw it, it was
+so near me, and yet I did not venture to approach it. But a peasant who
+had followed us from one of the neighbouring cottages, and had probably
+guessed my anxiety and my fear, took me by the hand and constituted
+himself my cicerone. He had unfortunately, it being Sunday, paid too
+great a devotion to the brandy-bottle, so that he staggered rather than
+walked, and I hesitated to trust myself to the guidance of this man, not
+knowing whether he had reason enough left to distinguish how far we might
+with safety venture. My guide, who had accompanied me from Reikjavik,
+assured me indeed that I might trust him in spite of his intoxication,
+and that he would himself go with us to translate the peasant's Icelandic
+jargon into Danish; but nevertheless I followed with great trepidation.
+
+He led me to the margin of the basin of the great Geyser, which lies on
+the top of a gentle elevation of about ten feet, and contains the outer
+and the inner basins. The diameter of the outer basin may be about
+thirty feet; that of the inner one six to seven feet. Both were filled
+to the brim, the water was pure as crystal, but boiled and bubbled only
+slightly. We soon left this spot; for when the basins are quite filled
+with water it is very dangerous to approach them, as they may empty
+themselves any moment by an eruption. We therefore went to inspect the
+other springs.
+
+My unsteady guide pointed those out which we might unhesitatingly
+approach, and warned me from the others. Then we returned to the great
+Geyser, where he gave me some precautionary rules, in case of an
+intervening eruption, and then left me to prepare some accommodation for
+my stay. I will briefly enumerate the rules he gave me.
+
+"The pillar of water always rises perpendicularly, and the overflowing
+water has its chief outlets on one and the same side. The water does
+indeed escape on the other side, but only in inconsiderable quantities,
+and in shapeless little ducts, which one may easily evade. On this side
+one may therefore approach within forty paces even during the most
+violent eruptions. The eruption announces itself by a dull roaring; and
+as soon as this is heard, the traveller must hastily retire to the
+above-named distance, as the eruption always follows very quickly after
+the noise. The water, however, does not rise high every time, often only
+very inconsiderably, so that, to see a very fine explosion, it is often
+necessary to stay some days here."
+
+The French scholar, M. P. Geimard, has provided for the accommodation of
+travellers with a truly noble disinterestedness. He traversed the whole
+of Iceland some years ago and left two large tents behind him; one here,
+and the other in Thingvalla. The one here is particularly appropriate,
+as travellers are frequently obliged, as stated above, to wait several
+days for a fine eruption. Every traveller certainly owes M. Geimard the
+warmest thanks for this convenience. A peasant, the same who guides
+travellers to the springs, has the charge of it, and is bound to pitch it
+for any one for a fee of one or two florins.
+
+When my tent was ready it was nearly eleven o'clock. My companions
+retired, and I remained alone.
+
+It is usual to watch through the night in order not to miss an eruption.
+Now, although an alternate watching is no very arduous matter for several
+travellers, it became a very hard task for me alone, and an Icelandic
+peasant cannot be trusted; an eruption of Mount Hecla would scarcely
+arouse him.
+
+I sat sometimes before and sometimes in my tent, and listened with
+anxious expectation for the coming events; at last, after midnight--the
+witching hour--I heard some hollow sounds, as if a cannon were being
+fired at a great distance, and its echoing sounds were borne by the
+breeze. I rushed from my tent and expected subterranean noises, violent
+cracking and trembling of the earth, according to the descriptions I had
+read. I could scarcely repress a slight sensation of fear. To be alone
+at midnight in such a scene is certainly no joke.
+
+Many of my friends may remember my telling them, before my departure,
+that I expected I should need the most courage on my Icelandic journey
+during the nights at the Geyser.
+
+These hollow sounds were repeated, at very short intervals, thirteen
+times; and each time the basin overflowed and ejected a considerable
+quantity of water. The sounds did not seem to proceed from subterranean
+ragings, but from the violent agitation of the waters. In a minute and a
+half all was over; the water no longer overflowed, the caldron and basin
+remained filled, and I returned to my tent disappointed in every way.
+This phenomenon was repeated every two hours and a half, or, at the
+latest, every three hours and a half. I saw and heard nothing else all
+night, the next day, or the second night. I waited in vain for an
+eruption.
+
+When I had accustomed myself to these temporary effusions of my
+neighbour, I either indulged in a gentle slumber in the intermediate
+time, or I visited the other springs and explored. I wished to discover
+the boiling vapour and the coloured springs which many travellers assert
+they have seen here.
+
+All the hot-springs are united with a circumference of 800 to 900 paces:
+several of them are very remarkable, but the majority insignificant.
+
+They are situated in the angle of an immense valley at the foot of a
+hill, behind which extends a chain of mountains. The valley is entirely
+covered with grass, and the vegetation only decreases a little in the
+immediate vicinity of the springs. Cottages are built every where in the
+neighbourhood; the nearest to the springs are only about 700 to 800 paces
+distant.
+
+I counted twelve large basins with boiling and gushing springs; of
+smaller ones there were many more.
+
+Among the gushing springs the Strokker is the most remarkable. It boils
+and bubbles with most extraordinary violence at a depth of about twenty
+feet, shoots up suddenly, and projects its waters into the air. Its
+eruptions sometimes last half an hour, and the column occasionally
+ascends to a height of forty feet. I witnessed several of its eruptions;
+but unfortunately not one of the largest. The highest I saw could not
+have been above thirty feet, and did not last more than a quarter of an
+hour. The Strokker is the only spring, except the Geyser, which has to
+be approached with great caution. The eruptions sometimes succeed each
+other quickly, and sometimes cease for a few hours, and are not preceded
+by any sign. Another spring spouts constantly, but never higher than
+three to four feet. A third one lies about four or five feet deep, in a
+rather broad basin, and produces only a few little bubbles. But this
+calmness is deceptive: it seldom lasts more than half a minute, rarely
+two or three minutes; then the spring begins to bubble, to boil, and to
+wave and spout to a height of two or three feet; without, however,
+reaching the level of the basin. In some springs I heard boiling and
+foaming like a gentle bellowing; but saw no water, sometimes not even
+steam, rising.
+
+Two of the most remarkable springs which can perhaps be found in the
+world are situated immediately above the Geyser, in two openings, which
+are separated by a wall of rock scarcely a foot wide. This partition
+does not rise above the surface of the soil, but descends into the earth;
+the water boils slowly, and has an equable, moderate discharge. The
+beauty of these springs consists in their remarkable transparency. All
+the varied forms and caves, the projecting peaks, and edges of rock, are
+visible far down, until the eye is lost in the depths of darkness. But
+the greatest beauty of the spring is the splendid colouring proceeding
+from the rock; it is of the tenderest, most transparent, pale blue and
+green, and resembles the reflection of a Bengal flame. But what is most
+strange is, that this play of colour proceeds from the rock, and only
+extends eight to ten inches from it, while the other water is colourless
+as common water, only more transparent, and purer.
+
+I could not believe it at first, and thought it must be occasioned by the
+sun; I therefore visited the springs at different times, sometimes when
+the sun shone brightly, sometimes when it was obscured by clouds, once
+even after its setting; but the colouring always remained the same.
+
+One may fearlessly approach the brink of these springs. The platform
+which projects directly from them, and under which one can see in all
+directions, is indeed only a thin ledge of rock, but strong enough to
+prevent any accident. The beauty consists, as I have said, in the
+magical illumination, and in the transparency, by which all the caves and
+grottoes to the greatest depths become visible to the eye. Involuntarily
+I thought of Schiller's _Diver_. {40} I seemed to see the goblet hang on
+the peaks and jags of the rock; I could fancy I saw the monsters rise
+from the bottom. It must be a peculiar pleasure to read this splendid
+poem in such an appropriate spot.
+
+I found scarcely any basins of Brodem or coloured waters. The only one
+of the kind which I saw was a small basin, in which a brownish-red
+substance, rather denser than water, was boiling. Another smaller
+spring, with dirty brown water, I should have quite overlooked, if I had
+not so industriously searched for these curiosities.
+
+At last, after long waiting, on the second day of my stay, on the 27th
+June, at half-past eight in the morning, I was destined to see an
+eruption of the Geyser in its greatest perfection. The peasant, who came
+daily in the morning and in the evening to inquire whether I had already
+seen an eruption, was with me when the hollow sounds which precede it
+were again heard. We hastened out, and I again despaired of seeing any
+thing; the water only overflowed as usual, and the sound was already
+ceasing. But all at once, when the last sounds had scarcely died away,
+the explosion began. Words fail me when I try to describe it: such a
+magnificent and overpowering sight can only be seen once in a lifetime.
+
+All my expectations and suppositions were far surpassed. The water
+spouted upwards with indescribable force and bulk; one pillar rose higher
+than the other; each seemed to emulate the other. When I had in some
+measure recovered from the surprise, and regained composure, I looked at
+the tent. How little, how dwarfish it seemed as compared to the height
+of these pillars of water! And yet it was about twenty feet high. It
+did, indeed, lie ten feet lower than the basin of the Geyser; but if tent
+had been raised above tent, these ten feet could only be deducted once,
+and I calculated, though my calculation may not be correct, that one
+would need to pile up five or six tents to have the height of one of the
+pillars. Without exaggeration, I think the largest spout rose above one
+hundred feet high, and was three to four feet in diameter.
+
+Fortunately I had looked at my watch at the beginning of the hollow
+sounds, the forerunners of the eruption, for during its continuance I
+should probably have forgotten to do so. The whole lasted four minutes,
+of which the greater half must have been taken up by the eruption itself.
+
+When this wonderful scene was over, the peasant accompanied me to the
+basin. We could now approach it and the boiler without danger, and
+examine both at leisure. There was now nothing to fear; the water had
+entirely disappeared from the outer basin. We entered it and approached
+the inner basin, in which the water had sunk seven or eight feet, where
+it boiled and bubbled fiercely.
+
+With a hammer I broke some crust out of the outer as well as out of the
+inner basin; the former was white, the latter brown. I also tasted the
+water; it had not an unpleasant taste, and can only contain an
+inconsiderable proportion of sulphur, as the steam does not even smell of
+it.
+
+I went to the basin of the Geyser every half hour to observe how much
+time was required to fill it again. After an hour I could still descend
+into the outer basin; but half an hour later the inner basin was already
+full, and commenced to overflow. As long as the water only filled the
+inner basin it boiled violently; but the higher it rose in the outer one,
+the less it boiled, and nearly ceased when the basin was filled: it only
+threw little bubbles here and there.
+
+After a lapse of two hours--it was just noon--the basin was filled nearly
+to the brim; and while I stood beside it the water began again to bubble
+violently, and to emit the hollow sounds. I had scarcely time to
+retreat, for the pillars of water rose immediately. This time they
+spouted during the noise, and were more bulky than those of the first
+explosion, which might proceed from their not rising so high, and
+therefore remaining more compact. Their height may have been from forty
+to fifty feet. The basins this time remained nearly as full after the
+eruption as before.
+
+I had now seen two eruptions of the Geyser, and felt amply compensated
+for my persevering patience and watchfulness. But I was destined to be
+more fortunate, and to experience its explosions in all their variety.
+The spring spouted again at seven o'clock in the evening, ascended higher
+than at noon, and brought up some stones, which looked like black spots
+and points in the white frothy water-column. And during the third night
+it presented itself under another phase: the water rose in dreadful,
+quickly-succeeding waves, without throwing rays; the basin overflowed
+violently, and generated such a mass of steam as is rarely seen. The
+wind accidentally blew it to the spot where I stood, and it enveloped me
+so closely that I could scarcely see a few feet off. But I perceived
+neither smell nor oppression, merely a slight degree of warmth.
+
+ June 28th.
+
+As I had now seen the Geyser play so often and so beautifully, I ordered
+my horses for nine o'clock this morning, to continue my journey. I made
+the more haste to leave, as a Dutch prince was expected, who had lately
+arrived at Reikjavik, with a large retinue, in a splendid man-of-war.
+
+I had the luck to see another eruption before my departure at half-past
+eight o'clock; and this one was nearly as beautiful as the first. This
+time also the outer basin was entirely emptied, and the inner one to a
+depth of six or seven feet. I could therefore again descend into the
+basin, and bid farewell to the Geyser at the very brink of the crater,
+which, of course, I did.
+
+I had now been three nights and two days in the immediate vicinity of the
+Geyser, and had witnessed five eruptions, of which two were of the most
+considerable that had ever been known. But I can assure my readers that
+I did not find every thing as I had anticipated it according to the
+descriptions and accounts I had read. I never heard a greater noise than
+I have mentioned, and never felt any trembling of the earth, although I
+paid the greatest attention to every little circumstance, and held my
+head to the ground during an eruption.
+
+It is singular how many people repeat every thing they hear from
+others--how some, with an over-excited imagination, seem to see, hear,
+and feel things which do not exist; and how others, again, tell the most
+unblushing falsehoods. I met an example of this in Reikjavik, in the
+house of the apothecary Moller, in the person of an officer of a French
+frigate, who asserted that he had "ridden to the very edge of the crater
+of Mount Vesuvius." He probably did not anticipate meeting any one in
+Reikjavik who had also been to the crater of Vesuvius. Nothing irritates
+me so much as such falsehoods and boastings; and I could not therefore
+resist asking him how he had managed that feat. I told him that I had
+been there, and feared danger as little as he could do; but that I had
+been compelled to descend from my donkey near the top of the mountain,
+and let my feet carry me the remainder of the journey. He seemed rather
+embarrassed, and pretended he had meant to say _nearly_ to the crater;
+but I feel convinced he will tell this story so often that he will at
+last believe it himself.
+
+I hope I do not weary my readers by dwelling so long on the subject of
+the Geyser. I will now vary the subject by relating a few circumstances
+that came under my notice, which, though trifling in themselves, were yet
+very significant. The most unimportant facts of an almost unknown
+country are often interesting, and are often most conclusive evidences of
+the general character of the nation.
+
+I have already spoken of my intoxicated guide. It is yet inexplicable to
+me how he could have conducted me so safely in such a semi-conscious
+state; and had he not been the only one, I should certainly not have
+trusted myself to his guidance.
+
+Of the want of cleanliness of the Icelanders, no one who has not
+witnessed it can have any idea; and if I attempted to describe some of
+their nauseous habits, I might fill volumes. They seem to have no
+feeling of propriety, and I must, in this respect, rank them as far
+inferior to the Bedouins and Arabs--even to the Greenlanders. I can,
+therefore, not conceive how this nation could once have been
+distinguished for wealth, bravery, and civilisation.
+
+On this day I proceeded on my journey about twenty-eight miles farther to
+Skalholt.
+
+For the first five miles we retraced our former road; then we turned to
+the left and traversed the beautiful long valley in which the Geyser is
+situated. For many miles we could see its clouds of steam rising to the
+sky. The roads were tolerable only when they passed along the sides of
+hills and mountains; in the plains they were generally marshy and full of
+water. We sometimes lost all traces of a road, and only pushed on
+towards the quarter in which the place of our destination was situated;
+and feared withal to sink at every pace into the soft and unresisting
+soil.
+
+I found the indolence of the Icelandic peasants quite unpardonable. All
+the valleys through which we passed were large morasses richly overgrown
+with grass. If the single parishes would unite to dig trenches and drain
+the soil, they would have the finest meadows. This is proved near the
+many precipices where the water has an outlet; in these spots the grass
+grows most luxuriantly, and daisies and herbs flourish there, and even
+wild clover. A few cottages are generally congregated on these oases.
+
+Before arriving at the village of Thorfastadir, we already perceived
+Hecla surrounded by the beautiful jokuls.
+
+I arrived at Thorfastadir while a funeral was going on. As I entered the
+church the mourners were busily seeking courage and consolation in the
+brandy-bottle. The law commands, indeed, that this be not done in the
+church; but if every one obeyed the law, what need would there be of
+judges? The Icelanders must think so, else they would discontinue the
+unseemly practice.
+
+When the priest came, a psalm or a prayer--I could not tell which it was,
+being Icelandic--was so earnestly shouted by peasants under the
+leadership of the priest and elders, that the good people waxed quite
+warm and out of breath. Then the priest placed himself before the
+coffin, which, for want of room, had been laid on the backs of the seats,
+and with a very loud voice read a prayer which lasted more than half an
+hour. With this the ceremony within the church was concluded, and the
+coffin was carried round the church to the grave, followed by the priest
+and the rest of the company. This grave was deeper than any I had ever
+seen. When the coffin had been lowered, the priest threw three handfuls
+of earth upon it, but none of the mourners followed his example. Among
+the earth which had been dug out of the grave I noticed four skulls,
+several human bones, and a board of a former coffin. These were all
+thrown in again upon the coffin, and the grave filled in presence of the
+priest and the people. One man trod the soil firm, then a little mound
+was made and covered with grass-plots which were lying ready. The whole
+business was completed with miraculous speed.
+
+The little town of Skalholt, my station this night, was once as
+celebrated in religious matters as Thingvalla had been politically
+famous. Here, soon after the introduction of Christianity, the first
+bishopric was founded in 1098, and the church is said to have been one of
+the largest and richest. Now Skalholt is a miserable place, and consists
+of three or four cottages, and a wretched wooden church, which may
+perhaps contain a hundred persons; it has not even its own priest, but
+belongs to Thorfastadir.
+
+My first business on arriving was to inspect the yet remaining relics of
+past ages. First I was shewn an oil-picture which hangs in the church,
+and is said to represent the first bishop of Skalholt, Thorlakur, who was
+worshipped almost as a saint for his strict and pious life.
+
+After this, preparations were made to clear away the steps of the altar
+and several boards of the flooring. I stood expectantly looking on,
+thinking that I should now have to descend into a vault to inspect the
+embalmed body of the bishop. I must confess this prospect was not the
+most agreeable, when I thought of the approaching night which I should
+have to spend in this church, perhaps immediately over the grave of the
+old skeleton. I had besides already had too much to do with the dead for
+one day, and could not rid myself of the unpleasant grave-odour which I
+had imbibed in Thorfastadir, and which seemed to cling to my dress and my
+nose. {41} I was therefore not a little pleased when, instead of the
+dreaded vault and mummy, I was only shewn a marble slab, on which were
+inscribed the usual notifications of the birth, death, &c. of this great
+bishop. Besides this, I saw an old embroidered stole and a simple golden
+chalice, both of which are said to be relics of the age of Thorlakar.
+
+Then we ascended into the so-called store-room, which is only separated
+from the lower portion of the church by a few boards, and which extends
+to the altar. Here are kept the bells and the organ, if the church
+possesses one, the provisions, and a variety of tools. They opened an
+immense chest for me there, which seemed to contain only large pieces of
+tallow made in the form of cheeses; but under this tallow I found the
+library, where I discovered an interesting treasure. This was, besides
+several very old books in the Icelandic tongue, three thick folio
+volumes, which I could read very easily; they were German, and contained
+Luther's doctrines, letters, epistles, &c.
+
+I had now seen all there was to be seen, and began to satisfy my physical
+wants by calling for some hot water to make coffee, &c. As usual, all
+the inhabitants of the place ranged themselves in and before the church,
+probably to increase their knowledge of the human race by studying my
+peculiarities. I soon, however, closed the door, and prepared a splendid
+couch for myself. At my first entrance into the church, I had noticed a
+long box, quite filled with sheep's wool. I threw my rugs over this, and
+slept as comfortably as in the softest bed. In the morning I carefully
+teased the wool up again, and no one could then have imagined where I had
+passed the night.
+
+Nothing amused me more, when I had lodgings of this description, than the
+curiosity of the people, who would rush in every morning, as soon as I
+opened the door. The first thing they said to each other was always,
+"Krar hefur hun sovid" (Where can she have slept?). The good people
+could not conceive how it was possible to spend a night _alone_ in a
+church surrounded by a churchyard; they perhaps considered me an evil
+spirit or a witch, and would too gladly have ascertained how such a
+creature slept. When I saw their disappointed faces, I had to turn away
+not to laugh at them.
+
+ June 29th.
+
+Early the next morning I continued my journey. Not far from Skalholt we
+came to the river Thiorsa, which is deep and rapid. We crossed in a
+boat; but the horses had to swim after us. It is often very troublesome
+to make the horses enter these streams; they see at once that they will
+have to swim. The guide and boatmen cannot leave the shore till the
+horses have been forced into the stream; and even then they have to throw
+stones, to threaten them with the whip, and to frighten them by shouts
+and cries, to prevent them from returning.
+
+When we had made nearly twelve miles on marshy roads, we came to the
+beautiful waterfall of the Huitha. This fall is not so remarkable for
+its height, which is scarcely more than fifteen to twenty feet, as for
+its breadth, and for its quantity of water. Some beautiful rocks are so
+placed at the ledge of the fall, that they divide it into three parts;
+but it unites again immediately beneath them. The bed of the river, as
+well as its shores, is of lava.
+
+The colour of the water is also a remarkable feature in this river; it
+inclines so much to milky white, that, when the sun shines on it, it
+requires no very strong imaginative power to take the whole for milk.
+
+Nearly a mile above the fall we had to cross the Huitha, one of the
+largest rivers in Iceland. Thence the road lies through meadows, which
+are less marshy than the former ones, till it comes to a broad stream of
+lava, which announces the vicinity of the fearful volcano of Hecla.
+
+I had hitherto not passed over such an expanse of country in Iceland as
+that from the Geyser to this place without coming upon streams of lava.
+And this lava-stream seemed to have felt some pity for the beautiful
+meadows, for it frequently separated into two branches, and thus enclosed
+the verdant plain. But it could not withstand the violence of the
+succeeding masses; it had been carried on, and had spread death and
+destruction everywhere. The road to it, through plains covered with dark
+sand, and over steep hills intervening, was very fatiguing and laborious.
+
+We proceeded to the little village of Struvellir, where we stopped to
+give our horses a few hours' rest. Here we found a large assembly of men
+and animals. {42} It happened to be Sunday, and a warm sunny day, and so
+a very full service was held in the pretty little church. When it was
+over, I witnessed an amusing rural scene. The people poured out of the
+church,--I counted ninety-six, which is an extraordinarily numerous
+assemblage for Iceland,--formed into little groups, chatting and joking,
+not forgetting, however, to moisten their throats with brandy, of which
+they had taken care to bring an ample supply. Then they bridled their
+horses and prepared for departure; now the kisses poured in from all
+sides, and there was no end of leave-taking, for the poor people do not
+know whether they shall ever meet again, and when.
+
+In all Iceland welcome and farewell is expressed by a loud kiss,--a
+practice not very delightful for a non-Icelander, when one considers
+their ugly, dirty faces, the snuffy noses of the old people, and the
+filthy little children. But the Icelanders do not mind this. They all
+kissed the priest, and the priest kissed them; and then they kissed each
+other, till the kissing seemed to have no end. Rank is not considered in
+this ceremony; and I was not a little surprised to see how my guide, a
+common farm-labourer, kissed the six daughters of a judge, or the wife
+and children of a priest, or a judge and the priest themselves, and how
+they returned the compliment without reserve. Every country has its
+peculiar customs!
+
+The religious ceremonies generally begin about noon, and last two or
+three hours. There being no public inn in which to assemble, and no
+stable in which the horses can be fastened, all flock to the open space
+in front of the church, which thus becomes a very animated spot. All
+have to remain in the open air.
+
+When the service was over, I visited the priest, Herr Horfuson; he was
+kind enough to conduct me to the Salsun, nine miles distant, principally
+to engage a guide to Hecla for me.
+
+I was doubly rejoiced to have this good man at my side, as we had to
+cross a dangerous stream, which was very rapid, and so deep that the
+water rose to the horses' breasts. Although we raised our feet as high
+as possible, we were yet thoroughly wet. This wading across rivers is
+one of the most unpleasant modes of travelling. The horse swims more
+than it walks, and this creates a most disagreeable sensation; one does
+not know whither to direct one's eyes; to look into the stream would
+excite giddiness, and the sight of the shore is not much better, for that
+seems to move and to recede, because the horse, by the current, is forced
+a little way down the river. To my great comfort the priest rode by my
+side to hold me, in case I should not be able to keep my seat. I passed
+fortunately through this probation; and when we reached the other shore,
+Herr Horfuson pointed out to me how far the current had carried us down
+the river.
+
+The valley in which Salsun and the Hecla are situated is one of those
+which are found only in Iceland. It contains the greatest contrasts.
+Here are charming fields covered with a rich green carpet of softest
+grass, and there again hills of black, shining lava; even the fertile
+plains are traversed by streams of lava and spots of sand. Mount Hecla
+notoriously has the blackest lava and the blackest sand; and it may be
+imagined how the country looks in its immediate neighbourhood. One hill
+only to the left of Hecla is reddish brown, and covered with sand and
+stones of a similar colour. The centre is much depressed, and seems to
+form a large crater. Mount Hecla is directly united with the
+lava-mountains piled round it, and seems from the plain only as a higher
+point. It is surrounded by several glaciers, whose dazzling fields of
+snow descend far down, and whose brilliant plains have probably never
+been trod by human feet; several of its sides were also covered with
+snow. To the left of the valley near Salsun, and at the foot of a
+lava-hill, lies a lovely lake, on whose shores a numerous flock of sheep
+were grazing. Near it rises another beautiful hill, so solitary and
+isolated, that it looks as if it had been cast out by its neighbours and
+banished hither. Indeed, the whole landscape here is so peculiarly
+Icelandic, so strange and remarkable, that it will ever remain impressed
+on my memory.
+
+Salsun lies at the foot of Mount Hecla, but is not seen before one
+reaches it.
+
+Arrived at Salsun, our first care was to seek a guide, and to bargain for
+every thing requisite for the ascension of the mountain. The guide was
+to procure a horse for me, and to take me and my former guide to the
+summit of Hecla. He demanded five thaler and two marks (about fifteen
+shillings), a most exorbitant sum, on which he could live for a month.
+But what could we do? He knew very well that there was no other guide to
+be had, and so I was forced to acquiesce. When all was arranged, my kind
+companion left me, wishing me success on my arduous expedition.
+
+I now looked out for a place in which I could spend the night, and a
+filthy hole fell to my lot. A bench, rather shorter that my body, was
+put into it, to serve as my bed; beside it hung a decayed fish, which had
+infected the whole room with its smell. I could scarcely breathe; and as
+there was no other outlet, I was obliged to open the door, and thus
+receive the visits of the numerous and amiable inhabitants. What a
+strengthening and invigorating preparation for the morrow's expedition!
+
+At the foot of Mount Hecla, and especially in this village, every thing
+seems to be undermined. Nowhere, not even on Mount Vesuvius, had I heard
+such hollow, droning sounds as here,--the echoes of the heavy footsteps
+of the peasants. These sounds made a very awful impression on me as I
+lay all night alone in that dark hole.
+
+My Hecla guide, as I shall call him to distinguish him from my other
+guide, advised me to start at two o'clock in the morning, to which I
+assented, well knowing, however, that we should not have mounted our
+horses before five o'clock.
+
+As I had anticipated, so it happened. At half-past five we were quite
+prepared and ready for departure. Besides bread and cheese, a bottle of
+water for myself, and one of brandy for my guides, we were also provided
+with long sticks, tipped with iron points to sound the depth of the snow,
+and to lean upon.
+
+We were favoured by a fine warm sunny morning, and galloped briskly over
+the fields and the adjoining plains of sand. My guide considered the
+fine weather a very lucky omen, and told me that M. Geimard, the
+before-mentioned French scholar, had been compelled to wait three days
+for fine weather. Nine years had elapsed, and no one had ascended the
+mountain since then. A prince of Denmark, who travelled through Iceland
+some years before, had been there, but had returned without effecting his
+purpose.
+
+Our road at first led us through beautiful fields, and then over plains
+of black sand enclosed on all sides by streams, hillocks, and mountains
+of piled-up lava. Closer and closer these fearful masses approach, and
+scarcely permit a passage through a narrow cleft; we had to climb over
+blocks and hills of lava, where it is difficult to find a firm
+resting-place for the foot. The lava rolled beside and behind us, and we
+had to proceed carefully not to fall or be hit by the rolling lava. But
+most dangerous were the chasms filled with snow over which we had to
+pass; the snow had been softened by the warmth of the season, so that we
+sank into it nearly every step, or, what was worse, slipped back more
+than we had advanced. I scarcely think there can be another mountain
+whose ascent offers so many difficulties.
+
+After a labour of about three hours and a half we neared the summit of
+the mountain, where we were obliged to leave our horses. I should,
+indeed, have preferred to do so long before, as I was apprehensive of the
+poor animals falling as they climbed over these precipices--one might
+almost call them rolling mountains--but my guide would not permit it.
+Sometimes we came to spots where they were useful, and then he maintained
+that I must ride as far as possible to reserve my strength for the
+remaining difficulties. And he was right; I scarcely believe I should
+have been able to go through it on foot, for when I thought we were near
+the top, hills of lava again rose between us, and we seemed farther from
+our journey's end than before.
+
+My guide told me that he had never taken any one so far on horseback, and
+I can believe it. Walking was bad enough--riding was fearful.
+
+At every fresh declivity new scenes of deserted, melancholy districts
+were revealed to us; every thing was cold and dead, every where there was
+black burnt lava. It was a painful feeling to see so much, and behold
+nothing but a stony desert, an immeasurable chaos.
+
+There were still two declivities before us,--the last, but the worst. We
+had to climb steep masses of lava, sharp and pointed, which covered the
+whole side of the mountain. I do not know how often I fell and cut my
+hands on the jagged points of the lava. It was a fearful journey!
+
+The dazzling whiteness of the snow contrasted with the bright black lava
+beside it had an almost blinding effect. When crossing fields of snow I
+did not look at the lava; for having tried to do so once or twice, I
+could not see my way afterwards, and had nearly grown snow-blind.
+
+ [Picture: Hecla]
+
+After two hours' more labour we reached the summit of the mountain. I
+stood now on Mount Hecla, and eagerly sought the crater on the snowless
+top, but did not find it. I was the more surprised, as I had read
+detailed accounts of it in several descriptions of travel.
+
+I traversed the whole summit of the mountain and climbed to the adjoining
+jokul, but did not perceive an opening, a fissure, a depressed space, nor
+any sign of a crater. Lower down in the sides of the mountain, but not
+in the real cone, I saw some clefts and fissures from which the streams
+of lava probably poured. The height of the mountain is said to be 4300
+feet.
+
+During the last hour of our ascent the sun had grown dim. Clouds of mist
+blown from the neighbouring glaciers enshrouded the hill-tops, and soon
+enveloped us so closely that we could scarcely see ten paces before us.
+At last they dissolved, fortunately not in rain but in snow, which
+profusely covered the black uneven lava. The snow remained on the
+ground, and the thermometer stood at one degree of cold.
+
+In a little while the clear blue sky once more was visible, and the sun
+again shone over us. I remained on the top till the clouds had separated
+beneath us, and afforded me a better distant view over the country.
+
+My pen is unfortunately too feeble to bring vividly before my readers the
+picture such as I beheld it here, and to describe to them the desolation,
+the extent and height of these lava-masses. I seemed to stand in a
+crater, and the whole country appeared only a burnt-out fire. Here lava
+was piled up in steep inaccessible mountains; there stony rivers, whose
+length and breadth seemed immeasurable, filled the once-verdant fields.
+Every thing was jumbled together, and yet the course of the last eruption
+could be distinctly traced.
+
+I stood there, in the centre of horrible precipices, caves, streams,
+valleys, and mountains, and scarcely comprehended how it was possible to
+penetrate so far, and was overcome with terror at the thought which
+involuntarily obtruded itself--the possibility of never finding my way
+again out of these terrible labyrinths.
+
+Here, from the top of Mount Hecla, I could see far into the uninhabited
+country, the picture of a petrified creation, dead and motionless, and
+yet magnificent,--a picture which once seen can never again fade from the
+memory, and which alone amply compensates for all the previous troubles
+and dangers. A whole world of glaciers, lava-mountains, snow and
+ice-fields, rivers and lakes, into which no human foot has ever ventured
+to penetrate. How nature must have laboured and raged till these forms
+were created! And is it over now? Has the destroying element exhausted
+itself; or does it only rest, like the hundred-headed Hydra, to break
+forth with renewed strength, and desolate those regions which, pushed to
+the verge of the sea-shore, encircle the sterile interior as a modest
+wreath? I thank God that he has permitted me to behold this chaos in his
+creation; but I thank him more heartily that he has placed me to dwell in
+regions where the sun does more than merely give light; where it inspires
+and fertilises animals and plants, and fills the human heart with joy and
+thankfulness towards its Creator. {43}
+
+The Westmann Isles, which are said to be visible from the top of Hecla, I
+could not see; they were probably covered by clouds.
+
+During the ascent of the Hecla I had frequently touched lava,--sometimes
+involuntarily, when I fell; sometimes voluntarily, to find a hot or at
+least a warm place. I was unfortunate enough only to find cold ones.
+The falling snow was therefore most welcome, and I looked anxiously
+around to see a place where the subterranean heat would melt it. I
+should then have hastened thither and found what I sought. But
+unfortunately the snow remained unmelted every where. I could neither
+see any clouds of smoke, although I gazed steadily at the mountain for
+hours, and could from my post survey it far down the sides.
+
+As we descended we found the snow melting at a depth of 500 to 600 feet;
+lower down, the whole mountain smoked, which I thought was the
+consequence of the returning warmth of the sun, for my thermometer now
+stood at nine degrees of heat. I have noticed the same circumstance
+often on unvolcanic mountains. The spots from which the smoke rose were
+also cold.
+
+The smooth jet-black, bright, and dense lava is only found on the
+mountain itself and in its immediate vicinity. But all lava is not the
+same: there is jagged, glassy, and porous lava; the former is black, and
+so is the sand which covers one side of Hecla. The farther the lava and
+sand are from the mountain, the more they lose this blackness, and their
+colour plays into iron-colour and even into light-grey; but the
+lighter-coloured lava generally retains the brightness and smoothness of
+the black lava.
+
+After a troublesome descent, having spent twelve hours on this excursion,
+we arrived safely at Salsun; and I was on the point of returning to my
+lodging, somewhat annoyed at the prospect of spending another night in
+such a hole, when my guide surprised me agreeably by the proposition to
+return to Struvellir at once. The horses, he said, were sufficiently
+rested, and I could get a good room there in the priest's house. I soon
+packed, and in a short time we were again on horseback. The second time
+I came to the deep Rangaa, I rode across fearlessly, and needed no
+protection at any side. Such is man: danger only alarms him the first
+time; when he has safely surmounted it once, he scarcely thinks of it the
+second time, and wonders how he can have felt any fear.
+
+I saw five little trees standing in a field near the stream. The stems
+of these, which, considering the scarcity of trees in Iceland, may be
+called remarkable phenomena, were crooked and knotty, but yet six or
+seven feet high, and about four or five inches in diameter.
+
+As my guide had foretold, I found a very comfortable room and a good bed
+in the priest's house. Herr Horfuson is one of the best men I have ever
+met with. He eagerly sought opportunities for giving me pleasure, and to
+him I owe several fine minerals and an Icelandic book of the year 1601.
+May God reward his kindness and benevolence!
+
+ July 1st.
+
+We retraced our steps as far as the river Huitha, over which we rowed,
+and then turned in another direction. Our journey led us through
+beautiful valleys, many of them producing abundance of grass; but
+unfortunately so much moss grew among it, that these large plains were
+not available for pastures, and only afforded comfort to travellers by
+their aspect of cheerfulness. They were quite dry.
+
+The valley in which Hjalmholm, our resting-place for this night, was
+situated, is traversed by a stream of lava, which had, however, been
+modest enough not to fill up the whole valley, but to leave a space for
+the pretty stream Elvas, and for some fields and hillocks, on which many
+cottages stood. It was one of the most populous valleys I had seen in
+Iceland.
+
+Hjalmholm is situated on a hill. In it lives the Sysselmann of the
+Rangaar district, in a large and beautiful house such as I saw no where
+in Iceland except in Reikjavik. He had gone to the capital of the island
+as member of the Allthing; but his daughters received me very hospitably
+and kindly.
+
+We talked and chatted much; I tried to display my knowledge of the Danish
+language before them, and must often have made use of curious phrases,
+for the girls could not contain their laughter. But that did not abash
+me; I laughed with them, applied to my dictionary, which I carried with
+me, and chatted on. They seemed to gather no very high idea of the
+beauty of my countrywomen from my personal appearance; for which I humbly
+crave the forgiveness of my countrywomen, assuring them that no one
+regrets the fact more than I do. But dame Nature always treats people of
+my years very harshly, and sets a bad example to youth of the respect due
+to age. Instead of honouring us and giving us the preference, she
+patronises the young folks, and every maiden of sixteen can turn up her
+nose at us venerable matrons. Besides my natural disqualifications, the
+sharp air and the violent storms to which I had been subjected had
+disfigured my face very much. They had affected me more than the burning
+heat of the East. I was very brown, my lips were cracked, and my nose,
+alas, even began to rebel against its ugly colour. It seemed anxious to
+possess a new, dazzling white, tender skin, and was casting off the old
+one in little bits.
+
+The only circumstance which reinstated me in the good opinion of the
+young girls was, that having brushed my hair unusually far out of my
+face, a white space became visible. The girls all cried out
+simultaneously, quite surprised and delighted: "Hun er quit" (she is
+white). I could not refrain from laughing, and bared my arm to prove to
+them that I did not belong to the Arab race.
+
+A great surprise was destined me in this house; for, as I was ransacking
+the Sysselmann's book-case, I found Rotteck's Universal History, a German
+Lexicon, and several poems and writings of German poets.
+
+ July 2d.
+
+The way from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla leads over nothing but lava, and
+the one to-day went entirely through marshes. As soon as we had crossed
+one, another was before us. Lava seemed to form the soil here, for
+little portions of this mineral rose like islands out of the marshes.
+
+The country already grew more open, and we gradually lost sight of the
+glaciers. The high mountains on the left seemed like hills in the
+distance, and the nearer ones were really hills. After riding about nine
+miles we crossed the large stream of Elvas in a boat, and then had to
+tread carefully across a very long, narrow bank, over a meadow which was
+quite under water. If a traveller had met us on this bank, I do not know
+what we should have done; to turn round would have been as dangerous as
+to sink into the morass. Fortunately one never meets any travellers in
+Iceland.
+
+Beyond the dyke the road runs for some miles along the mountains and
+hills, which all consist of lava, and are of a very dark, nearly black
+colour. The stones on these hills were very loose; in the plain below
+many colossal pieces were lying, which must have fallen down; and many
+others threatened to fall every moment. We passed the dangerous spot
+safely, without having had to witness such a scene.
+
+I often heard a hollow sound among these hills; I at first took it for
+distant thunder, and examined the horizon to discover the approaching
+storm. But when I saw neither clouds nor lightning, I perceived that I
+must seek the origin of the sounds nearer, and that they proceeded from
+the falling portions of rock.
+
+The higher mountains to the left fade gradually more and more from view;
+but the river Elvas spreads in such a manner, and divides into so many
+branches, that one might mistake it for a lake with many islands. It
+flows into the neighbouring sea, whose expanse becomes visible after
+surmounting a few more small hills.
+
+The vale of Reikum, which we now entered, is, like that of Reikholt, rich
+in hot springs, which are congregated partly in the plain, partly on or
+behind the hills, in a circumference of between two and three miles.
+
+When we had reached the village of Reikum I sent my effects at once to
+the little church, took a guide, and proceeded to the boiling springs. I
+found very many, but only two remarkable ones; these, however, belong to
+the most noteworthy of their kind. The one is called the little Geyser,
+the other the Bogensprung.
+
+The little Geyser has an inner basin of about three feet diameter. The
+water boils violently at a depth of from two to three feet, and remains
+within its bounds till it begins to spout, when it projects a beautiful
+voluminous steam of from 20 to 30 feet high.
+
+At half-past eight in the evening I had the good fortune to see one of
+these eruptions, and needed not, as I had done at the great Geyser, to
+bivouac near it for days and nights. The eruption lasted some time, and
+was tolerably equable; only sometimes the column of water sank a little,
+to rise to its former height with renewed force. After forty minutes it
+fell quite down into the basin again. The stones we threw in, it
+rejected at once, or in a few seconds, shivered into pieces, to a height
+of about 12 to 15 feet. Its bulk must have been 1 to 1.5 feet in
+diameter. My guide assured me that this spring generally plays only
+twice, rarely thrice, in twenty-four hours, and not, as I have seen it
+stated, every six minutes. I remained near it till midnight, but saw no
+other eruption.
+
+This spring very much resembles the Strukker near the great Geyser, the
+only difference being that the water sinks much lower in the latter.
+
+The second of the two remarkable springs, the arched spring, is situated
+near the little Geyser, on the declivity of a hill. I had never seen
+such a curious formation for the bed of a spring as this is. It has no
+basin, but lies half open at your feet, in a little grotto, which is
+separated into various cavities and holes, and which is half-surrounded
+by a wall of rock bending over it slightly at a height of about 2 feet,
+and then rises 10 to 12 feet higher. This spring never is at rest more
+than a minute; then it begins to rise and boil quickly, and emits a
+voluminous column, which, striking against the projecting rock, is
+flattened by it, and rises thence like an arched fan. The height of this
+peculiarly-spread jet of water may be about 12 feet, the arch it
+describes 15 to 20 feet, and its breadth 3 to 8 feet. The time of
+eruption is often longer than that of repose. After an eruption the
+water always sinks a few feet into the cave, and for 15 or 20 seconds
+admits of a glance into this wonderful grotto. But it rises again
+immediately, fills the grotto and the basin, which is only a continuation
+of the grotto, and springs again.
+
+I watched this miraculous play of nature for more than an hour, and could
+not tear myself from it. This spring, which is certainly the only one of
+its kind, gratified me much more than the little Geyser.
+
+There is another spring called the roaring Geyser; but it is nothing more
+than a misshapen hole, in which one hears the water boil, but cannot see
+it. The noise is, also, not at all considerable.
+
+ July 3d.
+
+Near Reikum we crossed a brook into which all the hot springs flow, and
+which has a pretty fall. We then ascended the adjoining mountain, and
+rode full two hours on the high plain. The plain itself was monotonous,
+as it was only covered with lava-stones and moss, but the prospect into
+the valley was varied and beautiful. Vale and sea were spread before me,
+and I saw the Westmann Islands, with their beautiful hills, which the
+envious clouds had concealed from me on the Hecla, lying in the distance.
+Below me stood some houses in the port-town, Eierbach, and near them the
+waters of the Elvas flow into the sea.
+
+At the end of this mountain-level a valley was situated, which was also
+filled with lava, but with that jagged black lava which presents such a
+beautiful appearance. Immense streams crossed it from all sides, so that
+it almost resembled a black lake separated from the sea by a chain of
+equally black mountains.
+
+We descended into this sombre vale through piles of lava and fields of
+snow, and went on through valleys and chasms, over fields of lava, plains
+of meadow-land, past dark mountains and hills, till we reached the chief
+station of my Icelandic journey, the town of Reikjavik.
+
+The whole country between Reikum and Reikjavik, a distance of 45 to 50
+miles, is, for the most part, uninhabited. Here and there, in the fields
+of lava, stand little pyramids of the same substance, which serve as
+landmarks; and there are two houses built for such persons as are obliged
+to travel during the winter. But we found much traffic on the road, and
+often overtook caravans of 15 to 20 horses. Being the beginning of
+August, it was the time of trade and traffic in Iceland. Then the
+country people travel to Reikjavik from considerable distances, to change
+their produce and manufactures, partly for money, partly for necessaries
+and luxuries. At this period the merchants and factors have not hands
+enough to barter the goods or close the accounts which the peasants wish
+to settle for the whole year.
+
+At this season an unusual commotion reigns in Reikjavik. Numerous groups
+of men and horses fill the streets; goods are loaded and unloaded;
+friends who have not met for a year or more welcome each other, others
+take leave. On one spot curious tents {44} are erected, before which
+children play; on another drunken men stagger along, or gallop on
+horseback, so that one is terrified, and fears every moment to see them
+fall.
+
+This unusual traffic unfortunately only lasts six or eight days. The
+peasant hastens home to his hay-harvest; the merchant must quickly
+regulate the produce and manufactures he has purchased, and load his
+ships with them, so that they may sail and reach their destination before
+the storms of the autumnal equinox.
+
+
+ Miles.
+From Reikjavik to Thingvalla is 45
+From Thingvalla to the Geyser 36
+From the Geyser to Skalholt 28
+From Skalholt to Salsun 36
+From Salsun to Struvellir 9
+From Struvellir to Hjalmholm 28
+From Hjalmholm to Reikum 32
+From Reikum to Reikjavik 45
+ 259
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+During my travels in Iceland I had of course the opportunity of becoming
+acquainted with its inhabitants, their manners and customs. I must
+confess that I had formed a higher estimate of the peasants. When we
+read in the history of that country that the first inhabitants had
+emigrated thither from civilised states; that they had brought knowledge
+and religion with them; when we hear of the simple good-hearted people,
+and their patriarchal mode of life in the accounts of former travellers,
+and which we know that nearly every peasant in Iceland can read and
+write, and that at least a Bible, but generally other religions books
+also, are found in every cot,--one feels inclined to consider this nation
+the best and most civilised in Europe. I deemed their morality
+sufficiently secured by the absence of foreign intercourse, by their
+isolated position, and the poverty of the country. No large town there
+affords opportunity for pomp or gaiety, or for the commission of smaller
+or greater sins. Rarely does a foreigner enter the island, whose
+remoteness, severe climate, inhospitality, and poverty, are uninviting.
+The grandeur and peculiarity of its natural formation alone makes it
+interesting, and that does not suffice for the masses.
+
+I therefore expected to find Iceland a real Arcadia in regard to its
+inhabitants, and rejoiced at the anticipation of seeing such an Idyllic
+life realised. I felt so happy when I set foot on the island that I
+could have embraced humanity. But I was soon undeceived.
+
+I have often been impatient at my want of enthusiasm, which must be
+great, as I see every thing in a more prosaic form than other travellers.
+I do not maintain that my view is _right_, but I at least possess the
+virtue of describing facts as I see them, and do not repeat them from the
+accounts of others.
+
+I have already described the impoliteness and heartlessness of the
+so-called higher classes, and soon lost the good opinion I had formed of
+them. I now came to the working classes in the vicinity of Reikjavik.
+The saying often applied to the Swiss people, "No money, no Swiss," one
+may also apply to the Icelanders. And of this fact I can cite several
+examples.
+
+Scarcely had they heard that I, a foreigner, had arrived, than they
+frequently came to me, and brought quite common objects, such as can be
+found any where in Iceland, and expected me to pay dearly for them. At
+first I purchased from charity, or to be rid of their importunities, and
+threw the things away again; but I was soon obliged to give this up, as I
+should else have been besieged from morning to night. Their anxiety to
+gain money without labour annoyed me less than the extortionate prices
+with which they tried to impose on a stranger. For a beetle, such as
+could be found under every stone, they asked 5 kr. (about 2d.); as much
+for a caterpillar, of which thousands were lying on the beach; and for a
+common bird's egg, 10 to 20 kr. (4d. to 8d.) Of course, when I declined
+buying, they reduced their demand, sometimes to less than half the
+original sum; but this was certainly not in consequence of their honesty.
+The baker in whose house I lodged also experienced the selfishness of
+these people. He had engaged a poor labourer to tar his house, who, when
+he had half finished his task, heard of other employment. He did not
+even take the trouble to ask the baker to excuse him for a few days; he
+went away, and did not return to finish the interrupted work for a whole
+week. This conduct was the more inexcusable as his children received
+bread, and even butter, twice a week from the baker.
+
+I was fortunate enough to experience similar treatment. Herr Knudson had
+engaged a guide for me, with whom I was to take my departure in a few
+days. But it happened that the magistrate wished also to take a trip,
+and sent for my guide. The latter expected to be better paid by him, and
+went; he did not come to me to discharge himself, but merely sent me word
+on the eve of my departure, that he was ill, and could therefore not go
+with me. I could enumerate many more such examples, which do not much
+tend to give a high estimate of Icelandic morality.
+
+I consoled myself with the hope of finding simplicity and honesty in the
+more retired districts, and therefore anticipated a twofold pleasure from
+my journey into the interior. I found many virtues, but unfortunately so
+many faults, that I am no longer inclined to exalt the Icelandic peasants
+as examples.
+
+The best of their virtues is their honesty. I could leave my baggage
+unguarded any where for hours, and never missed the least article, for
+they did not even permit their children to touch any thing. In this
+point they are so conscientious, that if a peasant comes from a distance,
+and wishes to rest in a cottage, he never fails to knock at the door,
+even if it is open. If no one calls "come in," he does not enter. One
+might fearlessly sleep with open doors.
+
+Crimes are of such rare occurrence here, that the prison of Reikjavik was
+changed into a dwelling-house for the chief warden many years since.
+Small crimes are punished summarily, either in Reikjavik or at the seat
+of the Sysselmann. Criminals of a deeper dye are sent to Copenhagen, and
+are sentenced and punished there.
+
+My landlord at Reikjavik, the master-baker Bernhoft, told me that only
+one crime had been committed in Iceland during the thirteen years that he
+had resided there. This was the murder of an illegitimate child
+immediately after its birth. The most frequently occurring crime is
+cow-stealing.
+
+I was much surprised to find that nearly all the Icelanders can read and
+write. The latter quality only was somewhat rarer with the women.
+Youths and men often wrote a firm, good hand. I also found books in
+every cottage, the Bible always, and frequently poems and stories,
+sometimes even in the Danish language.
+
+They also comprehend very quickly; when I opened my map before them, they
+soon understood its use and application. Their quickness is doubly
+surprising, if we consider that every father instructs his own children,
+and sometimes the neighbouring orphans. This is of course only done in
+the winter; but as winter lasts eight months in Iceland, it is long
+enough.
+
+There is only one school in the whole island, which originally was in
+Bessestadt, but has been removed to Reikjavik since 1846. In this school
+only youths who can read and write are received, and they are either
+educated for priests, and may complete their studies here, or for
+doctors, apothecaries, or judges, when they must complete their studies
+in Copenhagen.
+
+Besides theology, geometry, geography, history, and several languages,
+such as Latin, Danish, and, since 1846, German and also French, are
+taught in the school of Reikjavik.
+
+The chief occupation of the Icelandic peasants consists in fishing, which
+is most industriously pursued in February, March, and April. Then the
+inhabitants of the interior come to the coasting villages and hire
+themselves to the dwellers on the beach, the real fishermen, as
+assistants, taking a portion of the fish as their wages. Fishing is
+attended to at other times also, but then exclusively by the real
+fishermen. In the months of July and August many of the latter go into
+the interior and assist in the hay-harvest, for which they receive
+butter, sheep's wool, and salt lamb. Others ascend the mountains and
+gather the Iceland moss, of which they make a decoction, which they drink
+mixed with milk, or they grind it to flour, and bake flat cakes of it,
+which serve them in place of bread.
+
+The work of the women consists in the preparation of the fish for drying,
+smoking, or salting; in tending the cattle, in knitting, sometimes in
+gathering moss. In winter both men and women knit and weave.
+
+As regards the hospitality of the Icelanders, {45} I do not think one can
+give them so very much credit for it. It is true that priests and
+peasants gladly receive any European traveller, and treat him to every
+thing in their power; but they know well that the traveller who comes to
+their island is neither an adventurer nor a beggar, and will therefore
+pay them well. I did not meet one peasant or priest who did not accept
+the proffered gift without hesitation. But I must say of the priests
+that they were every where obliging and ready to serve me, and satisfied
+with the smallest gift; and their charges, when I required horses for my
+excursions, were always moderate. I only found the peasant less
+interested in districts where a traveller scarcely ever appeared; but in
+such places as were more visited, their charges were often exorbitant.
+For example, I had to pay 20 to 30 kr. (8d. to 1s.) for being ferried
+over a river; and then my guide and I only were rowed in the boat, and
+the horses had to swim. The guide who accompanied me on the Hecla also
+overcharged me; but he knew that I was forced to take him, as there is no
+choice of guides, and one does not give up the ascent for the sake of a
+little money.
+
+This conduct shows that the character of the Icelanders does not belong
+to the best; and that they take advantage of travellers with as much
+shrewdness as the landlords and guides on the continent.
+
+A besetting sin of the Icelanders is their drunkenness. Their poverty
+would probably not be so great if they were less devoted to brandy, and
+worked more industriously. It is dreadful to see what deep root this
+vice has taken. Not only on Sundays, but also on week-days, I met
+peasants who were so intoxicated that I was surprised how they could keep
+in their saddle. I am, however, happy to say that I never saw a woman in
+this degrading condition.
+
+Another of their passions is snuff. They chew and snuff tobacco with the
+same infatuation as it is smoked in other countries. But their mode of
+taking it is very peculiar. Most of the peasants, and even many of the
+priests, have no proper snuff-box, but only a box turned of bone, shaped
+like a powder-flask. When they take snuff, they throw back their head,
+insert the point of the flask in their nose, and shake a dose of tobacco
+into it. They then, with the greatest amiability, offer it to their
+neighbour, he to his, and so it goes round till it reaches the owner
+again.
+
+I think, indeed, that the Icelanders are second to no nation in
+uncleanliness; not even to the Greenlanders, Esquimaux, or Laplanders.
+If I were to describe a portion only of what I experienced, my readers
+would think me guilty of gross exaggeration; I prefer, therefore, to
+leave it to their imagination; merely saying that they cannot conceive
+any thing too dirty for Iceland delicacy.
+
+Beside this very estimable quality, they are also insuperably lazy. Not
+far from the coast are immense meadows, so marshy that it is dangerous to
+cross them. The fault lies less in the soil than the people. If they
+would only make ditches, and thus dry the ground, they would have the
+most splendid grass. That this would grow abundantly is proved by the
+little elevations which rise from above the marshes, and which are
+thickly covered with grass, herbage, and wild clover. I also passed
+large districts covered with good soil, and some where the soil was mixed
+with sand.
+
+I frequently debated with Herr Boge, who has lived in Iceland for forty
+years, and is well versed in farming matters, whether it would not be
+possible to produce important pasture-grounds and hay-fields with
+industry and perseverance. He agreed with me, and thought that even
+potato-fields might be reclaimed, if only the people were not so lazy,
+preferring to suffer hunger and resign all the comforts of cleanliness
+rather than to work. What nature voluntarily gives, they are satisfied
+with, and it never occurs to them to force more from her. If a few
+German peasants were transported hither, what a different appearance the
+country would soon have!
+
+The best soil in Iceland is on the Norderland. There are a few
+potato-grounds there, and some little trees, which, without any
+cultivation, have reached a height of seven to eight feet. Herr Boge,
+established here for thirty years, had planted some mountain-ash and
+birch-trees, which had grown to a height of sixteen feet.
+
+In the Norderland, and every where except on the coast, the people live
+by breeding cattle. Many a peasant there possesses from two to four
+hundred sheep, ten to fifteen cows, and ten to twelve horses. There are
+not many who are so rich, but at all events they are better off than the
+inhabitants of the sea-coast. The soil there is for the most part bad,
+and they are therefore nearly all compelled to have recourse to fishing.
+
+Before quitting Iceland, I must relate a tradition told me by many
+Icelanders, not only by peasants, but also by people of the so-called
+higher classes, and who all implicitly believe it.
+
+It is asserted that the inhospitable interior is likewise populated, but
+by a peculiar race of men, to whom alone the paths through these deserts
+are known. These savages have no intercourse with their
+fellow-countrymen during the whole year, and only come to one of the
+ports in the beginning of July, for one day at the utmost, to buy several
+necessaries, for which they pay in money. They then vanish suddenly, and
+no one knows in which direction they are gone. No one knows them; they
+never bring their wives or children with them, and never reply to the
+question whence they come. Their language, also, is said to be more
+difficult than that of the other inhabitants of Iceland.
+
+One gentleman, whom I do not wish to name, expressed a wish to have the
+command of twenty to twenty-five well-armed soldiers, to search for these
+wild men.
+
+The people who maintain that they have seen these children of nature,
+assert that they are taller and stronger than other Icelanders; that
+their horses' hoofs, instead of being shod earth iron, have shoes of
+horn; and that they have much money, which they can only have acquired by
+pillage. When I inquired what respectable inhabitants of Iceland had
+been robbed by these savages, and when and where, no one could give me an
+answer. For my part, I scarcely think that one man, certainly not a
+whole race, could live by pillage in Iceland.
+
+
+
+DEPARTURE FROM ICELAND.--JOURNEY TO COPENHAGEN.
+
+
+I had seen all there was to be seen in Iceland, had finished all my
+excursions, and awaited with inexpressible impatience the sailing of the
+vessel which was destined to bring me nearer my beloved home. But I had
+to stay four very long weeks in Reikjavik, my patience being more
+exhausted from day to day, and had after this long delay to be satisfied
+with the most wretched accommodation.
+
+The delay was the more tantalising, as several ships left the port in the
+mean time, and Herr Knudson, with whom I had crossed over from
+Copenhagen, invited me to accompany him on his return; but all the
+vessels went to England or to Spain, and I did not wish to visit either
+of these countries. I was waiting for an opportunity to go to
+Scandinavia, to have at least a glance at these picturesque districts.
+
+At last there were two sloops which intended to sail towards the end of
+July. The better of the two went to Altona; the destination of the other
+was Copenhagen. I had intended to travel in the former; but a merchant
+of Reikjavik had already engaged the only berth,--for there rarely is
+more than one in such a small vessel,--and I deemed myself lucky to
+obtain the one in the other ship. Herr Bernhoft thought, indeed, that
+the vessel might be too bad for such a long journey, and proposed to
+examine it, and report on its condition. But as I had quite determined
+to go to Denmark, I requested him to waive the examination, and agree
+with the captain about my passage. If, as I anticipated, he found the
+vessel too wretched, his warnings might have shaken my resolution, and I
+wished to avoid that contingency.
+
+We heard, soon, that a young Danish girl, who had been in service in
+Iceland, wished to return by the same vessel. She had been suffering so
+much from home-sickness, that she was determined, under any
+circumstances, to see her beloved fatherland again. If, thought I to
+myself, the home-sickness is powerful enough to make this girl
+indifferent to the danger, longing must take its place in my breast and
+effect the same result.
+
+Our sloop bore the consolatory name of Haabet (hope), and belonged to the
+merchant Fromm, in Copenhagen.
+
+Our departure had been fixed for the 26th of July, and after that day I
+scarcely dared to leave my house, being in constant expectation of a
+summons on board. Violent storms unfortunately prevented our departure,
+and I was not called till the 29th of July, when I had to bid farewell to
+Iceland.
+
+This was comparatively easy. Although I had seen many wonderful views,
+many new and interesting natural phenomena, I yet longed for my
+accustomed fields, in which we do not find magnificent and overpowering
+scenes, but lovelier and more cheerful ones. The separation from Herr
+Knudson and the family of Bernhoft was more difficult. I owed all the
+kindness I had experienced in the island, every good advice and useful
+assistance in my travels, only to them. My gratitude to these kind and
+good people will not easily fade from my heart.
+
+At noon I was already on board, and had leisure to admire all the gay
+flags and streamers with which the French frigate anchoring here had been
+decked, to celebrate the anniversary of the July revolution.
+
+I endeavoured to turn my attention as much as possible to exterior
+objects, and not to look at our ship, for all that I had involuntarily
+seen had not impressed me very favourably. I determined also not to
+enter the cabin till we were in the open sea and the pilots had left our
+sloop, so that all possibility of return would be gone.
+
+Our crew consisted of captain, steersman, two sailors, and a cabin-boy,
+who bore the title of cook; we added that of valet, as he was appointed
+to wait on us.
+
+When the pilots had left us, I sought the entrance of the cabin,--the
+only, and therefore the common apartment. It consisted of a hole two
+feet broad, which gaped at my feet, and in which a perpendicular ladder
+of five steps was inserted. I stood before it puzzled to know which
+would be the best mode of descent, but knew no other way than to ask our
+host the captain. He shewed it me at once, by sitting at the entrance
+and letting his feet down. Let the reader imagine such a proceeding with
+our long dresses, and, above all, in bad weather, when the ship was
+pitched about by storms. But the thought that many other people are
+worse off, and can get on, was always the anchor of consolation to which
+I held; I argued with myself that I was made of the same stuff as other
+human beings, only spoiled and pampered, but that I could bear what they
+bore. In consequence of this self-arguing, I sat down at once, tried the
+new sliding-ladder, and arrived below in safety.
+
+I had first to accustom my eyes to the darkness which reigned here, the
+hatches being constructed to admit the light very sparingly. I soon,
+however, saw too much; for all was raggedness, dirt, and disorder. But I
+will describe matters in the order in which they occurred to me; for, as
+I flatter myself that many of my countrywomen will in spirit make this
+journey with me, and as many of them probably never had the opportunity
+of being in such a vessel, I wish to describe it to them very accurately.
+All who are accustomed to the sea will testify that I have adhered
+strictly to the truth. But to return to the sloop. Its age emulated
+mine, she being a relic of the last century. At that time little regard
+was paid to the convenience of passengers, and the space was all made
+available for freight; a fact which cannot surprise us, as the seaman's
+life is passed on deck, and the ship was not built for travellers. The
+entire length of the cabin from one berth to the other was ten feet; the
+breadth was six feet. The latter space was made still narrower by a box
+on one side, and by a little table and two little seats on the other, so
+that only sufficient space remained to pass through.
+
+At dinner or supper, the ladies--the Danish girl and myself--sat on the
+little benches, where we were so squeezed, that we could scarcely move;
+the two cavaliers--the captain and the steersman--were obliged to stand
+before the table, and eat their meals in that position. The table was so
+small that they were obliged to hold their plates in their hands. In
+short, every thing shewed the cabin was made only for the crew, not for
+the passengers.
+
+The air in this enclosure was also not of the purest; for, besides that
+it formed our bed-room, dining-room, and drawing-room, it was also used
+as store-room, for in the side cupboards provisions of various kinds were
+stored, also oil-colours, and a variety of other matter. I preferred to
+sit on the deck, exposed to the cold and the storm, or to be bathed by a
+wave, than to be half stifled below. Sometimes, however, I was obliged
+to descend, either when rain and storms were too violent, or when the
+ship was so tossed by contrary winds that the deck was not safe. The
+rolling and pitching of our little vessel was often so terrible, that we
+ladies could neither sit nor stand, and were therefore obliged to lie
+down in the miserable berths for many a weary day. How I envied my
+companion! she could sleep day and night, which I could not. I was
+nearly always awake, much to my discomfort; for the hatches and the
+entrance were closed during the storm, and an Egyptian darkness, as well
+as a stifling atmosphere, filled the cabin.
+
+In regard to food, all passengers, captain and crew, ate of the same
+dish. The morning meal consisted of miserable tea, or rather of nauseous
+water having the colour of tea. The sailors imbibed theirs without
+sugar, but the captain and the steersman took a small piece of candied
+sugar, which does not melt so quickly as the refined sugar, in their
+mouth, and poured down cup after cup of tea, and ate ship's biscuit and
+butter to it.
+
+The dinner fare varied. The first day we had salt meat, which is soaked
+the evening before, and boiled the next day in sea-water. It was so
+salt, so hard, and so tough, that only a sailor's palate can possibly
+enjoy it. Instead of soup, vegetables, and pudding, we had pearl-barley
+boiled in water, without salt or butter; to which treacle and vinegar was
+added at the dinner-table. All the others considered this a delicacy,
+and marvelled at my depraved taste when I declared it to be unpalatable.
+
+The second day brought a piece of bacon, boiled in sea-water, with the
+barley repeated. On the third we had cod-fish with peas. Although the
+latter were boiled hard and without butter, they were the most eatable of
+all the dishes. On the fourth day the bill of fare of the first was
+repeated, and the same course followed again. At the end of every dinner
+we had black coffee. The supper was like the breakfast,--tea-water,
+ship's biscuit and butter.
+
+I wished to have provided myself with some chickens, eggs, and potatoes
+in Reikjavik, but I could not obtain any of these luxuries. Very few
+chickens are kept--only the higher officials or merchants have them; eggs
+of eider-ducks and other birds may often be had, but more are never
+collected than are wanted for the daily supply, and then only in spring;
+for potatoes the season was not advanced enough. My readers have now a
+picture of the luxurious life I led on board the ship. Had I been
+fortunate enough to voyage in a better vessel, where the passengers are
+more commodiously lodged and better fed, the seasickness would certainly
+not have attacked me; but in consequence of the stifling atmosphere of
+the cabin and the bad food, I suffered from it the first day. But on the
+second I was well again, regained my appetite, and ate salt meat, bacon,
+and peas as well as a sailor; the stockfish, the barley, and the coffee
+and tea, I left untouched.
+
+A real sailor never drinks water; and this observation of mine was
+confirmed by our captain and steersman: instead of beer or wine, they
+took tea, and, except at meals, cold tea.
+
+On Sunday evenings we had a grand supper, for the captain had eight eggs,
+which he had brought from Denmark, boiled for us four people. The crew
+had a few glasses of punch-essence mixed in their tea.
+
+As my readers are now acquainted with the varied bill of fare in such a
+ship, I will say a few words of the table-linen. This consisted only of
+an old sailcloth, which was spread over the table, and looked so dirty
+and greasy that I thought it would be much better and more agreeable to
+leave the table uncovered. But I soon repented the unwise thought, and
+discovered how important this cloth was. One morning I saw our valet
+treating a piece of sailcloth quite outrageously: he had spread it upon
+the deck, stood upon it, and brushed it clean with the ship's broom. I
+recognised our tablecloth by the many spots of dirt and grease, and in
+the evening found the table bare. But what was the consequence?
+Scarcely had the tea-pot been placed on the table than it began to slip
+off; had not the watchful captain quickly caught it, it would have fallen
+to the ground and bathed our feet with its contents. Nothing could stand
+on the polished table, and I sincerely pitied the captain that he had not
+another tablecloth.
+
+My readers will imagine that what I have described would have been quite
+sufficient to make my stay in the vessel any thing but agreeable; but I
+discovered another circumstance, which even made it alarming. This was
+nothing less than that our little vessel was constantly letting in a
+considerable quantity of water, which had to be pumped out every few
+hours. The captain tried to allay my uneasiness by asserting that every
+ship admitted water, and ours only leaked a little more because it was so
+old. I was obliged to be content with his explanation, as it was now too
+late to think of a change. Fortunately we did not meet with any storms,
+and therefore incurred less danger.
+
+Our journey lasted twenty days, during twelve of which we saw no land;
+the wind drove us too far east to see the Feroe or the Shetland Isles. I
+should have cared less for this, had I seen some of the monsters of the
+deep instead, but we met with scarcely any of these amiable animals. I
+saw the ray of water which a whale emitted from his nostrils, and which
+exactly resembled a fountain; the animal itself was unfortunately too far
+from our ship for us to see its body. A shark came a little nearer; it
+swam round our vessel for a few moments, so that I could easily look at
+him: it must have been from sixteen to eighteen feet long.
+
+The so-called flying-fish afforded a pretty sight. The sea was as calm
+as a mirror, the evening mild and moonlight; and so we remained on deck
+till late, watching the gambols of these animals. As far as we could
+see, the water was covered with them. We could recognise the younger
+fishes by their higher springs; they seemed to be three to four feet
+long, and rose five to six feet above the surface of the sea. Their
+leaping looked like an attempt at flying, but their gills did not do them
+good service in the trial, and they fell back immediately. The old fish
+did not seem to have the same elasticity; they only described a small
+arch like the dolphins, and only rose so far above the water that we
+could see the middle part of their body.
+
+These fish are not caught; they have little oil, and an unpleasant taste.
+
+On the thirteenth day we again saw land. We had entered the Skagerrak,
+and saw the peninsula of Jutland, with the town of Skaggen. The
+peninsula looks very dreary from this side; it is flat and covered with
+sand.
+
+On the sixteenth day we entered the Cattegat. For some time past we had
+always either been becalmed or had had contrary winds, and had been
+tossed about in the Skagerrak, the Cattegat, and the Sound for nearly a
+week. On some days we scarcely made fifteen to twenty leagues a day. On
+such calm days I passed the time with fishing; but the fish were wise
+enough not to bite my hook. I was daily anticipating a dinner of
+mackerel, but caught only one.
+
+The multitude of vessels sailing into the Cattegat afforded me more
+amusement; I counted above seventy. The nearer we approached the
+entrance of the Sound, the more imposing was the sight, and the more
+closely were the vessels crowded together. Fortunately we were favoured
+by a bright moonlight; in a dark or stormy night we should not with the
+greatest precaution and skill have been able to avoid a collision.
+
+The inhabitants of more southern regions have no idea of the
+extraordinary clearness and brilliancy of a northern moonlight night; it
+seems almost as if the moon had borrowed a portion of the sun's lustre.
+I have seen splendid nights on the coast of Asia, on the Mediterranean;
+but here, on the shores of Scandinavia, they were lighter and brighter.
+
+I remained on deck all night; for it pleased me to watch the forests of
+masts crowded together here, and endeavouring simultaneously to gain the
+entrance to the Sound. I should now be able to form a tolerable idea of
+a fleet, for this number of ships must surely resemble a merchant-fleet.
+
+On the twentieth day of our journey we entered the port of Helsingor.
+The Sound dues have to be paid here, or, as the sailor calls it, the ship
+must be cleared. This is a very tedious interruption, and the stopping
+and restarting of the ship very incommodious. The sails have to be
+furled, the anchor cast, the boat lowered, and the captain proceeds on
+shore; hours sometimes elapse before he has finished. When he returns to
+the ship, the boat has to be hoisted again, the anchor raised, and the
+sails unfurled. Sometimes the wind has changed in the mean time; and in
+consequence of these formalities, the port of Copenhagen cannot be
+reached at the expected time.
+
+If a ship is unfortunate enough to reach Helsingor on a dark night, she
+may not enter at all for fear of a collision. She has to anchor in the
+Cattegat, and thus suffer two interruptions. If she arrives at Helsingor
+in the night before four o'clock, she has to wait, as the custom-house is
+not opened till that time.
+
+The skipper is, however, at liberty to proceed direct to Copenhagen, but
+this liberty costs five thalers (fifteen shillings). If, however, the
+toll may thus be paid in Copenhagen just as easily, the obligation to
+stop at Helsingor is only a trick to gain the higher toll; for if a
+captain is in haste, or the wind is too favourable to be lost, he
+forfeits the five thalers, and sails on to Copenhagen.
+
+Our captain cared neither for time nor trouble; he cleared the ship here,
+and so we did not reach Copenhagen until two o'clock in the afternoon.
+After my long absence, it seemed so familiar, so beautiful and grand, as
+if I had seen nothing so beautiful in my whole life. My readers must
+bear in mind, however, where I came from, and how long I had been
+imprisoned in a vessel in which I scarcely had space to move. When I put
+foot on shore again, I could have imitated Columbus, and prostrated
+myself to kiss the earth.
+
+
+
+DEPARTURE FROM COPENHAGEN.--CHRISTIANIA.
+
+
+On the 19th August, the day after my arrival from Iceland, at two o'clock
+in the afternoon, I had already embarked again; this time in the fine
+royal Norwegian steamer _Christiania_, of 170 horsepower, bound for the
+town of Christiania, distant 304 sea-miles from Copenhagen. We had soon
+passed through the Sound and arrived safely in the Cattegat, in which we
+steered more to the right than on the journey to Iceland; for we not only
+intended to see Norway and Sweden, but to cast anchor on the coast.
+
+We could plainly see the fine chain of mountains which bound the Cattegat
+on the right, and whose extreme point, the Kulm, runs into the sea like a
+long promontory. Lighthouses are erected here, and on the other numerous
+dangerous spots of the coast, and their lights shine all around in the
+dark night. Some of the lights are movable, and some stationary, and
+point out to the sailor which places to avoid.
+
+ August 20th.
+
+Bad weather is one of the greatest torments of a traveller, and is more
+disagreeable when one passes through districts remarkable for beauty and
+originality. Both grievances were united to-day; it rained, almost
+incessantly; and yet the passage of the Swedish coast and of the little
+fiord to the port of Gottenburg was of peculiar interest. The sea here
+was more like a broad stream which is bounded by noble rocks, and
+interspersed by small and large rocks and shoals, over which the waters
+dashed finely. Near the harbour, some buildings lie partly on and partly
+between the rocks; these contain the celebrated royal Swedish
+iron-foundry, called the new foundry. Even numerous American ships were
+lying here to load this metal. {46}
+
+The steamer remains more than four hours in the port of Gottenburg, and
+we had therefore time to go into the town, distant about two miles, and
+whose suburbs extend as far as the port. On the landing-quay a captain
+lives who has always a carriage and two horses ready to drive travellers
+into the town. There are also one-horse vehicles, and even an omnibus.
+The former were already engaged; the latter, we were told, drives so
+slowly, that nearly the whole time is lost on the road; so I and two
+travelling companions hired the captain's carriage. The rain poured in
+torrents on our heads; but this did not disturb us much. My two
+companions had business to transact, and curiosity attracted me. I did
+not at that time know that I should have occasion to visit this pretty
+little town again, and would not leave without seeing it.
+
+The suburbs are built entirely of wood, and contain many pretty one-story
+houses, surrounded, for the most part, by little gardens. The situation
+of the suburbs is very peculiar. Rocks, or little fields and meadows,
+often lie between the houses; the rocks even now and then cross the
+streets, and had to be blasted to form a road. The view from one of the
+hills over which the road to the town lies is truly beautiful.
+
+The town has two large squares: on the smaller one stands the large
+church; on the larger one the town-hall, the post-office, and many pretty
+houses. In the town every thing is built of bricks. The river Ham flows
+through the large square, and increases the traffic by the many ships and
+barks running into it from the sea, and bringing provisions, but
+principally fuel, to market. Several bridges cross it. A visit to the
+well-stocked fish-market is also an interesting feature in a short visit
+to this town.
+
+I entered a Swedish house for the first time here. I remarked that the
+floor was strewed over with the fine points of the fir-trees, which had
+an agreeable odour, a more healthy one probably than any artificial
+perfume. I found this custom prevalent all over Sweden and Norway, but
+only in hotels and in the dwellings of the poorer classes.
+
+About eleven o'clock in the forenoon we continued our journey. We
+steered safely through the many rocks and shoals, and soon reached the
+open sea again. We did not stand out far from the shore, and saw several
+telegraphs erected on the rocks. We soon lost sight of Denmark on the
+left, and arrived at the fortress Friedrichsver towards evening, but
+could not see much of it. Here the so-called Scheren begin, which extend
+sixty leagues, and form the Christian's Sound. By what I could see in
+the dim twilight, the scene was beautiful. Numerous islands, some merely
+consisting of bare rocks, others overgrown with slender pines, surrounded
+us on all sides. But our pilot understood his business perfectly, and
+steered us safely through to Sandesund, spite of the dark night. Here we
+anchored, for it would have been too dangerous to proceed. We had to
+wait here for the steamer from Bergen, which exchanged passengers with
+us. The sea was very rough, and this exchange was therefore extremely
+difficult to effect. Neither of the steamers would lower a boat; at last
+our steamer gave way, after midnight, and the terrified and wailing
+passengers were lowered into it. I pitied them from my heart, but
+fortunately no accident happened.
+
+ August 21st
+
+I could see the situation of Sandesund better by day; and found it to
+consist only of a few houses. The water is so hemmed in here that it
+scarcely attains the breadth of a stream; but it soon widens again, and
+increases in beauty and variety with every yard. We seemed to ride on a
+beautiful lake; for the islands lie so close to the mountains in the
+background, that they look like a continent, and the bays they form like
+the mouths of rivers. The next moment the scene changes to a succession
+of lakes, one coming close on the other; and when the ship appears to be
+hemmed in, a new opening is suddenly presented to the eye behind another
+island. The islands themselves are of a most varied character: some only
+consist of bare rocks, with now and then a pine; some are richly covered
+with fields and groves; and the shore presents so many fine scenes, that
+one hardly knows where to look in order not to miss any of the beauties
+of the scenery. Here are high mountains overgrown from the bottom to the
+summit with dark pine-groves; there again lovely hills, with verdant
+meadows, fertile fields, pretty farmsteads and yards; and on another side
+the mountains separate and form a beautiful perspective of precipices and
+valleys. Sometimes I could follow the bend of a bay till it mingled with
+the distant clouds; at others we passed the most beautiful valleys,
+dotted with little villages and towns. I cannot describe the beauties of
+the scenery in adequate terms: my words are too weak, and my knowledge
+too insignificant; and I can only give an idea of my emotions, but not
+describe them.
+
+Near Walloe the country grows less beautiful; the mountains decrease into
+hills, and the water is not studded with islands. The little town itself
+is almost concealed behind the hills. A remarkable feature is the long
+row of wooden huts and houses adjoining, which all belong to a salt-work
+established there.
+
+We entered one of the many little arms of the sea to reach the town of
+Moss. Its situation is beautiful, being built amphi-theatrically on a
+hillock which leans against a high mountain. A fine building on the
+sea-shore, whose portico rests upon pillars, is used for a bathing
+institution.
+
+A dock-yard, in which men-of-war are built at the expense of the state,
+is situated near the town of Horten, which is also picturesquely placed.
+There does not seem to be much work doing here, for I only saw one ship
+lying at anchor, and none on the stocks. About eight leagues beyond
+Horten a mountain rises in the middle of the sea, and divides it into two
+streams, uniting again beyond it, and forming a pretty view.
+
+We did not see Christiania till we were only ten leagues from it. The
+town, the suburbs, the fortress, the newly-erected royal palace, the
+freemasons' lodge, &c., lie in a semicircle round the port, and are
+bounded by fields, meadows, woods, and hills, forming a delightful
+_coup-d'oeil_. It seems as if the sea could not part from such a lovely
+view, and runs in narrow streams, through hills and plains, to a great
+distance beyond the town.
+
+Towards eleven o'clock in the forenoon we reached the port of
+Christiania. We had come from Sandesund in seven hours, and had stopped
+four times on the way; but the boats with new-comers, with merchandise
+and letters, had always been ready, had been received, and we had
+proceeded without any considerable delay.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+My first care on arriving in this town was to find a countrywoman of mine
+who had been married to a lawyer here. It is said of the Viennese that
+they cannot live away from their Stephen's steeple; but here was a proof
+of the contrary, for there are few couples living so happily as these
+friends, and yet they were nearly one thousand miles from St. Stephen's
+steeple. {47}
+
+I passed through the whole town on the way from the quay to the hotel,
+and thence to my friend. The town is not large, and not very pretty.
+The newly-built portion is the best, for it at least has broad, tolerably
+long streets, in which the houses are of brick, and sometimes large. In
+the by-streets I frequently found wooden barracks ready to fall. The
+square is large, but irregular; and as it is used as a general
+market-place, it is also very dirty.
+
+ [Picture: Christiania]
+
+In the suburbs the houses are mostly built of wood. There are some
+rather pretty public buildings; the finest among them are the royal
+castle and the fortress. They are built on little elevations, and afford
+a beautiful view. The old royal palace is in the town, but not at all
+distinguishable from a common private house. The house in which the
+Storthing {48} assembles is large, and its portico rests on pillars; but
+the steps are of wood, as in all stone houses in Scandinavia. The
+theatre seemed large enough for the population; but I did not enter it.
+The freemasons' lodge is one of the most beautiful buildings in the town;
+it contains two large saloons, which are used for assemblies or
+festivities of various kinds, besides serving as the meeting-place of the
+freemasons. The university seemed almost too richly built; it is not
+finished yet, but is so beautiful that it would be an ornament to the
+largest capital. The butchers' market is also very pretty. It is of a
+semi-circular shape, and is surrounded by arched passages, in which the
+buyers stand, sheltered from the weather. The whole edifice is built of
+bricks, left in their natural state, neither stuccoed with mortar nor
+whitewashed. There are not many other palaces or fine public buildings,
+and most of the houses are one-storied.
+
+One of the features of the place--a custom which is of great use to the
+traveller, and prevails in all Scandinavian towns--is, that the names of
+the streets are affixed at every corner, so that the passer-by always
+knows where he is, without the necessity of asking his way.
+
+Open canals run through the town; and on such nights as the almanac
+announces a full or bright moon the streets are not lighted.
+
+Wooden quays surround the harbour, on which several large warehouses,
+likewise built of wood, are situated; but, like most of the houses, they
+are roofed with tiles.
+
+The arrangement and display of the stores are simple, and the wares very
+beautiful, though not of home manufacture. Very few factories exist
+here, and every thing has to be imported.
+
+I was much shocked at the raggedly-clad people I met every where in the
+streets; the young men especially looked very ragged. They rarely
+begged; but I should not have been pleased to meet them alone in a
+retired street.
+
+I was fortunate enough to be in Christiania at the time when the
+Storthing was sitting. This takes place every three years; the sessions
+commence in January or February, and usually last three months; but so
+much business had this time accumulated, that the king proposed to extend
+the length of the session. To this fortunate accident I owed the
+pleasure of witnessing some of the meetings. The king was expected to
+close the proceedings in September. {49}
+
+The hall of meeting is long and large. Four rows of tapestried seats,
+one rising above the other, run lengthways along the hall, and afford
+room for eighty legislators. Opposite the benches a table stands on a
+raised platform, and at this table the president and secretary sit. A
+gallery, which is open to the public, runs round the upper portion of the
+hall.
+
+Although I understood but little of the Norwegian language, I attended
+the meetings daily for an hour. I could at least distinguish whether
+long or short speeches were made, or whether the orator spoke fluently.
+Unfortunately, the speakers I heard spoke the few words they mustered
+courage to deliver so slowly and hesitatingly, that I could not form a
+very favourable idea of Norwegian eloquence. I was told that the
+Storthing only contained three or four good speakers, and they did not
+display their talents during my stay.
+
+I have never seen such a variety of carriages as I met with here. The
+commonest and most incommodious are called Carriols. A carriol consists
+of a narrow, long, open box, resting between two immensely high wheels,
+and provided with a very small seat. You are squeezed into this
+contrivance, and have to stretch your feet forward. You are then buckled
+in with a leather apron as high as the hips, and must remain in this
+position, without moving a limb, from the beginning to the end of your
+ride. A board is hung on behind the box for the coachman; and from this
+perch he, in a kneeling or standing position, directs the horses, unless
+the temporary resident of the box should prefer to take the reins
+himself. As it is very unpleasant to hear the quivering of the reins on
+one side and the smacking of the whip on the other, every one, men and
+women, can drive. Besides these carriols, there are phaetons, droschkas,
+but no closed vehicles.
+
+The carts which are used for the transport of beer are of a very peculiar
+construction. The consumption of beer in Christiania is very great, and
+it is at once bottled when made, and not sold in casks. The carts for
+the transport of these bottles consist of roomy covered boxes a foot and
+a half high, which are divided into partitions like a cellaret, in which
+many bottles can be easily and safely transported from one part to
+another.
+
+Another species of basket, which the servants use to carry such articles
+as are damp or dirty, and which my readers will excuse my describing, is
+made of fine white tin, and provided with a handle. Straw baskets are
+only used for bread, and for dry and clean provisions.
+
+There are no public gardens or assemblies in Christiania, but numerous
+promenades; indeed, every road from the town leads to the most beautiful
+scenery, and every hill in the neighbourhood affords the most delightful
+prospects.
+
+Ladegardoen is the only spot which is often resorted to by the citizens
+by carriage or on foot. It affords many and splendid views of the sea
+and its islands, of the surrounding mountains, valleys, and pine and fir
+groves. The majority of the country-houses are built here. They are
+generally small, but pretty, and surrounded by flower-gardens and
+orchards. While there, I seemed to be far in the south, so green and
+verdant was the scenery. The corn-fields alone betrayed the north. Not
+that the corn was poor; on the contrary, I found many ears bending to the
+ground under their weight; but now, towards the end of August, most of it
+was standing uncut in the fields.
+
+Near the town stands a pine-grove, from which one has splendid views; two
+monuments are raised in it, but neither of them are of importance: one is
+raised to the memory of a crown-prince of Sweden, Christian Augustus; the
+other to Count Hermann Wenel Jarlsberg.
+
+
+
+JOURNEY TO DELEMARKEN.
+
+
+All I had hitherto seen in Norway had gratified me so much, that I could
+not resist the temptation of a journey to the wildly romantic regions of
+Delemarken. I was indeed told that it would be a difficult undertaking
+for a female, alone and almost entirely ignorant of the language, to make
+her way through the peasantry. But I found no one to accompany me, and
+was determined to go; so I trusted to fate, and went alone.
+
+According to the inquires I had instituted in respect to this journey, I
+anticipated that my greatest difficulties would arise from the absence of
+all institutions for the speedy and comfortable progress of travellers.
+One is forced to possess a carriage, and to hire horses at every station.
+It is sometimes possible to hire a vehicle, but this generally consists
+only of a miserable peasant's cart. I hired, therefore, a carriol for
+the whole journey, and a horse to the next station, the townlet of
+Drammen, distant about twenty-four miles.
+
+On the 25th August, at three o'clock in the afternoon, I left
+Christiania, squeezed myself into my carriage, and, following the example
+of Norwegian dames, I seized the reins. I drove as if I had been used to
+it from infancy. I turned right and left, and my horse galloped and
+trotted gaily on.
+
+The road to Drammen is exquisite, and would afford rich subjects for an
+artist. All the beauties of nature are here combined in most perfect
+harmony. The richness and variety of the scenery are almost oppressive,
+and would be an inexhaustible subject for the painter. The vegetation is
+much richer than I had hoped to find it so far north; every hill, every
+rock, is shaded by verdant foliage; the green of the meadows was of
+incomparable freshness; the grass was intermingled with flowers and
+herbs, and the corn-fields bent under their golden weight.
+
+I have been in many countries, and have seen beautiful districts; I have
+been in Switzerland, in Tyrol, in Italy, and in Salzburg; but I never saw
+such peculiarly beautiful scenery as I found here: the sea every where
+intruding and following us to Drammen; here forming a lovely lake on
+which boats were rocking, there a stream rushing through hills and
+meadows; and then again, the splendid expanse dotted with proud
+three-masters and with countless islets. After a five hours' ride
+through rich valleys and splendid groves, I reached the town of Drammen,
+which lies on the shores of the sea and the river Storri Elf, and whose
+vicinity was announced by the beautiful country-houses ornamenting the
+approach to it.
+
+A long, well-built wooden bridge, furnished with beautiful iron
+palisadings, leads over the river. The town of Drammen has pretty
+streets and houses, and above 6000 inhabitants. The hotel where I lodged
+was pretty and clean. My bedroom was a large room, with which the most
+fastidious might have been contented. The supper which they provided for
+me was, however, most frugal, consisting only of soft-boiled eggs. They
+gave me neither salt nor bread with them, nor a spoon; nothing but a
+knife and fork. And it is a mystery to me how soft eggs can be eaten
+without bread, and with a knife and fork.
+
+ August 25th.
+
+I hired a fresh horse here, with which I proceeded to Kongsberg, eighteen
+miles farther. The first seven miles afforded a repetition of the
+romantic scenery of the previous day, with the exception of the sea. But
+instead I had the beautiful river, until I had ascended a hill, from
+whose summit I overlooked a large and apparently populous valley, filled
+with groups of houses and single farms. It is strange that there are
+very few large towns in Norway; every peasant builds his house in the
+midst of his fields.
+
+Beyond this hill the scenery grows more monotonous. The mountains are
+lower, the valley narrower, and the road is enclosed by wood or rocks.
+One peculiarity of Norwegian rocks is their humidity. The water
+penetrates through countless fissures, but only in such small quantities
+as to cover the stones with a kind of veil. When the sun shines on these
+wet surfaces of rock, of which there are many and large ones, they shine
+like mirrors.
+
+Delemarken seems to be tolerably populous. I often met with solitary
+peasant-huts in the large gloomy forests, and they gave some life to the
+monotonous landscape. The industry of the Norwegian peasant is very
+great; for every spot of earth, even on the steepest precipices, bore
+potatoes, barley, or oats; their houses also look cheerful, and were
+painted for the most part of a brick-red colour.
+
+I found the roads very good, especially the one from Christiania to
+Drammen; and the one from Drammen to Kongsberg was not very
+objectionable. There is such an abundance of wood in Norway, that the
+streets on each side are fenced by wooden enclosures; and every field and
+meadow is similarly protected against the intrusion of cattle, and the
+miserable roads through the woods are even covered with round trunks of
+trees.
+
+The peasantry in this district have no peculiar costume; only the
+head-covering of the females is curious. They wear a lady's hat, such as
+was fashionable in the last century, ornamented with a bunch behind, and
+with an immense shade in front. They are made of any material, generally
+of the remains of old garments; and only on Sundays better ones, and
+sometimes even silk ones, make their appearance.
+
+In the neighbourhood of Kongsberg this head-dress is no longer worn.
+There they wear little caps like the Suabian peasantry, petticoats
+commencing under the shoulders, and very short spencers: a very ugly
+costume, the whole figure being spoilt by the short waist.
+
+The town of Kongsberg is rather extended, and is beautifully situated on
+a hill in the centre of a splendid wooded valley. It is, like all the
+towns in Norway except Christiania, built of wood; but it has many
+pretty, neat houses and some broad streets.
+
+The stream Storri Elf flows past the town, and forms a small but very
+picturesque waterfall a little below the bridge. What pleased me most
+was the colour of the water as it surged over the rock. It was about
+noon as I drove across the bridge; the sun illuminated the whole country
+around, and the waves breaking against the rocks seemed by this light of
+a beautiful pale-yellow colour, so that they resembled thick masses of
+pure transparent amber.
+
+Two remarkable sights claimed my attention at Kongsberg,--a rich
+silver-mine, and a splendid waterfall called the Labrafoss. But as my
+time was limited and I could only remain a few hours in Kongsberg, I
+preferred to see the waterfall and believe the accounts of the
+silver-mine; which were, that the deepest shaft was eight hundred feet
+below the surface, and that it was most difficult to remain there, as the
+cold, the smoke, and the powder-smell had a very noxious effect on the
+traveller accustomed to light and air.
+
+I therefore hired a horse and drove to the fall, which is situated in a
+narrow pass about four miles from Kongsberg. The river collects in a
+quiet calm basin a little distance above the fall, and then rushes over
+the steep precipice with a sudden bound. The considerable depth of the
+fall and the quality of water make it a very imposing sight. This is
+increased by a gigantic rock planted like a wall in the lower basin, and
+opposing its body to the progress of the hurrying waters. The waves
+rebound from the rock, and, collecting in mighty masses, rush over it,
+forming several smaller waterfalls in their course.
+
+I watched it from a high rock, and was nevertheless covered by the spray
+to such a degree, that I sometimes could scarcely open my eyes. My guide
+then took me to the lower part of the fall, so that I might have a view
+of it from all sides; and each view seemed different and more splendid.
+I perceived the same yellow transparent colour which I had remarked in
+the fall at Kongsberg in the waters which dashed over the rock and were
+illuminated by the sun. I imagine it arises from the rock, which is
+every where of a brownish-red colour, for the water itself was clear and
+pure.
+
+At four o'clock in the afternoon I left Kongsberg, and drove to Bolkesoe,
+a distance of eighteen miles. It was by no means a beautiful or an
+agreeable drive; for the road was very bad, and took me through passes
+and valleys, across woods and over steep mountains, while the night was
+dark and unilluminated by the moon. The thought involuntarily entered my
+mind, how easily my guide, who sat close behind me on the vehicle, could
+put me out of the world by a gentle blow, and take possession of my
+effects. But I had confidence in the upright character of the
+Norwegians, and drove on quietly, devoting my attention entirely to the
+reins of my little steed, which I had to lead with a sure hand over hill
+and valley, over ruts and stones, and along precipices. I heard no sound
+but the rushing of the mountain-river, which leaped, close beside us,
+over the rocks, and was heard rushing in the far distance.
+
+We did not arrive at Bolkesoe until ten o'clock at night. When we
+stopped before an insignificant-looking peasant's cot, and I remembered
+my Icelandic night-accommodations, whose exterior this resembled, my
+courage failed me; but I was agreeably disappointed when the peasant's
+wife led me up a broad staircase into a large clean chamber furnished
+with several good beds, some benches, a table, a box, and an iron stove.
+I found equal comforts on all the stations of my journey.
+
+There are no proper hotels or posthouses on the little-frequented
+Norwegian roads; but the wealthy peasants undertake the duties of both.
+I would, however, advise every traveller to provide himself with bread
+and other provisions for the trip; for his peasant-host rarely can
+furnish him with these. His cows are on the hills during the summer;
+fowls are far too great a luxury for him; and his bread is scarcely
+eatable: it consists of large round cakes, scarcely half an inch thick,
+and very hard; or of equally large cakes scarcely as thick as a knife,
+and quite dry. The only eatables I found were fish and potatoes; and
+whenever I could stay for several hours, they fetched milk for me from
+the hills.
+
+The travelling conveniences are still more unattainable; but these I will
+mention in a future chapter, when my experience will be a little more
+extensive.
+
+ August 26th.
+
+I could not see the situation of the town of Bolkesoe till daylight
+to-day, for when I arrived the darkness of night concealed it. It is
+situated in a pretty wooded vale, on a little hill at whose foot lies a
+beautiful lake of the same name.
+
+The road from here to Tindosoe, about sixteen miles, is not practicable
+for vehicles, and I therefore left my carriol here and proceeded on
+horseback. The country grows more quiet and uninhabited, and the valleys
+become real chasms. Two lakes of considerable size form an agreeable
+variety to the wildness of the scenery. The larger one, called the
+Foelsoe, is of a regular form, and above two miles in diameter; it is
+encircled by picturesque mountains. The effect of the shadows which the
+pine-covered mountain-tops throw on the lakes is particularly attractive.
+I rode along its shores for more than an hour, and had leisure to see and
+examine every thing very accurately, for the horses here travel at a very
+slow pace. The reason of this is partly that the guide has no horse, and
+walks beside you in a very sleepy manner; the horse knows its master's
+peculiarities by long experience, and is only too willing to encourage
+him in his slow, dull pace. I spent more than five hours in reaching
+Tindosoe. My next object of interest was the celebrated waterfall of
+Rykanfoss, to reach which we had to cross a large lake. Although it had
+rained incessantly for an hour, and the sky looked threatening, I at once
+hired a boat with two rowers to continue my journey without interruption;
+for I anticipated a storm, and then I should not have found a boatman who
+would have ventured a voyage of four or five hours on this dangerous
+lake. In two hours my boat was ready, and I started in the pouring rain,
+but rejoiced at least at the absence of fog, which would have concealed
+the beauties of nature which surrounded me. The lake is eighteen miles
+long, but in many parts only from two to three miles wide. It is
+surrounded by mountains, which rise in terraces without the least gap to
+admit a distant view. As the mountains are nearly all covered with dark
+fir-groves, and overshadow the whole breadth of the narrow lake, the
+water seems quite dark, and almost black. This lake is dangerous to
+navigate on account of the many rocks rising perpendicularly out of the
+water, which, in a storm, shatter a boat dashed against them to pieces,
+and the passengers would find an inevitable grave in the deep waters. We
+had a flesh and a favourable breeze, which blew us quickly to our
+destination. One of the rocks on the coast has a very loud echo.
+
+An island about a mile long divides the lake into equal parts; and when
+we had passed it, the landscape became quite peculiar. The mountains
+seemed to push before each other, and try whose foot should extend
+farthest into the sea. This forms numerous lovely bays; but few of them
+are adapted for landing, as the dangerous rocks seem to project every
+where.
+
+The little dots of field and meadow which seem to hang against the rock,
+and the modest cottages of the peasants, which are built on the points of
+the most dangerous precipices, and over which rocks and stones tower as
+mountains, present a very curious appearance. The most fearful rocks
+hang over the huts, and threaten to crush them by falling, which would
+inevitably carry cottage and field with them into the sea. It is
+difficult to say whether the boldness or the stupidity of the peasants
+induces them to choose such localities for their dwellings.
+
+From the mountains many rivers flow into the lake, and form beautiful
+falls. This might only have been the case at that time, because it was
+raining incessantly, and the water poured down from all sides, so that
+the mountains seemed embroidered with silver threads. It was a beautiful
+sight; but I would willingly have relinquished it for a day of sunshine.
+It is no trifle to be exposed to such a shower-bath from morning till
+night; I was wet through, and had no hope for better weather, as the sky
+was clouded all round. My perseverance was nearly exhausted; and I was
+on the point of relinquishing the purpose of my journey,--the sight of
+the highest Norwegian waterfall,--when it occurred to me that the bad
+weather was most favourable for my plan, as each drop of water would
+increase the splendour of the waterfall.
+
+After three hours and a half's rowing we reached Haukaness-am-See, where
+it is usual to stop a night as there is a pretty farm here, and the
+distance from the fall is still considerable.
+
+ August 27th.
+
+My first care in the morning was the weather; it was unchanged, and the
+experienced peasants prophesied that it would remain wet. As I would not
+return nor wait for better weather, I could only take to my boat again,
+put on my half-dried cloak, and row on boldly.
+
+The termination of the lake, which we soon reached, was already
+sufficient to compensate for my perseverance. A high mountain advances
+into the lake, and divides it into two beautiful bays. We entered the
+left bay, and landed at Mael, which lies at the mouth of the river
+Rykaness. The distance from Haukaness is a little more than two miles.
+I had to mount a horse to reach the waterfall, which was yet eleven miles
+distant. The road runs through a narrow valley, which gradually narrows
+still more until it can only contain the river; and the traveller is
+obliged to ascend the heights and grope on along the sides of the
+mountains. Below in the vale he sees the foam of the waves surging
+against the rocks; they flow like a narrow band of silver in the deep
+chasm. Sometimes the path is so high that one neither sees nor hears the
+river. The last half mile has to be journeyed on foot, and goes past
+spots which are really dangerous; numerous waterfalls rush from the
+mountain-sides, and have to be crossed on paths of tree-trunks laid
+alongside each other; and roads scarcely a foot wide lead along giddy
+precipices. But the traveller may trust unhesitatingly to his guide's
+arm, who has hitherto led every one in safety to his destination.
+
+The road from Haukaness to the waterfall must be the finest that can be
+imagined on a bright sunny day; for I was enchanted with the
+wildly-romantic scenery in spite of the incessant rain and my wet
+clothes, and would on no consideration have missed this sight.
+Unfortunately the bad weather increased, and thick fogs rolled down into
+the valleys. The water flowed down from the mountains, and transformed
+our narrow path into a brook, through which we had to wade ankle-deep in
+water. At last we reached the spot which afforded the best view of the
+fall. It was yet free from mist, and I could still admire the
+extraordinary beauty of the fall and its quantity of water. I saw the
+immense mountain-rock which closes the valley, the tremendous pillar of
+water which dashes over it, and rebounds from the rock projecting in the
+centre of the fall, filling the whole valley with clouds of spray, and
+concealing the depth to which it descends. I saw this, one of the rarest
+and of the most magnificent of natural beauties; but alas, I saw it only
+for a moment, and had scarcely time to recover from the surprise of the
+first view when I lost it for ever! I was not destined to see the single
+grandeurs of the fall and of the surrounding scenery, and was fain to be
+content with one look, one glance. Impenetrable mists rolled from all
+sides into the wild glen, and shrouded every thing in complete darkness;
+I sat on a piece of rock, and gazed for two hours stedfastly at the spot
+where a faint outline of the fall was scarcely distinguishable through
+the mist sometimes this faint trace even was lost, and I could perceive
+its vicinity only by the dreadful sounds of the fall, and by the
+trembling of the rock beneath my feet.
+
+After I had gazed, and hoped, and raised my eyes entreatingly to heaven
+for a single ray of sunshine, all in vain, I had at last to determine on
+my return. I left my post almost with tears in my eyes, and turned my
+head more backwards than forwards as we left the spot. At the least
+indication of a clearing away of the fog I should have returned.
+
+But I retired farther and farther from it till I reached Mael again,
+where I sadly entered my boat, and proceeded uninterruptedly to Tindosoe.
+I arrived there towards ten o'clock at night. The wet, the cold, the
+want of food, and, above all, the depressed and disappointed state of my
+mind, had so affected me, that I went to bed with a slight attack of
+fever, and feared that I should not be able to continue my journey on the
+following day. But my strong constitution triumphed over every thing,
+and at five o'clock in the morning I was ready to continue my journey to
+Bolkesoe on horseback.
+
+I was obliged to hurry for fear of missing the departure of the steamer
+from Christiania. The journey to Delemarken had been represented to me
+as much shorter than I found it in reality; for the constant waiting for
+horses, boats, guides, &c. takes up very much time.
+
+ August 28th.
+
+I had ordered my horse to be ready at five o'clock, but was obliged to
+wait for it until seven o'clock.
+
+Although I made only a short trip into the interior, I had sufficient
+opportunities for experiencing the extortions and inconveniences to which
+a traveller is liable in Norway. No country in Europe is so much in its
+infancy as regards all conveniences for locomotion. It is true that
+horses, carriages, boats, &c. can be had at every station, and the law
+has fixed the price of these commodities; but every thing is in the hands
+of the peasants and the publicans, and they are so skilled in tormenting
+the traveller by their intentional slowness, that he is compelled to pay
+the two-fold tax, in order to proceed a little more quickly. The
+stations are short, being rarely above five or six miles, and one is
+therefore constantly changing horses. Arrived at a station, it either
+happens that there is really no horse to be had, or that this is an
+ostensible excuse. The traveller is told that the horse has to be
+fetched from the mountain, and that he can be served in one and a half or
+two hours. Thus he rides one hour, and waits two. It is also necessary
+to keep the tariff, as every trifle, the saddle, the carriage, the
+harness, fetching the horse, the boat, &c., has to be paid for extra; and
+when the traveller does not know the fixed prices, he is certain to be
+dreadfully imposed upon. At every station a book lies, containing the
+legal prices; but it is written in the language of the district, and
+utterly unintelligible to the stranger. Into this book, which is
+examined by the judge of the district every month, one may enter
+complaints against the peasant or publican; but they do not seem to fear
+it, for the guide who accompanied me to the fall of Rykanfoss endeavoured
+to cheat me twice in the most barefaced manner, by charging me six-fold
+for the use of the saddles and the fetching of the horse. When I
+threatened to inscribe my complaint in the book, he seemed not to care,
+and insisted on his demand, till I was obliged to pay him. On my return
+to Mael, I kept my word, asked for the book, and entered my complaint,
+although I was alone with all the peasants. It was not so much the money
+which annoyed me, as the shameless imposition. I am of opinion that
+every one should complain when he is wronged; if it does not benefit him,
+it will make the matter more easy for his successor.
+
+I must confess, in justice to the peasants, that they were very indignant
+when I told them of the dishonesty of their countryman, and did not
+attempt to prevent my complaint.
+
+To conclude my journey, I need only remark that, although the rain had
+ceased, the sky was still covered with clouds, and the country shrouded
+in mist. I therefore took the shorter road to Christiania, by which I
+had come, although I thereby missed a beautiful district, where I should,
+as I was told, have seen the most splendid perspective views in Norway.
+This would have been on the road from Kongsberg over Kroxleben to
+Christiania. The finest part is near Kroxleben.
+
+But the time was too short to take this round, and I returned by way of
+Drammen. In the village of Muni, about five miles from Kongsberg, where
+I arrived at seven o'clock in the evening, the amiable host wished to
+keep me waiting again two hours for a horse; and as this would probably
+have happened at every station, I was obliged to hire a horse for the
+whole distance to Christiania, at a threefold price. I slept here for a
+few hours, left in the night at one o'clock, and arrived at Christiania
+the following afternoon at two.
+
+On this journey I found all those people very kind and obliging with whom
+I came into no sort of pecuniary relation; but the hosts, the boatmen,
+the drivers, the guides, were as selfish and grasping as in any other
+country. I believe that kindness and disinterestedness would only be
+found in any district by him who has the good fortune to be the first
+traveller.
+
+This little excursion was very dear; and yet I think I could now travel
+cheaply even in this country, universally acknowledged to be dear. I
+would go with the steamer along the coast to Hammerfest, buy a little
+vehicle and a good horse there, and then travel pleasantly, and without
+annoyance, through the whole country. But for a family who wished to
+travel in a comfortable covered carriage, it would be incalculably dear,
+and in many parts impossible, on account of the bad roads.
+
+The Norwegian peasantry are strong and robust, but their features are not
+the most comely, and they seemed neither wealthy nor cleanly. They were
+generally very poorly clad, and always barefooted. Their cottages, built
+of wood and covered with tiles, are more roomy than those of the
+Icelanders; but they are nevertheless dirty and wretched. A weakness of
+the Norwegians is their fondness for coffee, which they drink without
+milk or sugar. The old women, as well as the men, smoke their pipes
+morning and night.
+
+
+ Miles.
+From Christiania to Kongsberg is 41
+about
+From Kongsberg to the waterfall 5
+Labrafoss
+From Kongsberg to Bolkosoe 14
+From Bolkosoe to Tindosoe 16
+From Tindosoe across the lake to 16
+Mael
+From Mael to the waterfall 11
+Rykanfoss
+ 103
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+ August 30th.
+
+At seven o'clock this morning I left Christiania, accompanied by the good
+wishes of my countrywoman and her husband, and went back to Gottenburg by
+the same steamer which had brought me thence ten days before. I need
+only mention the splendid view of a portion of Christian's Sound--also
+called Fiord--which I lost on the former journey from the darkness of the
+night. We passed it in the afternoon. The situation of the little town
+of Lauervig is superb. It is built on a natural terrace, bordered in the
+background by beautiful mountains. In front, the fortress of
+Friedrichsver lies on a mountain surrounded by rocks, on which little
+watch-towers are erected; to the left lies the vast expanse of sea.
+
+We were delayed an hour at Friedrichsver to transfer the travellers for
+Bergen {50} to a vessel waiting for them, as we had stopped on our
+previous journey at Sandesund for the same purpose.
+
+This is the last view in the fiord; for now we steered into the open sea,
+and in a few hours we had lost sight of land. We saw nothing but land
+and water till we arrived the next morning at the Scheren, and steered
+for Gottenburg.
+
+ August 31st.
+
+The sea had been rough all night, and we therefore reached Gottenburg
+three hours later than usual. In this agitated sea, the surging of the
+breakers against the many rocks and islets near Gottenburg has a very
+curious effect.
+
+The few travellers who could keep on their feet, who did not suffer from
+sea-sickness, and remained on deck, spoke much of the dangerous storm. I
+had frequently marvelled to hear people who had made a journey, if it
+were even only a short one of forty to sixty leagues, relate of some
+fearful storm they had witnessed. Now I comprehended the reason, when I
+heard the travellers beside me call the brisk breeze, which only
+occasioned what seamen call a little swell, a dreadful storm; and they
+will probably tell at home of the dangers they have passed. Storms are,
+fortunately, not so frequent. I have travelled many thousand leagues,
+and have often met with stormy weather, especially on the passage from
+Copenhagen to Iceland; but I only experienced one real storm, but a
+violent and dangerous one, as I was crossing the Black Sea to
+Constantinople in April 1842.
+
+We arrived at Gottenburg at nine instead of at six o'clock in the
+morning. I landed at once, to make the celebrated trip through the
+locks, over the waterfalls of Trollhatta, with the next Stockholm
+steamer. By the junction of the river Gotha with some of the interior
+lakes, this great construction crosses the whole country, and connects
+the North Sea with the Baltic.
+
+I found the town of Gottenburg very animated, on account of the presence
+of the king of Sweden, who was spending a few days here on his way to
+Christiania to prorogue the Storthing. I arrived on a Sunday, and the
+king, with his son, were in the church. The streets swarmed with human
+beings, all crowding towards the cathedral to catch a glimpse of his
+majesty on his departure. I, of course, mingled with the crowd, and was
+fortunate enough to see the king and prince come out of the church, enter
+their carriage, and drive away very near to me. Both were handsome,
+amiable-looking men. The people rushed after the carriage, and eagerly
+caught the friendly bows of the intelligent father and his hopeful son;
+they followed him to his palace, and stationed themselves in front of it,
+impatiently longing for the moment when the royal pair would appear at a
+window.
+
+I could not have arrived at a more favourable time; for every one was in
+holiday attire, and the military, the clergy, the officials, citizens and
+people, were all exerting themselves to the utmost to do honour to their
+king.
+
+I noticed two peasant-girls among the crowd who were peculiarly dressed.
+They wore black petticoats reaching half way down the calf of the leg,
+red stockings, red spensers, and white chemises, with long white sleeves;
+a kerchief was tied round the head. Some of the citizens' wives wore
+caps like the Suabian caps, covered by a little black, embroidered veil,
+which, however, left the face free.
+
+Here, as in Copenhagen, I noticed boys of ten to twelve years of age
+among the drummers, and in the bands of the military.
+
+The king remained this day and the next in Gottenburg, and continued his
+journey on the Tuesday. On the two evenings of his stay the windows in
+the town were ornamented with wreaths of fresh flowers, interspersed with
+lighted tapers. Some houses displayed transparencies, which, however,
+did not place the inventive powers of the amiable Gottenburgers in a very
+favourable light. They were all alike, consisting of a tremendous O
+(Oscar), surmounted by a royal crown.
+
+I was detained four days in Gottenburg; and small consideration seems to
+be paid to the speedy transport of travellers in Sweden. The steamer for
+Stockholm started on the day I arrived from Christiania, but
+unfortunately at five o'clock in the morning; and as in the month of
+September only two steamers go in the week to Stockholm, I was compelled
+to wait till Thursday. The time hung heavily on my hands; for I had seen
+the town itself, and the splendid views on the hills between the suburbs,
+during my former visit to the town, and the other portions only consisted
+of bare rocks and cliffs, which were of no interest.
+
+ September 4th.
+
+The press of travellers was so great this time, that two days before the
+departure the cabins were all engaged; several ladies and gentlemen who
+would not wait for the next steamer were compelled to be satisfied with
+the deck, and I was among them; for the probability of such a crowd of
+passengers had not occurred to me, and I applied for a place only two
+days before our departure. During the journey fresh passengers were
+taken in at every station, and the reader may conceive the misery of the
+poor citizens unused to such hardships. Every one sought a shelter for
+the night, and the little cabins of the engineer and steersman were given
+up to some, while others crept into the passages, or squatted down on the
+steps of the stairs leading to the cabins. A place was offered to me in
+the engineer's cabin; but as three or four other persons were to share
+the apartment calculated only for one person, I preferred to bivouac
+night and day upon deck. One of the gentlemen was kind enough to lend me
+a thick cloak, in which I could wrap myself; and so I slept much more
+comfortably under the high canopy of heaven than my companions did in
+their sweating-room.
+
+The arrangements in the vessels navigating the Gotha canal are by no
+means the best. The first class is very comfortable, and the cabin-place
+is divided into pretty light divisions for two persons; but the second
+class is all the more uncomfortable: its cabin is used for a common
+dining-room by day, and by night hammocks are slung up in it for sleeping
+accommodation. The arrangements for the luggage are worse still. The
+canal-boats, having only a very small hold, trunks, boxes, portmanteaus,
+&c. are heaped up on the deck, not fastened at all, and very
+insufficiently protected against rain. The consequence of this
+carelessness on a journey of five or six days was, that the rain and the
+high waves of the lakes frequently put the after-deck several inches
+under water, and then the luggage was wetted through. It was worse still
+in a squall on the Wenner lake; for while the ship was rather roughly
+tossed about, many a trunk lost its equilibrium and fell from its high
+position, frequently endangering the safety of the passengers' heads.
+The fares are, however, very cheap, which seemed doubly strange, as the
+many locks must cause considerable expense.
+
+And now for the journey itself. We started at five o'clock in the
+morning, and soon arrived in the river Gotha, whose shores for the first
+few miles are flat and bare. The valley itself is bounded by bare, rocky
+hills. After about nine miles we came to the town of Kongelf, which is
+said to have 1000 inhabitants. It is so situated among rocks, that it is
+almost hidden from view. On a rock opposite the town are the ruins of
+the fortress Bogus. Now the scenery begins to be a little more
+diversified, and forests are mingled with the bleak rocks; little valleys
+appear on both the shores; and the river itself, here divided by an
+islet, frequently expands to a considerable breadth. The peasants'
+cottages were larger and better than those in Norway; they are generally
+painted brick-red, and are often built in groups.
+
+The first lock is at Lilla Edet: there are five here; and while the ship
+passes through them, the passengers have leisure to admire the contiguous
+low, but broad and voluminous fall of the Gotha.
+
+This first batch of locks in the canal extends over some distance past
+the fall, and they are partly blasted out of the rock, or built of stone.
+The river past Akestron flows as through a beautiful park; the valley is
+hemmed in by fertile hills, and leaves space only for the stream and some
+picturesque paths winding along its shores, and through the pine-groves
+descending to its banks.
+
+In the afternoon we arrived at the celebrated locks near Trollhatta.
+They are of gigantic construction, which the largest states would be
+honoured in completing, and which occasion surprise when found in a
+country ranking high neither in extent nor in influence. There are
+eleven locks here, which rise 112 feet in a space of 3500 feet. They are
+broad, deep, blasted out of the rock, and walled round with fine
+freestone. They resemble the single steps of a giant's staircase; and by
+this name they might fitly rank as one of the wonders of the world. Lock
+succeeds lock, mighty gates close them, and the large vessel rises
+miraculously to the giddy heights in a wildly romantic country.
+
+ [Picture: Falls of Trollhatta]
+
+Scarcely arrived at the locks, the traveller is surrounded by a crowd of
+boys, who offer their services as guides to the waterfalls near
+Trollhatta. There is abundance of time for this excursion; for the
+passage of the ship through the many locks occupies three to four hours,
+and the excursion can be made in half the time. Before starting, it is,
+however, advisable to climb the rock to which the locks ascend. A
+pavilion is erected on its summit, and the view from it down over all the
+locks is exceedingly fine.
+
+Pretty paths hewn out of the wood lead to Trollhatta, which is charmingly
+situated in a lovely valley, surrounded by woods and hills, on the shore
+of a river, whose white foaming waves contrast strongly with the dark
+foliage of the overshadowing groves. The canal, which describes a large
+semicircle round the chief stream, glitters in the distance; but the
+highest locks are quite concealed behind rocks; we could neither observe
+the opening of the gates nor the rising of the water in them, and were
+therefore surprised when suddenly the masts and then the ship itself rose
+from the depth. An invisible hand seemed to raise it up between the
+rocks.
+
+The falls of the river are less distinguished for their height than for
+their diversity and their volumes of water. The principal arm of the
+river is divided at the point of decline into two equal falls by a little
+island of rock. A long narrow suspension-bridge leads to this island,
+and hangs over the fall; but it is such a weak, frail construction, that
+one person only can cross it at a time. The owner of this dangerous path
+keeps it private, and imposes a toll of about 3.5d. on all passengers.
+
+A peculiar sensation oppresses the traveller crossing the slender path.
+He sees the stream tearing onwards, breaking itself on the projecting
+rock, and fall surging into the abyss; he sees the boiling waves beneath,
+and feels the bridge vibrate at every footstep, and timidly hastens to
+reach the island, not taking breath to look around until he has found
+footing; on the firm island. A solid rock projects a little over the
+fall, and affords him a safe position, whence he sees not only the two
+falls on either side, but also several others formed above and below his
+point of view. The scene is so enchanting, that it is difficult to tear
+oneself away.
+
+Beyond Trollhatta the river expands almost to a lake, and is separated
+into many arms by the numerous islands. The shores lose their beauty,
+being flat and uninteresting.
+
+We unfortunately did not reach the splendid Wennersee, which is from
+forty-five to sixty-five miles long, and proportionally broad, until
+evening, when it was already too dark to admire the scenery. Our ship
+remained some hours before the insignificant village Wennersborg.
+
+We had met six or seven steamers on our journey, which all belonged to
+Swedish or Norwegian merchants; and it afforded us a peculiarly
+interesting sight to see these ships ascend and descend in the high
+locks.
+
+ September 5th.
+
+As we were leaving Wennersborg late on the previous night, and were
+cruising about the sea, a contrary wind, or rather a squall, arose, which
+would have signified little to a good vessel, but to which our small ship
+was not equal. The poor captain tried in vain to navigate the steamer
+across the lake; he was at last compelled to give up the attempt, to
+return and to cast anchor. We lost our boat during this storm; a high
+wave dashed over the deck and swept it away: it had probably been as well
+fastened as our boxes and trunks.
+
+Though it was but nine o'clock in the morning, our captain declared that
+he could not proceed during the day, but that if the weather became more
+favourable, he would start again about midnight. Fortunately a
+fishing-boat ventured to come alongside, and some of the passengers
+landed. I was among them, and made use of this opportunity to visit some
+cottages lying at the edge of a wood near the lake. They were very
+small, but consisted of two chambers, which contained several beds and
+other furniture; the people were also somewhat better clad than the
+Norwegians. Their food too was not so unpalatable; they boiled a thick
+mess of coarse black flour, which was eaten with sweet milk.
+
+ September 6th.
+
+We raised anchor at one o'clock in the morning, and in about five hours
+arrived at the island Eken, which consists entirely of rock, and is
+surrounded by a multitude of smaller islets and cliffs. This is one of
+the most important stations in the lake. A large wooden warehouse stands
+on the shore, and in it is stored the merchandise of the vicinity
+intended for export; and in return it receives the cargo from the ships.
+There are always several vessels lying at anchor here.
+
+We had now to wind through a cluster of islands, till we again reached
+the open lake, which, however, was only remarkable for its size. Its
+shores are bare and monotonous, and only dotted here and there with woods
+or low hills; the distant view even is not at all noteworthy. One of the
+finest views is the tolerably large castle of Leko, which lies on a rock,
+and is surrounded by fertile groves.
+
+Further off rises the Kinne Kulle, {51} to which the traveller's
+attention is directed, because it is said to afford an extended view, not
+only over the lake, but far into the country. A curious grotto is said
+to exist in this hill; but unfortunately one loses these sights since the
+establishment of steamers, for we fly past every object of interest, and
+the longest journey will soon be described in a few words.
+
+A large glass-factory is established at Bromoe, which fabricates
+window-glass exclusively. We stopped a short time, and took a
+considerable cargo of the brittle material on board.
+
+The factory and the little dwellings attached to it are prettily situated
+on the undulating ground.
+
+Near Sjotorp we entered the river again through several locks. The
+passage of the Wennersee is calculated at about ten or eleven hours.
+
+The river at first winds through woods; and while the ship slowly passes
+through the locks, it is pleasanter to walk a portion of the distance in
+their shade. Farther on it flows through broad valleys, which, however,
+present no very attractive features.
+
+ September 7th.
+
+Early in the morning we crossed the pretty Vikensee, which distinguishes
+itself, like all Swedish lakes, by the multitude of its islands, cliffs,
+and rocks. These islands are frequently covered with trees, which make
+the view more interesting.
+
+The lake is 306 feet above the level of the North Sea, and is the highest
+point of the journey; from thence the locks begin to descend. The number
+of ascending and descending locks amounts to seventy-two.
+
+A short canal leads into the Boltensee, which is comparatively free from
+islands. The passage across this little lake is very charming; the
+shores are diversified by hills, woods, meadows, and fields. After it
+comes the Weltersee, which can be easily defended by the beautiful
+fortress of Karlsborg. This lake has two peculiarities: one being the
+extraordinary purity and transparency of its waters; the other, the
+number of storms which prevail in it. I was told that it frequently
+raged and stormed on the lake while the surrounding country remained calm
+and free. The storm sometimes overtakes the ship so suddenly and
+violently, that escape is impossible; and the sagas and fables told of
+the deceitful tricks of these waves are innumerable.
+
+We fortunately escaped, and crossed its surface cheerfully and merrily.
+On its shores are situated the beautiful ladies' pensionary, Wadstena,
+and the celebrated mountain Omberg, at whose foot a battle was fought.
+
+The next canal is short, and leads through a lovely wood into the little
+lake of Norbysee. It is customary to walk this distance, and inspect the
+simple monument of Count Platen, who made the plans for the locks and
+canals,--a lasting, colossal undertaking. The monument is surrounded by
+an iron railing, and consists of a slab bearing an inscription, simply
+stating in Swedish his name, the date of his death, &c. Nearly opposite
+the monument, on the other side of the canal, is the town of Motala,
+distinguished principally for its large iron factories, in which the
+spacious work-rooms are especially remarkable.
+
+Fifteen locks lead from the Norbysee into the Roxersee, which is a
+descent of 116 feet. The canal winds gracefully through woods and
+meadows, crossed by pretty roads, and studded with elegant little houses
+and larger edifices. Distant church-steeples point out the village of
+Norby, which sometimes peeps forth behind little forests, and then
+vanishes again from the view of the traveller. When the sun shines on
+the waters of this canal, it has a beautiful, transparent, pea-green
+colour, like the purest chrysolite.
+
+The view from the hill which rises immediately before the lake of Roxen
+is exceedingly fine. It looks down upon an immense valley, covered with
+the most beautiful woods and rocks, and upon the broad lake, whose arm
+flows far in land. The evening sun shed its last rays over a little town
+on the lake-shore, and its newly-painted tiles shone brightly in its
+light beams.
+
+While the ship descended through the many locks, we visited the
+neighbouring church of the village of Vretakloster, which contains the
+skeletons of several kings in beautifully-made metal coffins.
+
+We then crossed the lake, which is from four to five miles broad, and
+remained all night before the entrance of the canal leading into a bay of
+the Baltic.
+
+ September 8th.
+
+This canal is one of the longest; its environs are very pretty, and the
+valley through which it runs is one of the largest we had passed. The
+town of Soderkoping is situated at the foot of high, picturesque groups
+of rocks, which extend to a considerable distance.
+
+Every valley and every spot of soil in Sweden are carefully cultivated.
+
+The people in general are well dressed, and inhabit small but very pretty
+houses, whose windows are frequently decorated with clean white
+draperies. I visited several of these houses, as we had abundance of
+time for such excursions while the ship was going through the locks. I
+think one might walk the whole distance from Gottenburg to Stockholm in
+the same time that the ship takes for the journey. We lose some hours
+daily with the locks, and are obliged to lie still at night on their
+account. The distance is calculated at from 180 to 250 miles, and the
+journey takes five days.
+
+In the evening we approached the Baltic, which has the same character as
+the Scheren of the North Sea. The ship threads its way through a shoal
+of islands and islets, of rocks and cliffs; and it is as difficult to
+imagine here as there how it is possible to avoid all the projecting
+cliffs, and guide the ship so safely through them. The sea divides
+itself into innumerable arms and bays, into small and large lakes, which
+are formed between the islands and rocks, and are hemmed in by beautiful
+hills. But nothing can exceed the beauty of the view of the castle
+Storry Husby, which lies on a high mountain, in a bay. In front of the
+mountain a beautiful meadow-lawn reaches to the shores of the sea, while
+the back is surrounded in the distance by a splendid pine-forest. Near
+this picturesque castle a steeple rises on a neighbouring island, which
+is all that remains of the ancient castle of Stegeborg. Nothing can be
+more romantic than the scenery here, and on the whole journey over the
+fiord; for it presents itself in ever-varying pictures to the traveller's
+notice.
+
+But gradually the hills become lower, the islands more rare; the sea
+supersedes every thing, and seems jealously anxious to exclude other
+objects from the traveller's attention, as if it wished to monopolise it.
+Now we were in the open sea, and saw only water and sky; and then again
+we were so hemmed in by the rocks and cliffs, that it would be impossible
+to extricate the ship without the assistance of an experienced pilot.
+
+ September 9th.
+
+We left the sea, and entered another lake, the Malarsee, celebrated for
+its numerous islands, by a short canal. The town of Sotulje lies at its
+entrance, charmingly situated in a narrow valley at the foot of a rather
+steep hill. This lake at first resembles a broad river, but widens at
+every step, and soon shews itself in its whole expanse. The passage of
+the Malarsee takes four hours, and is one of the most charming excursions
+that can be made. It is said to contain about a thousand islets of
+various sizes; and it may be imagined how varied in form and feature the
+scenery must be, and, like the fiord of the Baltic, what a constant
+succession of new scenes it must present.
+
+The shores also are very beautiful: in some spots hills descend sharply
+to the water's edge, the steep rocks forming dangerous points; on others
+dark, sombre pine-forests grow; and again there are gay valleys and
+meadows, with villages or single cottages. Many travellers assert that
+this lake is, after all, very monotonous; but I cannot agree with their
+opinion. I found it so attractive, that I could repeat the journey many
+times without wearying of this lovely sameness. It certainly has not the
+majestic backgrounds of the Swiss lakes; but this profusion of small
+islands is a pleasing peculiarity which can be found on no other lake.
+
+On the summit of a steep precipice of the shore the hat of the
+unfortunate Eric is hoisted, fastened to a long pole. History tells that
+this king fled from the enemy in a battle; that one of his soldiers
+pursued him, and reproached him for his cowardice, whereupon Eric, filled
+with shame and despair, gave spurs to his horse and leaped into the
+fearful abyss. At his fall his hat was blown from his head, and was left
+on this spot.
+
+Not far from this point the suburbs of Stockholm make their appearance,
+being spread round one of the broad arms of the lake. With increasing
+curiosity we gazed towards the town as we gradually approached it. Many
+of the pretty villas, which are situated in the valleys or on the sides
+of the hills as forerunners of the town, come into view, and the suburbs
+rise amphi-theatrically on the steep shores. The town itself closes the
+prospect by occupying the whole upper shore of the lake, and is flanked
+by the suburbs at either side. The Ritterholm church, with its cast-iron
+perforated towers, and the truly grand royal palace, which is built
+entirely in the Italian style, can be seen and admired from this
+distance.
+
+We had scarcely cast anchor in the port of Stockholm, when a number of
+Herculean women came and offered us their services as porters. They were
+Delekarliers, {52} who frequently come to Stockholm to earn a livelihood
+as porters, water-carriers, boatwomen, &c. They easily find employment,
+because they possess two excellent qualities: they are said to be
+exceedingly honest and hard-working, and, at the same time, have the
+strength and perseverance of men.
+
+Their dress consists of black petticoats, which come half way over the
+calf of the leg, red bodices, white chemises with long sleeves, short
+narrow aprons of two colours, red stockings, and shoes with wooden soles
+an inch thick. They twist a handkerchief round their head, or put on a
+little close black cap, which fits close on the back part of the head.
+
+In Stockholm there are entire houses, as well as single rooms, which, as
+in a hotel, are let by the day. They are much cheaper than hotels, and
+are therefore more in demand. I at once hired one of these rooms, which
+was very clean and bright, and for which, with breakfast, I only paid one
+riksdaler, which is about one shilling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+As my journey was ostensibly only to Iceland, and as I only paid a flying
+visit to this portion of Scandinavia, my readers will pardon me if I
+treat it briefly. This portion of Europe has been so frequently and so
+excellently described by other travellers, that my observations would be
+of little importance.
+
+I remained in Stockholm six days, and made as good use of my time as I
+could. The town is situated on the shores of the Baltic Sea and the
+Malar lake. These two waters are connected by a short canal, on whose
+shores the most delightful houses are erected.
+
+ [Picture: Stockholm]
+
+My first visit was to the beautiful church of Ritterholm, which is used
+more for a cemetery and an armory than for a place of worship. The
+vaults serve as burial-places for the kings, and their monuments are
+erected in the side-chapels. On each side of the nave of the church are
+placed effigies of armed knights on horseback, whose armour belonged to
+the former kings of Sweden. The walls and angles of the church are
+profusely decorated with flags and standards, said to number five
+thousand. In addition to this, the keys of conquered towns and
+fortresses hang along the side-walls, and drums are piled upon the floor;
+trophies taken from different nations with which Sweden has been at war.
+
+Besides these curiosities, several coats of armour and garments of
+Swedish regents are displayed behind glass-cases in the side-chapels.
+Among them, the dress which Charles XII. wore on the day of his death,
+and his hat perforated by a ball, interested me most. His riding-boots
+stand on the ground beside it. The modern dress and hat, embroidered
+with gold and ornamented with feathers, of the last king, the founder of
+the new dynasty, is not less interesting, partly perhaps from the great
+contrast.
+
+The church of St. Nicholas stands on the same side of the canal, and is
+one of the finest Protestant churches I had seen; it is very evident that
+it was built in Catholic times, and that its former decorations have been
+allowed to remain. It contains several large and small oil-paintings,
+some ancient and some modern monuments, and a profusion of gilding. The
+organ is fine and large; flanking the entrance of the church are
+beautiful reliefs, hewn in stone; and above it, carved in wood, a statue
+of the archangel Michael, larger than life, sitting on horseback on a
+bridge, in the act of killing the dragon.
+
+Near the church is situated the royal palace, which needs a more fluent
+pen than mine to describe it. It would fill a volume were I to enumerate
+and describe the treasures, curiosities, and beauties of its
+construction, or its interior arrangement; I can only say that I never
+saw any thing to equal it, except the royal palace of Naples. Such an
+edifice is the more surprising in the north, and in a country which has
+never been overstocked with wealth.
+
+The church of Shifferholm is remarkable only for its position and its
+temple-like form; it stands on the ledge of a rock facing the royal
+palace, on the opposite shore of the same indentation of the Baltic. A
+long bridge of boats leads from the one to the other.
+
+The church of St. Catharine is large and beautiful. In an outer angle of
+the church is shewn the stone on which one of the brothers Sturre was
+beheaded. {53}
+
+On the Ritterplatz stands the Ritterhouse, a very fine palace; also the
+old royal palace, and several other royal and private mansions; but they
+are not nearly so numerous nor so fine as in Copenhagen, and the streets
+and squares also cannot be compared with those of the capital of Denmark.
+
+The finest prospect is from a hill in one of the suburbs called the Great
+Mosbecken; it affords a magnificent view of the sea and the lake, of the
+town and its suburbs, as far as the points of the mountains, and of the
+lovely country-houses which border the shores of lake and sea. The town
+and its environs are so interspersed with islets and rocks, that these
+seem to be part of the town; and this gives Stockholm such a curious
+appearance, that I can compare it to no other city I have seen. Wooded
+hills and naked rocks prolong the view, and their ridges extend into the
+far distance; while level fields and lawns take up but a very small
+proportion of the magnificent scenery.
+
+On descending from this hill the traveller should not fail to go to
+Sodermalm, and to inspect the immense iron-stores, where iron is heaped
+up in countless bars. The corn-market of Stockholm is insignificant.
+The principal buildings besides those already enumerated are, the bank,
+the mint, the guard-house, the palace of the crown-prince, the theatre,
+&c. The latter is interesting, partly because Gustavus III. was shot in
+it. He fell on the stage, while a grand masquerade was taking place, for
+which the theatre had been changed into a ball-room. The king was shot
+by a mask, and died in a few hours.
+
+There is not a representation in the theatre every night; and on the one
+evening of performance during my visit a festival was to be celebrated in
+the hall of antiquities. The esteemed artist Vogelberg, a native of
+Sweden, had beautifully sculptured the three heathen gods, Thor, Balder,
+and Odin, in colossal size, and brought them over from Rome. The statues
+had only been lately placed, and a large company had been invited to meet
+in the illuminated saloon, and do honour to the artist. Solemn hymns
+were to be sung at the uncovering of the statues, beside other
+festivities. I was fortunate enough to receive an invitation to this
+festival, which was to commence a little past seven. Before that I went
+to the theatre, which, I was told, would open at half-past six. I
+intended to remain there half an hour, and then drive to the palace,
+where my friends would meet me to accompany me to the festival. I went
+to the theatre at six, and anxiously waited half an hour for the
+commencement of the overture; it was after half-past six, and no signs of
+the commencement. I looked again at the bill, and saw, to my annoyance,
+that the opera did not begin till seven. But as I would not leave until
+I had seen the stage, I spent the time in looking at the theatre itself.
+It is tolerably large, and has five tiers of boxes, but is neither
+tastefully nor richly decorated. I was most surprised at the exorbitant
+price and the variety of seats. I counted twenty-six different kinds; it
+seems that every row has a different price, else I don't understand how
+they could make such a variety.
+
+At last the overture began; I listened to it, saw the curtain rise,
+looked at the fatal spot, and left after the first air. The door-keeper
+followed me, took my arm, and wished to give me a return-ticket; and when
+I told him that I did not require one, as I did not intend to return, he
+said that it had only just commenced, and that I ought to stop, and not
+have spent all the money for nothing. I was unfortunately too little
+acquainted with the Swedish language to explain the reason of my
+departure, so I could give him no answer, but went away. I, however,
+heard him say to some one, "I never met with such a woman before; she sat
+an hour looking at the curtain, and goes away as soon as it rises." I
+looked round and saw how he shook his head thoughtfully, and pointed with
+his forefinger to his forehead. I could not refrain from smiling, and
+enjoyed the scene as much as I should have done the second act of
+Mozart's _Don Giovanni_.
+
+I called for my friends at the royal palace, and spent the evening very
+agreeably in the brilliantly-illuminated galleries of antiquities and of
+pictures. I had the pleasure also of being introduced to Herr Vogelberg.
+His modest, unpretending manners must inspire every one with respect,
+even if one does not know what distinguished talent he possesses.
+
+The royal park is one of the finest sights in the neighbourhood of
+Stockholm, and is one of the best of its kind. It is a fine large
+natural park, with an infinity of groves, meadows, hills, and rocks; here
+and there lies a country-house with its fragrant flower-garden, or
+tasteful coffee and refreshment houses, which on fine Sundays are filled
+with visitors from the town. Good roads are made through the park, and
+commodious paths lead to the finest points of view over sea and land.
+
+The bust of the popular poet Bellmann stands on an open sunny spot, and
+an annual festival is given here in his honour.
+
+Deeper in the park lies the so-called Rosenthal (Rose valley), a real
+Eden. The late king was so partial to this spot, that he spent many
+hours in the little royal country-house here, which is built on a retired
+spot in the midst of groves and flower-beds. In front of the palace
+stands a splendid vase made of a single piece of porphyry. I was told
+that it was the largest in Europe, but I consider the one in the Museum
+of Naples much larger.
+
+I spent the last hours of my visit to Stockholm in this spot, with the
+amiable family of Herr Boje from Finnland, whose acquaintance I had made
+on the journey from Gottenburg to Stockholm. I shall therefore never
+forget this beautiful park and the agreeable associations connected with
+it.
+
+I made a very agreeable excursion also to the royal palace of Haga, to
+the large cemetery, and to the military school Karlberg.
+
+The royal castle of Haga is surrounded by a magnificent park, which owes
+little to art; it contains some of the finest trees, with here and there
+a hill, and is crossed by majestic alleys and well-kept roads for driving
+and walking. The palace itself is so small, that I could not but admire
+the moderation of the royal family; but I was informed that this is the
+smallest of their summer palaces.
+
+Nearly opposite to this park is the great cemetery; but as it has only
+existed for about seventeen years, the trees in it are yet rather young.
+This would be of little consequence in other countries, but in Sweden the
+cemeteries serve as promenades, and are crossed by alleys, ornamented
+with groves, and provided with seats for the accommodation of visitors.
+This cemetery is surrounded by a dark pine-forest, and really seems quite
+shut off from the outer world. It is the only burial-place out of the
+town; the others all lie between the churches and the neighbouring
+houses, whose fronts often form the immediate boundary. Burials take
+place there constantly, so that the inhabitants are quite familiar with
+the aspect of death.
+
+From the great cemetery a road leads to the neighbouring Karlberg, which
+is the academy for military and naval cadets. The extensive buildings
+attached to this seminary are built on the slope of a mountain, which is
+washed on one side by the waters of the lake, and surrounded on the other
+by the beautiful park-plantations.
+
+Before leaving Stockholm I had the honour of being introduced to her
+majesty the Queen of Sweden. She had heard of my travels, and took a
+particular interest in my account of Palestine. In consequence of this
+favour, I received the special permission to inspect the whole interior
+of the palace. Although it was inhabited, I was conducted, not only
+through the state-rooms, but through all the private rooms of the court.
+It would be impossible to describe the splendour which reigns here, the
+treasures of art, the magnificent appointments, and the evident taste
+every where displayed. I was delighted with all the treasures and
+splendour, but still more with the warm interest with which her majesty
+conversed with me about Palestine. This interview will ever dwell on my
+memory as the bright salient point of my northern expedition.
+
+
+
+EXCURSION TO THE OLD ROYAL CASTLE OF GRIPTHOLM ON THE MALARSEE
+
+
+Every Sunday morning, at eight o'clock, a little steamer leaves Stockholm
+for this castle; the distance is about forty-five miles, and is passed in
+four hours; four hours more are allowed for the stay, and in the evening
+the steamer returns to Stockholm. This excursion is very interesting,
+although we pass the greater part of the time on that portion of the lake
+which we had seen on our arrival, but for the last few miles the ship
+turned into a pretty bay, at whose apex the castle is situated. It is
+distinguished for its size, its architecture, and its colossal turrets.
+It is unfortunately, however, painted with the favourite brick-red colour
+of the Swedes.
+
+Two immense cannons, which the Swedes once gained in battle from the
+Russians, stand in the courtyard. The apartments in the castle, which
+are kept in good condition, display neither splendour nor profusion of
+appointments, indeed almost the contrary. The pretty theatre is,
+however, an exception: for its walls are inlaid from top to bottom with
+mirrors, its pillars are gilt, and the royal box tapestried with rich red
+velvet. There has been no performance here since the death of Gustavus
+III.
+
+The immensely massive walls are a remarkable feature of this palace, and
+must measure about three yards in thickness in the lower stories.
+
+The upper apartments are all large and high, and afford a splendid view
+of the lake from their windows. But it is impossible to enjoy these
+beautiful scenes when one thinks of the sad events which have taken place
+here.
+
+Two kings, John III. and Eric XIV., the latter with four of his
+ministers, who were subsequently beheaded, were imprisoned here for many
+years. The captivity of John III. would not have been so bad, if
+captivity were not bad enough in itself. He was confined in a large
+splendid saloon, but which he was not permitted to quit, and which he
+would therefore probably have gladly exchanged for the poorest hut and
+liberty. His wife inhabited two smaller apartments adjoining; she was
+not treated as a prisoner, and could leave the castle at will. His son
+Sigismund was born here in the year 1566, and the room and bed in which
+he was born are still shewn as curiosities.
+
+Eric's fate was much more unfortunate, for he was kept in narrow and dark
+confinement. A small rudely-furnished apartment, with narrow,
+iron-barred windows, in one of the little turrets was his prison. The
+entrance was closed by a solid oaken door, in which a small opening had
+been made, through which his food was given him. For greater security
+this oaken door was covered by an iron one. Round the outside of the
+apartment a narrow gallery had been made, on which the guards were
+posted, and could at all times see their prisoner through the barred
+windows. The spot is still shewn at one of the windows where the king
+sat for hours looking into the distance, his head leaning on his hand.
+What must have been his feelings as he gazed on the bright sky, the
+verdant turf, and the smiling lake! How many sighs must have been echoed
+from these walls, how many sleepless nights must he have passed during
+those two long years in anxious expectation of the future!
+
+The guide who took us round the castle maintained that the floor was more
+worn on this spot than any where else, and that the window-sash had been
+hollowed by the elbow of the miserable king; but I could not perceive any
+difference. Eric was kept imprisoned here for two years, and was then
+taken to another prison.
+
+There is a large picture-gallery in this castle; but it contains
+principally portraits of kings, not only of Sweden, but of other
+countries, from the Middle Ages down to the present time; also portraits
+of ministers, generals, painters, poets, and learned men; of celebrated
+Swedish females, who have sacrificed themselves for their country, and of
+the most celebrated female beauties. The name and date of birth of each
+person are affixed to his or her portrait, so that each visitor may find
+his favourite without guide or catalogue. In many of them the colouring
+and drawing are wretched enough, but we will hope that the resemblance is
+all the more striking.
+
+On our return several gentlemen were kind enough to direct my attention
+to the most interesting points of the lake. Among these I must mention
+Kakeholm, its broadest point; the island of Esmoi, on which a Swedish
+female gained a battle; Norsberg, also celebrated for a battle which took
+place there; and Sturrehof, the property of a great Swedish family. Near
+Bjarkesoe a simple cross is erected, ostensibly on the spot where
+Christianity was first introduced. Indeed the Malarsee has so many
+historical associations, in addition to the attractions of its scenery,
+that it is one of the most interesting seas not only of Sweden but of
+Europe.
+
+
+
+JOURNEY FROM STOCKHOLM TO UPSALA AND TO THE IRON-MINES OF DANEMORA
+
+
+ September 12th.
+
+The intercourse between Stockholm and Upsala is very considerable. A
+steamer leaves both places every day except Sunday, and traverses the
+distance in six hours.
+
+Tempted by this convenient opportunity of easily and quickly reaching the
+celebrated town of Upsala, and by the unusually fine weather, I took my
+passage one evening, and was greatly disappointed when, on the following
+morning, the rain poured down in torrents. But if travellers paid much
+attention to the weather, they would not go far; so I nevertheless
+embarked at half-past seven, and arrived safely in Upsala. I remained in
+the cabin during the passage, and could not even enjoy the prospect from
+the cabin-windows, for the rain beat on them from the outside, while
+inside they were obscured by the heat. But I did not venture on deck,
+hoping to be favoured by better weather on my return.
+
+At last, about three o'clock, when I had been in Upsala more than an
+hour, the weather cleared up, and I sallied out to see the sights.
+
+First I visited the cathedral. I entered, and stood still with
+astonishment at the chief portal, on looking up at the high roof resting
+on two rows of pillars, and covering the whole church. It is formed in
+one beautiful straight line, unbroken by a single arch. The church
+itself is simple: behind the grand altar a handsome chapel is erected,
+the ceiling of which is painted azure blue, embossed with golden stars.
+In this chapel Gustavus I. is interred between his two wives. The
+monument which covers the grave is large, and made of marble, but clumsy
+and void of taste. It represents a sarcophagus, on which three bodies,
+the size of life, are laid; a marble canopy is raised over them. The
+walls of the chapel are covered with pretty frescoes, representing the
+most remarkable scenes in the life of this monarch. The most interesting
+among them are, one in which he enters a peasant's hut in peasant's
+attire, at the same moment that his pursuers are eagerly inquiring after
+him in front of the hut; the other, when he stands on a barrel, also
+dressed as a peasant, and harangues his people. Two large tablets in a
+broad gold frame contain in Swedish, and not in the Latin language, the
+explanation of the different pictures, so that every Swede may easily
+learn the monarch's history.
+
+Several other monuments are erected in the side-chapels; those of
+Catharine Magelone, John III., Gustavus Erichson, who was beheaded, and
+of the two brothers Sturre, who were murdered. The monument of
+Archbishop Menander, in white marble, is a tasteful and artistic modern
+production. The great Linnaeus is buried under a simple marble slab in
+this church; but his monument is in one of the side-chapels, and not over
+his grave, and consists of a beautiful dark-brown porphyry slab, on which
+his portrait is sculptured in relief.
+
+The splendid organ, which reaches nearly to the roof of the church, also
+deserves special attention. The treasure-chamber does not contain great
+treasures; the blood-stained and dagger-torn garments of the unfortunate
+brothers Sturre are kept in a glass case here; and here also stands a
+wooden statue of the heathen god Thor. This wooden affair seems to have
+originally been an Ecce Homo, which was perhaps the ornament of some
+village church, then carried off by some unbeliever, and made more
+shapeless than its creator, not proficient in art, had made it. It has a
+greater resemblance now to a frightful scarecrow than to any thing else.
+
+The churchyard near the church is distinguished for its size and beauty.
+It is surrounded by a wall of stone two feet high, surmounted by an iron
+palisading of equal height, broken by stone pillars. On several sides,
+steps are made into the burying-ground over this partition. In this
+cemetery, as in the one of Stockholm, one seems to be in a lovely garden,
+laid out with alleys, arbours, lawns, &c.; but it is more beautiful than
+the other, because it is older. The graves are half concealed by
+arbours; many were ornamented with flowers and wreaths, or hedged by
+rose-bushes. The whole aspect of this cemetery, or rather of this
+garden, seems equally adapted for the amusement of the living or the
+repose of the dead.
+
+The monuments are in no way distinguished; only two are rather
+remarkable, for they consist of tremendous pieces of rock in their
+natural condition, standing upright on the graves. One of these
+monuments resembles a mountain; it covers the ashes of a general, and is
+large enough to have covered his whole army; his relatives probably took
+the graves of Troy as a specimen for their monument. It is moreover
+inscribed by very peculiar signs, which seemed to me to be runic
+characters. The good people have united in this monument two
+characteristics of the ancients of two entirely distinct empires.
+
+The university or library building in Upsala is large and beautiful; it
+is situated on a little hill, with a fine front facing the town. The
+park, which is, however, still somewhat young, forms the background. {54}
+
+Near this building, on the same hill, stands a royal palace, conspicuous
+for its brick-red colour. It is very large, and the two wings are
+finished by massive round towers.
+
+In the centre of the courtyard, behind the castle, is placed a colossal
+bust of Gustavus I., and a few paces from it two artificial hills serve
+as bastions, on which cannons are planted. This being the highest point
+of the town, affords the best view over it, and over the surrounding
+country.
+
+The town itself is built half of wood and half of stone, and is very
+pretty, being crossed by broad streets, and ornamented with tastefully
+laid-out gardens. It has one disadvantage, which is the dark
+brownish-red colour of the houses, which has a peculiarly sombre
+appearance in the setting sun.
+
+An immense and fertile plain, diversified by dark forests contrasting
+with the bright green meadows and the yellow stubble-fields, surrounds
+the town, and in the distance the silvery river Fyris flows towards the
+sea. Forests close the distant view with their dark shadows. I saw but
+few villages; they may, however, have been hidden by the trees, for that
+they exist seems to be indicated by the well-kept high roads crossing the
+plain in all directions.
+
+Before quitting my position on the bastions of the royal palace I cast a
+glance on the castle-gardens, which were lying lower down the hill, and
+are separated from the castle by a road; they do not seem to be large,
+but are very pretty.
+
+I should have wished to be able to visit the botanic garden near the
+town, which was the favourite resort of Linnaeus, whose
+splendidly-sculptured bust is said to be its chief ornament; but the sun
+was setting behind the mountains, and I repaired to my chamber, to
+prepare for my journey to Danemora.
+
+ September 13th.
+
+I left Upsala at four o'clock in the morning, to proceed to the far-famed
+iron-mines of Danemora, upwards of thirty miles distant, and where I
+wished to arrive before twelve, as the blasting takes place at that hour,
+after which the pits are closed. As I had been informed how slowly
+travelling is done in this country, and how tedious the delays are when
+the horses are changed, I determined to allow time enough for all
+interruptions, and yet arrive at the appointed hour.
+
+A few miles behind Upsala lies Old Upsala (Gamla Upsala). I saw the old
+church and the grave-hills in passing; three of the latter are remarkably
+large, the others smaller. It is presumed that the higher ones cover the
+graves of kings. I saw similar tumuli during my journey to Greece, on
+the spot where Troy is said to have stood. The church is not honoured as
+a ruin; it has yet to do service; and it grieved me to see the venerable
+building propped up and covered with fresh mortar on many a time-worn
+spot.
+
+Half way between Upsala and Danemora we passed a large castle, not
+distinguished for its architecture, its situation, or any thing else.
+Then we neared the river Fyris, and the long lake of Danemora; both are
+quite overgrown with reeds and grass, and have flat uninteresting shores;
+indeed the whole journey offers little variety, as the road lies through
+a plain, only diversified by woods, fields, and pieces of rock. These
+are interesting features, because one cannot imagine how they came there,
+the mountains being at a great distance, and the soil by no means rocky.
+
+The little town of Danemora lies in the midst of a wood, and only
+consists of a church and a few large and small detached houses. The
+vicinity of the mines is indicated before arriving at the place by
+immense heaps of stones, which are brought by horse-gins from the pits,
+and which cover a considerable space.
+
+I had fortunately arrived in time to see the blastings. Those in the
+great pit are the most interesting; for its mouth is so very large, that
+it is not necessary to descend in order to see the pit-men work; all is
+visible from above. This is a very peculiar and interesting sight. The
+pit, 480 feet deep, with its colossal doors and entrances leading into
+the galleries, looks like a picture of the lower world, from which
+bridges of rocks, projections, arches and caverns formed in the walls,
+ascend to the upper world. The men look like pigmies, and one cannot
+follow their movements until the eye has accustomed itself to the depth
+and to the darkness prevailing below. But the darkness is not very
+dense; I could distinguish most of the ladders, which seemed to me like
+children's toys.
+
+It was nearly twelve, and the workmen left the pits, with the exception
+of those in charge of the mines. They ascended by means of little tubs
+hanging by ropes, and were raised by a windlass. It is a terrible sight
+to see the men soaring up on the little machine, especially when two or
+three ascend at once; for then one man stands in the centre, while the
+other two ride on the edge of the tub.
+
+ [Picture: Mines of Danemora]
+
+I should have liked to descend into the great pit, but it was too late on
+this day, and I would not wait another. I should not have feared the
+descent, as I was familiar with such adventures, having explored the
+salt-mines of Wieliczka and Bochnia, in Gallicia, some years before, in
+which I had had to let myself down by a rope, which is a much more
+dangerous method than the tub.
+
+With the stroke of twelve, four blasting trains in the large pit were
+fired. The man whose business it was to apply the match ran away in
+great haste, and sheltered himself behind a wall of rock. In a few
+moments the powder flashed, some stones fell, and then a fearful crash
+was heard all around, followed by the rolling and falling of the blasted
+masses. Repeated echoes announced the fearful explosion in the interior
+of the pits: the whole left a terrible impression on me. Scarcely had
+one mine ceased to rage, when the second began, then the third, and so
+on. These blastings take place daily in different mines.
+
+The other pits are deeper, the deepest being 600 feet; but the mouths are
+smaller, and the shafts not perpendicular, so that the eye is lost in
+darkness, which is a still more unpleasant sensation. I gazed with
+oppressed chest into the dark space, vainly endeavouring to distinguish
+something. I should not like to be a miner; I could not endure life
+without the light of day; and when I turned from the dark pits, I cast my
+eyes thankfully on the cheerful landscape basking in the sun.
+
+I returned to Upsala on the same day, having made this little journey by
+post. I can merely narrate the facts, without giving an opinion on the
+good or bad conveniences for locomotion, as this was more a pleasure-trip
+than a journey.
+
+As I had hired no carriage, I had a different vehicle at every station,
+and these vehicles consisted of ordinary two-wheeled wooden carts. My
+seat was a truss of hay covered with the horse-cloth. If the roads had
+not been so extremely good, these carts would have shaken terribly; but
+as it was, I must say that I rode more comfortably than in the carriols
+of the Norwegians, although they were painted and vanished; for in them I
+had to be squeezed in with my feet stretched out, and could not change my
+position.
+
+The stations are unequal,--sometimes long, sometimes short. The
+post-horses are provided here, as in Norway, by wealthy peasants, called
+Dschns-peasants. These have to collect a certain number of horses every
+evening for forwarding the travellers the next morning. At every
+post-house a book is kept, in which the traveller can see how many horses
+the peasant has, how many have already been hired, and how many are left
+in the stable. He must then inscribe his name, the hour of his
+departure, and the number of horses he requires. By this arrangement
+deception and extortion are prevented, as every thing is open, and the
+prices fixed. {55}
+
+Patience is also required here, though not so much as in Norway. I had
+always to wait from fifteen to twenty minutes before the carriage was
+brought and the horses and harness prepared, but never longer; and I must
+admit that the Swedish post-masters hurried as much as possible, and
+never demanded double fare, although they must have known that I was in
+haste. The pace of the horse depends on the will of the coachman and the
+powers of his steed; but in no other country did I see such consideration
+paid to the strength of the horses. It is quite ridiculous to see what
+small loads of corn, bricks, or wood, are allotted to two horses, and how
+slowly and sleepily they draw their burdens.
+
+The number of wooden gates, which divide the roads into as many parts as
+there are common grounds on it, are a terrible nuisance to travellers.
+The coachman has often to dismount six or eight times in an hour to open
+and close these gates. I was told that these delectable gates even exist
+on the great high road, only not quite in such profusion as on the
+by-roads.
+
+Wood must be as abundant here as in Norway, for every thing is enclosed;
+even fields which seem so barren as not to be worth the labour or the
+wood.
+
+The villages through which I passed were generally pretty and cheerful,
+and I found the cottages, which I entered while the horses were changed,
+neatly and comfortably furnished.
+
+The peasants of this district wear a peculiar costume. The men, and
+frequently also the boys, wear long dark-blue cloth surtouts, and cloth
+caps on their heads; so that, at a distance, they look like gentlemen in
+travelling dress. It seems curious to a foreigner to see these apparent
+gentlemen following the plough or cutting grass. At a nearer view, of
+course the aspect changes, and the rents and dirt appear, or the leathern
+apron worn beneath the coat, like carpenters in Austria, becomes visible.
+The female costume was peculiar only in so far that it was poor and
+ragged. In dress and shoes the Norwegian and Swedes are behind the
+Icelanders, but they surpass them in the comfort of their dwellings.
+
+ September 14th.
+
+To-day I returned to Stockholm on the Malarsee, and the weather being
+more favourable than on my former passage, I could remain on deck the
+whole time. I saw now that we sailed for several miles on the river
+Fyris, which flows through woods and fields into the lake.
+
+The large plain on which old and new Upsala lie was soon out of sight,
+and after passing two bridges, we turned into the Malar. At first there
+are no islands on its flat expanse, and its shores are studded with low
+tree-covered hills; but we soon, however, arrived at the region of
+islands, where the passage becomes more interesting, and the beauty of
+the shores increases. The first fine view we saw was the pretty estate
+Krusenberg, whose castle is romantically situated on a fertile hill. But
+much more beautiful and surprising is the splendid castle of Skukloster,
+a large, beautiful, and regular pile, ornamented with four immense round
+turrets at the four corners, and with gardens stretching down to the
+water's edge.
+
+From this place the scenery is full of beauty and variety; every moment
+presents another and a more lovely view. Sometimes the waters expand,
+sometimes they are hemmed in by islands, and become as narrow as canals.
+I was most charmed with those spots where the islands lie so close
+together that no outlet seems possible, till another turn shews an
+opening between them, with a glimpse of the lake beyond. The hills on
+the shores are higher, and the promontories larger, the farther the ship
+advances; and the islands appear to be merely projections of the
+continent, till a nearer approach dispels the illusion.
+
+The village of Sixtuna lies in a picturesque and charming little valley,
+filled with ruins, principally of round towers, which are said to be the
+remains of the Roman town of Sixtum; the name being retained by the new
+town with a slight modification.
+
+After this follow cliffs and rocks rising perpendicularly from the sea,
+and whose vicinity would be by no means desirable in a storm. Of the
+castle of Rouse only three beautiful domes rise above the trees; a
+frowning bleak hill conceals the rest from the eye. Then comes a palace,
+the property of a private individual, only remarkable for its size. The
+last of the notabilities is the Rokeby bridge, said to be one of the
+longest in Sweden. It unites the firm land with the island on which the
+royal castle of Drottingholm stands. The town of Stockholm now becomes
+visible; we turn into the portion of the lake on which it lies, and
+arrive there again at two o'clock in the afternoon.
+
+
+
+FROM STOCKHOLM TO TRAVEMUNDE AND HAMBURGH
+
+
+I bade farewell to Stockholm on the 18th September, and embarked in the
+steamer _Svithiold_, of 100-horse power, at twelve o'clock at noon, to go
+to Travemunde.
+
+Few passages can be more expensive than this one is. The distance is
+five hundred leagues, and the journey generally occupies two and a half
+to three days; for this the fare, without food, is four pounds. The food
+is also exorbitantly dear; in addition to which the captain is the
+purveyor; so that there is no appeal for the grossest extortion or
+insufficiency.
+
+It pained me much when one of the poorer travellers, who suffered greatly
+from sea-sickness, having applied for some soup to the steward, who
+referred him to the amiable captain, to hear him declare he would make no
+exception, and that a basin of soup would be charged the whole price of a
+complete dinner. The poor man was to do without the soup, of which he
+stood so much in need, or scrape every farthing together to pay a few
+shillings daily for his dinner. Fortunately for him some benevolent
+persons on deck paid for his meals. Some of the gentlemen brought their
+own wine with them, for which they had to pay as much duty to the captain
+as the wine was worth.
+
+To these pleasures of travelling must be added the fact, that a Swedish
+vessel does not advance at all if the weather is unfavourable. Most of
+the passengers considered that the engines were inefficient. However
+this may be, we were delayed twenty-four hours at the first half of our
+journey, from Stockholm to Calmar, although we had only a slight breeze
+against us and a rather high sea, but no storm. In Calmar we cast
+anchor, and waited for more favourable wind. Several gentlemen, whose
+business in Lubeck was pressing, left the steamer, and continued their
+journey by land.
+
+At first the Baltic very much resembles the Malarsee; for islands, rocks,
+and a variety of scenery make it interesting. To the right we saw the
+immensely long wooden bridge of Lindenborg, which unites one of the
+larger islands with the continent.
+
+At the end of one of the turns of the sea lies the town of Wachsholm; and
+opposite to it, upon a little rocky island, a splendid fortress with a
+colossal round tower. Judging by the number of cannons planted along the
+walls, this fortress must be of great importance. A few hours later we
+passed a similar fortress, Friedrichsborg; it is not in such an open
+situation as the other, but is more surrounded by forests. We passed at
+a considerable distance, and could not see much of it, nor of the castle
+lying on the opposite side, which seems to be very magnificent, and is
+also surrounded by woods.
+
+The boundaries of the right shore now disappear, but then again appear as
+a terrible heap of naked rocks, at whose extreme edge is situated the
+fine fortress Dolero. Near it groups of houses are built on the bare
+rocks projecting into the sea, and form an extensive town.
+
+September 19th.
+
+To-day we were on the open, somewhat stormy sea. Towards noon we arrived
+at the Calmar Sound, formed by the flat, uniform shores of the long
+island Oland on the left, and on the right by Schmoland. In front rose
+the mountain-island the Jungfrau, to which every Swede points with
+self-satisfied pride. Its height is only remarkable compared with the
+flatness around; beside the proud giant-mountain of the same name in
+Switzerland it would seem like a little hill.
+
+ September 20th.
+
+On account of the contrary wind, we had cast anchor here last night, and
+this morning continued the journey to Calmar, where we arrived about two
+in the forenoon. The town is situated on an immense plain, and is not
+very interesting. A few hours may be agreeably spent here in visiting
+the beautiful church and the antiquated castle, and we had more than
+enough leisure for it. Wind and weather seemed to have conspired against
+us, and the captain announced an indefinite stay at this place. At first
+we could not land, as the waves were too high; but at last one of the
+larger boats came alongside, and the more curious among us ventured to
+row to the land in the unsteady vessel.
+
+The exterior of the church resembles a fine antiquated castle from its
+four corner towers and the lowness of its dome, which rises very little
+above the building, and also because the other turrets here and there
+erected for ornament are scarcely perceptible. The interior of the
+church is remarkable for its size, its height, and a particularly fine
+echo. The tones of the organ are said to produce a most striking effect.
+We sent for the organist, but he was nowhere to be found; so we had to
+content ourselves with the echo of our own voices. We went from this
+place to the old royal castle built by Queen Margaret in the sixteenth
+century. The castle is so dilapidated inside that a tarrying in the
+upper chambers is scarcely advisable. The lower rooms of the castle have
+been repaired, and are used as prisons; and as we passed, arms were
+stretched forth from some of the barred windows, and plaintive voices
+entreated the passers-by to bestow some trifle upon the poor inmates.
+Upwards of 140 prisoners are said to be confined here. {56}
+
+About three o'clock in the afternoon the wind abated, and we continued
+our journey. The passage is very uniform, and we saw only flat, bare
+shores; a group of trees even was a rarity.
+
+ September 21st.
+
+When I came on deck this morning the Sound was far behind us. To the
+left we had the open sea; on the right, instead of the bleak Schmoland,
+we had the bleaker Schonen, which was so barren, that we hardly saw a
+paltry fishing-village between the low sterile hills.
+
+At nine o'clock in the morning we anchored in the port of Ystadt. The
+town is pretty, and has a large square, in which stand the house of the
+governor, the theatre, and the town-hall. The streets are broad, and the
+houses partly of wood and partly of stone. The most interesting feature
+is the ancient church, and in it a much-damaged wooden altar-piece, which
+is kept in the vestry. Though the figures are coarse and
+disproportionate, one must admire the composition and the carving. The
+reliefs on the pulpit, and a beautiful monument to the right of the
+altar, also deserve admiration. These are all carved in wood.
+
+In the afternoon we passed the Danish island Malmo.
+
+At last, after having been nearly four days on the sea instead of two
+days and a half, we arrived safely in the harbour of Travemunde on the
+22d September at two o'clock in the morning. And now my sea-journeys
+were over; I parted sorrowfully from the salt waters, for it is so
+delightful to see the water's expanse all around, and traverse its
+mirror-like surface. The sea presents a beautiful picture, even when it
+storms and rages, when waves tower upon waves, and threaten to dash the
+vessel to pieces or to engulf it--when the ship alternately dances on
+their points, or shoots into the abyss; and I frequently crept for hours
+in a corner, or held fast to the sides of the ship, and let the waves
+dash over me. I had overcome the terrible sea-sickness during my
+numerous journeys, and could therefore freely admire these fearfully
+beautiful scenes of excited nature, and adore God in His grandest works.
+
+We had scarcely cast anchor in the port when a whole array of coachmen
+surrounded us, volunteering to drive us overland to Hamburgh, a journey
+of thirty-six miles, which it takes eight hours to accomplish.
+
+Travemunde is a pretty spot, which really consists of only one street, in
+which the majority of the houses are hotels. The country from here to
+Lubeck, a distance of ten miles, is very pretty. A splendid road, on
+which the carriages roll smoothly along, runs through a charming wood
+past a cemetery, whose beauty exceeds that of Upsala; but for the
+monuments, one might take it for one of the most splendid parks or
+gardens.
+
+I regretted nothing so much as being unable to spend a day in Lubeck, for
+I felt very much attracted by this old Hanse town, with its
+pyramidically-built houses, its venerable dome, and other beautiful
+churches, its spacious squares, &c.; but I was obliged to proceed, and
+could only gaze at and admire it as I hurried through. The pavement of
+the streets is better than I had seen it in any northern town; and on the
+streets, in front of the houses, I saw many wooden benches, on which the
+inhabitants probably spend their summer evenings. I saw here for the
+first time again the gay-looking street-mirrors used in Hamburgh. The
+Trave, which flows between Travemunde and Lubeck, has to be crossed by
+boat. Near Oldesloe are the salt-factories, with large buildings and
+immensely high chimneys; an old romantic castle, entirely surrounded by
+water, lies near Arensburg.
+
+Past Arensburg the country begins to be uninteresting, and remains so as
+far as Hamburgh; but it seems to be very fertile, as there is an
+abundance of green fields and fine meadows.
+
+The little journey from Lubeck to Hamburgh is rather dear, on account of
+the almost incredible number of tolls and dues the poor coachmen have to
+pay. They have first to procure a license to drive from Lubeck into
+Hamburgh territory, which costs about 1_s._ 3_d._; then mine had to pay
+twice a double toll of 8_d._, because we passed through before five
+o'clock in the morning, and the gates, which are not opened till five
+o'clock, were unfastened especially for us; besides these, there was a
+penny toll on nearly every mile.
+
+This dreadful annoyance of the constant stopping and the toll-bars is
+unknown in Norway and in Sweden. There, an annual tax is paid for every
+horse, and the owner can then drive freely through the whole country, as
+no toll-bars are erected.
+
+The farm-houses here are very large and far-spread, but the reason is,
+that stable, barn, and shippen are under the same roof: the walls of the
+houses are of wood filled in with bricks.
+
+After passing Arensburg, we saw the steeples of Wandsbeck and Hamburgh in
+the distance; the two towns seem to be one, and are, in fact, only
+separated by pretty country-houses. But Wandsbeck compared to Hamburgh
+is a village, not a town.
+
+I arrived in Hamburgh about two o'clock in the afternoon; and my
+relatives were so astonished at my arrival, that they almost took me for
+a ghost. I was at first startled by their reception, but soon understood
+the reason of it.
+
+At the time I left Iceland another vessel went to Altona, by which I sent
+a box of minerals and curiosities to my cousin in Hamburgh. The sailor
+who brought the box gave such a description of the wretched vessel in
+which I had gone to Copenhagen, that, after having heard nothing of me
+for two months, he thought I must have gone to the bottom of the sea with
+the ship. I had indeed written from Copenhagen, but the letter had been
+lost; and hence their surprise and delight at my arrival.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+I had not much time to spare, so that I could only stay a few days with
+my relatives in Hamburgh; on the 26th September, I went in a little
+steamer from Hamburgh to Harburg, where we arrived in three quarters of
+an hour. From thence I proceeded in a stage-carriage to Celle, about
+sixty-five miles.
+
+The country is not very interesting; it consists for the most part of
+plains, which degenerate into heaths and marshes; but there are a few
+fertile spots peeping out here and there.
+
+ September 27th.
+
+We arrived at Celle in the night. From here to Lehrte, a distance of
+about seven miles, I had to hire a private conveyance, but from Lehrte
+the railway goes direct to Berlin. {57} Many larger and smaller towns
+are passed on this road; but we saw little of them, as the stations all
+lie at some distance, and the railway-train only stops a few minutes.
+
+The first town we passed was Brunswick. Immediately beyond the town lies
+the pretty ducal palace, built in the Gothic style, in the centre of a
+fine park. Wolfenbuttel seems to be a considerable town, judging by the
+quantity of houses and church-steeples. A pretty wooden bridge, with an
+elegantly-made iron balustrade, is built here across the Ocker. From the
+town, a beautiful lane leads to a gentle hill, on whose top stands a
+lovely building, used as a coffee-house.
+
+As soon as one has passed the Hanoverian domains the country, though it
+is not richer in natural curiosities, is less abundant in marshes and
+heaths, and is very well-cultivated land. Many villages are spread
+around, and many a charming town excites the wish to travel through at a
+slower pace.
+
+We passed Schepenstadt, Jersheim, and Wegersleben, which latter town
+already belongs to Prussia. In Ashersleben and in Magdeburg we changed
+carriages. Near Salze we saw some fine buildings which belong to the
+extensive saltworks existing here. Jernaudau is a colony of Moravians.
+I should have wished to visit the town of Kotten,--for nothing can be
+more charming than the situation of the town in the midst of fragrant
+gardens,--but we unfortunately only stopped there a few minutes. The
+town of Dessau is also surrounded by pretty scenery: several bridges
+cross the various arms of the Elbe; that over the river itself rests on
+solid stone columns. Of Wittenberg we only saw house tops and
+church-steeples; the same of Juterbog, which looks as if it were newly
+built. Near Lukewalde the regions of sand begin, and the uniformity is
+only broken by a little ridge of wooded hills near Trebbin; but when
+these are past, the railway passes on to Berlin through a melancholy,
+unmitigated desert of sand.
+
+I had travelled from six o'clock this morning until seven in the evening,
+over a distance of about two hundred and twenty miles, during which time
+we had frequently changed carriages.
+
+The number of passengers we had taken up on the road was very great, on
+account of the Leipzic fairs; sometimes the train had thirty-five to
+forty carriages, three locomotives, and seven to eight hundred
+passengers; and yet the greatest order had prevailed. It is a great
+convenience that one can take a ticket from Lehrte to Berlin, although
+the railway passes through so many different states, because then one
+needs not look after the luggage or any thing else. The officials on the
+railway are all very civil. As soon as the train stopped, the guards
+announced with a loud voice the time allowed, however long or short it
+might be; so that the passengers could act accordingly, and take
+refreshments in the neighbouring hotels. The arrangements for alighting
+are very convenient: the carriages run into deep rails at the stations,
+so that the ground is level with the carriages, and the entrance and exit
+easy. The carriages are like broad coaches; two seats ran breadthwise
+across them, with a large door at each side. The first and second class
+contain eight persons in each division, the third class ten. The
+carriages are all numbered, so that every passenger can easily find his
+seat.
+
+By these simple arrangements the traveller may descend and walk about a
+little, even though the train should only stop two minutes, or even
+purchase some refreshments, without any confusion or crowding.
+
+These conveniences are, of course, impossible when the carriages have the
+length of a house, and contain sixty or seventy persons within locked
+doors, and where the doors are opened by the guards, who only call out
+the name of the station without announcing how long the stay is. In such
+railways it is not advisable for travellers to leave their seats; for
+before they can pass from one end of the carriage to the other, through
+the narrow door and down the steep steps, the horn is sounded, and at the
+same time the train moves on; the sound being the signal for the
+engine-driver, the passengers having none.
+
+In these states there was also not the least trouble with the passport
+and the intolerable pass-tickets. No officious police-soldier comes to
+the carriage, and prevents the passengers alighting before they have
+answered all his questions. If passports had to be inspected on this
+journey, it would take a few days, for they must always be taken to the
+passport-office, as they are never examined on the spot.
+
+Such annoying interruptions often occur several times in the same state.
+And one need not even come from abroad to experience them, as a journey
+from a provincial to a capital town affords enough scope for annoyance.
+
+I had no reason to complain of such annoyances in any of the countries
+through which I had hitherto passed. My passport was only demanded in my
+hotel in the capitals of the countries, if I intended to remain several
+days. In Stockholm, however, I found a curious arrangement; every
+foreigner there is obliged to procure a Swedish passport, and pay
+half-a-crown for it, if he only remains a few hours in the town. This
+is, in reality, only a polite way of taking half-a-crown from the
+strangers, as they probably do not like to charge so much for a simple
+_vise_!
+
+
+
+STAY IN BERLIN--RETURN TO VIENNA
+
+
+I have never seen a town more beautifully or regularly built than
+Berlin,--I mean, the town of Berlin itself,--only the finest streets,
+palaces, and squares of Copenhagen would bear a comparison with it.
+
+I spent but a few days here, and had therefore scarcely time to see the
+most remarkable and interesting sights.
+
+The splendid royal palace, the extensive buildings for the
+picture-gallery and museums, the great dome--all these are situated very
+near each other.
+
+The Dome church is large and regularly built; a chapel, surrounded by an
+iron enclosure, stands at each side of the entrance. Several kings are
+buried here, and antiquated sarcophagi cover their remains, known as the
+kings' graves. Near them stands a fine cast-iron monument, beneath which
+Count Brandenburg lies.
+
+The Catholic church is built in the style of the Rotunda in Rome; but,
+unlike it, the light falls from windows made around the walls, and not
+from above. Beautiful statues and a simple but tasteful altar are the
+only ornaments of this church. The portico is ornamented by beautiful
+reliefs.
+
+The Werder church is a modern erection, built in the Gothic style, and
+its turrets are ornamented by beautiful bronze reliefs. The walls inside
+are inlaid with coloured wood up to the galleries, where they terminate
+in Gothic scroll-work. The organ has a full, clear tone; in front of it
+stands a painting which, at first sight, resembles a scene from heathen
+mythology more than a sacred subject. A number of cupids soar among
+wreaths of flowers, and surround three beautiful female figures.
+
+The mint and the architectural college stand near this church. The
+former is covered with fine sculptures; the latter is square, of a
+brick-red colour, without any architectural embellishment, and perfectly
+resembling an unusually large private house. The ground-floor is turned
+into fine shops.
+
+Near the palace lies the Opera Square, in which stand the celebrated
+opera-house, the arsenal, the university, the library, the academy, the
+guardhouse, and several royal palaces. Three statues ornament the
+square: those of General Count Bulov, General Count Scharnhorst, and
+General Prince Blucher. They are all three beautifully sculptured, but
+the drapery did not please me; it consisted of the long military cloth
+cloak, which, opening in front, afforded a glimpse of the splendid
+uniforms.
+
+The arsenal is one of the finest buildings in Berlin, and forms a square;
+at the time of my stay some repairs were being made, so that it was
+closed. I had to be content with glimpses through the windows of the
+first floor, which showed me immense saloons filled by tremendous
+cannons, ranged in rows.
+
+The guardhouse is contiguous, and resembles a pretty temple, with its
+portico of columns.
+
+The opera-house forms a long detached square. It would have a much
+better effect if the entrances were not so wretched. The one at the
+grand portal looks like a narrow, miserable church-door, low and gloomy.
+The other entrances are worse still, and one would not suppose that they
+could lead to such a splendid interior, whose appointments are
+indescribably luxurious and commodious. The pit is filled by rows of
+comfortably-cushioned chairs with cushioned backs, numbered, but not
+barred. The boxes are divided by very low partitions, so that the
+aristocratic world seems to sit on a tribune. The seats in the pit and
+the first and second tiers are covered with dark-red silk damask; the
+royal box is a splendid saloon, the floor of which is covered with the
+finest carpets. Beautiful oil-paintings, in tasteful gold frames,
+ornament the plafond; but the magnificent chandelier is the greatest
+curiosity. It looks so massively worked in bronze, that it is painful to
+see the heavy mass hang so loosely over the heads of the spectators. But
+it is only a delusion; for it is made of paste-board, and bronzed over.
+Innumerable lamps light the place; but one thing which I miss in such
+elegant modern theatres is a clock, which has a place in nearly every
+Italian theatre.
+
+The other buildings on this square are also distinguished for their size
+and the beauty of their architecture.
+
+An unusually broad stone bridge, with a finely-made iron balustrade, is
+built over a little arm of the Spree, and unites the square of the opera
+with that on which the palace stands.
+
+The royal museum is one of the finest architectural piles, and its high
+portal is covered with beautiful frescoes. The picture-gallery contains
+many _chefs-d'oeuvre_; and I regretted that I had not more time to
+examine it and the hall of antiquities, having only three hours for the
+two.
+
+From the academy runs a long street lined with lime-trees, and which is
+therefore called Under-the-limes (_unter den Linden_). This alley forms
+a cheerful walk to the Brandenburg-gate, beyond which the
+pleasure-gardens are situated. The longest and finest streets which run
+into the lime-alley are the Friedrichs Street and the Wilhelms Street.
+The Leipziger Street also belongs to the finest, but does not run into
+this promenade.
+
+The Gens-d'arme Square is distinguished by the French and German
+churches, at least by their exterior,--by their high domes, columns, and
+porticoes. The interiors are small and insignificant. On this square
+stands also the royal theatre, a tasteful pile of great beauty, with many
+pillars, and statues of muses and deities.
+
+I ascended the tower on which the telegraph works, on account of the view
+over the town and the flat neighbourhood. A very civil official was
+polite enough to explain the signs of the telegraph to me, and to permit
+me to look at the other telegraphs through his telescope.
+
+The Konigstadt, situated on the opposite shore of the Spree, not far from
+the royal palace, contains nothing remarkable. Its chief street, the
+Konigsstrasse, is long, but narrow and dirty. Indeed it forms a great
+contrast to the town of Berlin in every thing; the streets are narrow,
+short, and winding. The post-office and the theatres are the most
+remarkable buildings.
+
+The luxury displayed in the shop-windows is very great. Many a mirror
+and many a plate-glass window reminded me of Hamburgh's splendour, which
+surpasses that of Berlin considerably.
+
+There are not many excursions round Berlin, as the country is flat and
+sandy. The most interesting are to the pleasure-gardens, Charlottenburg,
+and, since the opening of the railway, to Potsdam.
+
+The park or pleasure-garden is outside the Brandenburg-gate; it is
+divided into several parts, one of which reminded me of our fine Prater
+in Vienna. The beautiful alleys were filled with carriages, riders, and
+pedestrians; pretty coffee-houses enlivened the woody portions, and merry
+children gambolled on the green lawns. I felt so much reminded of my
+beloved Prater, that I expected every moment to see a well-known face, or
+receive a friendly greeting. Kroll's Casino, sometimes called the
+Winter-garden, is built on this side of the park. I do not know how to
+describe this building; it is quite a fairy palace. All the splendour
+which fancy can invent in furniture, gilding, painting, or tapestry, is
+here united in the splendid halls, saloons, temples, galleries, and
+boxes. The dining-room, which will dine 1800 persons, is not lighted by
+windows, but by a glass roof vaulted over it. Rows of pillars support
+the galleries, or separate the larger and smaller saloons. In the
+niches, and in the corners, round the pillars, abound fragrant flowers,
+and plants in chaste vases or pots, which transform this place into a
+magical garden in winter. Concerts and _reunions_ take place here every
+Sunday, and the press of visitors is extraordinary, although smoking is
+prohibited. This place will accommodate 5000 persons.
+
+That side of the park which lies in the direction of the Potsdam-gate
+resembles an ornamental garden, with its well-kept alleys, flower-beds,
+terraces, islets, and gold-fish ponds. A handsome monument to the memory
+of Queen Louise is erected on the Louise island here.
+
+On this side, the coffee-house Odeon is the best, but cannot be compared
+to Kroll's casino. Here also are rows of very elegant country-houses,
+most of which are built in the Italian style.
+
+
+
+CHARLOTTENBURG
+
+
+This place is about half an hour's distance from the Brandenburg-gate,
+where the omnibuses that depart every minute are stationed. The road
+leads through the park, beyond which lies a pretty village, and adjoining
+it is the royal country-palace of Charlottenburg. The palace is built in
+two stories, of which the upper one is very low, and is probably only
+used for the domestics. The palace is more broad than deep; the roof is
+terrace-shaped, and in its centre rises a pretty dome. The garden is
+simple, and not very large, but contains a considerable orangery. In a
+dark grove stands a little building, the mausoleum in which the image of
+Queen Louise has been excellently executed by the famed artist Rauch.
+Here also rest the ashes of the late king. There is also an island with
+statues in the midst of a large pond, on which some swans float proudly.
+It is a pity that dirt does not stick to these white-feathered animals,
+else they would soon be black swans; for the pond or river surrounding
+the island is one of the dirtiest ditches I have ever seen.
+
+Fatigue would be very intolerable in this park, for there are very few
+benches, but an immense quantity of gnats.
+
+
+
+POTSDAM.
+
+
+The distance from Berlin to Potsdam is eighteen miles, which is passed by
+the railroad in three-quarters of an hour. The railway is very
+conveniently arranged; the carriages are marked with the names of the
+station, and the traveller enters the carriage on which the place of his
+destination is marked. Thus, the passengers are never annoyed by the
+entrance or exit of passengers, as all occupying the same carriage
+descend at the same time.
+
+The road is very uninteresting; but this is compensated for by Potsdam
+itself, for which a day is scarcely sufficient.
+
+Immediately in front of the town flows the river Havel, crossed by a
+long, beautiful bridge, whose pillars are of stone, and the rest of the
+bridge of iron. The large royal palace lies on the opposite shore, and
+is surrounded by a garden. The garden is not very extensive, but large
+enough for the town, and is open to the public. The palace is built in a
+splendid style, but is unfortunately quite useless, as the court has
+beautiful summer-palaces in the neighbourhood of Potsdam, and spends the
+winter in Berlin.
+
+The castle square is not very good; it is neither large nor regular, and
+not even level. On it stands the large church, which is not yet
+completed, but promises to be a fine structure. The town is tolerably
+large, and has many fine houses. The streets, especially the Nauner
+Street, are wide and long, but badly paved; the stones are laid with the
+pointed side upwards, and for foot-passengers there is a stone pavement
+two feet broad on one side of the street only. The promenade of the
+townspeople is called Am Kanal (beside the canal), and is a fine square,
+through which the canal flows, and is ornamented with trees.
+
+Of the royal pleasure-palaces I visited that of Sans Souci first. It is
+surrounded by a pretty park, and lies on a hill, which is divided into
+six terraces. Large conservatories stand on each side of these; and in
+front of them are long alleys of orange and lemon-trees.
+
+The palace has only a ground floor, and is surrounded by arbours, trees,
+and vines, so that it is almost concealed from view. I could not inspect
+the interior, as the royal family was living there.
+
+A side-path leads from here to the Ruinenberg, on which the ruins of a
+larger and a smaller temple, raised by the hand of art, are tastefully
+disposed. The top of the hill is taken up by a reservoir of water. From
+this point one can see the back of the palace of Sans Souci, and the
+so-called new palace, separated from the former by a small park, and
+distant only about a quarter of an hour.
+
+The new palace, built by Frederick the Great, is as splendid as one can
+imagine. It forms a lengthened square, with arabesques and flat columns,
+and has a flat roof, which is surrounded by a stone balustrade, and
+ornamented by statues.
+
+The apartments are high and large, and splendidly painted, tapestried,
+and furnished. Oil-paintings, many of them very good, cover the walls.
+One might fill a volume with the description of all the wonders of this
+place, which is, however, not inhabited.
+
+Behind the palace, and separated from it by a large court, are two
+beautiful little palaces, connected by a crescent-shaped hall of pillars;
+broad stone steps lead to the balconies surrounding the first story of
+the edifices. They are used as barracks, and are, as such, the most
+beautiful I have ever seen.
+
+From here a pleasant walk leads to the lovely palace of Charlottenburg.
+Coming from the large new palace it seemed too small for the dwelling
+even of the crown-prince. I should have taken it for a splendid pavilion
+attached to the new palace, to which the royal family sometimes walked,
+and perhaps remained there to take refreshment. But when I had inspected
+it more closely, and seen all the comfortable little rooms, furnished
+with such tasteful luxury, I felt that the crown-prince could not have
+made a better choice.
+
+Beautiful fountains play on the terraces; the walls of the corridors and
+anterooms are covered with splendid frescoes, in imitation of those found
+in Pompeii. The rooms abound in excellent engravings, paintings, and
+other works of art; and the greatest taste and splendour is displayed
+even in the minor arrangements.
+
+A pretty Chinese chiosque, filled with good statues, which have been
+unfortunately much damaged and broken, stands near the palace.
+
+These three beautiful royal residences are situated in parks, which are
+so united that they seem only as one. The parks are filled with fine
+trees, and verdant fields crossed by well-kept paths and drives; but I
+saw very few flower-beds in them.
+
+When I had contemplated every thing at leisure, I returned to the palace
+of Sans Souci, to see the beautiful fountains, which play twice a week,
+on Tuesday and Friday, from noon till evening. The columns projected
+from the basin in front of the castle are so voluminous, and rise with
+such force, that I gazed in amazement at the artifice. It is real
+pleasure to be near the basin when the sun shines in its full splendour,
+forming the most beautiful rainbows in the falling shower of drops.
+Equally beautiful is a fountain rising from a high vase, enwreathed by
+living flowers, and falling over it, so that it forms a quick, brisk
+fountain, transparent, and pure as the finest crystal. The lid of the
+vase, also enwreathed with growing flowers, rises above the fountain.
+The Neptune's grotto is of no great beauty; the water falls from an urn
+placed over it, and forms little waterfalls as it flows over
+nautilus-shells.
+
+The marble palace lies on the other side of Potsdam, and is half an
+hour's distance from these palaces; but I had time enough to visit it.
+
+Entering the park belonging to this palace, a row of neat peasants'
+cottages is seen on the left; they are all alike, but separated by fruit,
+flower, or kitchen-gardens. The palace lies at the extreme end of the
+park, on a pretty lake formed by the river Havel. It certainly has some
+right to the name of marble palace; but it seems presumption to call it
+so when compared to the marble palaces of Venice, or the marble mosques
+of Constantinople.
+
+The walls of the building are of brick left in its natural colour. The
+lower and upper frame-work, the window-sashes, and the portals, are all
+of marble. The palace is partly surrounded by a gallery supported on
+marble columns. The stairs are of fine white marble, and many of the
+apartments are laid with this mineral. The interior is not nearly so
+luxurious as the other palaces.
+
+This was the last of the sights I saw in Potsdam or the environs of
+Berlin; for I continued my journey to Vienna on the following day.
+
+Before quitting Berlin, I must mention an arrangement which is
+particularly convenient for strangers--namely, the fares for
+hackney-carriages. One need ask no questions, but merely enter the
+carriage, tell the coachman where to drive, and pay him six-pence. This
+moderate fare is for the whole town, which is somewhat extensive. At all
+the railway stations there are numbers of these vehicles, which will
+drive to any hotel, however far it may be from the station, for the same
+moderate fare. If only all cab-drivers were so accommodating!
+
+ October 1st.
+
+The railway goes through Leipzic to Dresden, where I took the mail-coach
+for Prague at eight o'clock the same evening, and arrived there in
+eighteen hours.
+
+As it was night when we passed, we did not enjoy the beautiful views of
+the Nollendorf mountain. In the morning we passed two handsome
+monuments, one of them, a pyramid fifty-four feet high, to the memory of
+Count Colloredo, the other to the memory of the Russian troops who had
+fallen here; both have been erected since the wars of Napoleon.
+
+On we went through charming districts to the famed bathing-place Teplitz,
+which is surrounded by the most beautiful scenery; and can bear
+comparison with the finest bathing-places of the world.
+
+Further on we passed a solitary basaltic rock, Boren, which deserves
+attention for its beauty and as a natural curiosity. We unfortunately
+hurried past it, as we wished to reach Prague before six o'clock, so that
+we might not miss the train to Vienna.
+
+My readers may imagine our disappointment on arriving at the gates of
+Prague, when our passports were taken from us and not returned. In vain
+we referred to the _vise_ of the boundary-town Peterswalde; in vain we
+spoke of our haste. The answer always was, "That is nothing to us; you
+can have your papers back to-morrow at the police-office." Thus we were
+put off, and lost twenty-four hours.
+
+I must mention a little joke I had on the ride from Dresden to Prague.
+Two gentlemen and a lady beside myself occupied the mail-coach; the lady
+happened to have read my diary of Palestine, and asked me, when she heard
+my name, if I were that traveller. When I had acknowledged I was that
+same person, our conversation turned on that and on my present journey.
+One of the gentlemen, Herr Katze, was very intelligent, and conversed in
+a most interesting manner on countries, nationalities, and scientific
+subjects. The other gentleman was probably equally well informed, but he
+made less use of his acquirements. Herr Katze remained in Teplitz, and
+the other gentleman proceeded with us to Vienna. Before arriving at our
+destination, he asked me if Herr Katze had not requested me to mention
+his name in my next book, and added, that if I would promise to do the
+same, he would tell me his name. I could not refrain from smiling, but
+assured him that Herr Katze had not thought of such a thing, and begged
+him not to communicate his name to me, so that he might see that we
+females were not so curious as we are said to be. But the poor man could
+not refrain from giving me his name--Nicholas B.--before we parted. I do
+not insert it for two reasons: first, because I did not promise to name
+him; and secondly, because I do not think it would do him any service.
+
+The railway from Prague to Vienna goes over Olmutz, and makes such a
+considerable round, that the distance is now nearly 320 miles, and the
+arrangements on the railway are very imperfect.
+
+There were no hotels erected on the road, and we had to be content with
+fruit, beer, bread, and butter, &c. the whole time. And these provisions
+were not easily obtained, as we could not venture to leave the carriages.
+The conductor called out at every station that we should go on directly,
+although the train frequently stood upwards of half an hour; but as we
+did not know that before, we were obliged to remain on our seats. The
+conductors were not of the most amiable character, which may perhaps be
+ascribed to the climate; for when we approached the boundary of the
+Austrian states at Peterswalde, the inspector received us very gruffly.
+We wished him good evening twice, but he took no notice of it, and
+demanded our papers in a loud and peremptory tone; he probably thought us
+as deaf as we thought him. At Ganserndorf, twenty-five miles from
+Vienna, they took our papers from us in a very uncivil, uncourteous
+manner.
+
+On the 4th of October, 1845, after an absence of six months, I arrived
+again in sight of the dear Stephen's steeple, as most of my countrywomen
+would say.
+
+I had suffered many hardships; but my love of travelling would not have
+been abated, nor would my courage have failed me, had they been ten times
+greater. I had been amply compensated for all. I had seen things which
+never occur in our common life, and had met with people as they are
+rarely met with--in their natural state. And I brought back with me the
+recollections of my travels, which will always remain, and which will
+afford me renewed pleasure for years.
+
+And now I take leave of my dear readers, requesting them to accept with
+indulgence my descriptions, which are always true, though they may not be
+amusing. If I have, as I can scarcely hope, afforded them some
+amusement, I trust they will in return grant me a small corner in their
+memories.
+
+In conclusion, I beg to add an Appendix, which may not be uninteresting
+to many of my readers, namely:
+
+1. A document which I procured in Reikjavik, giving the salaries of the
+royal Danish officials, and the sources from whence they are paid.
+
+2. A list of Icelandic insects, butterflies, flowers, and plants, which
+I collected and brought home with me.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A
+
+
+Salaries of the Royal Danish Officials in Iceland, which they receive
+from the Icelandic land-revenues.
+
+
+
+ Florins {58}
+The Governor of Iceland 2000
+ Office expenses 600
+The deputy for the western 1586
+district
+ Office expenses 400
+ Rent 200
+The deputy for the northern and 1286
+eastern districts
+ Office expenses 400
+The bishop of Iceland, who draws 800
+his salary from the
+school-revenues, has paid him
+from this treasury
+The members of the Supreme Court:
+ One judge 1184
+ First assessor 890
+ Second assessor 740
+The land-bailiff of Iceland 600
+ Office expenses 200
+ Rent 150
+The town-bailiff of Reikjavik 300
+The first police-officer of 200
+Reikjavik, who is at the same
+time gaoler, and therefore has 50
+_fl._ more than the second
+officer
+The second police-officer 150
+The mayor of Reikjavik only draws 150
+from this treasury his
+house-rent, which is
+The sysselman of the Westmanns 296
+Islands
+The other sysselmen, each 230
+Medical department and midwifery:
+ The physician 900
+ House-rent 150
+ Apothecary of Reikjavik 185
+ House-rent 150
+ The second apothecary at 90
+Sikkisholm
+ Six surgeons in the country, 300
+each
+ House-rent for some 30
+ For others 25
+ A medical practitioner on the 110
+Northland
+ Reikjavik has two midwives, 50
+each receives
+ The other midwives in Iceland, 100
+amounting to thirty, each
+receives
+ These midwives are instructed
+and examined by the land
+physician, who has the charge of
+paying them annually.
+Organist of Reikjavik 100
+From the school-revenues
+ The bishop receives 1200
+ The teachers at the high
+school:
+ The teacher of theology 800
+ The head assistant, besides 500
+free lodging
+ The second assistant 500
+ House-rent 50
+ The third assistant 500
+ House-rent 50
+ The resident at the school 170
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF INVERTEBRATED ANIMALS collected in Iceland
+
+
+1. CRUSTACEA.
+
+Pagarus Bernhardus, _Linnaeus_.
+
+2. INSECTA.
+
+a. _Coleoptera_. Nebria rubripes, _Dejean_. Patrobus hyperboreus.
+Calathus melanocephalus, _Fabr_. Notiophilus aquaticus. Amara vulgaris,
+_Duftsihm_. Ptinus fur, _Linn_. Aphodius Lapponum, _Schh_.
+Otiorhynchus laevigatus, _Dhl_. Otiorhynchus Pinastri, _Fabr_.
+Otiorhynchus ovatus. Staphylinus maxillosus. Byrrhus pillula.
+
+b. _Neuroptera_. Limnophilus lineola, _Schrank_.
+
+c. _Hymenoptera_. Pimpla instigator, _Gravh_. Bombus subterraneus,
+_Linn_.
+
+d. _Lepidoptera_. Geometra russata, Hub. Geom. alche millata. Geom.
+spec. nov.
+
+e. _Diptera_. Tipula lunata, _Meig_. Scatophaga stercoraria. Musca
+vomitaria. Musca mortuorum. Helomyza serrata. Lecogaster islandicus,
+_Scheff_. {59} Anthomyia decolor, _Fallin_.
+
+
+
+LIST OF ICELANDIC PLANTS _collected by Ida Pfeiffer in the Summer of the
+year_ 1845
+
+
+_Felices_. Cystopteris fragilis.
+
+_Equisetaceae_. Equisetum Teltamegra.
+
+_Graminae_. Festuca uniglumis.
+
+_Cyperaceae_. Carea filiformis. Carea caespitosa. Eriophorum
+caespitosum.
+
+_Juncaceae_. Luzula spicata. Luzula campestris.
+
+_Salicineae_. Salix polaris.
+
+_Polygoneae_. Remux arifolus. Oxyria reniformes.
+
+_Plumbagineae_. Armeria alpina (in the interior mountainous districts).
+
+_Compositae_. Chrysanthemum maritimum (on the sea-shore, and on marshy
+fields). Hieracium alpinum (on grassy plains). Taraxacum alpinum.
+Erigeron uniflorum (west of Havenfiord, on rocky soil).
+
+_Rubiaceae_. Gallium pusillum. Gallium verum.
+
+_Labiatae_. Thynus serpyllum.
+
+_Asperifoliae_. Myosotis alpestris. Myosotis scorpioicles.
+
+_Scrophularineae_. Bartsia alpina (in the interior north-western
+valleys). Rhinanthus alpestris.
+
+_Utricularieae_. Pinguicula alpina. Pinguicula vulgaris.
+
+_Umbelliferae_. Archangelica officinalis (Havenfiord).
+
+_Saxifrageae_. Saxifraga caespitosa (the real Linnaean plant: on rocks
+round Hecla).
+
+_Ranunculaceae_. Ranunculus auricomus. Ranunculus nivalis. Thalictrum
+alpinum (growing between lava, near Reikjavik). Caltha palustris.
+
+_Cruciferae_. Draba verna. Cardamine pratensis.
+
+_Violariceae_. Viola hirta.
+
+_Caryophylleae_. Sagina stricta. Cerastium semidecandrum. Lepigonum
+rubrum. Silene maritima. Lychnis alpina (on the mountain-fields round
+Reikjavik).
+
+_Empetreae_. Empetrum nigrum.
+
+_Geraniaceae_. Geranium sylvaticum (in pits near Thingvalla).
+
+_Troseaceae_. Parnassia palustris.
+
+_OEnothereae_. Epilobium latifolium (in clefts of the mountain at the
+foot of Hecla). Epilobium alpinum (in Reiker valley, west of
+Havenfiord).
+
+_Rosaceae_. Rubus arcticus. Potentilla anserina. Potentilla
+gronlandica (on rocks near Kallmanstunga and Kollismola). Alchemilla
+montana. Sanguisorba officinalis. Geum rivale. Dryas octopela (near
+Havenfiord).
+
+_Papilionaceae_. Trifolium repens.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+{1} In this Gutenberg eText only Madame Pfeiffer's work appears--DP.
+
+{2} Madame Pfeiffer's first journey was to the Holy Land in 1842; and on
+her return from Iceland she started in 1846 on a "Journey round the
+World," from which she returned in the end of 1848. This adventurous
+lady is now (1853) travelling among the islands of the Eastern
+Archipelago.
+
+{3} A florin is worth about 2_s._ 1_d._; sixty kreutzers go to a florin.
+
+{4} At Kuttenberg the first silver groschens were coined, in the year
+1300. The silver mines are now exhausted, though other mines, of copper,
+zinc, &c. are wrought in the neighbourhood. The population is only half
+of what it once was. --ED.
+
+{5} The expression of Madame Pfeiffer's about Frederick "paying his
+score to the Austrians," is somewhat vague. The facts are these. In
+1757 Frederick the Great of Prussia invaded Bohemia, and laid siege to
+Prague. Before this city an Austrian army lay, who were attacked with
+great impetuosity by Frederick, and completely defeated. But the town
+was defended with great valour; and during the time thus gained the
+Austrian general Daun raised fresh troops, with which he took the field
+at Collin. Here he was attacked by Frederick, who was routed, and all
+his baggage and cannon captured. This loss was "paying his score;" and
+the defeat was so complete, that the great monarch sat down by the side
+of a fountain, and tracing figures in the sand, was lost for a long time
+in meditation on the means to be adopted to retrieve his fortune.
+
+{6} I mention this little incident to warn the traveller against parting
+with his effects.
+
+{7} The true version of this affair is as follows. John of Nepomuk was
+a priest serving under the Archbishop of Prague. The king, Wenceslaus,
+was a hasty, cruel tyrant, who was detested by all his subjects, and
+hated by the rest of Germany. Two priests were guilty of some crime, and
+one of the court chamberlains, acting under royal orders, caused the
+priests to be put to death. The archbishop, indignant at this, placed
+the chamberlain under an interdict. This so roused the king that he
+attempted to seize the archbishop, who took refuge in flight. John of
+Nepomuk, however, and another priest, were seized and put to the torture
+to confess what were the designs of the archbishop. The king seems to
+have suspected that the queen was in some way connected with the line of
+conduct pursued by the archbishop. John of Nepomuk, however, refused,
+even though the King with his own hand burned him with a torch.
+Irritated by his obstinate silence, the king caused the poor monk to be
+cast over the bridge into the Moldau. This monk was afterwards
+canonised, and made the patron saint of bridges.--ED.
+
+{8} Albert von Wallenstein (or Waldstein), the famous Duke of Friedland,
+is celebrated as one of the ablest commanders of the imperial forces
+during the protracted religious contest known in German history as the
+"Thirty Years' War." During its earlier period Wallenstein greatly
+distinguished himself, and was created by the Emperor Ferdinand Duke of
+Friedland and generalissimo of the imperial forces. In the course of a
+few months Wallenstein raised an army of forty thousand men in the
+Emperor's service. The strictest discipline was preserved _within_ his
+camp, but his troops supported themselves by a system of rapine and
+plunder unprecedented even in those days of military license. Merit was
+rewarded with princely munificence, and the highest offices were within
+the reach of every common soldier who distinguished himself;--trivial
+breaches of discipline were punished with death. The dark and ambitious
+spirit of Wallenstein would not allow him to rest satisfied with the
+rewards and dignities heaped upon him by his imperial master. He
+temporised and entered into negotiations with the enemy; and during an
+interview with a Swedish general (Arnheim), is even said to have proposed
+an alliance to "hunt the Emperor to the devil." It is supposed that he
+aspired to the sovereignty of Bohemia. Ferdinand was informed of the
+ambitious designs of his general, and at length determined that
+Wallenstein should die. He despatched one of his generals, Gallas, to
+the commander-in-chief, with a mandate depriving him of his dignity of
+generalissimo, and nominating Gallas as his successor. Surprised before
+his plans were ripe, and deserted by many on whose support he had relied,
+Wallenstein retired hastily upon Egra. During a banquet in the castle,
+three of his generals who remained faithful to their leader were murdered
+in the dead of night. Roused by the noise, Wallenstein leapt from his
+bed, and encountered three soldiers who had been hired to despatch him.
+Speechless with astonishment and indignation, he stretched forth his
+arms, and receiving in his breast the stroke of a halbert, fell dead
+without a groan, in the fifty-first year of his age.
+
+The following anecdote, curiously illustrative of the state of affairs in
+Wallenstein's camp, is related by Schiller in his _History of the Thirty
+Years' War_, a work containing a full account of the life and actions of
+this extraordinary man. "The extortions of Wallenstein's soldiers from
+the peasants had at one period reached such a pitch, that severe
+penalties were denounced against all marauders; and every soldier who
+should be convicted of theft was threatened with a halter. Shortly
+afterwards, it chanced that Wallenstein himself met a soldier straying in
+the field, whom he caused to be seized, as having violated the law, and
+condemned to the gallows without a trial, by his usual word of doom: "Let
+the rascal be hung!" The soldier protested, and proved his innocence.
+"Then let them hang the innocent," cried the inhuman Wallenstein; "and
+the guilty will tremble the more." The preparations for carrying this
+sentence into effect had already commenced, when the soldier, who saw
+himself lost without remedy, formed the desperate resolution that he
+would not die unrevenged. Rushing furiously upon his leader, he was
+seized and disarmed by the bystanders before he could carry his intention
+into effect. "Now let him go," said Wallenstein; "it will excite terror
+enough.""--ED.
+
+{9} Poniatowski was the commander of the Polish legion in the armies of
+Napoleon, by whom he was highly respected. At the battle of Leipzig,
+fought in October 1813, Poniatowski and Marshal MacDonald were appointed
+to command the rear of Napoleon's army, which, after two days hard
+fighting, was compelled to retreat before the Allies. These generals
+defended the retreat of the army so gallantly, that all the French
+troops, except those under their immediate command, had evacuated the
+town. The rear-guard was preparing to follow, when the only bridge over
+the Elster that remained open to them was destroyed, through some
+mistake. This effectually barred the escape of the rear of Napoleon's
+army. A few, among whom was Marshal MacDonald, succeeded in swimming
+across; but Poniatowski, after making a brave resistance, and refusing to
+surrender, was drowned in making the same attempt.--ED.
+
+{10} Leipzig has long been famous as the chief book-mart of Germany. At
+the great Easter meetings, publishers from all the different states
+assemble at the "Buchhandler Borse," and a large amount of business is
+done. The fairs of Leipzig have done much towards establishing the
+position of this city as one of the first trading towns in Germany. They
+take place three times annually: at New-year, at Easter, and at
+Michaelmas; but the Easter fair is by far the most important. These
+commercial meetings last about three weeks, and during this time the town
+presents a most animated appearance, as the streets are thronged with the
+costumes of almost every nation, the smart dress of the Tyrolese
+contrasting gaily with the sombre garb of the Polish Jews. The amount of
+business transacted at these fairs is very considerable; on several
+occasions, above twenty thousand dealers have assembled. The trade is
+principally in woollen cloths; but lighter wares, and even ornaments of
+every description, are sold to a large extent. The manner in which every
+available place is taken advantage of is very curious: archways, cellars,
+passages, and courtyards are alike filled with merchandise, and the
+streets are at times so crowded as to be almost impassable. When the
+three weeks have passed, the wooden booths which have been erected in the
+market-place and the principal streets are taken down, the buyers and
+sellers vanish together, and the visitor would scarcely recognise in the
+quiet streets around him the bustling busy city of a few days ago.--ED.
+
+{11} The fire broke out on 4th May 1842, and raged with the utmost fury
+for three days. Whole streets were destroyed, and at least 2000 houses
+burned to the ground. Nearly half a million of money was raised in
+foreign countries to assist in rebuilding the city, of which about a
+tenth was contributed by Britain. Such awful fires, fearful though they
+are at the time, seem absolutely necessary to great towns, as they cause
+needful improvements to be made, which the indolence or selfishness of
+the inhabitants would otherwise prevent. There is not a great city that
+has not at one time or another suffered severely from fire, and has risen
+out of the ruins greater than before.--ED.
+
+{12} There are no docks at Hamburgh, consequently all the vessels lie in
+the river Elbe, and both receive and discharge their cargoes there.
+Madame Pfeiffer, however, is mistaken in supposing that only London could
+show a picture of so many ships and so much commercial activity
+surpassing that of Hamburgh. Such a picture, more impressive even than
+that seen in the Elbe, is exhibited every day in the Mersey or the
+Hudson.--ED.
+
+{13} Kiel, however, is a place of considerable trade; and doubtless the
+reason why Madame Pfeiffer saw so few vessels at it was precisely the
+same reason why she saw so many at Hamburgh. Kiel contains an excellent
+university.--ED.
+
+{14} At sea I calculate by sea-miles, of which sixty go to a degree.
+
+{15} This great Danish sculptor was born of poor parents at Copenhagen,
+on the 19th November, 1770; his father was an Icelander, and earned his
+living by carving figure-heads for ships. Albert, or "Bertel," as he is
+more generally called, was accustomed during his youth to assist his
+father in his labours on the wharf. At an early age he visited the
+Academy at Copenhagen, where his genius soon began to make itself
+conspicuous. At the age of sixteen he had won a silver, and at twenty a
+gold medal. Two years later he carried off the "great" gold medal, and
+was sent to study abroad at the expense of the Academy. In 1797 we find
+him practising his art at Rome under the eye of Zoega the Dane, who does
+not, however, seem to have discovered indications of extraordinary genius
+in the labours of his young countryman. But a work was soon to appear
+which should set all questions as to Thorwaldsen's talent for ever at
+rest. In 1801 he produced his celebrated statue of "Jason," which was at
+once pronounced by the great Canova to be "a work in a new and a grand
+style." After this period the path of fame lay open before the young
+sculptor; his bas-reliefs of "Summer" and "Autumn," the "Dance of the
+Muses," "Cupid and Psyche," and numerous other works, followed each other
+in rapid succession; and at length, in 1812, Thorwaldsen produced his
+extraordinary work, "The Triumph of Alexander." In 1819 Thorwaldsen
+returned rich and famous to the city he had quitted as a youth
+twenty-three years before; he was received with great honour, and many
+feasts and rejoicings were held to celebrate his arrival. After a
+sojourn of a year Thorwaldsen again visited Rome, where he continued his
+labours until 1838, when, wealthy and independent, he resolved to rest in
+his native country. This time his welcome to Copenhagen was even more
+enthusiastic than in 1819. The whole shore was lined with spectators,
+and amid thundering acclamations the horses were unharnessed from his
+carriage, and the sculptor was drawn in triumph by the people to his
+_atelier_. During the remainder of his life Thorwaldsen passed much of
+his time on the island of Nyso, where most of his latest works were
+executed. On Sunday, March 9th, 1842, he had been conversing with a
+circle of friends in perfect health. Halm's tragedy of _Griselda_ was
+announced for the evening, and Thorwaldsen proceeded to the theatre to
+witness the performance. During the overture he rose to allow a stranger
+to pass, then resumed his seat, and a moment afterwards his head sunk on
+his breast--he was dead!
+
+His funeral was most sumptuous. Rich and poor united to do honour to the
+memory of the great man, who had endeared himself to them by his virtues
+as by his genius. The crown-prince followed the coffin, and the people
+of Copenhagen stood in two long rows, and uncovered their heads as the
+coffin of the sculptor was carried past. The king himself took part in
+the solemnity. At the time of his decease Thorwaldsen had completed his
+seventy-second year.--ED.
+
+{16} Tycho de Brahe was a distinguished astronomer, who lived between
+1546 and 1601. He was a native of Denmark. His whole life may be said
+to have been devoted to astronomy. A small work that he published when a
+young man brought him under the notice of the King of Denmark, with whose
+assistance he constructed, on the small island of Hulln, a few miles
+north of Copenhagen, the celebrated Observatory of Uranienburg. Here,
+seated in "the ancient chair" referred to in the text, and surrounded by
+numerous assistants, he directed for seventeen years a series of
+observations, that have been found extremely accurate and useful. On the
+death of his patron he retired to Prague in Bohemia, where he was
+employed by Rodolph II. then Emperor of Germany. Here he was assisted by
+the great Kepler, who, on Tycho's death in 1601, succeeded him.--ED.
+
+{17} The fisheries of Iceland have been very valuable, and indeed the
+chief source of the commerce of the country ever since it was discovered.
+The fish chiefly caught are cod and the tusk or cat-fish. They are
+exported in large quantities, cured in various ways. Since the discovery
+of Newfoundland, however, the fisheries of Iceland have lost much of
+their importance. So early as 1415, the English sent fishing vessels to
+the Icelandic coast, and the sailors who were on board, it would appear,
+behaved so badly to the natives that Henry V. had to make some
+compensation to the King of Denmark for their conduct. The greatest
+number of fishing vessels from England that ever visited Iceland was
+during the reign of James I., whose marriage with the sister of the
+Danish king might probably make England at the time the most favoured
+nation. It was in his time that an English pirate, "Gentleman John," as
+he was called, committed great ravages in Iceland, for which James had
+afterwards to make compensation. The chief markets for the fish are in
+the Catholic countries of Europe. In the seventeenth century, a great
+traffic in fish was carried on between Iceland and Spain.--ED.
+
+{18} The dues charged by the Danish Government on all vessels passing
+through the Sound have been levied since 1348, and therefore enjoy a
+prescriptive right of more than five hundred years. They bring to the
+Danish Government a yearly revenue of about a quarter of a million; and,
+in consideration of the dues, the Government has to support certain
+lighthouses, and otherwise to render safe and easy the navigation of this
+great entrance to the Baltic. Sound-dues were first paid in the palmy
+commercial days of the Hanseatic League. That powerful combination of
+merchants had suffered severely from the ravages of Danish pirates, royal
+and otherwise; but ultimately they became so powerful that the rich
+merchant could beat the royal buccaneer, and tame his ferocity so
+effectually as to induce him to build and maintain those beacon-lights on
+the shores of the Sound, for whose use they and all nations and merchants
+after them have agreed to pay certain duties.--ED.
+
+{19} The Feroe Islands consist of a great many islets, some of them mere
+rocks, lying about halfway between the north coast of Scotland and
+Iceland. At one time they belonged to Norway, but came into the
+possession of Denmark at the same time as Iceland. They are exceedingly
+mountainous, some of the mountains attaining an elevation of about 2800
+feet. The largest town or village does not contain more than 1500 or
+1600 inhabitants. The population live chiefly on the produce of their
+large flocks of sheep, and on the down procured, often at great risk to
+human life, from the eider-duck and other birds by which the island is
+frequented.--ED.
+
+{20} I should be truly sorry if, in this description of our "life aboard
+ship," I had said any thing which could give offence to my kind friend
+Herr Knudson. I have, however, presumed that every one is aware that the
+mode of life at sea is different to life in families. I have only to
+add, that Herr Knudson lived most agreeably not only in Copenhagen, but
+what is far more remarkable, in Iceland also, and was provided with every
+comfort procurable in the largest European towns.
+
+{21} It is not only at sea that ingenious excuses for drinking are
+invented. The lovers of good or bad liquor on land find these reasons as
+"plenty as blackberries," and apply them with a marvellous want of stint
+or scruple. In warm climates the liquor is drank to keep the drinker
+cool, in cold to keep him warm; in health to prevent him from being sick,
+in sickness to bring him back to health. Very seldom is the real reason,
+"because I like it," given; and all these excuses and reasons must be
+regarded as implying some lingering sense of shame at the act, and as
+forming part of "the homage that vice always pays to virtue."--ED.
+
+{22} The sailors call those waves "Spanish" which, coming from the west,
+distinguish themselves by their size.
+
+{23} These islands form a rocky group, only one of which is inhabited,
+lying about fifteen miles from the coast. They are said to derive their
+name from some natives of Ireland, called West-men, who visited Iceland
+shortly after its discovery by the Norwegians. In this there is nothing
+improbable, for we know that during the ninth and tenth centuries the
+Danes and Normans, called Easterlings, made many descents on the Irish
+coast; and one Norwegian chief is reported to have assumed sovereign
+power in Ireland about the year 866, though he was afterwards deposed,
+and flung into a lough, where he was drowned: rather an ignominious death
+for a "sea-king."--ED.
+
+{24} This work, which Madame Pfeiffer does not praise too highly, was
+first published in 1810. After passing through two editions, it was
+reprinted in 1841, at a cheap price, in the valuable people's editions of
+standard works, published by Messrs. Chambers of Edinburgh.
+
+{25} It is related of Ingold that he carried with him on his voyage the
+door of his former house in Ireland, and that when he approached the
+coast he cast it into the sea, watching the point of land which it
+touched; and on that land he fixed his future home. This land is the
+same on which the town of Reikjavik now stands. These old sea-kings,
+like the men of Athens, were "in all things too superstitious."--ED.
+
+{26} These sea-rovers, that were to the nations of Europe during the
+middle ages what the Danes, Norwegians, and other northmen were at an
+earlier period, enjoyed at this time the full flow of their lawless
+prosperity. Their insolence and power were so great that many nations,
+our own included, were glad to purchase, by a yearly payment, exemption
+from the attacks of these sea-rovers. The Americans paid this tribute so
+late as 1815. The unfortunate Icelanders who were carried off in the
+seventeenth century nearly all died as captives in Algiers. At the end
+of ten years they were liberated; but of the four hundred only
+thirty-seven were alive when the joyful intelligence reached the place of
+their captivity; and of these twenty-four died before rejoining their
+native land.--ED.
+
+{27} This town, the capital of Iceland, and the seat of government, is
+built on an arm of the sea called the Faxefiord, in the south-west part
+of the island. The resident population does not exceed 500, but this is
+greatly increased during the annual fairs. It consists mainly of two
+streets at right angles to each other. It contains a large church built
+of stone, roofed with tiles; an observatory; the residences of the
+governor and the bishop, and the prison, which is perhaps the most
+conspicuous building in the town.--ED.
+
+{28} As Madame Pfeiffer had thus no opportunity of attending a ball in
+Iceland, the following description of one given by Sir George Mackenzie
+may be interesting to the reader.
+
+"We gave a ball to the ladies of Reikjavik and the neighbourhood. The
+company began to assemble about nine o'clock. We were shewn into a small
+low-roofed room, in which were a number of men, but to my surprise I saw
+no females. We soon found them, however, in one adjoining, where it is
+the custom for them to wait till their partners go to hand them out. On
+entering this apartment, I felt considerable disappointment at not
+observing a single woman dressed in the Icelandic costume. The dresses
+had some resemblance to those of English chambermaids, but were not so
+smart. An old lady, the wife of the man who kept the tavern, was habited
+like the pictures of our great-grandmothers. Some time after the dancing
+commenced, the bishop's lady, and two others, appeared in the proper
+dress of the country.
+
+"We found ourselves extremely awkward in dancing what the ladies were
+pleased to call English country dances. The music, which came from a
+solitary ill-scraped fiddle, accompanied by the rumbling of the same
+half-rotten drum that had summoned the high court of justice, and by the
+jingling of a rusty triangle, was to me utterly unintelligible. The
+extreme rapidity with which it was necessary to go through many
+complicated evolutions in proper time, completely bewildered us; and our
+mistakes, and frequent collisions with our neighbours, afforded much
+amusement to our fair partners, who found it for a long time
+impracticable to keep us in the right track. When allowed to breathe a
+little, we had an opportunity of remarking some singularities in the
+state of society and manners among the Danes of Reikjavik. While
+unengaged in the dance, the men drink punch, and walk about with
+tobacco-pipes in their mouths, spitting plentifully on the floor. The
+unrestrained evacuation of saliva seems to be a fashion all over Iceland;
+but whether the natives learned it from the Danes, or the Danes from the
+natives, we did not ascertain. Several ladies whose virtue could not
+bear a very strict scrutiny were pointed out to us.
+
+"During the dances, tea and coffee were handed about; and negus and punch
+were ready for those who chose to partake of them. A cold supper was
+provided, consisting of hams, beef, cheese, &c., and wine. While at
+table, several of the ladies sang, and acquitted themselves tolerably
+well. But I could not enjoy the performance, on account of the incessant
+talking, which was as fashionable a rudeness in Iceland as it is now in
+Britain. This, however, was not considered as in the least unpolite.
+One of the songs was in praise of the donors of the entertainment; and,
+during the chorus, the ceremony of touching each other's glasses was
+performed. After supper, waltzes were danced, in a style that reminded
+me of soldiers marching in cadence to the dead march in Saul. Though
+there was no need of artificial light, a number of candles were placed in
+the rooms. When the company broke up, about three o'clock, the sun was
+high above the horizon."
+
+{29} A man of eighty years of age is seldom seen on the
+island.--_Kerguelen_.
+
+{30} Kerguelen (writing in 1768) says: "They live during the summer
+principally on cod's heads. A common family make a meal of three or four
+cods' heads boiled in sea-water."--ED.
+
+{31} This bakehouse is the only one in Iceland, and produces as good
+bread and biscuit as any that can be procured in Denmark. [In
+Kerguelen's time (1768) bread was very uncommon in Iceland. It was
+brought from Copenhagen, and consisted of broad thin cakes, or
+sea-biscuits, made of rye-flour, and extremely black.--ED.]
+
+{32} In all high latitudes fat oily substances are consumed to a vast
+extent by the natives. The desire seems to be instinctive, not acquired.
+A different mode of living would undoubtedly render them more susceptible
+to the cold of these inclement regions. Many interesting anecdotes are
+related of the fondness of these hyperborean races for a kind of food
+from which we would turn in disgust. Before gas was introduced into
+Edinburgh, and the city was lighted by oil-lamps, several Russian
+noblemen visited that metropolis; and it is said that their longing for
+the luxury of train-oil became one evening so intense, that, unable to
+procure the delicacy in any other way, they emptied the oil-lamps. Parry
+relates that when he was wintering in the Arctic regions, one of the
+seamen, who had been smitten with the charms of an Esquimaux lady, wished
+to make her a present, and knowing the taste peculiar to those regions,
+he gave her with all due honours a pound of candles, six to the pound!
+The present was so acceptable to the lady, that she eagerly devoured the
+lot in the presence of her wondering admirer.--ED.
+
+{33} An American travelling in Iceland in 1852 thus describes, in a
+letter to the _Boston Post_, the mode of travelling:--"All travel is on
+horseback. Immense numbers of horses are raised in the country, and they
+are exceedingly cheap. As for travelling on foot, even short journeys,
+no one ever thinks of it. The roads are so bad for walking, and
+generally so good for riding that shoe-leather, to say nothing of
+fatigue, would cost nearly as much as horse-flesh. Their horses are
+small, compact, hardy little animals, a size larger than Shetland ponies,
+but rarely exceeding from 12 or 13.5 hands high. A stranger in
+travelling must always have a 'guide,' and if he does go equipped for a
+good journey and intends to make good speed, he wants as many as six
+horses; one for himself, one for the guide, one for the luggage, and
+three relay horses. Then when one set of horses are tired the saddles
+are exchanged to the others. The relay horses are tied together and are
+either led or driven before the others. A tent is often carried, unless
+a traveller chooses to chance it for his lodgings. Such an article as an
+hotel is not kept in Iceland out of the capital. You must also carry
+your provisions with you, as you will be able to get but little on your
+route. Plenty of milk can be had, and some fresh-water fish. The
+luggage is carried in trunks that are hung on each side of the horse, on
+a rude frame that serves as a pack-saddle. Under this, broad pieces of
+turf are placed to prevent galling the horse's back."
+
+{34} The down of the eider-duck forms a most important and valuable
+article of Icelandic commerce. It is said that the weight of down
+procurable from each nest is about half a pound, which is reduced
+one-half by cleansing. The down is sold at about twelve shillings per
+pound, so that the produce of each nest is about three shillings. The
+eider-duck is nearly as large as the common goose; and some have been
+found on the Fern Islands, off the coast of Northumberland.--ED.
+
+{35} The same remark applies with equal force to many people who are not
+Icelanders. It was once the habit among a portion of the population of
+Lancashire, on returning from market, to carry their goods in a bag
+attached to one end of a string slung over their shoulders, which was
+balanced by a bag containing a stone at the other. Some time ago, it was
+pointed out to a worthy man thus returning from market, that it would be
+easier for him to throw away the stone, and make half of his load balance
+the other half, but the advice was rejected with disdain; the plan he had
+adopted was that of his forefathers, and he would on no account depart
+from it.--ED.
+
+{36} The description of the Wolf's Hollow occurs in the second act of
+_Der Freyschutz_, when Rodolph sings:
+
+ "How horrid, dark, and wild, and drear,
+ Doth this gaping gulf appear!
+ It seems the hue of hell to wear.
+ The bellowing thunder bursts yon clouds,
+ The moon with blood has stained her light!
+ What forms are those in misty shrouds,
+ That stalk before my sight?
+ And now, hush! hush!
+ The owl is hooting in yon bush;
+ How yonder oak-tree's blasted arms
+ Upon me seem to frown!
+ My heart recoils, but all alarms
+ Are vain: fate calls, I must down, down."
+
+{37} The reader must bear in mind that, during the season of which I
+speak, there is no twilight, much less night, in Iceland.
+
+{38} The springs of Carlsbad are said to have been unknown until about
+five hundred years ago, when a hunting-dog belonging to one of the
+emperors of Germany fell in, and by his howling attracted the hunters to
+the spot. The temperature of the chief spring is 165 degrees.--ED.
+
+{39} History tells of this great Icelandic poet, that owing to his
+treachery the free island of Iceland came beneath the Norwegian sceptre.
+For this reason he could never appear in Iceland without a strong guard,
+and therefore visited the Allthing under the protection of a small army
+of 600 men. Being at length surprised by his enemies in his house at
+Reikiadal, he fell beneath their blows, after a short and ineffectual
+resistance. [Snorri Sturluson, the most distinguished name of which
+Iceland can boast, was born, in 1178, at Hoam. In his early years he was
+remarkably fortunate in his worldly affairs. The fortune he derived from
+his father was small, but by means of a rich marriage, and by
+inheritance, he soon became proprietor of large estates in Iceland. Some
+writers say that his guard of 600 men, during his visit to the Allthing,
+was intended not as a defence, as indicated in Madame Pfeiffer's note,
+but for the purposes of display, and to impress the inhabitants with
+forcible ideas of his influence and power. He was invited to the court
+of the Norwegian king, and there he either promised or was bribed to
+bring Iceland under the Norwegian power. For this he has been greatly
+blamed, and stigmatised as a traitor; though it would appear from some
+historians that he only undertook to do by peaceable means what otherwise
+the Norwegian kings would have effected by force, and thus saved his
+country from a foreign invasion. But be this as it may, it is quite
+clear that he sunk in the estimation of his countrymen, and the feeling
+against him became so strong, that he was obliged to fly to Norway. He
+returned, however, in 1239, and in two years afterwards he was
+assassinated by his own son-in-law. The work by which he is chiefly
+known is the _Heimskringla_, or Chronicle of the Sea-Kings of Norway, one
+of the most valuable pieces of northern history, which has been admirably
+translated into English by Mr. Samuel Laing. This curious name of
+Heimskringla was given to the work because it contains the words with
+which begins, and means literally _the circle of the world_.--ED.]
+
+{40} A translation of this poem will be found in the Appendix. [Not
+included in this Gutenberg eText--DP]
+
+{41} In Iceland, as in Denmark, it is the custom to keep the dead a week
+above ground. It may be readily imagined that to a non-Icelandic sense
+of smell, it is an irksome task to be present at a burial from beginning
+to end, and especially in summer. But I will not deny that the continued
+sensation may have partly proceeded from imagination.
+
+{42} Every one in Iceland rides.
+
+{43} I cannot forbear mentioning a curious circumstance here. When I
+was at the foot of Mount Etna in 1842, the fiery element was calmed; some
+months after my departure it flamed with renewed force. When, on my
+return from Hecla, I came to Reikjavik, I said jocularly that it would be
+most strange if this Etna of the north should also have an eruption now.
+Scarcely had I left Iceland more than five weeks when an eruption, more
+violent than the former one, really took place. This circumstance is the
+more remarkable, as it had been in repose for eighty years, and was
+already looked upon as a burnt-out volcano. If I were to return to
+Iceland now, I should be looked upon as a prophetess of evil, and my life
+would scarcely be safe.
+
+{44} Every peasant in tolerably good circumstances carries a little tent
+with him when he leaves home for a few days. These tents are, at the
+utmost, three feet high, five or six feet long, and three broad.
+
+{45} "Though their poverty disables them from imitating the hospitality
+of their ancestors in all respects, yet the desire of doing it still
+exists: they cheerfully give away the little they have to spare, and
+express the utmost joy and satisfaction if you are pleased with the
+gift." _Uno von Troil_, 1772.--ED.
+
+{46} The presence of American ships in the port of Gottenburg is not to
+be wondered at, seeing that nearly three-fourths of all the iron exported
+from Gottenburg is to America.--ED.
+
+{47} "St. Stephen's steeple" is 450 feet high, being about 40 feet
+higher than St. Paul's, and forms part of St. Stephen's Cathedral in
+Vienna, a magnificent Gothic building, that dates as far back as the
+twelfth century. It has a great bell, that weighs about eighteen tons,
+being more than double the weight of the bell in St. Peter's at Rome, and
+four times the weight of the "Great Tom of Lincoln." The metal used
+consisted of cannons taken from the Turks during their memorable sieges
+of Vienna. The cathedral is 350 feet long and 200 wide, being less than
+St. Paul's in London, which is 510 feet long and 282 wide.--ED.
+
+{48} The _Storthing_ is the name given to the Norwegian parliament,
+which assembles once every three years at Christiania. The time and
+place of meeting are fixed by law, and the king has no power to prevent
+or postpone its assembly. It consists of about a hundred members, who
+divide themselves into two houses. The members must not be under thirty
+years of age, and must have lived for ten years in Norway. The electors
+are required to be twenty-five years of age, and to be either burgesses
+of a town, or to possess property of the annual value of 30_l._ The
+members must possess the same qualification. The members of the
+Storthing are usually plain-spoken, sensible men, who have no desire to
+shine as orators, but who despatch with great native sagacity the
+business brought before them. This Storthing is the most independent
+legislative assembly in Europe; for not only has the king no power to
+prevent its meeting at the appointed time, but should he refuse to assent
+to any laws that are passed, these laws come into force without his
+assent, provided they are passed by three successive parliaments.--ED.
+
+{49} The present king of Sweden and Norway is Oscar, one of the few
+fortunate scions of those lowly families that were raised to royal power
+and dignity by Napoleon. His father, Bernadotte, was the son of an
+advocate, and entered the French army as a common soldier; in that
+service he rose to the rank of marshal, and then became crown-prince, and
+ultimately king of Sweden. He died in 1844. The mother of Oscar was
+Desiree Clary, a sister of Julie Clary, wife of Joseph Bonaparte, the
+elder brother of Napoleon. This lady was asked in marriage by Napoleon
+himself, but her father refused his assent; and instead of becoming an
+unfortunate empress of France, she became a fortunate queen of Sweden and
+Norway. Oscar was born at Paris in 1799, and received his education
+chiefly in Hanover. He accompanied his father to Sweden in 1810, and
+ascended the throne on his father's death in 1844. In 1824 he married
+Josephine Beauharnois, daughter of Prince Eugene, and granddaughter of
+the brilliant and fascinating Josephine, the first and best wife of
+Napoleon. Oscar is much beloved by his subjects; his administration is
+mild, just, and equable; and his personal abilities and acquirements are
+far beyond the average of crowned heads.--ED.
+
+{50} Bergen is a town of about twenty-five thousand inhabitants,
+situated near the Kons Fiord, on the west coast of Norway, and distant
+about 350 miles from Christiania. It is the seat of a bishopric, and a
+place of very considerable trade, its exports being chiefly fish. It has
+given its name to a county and a township in the state of New Jersey.
+There are three other Bergens,--one in the island of Rugen, one in the
+Netherlands, and another in the electorate of Hesse.
+
+{51} _Kulle_ is the Swedish for hill.
+
+{52} Delekarlien is a Swedish province, situated ninety or one hundred
+miles north of Stockholm.
+
+{53} The family of Sturre was one of the most distinguished in Sweden.
+Sten Sturre introduced printing into Sweden, founded the University of
+Upsala, and induced many learned men to come over. He was mortally
+wounded in a battle against the Danes, and died in 1520.
+
+His successors as governors, Suante, Nilson Sturre, and his son, Sten
+Sturre the younger, still live in the memory of the Swedish nation, and
+are honoured for their patriotism and valour.
+
+{54} The University of Upsala is the most celebrated in the north. It
+owes its origin to Sten Sturre, the regent of the kingdom, by whom it was
+founded in 1476, on the same plan as the University of Paris. Through
+the influence of the Jesuits, who wished to establish a new academy in
+Stockholm, it was dissolved in 1583, but re-established in 1598.
+Gustavus Vasa, who was educated at Upsala, gave it many privileges, and
+much encouragement; and Gustavus Adolphus reconstituted it, and give it
+very liberal endowments. There are twenty-four professors, and the
+number of students is between four and five hundred.--ED.
+
+{55} See novel of _Ivar_, _the Skjuts Boy_, by Miss Emilie Carlen.
+
+{56} At Calmar was concluded, in 1397, the famous treaty which bears its
+name, by which Denmark, Sweden, and Norway were united under one crown,
+that crown placed nominally on the head of Eric Duke of Pomerania, but
+virtually on that of his aunt Margaret, who has received the name of "the
+Semiramis of the North." --ED.
+
+{57} There is now a railway direct from Hamburgh to Berlin.--ED.
+
+{58} A florin is about two shillings sterling.--_Tr._
+
+{59} Herr T. Scheffer of Modling, near Vienna, gives the following
+characteristic of this new dipteral animal, which belongs to the family
+muscidae, and resembles the species borborus:
+
+_Antennae_ deflexae, breves, triarticulatae, articulo ultimo phoereco;
+seda nuda.
+
+_Hypoctoma_ subprominulum, fronte lata, setosa. _Oculi_ rotundi, remoti.
+Abdomen quinque annulatum, dorso nudo. _Tarsi_ simplices. _Alae_
+incumbentes, abdomine longiores, nervo primo simplici.
+
+Niger, abdomine nitido, antennis pedibusque rufopiceis.
+
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg Etext Visit to Iceland, by Madame Ida Pfeiffer
+#1 in our series by Madame Ida Pfeiffer
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+A Visit to Iceland and the Scandinavian North
+Translated from German
+
+by Madame Ida Pfeiffer
+
+September, 1999 [Etext #1894]
+
+
+Project Gutenberg Etext Visit to Iceland, by Madame Ida Pfeiffer
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+This etext was prepared by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk,
+from the 1853 Ingram, Cooke, and Co. edition. Second proofread by
+Mike Ruffell.
+
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+
+
+
+A Visit to Iceland and the Scandinavian North
+Translated from German
+
+by Madame Ida Pfeiffer
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION
+
+
+
+The success which attended the publication in this Series of
+Illustrated Works of A Woman's Journey round the World, has induced
+the publication of the present volume on a country so little known
+as Iceland, and about which so little recent information exists.
+
+The translation has been carefully made, expressly for this Series,
+from the original work published at Vienna; and the Editor has added
+a great many notes, wherever they seemed necessary to elucidate the
+text.
+
+In addition to the matter which appeared in the original work, the
+present volume contains a translation of a valuable Essay on
+Icelandic poetry, by M. Bergmann; a translation of an Icelandic
+poem, the 'Voluspa;' a brief sketch of Icelandic History; and a
+translation of Schiller's ballad, 'The Diver,' which is prominently
+alluded to by Madame Pfeiffer in her description of the Geysers. {1}
+
+The Illustrations have been printed in tints, so as to make the work
+uniform with the Journey round the World.
+
+London, August 1, 1852.
+
+
+
+AUTHOR'S PREFACE
+
+
+
+"Another journey--a journey, moreover, in regions which every one
+would rather avoid than seek. This woman only undertakes these
+journeys to attract attention."
+
+"The first journey, for a woman ALONE, was certainly rather a bold
+proceeding. Yet in that instance she might still have been excused.
+Religious motives may perhaps have actuated her; and when this is
+the case, people often go through incredible things. At present,
+however, we can see no just reason which could excuse an undertaking
+of this description."
+
+Thus, and perhaps more harshly still, will the majority judge me.
+And yet they will do me a grievous wrong. I am surely simple and
+harmless enough, and should have fancied any thing in the world
+rather than that it would ever be my fate to draw upon myself in any
+degree the notice of the public. I will merely indicate, as briefly
+as may be, my character and circumstances, and then I have no doubt
+my conduct will lose its appearance of eccentricity, and seem
+perfectly natural.
+
+When I was but a little child, I had already a strong desire to see
+the world. Whenever I met a travelling-carriage, I would stop
+involuntarily, and gaze after it until it had disappeared; I used
+even to envy the postilion, for I thought he also must have
+accomplished the whole long journey.
+
+As I grew to the age of from ten to twelve years, nothing gave me so
+much pleasure as the perusal of voyages and travels. I ceased,
+indeed, to envy the postilions, but envied the more every navigator
+and naturalist.
+
+Frequently my eyes would fill with tears when, having ascended a
+mountain, I saw others towering before me, and could not gain the
+summit.
+
+I made several journeys with my parents, and, after my marriage,
+with my husband; and only settled down when it became necessary that
+my two boys should visit particular schools. My husband's affairs
+demanded his entire attention, partly in Lemberg, partly in Vienna.
+He therefore confided the education and culture of the two boys
+entirely to my care; for he knew my firmness and perseverance in all
+I undertook, and doubted not that I would be both father and mother
+to his children.
+
+When my sons' education had been completed, and I was living in
+peaceful retirement, the dreams and aspirations of my youth
+gradually awoke once more. I thought of strange manners and
+customs, of distant regions, where a new sky would be above me, and
+new ground beneath my feet. I pictured to myself the supreme
+happiness of treading the land once hallowed by the presence of our
+Saviour, and at length made up my mind to travel thither.
+
+As dangers and difficulties rose before my mind, I endeavoured to
+wean myself from the idea I had formed--but in vain. For privation
+I cared but little; my health was good and my frame hardy: I did
+not fear death. And moreover, as I was born in the last century, I
+could travel ALONE. Thus every objection was overcome; every thing
+had been duly weighed and considered. I commenced my journey to
+Palestine with a feeling of perfect rapture; and behold, I returned
+in safety. I now feel persuaded that I am neither tempting
+Providence, nor justly incurring the imputation of wishing to be
+talked about, in following the bent of my inclinations, and looking
+still further about me in the world I chose Iceland for my
+destination, because I hoped there to find Nature in a garb such as
+she wears nowhere else. I feel so completely happy, so brought into
+communion with my Maker, when I contemplate sublime natural
+phenomena, that in my eyes no degree of toil or difficulty is too
+great a price at which to purchase such perfect enjoyment.
+
+And should death overtake me sooner or later during my wanderings, I
+shall await his approach in all resignation, and be deeply grateful
+to the Almighty for the hours of holy beauty in which I have lived
+and gazed upon His wonders.
+
+And now, dear reader, I would beg thee not to be angry with me for
+speaking so much of myself; it is only because this love of
+travelling does not, according to established notions, seem proper
+for one of my sex, that I have allowed my feelings to speak in my
+defence.
+
+Judge me, therefore, not too harshly; but rather grant me the
+enjoyment of a pleasure which hurts no one, while it makes me happy.
+
+THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+VISIT TO ICELAND
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+
+In the year 1845 I undertook another journey; {2} a journey,
+moreover, to the far North. Iceland was one of those regions
+towards which, from the earliest period of my consciousness, I had
+felt myself impelled. In this country, stamped as it is by Nature
+with features so peculiar, as probably to have no counterpart on the
+face of the globe, I hoped to see things which should fill me with
+new and inexpressible astonishment. How deeply grateful do I feel
+to Thee, O Thou that hast vouchsafed to me to behold the fulfilment
+of these my cherished dreams!
+
+The parting from all my dear ones had this time far less bitterness;
+I had found by experience, that a woman of an energetic mind can
+find her way through the world as well as a man, and that good
+people are to be met with every where. To this was added the
+reflection, that the hardships of my present voyage would be of
+short duration, and that five or six months might see me restored to
+my family.
+
+I left Vienna at five o'clock on the morning of the tenth of April.
+As the Danube had lately caused some devastations, on which occasion
+the railroad had not entirely escaped, we rode for the first four
+miles, as far as Florisdorf, in an omnibus--not the most agreeable
+mode of travelling. Our omnibuses are so small and narrow, that one
+would suppose they were built for the exclusive accommodation of
+consumptive subjects, and not for healthy, and in some cases portly
+individuals, whose bulk is further increased by a goodly assemblage
+of cloaks, furs, and overcoats.
+
+At the barriers a new difficulty arose. We delivered up our pass-
+warrants (passirscheine) in turn, with the exception of one young
+man, who was quite astounded at the demand. He had provided nothing
+but his passport and testimonials, being totally unaware that a
+pass-warrant is more indispensable than all the rest. In vain did
+he hasten into the bureau to expostulate with the officials,--we
+were forced to continue our journey without him.
+
+We were informed that he was a student, who, at the conclusion of
+term, was about to make holiday for a few weeks at his parents'
+house near Prague. Alas, poor youth! he had studied so much, and
+yet knew so little. He had not even an idea of the overwhelming
+importance of the document in question. For this trifling omission
+he forfeited the fare to Prague, which had been paid in advance.
+
+But to proceed with my journey.
+
+At Florisdorf a joyful surprise awaited me. I met my brother and my
+son, who had, it appears, preceded me. We entered the train to
+proceed in company to Stockerau, a place between twelve and thirteen
+miles off; but were obliged to alight halfway, and walk a short
+distance. The Embankment had given way. Luckily the weather was
+favourable, inasmuch as we had only a violent storm of wind. Had it
+rained, we should have been wetted to the skin, besides being
+compelled to wade ankle-deep in mud. We were next obliged to remain
+in the open air, awaiting the arrival of the train from Stockerau,
+which unloaded its freight, and received us in exchange.
+
+At Stockerau I once more took leave of my companions, and was soon
+securely packed in the post-carriage for transmission.
+
+In travelling this short distance, I had thus entered four
+carriages; a thing sufficiently disagreeable to an unencumbered
+person, but infinitely more so to one who has luggage to watch over.
+The only advantage I could discover in all this was, that we had
+saved half an hour in coming these seventeen miles. For this,
+instead of 9 fl. 26 kr. from Vienna to Prague, we paid 10 fl. 10 kr.
+from Stockerau to Prague, without reckoning expense of omnibus and
+railway. It was certainly a dearly-bought half-hour. {3}
+
+The little town of Znaim, with its neighbouring convent, is situated
+on a large plain, extending from Vienna to Budwitz, seventeen miles
+beyond Znaim; the monotony of the view is only broken here and there
+by low hills.
+
+Near Schelletau the scenery begins to improve. On the left the view
+is bounded by a range of high hills, with a ruined castle,
+suggestive of tragical tales of centuries gone by. Fir and pine
+forests skirt the road, and lie scattered in picturesque groups over
+hill and dale.
+
+April 11th.
+
+Yesterday the weather had already begun to be ungracious to us. At
+Znaim we found the valleys still partly covered with snow, and the
+fog was at times so thick, that we could not see a hundred paces in
+advance; but to-day it was incomparably worse. The mist resolved
+itself into a mild rain, which, however, lost so much of its
+mildness as we passed from station to station, that every thing
+around us was soon under water. But not only did we ride through
+water, we were obliged to sit in it also. The roof of our carriage
+threatened to become a perfect sieve, and the rain poured steadily
+in. Had there been room for such a proceeding, we should all have
+unfurled our umbrellas.
+
+On occasions like these, I always silently admire the patience of my
+worthy countrymen, who take every thing so good-humouredly. Were I
+a man, I should pursue a different plan, and should certainly not
+fail to complain of such carelessness. But as a woman, I must hold
+my peace; people would only rail at my sex, and call it ill-
+humoured. Besides, I thanked my guardian-angel for these
+discomforts, looking upon them as a preparation for what was to
+befall me in the far North.
+
+Passing several small towns and villages, we at length entered the
+Bohemian territory, close behind Iglau. The first town which we saw
+was Czaslau, with its large open square, and a few neat houses; the
+latter provided with so-called arbours (or verandahs), which enable
+one to pass round the square dry-footed, even in the most rainy
+weather.
+
+Journeying onwards, we noticed the fine cathedral and town of
+Kuttenberg, once famous for its gold and silver mines. {4} Next
+comes the great tobacco-manufactory of Sedlitz, near which we first
+see the Elbe, but only for a short time, as it soon takes another
+direction. Passing the small town of Collin, we are whirled close
+by the battle-field where, in the year 1757, the great King
+Frederick paid his score to the Austrians. An obelisk, erected a
+few years since to the memory of General Daun, occupies a small
+eminence on the right. On the left is the plain of Klephorcz, where
+the Austrian army was drawn up. {5}
+
+At eleven o'clock on the same night we reached
+
+
+PRAGUE.
+
+
+As it was my intention to pursue my journey after two days, my first
+walk on the following morning was to the police-office, to procure a
+passport and the all-important pass-warrant; my next to the custom-
+house, to take possession of a small chest, which I had delivered up
+five days before my departure, and which, as the expeditor affirmed,
+I should find ready for me on my arrival at Prague. {6} Ah, Mr.
+Expeditor! my chest was not there. After Saturday comes Sunday; but
+on Sunday the custom-house is closed. So here was a day lost, a day
+in which I might have gone to Dresden, and even visited the opera.
+
+On Monday morning I once more hastened to the office in anxious
+expectation; the box was not yet there. An array of loaded wagons
+had, however, arrived, and in one of these it might be. Ah, how I
+longed to see my darling little box, in order that I might--NOT
+press it to my heart, but unpack it in presence of the excise
+officer!
+
+I took merely a cursory glance at Prague, as I had thoroughly
+examined every thing there some years before. The beautiful
+"Graben" and Horse-market once more excited my admiration. It was
+with a peculiar feeling that I trod the old bridge, from which St.
+John of Nepomuk was cast into the Moldau for refusing to publish the
+confession of King Wenceslaus' consort. {7} On the opposite bank I
+mounted the Hradschin, and paid a visit to the cathedral, in which a
+large sarcophagus, surrounded and borne by angels, and surmounted by
+a canopy of crimson damask, is dedicated to the memory of the saint.
+The monument is of silver, and the worth of the metal alone is
+estimated at 80,000 florins. The church itself is not spacious, but
+is built in the noble Gothic style; the lesser altars, however, with
+their innumerable gilded wooden figures, look by contrast extremely
+puny. In the chapel are many sarcophagi, on which repose bishops
+and knights hewn in stone, but so much damaged, that many are
+without hands and feet, while some lack heads. To the right, at the
+entrance of the church, is the celebrated chapel of St. Wenceslaus,
+with its walls ornamented with frescoes, of which the colours and
+designs are now almost obliterated. It is further enriched with
+costly stones.
+
+Not far from the cathedral is situated the palace of Count Czernin,
+a building particularly favoured with windows, of which it has one
+for every day in the year. I was there in an ordinary year, and saw
+365; how they manage in leap-year I do not know. The view from the
+belvedere of this palace well repays the observer. It takes in the
+old and new town, the noble river with its two bridges (the ancient
+venerable-looking stone structure, and the graceful suspension-
+bridge, six hundred paces long), and the hills round about, clothed
+with gardens, among which appear neat country-houses.
+
+The streets of the "Kleinseite" are not particularly attractive,
+being mostly tortuous, steep, and narrow. They contain, however,
+several remarkable palaces, among which that of Wallenstein Duke of
+Friedland stands pre-eminent. {8}
+
+After visiting St. Nicholas' Church, remarkable for the height of
+its spire and its beautifully arched cupola, I betook myself to
+Wimmer's gardens, and thence to the "Bastei," a place of public
+resort with the citizens of Prague.
+
+I could now observe the devastation caused by the rising of the
+water shortly before my arrival. The Moldau had overstepped its
+banks in so turbulent a manner, as to carry along with it several
+small houses, and even a little village not far from Prague, besides
+damaging all the dwellings upon its banks. The water had indeed
+already fallen, but the walls of the houses were soaked through and
+through; the doors had been carried away, and from the broken
+windows no faces looked out upon the passers-by. The water had
+risen two feet more than in 1784, in which year the Moldau had also
+attained an unusual height.
+
+From the same tower of observation, I looked down upon the great
+open space bought a few years ago, and intended to be occupied by
+the termini of the Vienna and Dresden railroads. Although several
+houses were only just being pulled down, and the foundations of but
+few buildings were laid, I was assured that within six months every
+thing would be completed.
+
+I have still to mention a circumstance which struck me during my
+morning peregrinations, namely, the curious method in which milk,
+vegetables, and other provisions are here brought to town. I could
+have fancied myself transported to Lapland or Greenland, on meeting
+every where carts to which two, three, or four dogs were harnessed.
+One pair of dogs will drag three hundredweight on level ground; but
+when they encounter a hill, the driver must lend a helping hand.
+These dogs are, besides, careful guardians; and I would not advise
+any one to approach a car of this kind, as it stands before the inn-
+door, while the proprietor is quenching his thirst within, on the
+money he has just earned.
+
+At five o'clock on the morning of the 15th of April I left Prague,
+and rode for fourteen miles in the mail-carriage, as far as Obristwy
+on the Elbe, at which place I embarked for Dresden, on board the
+steamer Bohemia, of fifty-horse power, a miserable old craft,
+apparently a stranger to beauty and comfort from her youth up. The
+price charged for this short passage of eight or nine hours is
+enormously dear. The travellers will, however, soon have their
+revenge on the extortionate proprietors; a railroad is constructing,
+by means of which this distance will be traversed in a much shorter
+time, and at a great saving of expense.
+
+But at any rate the journey by water is the more agreeable; the way
+lies through very picturesque scenery, and at length through "Saxon
+Switzerland" itself. The commencement of the journey is, however,
+far from pleasing. On the right are naked hills, and on the left
+large plains, over which, last spring, the swollen stream rolled,
+partly covering the trees and the roofs of the cottages. Here I
+could for the first time see the whole extent of the calamity. Many
+houses had been completely torn down, and the crops, and even the
+loose alluvial earth swept away; as we glided by each dreary scene
+of devastation, another yet more dismal would appear in its place.
+
+This continued till we reached Melnick, where the trees become
+higher, and groups of houses peer forth from among the innumerable
+vineyards. Opposite this little town the Moldau falls into the
+Elbe. On the left, in the far distance, the traveller can descry
+St. George's Mount, from which, as the story goes, Czech took
+possession of all Bohemia.
+
+Below the little town of Raudnitz the hills gave place to mountains,
+and as many enthusiasts can only find those regions romantic where
+the mountains are crowned with half-ruined castles and strongholds,
+good old Time has taken care to plant there two fine ruins,
+Hafenberg and Skalt, for the delectation of such sentimental
+observers.
+
+Near Leitmeritz, a small town with a handsome castle, and a church
+and convent, the Eger flows into the Elbe, and a high-arched wooden
+bridge connects the two banks. Here our poor sailors had difficult
+work to lower the mast and the funnel.
+
+The rather pretty village of Gross-Czernoseck is remarkable for its
+gigantic cellars, hewn out of the rock. A post-carriage could
+easily turn round in one of these. The vats are of course
+proportioned to the cellars, particularly the barrels called the
+"twelve apostles," each of which holds between three and four
+thousand gallons. It would be no more than fair to stop here
+awhile, to give every hero of the bottle an opportunity to enjoy a
+sight of these palace-cellars, and to offer a libation to the twelve
+apostles; but the steamer passed on, and we were obliged to make the
+most of the descriptions furnished by those who were more at home in
+these parts, and had no doubt frequently emerged in an inspired
+state from the depths of the cellars in question.
+
+The view now becomes more and more charming: the mountains appear
+to draw closer together, and shut in the bed of the stream; romantic
+groups of rocks, with summits crowned by rains yet more romantic,
+tower between. The ancient but well-preserved castle of
+Schreckenstein, built on a rock rising boldly out of the Elbe, is
+particularly striking; the approaches to it are by serpentine walks
+hewn out of the rock.
+
+Near the small town of Aussig we find the most considerable coal-
+mines in Bohemia. In their neighbourhood is situated the little
+mountain estate Paschkal, which produces a kind of wine said to
+resemble champagne.
+
+The mountains now become higher and higher, but above them all
+towers the gigantic Jungfernsprung (Maiden's Leap). The beauty of
+this region is only surpassed by the situation of the town and
+castle of Tetschen. The castle stands on a rock, between twenty and
+thirty feet high, which seems to rise out of the Elbe; it is
+surrounded by hot-houses and charming gardens, shelving downwards as
+far as the town, which lies in a blooming valley, near a little
+harbour. The valley itself, encompassed by a chain of lofty
+mountains, seems quite shut out from the rest of the world.
+
+The left bank of the river is here so crowded with masses and walls
+of rock, that there is only room at intervals for an isolated farm
+or hut. Suddenly the tops of masts appear between the high rocks, a
+phenomenon which is soon explained; a large gap in one of the rocky
+walls forms a beautiful basin.
+
+And now we come to Schandau, a place consisting only of a few
+houses; it is a frontier town of the Saxon dominions. Custom-house
+officers, a race of beings ever associated with frontier towns, here
+boarded our vessel, and rummaged every thing. My daguerreotype
+apparatus, which I had locked up in a small box, was looked upon
+with an eye of suspicion; but upon my assertion that it was
+exclusively intended for my own use, I and my apparatus were
+graciously dismissed.
+
+In our onward journey we frequently observed rocks of peculiar
+shapes, which have appropriate names, such as the "Zirkelstein,"
+"Lilienstein," &c. The Konigstein is a collection of jagged masses
+of rock, on which is built the fortress of the same name, used at
+present as a prison for great criminals. At the foot of the rocks
+lies the little town of Konigstein. Not far off, on the right bank,
+a huge rock, resting on others, bears a striking resemblance to a
+human head. The more distant groups of rocks are called those of
+"Rathen," but are considered as belonging to Saxon Switzerland. The
+"Basteien" (Bastions) of this Switzerland, close by which we now
+pass, are most wonderful superpositions of lofty and fantastically
+shaped rocks. Unfortunately, the steamer whirled us so rapidly on
+our way, that whilst we contemplated one bank, the beauteous scenes
+on the opposite side had already glided from our view. In much too
+short a time we had passed the town of Pirna, situate at the
+commencement of this range of mountains. The very ancient gate of
+this town towers far above all the other buildings.
+
+Lastly we see the great castle Sonnenstein, built on a rock, and now
+used as an asylum for lunatics.
+
+All the beautiful and picturesque portion of our passage is now
+past, and the royal villa of Pillnitz, with its many Chinese gables,
+looks insignificant enough, after the grand scenes of nature. A
+chain of hills, covered with the country-houses of citizens, adjoins
+it; and on the right extends a large plain, at the far end of which
+we can dimly descry the Saxon metropolis. But what is that in the
+distance? We have hardly time to arrange our luggage, when the
+anchor is let go near the fine old Dresden Bridge.
+
+This bridge had not escaped unscathed by the furious river. One of
+the centre arches had given way, and the cross and watchbox which
+surmounted it were precipitated into the flood. At first, carriages
+still passed over the bridge; it was not until some time afterwards
+that the full extent of the damage was ascertained, and the passage
+of carriages over the bridge discontinued for many months.
+
+As I had seen the town of Dresden several years before, and the only
+building new to me was the splendid theatre, I took advantage of the
+few evening hours of my stay to visit this structure.
+
+Standing in the midst of the beautiful Cathedral-square, its noble
+rotunda-like form at once rivets the attention. The inner theatre
+is surrounded by a superb broad and lofty corridor, with fine bow-
+windows and straight broad staircases, leading in different
+directions towards the galleries. The interior of the theatre is
+not so spacious as, judging from the exterior, one would imagine it
+to be, but the architecture and decorations are truly gorgeous and
+striking. The boxes are all open, being separated from each other
+merely by a low partition; the walls and chairs are covered with
+heavy silken draperies, and the seats of the third and fourth
+galleries with a mixture of silk and cotton. One single
+circumstance was disagreeable to me in an acoustic point of view--I
+could hear the slightest whisper of the prompter as distinctly as
+though some one had been behind me reading the play. The curtain
+had scarcely fallen before the whole house was empty, and yet there
+was no crowding to get out. This first drew my attention to the
+numerous and excellently contrived doors.
+
+
+April 16th.
+
+The Dresden omnibuses may be cited as models of comfort; one is
+certain of plenty of room, and there is no occasion to dread either
+the corpulent persons or the furs and cloaks of fellow-passengers.
+A bell-pull is fixed in the interior of the carriage, so that each
+individual can give the coachman a signal when he or she wishes to
+alight. These omnibuses call at the principal inns, and wait for a
+moment; but the traveller who is not ready in advance is left
+behind.
+
+At half-past five in the morning it called at our hotel. I was
+ready and waiting, and drove off comfortably to the railway. The
+distance from Dresden to Leipzig is reckoned at fifty-six miles, and
+the journey occupied three hours.
+
+The first fourteen miles are very agreeable; gardens, fields, and
+meadows, pine-forests in the plain and on the hills, and between
+these, villages, farms, country-houses, and solitary chapels,
+combine to form a very pretty landscape. But the scene soon
+changes, and the town of Meissen (famous for its porcelain
+manufactory), on the right hand, seems to shut out from our view all
+that is picturesque and beautiful.
+
+From here to Leipzig we travel through a wearisome monotonous plain,
+enlivened at long intervals by villages and scattered farms. There
+is nothing to see but a great tunnel, and the river Pleisse--the
+latter, or rather the Elster, is rendered famous by the death of
+Prince Poniatowski. {9}
+
+The town of Leipzig, celebrated far and wide for its fairs, and more
+for its immense publishing trade, presents an appearance of noise
+and bustle proportionate to its commercial importance. I found
+streets, squares, and inns alike crowded. {10}
+
+Perhaps there does not exist a town with its houses, and
+consequently its streets, so disfigured with announcements, in all
+sizes and shapes, covering its walls, and sometimes projecting
+several feet, as Leipzig.
+
+Among the public buildings, those which pleased me most were the
+Augusteum and the Burgerschule. The Bucherhalle (book-hall) I
+should suppose indebted for its celebrity rather to its literary
+contents than to its architectural beauty or its exterior. The hall
+itself is indeed large, and occupies the whole length of the
+building, while the lower story consists of several rooms. The
+hall, the chambers, and the exterior are all plain, and without
+particular decoration. The Tuchhalle (cloth-hall) is simply a large
+house, with spacious chambers, containing supplies of cloth. The
+Theatre stands on a very large square, and does not present a very
+splendid appearance, whether viewed from within or from without.
+The plan of having stalls in front of the boxes in the second and
+third galleries was a novelty to me. The orchestra I could only
+hear, but could not discover its whereabouts; most probably it was
+posted behind the scenes. On inquiry, I was told that this was only
+done on extraordinary occasions, when the seats in the orchestra
+were converted into stalls, as was the case on the night of my
+visit. The play given was "the original Tartuffe," a popular piece
+by Gutzkow. It was capitally performed.
+
+In the Leipzig theatre I had a second opportunity of observing, that
+as regards the love of eating our good Saxons are not a whit behind
+the much-censured Viennese. In the Dresden theatre I had admired a
+couple of ladies who sat next me. They came provided with a neat
+bag, containing a very sufficient supply of confectionery, to which
+they perseveringly applied themselves between the acts. But at
+Leipzig I found a delicate-looking mother and her son, a lad of
+fifteen or sixteen years, regaling themselves with more solid
+provisions--white bread and small sausages. I could not believe my
+eyes, and had made up my mind that the sausages were artificially
+formed out of some kind of confectionery--but alas! my nose came
+forward but too soon, as a potent witness, to corroborate what I was
+so unwilling to believe!
+
+Neither did these two episodes take place in the loftiest regions of
+Thalia's temple, but in the stalls of the second tier.
+
+Beautiful alleys are planted round Leipzig. I took a walk into the
+Rosenthal (Valley of Roses), which also consists of splendid avenues
+and lawns. A pretty coffee-house, with a very handsome alcove,
+built in a semicircular form, invites the weary traveller to rest
+and refreshment, while a band of agreeable music diffuses mirth and
+good humour around.
+
+The rest of the scenery around Leipzig presents the appearance of a
+vast and monotonous plain.
+
+
+April 17th.
+
+I had intended to continue my journey to Hamburgh via Berlin, but
+the weather was so cold and stormy, and the rain poured down so
+heavily, that I preferred the shorter way, and proceeded by rail to
+Magdeburg. Flying through the dismal plain past Halle, Kothen, and
+other towns, of which I could only discern groups of houses, we
+hurriedly recognised the Saale and the Elbe; and towards 10 o'clock
+in the morning arrived at Magdeburg, having travelled seventy miles
+in three hours and a quarter.
+
+As the steamer for Hamburgh was not to start until 3 o'clock, I had
+ample time to look at the town.
+
+Magdeburg is a mixed pattern of houses of ancient, mediaeval, and
+modern dates. Particularly remarkable in this respect is the
+principal street, the "Broadway," which runs through the whole of
+the town. Here we can see houses dating their origin from the most
+ancient times; houses that have stood proof against sieges and
+sackings; houses of all colours and forms; some sporting peaked
+gables, on which stone figures may still be seen; others covered
+from roof to basement with arabesques; and in one instance I could
+even detect the remains of frescoes. In the very midst of these
+relics of antiquity would appear a house built in the newest style.
+I do not remember ever having seen a street which produced so
+remarkable an impression on me. The finest building is
+unquestionably the venerable cathedral. In Italy I had already seen
+numbers of the most beautiful churches; yet I remained standing in
+mute admiration before this masterpiece of Gothic architecture.
+
+The monument with the twelve Apostles in this church is a worthy
+memorial of the celebrated sculptor Vischer. In order to view it,
+it is necessary to obtain the special permission of the commandant.
+
+The cathedral square is large, symmetrical, and decorated with two
+alleys of trees; it is also used as a drilling-ground for the
+soldiers' minor manoeuvres. I was particularly struck with the
+number of military men to be seen here. Go where I would, I was
+sure to meet soldiers and officers, frequently in large companies;
+in time of war it could scarcely have been worse. This was an
+unmistakeable token that I was on Prussian territory.
+
+The open canals, which come from all the houses, and meander through
+the streets, are a great disfigurement to the town.
+
+Half-past three o'clock came only too quickly, and I betook myself
+on board the steamer Magdeburg, of sixty-horse power, to proceed to
+Hamburgh. Of the passage itself I can say nothing, except that a
+journey on a river through execrable scenery is one of the most
+miserable things that can well be imagined. When, in addition to
+this, the weather is bad, the ship dirty, and one is obliged to pass
+a night on board, the discomfort is increased. It was my lot to
+endure all this: the weather was bad, the ship was dirty, the
+distance more than 100 miles, so that we had the pleasant prospect
+of a delightful night on board the ship. There were, moreover, so
+many passengers, that we were forced to sit crowded together; so
+there we sat with exemplary patience, stared at each other, and
+sighed bitterly. Order was entirely out of the question; no one had
+time to think of such a thing. Smoking and card-playing were
+perseveringly carried on all day and all night; it can easily be
+imagined that things did not go so quietly as at an English whist-
+party. The incessant rain rendered it impossible to leave the cabin
+even for a short time. The only consolation I had was, that I made
+the acquaintance of the amiable composer Lorzing, a circumstance
+which delighted me the more, as I had always been an admirer of his
+beautiful original music.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+
+Morning dawned at length, and in a short time afterwards we reached
+the great commercial city, which, half destroyed by the dreadful
+conflagration of 1842, had risen grander and more majestic from its
+ashes. {11} I took up my quarters with a cousin, who is married to
+the Wurtemburg consul, the merchant Schmidt, in whose house I spent
+a most agreeable and happy week. My cousin-in-law was polite enough
+to escort me every where himself, and to shew me the lions of
+Hamburgh.
+
+First of all we visited the Exchange between the hours of one and
+two, when it is at the fullest, and therefore best calculated to
+impress a stranger with an idea of the extent and importance of the
+business transacted there. The building contains a hall of great
+size, with arcades and galleries, besides many large rooms, which
+are partly used for consultations, partly for the sale of
+refreshments. The most interesting thing of all is, however, to sit
+in the gallery, and looking downwards, to observe the continually
+increasing crowd passing and repassing each other in the immense
+hall and through the galleries and chambers, and to listen to the
+hubbub and noise of the thousands of eager voices talking at once.
+At half-past one o'clock the hall is at its fullest, and the noise
+becomes absolutely deafening; for now they are marking up the rates
+of exchange, by which the merchants regulate their monetary
+transactions.
+
+Leaving the Exchange, we bent our steps towards the great harbour,
+and entering a small boat, cruised in and about it in all
+directions. I had resolved to count only the three-masted ships;
+but soon gave it up, for their number seemed overwhelming, even
+without reckoning the splendid steamers, brigs, sloops, and craft.
+In short, I could only gaze and wonder, for at least 900 ships lay
+before me.
+
+Let any one fancy an excursion amidst 900 ships, great and small,
+which lined both shores of the Elbe in tiers of three deep or more;
+the passing to and fro of countless boats busily employed in loading
+or unloading these vessels; these things, together with the shouting
+and singing of the sailors, the rattling of anchors which are being
+weighed, and the rush and swell of passing steamers, combine to
+constitute a picture not to be surpassed in any city except in that
+metropolis of the world, London. {12}
+
+The reason of this unusual activity in the harbour lay in the
+severity of the past winter. Such a winter had not been experienced
+for seventy years: the Elbe and the Baltic lay for months in icy
+chains, and not a ship could traverse the frozen river, not an
+anchor could be weighed or lowered. It was only a short time before
+my arrival that the passage had once more become free.
+
+In the neighbourhood of the harbour are situated the greater number
+of the so-called "yards." I had read concerning them that, viewed
+from the exterior, they look like common houses; but that they
+constitute separate communities, and contain alleys and streets,
+serving as the domicile of innumerable families. I visited several
+of these places, and can assure the reader that I saw nothing
+extraordinary in them. Houses with two large wings, forming an
+alley of from eighty to a hundred paces in length, are to be met
+with in every large town; and that a number of families should
+inhabit such a house is not remarkable, considering that they are
+all poor, and that each only possesses a single small apartment.
+
+The favourite walk in the town is the "Jungfernstieg" (Maiden's
+Walk), a broad alley, extending round a spacious and beautiful basin
+of the Alster. On one side are splendid hotels, with which Hamburgh
+is richly provided; on the other, a number of private residences of
+equal pretensions. Other walks are, the "Wall," surrounding the
+town, and the "Botanical Garden," which resembles a fine park. The
+noblest building, distinguished alike as regards luxury, skill,
+tastefulness of design, and stability, is the Bazaar. It is truly a
+gigantic undertaking, and the more to be admired from the fact that
+it is not built upon shares, but at the expense of a single
+individual, Herr Carl Sillem; the architect's name is Overdick. The
+building itself is constructed entirely of stone, and the walls of
+the great room and of the hall are inlaid with marble. A lofty
+cupola and an immense glazed dome cover both the great room and the
+hall; the upper staircases are ornamented with beautiful statues.
+When in the evening it is brilliantly lighted with gas, and further
+ornamented by a tasteful display of the richest wares, the spectator
+can almost fancy himself transported to a fairy palace.
+
+Altogether the shops in Hamburgh are very luxurious. The wares lie
+displayed in the most tasteful manner behind huge windows of plate-
+glass, which are often from five to six feet broad, and eight or ten
+feet high; a single sheet frequently costs 600 florins. This plate-
+glass luxury is not confined to shops, but extends to windows
+generally, not only in Hamburgh, but also in Altona, and is also
+seen in the handsomest country-houses of the Hamburghers. Many a
+pane costs eight or ten florins; and the glass is insured in case of
+breakage, like houses in case of fire.
+
+This display of glass is equalled by the costliness of the
+furniture, which is almost universally of mahogany; a wood which is
+here in such common use, that in some of the most elegant houses the
+very stair-banisters are constructed of it. Even the pilots have
+often mahogany furniture.
+
+The handsomest and most frequented street is the "Neue Wall" (New
+Wall). I was particularly struck with the number of shops and
+dwellings underground, to which one descends by a flight of six or
+eight stairs; an iron railing is generally placed before the
+entrance, to prevent the passers-by from falling down.
+
+A very practical institution is the great slaughterhouse, in which
+all cattle are killed on certain days of the week.
+
+Concerning the town of Altona, I have only to observe that it
+appeared to me a continuation of Hamburgh; from which town, indeed,
+it is only separated by a wooden door. A very broad, handsome
+street, or, more properly speaking, an elongated square, planted
+with a double row of large trees, is the most remarkable thing about
+Altona, which belongs to the Danish Government, and is considered,
+after Copenhagen, the most important place in the kingdom.
+
+It is a delicious ride to the village of Blankenese, distant nine
+miles from Hamburgh; the road lies among beautiful country-houses
+and large park-like gardens. Blankenese itself consists of
+cottages, grouped in a picturesque manner round the Sulberg, a hill
+from which the traveller enjoys a very extended view over the great
+plain, in which it is the only elevated point. The course of the
+Elbe, as it winds at moderate speed towards the sea, is here to be
+traced almost to its embouchure at Cuxhaven.
+
+The breadth of the Elbe at Blankenese exceeds two miles.
+
+Another interesting excursion is to the "New Mills," a little
+village on the Elbe, not more than half a mile from Altona, and
+inhabited only by fishermen and pilots. Whoever wishes to form an
+idea of Dutch prettiness and cleanliness should come here.
+
+The houses are mostly one story high, neatly and tastefully built;
+the brightest of brass handles adorn the street-doors; the windows
+are kept scrupulously clean, and furnished with white curtains.
+
+In Saxony I had found many dwellings of the peasantry tidy and neat
+enough, displaying at any rate more opulence than we are accustomed
+to find with this class of people; but I had seen none to compete
+with this pretty village.
+
+Among the peasants' costumes, I only liked that worn by the women
+from the "Vierlanden." They wear short full skirts of black stuff,
+fine white chemisettes with long sleeves, and coloured bodices,
+lightly fastened in front with silk cords or silver buckles. Their
+straw hats have a most comical appearance; the brim of the hat is
+turned up in such a manner that the crown appears to have completely
+sunk in. Many pretty young girls dressed in this manner come to
+Hamburgh to sell flowers, and take up their position in front of the
+Exchange.
+
+The 26th of April, the day appointed for my departure, arrived only
+too speedily. To part is the unavoidable fate of the traveller; but
+sometimes we part gladly, sometimes with regret. I need not write
+many pages to describe my feelings at the parting in Hamburgh. I
+was leaving behind me my last relations, my last friends. Now I was
+going into the wide world, and among strangers.
+
+At eight o'clock in the morning I left Altona, and proceeded by
+railway to Kiel.
+
+I noticed with pleasure that on this railway even the third-class
+carriages were securely covered in, and furnished with glass
+windows. In fact, they only differed from those of the first and
+second class in being painted a different colour, and having the
+seats uncushioned.
+
+The whole distance of seventy miles was passed in three hours; a
+rapid journey, but agreeable merely by its rapidity, for the whole
+neighbourhood presents only widely-extended plains, turf-bogs and
+moorlands, sandy places and heaths, interspersed with a little
+meadow or arable land. From the nature of the soil, the water in
+the ditches and fields looked black as ink.
+
+Near Binneburg we notice a few stunted plantations of trees. From
+Eisholm a branch-line leads to Gluckstadt, and another from
+Neumunster, a large place with important cloth-factories, to
+Rendsburg.
+
+From here there is nothing to be seen but a convent, in which many
+Dukes of Holstein lie buried, and several unimportant lakes; for
+instance, those of Bernsholm, Einfeld, and Schulhof. The little
+river Eider would have passed unnoticed by me, had not some of my
+fellow-passengers made a great feature of it. In the finest
+countries I have found the natives far less enthusiastic about what
+was really grand and beautiful, than they were here in praise of
+what was neither the one nor the other. My neighbour, a very
+agreeable lady, was untiring in laudation of her beautiful native
+land. In her eyes the crippled wood was a splendid park, the waste
+moorland an inexhaustible field for contemplation, and every trifle
+a matter of real importance. In my heart I wished her joy of her
+fervid imagination; but unfortunately my colder nature would not
+catch the infection.
+
+Towards Kiel the plain becomes a region of low hills. Kiel itself
+is prettily situated on the Baltic, which, viewed from thence, has
+the appearance of a lake of middling size. The harbour is said to
+be good; but there were not many ships there. {13} Among these was
+the steamer destined to carry me to Copenhagen. Little did I
+anticipate the good reason I should have to remember this vessel.
+
+Thanks to the affectionate forethought of my cousin Schmidt, I found
+one of his relations, Herr Brauer, waiting for me at the railway. I
+was immediately introduced to his family, and passed the few hours
+of my stay very agreeably in their company.
+
+Evening approached, and with it the hour of embarkation. My kind
+friends the Brauers accompanied me to the steamer, and I took a
+grateful leave of them.
+
+I soon discovered the steamer Christian VIII., of 180-horse power,
+to be a vessel dirtier and more uncomfortable than any with which I
+had become acquainted in my maritime excursions. Scrubbing and
+sweeping seemed things unknown here. The approach to the cabin was
+by a flight of stairs so steep, that great care was requisite to
+avoid descending in an expeditious but disagreeable manner, by a
+fall from top to bottom. In the fore-cabin there was no attempt at
+separate quarters for ladies and gentlemen. In short, the
+arrangements seemed all to have been made with a view of impressing
+the ship vividly on the recollection of every traveller.
+
+At nine o'clock we left Kiel. The day and the twilight are here
+already longer than in the lands lying to the south and the west.
+There was light enough to enable me to see, looming out of the
+surrounding darkness, the fortress "Friedrichsort," which we passed
+at about ten o'clock.
+
+
+April 27th.
+
+To-day I still rose with the sun; but that will soon be a difficult
+matter to accomplish; for in the north the goddess of light makes
+amends in spring and summer for her shortcomings during the winter.
+I went on deck, and looked on the broad expanse of ocean. No land
+was to be seen; but soon a coast appeared, then disappeared, and
+then a new and more distant one rose out of the sea. Towards noon
+we reached the island of Moen, which lies about forty {14} miles
+distant from Copenhagen. It forms a beautiful group of rocks,
+rising boldly from the sea. They are white as chalk, and have a
+smooth and shining appearance. The highest of these walls of rock
+towers 400 feet above the level of the surrounding ocean. Soon we
+saw the coast of Sweden, then the island of Malmo; and at last
+Copenhagen itself, where we landed at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+The distance from Kiel to Copenhagen is 136 sea-miles.
+
+I remained seven days at Copenhagen, and should have had ample time
+to see every thing, had the weather been more favourable. But it
+blew and rained so violently, that I was obliged to give up all
+thoughts of visiting the surrounding parks, and was fain to content
+myself with seeing a few of the nearest walks, which I accomplished
+with some difficulty.
+
+The first street in Copenhagen which I traversed on coming from the
+harbour generally produces a great impression. It is called the
+"Broad Street," and leads from the harbour through the greater part
+of the town. In addition to its breadth it is very long and
+regular, and the splendid palaces and houses on either side give it
+a remarkably grand appearance.
+
+It is a peculiar sight, when, in the midst of this fine quarter, we
+come suddenly upon a ruin, a giant building resting on huge pillars,
+but half completed, and partly covered with moss and lichens. It
+was intended for a splendid church, and is built entirely of marble;
+but the soft ground would not bear the immense weight. The half-
+finished building began to sink, and the completion of the
+undertaking became for ever impossible.
+
+Many other streets rival the "Broad Street" in size and
+magnificence. Foremost among them comes the Amalienstrasse. The
+most bustling, but by far not the finest, are the Oster and
+Gotherstrasse. To walk in these is at first quite a difficult
+undertaking for a stranger. On one side of the pavement, which is
+raised about a foot above the carriage-way, he comes continually in
+contact with stairs, leading sometimes to warehouses above, at
+others to subterranean warehouses below the level of the street.
+The approaches to the latter are not guarded by railings as in
+Hamburgh. The other side of the pavement is bounded by a little
+unostentatious rivulet, called by unpoetical people "canal," into
+which tributaries equally sweet pour from all the neighbouring
+houses. It is therefore necessary to take great care, lest you
+should fall into the traitorous depths on the one side, or stumble
+over the projecting steps on the other. The pavement itself is
+covered with a row of stone slabs, a foot and a half wide, on which
+one walks comfortably enough. But then every body contends for the
+possession of these, to avoid the uneven and pointed stones at the
+side. This, added to the dreadful crowding, renders the street one
+which would scarcely be chosen for a walk, the less so as the shops
+do not contain any thing handsome, the houses are neither palace-
+like nor even tastefully built, and the street itself is neither of
+the broadest nor of the cleanest.
+
+The squares are all large and regularly built. The finest is the
+Kongensnytorf (King's New Market). Some fine mansions, the chief
+guard-house, the theatre, the chief coffee-houses and inns, the
+academy of the fine arts, and the building belonging to the
+botanical garden, the two last commonly known by the name of
+"Charlottenburg," are among the ornaments of this magnificent
+square, in the midst of which stands a beautiful monument,
+representing Christian V. on horseback, and surrounded by several
+figures.
+
+Smaller, but more beautiful in its perfect symmetry, is the
+"Amalienplatz," containing four royal palaces, built exactly alike,
+and intersected by four broad streets in the form of a cross. This
+square also is decorated by a monument standing in the midst, and
+representing Frederick V. In another fine square, the "Nytorf" (New
+Market), there is a fountain. Its little statue sends forth very
+meagre jets of water, and the fountain is merely noticeable as being
+the only one I could find at Copenhagen.
+
+The traveller can hardly fail of being surprised by the number and
+magnificence of the palaces, at sight of which he could fancy
+himself in the metropolis of one of the largest kingdoms. The
+"Christianensburg" is truly imperial; it was completely destroyed by
+fire in the year 1794, but has since been rebuilt with increased
+splendour. The chapel of this palace is very remarkable. The
+interior has the appearance rather of a concert-room than of a
+building devoted to purposes of worship. Tastefully decorated
+boxes, among which we notice that of the king, together with
+galleries, occupy the upper part of the chapel; the lower is filled
+with benches covered with red velvet and silk. The pulpit and altar
+are so entirely without decoration, that, on first entering, they
+wholly escape notice.
+
+In the "Christianensburg" is also the "Northern Museum," peculiarly
+rich in specimens of the ornaments, weapons, musical instruments,
+and other mementoes of northern nations.
+
+The Winter Riding-school, in which concerts are frequently given, is
+large and symmetrical. I admired the stalls, and yet more the grey
+horses which occupied them--descendants of the pure Arabian and wild
+Norwegian breeds--creatures with long manes and tails of fine silky
+hair. Every one who sees these horses, whether he be a connoisseur
+or one of the uninitiated, must admire them.
+
+Adjoining the "Christianensburg" is Thorwaldsen's Museum, a square
+building with fine saloons, lighted from above. When I saw it, it
+was not completed; the walls were being painted in fresco by some of
+the first native artists. The sculptured treasures were there, but
+unfortunately yet unpacked.
+
+In the midst of the courtyard Thorwaldsen's mausoleum is being
+erected. There his ashes will rest, with his exquisitely finished
+lion as a gravestone above them. {15}
+
+The largest among the churches is the "Woman's Church." The
+building has no architectural beauty; the pillars, galleries, and
+cupola are all of wood, covered with a mixture of sand and plaster.
+But whatever may be wanting in outward splendour is compensated by
+its contents, for this church contains the masterpieces of
+Thorwaldsen. At the high altar stands his glorious figure of our
+Saviour, in the niches of the wall his colossal twelve apostles.
+
+In the contemplation of these works we forget the plainness of the
+building which contains them. May the fates be prosperous, and no
+conflagration reach this church, built as it is half of wood!
+
+The Catholic Church is small, but tasteful beyond expression. The
+late emperor of Austria presented to it a good full-toned organ, and
+two oil-paintings, one by Kuppelweiser, the other by a pupil of this
+master.
+
+In the "Museum of Arts" I was most interested in the ancient chair,
+used in days of yore by Tycho de Brahe. {16}
+
+The Exchange is a curious ancient building. It is very long and
+narrow, and surmounted by nine peaks, from the centre of which
+protrudes a remarkable pointed tower, formed of four crocodiles'
+tails intertwined.
+
+The hall itself is small, low, and dark; it contains a full-length
+portrait in oil of Tycho de Brahe. Nearly all the upper part of the
+building is converted into a kind of bazaar, and the lower portion
+contains a number of small and dingy booths.
+
+Several canals, having an outlet into the sea, give a peculiar charm
+to the town. They are, in fact, so many markets; for the craft
+lying in them are laden with provisions of all kinds, which are here
+offered for sale.
+
+The Sailors' Town, adjoining Copenhagen, and situated near the
+harbour, is singularly neat and pretty. It consists of three long,
+broad, straight streets, built of houses looking so exactly alike,
+that on a foggy night an accurate knowledge of the locality is
+requisite to know one from the other. It looks as though, on each
+side of the way, there were only one long house of a single floor,
+with a building one story high in the middle. In the latter dwell
+the commandant and overseers.
+
+The lighting of the streets is managed in Copenhagen in the same way
+as in our smaller German towns. When "moonlight" is announced in
+the calendar, not a lamp is lighted. If the lady moon chooses to
+hide behind dark clouds, that is her fault. It would be insolent to
+attempt to supply the place of her radiance with miserable lamps--a
+wise arrangement! (?)
+
+Of the near walks, the garden of the "Rosenburg," within the town,
+pleased me much; as did also the "Long Line," an alley of beautiful
+trees extending parallel with the sea, and in which one can either
+walk or ride. A coffee-house, in front of which there is music in
+fine weather, attracts many of the loungers. The most beautiful
+place of all is the "Kastell," above the "Long Line," from whence
+one can enjoy a beautiful view. The town lies displayed below in
+all its magnificence: the harbour, with its many ships; the
+sparkling blue Sound, which spreads its broad expanse between the
+coasts of Denmark and Sweden, and washes many a beautiful group of
+islands belonging to one or the other of these countries. The
+background of the picture alone is uninteresting, as there is no
+chain of mountains to form a horizon, and the eye wanders over the
+boundless flats of Denmark.
+
+Among the vessels lying at anchor in the harbour I saw but few
+three-masters, and still fewer steamers. The ships of the fleet
+presented a curious appearance; at the first view they look like
+great houses with flag-staves, for every ship is provided with a
+roof, out of which the masts rise into the air; they are besides
+very high out of the water, so that all the port-holes and the
+windows of the cabins appear in two or three stories, one above the
+other.
+
+A somewhat more distant excursion, which can be very conveniently
+made in a capital omnibus, takes you to the royal chateau
+"Friedrichsberg," lying before the water-gate, two miles distant
+from the town. Splendid avenues lead to this place, where are to be
+found all the delights that can combine to draw a citizen into the
+country. There are a tivoli, a railway, cabinets, and booths with
+wax-figures, and countless other sights, besides coffee-houses,
+beer-rooms, and music. The gardens are planted at the sides with a
+number of small arbours, each containing a table and chairs, and
+all open in front, so as to shew at one view all the visitors of
+these pretty natural huts. On Sundays, when the gardens are
+crowded, this is a very animated sight.
+
+On the way to this "Prater" of Copenhagen, we pass many handsome
+villas, each standing in a fine garden.
+
+The royal palace is situated on the summit of a hill, at the end of
+the avenue, and is surrounded by a beautiful park; it commands a
+view of a great portion of the town, with the surrounding country
+and the sea; still I far prefer the prospect from the "Kastell."
+The Park contains a considerable island, which, during some part of
+the year, stands in the midst of an extensive lake. This island is
+appropriated to the Court, but the rest of the park is open to the
+public.
+
+Immediately outside the water-gate stands an obelisk, remarkable
+neither for its beauty nor for the skill displayed in its erection,
+for it consists of various stones, and is not high, but interesting
+from the circumstance to which it owes its origin. It was erected
+by his grateful subjects in memory of the late king Christian VII.,
+to commemorate the abolition of feudal service. Surely no feeling
+person can contemplate without joyful emotion a monument like this.
+
+I have here given a faithful account of what I saw during my short
+stay at Copenhagen. It only remains for me to describe a few
+peculiar customs of the people, and so I will begin as it were at
+the end, with the burial of the dead. In Denmark, as in fact in the
+whole of Scandinavia, not excepting Iceland, it is customary not to
+bury the dead until eight or ten days have elapsed. In winter-time
+this is not of so much consequence, but in summer it is far from
+healthy for those under the same roof with the corpse. I was
+present at Copenhagen at the funeral of Dr. Brandis, physician to
+the king. Two of the king's carriages and a number of private
+equipages attended. Nearly all these were empty, and the servants
+walked beside them. Among the mourners I did not notice a single
+woman; I supposed that this was only the case at the funerals of
+gentlemen, but on inquiry I found that the same rule is observed at
+the burial of women. This consideration for the weaker sex is
+carried so far, that on the day of the funeral no woman may be seen
+in the house of mourning. The mourners assemble in the house of the
+deceased, and partake of cold refreshments. At the conclusion of
+the ceremony they are again regaled. What particularly pleased me
+in Copenhagen was, that I never on any occasion saw beggars, or even
+such miserably clad people as are found only too frequently in our
+great cities. Here there are no doubt poor people, as there are
+such every where else in the world, but one does not see them beg.
+I cannot help mentioning an arrangement which certainly deserves to
+be universally carried out;--I mean, the setting apart of many large
+houses, partly belonging to the royal family, partly to rich private
+people or to companies, for the reception of poor people, who are
+here lodged at a much cheaper rate than is possible in ordinary
+dwellings.
+
+The costumes of the peasants did not particularly please me. The
+women wear dresses of green or black woollen stuff, reaching to the
+ankle, and trimmed at the skirt with broad coloured woollen borders.
+The seams of the spenser, and the arm-holes, are also trimmed with
+smaller coloured borders. On their heads they wear a handkerchief,
+and over this a kind of shade, like a bonnet. On Sundays I saw many
+of them in small, pretty caps, worked with silk, with a border of
+lace of more than a hand's breadth, plaited very stiffly; at the
+back they have large bows of fine riband, the ends of which reach
+half down to their feet. I found nothing very remarkable in the
+dress of the peasants. As far as strength and beauty were
+concerned, I thought these peasants were neither more nor less
+gifted than those of Austria. As regards the beauty of the fair
+sex, I should certainly give the preference to the Austrians. Fair
+hair and blue eyes predominate.
+
+I saw but few soldiers; their uniforms, particularly those worn by
+the king's life-guards, are very handsome.
+
+I especially noticed the drummers; they were all little lads of ten
+or twelve years old. One could almost have exclaimed, "Drum,
+whither art thou carrying that boy?" To march, and to join in
+fatiguing manoeuvres, carrying such a drum, and beating it bravely
+at the same time, is rather cruel work for such young lads. Many a
+ruined constitution may be ascribed to this custom.
+
+During my stay in Copenhagen I spent many very delightful hours with
+Professor Mariboe and his amiable family, and with the kind
+clergyman of the embassy, Herr Zimmermann. They received me with
+true politeness and hospitality, and drew me into their circle,
+where I soon felt myself quite at ease. I shall never forget their
+friendship, and shall make use of every opportunity to shew them my
+appreciation of it. Herr Edouard Gottschalk and Herr Knudson have
+also my best thanks. I applied to the first of these gentlemen to
+procure me a passage to Iceland, and he was kind enough to use his
+interest with Herr Knudson on my behalf.
+
+Herr Knudson is one of the first general dealers in Copenhagen, and
+carries on a larger and more extended commerce with Iceland than any
+other house trading thither. He is already beginning to retire, as
+the continual journeys are becoming irksome to him; but he still
+owns a number of great and small vessels, which are partly employed
+in the fisheries, and partly in bringing all kinds of articles of
+consumption and luxury to the different harbours of Iceland.
+
+He himself goes in one of his ships every year, and stays a few
+months in Iceland to settle his affairs there. On the
+recommendation of Herr Gottschalk, Herr Knudson was kind enough to
+give me a passage in the ship in which he made the journey himself;
+a favour which I knew how to value. It is certainly no small
+kindness to take a lady passenger on such a journey. Herr Knudson
+knew neither my fortitude nor my perseverance; he did not know
+whether I should be able to endure the hardships of a journey to the
+north, whether I would bear sea-sickness philosophically, or even if
+I had courage enough, in case of storms or bad weather, to abstain
+from annoying the captain by my fears or complaints at a time when
+he would only have too much to harass him. The kind man allowed no
+such considerations to influence him. He believed me when I
+promised to behave courageously come what might, and took me with
+him. Indeed his kindness went so far that it is to him I owe every
+comfort I enjoyed in Iceland, and every assistance in furthering the
+attainment of my journey's object. I could certainly not have
+commenced a voyage under better auspices.
+
+All ships visiting Iceland leave Copenhagen at the end of April, or
+at the latest in the middle of May. After this time only one ship
+is despatched, to carry the mails of the Danish government. This
+vessel leaves Copenhagen in October, remains in Iceland during the
+winter months, and returns in March. The gain or loss of this
+expedition is distributed in shares among the merchants of
+Copenhagen.
+
+Besides this, a French frigate comes to Iceland every spring, and
+cruises among the different harbours until the middle of August.
+She superintends the fishing vessels, which, attracted by the large
+profits of the fisheries, visit these seas in great numbers during
+the summer. {17}
+
+Opportunities of returning from Iceland occur during the summer
+until the end of September, by means of the merchant-ships, which
+carry freights from the island to Denmark, England, and Spain.
+
+At length, on Sunday the 4th of May, a favourable wind sprung up.
+Herr Knudson sent me word to be ready to embark at noon on board the
+fine brig John.
+
+I immediately proceeded on board. The anchor was weighed, and the
+sails, unfolding themselves like giant wings, wafted us gently out
+of the harbour of Copenhagen. No parting from children, relations,
+or old-cherished friends embittered this hour. With a glad heart I
+bade adieu to the city, in the joyful hope soon to see the
+fulfilment of my long-expected journey.
+
+The bright sky smiled above us, and a most favourable wind filled
+our sails. I sat on deck and revelled in the contemplation of
+scenes so new to me. Behind us lay spread the majestic town; before
+us the Sound, an immense natural basin, which I could almost compare
+to a great Swiss lake; on the right and left were the coasts of
+Sweden and Denmark, which here approach each other so closely that
+they seem to oppose a barrier to the further progress of the
+adventurous voyager.
+
+Soon we passed the little Swedish town of Carlscrona, and the
+desolate island Hveen, on which Tycho de Brahe passed the greater
+portion of his life, occupied with stellar observations and
+calculations. Now came a somewhat dangerous part, and one which
+called into action all the careful seamanship of the captain to
+bring us safely through the confined sea and the strong current,--
+the entrance of the Sound into the Cattegat.
+
+The two coasts here approach to within a mile of each other. On the
+Swedish side lies the pretty little town of Helsingborg, on the
+Danish side that of Helsingor, and at the extremity of a projecting
+neck of land the fortress Kronburg, which demands a toll of every
+passing ship, and shews a large row of threatening cannon in case of
+non-compliance. Our toll had already been paid before leaving
+Copenhagen; we had been accurately signalled, and sailed fearlessly
+by. {18}
+
+The entrance once passed, we entered the Cattegat, which already
+looked more like the great ocean: the coasts retired on each side,
+and most of the shifts and barques, which till now had hovered
+around us on all sides, bade us "farewell." Some bent their course
+towards the east, others towards the west; and we alone, on the
+broad desert ocean, set sail for the icy north. Twilight did not
+set in until 9 o'clock at night; and on the coasts the flaming
+beacons flashed up, to warn the benighted mariner of the proximity
+of dangerous rocks.
+
+I now offered up my thanksgiving to Heaven for the protection
+hitherto vouchsafed me, with a humble prayer for its continuance.
+Then I descended to the cabin, where I found a convenient bunk (a
+kind of crib fixed to the side of the ship); I laid myself down, and
+was soon in a deep and refreshing sleep.
+
+I awoke full of health and spirits, which, however, I enjoyed but
+for a short time. During the night we had left behind us the
+"Cattegat" and the "Skagerrack," and were driving through the stormy
+German Ocean. A high wind, which increased almost to a gale,
+tumbled our poor ship about in such a manner, that none but a good
+dancer could hope to maintain an upright position. I had
+unfortunately been from my youth no votary of Terpsichore, and what
+was I to do? The naiads of this stormy region seized me, and
+bandied me to and fro, until they threw me into the arms of what
+was, according to my experience, if not exactly after Schiller's
+interpretation, "the horrible of horrors,"--sea-sickness. At first
+I took little heed of this, thinking that sea-sickness would soon be
+overcome by a traveller like myself, who should be inured to every
+thing. But in vain did I bear up; I became worse and worse, till I
+was at length obliged to remain in my berth with but one consoling
+thought, namely, that we were to-day on the open sea, where there
+was nothing worthy of notice. But the following day the Norwegian
+coast was in sight, and at all hazards I must see it; so I crawled
+on deck more dead than alive, looked at a row of mountains of
+moderate elevation, their tops at this early season still sparkling
+with their snowy covering, and then hurried back, benumbed by the
+piercing icy wind, to my good warm feather-bed. Those who have
+never experienced it can have no conception of the biting,
+penetrating coldness of a gale of wind in the northern seas. The
+sun shone high in the heavens; the thermometer (I always calculate
+according to Reaumur) stood 3 degrees above zero; I was dressed much
+more warmly than I should have thought necessary when, in my
+fatherland, the thermometer was 8 degrees or 10 degrees BELOW zero,
+and yet I felt chilled to the heart, and could have fancied that I
+had no clothes on at all.
+
+On the fourth night we sailed safely past the Shetland Islands; and
+on the evening of the fifth day we passed so near the majestic rocky
+group of the Feroe Islands, that we were at one time apprehensive of
+being cast upon the rocks by the unceasing gale. {19}
+
+Already on the seventh day we descried the coast of Iceland. Our
+passage had been unprecedentedly quick; the sailors declared that a
+favourable gale was to be preferred even to steam, and that on our
+present voyage we should certainly have left every steamer in our
+wake. But I, wretched being that I was, would gladly have dispensed
+with the services both of gale and steam for the sake of a few
+hours' rest. My illness increased so much, that on the seventh day
+I thought I must succumb. My limbs were bathed in a cold
+perspiration; I was as weak as an infant, and my mouth felt parched
+and dry. I saw that I must now either make a great effort or give
+up entirely; so I roused myself, and with the assistance of the
+cabin-boy gained a seat, and promised to take any and every remedy
+which should be recommended. They gave me hot-water gruel with wine
+and sugar; but it was not enough to be obliged to force this down, I
+was further compelled to swallow small pieces of raw bacon highly
+peppered, and even a mouthful of rum. I need not say what strong
+determination was required to make me submit to such a regimen. I
+had, however, but one choice, either to conquer my repugnance or
+give myself up a victim to sea-sickness; so with all patience and
+resignation I received the proffered gifts, and found, after a trial
+of many hours, that I could manage to retain a small dose. This
+physicking was continued for two long, long days, and then I began
+slowly to recover.
+
+I have here circumstantially described both my illness and its cure,
+because so many people are unfortunately victims to the complaint,
+and when under its influence cannot summon resolution to take
+sustenance. I should advise all my friends not to hold out so long
+as I did, but to take food at once, and continue to do so until the
+system will receive it.
+
+As I was now convalescent, I tried to recruit my wearied mind by a
+diligent study of the mode of life and customs of the mariners of
+the northern seas.
+
+Our ship's company consisted of Herr Knudson, Herr Bruge (a merchant
+whom we were to land at the Westmann Islands), the captain, the
+mate, and six or seven sailors. Our mode of life in the cabin was
+as follows: in the morning, at seven o'clock, we took coffee, but
+whence this coffee came, heaven knows! I drank it for eleven days,
+and could never discover any thing which might serve as a clue in my
+attempt to discover the country of its growth. At ten o'clock we
+had a meal consisting of bread and butter and cheese, with cold beef
+or pork, all excellent dishes for those in health; the second course
+of this morning meal was "tea-water." In Scandinavia, by the way,
+they never say, "I drink TEA," the word "water" is always added: "I
+drink TEA-WATER." Our "tea-water" was, if possible, worse than its
+predecessor, the incomparable coffee. Thus I was beaten at all
+points; the eatables were too strong for me, the drinkables too--
+too--I can find no appropriate epithet--probably too artificial. I
+consoled myself with the prospect of dinner; but, alas, too soon
+this sweet vision faded into thin air! On the sixth day I made my
+first appearance at the covered table, and could not help at once
+remarking the cloth which had been spread over it. At the
+commencement of our journey it might perhaps have been white; now it
+was most certainly no longer of that snowy hue. The continual
+pitching and rolling of the ship had caused each dish to set its
+peculiar stamp upon the cloth. A sort of wooden network was now
+laid upon it, in the interstices of which the plates and glasses
+were set, and thus secured from falling. But before placing it on
+the table, our worthy cabin-boy took each plate and glass
+separately, and polished it on a towel which hung near, and in
+colour certainly rather resembling the dingy floor of the cabin than
+the bight-hued rainbow. This could still have been endured, but the
+article in question really did duty AS A TOWEL in the morning,
+before extending its salutary influence over plates and glasses for
+the remainder of the day.
+
+On making discoveries such as these, I would merely turn away my
+eyes, and try to think that perhaps MY GLASS and MY PLATE would be
+more delicately manipulated, or probably escape altogether; and then
+I would turn my whole attention to the expected dishes.
+
+First came soup; but instead of gravy-soup, it was water-soup, with
+rice and dried plums. This, when mingled with red wine and sugar,
+formed a most exquisite dish for Danish appetites, but it certainly
+did not suit mine. The second and concluding course consisted of a
+large piece of beef, with which I had no fault to find, except that
+it was too heavy for one in my weak state of health. At supper we
+had the same dishes as at dinner, and each meal was followed by
+"tea-water." At first I could not fancy this bill of fare at all;
+but within a few days after my convalesence, I had accustomed myself
+to it, and could bear the sea-diet very well. {20}
+
+As the rich owner of the vessel was on board, there was no lack of
+the best wines, and few evenings passed on which a bowl of punch was
+not emptied. There was, however, a reason found why every bottle of
+wine or bowl of punch should be drunk: for instance, at our
+embarkation, to drink the health of the friends we were leaving, and
+to hope for a quick and prosperous voyage; then, when the wind was
+favourable, its health was drunk, with the request that it would
+remain so; when it was contrary, with the request that it would
+change; when we saw land, we saluted it with a glass of wine, or
+perhaps with several, but I was too ill to count; when we lost sight
+of it, we drank a farewell glass to its health: so that every day
+brought with it three or four distinct and separate occasions for
+drinking wine. {21}
+
+The sailors drank tea-water without sugar every morning and evening,
+with the addition of a glass of brandy; for dinner they had pease,
+beans, barley, or potatoes, with salted cod, bacon, "or junk;" good
+sea-biscuit they could get whenever they chose.
+
+The diet is not the worst part of these poor people's hardships.
+Their life may be called a continual fight against the elements; for
+it is precisely during the most dreadful storms, with rain and
+piercing cold, that they have to be continually upon deck. I could
+not sufficiently admire the coolness, or rather the cheerfulness and
+alacrity with which they fulfilled their onerous duties. And what
+reward have they? Scanty pay, for food the diet I have just
+described, and for their sleeping-place the smallest and most
+inconvenient part of the ship, a dark place frequently infested with
+vermin, and smelling offensively from being likewise used as a
+receptacle for oil-colours, varnish, tar, salt-fish, &c. &c.
+
+To be cheerful in the midst of all this requires a very quiet and
+contented mind. That the Danish sailors are contented, I had many
+opportunities of observing during the voyage of which I am speaking,
+and on several other occasions.
+
+But after all this long description, it is high time that I should
+return to the journey itself.
+
+The favourable gale which had thus wafted us to the coast of Iceland
+within seven days, now unfortunately changed its direction, and
+drove us back. We drifted about in the storm-tost ocean, and many a
+Spanish wave {22} broke completely over our ship. Twice we
+attempted to approach the Westmann Islands {23} (a group belonging
+to Iceland) to watch an opportunity of casting anchor, and setting
+ashore our fellow-traveller Herr Bruge; but it was in vain, we were
+driven back each time. At length, at the close of the eleventh day,
+we reached Havenfiord, a very good harbour, distant nine miles from
+Reikjavik, the capital of Iceland.
+
+In spite of the very inopportune change in the direction of the
+wind, we had had an unprecedentedly quick passage. The distance
+from Copenhagen to Iceland, in a straight line, is reckoned at 1200
+geographical miles; for a sailing vessel, which must tack now and
+then, and must go as much with the wind as possible, 1500 to 1600
+miles. Had the strong wind, which was at first so favourable,
+instead of changing on the seventh day, held on for thirty or forty
+hours longer, we should have landed in Iceland on the eighth or
+ninth day--even the steamer could not have accomplished the passage
+so quickly.
+
+The shores of Iceland appeared to me quite different from what I had
+supposed them to be from the descriptions I had read. I had fancied
+them naked, without tree or shrub, dreary and desert; but now I saw
+green hills, shrubs, and even what appeared to be groups of stunted
+trees. As we came nearer, however, I was enabled to distinguish
+objects more clearly, and the green hills became human dwellings
+with small doors and windows, while the supposed groups of trees
+proved in reality to be heaps of lava, some ten or twelve feet high,
+thickly covered with moss and grass. Every thing was new and
+striking to me; I waited in great impatience till we could land.
+
+At length the anchor descended; but it was not till next morning
+that the hour of disembarkation and deliverance came.
+
+But one more night, and then, every difficulty overcome, I should
+tread the shores of Iceland, the longed-for, and bask as it were in
+the wonders of this island, so poor in the creations of art, so rich
+in the phenomena of Nature.
+
+
+Before I land in Iceland, I must trouble the reader with a few
+preliminary observations regarding this island. They are drawn from
+Mackenzie's Description of Iceland, a book the sterling value of
+which is appreciated every where. {24}
+
+The discovery of Iceland, about the year of our Lord 860, is
+attributed to the spirit of enterprise of some Swedish and Norwegian
+pirates, who were drifted thither on a voyage to the Feroe Isles.
+It was not till the year 874 that the island was peopled by a number
+of voluntary emigrants, who, feeling unhappy under the dominion of
+Harold Harfraga (fine hair), arrived at the island under the
+direction of Ingold. {25} As the newcomers are said to have found
+no traces of dwellings, they are presumed to be the first who took
+possession of the island.
+
+At this time Iceland was still so completely covered with underwood,
+that at some points it was necessary to cut a passage. Bringing
+with them their language, religion, customs, and historical
+monuments, the Norwegians introduced a kind of feudal system, which,
+about the year 928, gave place to a somewhat aristocratic
+government, retaining, however, the name of a republic. The island
+was divided into four provinces, over each of which was placed an
+hereditary governor or judge.
+
+The General Assembly of Iceland (called Allthing) was held annually
+on the shores of the Lake Thingvalla. The people possessed an
+excellent code of laws, in which provision had been made for every
+case which could occur.
+
+This state of things lasted for more than 300 years, a period which
+may be called the golden age of Iceland. Education, literature, and
+even refined poetry flourished among the inhabitants, who took part
+in commerce and in the sea-voyages which the Norwegians undertook
+for purposes of discovery.
+
+The "Sagas," or histories of this country, contain many tales of
+personal bravery. Its bards and historians visited other climes,
+became the favourites of monarchs, and returned to their island
+covered with honour and loaded with presents. The Edda, by Samund,
+is one of the most valued poems of the ancient days of Iceland. The
+second portion of the Edda, called Skalda, dates from a later
+period, and is ascribed by many to the celebrated Snorri Sturluson.
+Isleif, first Bishop of Skalholt, was the earliest Icelandic
+historian; after him came the noted Snorri Sturluson, born in 1178,
+who became the richest and mightiest man in Iceland.
+
+Snorri Sturluson was frequently followed to the General Assembly of
+Iceland by a splendid retinue of 800 armed men. He was a great
+historian and poet, and possessed an accurate knowledge of the Greek
+and Latin tongues, besides being a powerful orator. He was also the
+author of the Heims-kringla.
+
+The first school was founded at Skalholt, about the middle of the
+eleventh century, under Isleif, first Bishop of Iceland; four other
+schools and several convents soon followed. Poetry and music seem
+to have formed a staple branch of education.
+
+The climate of Iceland appears to have been less inclement than is
+now the case; corn is said to have grown, and trees and shrubs were
+larger and thicker than we find them at present. The population of
+Iceland was also much more numerous than it is now, although there
+were neither towns nor villages. The people lived scattered
+throughout the island; and the General Assembly was held at
+Thingvalla, in the open air.
+
+Fishing constituted the chief employment of the Icelanders. Their
+clothing was woven from the wool of their sheep. Commerce with
+neighbouring countries opened to them another field of occupation.
+
+The doctrines of Christianity were first introduced into Iceland, in
+the year 981, by Friederich, a Saxon bishop. Many churches were
+built, and tithes established for the maintenance of the clergy.
+Isleif, first Bishop of Skalholt, was ordained in the year 1057.
+After the introduction of Christianity, all the Icelanders enjoyed
+an unostentatious but undisturbed practice of their religion.
+
+Greenland and the most northern part of America are said to have
+been discovered by Icelanders.
+
+In the middle of the thirteenth century Iceland came into the power
+of the Norwegian kings. In the year 1380 Norway was united to the
+crown of Denmark; and Iceland incorporated, without resistance, in
+the Danish monarchy. Since the cession of the island to Norway, and
+then to Denmark, peace and security took the place of the internal
+commotions with which, before this time, Iceland had been frequently
+disturbed; but this state of quiet brought forth indolence and
+apathy. The voyages of discovery were interfered with by the new
+government, and the commerce gradually passed into the hands of
+other nations. The climate appears also to have changed; and the
+lessened industry and want of perseverance in the inhabitants have
+brought agriculture completely into decline.
+
+In the year 1402 the plague broke out upon the island, and carried
+off two-thirds of the population.
+
+The first printing-press was established at Hoolum, about the year
+1530, under the superintendence of the Bishop, John Areson.
+
+The reformation in the Icelandic Church was not brought about
+without disturbance. It was legally established in the year 1551.
+
+During the fifteenth century the Icelanders suffered more from the
+piratical incursions of foreigners. As late as the year 1616 the
+French and English nations took part in these enormities. The most
+melancholy occurrence of this kind took place in 1627, in which year
+a great number of Algerine pirates made a descent upon the Icelandic
+coast, murdered about fifty of the inhabitants, and carried off
+nearly 400 others into captivity. {26}
+
+The eighteenth century commenced with a dreadful mortality from the
+smallpox; of which disease more than 16,000 of the inhabitants died.
+In 1757 a famine swept away about 10,000 souls.
+
+The year 1783 was distinguished by most dreadful volcanic outbreaks
+in the interior of the island. Tremendous streams of lava carried
+all before them; great rivers were checked in their course, and
+formed lakes. For more than a year a thick cloud of smoke and
+volcanic ashes covered the whole of Iceland, and nearly darkened the
+sunlight. Horned cattle, sheep, and horses were destroyed; famine
+came, with its accompanying illnesses; and once more appeared the
+malignant small-pox. In a few years more than 11,000 persons had
+died; more than one-fourth of the whole present population of the
+island.
+
+Iceland lies in the Atlantic ocean; its greatest breadth is 240
+geographical miles, and its extreme length from north to south 140
+miles. The number of inhabitants is estimated at 48,000, and the
+superficial extent of the island at 29,800 square miles.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+
+On the morning of the 16th of May I landed in the harbour of
+Havenfiord, and for the first time trod the shores of Iceland.
+Although I was quite bewildered by sea-sickness, and still more by
+the continual rocking of the ship, so that every object round me
+seemed to dance, and I could scarcely make a firm step, still I
+could not rest in the house of Herr Knudson, which he had obligingly
+placed at my disposal. I must go out at once, to see and
+investigate every thing. I found that Havenfiord consisted merely
+of three wooden houses, a few magazines built of the same material,
+and some peasants' cottages.
+
+The wooden houses are inhabited by merchants or by their factors,
+and consist only of a ground-floor, with a front of four or six
+windows. Two or three steps lead up to the entrance, which is in
+the centre of the building, and opens upon a hall from which doors
+lead into the rooms to the right and left. At the back of the house
+is situated the kitchen, which opens into several back rooms and
+into the yard. A house of this description consists only of five or
+six rooms on the ground-floor and a few small attic bedrooms.
+
+The internal arrangements are quite European. The furniture--which
+is often of mahogany,--the mirrors, the cast-iron stoves, every
+thing, in short, come from Copenhagen. Beautiful carpets lie spread
+before the sofas; neat curtains shade the windows; English prints
+ornament the whitewashed walls; porcelain, plate, cut-glass, &c.,
+are displayed on chests and on tables; and flower-pots with roses,
+mignonnette, and pinks spread a delicious fragrance around. I even
+found a grand pianoforte here. If any person could suddenly, and
+without having made the journey, be transported into one of these
+houses, he would certainly fancy himself in some continental town,
+rather than in the distant and barren island of Iceland. And as in
+Havenfiord, so I found the houses of the more opulent classes in
+Reikjavik, and in all the places I visited.
+
+From these handsome houses I betook myself to the cottages of the
+peasants, which have a more indigenous, Icelandic appearance. Small
+and low, built of lava, with the interstices filled with earth, and
+the whole covered with large pieces of turf, they would present
+rather the appearance of natural mounds of earth than of human
+dwellings, were it not that the projecting wooden chimneys, the low-
+browed entrances, and the almost imperceptible windows, cause the
+spectator to conclude that they are inhabited. A dark narrow
+passage, about four feet high, leads on one side into the common
+room, and on the other to a few compartments, some of which are used
+as storehouses for provisions, and the rest as winter stables for
+the cows and sheep. At the end of this passage, which is purposely
+built so low, as an additional defence against the cold, the
+fireplace is generally situated. The rooms of the poorer class have
+neither wooden walls nor floors, and are just large enough to admit
+of the inhabitants sleeping, and perhaps turning round in them. The
+whole interior accommodation is comprised in bedsteads with very
+little covering, a small table, and a few drawers. Beds and chests
+of drawers answer the purpose of benches and chairs. Above the beds
+are fixed rods, from which depend clothes, shoes, stockings, &c. A
+small board, on which are arranged a few books, is generally to be
+observed. Stoves are considered unnecessary; for as the space is
+very confined, and the house densely populated, the atmosphere is
+naturally warm.
+
+Rods are also placed round the fireplace, and on these the wet
+clothes and fishes are hung up in company to dry. The smoke
+completely fills the room, and slowly finds its way through a few
+breathing-holes into the open air.
+
+Fire-wood there is none throughout the whole island. The rich
+inhabitants have it brought from Norway or Denmark; the poor burn
+turf, to which they frequently add bones and other offal of fish,
+which naturally engender a most disagreeable smoke.
+
+On entering one of these cottages, the visitor is at a loss to
+determine which of the two is the more obnoxious--the suffocating
+smoke in the passage or the poisoned air of the dwelling-room,
+rendered almost insufferable by the crowding together of so many
+persons. I could almost venture to assert, that the dreadful
+eruption called Lepra, which is universal throughout Iceland, owes
+its existence rather to the total want of cleanliness than to the
+climate of the country or to the food.
+
+Throughout my subsequent journeys into the interior, I found the
+cottages of the peasants every where alike squalid and filthy. Of
+course I speak of the majority, and not of the exceptions; for here
+I found a few rich peasants, whose dwellings looked cleaner and more
+habitable, in proportion to the superior wealth or sense of decency
+of the owners. My idea is, that the traveller's estimate of a
+country should be formed according to the habits and customs of the
+generality of its inhabitants, and not according to the doings of a
+few individuals, as is often the case. Alas, how seldom did I meet
+with these creditable exceptions!
+
+The neighbourhood of Havenfiord is formed by a most beautiful and
+picturesque field of lava, at first rising in hills, then sinking
+into hollows, and at length terminating in a great plain which
+extends to the base of the neighbouring mountains. Masses of the
+most varied forms, often black and naked, rise to the height of ten
+or fifteen feet, forming walls, ruined pillars, small grottoes, and
+hollow spaces. Over these latter large slabs often extend, and form
+bridges. Every thing around consists of suddenly cooled heaped-up
+masses of lava, in some instances covered to their summits with
+grass and moss; this circumstance gives them, as already stated, the
+appearance of groups of stunted trees. Horses, sheep, and cows were
+clambering about, diligently seeking out every green place. I also
+clambered about diligently; I could not tire of gazing and wondering
+at this terribly beautiful picture of destruction.
+
+After a few hours I had so completely forgotten the hardships of my
+passage, and felt myself so much strengthened, that I began my
+journey to Reikjavik at five o'clock on the evening of the same day.
+Herr Knudson seemed much concerned for me; he warned me that the
+roads were bad, and particularly emphasised the dangerous abysses I
+should be compelled to pass. I comforted him with the assurance
+that I was a good horsewoman, and could hardly have to encounter
+worse roads than those with which I had had the honour to become
+acquainted in Syria. I therefore took leave of the kind gentleman,
+who intended to stay a week or ten days in Havenfiord, and mounting
+a small horse, set out in company of a female guide.
+
+In my guide I made the acquaintance of a remarkable antiquity of
+Iceland, who is well worthy that I should devote a few words to her
+description. She is above seventy years of age, but looks scarcely
+fifty; her head is surrounded by tresses of rich fair hair. She is
+dressed like a man; undertakes, in the capacity of messenger, the
+longest and most fatiguing journeys; rows a boat as skilfully as the
+most practised fisherman; and fulfils all her missions quicker and
+more exactly than a man, for she does not keep up so good an
+understanding with the brandy-bottle. She marched on so sturdily
+before me, that I was obliged to incite my little horse to greater
+speed with my riding-whip.
+
+At first the road lay between masses of lava, where it certainly was
+not easy to ride; then over flats and small acclivities, from whence
+we could descry the immense plain in which are situated Havenfiord,
+Bassastadt, Reikjavik, and other places. Bassastadt, a town built
+on a promontory jutting out into the sea, contains one of the
+principal schools, a church built of masonry, and a few cottages.
+The town of Reikjavik cannot be seen, as it is hidden behind a hill.
+The other places consist chiefly of a few cottages, and only meet
+the eye of the traveller when he approaches them nearly. Several
+chains of mountains, towering one above the other, and sundry
+"Jokuls," or glaciers, which lay still sparkling in their wintry
+garb, surround this interminable plain, which is only open at one
+end, towards the sea. Some of the plains and hills shone with
+tender green, and I fancied I beheld beautiful meadows. On a nearer
+inspection, however, they proved to be swampy places, and hundreds
+upon hundreds of little acclivities, sometimes resembling mole-
+hills, at others small graves, and covered with grass and moss.
+
+I could see over an area of at least thirty or forty miles, and yet
+could not descry a tree or a shrub, a bit of meadow-land or a
+friendly village. Every thing seemed dead. A few cottages lay
+scattered here and there; at long intervals a bird would hover in
+the air, and still more seldom I heard the kindly greeting of a
+passing inhabitant. Heaps of lava, swamps, and turf-bogs surrounded
+me on all sides; in all the vast expanse not a spot was to be seen
+through which a plough could be driven.
+
+After riding more than four miles, I reached a hill, from which I
+could see Reikjavik, the chief harbour, and, in fact, the only town
+on the island. But I was deceived in my expectations; the place
+before me was a mere village.
+
+The distance from Havenfiord to Reikjavik is scarcely nine miles;
+but as I was unwilling to tire my good old guide, I took three hours
+to accomplish it. The road was, generally speaking, very good,
+excepting in some places, where it lay over heaps of lava. Of the
+much-dreaded dizzy abysses I saw nothing; the startling term must
+have been used to designate some unimportant declivities, along the
+brow of which I rode, in sight of the sea; or perhaps the "abysses"
+were on the lava-fields, where I sometimes noticed small chasms of
+fifteen or sixteen feet in depth at the most.
+
+Shortly after eight o'clock in the evening I was fortunate enough to
+reach Reikjavik safe and well. Through the kind forethought of Herr
+Knudson, a neat little room had been prepared for me in one of his
+houses occupied by the family of the worthy baker Bernhoft, and
+truly I could not have been better received any where.
+
+During my protracted stay the whole family of the Bernhofts shewed
+me more kindness and cordiality than it has been my lot frequently
+to find. Many an hour has Herr Bernhoft sacrificed to me, in order
+to accompany me in my little excursions. He assisted me most
+diligently in my search for flowers, insects, and shells, and was
+much rejoiced when he could find me a new specimen. His kind wife
+and dear children rivalled him in willingness to oblige. I can only
+say, may Heaven requite them a thousand-fold for their kindness and
+friendship!
+
+I had even an opportunity of hearing my native language spoken by
+Herr Bernhoft, who was a Holsteiner by birth, and had not quite
+forgotten our dear German tongue, though he had lived for many years
+partly in Denmark, partly in Iceland.
+
+So behold me now in the only town in Iceland, {27} the seat of the
+so-called cultivated classes, whose customs and mode of life I will
+now lay before my honoured readers.
+
+Nothing was more disagreeable to me than a certain air of dignity
+assumed by the ladies here; an air which, except when it is natural,
+or has become so from long habit, is apt to degenerate into
+stiffness and incivility. On meeting an acquaintance, the ladies of
+Reikjavik would bend their heads with so stately and yet so careless
+an air as we should scarcely assume towards the humblest stranger.
+At the conclusion of a visit, the lady of the house only accompanies
+the guest as far as the chamber-door. If the husband be present,
+this civility is carried a little further; but when this does not
+happen to be the case, a stranger who does not know exactly through
+which door he can make his exit, may chance to feel not a little
+embarrassed. Excepting in the house of the "Stiftsamtmann" (the
+principal official on the island), one does not find a footman who
+can shew the way. In Hamburgh I had already noticed the beginnings
+of this dignified coldness; it increased as I journeyed further
+north, and at length reached its climax in Iceland.
+
+Good letters of recommendation often fail to render the northern
+grandees polite towards strangers. As an instance of this fact, I
+relate the following trait:
+
+Among other kind letters of recommendation, I had received one
+addressed to Herr von H-, the "Stiftsamtmann" of Iceland. On my
+arrival at Copenhagen, I heard that Herr von H- happened to be
+there. I therefore betook myself to his residence, and was shewn
+into a room where I found two young ladies and three children. I
+delivered my letter, and remained quietly standing for some time.
+Finding at length that no one invited me to be seated, I sat down
+unasked on the nearest chair, never supposing for an instant that
+the lady of the house could be present, and neglect the commonest
+forms of politeness which should be observed towards every stranger.
+After I had waited for some time, Herr von H- graciously made his
+appearance, and expressed his regret that he should have very little
+time to spare for me, as he intended setting sail for Iceland with
+his family in a short time, and in the interim had a number of
+weighty affairs to settle at Copenhagen; in conclusion, he gave me
+the friendly advice to abandon my intention of visiting Iceland, as
+the fatigues of travelling in that country were very great; finding,
+however, that I persevered in my intention, he promised, in case I
+set sail for Reikjavik earlier than himself, to give me a letter of
+recommendation. All this was concluded in great haste, and we stood
+during the interview. I took my leave, and at first determined not
+to call again for the letter. On reflection, however, I changed my
+mind, ascribed my unfriendly reception to important and perhaps
+disagreeable business, and called again two days afterwards. Then
+the letter was handed to me by a servant; the high people, whom I
+could hear conversing in the adjoining apartment, probably
+considered it too much trouble to deliver it to me personally.
+
+On paying my respects to this amiable family in Reikjavik, I was not
+a little surprised to recognise in Frau von H- one of those ladies
+who in Copenhagen had not had the civility to ask me to be seated.
+Five or six days afterwards, Herr von H- returned my call, and
+invited me to an excursion to Vatne. I accepted the invitation with
+much pleasure, and mentally asked pardon of him for having formed
+too hasty an opinion. Frau von H-, however, did not find her way to
+me until the fourth week of my stay in Reikjavik; she did not even
+invite me to visit her again, so of course I did not go, and our
+acquaintance terminated there. As in duty bound, the remaining
+dignitaries of this little town took their tone from their chief.
+My visits were unreturned, and I received no invitations, though I
+heard much during my stay of parties of pleasure, dinners, and
+evening parties. Had I not fortunately been able to employ myself,
+I should have been very badly off. Not one of the ladies had
+kindness and delicacy enough to consider that I was alone here, and
+that the society of educated people might be necessary for my
+comfort. I was less annoyed at the want of politeness in the
+gentlemen; for I am no longer young, and that accounts for every
+thing. When the women were wanting in kindliness, I had no right to
+expect consideration from the gentlemen.
+
+I tried to discover the reason of this treatment, and soon found
+that it lay in a national characteristic of these people--their
+selfishness.
+
+It appears I had scarcely arrived at Reikjavik before diligent
+inquiries were set on foot as to whether I was RICH, and should see
+much company at my house, and, in fact, whether much could be got
+out of me.
+
+To be well received here it is necessary either to be rich, or else
+to travel as a naturalist. Persons of the latter class are
+generally sent by the European courts to investigate the remarkable
+productions of the country. They make large collections of
+minerals, birds, &c.; they bring with them numerous presents,
+sometimes of considerable value, which they distribute among the
+dignitaries; they are, moreover, the projectors of many an
+entertainment, and even of many a little ball, &c.; they buy up
+every thing they can procure for their cabinets, and they always
+travel in company; they have much baggage with them, and
+consequently require many horses, which cannot be hired in Iceland,
+but must be bought. On such occasions every one here is a dealer:
+offers of horses and cabinets pour in on all sides.
+
+The most welcome arrival of all is that of the French frigate, which
+visits Iceland every year; for sometimes there are dejeuners a la
+fourchette on board, sometimes little evening parties and balls.
+There is at least something to be got besides the rich presents; the
+"Stiftsamtmann" even receives 600 florins per annum from the French
+government to defray the expense of a few return balls which he
+gives to the naval officers.
+
+With me this was not the case: I gave no parties--I brought no
+presents--they had nothing to expect from me; and therefore they
+left me to myself. {28}
+
+For this reason I affirm that he only can judge of the character of
+a people who comes among them without claim to their attention, and
+from whom they have nothing to expect. To such a person only do
+they appear in their true colours, because they do not find it worth
+while to dissemble and wear a mask in his presence. In these cases
+the traveller is certainly apt to make painful discoveries; but
+when, on the other hand, he meets with good people, he may be
+certain of their sincerity; and so I must beg my honoured readers to
+bear with me, when I mention the names of all those who heartily
+welcomed the undistinguished foreigner; it is the only way in which
+I can express my gratitude towards them.
+
+As I said before, I had intercourse with very few people, so that
+ample time remained for solitary walks, during which I minutely
+noticed every thing around me.
+
+The little town of Reikjavik consists of a single broad street, with
+houses and cottages scattered around. The number of inhabitants
+does not amount to 500.
+
+The houses of the wealthier inhabitants are of wood-work, and
+contain merely a ground-floor, with the exception of a single
+building of one story, to which the high school, now held at
+Bassastadt, will be transferred next year. The house of the
+"Stiftsamtmann" is built of stone. It was originally intended for a
+prison; but as criminals are rarely to be met with in Iceland, the
+building was many years ago transformed into the residence of the
+royal officer. A second stone building, discernible from Reikjavik,
+is situated at Langarnes, half a mile from the town. It lies near
+the sea, in the midst of meadows, and is the residence of the
+bishop.
+
+The church is capable of holding only at the most from 100 to 150
+persons; it is built of stone, with a wooden roof. In the chambers
+of this roof the library, consisting of several thousand volumes, is
+deposited. The church contains a treasure which many a larger and
+costlier edifice might envy,--a baptismal font by Thorwaldsen, whose
+parents were of Icelandic extraction. The great sculptor himself
+was born in Denmark, and probably wished, by this present, to do
+honour to the birth-place of his ancestors.
+
+To some of the houses in Reikjavik pieces of garden are attached.
+These gardens are small plots of ground where, with great trouble
+and expense, salad, spinach, parsley, potatoes, and a few varieties
+of edible roots, are cultivated. The beds are separated from each
+other by strips of turf a foot broad, seldom boasting even a few
+field-flowers.
+
+The inhabitants of Iceland are generally of middle stature, and
+strongly built, with light hair, frequently inclining to red, and
+blue eyes. The men are for the most part ugly; the women are better
+favoured, and among the girls I noticed some very sweet faces. To
+attain the age of seventy or eighty years is here considered an
+extraordinary circumstance. {29} The peasants have many children,
+and yet few; many are born, but few survive the first year. The
+mothers do not nurse them, and rear them on very bad food. Those
+who get over the first year look healthy enough; but they have
+strangely red cheeks, almost as though they had an eruption.
+Whether this appearance is to be ascribed to the sharp air, to which
+the delicate skin is not yet accustomed, or to the food, I know not.
+
+In some places on the coast, when the violent storms prevent the
+poor fishermen for whole weeks from launching their boats, they live
+almost entirely on dried fishes' heads. {30} The fishes themselves
+have been salted down and sold, partly to pay the fishermen's taxes,
+and partly to liquidate debts for the necessaries of the past
+season, among which brandy and snuff unfortunately play far too
+prominent a part.
+
+Another reason why the population does not increase is to be found
+in the numerous catastrophes attending the fisheries during the
+stormy season of the year. The fishermen leave the shore with songs
+and mirth, for a bright sky and a calm sea promise them good
+fortune. But, alas, tempests and snow-storms too often overtake the
+unfortunate boatmen! The sea is lashed into foam, and mighty waves
+overwhelm boats and fishermen together, and they perish inevitably.
+It is seldom that the father of a family embarks in the same boat
+with his sons. They divide themselves among different parties, in
+order that, if one boat founder, the whole family may not be
+destroyed.
+
+I found the cottages of the peasants at Reikjavik smaller, and in
+every respect worse provided, than those at Havenfiord. This seems,
+however, to be entirely owing to the indolence of the peasants
+themselves; for stones are to be had in abundance, and every man is
+his own builder. The cows and sheep live through the winter in a
+wretched den, built either in the cottage itself or in its immediate
+neighbourhood. The horses pass the whole year under the canopy of
+heaven, and must find their own provender. Occasionally only the
+peasant will shovel away the snow from a little spot, to assist the
+poor animals in searching for the grass or moss concealed beneath.
+It is then left to the horses to finish clearing away the snow with
+their feet. It may easily be imagined that this mode of treatment
+tends to render them very hardy; but the wonder is, how the poor
+creatures manage to exist through the winter on such spare diet, and
+to be strong and fit for work late in the spring and in summer.
+These horses are so entirely unused to being fed with oats, that
+they will refuse them when offered; they are not even fond of hay.
+
+As I arrived in Iceland during the early spring, I had an
+opportunity of seeing the horses and sheep in their winter garments.
+The horses seemed to be covered, not with hair, but with a thick
+woolly coat; their manes and tails are very long, and of surprising
+thickness. At the end of May or the beginning of June the tail and
+mane are docked and thinned, their woolly coat falls of itself, and
+they then look smooth enough. The sheep have also a very thick coat
+during the winter. It is not the custom to shear them, but at the
+beginning of June the wool is picked off piece by piece with the
+hand. A sheep treated in this way sometimes presents a very comical
+appearance, being perfectly naked on one side, while on the other it
+is still covered with wool.
+
+The horses and cows are considerably smaller than those of our
+country. No one need journey so far north, however, to see stunted
+cattle. Already, in Galicia, the cows and horses of the peasants
+are not a whit larger or stronger than those in Iceland. The
+Icelandic cows are further remarkable only for their peculiarly
+small horns; the sheep are also smaller than ours.
+
+Every peasant keeps horses. The mode of feeding them is, as already
+shewn, very simple; the distances are long, the roads bad, and large
+rivers, moorlands, and swamps must frequently be passed; so every
+one rides, both men, women, and children. The use of carriages is
+as totally unknown throughout the island as in Syria.
+
+The immediate vicinity of Reikjavik is pretty enough. Some of the
+townspeople go to much trouble and expense in sometimes collecting
+and sometimes breaking the stones around their dwellings. With the
+little ground thus obtained they mix turf, ashes, and manure, until
+at length a soil is formed on which something will grow. But this
+is such a gigantic undertaking, that the little culture bestowed on
+the spots wholly neglected by nature cannot be wondered at. Herr
+Bernhoft shewed me a small meadow which he had leased for thirty
+years, at an annual rent of thirty kreutzers. In order, however, to
+transform the land he bought into a meadow, which yields winter
+fodder for only one cow, it was necessary to expend more than 150
+florins, besides much personal labour and pains. The rate of wages
+for peasants is very high when compared with the limited wants of
+these people: they receive thirty or forty kreutzers per diem, and
+during the hay-harvest as much as a florin.
+
+For a long distance round the town the ground consists of stones,
+turf, and swamps. The latter are mostly covered with hundreds upon
+hundreds of great and small mounds of firm ground. By jumping from
+one of these mounds to the next, the entire swamp may be crossed,
+not only without danger, but dry-footed.
+
+In spite of all this, one of these swamps put me in a position of
+much difficulty and embarrassment during one of my solitary
+excursions. I was sauntering quietly along, when suddenly a little
+butterfly fluttered past me. It was the first I had seen in this
+country, and my eagerness to catch it was proportionately great. I
+hastened after it; thought neither of swamp nor of danger, and in
+the heat of the chase did not observe that the mounds became every
+moment fewer and farther between. Soon I found myself in the middle
+of the swamp, and could neither advance nor retreat. Not a human
+being could I descry; the very animals were far from me; and this
+circumstance confirmed me as to the dangerous nature of the ground.
+Nothing remained for me but to fix my eyes upon one point of the
+landscape, and to step out boldly towards it. I was often obliged
+to hazard two or three steps into the swamp itself, in order to gain
+the next acclivity, upon which I would then stand triumphantly, to
+determine my farther progress. So long as I could distinguish
+traces of horses' hoofs, I had no fear; but even these soon
+disappeared, and I stood there alone in the morass. I could not
+remain for ever on my tower of observation, and had no resource but
+to take to the swamp once more. I must confess that I experienced a
+very uncomfortable feeling of apprehension when my foot sank
+suddenly into the soft mud; but when I found that it did not rise
+higher than the ankles, my courage returned; I stepped out boldly,
+and was fortunate enough to escape with the fright and a thorough
+wetting.
+
+The most arduous posts in the country are those of the medical men
+and clergymen. Their sphere of action is very enlarged,
+particularly that of the medical man, whose practice sometimes
+extends over a distance of eighty to a hundred miles. When we add
+to this the severity of the winter, which lasts for seven or eight
+months, it seems marvellous that any one can be found to fill such a
+situation.
+
+In winter the peasants often come with shovels, pickaxes, and horses
+to fetch the doctor. They then go before him, and hastily repair
+the worst part of the road; while the doctor rides sometimes on one
+horse, sometimes on another, that they may not sink under the
+fatigue. And thus the procession travels for many, many miles,
+through night and fog, through storm and snow, for on the doctor's
+promptitude life and death often hang. When he then returns, quite
+benumbed, and half dead with cold, to the bosom of his family, in
+the expectation of rest and refreshment, and to rejoice with his
+friends over the dangers and hardships he has escaped, the poor
+doctor is frequently compelled to set off at once on a new and
+important journey, before he has even had time to greet the dear
+ones at home.
+
+Sometimes he is sent for by sea, where the danger is still greater
+on the storm-tost element.
+
+Though the salary of the medical men is not at all proportionate to
+the hardships they are called upon to undergo, it is still far
+better than that of the priests.
+
+The smallest livings bring in six to eight florins annually, the
+richest 200 florins. Besides this, the government supplies for each
+priest a house, often not much better than a peasant's cottage, a
+few meadows, and some cattle. The peasants are also required to
+give certain small contributions in the way of hay, wool, fish, &c.
+The greater number of priests are so poor, that they and their
+families dress exactly like the peasants, from whom they can
+scarcely be distinguished. The clergyman's wife looks after the
+cattle, and milks cows and ewes like a maid-servant; while her
+husband proceeds to the meadow, and mows the grass with the
+labourer. The intercourse of the pastor is wholly confined to the
+society of peasants; and this constitutes the chief element of that
+"patriarchal life" which so many travellers describe as charming. I
+should like to know which of them would wish to lead such a life!
+
+The poor priest has, besides, frequently to officiate in two, three,
+or even four districts, distant from four to twelve miles from his
+residence. Every Sunday he must do duty at one or other of these
+districts, taking them in turn, so that divine service is only
+performed at each place once in every three or four weeks. The
+journeys of the priest, however, are not considered quite so
+necessary as those of the doctor; for if the weather is very bad on
+Sundays, particularly during the winter, he can omit visiting the
+most distant places. This is done the more readily, as but few of
+the peasants would be at church; all who lived at a distance
+remaining at home.
+
+The Sysselmann (an officer similar to that of the sheriff of a
+county) is the best off. He has a good salary with little to do,
+and in some places enjoys in addition the "strand-right," which is
+at times no inconsiderable privilege, from the quantity of drift
+timber washed ashore from the American continent.
+
+Fishing and the chase are open to all, with the exception of the
+salmon-fisheries in the rivers; these are farmed by the government.
+Eider-ducks may not be shot, under penalty of a fine. There is no
+military service, for throughout the whole island no soldiers are
+required. Even Reikjavik itself boasts only two police-officers.
+
+Commerce is also free; but the islanders possess so little
+commercial spirit, that even if they had the necessary capital, they
+would never embark in speculation.
+
+The whole commerce of Iceland thus lies in the hands of Danish
+merchants, who send their ships to the island every year, and have
+established factories in the different ports where the retail trade
+is carried on.
+
+These ships bring every thing to Iceland, corn, wood, wines,
+manufactured goods, and colonial produce, &c. The imports are free,
+for it would not pay the government to establish offices, and give
+servants salaries to collect duties upon the small amount of produce
+required for the island. Wine, and in fact all colonial produce,
+are therefore much cheaper than in other countries.
+
+The exports consist of fish, particularly salted cod, fish-roe,
+tallow, train-oil, eider-down, and feathers of other birds, almost
+equal to eider-down in softness, sheep's wool, and pickled or salted
+lamb. With the exception of the articles just enumerated, the
+Icelanders possess nothing; thirteen years ago, when Herr Knudson
+established a bakehouse, {31} he was compelled to bring from
+Copenhagen, not only the builder, but even the materials for
+building, stones, lime, &c.; for although the island abounds with
+masses of stone, there are none which can be used for building an
+oven, or which can be burnt into lime: every thing is of lava.
+
+Two or three cottages situated near each other are here dignified by
+the name of a "place." These places, as well as the separate
+cottages, are mostly built on little acclivities, surrounded by
+meadows. The meadows are often fenced in with walls of stone or
+earth, two or three feet in height, to prevent the cows, sheep, and
+horses from trespassing upon them to graze. The grass of these
+meadows is made into hay, and laid up as a winter provision for the
+cows.
+
+I did not hear many complaints of the severity of the cold in
+winter; the temperature seldom sinks to twenty degrees below zero;
+the sea is sometimes frozen, but only a few feet from the shore.
+The snowstorms and tempests, however, are often so violent, that it
+is almost impossible to leave the house. Daylight lasts only for
+five or six hours, and to supply its place the poor Icelanders have
+only the northern light, which is said to illumine the long nights
+with a brilliancy truly marvellous.
+
+The summer I passed in Iceland was one of the finest the inhabitants
+had known for years. During the month of June the thermometer often
+rose at noon to twenty degrees. The inhabitants found this heat so
+insupportable, that they complained of being unable to work or to go
+on messages during the day-time. On such warm days they would only
+begin their hay-making in the evening, and continued their work half
+the night.
+
+The changes in the weather are very remarkable. Twenty degrees of
+heat on one day would be followed by rain on the next, with a
+temperature of only five degrees; and on the 5th of June, at eight
+o'clock in the morning, the thermometer stood at one degree below
+zero. It is also curious that thunderstorms happen in Iceland in
+winter, and are said never to occur during the summer.
+
+From the 16th or 18th of June to the end of the month there is no
+night. The sun appears only to retire for a short time behind a
+mountain, and forms sunset and morning-dawn at the same time. As on
+one side the last beam fades away, the orb of day re-appears at the
+opposite one with redoubled splendour.
+
+During my stay in Iceland, from the 15th of May to the 29th of July,
+I never retired to rest before eleven o'clock at night, and never
+required a candle. In May, and also in the latter portion of the
+month of July, there was twilight for an hour or two, but it never
+became quite dark. Even during the last days of my stay, I could
+read until half-past ten o'clock. At first it appeared strange to
+me to go to bed in broad daylight; but I soon accustomed myself to
+it, and when eleven o'clock came, no sunlight was powerful enough to
+cheat me of my sleep. I found much pleasure in walking at night, at
+past ten o'clock, not in the pale moonshine, but in the broad blaze
+of the sun.
+
+It was a much more difficult task to accustom myself to the diet.
+The baker's wife was fully competent to superintend the cooking
+according to the Danish and Icelandic schools of the art; but
+unfortunately these modes of cookery differ widely from ours. One
+thing only was good, the morning cup of coffee with cream, with
+which the most accomplished gourmand could have found no fault:
+since my departure from Iceland I have not found such coffee. I
+could have wished for some of my dear Viennese friends to breakfast
+with me. The cream was so thick, that I at first thought my hostess
+had misunderstood me, and brought me curds. The butter made from
+the milk of Icelandic cows and ewes did not look very inviting, and
+was as white as lard, but the taste was good. The Icelanders,
+however, find the taste not sufficiently "piquant," and generally
+qualify it with train-oil. Altogether, train-oil plays a very
+prominent part in the Icelandic kitchen; the peasant considers it a
+most delicious article, and thinks nothing of devouring a quantity
+of it without bread, or indeed any thing else. {32}
+
+I did not at all relish the diet at dinner; this meal consisted of
+two dishes, namely, boiled fish, with vinegar and melted butter
+instead of oil, and boiled potatoes. Unfortunately I am no admirer
+of fish, and now this was my daily food. Ah, how I longed for beef-
+soup, a piece of meat, and vegetables, in vain! As long as I
+remained in Iceland, I was compelled quite to give up my German
+system of diet.
+
+After a time I got on well enough with the boiled fish and potatoes,
+but I could not manage the delicacies of the island. Worthy Madame
+Bernhoft, it was so kindly meant on her part; and it was surely not
+her fault that the system of cookery in Iceland is different from
+ours; but I could not bring myself to like the Icelandic delicacies.
+They were of different kinds, consisting sometimes of fishes, hard-
+boiled eggs, and potatoes chopped up together, covered with a thick
+brown sauce, and seasoned with pepper, sugar, and vinegar; at
+others, of potatoes baked in butter and sugar. Another delicacy was
+cabbage chopped very small, rendered very thin by the addition of
+water, and sweetened with sugar; the accompanying dish was a piece
+of cured lamb, which had a very unpleasant "pickled" flavour.
+
+On Sundays we sometimes had "Prothe Grutze," properly a Scandinavian
+dish, composed of fine sago boiled to a jelly, with currant-juice or
+red wine, and eaten with cream or sugar. Tapfen, a kind of soft
+cheese, is also sometimes eaten with cream and sugar.
+
+In the months of June and July the diet improved materially. We
+could often procure splendid salmon, sometimes roast lamb, and now
+and then birds, among which latter dainties the snipes were
+particularly good. In the evening came butter, cheese, cold fish,
+smoked lamb, and eggs of eider-ducks, which are coarser than hen's
+eggs. In time I became so accustomed to this kind of food, that I
+no longer missed either soup or beef, and felt uncommonly well.
+
+My drink was always clear fresh water; the gentlemen began their
+dinner with a small glass of brandy, and during the meal all drank
+beer of Herr Bernhoft's own brewing, which was very good. On
+Sundays, a bottle of port or Bordeaux sometimes made its appearance
+at our table; and as we fared at Herr Bernhoft's, so it was the
+custom in the houses of all the merchants and officials.
+
+At Reikjavik I had an opportunity of witnessing a great religious
+ceremony. Three candidates of theology were raised to the
+ministerial office. Though the whole community here is Lutheran,
+the ceremonies differ in many respects from those of the continent
+of Europe, and I will therefore give a short sketch of what I saw.
+The solemnity began at noon, and lasted till four o'clock. I
+noticed at once that all the people covered their faces for a moment
+on entering the church, the men with their hats, and the women with
+their handkerchiefs. Most of the congregation sat with their faces
+turned towards the altar; but this rule had its exceptions. The
+vestments of the priests were the same as those worn by our
+clergymen, and the commencement of the service also closely
+resembled the ritual of our own Church; but soon this resemblance
+ceased. The bishop stepped up to the altar with the candidates, and
+performed certain ceremonies; then one would mount the pulpit and
+read part of a sermon, or sing a psalm, while the other clergymen
+sat round on chairs, and appeared to listen; then a second and a
+third ascended the pulpit, and afterwards another sermon was
+preached from the altar, and another psalm sung; then a sermon was
+again read from the pulpit. While ceremonies were performed at the
+altar, the sacerdotal garments were often put on and taken off
+again. I frequently thought the service was coming to a close, but
+it always began afresh, and lasted, as I said before, until four
+o'clock. The number of forms surprised me greatly, as the ritual of
+the Lutheran Church is in general exceedingly simple.
+
+On this occasion a considerable number of the country people were
+assembled, and I had thus a good opportunity of noticing their
+costumes. The dresses worn by the women and girls are all made of
+coarse black woollen stuffs. The dress consists of a long skirt, a
+spencer, and a coloured apron. On their heads they wear a man's
+nightcap of black cloth, the point turned downwards, and terminating
+in a large tassel of wool or silk, which hangs down to the shoulder.
+Their hair is unbound, and reaches only to the shoulder: some of
+the women wear it slightly curled. I involuntarily thought of the
+poetical descriptions of the northern romancers, who grow
+enthusiastic in praise of ideal "angels' heads with golden tresses."
+The hair is certainly worn in this manner here, and our poets may
+have borrowed their descriptions from the Scandinavians. But the
+beautiful faces which are said to beam forth from among those golden
+locks exist only in the poet's vivid imagination.
+
+Ornamental additions to the costume are very rare. In the whole
+assembly I only noticed four women who were dressed differently from
+the others. The cords which fastened their spencers, and also their
+girdles, were ornamented with a garland worked in silver thread.
+Their skirts were of fine black cloth, and decorated with a border
+of coloured silk a few inches broad. Round their necks they wore a
+kind of stiff collar of black velvet with a border of silver thread,
+and on their heads a black silk handkerchief with a very strange
+addition. This appendage consisted of a half-moon fastened to the
+back of the head, and extending five or six inches above the
+forehead. It was covered with white lawn arranged in folds; its
+breadth at the back of the head did not exceed an inch and a half,
+but in front it widened to five or six inches.
+
+The men, I found, were clothed almost like our peasants. They wore
+small-clothes of dark cloth, jackets and waistcoats, felt hats, or
+fur caps; and instead of boots a kind of shoe of ox-hide, sheep, or
+seal-skin, bound to the feet by a leather strap. The women, and
+even the children of the officials, all wear shoes of this
+description.
+
+It was very seldom that I met people so wretchedly and poorly clad
+as we find them but too often in the large continental towns. I
+never saw any one without good warm shoes and stockings.
+
+The better classes, such as merchants, officials, &c. are dressed in
+the French style, and rather fashionably. There is no lack of silk
+and other costly stuffs. Some of these are brought from England,
+but the greater part come from Denmark.
+
+On the king's birthday, which is kept every year at the house of the
+Stiftsamtmann, the festivities are said to be very grand; on this
+occasion the matrons appear arrayed in silk, and the maidens in
+white jaconet; the rooms are lighted with wax tapers.
+
+Some speculative genius or other has also established a sort of club
+in Reikjavik. He has, namely, hired a couple of rooms, where the
+townspeople meet of an evening to discuss "tea-water," bread and
+butter, and sometimes even a bottle of wine or a bowl of punch. In
+winter the proprietor gives balls in these apartments, charging 20
+kr. for each ticket of admission. Here the town grandees and the
+handicraftsmen, in fact all who choose to come, assemble; and the
+ball is said to be conducted in a very republican spirit. The
+shoemaker leads forth the wife of the Stiftsamtmann to the dance,
+while that official himself has perhaps chosen the wife or daughter
+of the shoemaker or baker for his partner. The refreshments consist
+of "tea-water" and bread and butter, and the room is lighted with
+tallow candles. The music, consisting of a kind of three-stringed
+violin and a pipe, is said to be exquisitely horrible.
+
+In summer the dignitaries make frequent excursions on horse-back;
+and on these occasions great care is taken that there be no lack of
+provisions. Commonly each person contributes a share: some bring
+wine, others cake; others, again, coffee, and so on. The ladies use
+fine English side-saddles, and wear elegant riding-habits, and
+pretty felt hats with green veils. These jaunts, however, are
+confined to Reikjavik; for, as I have already observed, there is,
+with the exception of this town, no place in Iceland containing more
+than two or three stores and some half-dozen cottages.
+
+To my great surprise, I found no less than six square piano-fortes
+belonging to different families in Reikjavik, and heard waltzes by
+our favourite composers, besides variations of Herz, and some pieces
+of Liszt, Wilmers, and Thalberg. But such playing! I do not think
+that these talented composers would have recognised their own works.
+
+In conclusion, I must offer a few remarks relative to the travelling
+in this country.
+
+The best time to choose for this purpose is from the middle of June
+to the end of August at latest. Until June the rivers are so
+swollen and turbulent, by reason of the melting snows, as to render
+it very dangerous to ride through them. The traveller must also
+pass over many a field of snow not yet melted by the sun, and
+frequently concealing chasms and masses of lava; and this is
+attended with danger almost as great. At every footstep the
+traveller sinks into the snow; and he may thank his lucky stars if
+the whole rotten surface does not give way. In September the
+violent storms of wind and rain commence, and heavy falls of snow
+may be expected from day to day.
+
+A tent, provisions, cooking utensils, pillows, bed-clothes, and warm
+garments, are highly necessary for the wayfarer's comfort. This
+paraphernalia would have been too expensive for me to buy, and I was
+unprovided with any thing of the kind; consequently I was forced to
+endure the most dreadful hardships and toil, and was frequently
+obliged to ride an immense distance to reach a little church or a
+cottage, which would afford me shelter for the night. My sole food
+for eight or ten days together was often bread and cheese; and I
+generally passed the night upon a chest or a bench, where the cold
+would often prevent my closing my eyes all night.
+
+It is advisable to be provided with a waterproof cloak and a
+sailor's tarpaulin hat, as a defence against the rain, which
+frequently falls. An umbrella would be totally useless, as the rain
+is generally accompanied by a storm, or, at any rate, by a strong
+wind; when we add to this, that it is necessary in some places to
+ride quickly, it will easily be seen that holding an umbrella open
+is a thing not to be thought of.
+
+Altogether I found the travelling in this country attended with far
+more hardship than in the East. For my part, I found the dreadful
+storms of wind, the piercing air, the frequent rain, and the cold,
+much less endurable than the Oriental heat, which never gave me
+either cracked lips or caused scales to appear on my face. In
+Iceland my lips began to bleed on the fifth day; and afterwards the
+skin came off my face in scales, as if I had had the scrofula.
+Another source of great discomfort is to be found in the long
+riding-habit. It is requisite to be very warmly clad; and the heavy
+skirts, often dripping with rain, coil themselves round the feet of
+the wearer in such a manner, as to render her exceedingly awkward
+either in mounting or dismounting. The worst hardship of all,
+however, is the being obliged to halt to rest the horses in a meadow
+during the rain. The long skirts suck up the water from the damp
+grass, and the wearer has often literally not a dry stitch in all
+her garments.
+
+Heat and cold appear in this country to affect strangers in a
+remarkable degree. The cold seemed to me more piercing, and the
+heat more oppressive in Iceland, than when the thermometer stood at
+the same points in my native land.
+
+In summer the roads are marvellously good, so that one can generally
+ride at a pretty quick pace. They are, however, impracticable for
+vehicles, partly because they are too narrow, and partly also on
+account of some very bad places which must occasionally be
+encountered. On the whole island not a single carriage is to be
+found.
+
+The road is only dangerous when it leads through swamps and moors,
+or over fields of lava. Among these fields, such as are covered
+with white moss are peculiarly to be feared, for the moss frequently
+conceals very dangerous holes, into which the horse can easily
+stumble. In ascending and descending the hills very formidable
+spots sometimes oppose the traveller's progress. The road is at
+times so hidden among swamps and bogs, that not a trace of it is to
+be distinguished, and I could only wonder how my guide always
+succeeded in regaining the right path. One could almost suppose
+that on these dangerous paths both horse and man are guided by a
+kind of instinct.
+
+Travelling is more expensive in Iceland than any where else,
+particularly when one person travels alone, and must bear all the
+expense of the baggage, the guide, ferries, &c. Horses are not let
+out on hire, they must be bought. They are, however, very cheap; a
+pack-horse costs from eighteen to twenty-four florins, and a riding-
+horse from forty to fifty florins. To travel with any idea of
+comfort it is necessary to have several pack-horses, for they must
+not be heavily laden; and an additional servant must likewise be
+hired, as the guide only looks after the saddle-horses, and, at
+most, one or two of the pack-horses. If the traveller, at the
+conclusion of the journey, wishes to sell the horses, such a
+wretchedly low price is offered, that it is just as well to give
+them away at once. This is a proof of the fact that men are every
+where alike ready to follow up their advantage. These people are
+well aware that the horses must be left behind at any rate, and
+therefore they will not bid for them. I must confess that I found
+the character of the Icelanders in every respect below the estimate
+I had previously formed of it, and still further below the standard
+given in books.
+
+In spite of their scanty food, the Icelandic horses have a
+marvellous power of endurance; they can often travel from thirty-
+five to forty miles per diem for several consecutive days. But the
+only difficulty is to keep the horse moving. The Icelanders have a
+habit of continually kicking their heels against the poor beast's
+sides; and the horse at last gets so accustomed to this mode of
+treatment, that it will hardly go if the stimulus be discontinued.
+In passing the bad pieces of road it is necessary to keep the bridle
+tight in hand, or the horse will stumble frequently. This and the
+continual urging forward of the horse render riding very fatiguing.
+{33}
+
+Not a little consideration is certainly required before undertaking
+a journey into the far north; but nothing frightened me,--and even
+in the midst of the greatest dangers and hardships I did not for one
+moment regret my undertaking, and would not have relinquished it
+under any consideration.
+
+I made excursions to every part of Iceland, and am thus enabled to
+place before my readers, in regular order, the chief curiosities of
+this remarkable country. I will commence with the immediate
+neighbourhood of Reikjavik.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+
+May 25th.
+
+Stiftsamtmann von H- was today kind enough to pay me a visit, and to
+invite me to join his party for a ride to the great lake Vatne. I
+gladly accepted the invitation, for, according to the description
+given by the Stiftsamtmann, I hoped to behold a very Eden, and
+rejoiced at the prospect of observing the recreations of the higher
+classes, and at the same time gaining many acquisitions in specimens
+of plants, butterflies, and beetles. I resolved also to test the
+capabilities of the Icelandic horses more thoroughly than I had been
+able to do during my first ride from Havenfiord to Reikjavik, as I
+had been obliged on that occasion to ride at a foot-pace, on account
+of my old guide.
+
+The hour of starting was fixed for two o'clock. Accustomed as I am
+to strict punctuality, I was ready long before the appointed time,
+and at two o'clock was about to hasten to the place of rendezvous,
+when my hostess informed me I had plenty of time, for Herr von H-
+was still at dinner. Instead of meeting at two o'clock, we did not
+assemble until three, and even then another quarter of an hour
+elapsed before the cavalcade started. Oh, Syrian notions of
+punctuality and dispatch! Here, almost at the very antipodes, did I
+once more greet ye.
+
+The party consisted of the nobility and the town dignitaries. Among
+the former class may be reckoned Stiftsamtmann von H- and his lady;
+a privy councillor, Herr von B-, who had been sent from Copenhagen
+to attend the "Allthing" (political assembly); and a Danish baron,
+who had accompanied the councillor. I noticed among the town
+dignitaries the daughter and wife of the apothecary, and the
+daughters of some merchants resident here.
+
+Our road lay through fields of lava, swamps, and very poor grassy
+patches, in a great valley, swelling here and there into gentle
+acclivities, and shut in on three sides by several rows of
+mountains, towering upwards in the most diversified shapes. In the
+far distance rose several jokuls or glaciers, seeming to look
+proudly down upon the mountains, as though they asked, "Why would ye
+draw men's eyes upon you, where we glisten in our silver sheen?" In
+the season of the year at which I beheld them, the glaciers were
+still very beautiful; not only their summits, but their entire
+surface, as far as visible, being covered with snow. The fourth
+side of the valley through which we travelled was washed by the
+ocean, which melted as it were into the horizon in immeasurable
+distance. The coast was dotted with small bays, having the
+appearance of so many lakes.
+
+As the road was good, we could generally ride forward at a brisk
+pace. Occasionally, however, we met with small tracts on which the
+Icelandic horse could exercise its sagacity and address. My horse
+was careful and free from vice; it carried me securely over masses
+of stone and chasms in the rocks, but I cannot describe the
+suffering its trot caused me. It is said that riding is most
+beneficial to those who suffer from liver-complaints. This may be
+the case; but I should suppose that any one who rode upon an
+Icelandic horse, with an Icelandic side-saddle, every day for the
+space of four weeks, would find, at the expiration of that time, her
+liver shaken to a pulp, and no part of it remaining.
+
+All the rest of the party had good English saddles, mine alone was
+of Icelandic origin. It consisted of a chair, with a board for the
+back. The rider was obliged to sit crooked upon the horse, and it
+was impossible to keep a firm seat. With much difficulty I trotted
+after the others, for my horse would not be induced to break into a
+gallop.
+
+At length, after a ride of an hour and a half, we reached a valley.
+In the midst of a tolerably green meadow I descried what was, for
+Iceland, a farm of considerable dimensions, and not far from this
+farm was a very small lake. I did not dare to ask if this was the
+GREAT lake Vatne, or if this was the delicious prospect I had been
+promised, for my question would have been taken for irony. I could
+not refrain from wonder when Herr von H- began praising the
+landscape as exquisite, and farther declaring the effect of the lake
+to be bewitching. I was obliged, for politeness' sake, to
+acquiesce, and leave them in the supposition that I had never seen a
+larger lake nor a finer prospect.
+
+We now made a halt, and the whole party encamped in the meadow.
+While the preparations for a social meal were going on, I proceeded
+to satisfy my curiosity.
+
+The peasant's house first attracted my attention. I found it to
+consist of one large chamber, and two of smaller size, besides a
+storeroom and extensive stables, from which I judged that the
+proprietor was rich in cattle. I afterwards learnt that he owned
+fifty sheep, eight cows, and five horses, and was looked upon as one
+of the richest farmers in the neighbourhood. The kitchen was
+situated at the extreme end of the building, and was furnished with
+a chimney that seemed intended only as a protection against rain and
+snow, for the smoke dispersed itself throughout the whole kitchen,
+drying the fish which hung from the ceiling, and slowly making its
+exit through an air-hole.
+
+The large apartment boasted a wooden bookshelf, containing about
+forty volumes. Some of these I turned over, and in spite of my
+limited knowledge of the Danish language, could make out enough to
+discover that they were chiefly on religious subjects. But the
+farmer seemed also to love poetry; among the works of this class in
+his library, I noticed Kleist, Muller, and even Homer's Odyssey. I
+could make nothing of the Icelandic books; but on inquiring their
+contents, I was told that they all treated of religious matters.
+
+After inspecting these, I walked out into the meadow to search for
+flowers and herbs. Flowers I found but few, as it was not the right
+time of the year for them; my search for herbs was more successful,
+and I even found some wild clover. I saw neither beetles nor
+butterflies; but, to my no small surprise, heard the humming of two
+wild bees, one of which I was fortunate enough to catch, and took
+home to preserve in spirits of wine.
+
+On rejoining my party, I found them encamped in the meadow around a
+table, which had in the meantime been spread with butter, cheese,
+bread, cake, roast lamb, raisins and almonds, a few oranges, and
+wine. Neither chairs nor benches were to be had, for even wealthy
+peasants only possess planks nailed to the walls of their rooms; so
+we all sat down upon the grass, and did ample justice to the capital
+coffee which made the commencement of the meal. Laughter and jokes
+predominated to such an extent, that I could have fancied myself
+among impulsive Italians instead of cold Northmen.
+
+There was no lack of wit; but to-day I was unfortunately its butt.
+And what was my fault?--only my stupid modesty. The conversation
+was carried on in the Danish language; some members of our party
+spoke French and others German, but I purposely abstained from
+availing myself of their acquirements, in order not to disturb the
+hilarity of the conversation. I sat silently among them, and was
+perfectly contented in listening to their merriment. But my
+behaviour was set down as proceeding from stupidity, and I soon
+gathered from their discourse that they were comparing me to the
+"stone guest" in Mozart's Don Giovanni. If these kind people had
+only surmised the true reason of my keeping silence, they would
+perhaps have thanked me for doing so.
+
+As we sat at our meal, I heard a voice in the farmhouse singing an
+Icelandic song. At a distance it resembled the humming of bees; on
+a nearer approach it sounded monotonous, drawling, and melancholy.
+
+While we were preparing for our departure, the farmer, his wife, and
+the servants approached, and shook each of us by the hand. This is
+the usual mode of saluting such HIGH people as we numbered among our
+party. The true national salutation is a hearty kiss.
+
+On my arrival at home the effect of the strong coffee soon began to
+manifest itself. I could not sleep at all, and had thus ample
+leisure to make accurate observations as to the length of the day
+and of the twilight. Until eleven o'clock at night I could read
+ordinary print in my room. From eleven till one o'clock it was
+dusk, but never so dark as to prevent my reading in the open air.
+In my room, too, I could distinguish the smallest objects, and even
+tell the time by my watch. At one o'clock I could again read in my
+room.
+
+
+EXCURSION TO VIDOE.
+
+
+The little island of Vidoe, four miles distant from Reikjavik, is
+described by most travellers as the chief resort of the eider-duck.
+I visited the island on the 8th of June, but was disappointed in my
+expectations. I certainly saw many of these birds on the
+declivities and in the chasms of the rocks, sitting quietly on their
+nests, but nothing approaching the thousands I had been led to
+expect. On the whole, I may perhaps have seen from one hundred to a
+hundred and fifty nests.
+
+The most remarkable circumstance connected with the eider-ducks is
+their tameness during the period of incubation. I had always
+regarded as myths the stories told about them in this respect, and
+should do so still had I not convinced myself of the truth of these
+assertions by laying hands upon the ducks myself. I could go quite
+up to them and caress them, and even then they would not often leave
+their nests. Some few birds, indeed, did so when I wished to touch
+them; but they did not fly up, but contented themselves with coolly
+walking a few paces away from the nest, and there sitting quietly
+down until I had departed. But those which already had live young,
+beat out boldly with their wings when I approached, struck at me
+with their bills, and allowed themselves to be taken up bodily
+rather than leave the nest. They are about the size of our ducks;
+their eggs are of a greenish grey, rather larger than hen's eggs,
+and taste very well. Altogether they lay about eleven eggs. The
+finest down is that with which they line their nests at first; it is
+of a dark grey colour. The Icelanders take away this down, and the
+first nest of eggs. The poor bird now robs herself once more of a
+quantity of down (which is, however, not of so fine a quality as the
+first), and again lays eggs. For the second time every thing is
+taken from her; and not until she has a third time lined the nest
+with her down is the eider-duck left in peace. The down of the
+second, and that of the third quality especially, are much lighter
+than that of the first. I also was sufficiently cruel to take a few
+eggs and some down out of several of the nests. {34}
+
+I did not witness the dangerous operation of collecting this down
+from between the clefts of rocks and from unapproachable precipices,
+where people are let down, or to which they are drawn up, by ropes,
+at peril of their lives. There are, however, none of these break-
+neck places in the neighbourhood of Reikjavik.
+
+
+SALMON FISHERY.
+
+
+I made another excursion to a very short distance (two miles) from
+Reikjavik, in the company of Herr Bernhoft and his daughter, to the
+Laxselv (salmon river) to witness the salmon-fishing, which takes
+place every week from the middle of June to the middle of August.
+It is conducted in a very simple manner. The fish come up the river
+in the spawning season; the stream is then dammed up with several
+walls of stone loosely piled to the height of some three feet; and
+the retreat of the fish to the sea is thus cut off. When the day
+arrives on which the salmon are to be caught, a net is spread behind
+each of these walls. Three or four such dams are erected at
+intervals, of from eighty to a hundred paces, so that even if the
+fishes escape one barrier, they are generally caught at the next.
+The water is now made to run off as much as possible; the poor
+salmon dart to and fro, becoming every moment more and more aware of
+the sinking of the water, and crowd to the weirs, cutting themselves
+by contact with the sharp stones of which they are built. This is
+the deepest part of the water; and it is soon so thronged with fish,
+that men, stationed in readiness, can seize them in their hands and
+fling them ashore.
+
+The salmon possess remarkable swiftness and strength. The fisherman
+is obliged to take them quickly by the head and tail, and to throw
+them ashore, when they are immediately caught by other men, who
+fling them still farther from the water. If this is not done with
+great quickness and care, many of the fishes escape. It is
+wonderful how these creatures can struggle themselves free, and leap
+into the air. The fishermen are obliged to wear woollen mittens, or
+they would be quite unable to hold the smooth salmon. At every
+day's fishing, from five hundred to a thousand fish are taken, each
+weighing from five to fifteen pounds. On the day when I was present
+eight hundred were killed. This salmon-stream is farmed by a
+merchant of Reikjavik.
+
+The fishermen receive very liberal pay,--in fact, one-half of the
+fish taken. And yet they are dissatisfied, and show so little
+gratitude, as seldom to finish their work properly. So, for
+instance, they only brought the share of the merchant to the harbour
+of Reikjavik, and were far too lazy to carry the salmon from the
+boat to the warehouse, a distance certainly not more than sixty or
+seventy paces from the shore. They sent a message to their
+employer, bidding him "send some fresh hands, for they were much too
+tired." Of course, in a case like this, all remonstrance is
+unavailing.
+
+As in the rest of the world, so also in Iceland, every occasion that
+offers is seized upon for a feast or a merry-making. The day on
+which I witnessed the salmon-fishing happened to be one of the few
+fine days that occur during a summer in Iceland. It was therefore
+unanimously concluded by several merchants, that the day and the
+salmon-fishing should be celebrated by a dejeuner a la fourchette.
+Every one contributed something, and a plentiful and elegant
+breakfast was soon arranged, which quite resembled an entertainment
+of the kind in our country; this one circumstance excepted, that we
+were obliged to seat ourselves on the ground, by reason of a
+scarcity of tables and benches. Spanish and French wines, as well
+as cold punch, were there in plenty, and the greatest hilarity
+prevailed.
+
+I made a fourth excursion, but to a very inconsiderable distance,--
+in fact, only a mile and a half from Reikjavik. It was to see a hot
+and slightly sulphurous spring, which falls into a river of cold
+water. By this lucky meeting of extremes, water can be obtained at
+any temperature, from the boiling almost to the freezing point. The
+townspeople take advantage of this good opportunity in two ways, for
+bathing and for washing clothes. The latter is undoubtedly the more
+important purpose of application, and a hut has been erected, in
+order to shield the poor people from wind and rain while they are at
+work. Formerly this hut was furnished with a good door and with
+glazed windows, and the key was kept at an appointed place in the
+town, whence any one might fetch it. But the servants and peasant
+girls were soon too lazy to go for the key; they burst open the
+lock, and smashed the windows, so that now the hut has a very
+ruinous appearance, and affords but little protection against the
+weather. How much alike mankind are every where, and how seldom
+they do right, except when it gives them no trouble, and then,
+unfortunately, there is not much merit to be ascribed to them, as
+their doing right is merely the result of a lucky chance! Many
+people also bring fish and potatoes, which they have only to lay in
+the hot water, and in a short time both are completely cooked.
+
+This spring is but little used for the purpose of bathing; at most
+perhaps by a few children and peasants. Its medicinal virtues, if
+it possesses any, are completely unknown.
+
+
+THE SULPHUR-SPRINGS AND SULPHUR-MOUNTAINS OF KRISUVIK.
+
+
+The 4th of June was fixed for my departure. I had only to pack up
+some bread and cheese, sugar and coffee, then the horses were
+saddled, and at seven o'clock the journey was happily commenced. I
+was alone with my guide, who, like the rest of his class, could not
+be considered as a very favourable specimen of humanity. He was
+very lazy, exceedingly self-interested, and singularly loath to
+devote any part of his attention either to me or to the horses,
+preferring to concentrate it upon brandy, an article which can
+unfortunately be procured throughout the whole country.
+
+I had already seen the district between Reikjavik and Havenfiord at
+my first arrival in Iceland. At the present advanced season of the
+year it wore a less gloomy aspect: strawberry-plants and violets,--
+the former, however, without blossoms, and the latter inodorous,--
+were springing up between the blocks of lava, together with
+beautiful ferns eight or ten inches high. In spite of the trifling
+distance, I noticed, as a rule, that vegetation was here more
+luxuriant than at Reikjavik; for at the latter place I had found no
+strawberry-plants, and the violets were not yet in blossom. This
+difference in the vegetation is, I think, to be ascribed to the high
+walls of lava existing in great abundance round Havenfiord; they
+protect the tender plants and ferns from the piercing winds. I
+noticed that both the grass and the plants before mentioned throve
+capitally in the little hollows formed by masses of lava.
+
+A couple of miles beyond Havenfiord I saw the first birch-trees,
+which, however, did not exceed two or three feet in height, also
+some bilberry-plants. A number of little butterflies, all of one
+colour, and, as it seemed to me, of the same species, fluttered
+among the shrubs and plants.
+
+The manifold forms and varied outline of the lava-fields present a
+remarkable and really a marvellous appearance. Short as this
+journey is--for ten hours are amply sufficient for the trip to
+Krisuvik,--it presents innumerable features for contemplation. I
+could only gaze and wonder. I forgot every thing around me, felt
+neither cold nor storm, and let my horse pick his way as slowly as
+he chose, so that I had once almost become separated from my guide.
+
+One of the most considerable of the streams of lava lay in a
+spacious broad valley. The lava-stream itself, about two miles
+long, and of a considerable breadth, traversing the whole of the
+plain, seemed to have been called into existence by magic, as there
+was no mountain to be seen in the neighbourhood from which it could
+have emerged. It appeared to be the covering of an immense crater,
+formed, not of separate stones and blocks, but of a single and
+slightly porous mass of rock ten or twelve feet thick, broken here
+and there by clefts about a foot in breadth.
+
+Another, and a still larger valley, many miles in circumference, was
+filled with masses of lava shaped like waves, reminding the beholder
+of a petrified sea. From the midst rose a high black mountain,
+contrasting beautifully with the surrounding masses of light-grey
+lava. At first I supposed the lava must have streamed forth from
+this mountain, but soon found that the latter was perfectly smooth
+on all sides, and terminated in a sharp peak. The remaining
+mountains which shut in the valley were also perfectly closed, and I
+looked in vain for any trace of a crater.
+
+We now reached a small lake, and soon afterwards arrived at a larger
+one, called Kleinfarvatne. Both were hemmed in by mountains, which
+frequently rose abruptly from the waters, leaving no room for the
+passage of the horses. We were obliged sometimes to climb the
+mountains by fearfully dizzy paths; at others to scramble downwards,
+almost clinging to the face of the rock. At some points we were
+even compelled to dismount from our horses, and scramble forward on
+our hands and knees. In a word, these dangerous points, which
+extended over a space of about seven miles, were certainly quite as
+bad as any I had encountered in Syria; if any thing, they were even
+more formidable.
+
+I was, however, assured that I should have no more such places to
+encounter during all my further journeys in Iceland, and this
+information quite reconciled me to the roads in this country. For
+the rest, the path was generally tolerably safe even during this
+tour, which continually led me across fields of lava.
+
+A journey of some eight-and-twenty miles brought us at length into a
+friendly valley; clouds of smoke, both small and great, were soon
+discovered rising from the surrounding heights, and also from the
+valley itself; these were the sulphur-springs and sulphur-mountains.
+
+I could hardly restrain my impatience while we traversed the couple
+of miles which separated us from Krisuvik. A few small lakes were
+still to be crossed; and at length, at six o'clock in the evening,
+we reached our destination.
+
+With the exception of a morsel of bread and cheese, I had eaten
+nothing since the morning; still I could not spare time to make
+coffee, but at once dismounted, summoned my guide, and commenced my
+pilgrimage to the smoking mountains. At the outset our way lay
+across swampy places and meadow lands; but soon we had to climb the
+mountains themselves, a task rendered extremely difficult by the
+elastic, yielding soil, in which every footstep imprinted itself
+deeply, suggesting to the traveller the unpleasant possibility of
+his sinking through,--a contingency rendered any thing but agreeable
+by the neighbourhood of the boiling springs. At length I gained the
+summit, and saw around me numerous basins filled with boiling water,
+while on all sides, from hill and valley, columns of vapour rose out
+of numberless clefts in the rocks. From a cleft in one rock in
+particular a mighty column of vapour whirled into the air. On the
+windward side I could approach this place very closely. The ground
+was only lukewarm in some places, and I could hold my hand for
+several moments to the gaps from which steam issued. No trace of a
+crater was to be seen. The bubbling and hissing of the steam, added
+to the noise of the wind, occasioned such a deafening clamour, that
+I was very glad to feel firmer ground beneath my feet, and to leave
+the place in haste. It really seemed as if the interior of the
+mountain had been a boiling caldron. The prospect from these
+mountains is very fine. Numerous valleys and mountains innumerable
+offered themselves to my view, and I could even discern the isolated
+black rock past which I had ridden five or six hours previously.
+
+I now commenced my descent into the valley; at a few hundred paces
+the bubbling and hissing were already inaudible. I supposed that I
+had seen every thing worthy of notice; but much that was remarkable
+still remained. I particularly noticed a basin some five or six
+feet in diameter, filled with boiling mud. This mud has quite the
+appearance of fine clay dissolved in water; its colour was a light
+grey.
+
+From another basin, hardly two feet in diameter, a mighty column of
+steam shot continually into the air with so much force and noise
+that I started back half stunned, and could have fancied the vault
+of heaven would burst. This basin is situated in a corner of the
+valley, closely shut in on three sides by hills. In the
+neighbourhood many hot springs gushed forth; but I saw no columns of
+water, and my guide assured me that such a phenomenon was never
+witnessed here.
+
+There is more danger in passing these spots than even in traversing
+the mountains. In spite of the greatest precautions, I frequently
+sank in above the ankles, and would then draw back with a start, and
+find my foot covered with hot mud. From the place where I had
+broken through, steam and hot mud, or boiling water, rose into the
+air.
+
+Though my guide, who walked before me, carefully probed the ground
+with his stick, he several times sank through half-way to the knee.
+These men are, however, so much accustomed to contingencies of this
+kind that they take little account of them. My guide would quietly
+repair to the next spring and cleanse his clothes from mud. As I
+was covered with it to above the ankles, I thought it best to follow
+his example.
+
+For excursions like these it is best to come provided with a few
+boards, five or six feet in length, with which to cover the most
+dangerous places.
+
+At nine o'clock in the evening, but yet in the full glare of the
+sun, we arrived at Krisuvik. I now took time to look at this place,
+which I found to consist of a small church and a few miserable huts.
+
+I crept into one of these dens; it was so dark that a considerable
+time elapsed before I could distinguish objects, the light was only
+admitted through a very small aperture. I found in this hut a few
+persons who were suffering from the eruption called "lepra," a
+disease but too commonly met with in Iceland. Their hands and faces
+were completely covered with this eruption; if it spreads over the
+whole body the patient languishes slowly away, and is lost without
+remedy.
+
+Churches are in this country not only used for purposes of public
+worship, but also serve as magazines for provisions, clothes, &c.,
+and as inns for travellers. I do not suppose that a parallel
+instance of desecration could be met with even among the most
+uncivilised nations. I was assured, indeed, that these abuses were
+about to be remedied. A reform of this kind ought to have been
+carried out long ago; and even now the matter seems to remain an
+open point; for wherever I came the church was placed at my disposal
+for the night, and every where I found a store of fish, tallow, and
+other equally odoriferous substances.
+
+The little chapel at Krisuvik is only twenty-two feet long by ten
+broad; on my arrival it was hastily prepared for my reception.
+Saddles, ropes, clothes, hats, and other articles which lay
+scattered about, were hastily flung into a corner; mattresses and
+some nice soft pillows soon appeared, and a very tolerable bed was
+prepared for me on a large chest in which the vestments of the
+priest, the coverings of the altar, &c., were deposited. I would
+willingly have locked myself in, eaten my frugal supper, and
+afterwards written a few pages of my diary before retiring to rest;
+but this was out of the question. The entire population of the
+village turned out to see me, old and young hastened to the church,
+and stood round in a circle and gazed at me.
+
+Irksome as this curiosity was, I was obliged to endure it patiently,
+for I could not have sent these good people away without seriously
+offending them; so I began quietly to unpack my little portmanteau,
+and proceeded to boil my coffee over a spirit-lamp. A whispering
+consultation immediately began; they seemed particularly struck by
+my mode of preparing coffee, and followed every one of my movements
+with eager eyes. My frugal meal dispatched, I resolved to try the
+patience of my audience, and, taking out my journal, began to write.
+For a few minutes they remained quiet, then they began to whisper
+one to another, "She writes, she writes," and this was repeated
+numberless times. There was no sign of any disposition to depart; I
+believe I could have sat there till doomsday, and failed to tire my
+audience out. At length, after this scene had lasted a full hour, I
+could stand it no longer, and was fain to request my amiable
+visitors to retire, as I wished to go to bed.
+
+My sleep that night was none of the sweetest. A certain feeling of
+discomfort always attaches to the fact of sleeping in a church
+alone, in the midst of a grave-yard. Besides this, on the night in
+question such a dreadful storm arose that the wooden walls creaked
+and groaned as though their foundations were giving way. The cold
+was also rather severe, my thermometer inside the church shewing
+only two degrees above zero. I was truly thankful when approaching
+day brought with it the welcome hour of departure.
+
+
+June 5th.
+
+The heavy sleepiness and extreme indolence of an Icelandic guide
+render departure before seven o'clock in the morning a thing not to
+be thought of. This is, however, of little consequence, as there is
+no night in Iceland at this time of year.
+
+Although the distance was materially increased by returning to
+Reikjavik by way of Grundivik and Keblevik, I chose this route in
+order to pass through the wildest of the inhabited tracts in
+Iceland.
+
+The first stage, from Krisuvik to Grundivik, a distance of twelve to
+fourteen miles, lay through fields of lava, consisting mostly of
+small blocks of stone and fragments, filling the valley so
+completely that not a single green spot remained. I here met with
+masses of lava which presented an appearance of singular beauty.
+They were black mounds, ten or twelve feet in height, piled upon
+each other in the most varied forms, their bases covered with a
+broad band of whitish-coloured moss, while the tops were broken into
+peaks and cones of the most fantastic shapes. These lava-streams
+seem to date from a recent period, as the masses are somewhat scaly
+and glazed.
+
+Grundivik, a little village of a few wretched cottages, lies like an
+oasis in this desert of lava.
+
+My guide wished to remain here, asserting that there was no place
+between this and Keblevik where I could pass the night, and that it
+would be impossible for our horses, exhausted as they were with
+yesterday's march, to carry us to Keblevik that night. The true
+reason of this suggestion was that he wished to prolong the journey
+for another day.
+
+Luckily I had a good map with me, and by dint of consulting it could
+calculate distances with tolerable accuracy; it was also my custom
+before starting on a journey to make particular inquiries as to how
+I should arrange the daily stages.
+
+So I insisted upon proceeding at once; and soon we were wending our
+way through fields of lava towards Stad, a small village six or
+seven miles distant from Grundivik.
+
+On the way I noticed a mountain of most singular appearance. In
+colour it closely resembled iron; its sides were perfectly smooth
+and shining, and streaks of the colour of yellow ochre traversed it
+here and there.
+
+Stad is the residence of a priest. Contrary to the assertions of my
+guide, I found this place far more cheerful and habitable than
+Grundivik. Whilst our horses were resting, the priest paid me a
+visit, and conducted me, not, as I anticipated, into his house, but
+into the church. Chairs and stools were quickly brought there, and
+my host introduced his wife and children to me, after which we
+partook of coffee, bread and cheese, &c. On the rail surrounding
+the altar hung the clothes of the priest and his family, differing
+little in texture and make from those of the peasants.
+
+The priest appeared to be a very intelligent, well-read man. I
+could speak the Danish language pretty fluently, and was therefore
+able to converse with him on various subjects. On hearing that I
+had already been in Palestine, he put a number of questions to me,
+from which I could plainly see that he was alike well acquainted
+with geography, history, natural science, &c. He accompanied me
+several miles on my road, and we chatted away the time very
+pleasantly.
+
+The distance between Krisuvik and Keblevik is about forty-two miles.
+The road lies through a most dreary landscape, among vast desert
+plains, frequently twenty-five to thirty miles in circumference,
+entirely divested of all traces of vegetation, and covered
+throughout their extreme area by masses of lava--gloomy monuments of
+volcanic agency. And yet here, at the very heart of the
+subterranean fire, I saw only a single mountain, the summit of which
+had fallen in, and presented the appearance of a crater. The rest
+were all completely closed, terminating sometimes in a beautiful
+round top, and sometimes in sharp peaks; in other instances they
+formed long narrow chains.
+
+Who can tell whence these all-destroying masses of lava have poured
+forth, or how many hundred years they have lain in these petrified
+valleys?
+
+Keblevik lies on the sea-coast; but the harbour is insecure, so that
+ships remain here at anchor only so long as is absolutely necessary;
+there are frequently only two or three ships in the harbour.
+
+A few wooden houses, two of which belong to Herr Knudson, and some
+peasants' cottages, are the only buildings in this little village.
+I was hospitably received, and rested from the toils of the day at
+the house of Herr Siverson, Herr Knudson's manager.
+
+On the following day (June 6th) I had a long ride to Reikjavik,
+thirty-six good miles, mostly through fields of lava.
+
+The whole tract of country from Grundivik almost to Havenfiord is
+called "The lava-fields of Reikianes."
+
+Tired and almost benumbed with cold, I arrived in the evening at
+Reikjavik, with no other wish than to retire to rest as fast as
+possible.
+
+In these three days I had ridden 114 miles, besides enduring much
+from cold, storms, and rain. To my great surprise, the roads had
+generally been good; there were, however, many places highly
+dangerous and difficult.
+
+But what mattered these fatigues, forgotten, as they were, after a
+single night's rest? What were they in comparison to the unutterably
+beautiful and marvellous phenomena of the north, which will remain
+ever present to my imagination so long as memory shall be spared me?
+
+The distances of this excursion were: From Reikjavik to Krisuvik,
+37 miles; from Krisuvik to Keblevik, 39 miles; from Keblevik to
+Reikjavik, 38 miles: total, 114 miles.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+
+As the weather continued fine, I wished to lose no time in
+continuing my wanderings. I had next to make a tour of some 560
+miles; it was therefore necessary that I should take an extra horse,
+partly that it might carry my few packages, consisting of a pillow,
+some rye-bread, cheese, coffee, and sugar, but chiefly that I might
+be enabled to change horses every day, as one horse would not have
+been equal to the fatigue of so long a journey.
+
+My former guide could not accompany me on my present journey, as he
+was unacquainted with most of the roads. My kind protectors, Herr
+Knudson and Herr Bernhoft, were obliging enough to provide another
+guide for me; a difficult task, as it is a rare occurrence to find
+an Icelander who understands the Danish language, and who happens to
+be sober when his services are required. At length a peasant was
+found who suited our purpose; but he considered two florins per diem
+too little pay, so I was obliged to give an additional zwanziger.
+On the other hand, it was arranged that the guide should also take
+two horses, in order that he might change every day.
+
+The 16th of June was fixed for the commencement of our journey.
+From the very first day my guide did not shew himself in an amiable
+point of view. On the morning of our departure his saddle had to be
+patched together, and instead of coming with two horses, he appeared
+with only one. He certainly promised to buy a second when we should
+have proceeded some miles, adding that it would be cheaper to buy
+one at a little distance from the "capital." I at once suspected
+this was merely an excuse of the guide's, and that he wished thereby
+to avoid having the care of four horses. The event proved I was
+right; not a single horse could be found that suited, and so my poor
+little animal had to carry the guide's baggage in addition to my
+own.
+
+Loading the pack-horses is a business of some difficulty, and is
+conducted in the following manner: sundry large pieces of dried
+turf are laid upon the horse's back, but not fastened; over these is
+buckled a round piece of wood, furnished with two or three pegs. To
+these pegs the chests and packages are suspended. If the weight is
+not quite equally balanced, it is necessary to stop and repack
+frequently, for the whole load at once gets askew.
+
+The trunks used in this country are massively constructed of wood,
+covered with a rough hide, and strengthened on all sides with nails,
+as though they were intended to last an eternity. The poor horses
+have a considerable weight to bear in empty boxes alone, so that
+very little real luggage can be taken. The weight which a horse has
+to carry during a long journey should never exceed 150lbs.
+
+It is impossible to remember how many times our baggage had to be
+repacked during a day's journey. The great pieces of turf would
+never stay in their places, and every moment something was wrong.
+Nothing less than a miracle, however, can prevail on an Icelander to
+depart from his regular routine. His ancestors packed in such and
+such a manner, and so he must pack also. {35}
+
+We had a journey of above forty miles before us the first day, and
+yet, on account of the damaged saddle, we could not start before
+eight o'clock in the morning.
+
+The first twelve or fourteen miles of our journey lay through the
+great valley in which Reikjavik is situated; the valley contains
+many low hills, some of which we had to climb. Several rivers,
+chief among which was the Laxselv, opposed our progress, but at this
+season of the year they could be crossed on horseback without
+danger. Nearly all the valleys through which we passed to-day were
+covered with lava, but nevertheless offered many beautiful spots.
+
+Many of the hills we passed seemed to me to be extinct volcanoes;
+the whole upper portion was covered with colossal slabs of lava, as
+though the crater had been choked up with them. Lava of the same
+description and colour, but in smaller pieces, lay strewed around.
+
+For the first twelve or fourteen miles the sea is visible from the
+brow of every successive hill. The country is also pretty generally
+inhabited; but afterwards a distance of nearly thirty miles is
+passed, on which there is not a human habitation. The traveller
+journeys from one valley into another, and in the midst of these
+hill-girt deserts sees a single small hut, erected for the
+convenience of those who, in the winter, cannot accomplish the long
+distance in one day, and must take up their quarters for the night
+in the valley. No one must, however, rashly hope to find here a
+human being in the shape of a host. The little house is quite
+uninhabited, and consists only of a single apartment with four naked
+walls. The visitor must depend on the accommodation he carries with
+him.
+
+The plains through which we travelled to-day were covered throughout
+with one and the same kind of lava. It occurs in masses, and also
+in smaller stones, is not very porous, of a light grey colour, and
+mixed, in many instances, with sand or earth.
+
+Some miles from Thingvalla we entered a valley, the soil of which is
+fine, but nevertheless only sparingly covered with grass, and full
+of little acclivities, mostly clothed with delicate moss. I have no
+doubt that the indolence of the inhabitants alone prevents them from
+materially improving many a piece of ground. The worst soil is that
+in the neighbourhood of Reikjavik; yet there we see many a garden,
+and many a piece of meadow-land, wrung, as it were, from the barren
+earth by labour and pains. Why should not the same thing be done
+here--the more so as nature has already accomplished the preliminary
+work?
+
+Thingvalla, our resting-place for to-night, is situated on a lake of
+the same name, and only becomes visible when the traveller is close
+upon it. The lake is rather considerable, being almost three miles
+in length, and at some parts certainly more than two miles in
+breadth; it contains two small islands,--Sandey and Nesey.
+
+My whole attention was still riveted by the lake and its naked and
+gloomy circle of mountains, when suddenly, as if by magic, I found
+myself standing on the brink of a chasm, into which I could scarcely
+look without a shudder; involuntarily I thought of Weber's
+Freyschutz and the "Wolf's Hollow." {36}
+
+The scene is the more startling from the circumstance that the
+traveller approaching Thingvalla in a certain direction sees only
+the plains beyond this chasm, and has no idea of its existence. It
+was a fissure some five or six fathoms broad, but several hundred
+feet in depth; and we were forced to descend by a small, steep,
+dangerous path, across large fragments of lava. Colossal blocks of
+stone, threatening the unhappy wanderer with death and destruction,
+hang loosely, in the form of pyramids and of broken columns, from
+the lofty walls of lava, which encircle the whole long ravine in the
+form of a gallery. Speechless, and in anxious suspense, we descend
+a part of this chasm, hardly daring to look up, much less to give
+utterance to a single sound, lest the vibration should bring down
+one of these avalanches of stone, to the terrific force of which the
+rocky fragments scattered around bear ample testimony. The
+distinctness with which echo repeats the softest sound and the
+lightest footfall is truly wonderful.
+
+The appearance presented by the horses, which are allowed to come
+down the ravine after their masters have descended, is most
+peculiar. One could fancy they were clinging to the walls of rock.
+
+This ravine is known by the name of Almanagiau. Its entire length
+is about a mile, but a small portion only can be traversed; the rest
+is blocked up by masses of lava heaped one upon the other. On the
+right hand, the rocky wall opens, and forms an outlet, over
+formidable masses of lava, into the beautiful valley of Thingvalla.
+I could have fancied I wandered through the depths of a crater,
+which had piled around itself these stupendous barriers during a
+mighty eruption in times long gone by.
+
+The valley of Thingvalla is considered one of the most beautiful in
+Iceland. It contains many meadows, forming, as it were, a place of
+refuge for the inhabitants, and enabling them to keep many head of
+cattle. The Icelanders consider this little green valley the finest
+spot in the world. Not far from the opening of the ravine, on the
+farther bank of the river Oxer, lies the little village of
+Thingvalla, consisting of three or four cottages and a small chapel.
+A few scattered farms and cottages are situated in the
+neighbourhood.
+
+Thingvalla was once one of the most important places in Iceland; the
+stranger is still shewn the meadow, not far from the village, on
+which the Allthing (general assembly) was held annually in the open
+air. Here the people and their leaders met, pitching their tents
+after the manner of nomads. Here it was also that many an opinion
+and many a decree were enforced by the weight of steel.
+
+The chiefs appeared, ostensibly for peace, at the head of their
+tribe; yet many of them returned not again, but beneath the sword-
+stroke of their enemies obtained that peace which no man seeketh,
+but which all men find.
+
+On one side the valley is skirted by the lake, on the other it is
+bounded by lofty mountains, some of them still partly covered with
+snow. Not far from the entrance of the ravine, the river Oxer
+rushes over a wall of rock of considerable height, forming a
+beautiful waterfall.
+
+It was still fine clear daylight when I reached Thingvalla, and the
+sky rose pure and cloudless over the far distance. It seemed
+therefore the more singular to me to see a few clouds skimming over
+the surface of the mountains, now shrouding a part of them in
+vapour, now wreathing themselves round their summits, now vanishing
+entirely, to reappear again at a different point.
+
+This is a phenomenon frequently observed in Iceland during the
+finest days, and one I had often noticed in the neighbourhood of
+Reikjavik. Under a clear and cloudless sky, a light mist would
+appear on the brow of a mountain,--in a moment it would increase to
+a large cloud, and after remaining stationary for a time, it
+frequently vanished suddenly, or soared slowly away. However often
+it may be repeated, this appearance cannot fail to interest the
+observer.
+
+Herr Beck, the clergyman at Thingvalla, offered me the shelter of
+his hut for the night; as the building, however, did not look much
+more promising than the peasants' cottages by which it was
+surrounded, I preferred quartering myself in the church, permission
+to do so being but too easily obtained on all occasions. This
+chapel is not much larger than that at Krisuvik, and stands at some
+distance from the few surrounding cottages. This was perhaps the
+reason why I was not incommoded by visitors. I had already
+conquered any superstitious fears derived from the proximity of my
+silent neighbours in the churchyard, and passed the night quietly on
+one of the wooden chests of which I found several scattered about.
+Habit is certainly every thing; after a few nights of gloomy
+solitude one thinks no more about the matter.
+
+
+June 17th.
+
+Our journey of to-day was more formidable than that of yesterday. I
+was assured that Reikholt (also called Reikiadal) was almost fifty
+miles distant. Distances cannot always be accurately measured by
+the map; impassable barriers, only to be avoided by circuitous
+routes, often oppose the traveller's progress. This was the case
+with us to-day. To judge from the map, the distance from Thingvalla
+to Reikholt seemed less by a great deal than that from Reikjavik to
+Thingvalla, and yet we were full fourteen hours accomplishing it--
+two hours longer than on our yesterday's journey.
+
+So long as our way lay through the valley of Thingvalla there was no
+lack of variety. At one time there was an arm of the river Oxer to
+cross, at another we traversed a cheerful meadow; sometimes we even
+passed through little shrubberies,--that is to say, according to the
+Icelandic acceptation of the term. In my country these lovely
+shrubberies would have been cleared away as useless underwood. The
+trees trail along the ground, seldom attaining a height of more than
+two feet. When one of these puny stems reaches four feet in height,
+it is considered a gigantic tree. The greater portion of these
+miniature forests grow on the lava with which the valley is covered.
+
+The formation of the lava here assumes a new character. Up to this
+point it has mostly appeared either in large masses or in streams
+lying in strata one above the other; but here the lava covered the
+greater portion of the ground in the form of immense flat slabs or
+blocks of rock, often split in a vertical direction. I saw long
+fissures of eight or ten feet in breadth, and from ten to fifteen
+feet in depth. In these clefts the flowers blossom earlier, and the
+fern grows taller and more luxuriantly, than in the boisterous upper
+world.
+
+After the valley of Thingvalla has been passed the journey becomes
+very monotonous. The district beyond is wholly uninhabited, and we
+travelled many miles without seeing a single cottage. From one
+desert valley we passed into another; all were alike covered with
+light-grey or yellowish lava, and at intervals also with fine sand,
+in which the horses sunk deeply at every step. The mountains
+surrounding these valleys were none of the highest, and it was
+seldom that a jokul or glacier shone forth from among them. The
+mountains had a certain polished appearance, their sides being
+perfectly smooth and shining. In some instances, however, masses of
+lava formed beautiful groups, bearing a great resemblance to ruins
+of ancient buildings, and standing out in peculiarly fine relief
+from the smooth walls.
+
+These mountains are of different colours; they are black or brown,
+grey or yellow, &c.; and the different shades of these colours are
+displayed with marvellous effect in the brilliant sunshine.
+
+Nine hours of uninterrupted riding brought us into a large tract of
+moorland, very scantily covered with moss. Yet this was the first
+and only grazing-place to be met with in all the long distance from
+Thingvalla. We therefore made a halt of two hours, to let our poor
+horses pick a scanty meal. Large swarms of minute gnats, which
+seemed to fly into our eyes, nose, and mouth, annoyed us dreadfully
+during our stay in this place.
+
+On this moor there was also a small lake; and here I saw for the
+first time a small flock of swans. Unfortunately these creatures
+are so very timid, that the most cautious approach of a human being
+causes them to rise with the speed of lightning into the air. I was
+therefore obliged perforce to be content with a distant view of
+these proud birds. They always keep in pairs, and the largest flock
+I saw did not consist of more than four such pairs.
+
+Since my first arrival in Iceland I had considered the inhabitants
+an indolent race of people; to-day I was strengthened in my opinion
+by the following slight circumstance. The moorland on which we
+halted to rest was separated from the adjoining fields of lava by a
+narrow ditch filled with water. Across this ditch a few stones and
+slabs had been laid, to form a kind of bridge. Now this bridge was
+so full of holes that the horses could not tell where to plant their
+feet, and refused obstinately to cross it, so that in the end we
+were obliged to dismount and lead them across. We had scarcely
+passed this place, and sat down to rest, when a caravan of fifteen
+horses, laden with planks, dried fish, &c. arrived at the bridge.
+Of course the poor creatures observed the dangerous ground, and
+could only be driven by hard blows to advance. Hardly twenty paces
+off there were stones in abundance; but rather than devote a few
+minutes to filling up the holes, these lazy people beat their horses
+cruelly, and exposed them to the risk of breaking their legs. I
+pitied the poor animals, which would be compelled to recross the
+bridge, so heartily, that, after they are gone, I devoted a part of
+my resting-time to collecting stones and filling up the holes,--a
+business which scarcely occupied me a quarter of an hour.
+
+It is interesting to notice how the horses know by instinct the
+dangerous spots in the stony wastes, and in the moors and swamps.
+On approaching these places they bend their heads towards the earth,
+and look sharply round on all sides. If they cannot discover a firm
+resting-place for the feet, they stop at once, and cannot be urged
+forward without many blows.
+
+After a halt of two hours we continued our journey, which again led
+us across fields of lava. At past nine o'clock in the evening we
+reached an elevated plain, after traversing which for half an hour
+we saw stretched at our feet the valley of Reikholt or Reikiadal; it
+is fourteen to seventeen miles long, of a good breadth, and girt
+round by a row of mountains, among which several jokuls sparkle in
+their icy garments.
+
+A sunset seen in the sublime wildness of Icelandic scenery has a
+peculiarly beautiful effect. Over these vast plains, divested of
+trees or shrubs, covered with dark lava, and shut in by mountains
+almost of a sable hue, the parting sun sheds an almost magical
+radiance. The peaks of the mountains shine in the bright parting
+rays, the jokuls are shrouded in the most delicate roseate hue,
+while the lower parts of the mountains lie in deep shadow, and frown
+darkly on the valleys, which resemble a sheet of dark blue water,
+with an atmosphere of a bluish-red colour floating above it. The
+most impressive feature of all is the profound silence and solitude;
+not a sound can be heard, not a living creature is to be seen; every
+thing appears dead. Throughout the broad valleys not a town nor a
+village, no, not even a solitary house or a tree or shrub, varies
+the prospect. The eye wanders over the vast desert, and finds not
+one familiar object on which it can rest.
+
+To-night, as at past eleven o'clock we reached the elevated plain, I
+saw a sunset which I shall never forget. The sun disappeared behind
+the mountains, and in its stead a gorgeous ruddy gleam lighted up
+hill and valley and glacier. It was long ere I could turn away my
+eyes from the glittering heights, and yet the valley also offered
+much that was striking and beautiful.
+
+Throughout almost its entire length this valley formed a meadow,
+from the extremities of which columns of smoke and boiling springs
+burst forth. The mists had almost evaporated, and the atmosphere
+was bright and clear, more transparent even than I had seen it in
+any other country. I now for the first time noticed, that in the
+valley itself the radiance was almost as clear as the light of day,
+so that the most minute objects could be plainly distinguished.
+This was, however, extremely necessary, for steep and dangerous
+paths lead over masses of lava into the valley. On one side ran a
+little river, forming many picturesque waterfalls, some of them
+above thirty feet in height.
+
+I strained my eyes in vain to discover any where, in this great
+valley, a little church, which, if it only offered me a hard bench
+for a couch, would at any rate afford me a shelter from the sharp
+night-wind; for it is really no joke to ride for fifteen hours, with
+nothing to eat but bread and cheese, and then not even to have the
+pleasant prospect of a hotel a la villa de Londres or de Paris.
+Alas, my wishes were far more modest. I expected no porter at the
+gate to give the signal of my arrival, no waiter, and no
+chambermaid; I only desired a little spot in the neighbourhood of
+the dear departed Icelanders. I was suddenly recalled from these
+happy delusions by the voice of the guide, who cried out: "Here we
+are at our destination for to-night." I looked joyfully round;
+alas! I could only see a few of those cottages which are never
+observed until you almost hit your nose against one of them, as the
+grass-covered walls can hardly be distinguished from the surrounding
+meadow.
+
+It was already midnight. We stopped, and turned our horses loose,
+to seek supper and rest in the nearest meadow. Our lot was a less
+fortunate one. The inhabitants were already buried in deep
+slumbers, from which even the barking set up by the dogs at our
+approach failed to arouse them. A cup of coffee would certainly
+have been very acceptable to me; yet I was loath to rouse any one
+merely for this. A piece of bread satisfied my hunger, and a
+draught of water from the nearest spring tasted most deliciously
+with it. After concluding my frugal meal, I sought out a corner
+beside a cottage, where I was partially sheltered from the too-
+familiar wind; and wrapping my cloak around me, lay down on the
+ground, having wished myself, with all my heart, a good night's rest
+and pleasant dreams, in the broad daylight, {37} under the canopy of
+heaven. Just dropping off to sleep, I was surprised by a mild rain,
+which, of course, at once put to flight every idea of repose. Thus,
+after all, I was obliged to wake some one up, to obtain the shelter
+of a roof.
+
+The best room, i.e. the store-room, was thrown open for my
+accommodation, and a small wooden bedstead placed at my disposal.
+Chambers of this kind are luckily found wherever two or three
+cottages lie contiguous to each other; they are certainly far from
+inviting, as dried fish, train-oil, tallow, and many other articles
+of the same description combine to produce a most unsavoury
+atmosphere. Yet they are infinitely preferable to the dwellings of
+the peasants, which, by the by, are the most filthy dens that can be
+imagined. Besides being redolent of every description of bad odour,
+these cottages are infested with vermin to a degree which can
+certainly not be surpassed, except in the dwellings of the
+Greenlanders and Laplanders.
+
+
+June 18th.
+
+Yesterday we had been forced to put upon our poor horses a wearisome
+distance of more than fifty miles, as the last forty miles led us
+through desert and uninhabited places, boasting not even a single
+cottage. To-day, however, our steeds had a light duty to perform,
+for we only proceeded seven miles to the little village of
+Reikiadal, where I halted to-day, in order to visit the celebrated
+springs.
+
+The inconsiderable village called Reikiadal, consisting only of a
+church and a few cottages, is situated amidst pleasant meadows.
+Altogether this valley is rich in beautiful meadow-lands;
+consequently one sees many scattered homesteads and cottages, with
+fine herds of sheep, and a tolerable number of horses; cows are less
+plentiful.
+
+The church at Reikiadal is among the neatest and most roomy of those
+which came under my observation. The dwelling of the priest too,
+though only a turf-covered cottage, is large enough for the comfort
+of the occupants. This parish extends over a considerable area, and
+is not thinly inhabited.
+
+My first care on my arrival was to beg the clergyman, Herr Jonas
+Jonason, to procure for me, as expeditiously as possible, fresh
+horses and a guide, in order that I might visit the springs. He
+promised to provide me with both within half an hour; and yet it was
+not until three hours had been wasted, that, with infinite pains, I
+saw my wish fulfilled. Throughout my stay in Iceland, nothing
+annoyed me more than the slowness and unconcern displayed by the
+inhabitants in all their undertakings. Every wish and every request
+occupies a long time in its fulfilment. Had I not been continually
+at the good pastor's side, I believe I should scarcely have attained
+my object. At length every thing was ready, and the pastor himself
+was kind enough to be my guide.
+
+We rode about four miles through this beautiful vale, and in this
+short distance were compelled at least six times to cross the river
+Sidumule, which rolls its most tortuous course through the entire
+valley. At length the first spring was reached; it emerges from a
+rock about six feet in height, standing in the midst of a moor. The
+upper cavity of the natural reservoir, in which the water
+continually boils and seethes, is between two and three feet in
+diameter. This spring never stops; the jet of water rises two, and
+sometimes even four feet high, and is about eighteen inches thick.
+It is possible to increase the volume of the jet for a few seconds,
+by throwing large stones or lumps of earth into the opening, and
+thus stirring up the spring. The stones are cast forcibly forth,
+and the lumps of earth, dissolved by the action of the water, impart
+to the latter a dingy colour.
+
+Whoever has seen the jet of water at Carlsbad, in Bohemia, can well
+imagine the appearance of this spring, which closely resembles that
+of Carlsbad. {38}
+
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the spring is an abyss, in which
+water is continually seething, but never rises into the air. At a
+little distance, on a high rock, rising out of the river Sidumule,
+not far from the shore, are other springs. They are three in
+number, each at a short distance from the next, and occupy nearly
+the entire upper surface of the rock. Lower down we find a
+reservoir of boiling water; and at the foot of the rock, and on the
+nearest shore, are many more hot springs; but most of these are
+inconsiderable. Many of these hot springs emerge almost from the
+cold river itself.
+
+The chief group, however, lies still farther off, on a rock which
+may be about twenty feet in height, and fifty in length. It is
+called Tunga Huer, and rises from the midst of a moor. On this rock
+there are no less than sixteen springs, some emerging from its base,
+others rather above the middle, but none from the top of the rock.
+
+The construction of the basins and the height and diameter of the
+jets were precisely similar to those I have already described. All
+these sixteen springs are so near each other that they do not even
+occupy two sides of the rock. It is impossible to form an idea of
+the magnificence of this singular spectacle, which becomes really
+fairy-like, if the beholder have the courage to climb the rock
+itself, a proceeding of some danger, though of little difficulty.
+The upper stratum of the rock is soft and warm, presenting almost
+the appearance of mud thickened with sand and small stones. Every
+footstep leaves a trace behind it, and the visitor has continually
+before his eyes the fear of breaking through, and falling into a hot
+spring hidden from view by a thin covering. The good pastor walked
+in advance of me, with a stick, and probed the dangerous surface as
+much as possible. I was loath to stay behind, and suddenly we found
+ourselves at the summit of the rock. Here we could take in, at one
+view, the sixteen springs gushing from both its sides. If the view
+from below had been most interesting and singular, how shall I
+describe its appearance as seen from above? Sixteen jets of water
+seen at one glance, sixteen reservoirs, in all their diversity of
+form and construction, opening at once beneath the feet of the
+beholder, seemed almost too wonderful a sight. Forgetting all
+pusillanimous feelings, I stood and honoured the Creator in these
+his marvellous works. For a long time I stood, and could not tire
+of gazing into the abysses from whose darkness the masses of white
+and foaming water sprung hissing into the air, to fall again, and
+hasten in quiet union towards the neighbouring river. The good
+pastor found it necessary to remind me several times that our
+position here was neither of the safest nor of the most comfortable,
+and that it was therefore high time to abandon it. I had ceased to
+think of the insecurity of the ground we trod, and scarcely noticed
+the mighty clouds of hot vapour which frequently surrounded and
+threatened to suffocate us, obliging us to step suddenly back with
+wetted faces. It was fortunate that these waters contain but a very
+small quantity of brimstone, otherwise we could scarcely have long
+maintained our elevated position.
+
+The rock from which these springs rise is formed of a reddish mass,
+and the bed of the river into which the water flows is also
+completely covered with little stones of the same colour.
+
+On our way back we noticed, near a cottage, another remarkable
+phenomenon. It was a basin, in whose depths the water boils and
+bubbles violently; and near this basin are two unsightly holes, from
+which columns of smoke periodically rise with a great noise. Whilst
+this is going on, the basin fills itself more and more with water,
+but never so much as to overflow, or to force a jet of water into
+the air; then the steam and the noise cease in both cavities, and
+the water in the reservoir sinks several feet.
+
+This strange phenomenon generally lasts about a minute, and is
+repeated so regularly, that a bet could almost be made, that the
+rising and falling of the water, and the increased and lessened
+noise of the steam, shall be seen and heard sixty or sixty-five
+times within an hour.
+
+In communication with this basin is another, situate at a distance
+of about a hundred paces in a small hollow, and filled like the
+former with boiling water. As the water in the upper basin
+gradually sinks, and ceases to seethe, it begins to rise in the
+lower one, and is at length forced two or three feet into the air;
+then it falls again, and thus the phenomenon is continually repeated
+in the upper and the lower basin alternately.
+
+At the upper spring there is also a vapour-bath. This is formed by
+a small chamber situate hard by the basin, built of stones and
+roofed with turf. It is further provided with a small and narrow
+entrance, which cannot be passed in an upright position. The floor
+is composed of stone slabs, probably covering a hot spring, for they
+are very warm. The person wishing to use this bath betakes himself
+to this room, and carefully closes every cranny; a suffocating heat,
+which induces violent perspiration over the whole frame, is thus
+generated. The people, however, seldom avail themselves of this
+bath.
+
+On my return I had still to visit a basin with a jet of water, in a
+fine meadow near the church; a low wall of stone has been erected
+round this spring to prevent the cattle from scalding themselves if
+they should approach too near in the ardour of grazing. Some eighty
+paces off is to be seen the wool-bath erected by Snorri Sturluson.
+It consists of a stone basin three or four feet in depth, and
+eighteen or twenty in diameter. The approach is by a few steps
+leading to a low stone bench, which runs round the basin. The water
+is obtained from the neighbouring spring, but is of so high a
+temperature that it is impossible to bathe without previously
+cooling it. The bath stands in the open air, and no traces are left
+of the building which once covered it. It is now used for clothes
+and sheep's wool.
+
+I had now seen all the interesting springs on this side of the
+valley. Some columns of vapour, which may be observed from the
+opposite end of the valley, proceed from thermal springs, that offer
+no remarkable feature save their heat.
+
+On our return the priest took me to the churchyard, which lay at
+some distance from his dwelling, and showed me the principal graves.
+Though I thought the sight very impressive, it was not calculated to
+invigorate me, when I considered that I must pass the approaching
+night alone in the church, amidst these resting-places of the
+departed.
+
+The mound above each grave is very high, and the greater part of
+them are surmounted by a kind of wooden coffin, which at first sight
+conveys the impression that the dead person is above ground. I
+could not shake off a feeling of discomfort; and such is the power
+of prejudice, that--I acknowledge my weakness--I was even induced to
+beg that the priest would remove one of the covers. Though I knew
+full well that the dead man was slumbering deep in the earth, and
+not in this coffin, I felt a shudder pass over me as the lid was
+removed, and I saw--as the priest had assured me I should do--merely
+a tombstone with the usual inscription, which this coffin-like
+covering is intended to protect against the rude storms of the
+winter.
+
+Close beside the entrance to the church is the mound beneath which
+rest the bones of Snorri Sturluson, the celebrated poet; {39} over
+this grave stands a small runic stone of the length of the mound
+itself. This stone is said to have once been completely covered
+with runic characters; but all trace of these has been swept away by
+the storms of five hundred winters, against which the tomb had no
+protecting coffin. The stone, too, is split throughout its entire
+length into two pieces. The mound above the grave is often renewed,
+so that the beholder could often fancy he saw a new-made grave. I
+picked all the buttercups I could find growing on the grave, and
+preserved them carefully in a book. Perhaps I may be able to give
+pleasure to several of my countrywomen by offering them a floweret
+from the grave of the greatest of Icelandic poets.
+
+
+June 19th.
+
+In order to pursue my journey without interruption, I hired fresh
+horses, and allowed my own, which were rather fatigued, to accompany
+us unloaded. My object in this further excursion was to visit the
+very remarkable cavern of Surthellir, distant a good thirty-three
+miles from this place. The clergyman was again kind enough to make
+the necessary arrangements for me, and even to act as my Mentor on
+the journey.
+
+Though we were only three strong, we departed with a retinue of
+seven horses, and for nearly ten miles rode back the same way by
+which I had come from Reikholt on the preceding morning; then we
+turned off to the left, and crossing hills and acclivities, reached
+other valleys, which were partly traversed by beautiful streams of
+lava, and partly interspersed with forests--FORESTS, as I have
+already said, according to Icelandic notions. The separate stems
+were certainly slightly higher than those in the valley of
+Thingvalla.
+
+At Kalmannstunga we left the spare horses, and took with us a man to
+serve as guide in the cavern, from which we were now still some
+seven miles distant. The great valley in which this cavern lies is
+reckoned among the most remarkable in Iceland. It is a most perfect
+picture of volcanic devastation. The most beautiful masses of lava,
+in the most varied and picturesque forms, occupy the whole
+immeasurable valley. Lava is to be seen there in a rough glassy
+state, forming exquisite flames and arabesques; and in immense
+slabs, lying sometimes scattered, sometimes piled in strata one
+above the other, as though they had been cast there by a flood.
+Among these, again, lie mighty isolated streams, which must have
+been frozen in the midst of their course. From the different
+colours of the lava, and their transitions from light grey to black,
+we can judge of the eruptions which have taken place at different
+periods. The mountains surrounding this valley are mostly of a
+sombre hue; some are even black, forming a striking contrast to the
+neighbouring jokuls, which, in their large expanse, present the
+appearance almost of a sea of ice. I found one of these jokuls of a
+remarkable size; its shining expanse extended far down into the
+valley, and its upper surface was almost immeasurable.
+
+The other mountains were all smooth, as though polished by art; in
+the foreground I only noticed one which was covered with wonderful
+forms of dried lava. A deathlike silence weighed on the whole
+country round, on hill and on valley alike. Every thing seemed
+dead, all round was barren and desert, so that the effect was truly
+Icelandic. The greater portion of Iceland might be with justice
+designated the "Northern Desert."
+
+The cavern of Surthellir lies on a slightly elevated extended plain,
+where it would certainly not be sought for, as we are accustomed to
+see natural phenomena of this description only in the bowels of
+rocks. It is, therefore, with no little surprise that the traveller
+sees suddenly opening before him a large round basin about fifteen
+fathoms in diameter, and four in depth. It was with a feeling of
+awe that I looked downwards on the countless blocks of rock piled
+one upon the other, extending on one side to the edge of the hollow,
+across which the road led to the dark ravines farther on.
+
+We were compelled to scramble forward on our hands and knees, until
+we reached a long broad passage, which led us at first imperceptibly
+downwards, and then ran underneath the plain, which formed a rocky
+cavern above our heads. I estimated the different heights of this
+roof at not less than from eighteen to sixty feet; but it seldom
+reached a greater elevation than the latter. Both roof and walls
+are in some places very pointed and rough: a circumstance to be
+ascribed to the stalactites which adhere to them, without, however,
+forming figures or long sharp points.
+
+From this principal path several smaller ones lead far into the
+interior of this stony region; but they do not communicate with each
+other, and one is compelled to return from each side-path into the
+main road. Some of these by-paths are short, narrow, and low;
+others, on the contrary, are long, broad, and lofty.
+
+In one of the most retired of these by-paths I was shewn a great
+number of bones, which, I was told, were those of slaughtered sheep
+and other animals. I could gather, from the account given by the
+priest of the legend concerning them, that, in days of yore, this
+cave was the resort of a mighty band of robbers. This must have
+been a long, long time ago, as this is related as a legend or a
+fable.
+
+For my part, I could not tell what robbers had to do in Iceland.
+Pirates had often come to the island; but for these gentry this
+cavern was too far from the sea. I cannot even imagine beasts of
+prey to have been there; for the whole country round about is desert
+and uninhabited, so that they could have found nothing to prey upon.
+In fact, I turned over in my mind every probability, and can only
+say that it appeared to me a most remarkable circumstance to find in
+this desert place, so far from any living thing, a number of bones,
+which, moreover, looked as fresh as if the poor animals to whom they
+once belonged had been eaten but a short time ago. Unfortunately I
+could obtain no satisfactory information on this point.
+
+It is difficult to imagine any thing more laborious than to wander
+about in this cavern. As the road had shewed itself at the entrance
+of the cavern, so it continued throughout its whole extent. The
+path consisted entirely of loose fragments of lava heaped one upon
+the other, over which we had to clamber with great labour. None of
+us could afford to help the others; each one was fully occupied with
+himself. There was not a single spot to be seen on which we could
+have stood without holding fast at the same time with our hands. We
+were sometimes obliged to seat ourselves on a stone, and so to slide
+down; at others, to take hands and pull one another to the top of
+high blocks of stone.
+
+We came to several immense basins, or craters, which opened above
+our heads, but were inaccessible, the sides being too steep for us
+to climb. The light which entered through these openings was
+scarcely enough to illumine the principal path, much less the
+numerous by-paths.
+
+At Kalmannstunga I had endeavoured to procure torches, but was
+obliged to consider myself fortunate in getting a few tapers. It is
+necessary to provide oneself with torches at Reikjavik.
+
+The parts of the cavern beneath the open craters were still covered
+with a considerable quantity of snow, by which our progress was
+rendered very dangerous. We frequently sunk in, and at other times
+caught our feet between the stones, so that we could scarcely
+maintain our balance. In the by-paths situated near these openings
+an icy rind had formed itself, which was now covered with water.
+Farther on, the ice had melted; but it was generally very dirty, as
+a stratum of sand mixed with water lay there in place of the stones.
+The chief path alone was covered with blocks of lava; in the smaller
+paths I found only strata of sand and small pieces of lava.
+
+The magical illumination produced by the sun's rays shining through
+one of these craters into the cavern produced a splendid effect.
+The sun shone perpendicularly through the opening, spread a dazzling
+radiance over the snow, and diffused a pale delicate light around
+us. The effect of this point of dazzling light was the more
+remarkable from its contrasting strongly with the two dark chasms,
+from the first of which we had emerged to continue our journey
+through the obscurity of the second.
+
+This subterranean labyrinth is said to extend in different
+directions for many miles. We explored a portion of the chief path
+and several by-paths, and after a march of two hours returned
+heartily tired to the upper world. We then rested a quarter of an
+hour, and afterwards returned at a good round pace to Kalmannstunga.
+
+Unfortunately I do not possess sufficient geognostic knowledge to be
+able to set this cavern down as an extinct volcano. But in
+travelling in a country where every hill and mountain, every thing
+around, in fact, consists of lava, even the uninitiated in science
+seeks to discover the openings whence these immense masses have
+poured. The stranger curiously regards the top of each mountain,
+thinking every where to behold a crater, but both hill and dale
+appear smooth and closed. With what joy then does he hail the
+thought of having discovered, in this cavern, something to throw
+light upon the sources of these things! I, at least, fancied myself
+walking on the hearth of an extinct volcano; for all I saw, from the
+masses of stone piled beneath my feet and the immense basin above my
+head, were both of lava. If I am right in my conjecture, I do not
+know; I only speak according to my notions and my views.
+
+I was obliged to pass this night in a cottage. Kalmannstunga
+contains three such cottages, but no chapel. Luckily I found one of
+these houses somewhat larger and more cleanly than its neighbours;
+it could almost come under the denomination of a farm. The
+occupants, too, had been employed during my ride to the cavern in
+cleansing the best chamber, and preparing it, as far as possible,
+for my reception. The room in question was eleven feet long by
+seven broad; the window was so small and so covered with dirt that,
+although the sun was shining in its full glory, I could scarcely see
+to write. The walls, and even the floor, were boarded--a great
+piece of luxury in a country where wood is so scarce. The furniture
+consisted of a broad bedstead, two chests of drawers, and a small
+table. Chairs and benches are a kind of terra incognita in the
+dwellings of the Icelandic peasantry; besides, I do not know where
+such articles could be stowed in a room of such dimensions as that
+which I occupied.
+
+My hostess, the widow of a wealthy peasant, introduced to me her
+four children, who were very handsome, and very neatly dressed. I
+begged the good mother to tell me the names of the young ones, so
+that I might at least know a few Icelandic names. She appeared much
+flattered at my request, and gave me the names as follows:
+Sigrudur, Gudrun, Ingebor, and Lars.
+
+I should have felt tolerably comfortable in my present quarters,
+accustomed as I am to bear privations of all kinds with
+indifference, if they would but have left me in peace. But the
+reader may fancy my horror when the whole population, not only of
+the cottage itself, but also of the neighbouring dwellings, made
+their appearance, and, planting themselves partly in my chamber and
+partly at the door, held me in a far closer state of siege than even
+at Krisuvik. I was, it appeared, quite a novel phenomenon in the
+eyes of these good people, and so they came one and all and stared
+at me; the women and children were, in particular, most unpleasantly
+familiar; they felt my dress, and the little ones laid their dirty
+little countenances in my lap. Added to this, the confined
+atmosphere from the number of persons present, their lamentable want
+of cleanliness, and their filthy habit of spitting, &c., all
+combined to form a most dreadful whole. During these visits I did
+more penance than by the longest fasts; and fasting, too, was an
+exercise I seldom escaped, as I could touch few Icelandic dishes.
+The cookery of the Icelandic peasants is wholly confined to the
+preparation of dried fish, with which they eat fermented milk that
+has often been kept for months; on very rare occasions they have a
+preparation of barley-meal, which is eaten with flat bread baked
+from Icelandic moss ground fine.
+
+I could not but wonder at the fact that most of these people
+expected to find me acquainted with a number of things generally
+studied only by men; they seemed to have a notion that in foreign
+parts women should be as learned as men. So, for instance, the
+priests always inquired if I spoke Latin, and seemed much surprised
+on finding that I was unacquainted with the language. The common
+people requested my advice as to the mode of treating divers
+complaints; and once, in the course of one of my solitary wanderings
+about Reikjavik, on my entering a cottage, they brought before me a
+being whom I should scarcely have recognised as belonging to the
+same species as myself, so fearfully was he disfigured by the
+eruption called "lepra." Not only the face, but the whole body also
+was covered with it; the patient was quite emaciated, and some parts
+of his body were covered with sores. For a surgeon this might have
+been an interesting sight, but I turned away in disgust.
+
+But let us turn from this picture. I would rather tell of the
+angel's face I saw in Kalmannstunga. It was a girl, ten or twelve
+years of age, beautiful and lovely beyond description, so that I
+wished I had been a painter. How gladly would I have taken home
+with me to my own land, if only on canvass, the delicate face, with
+its roguish dimples and speaking eyes! But perhaps it is better as
+it is; the picture might by some unlucky chance have fallen into the
+hands of some too-susceptible youth, who, like Don Sylvio de
+Rosalva, in Wieland's Comical Romance, would immediately have
+proceeded to travel through half the world to find the original of
+this enchanting portrait. His spirit of inquiry would scarcely have
+carried him to Iceland, as such an apparition would never be
+suspected to exist in such a country, and thus the unhappy youth
+would be doomed to endless wandering.
+
+
+June 20th.
+
+The distance from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla is fifty-two miles,
+and the journey is certainly one of the most dreary and fatiguing of
+all that can be made in Iceland. The traveller passes from one
+desert valley into another; he is always surrounded by high
+mountains and still higher glaciers, and wherever he turns his eyes,
+nature seems torpid and dead. A feeling of anxious discomfort
+seizes upon the wanderer, he hastens with redoubled speed through
+the far-stretched deserts, and eagerly ascends the mountains piled
+up before him, in the hope that better things lie beyond. It is in
+vain; he only sees the same solitudes, the same deserts, the same
+mountains.
+
+On the elevated plateaux several places were still covered with
+snow; these we were obliged to cross, though we could frequently
+hear the rushing of the water beneath its snowy covering. We were
+compelled also to pass over coatings of ice spread lightly over
+rivers, and presenting that blue colour which is a certain sign of
+danger.
+
+Our poor horses were sometimes very restive; but it was of no use;
+they were beaten without mercy until they carried us over the
+dangerous places. The pack-horse was always driven on in front with
+many blows; it had to serve as pioneer, and try if the road was
+practicable. Next came my guide, and I brought up the rear. Our
+poor horses frequently sank up to their knees in the snow, and twice
+up to the saddle-girths. This was one of the most dangerous rides I
+have ever had. I could not help continually thinking what I should
+do if my guide were to sink in so deeply that he could not extricate
+himself; my strength would not have been sufficient to rescue him,
+and whither should I turn to seek for help? All around us was
+nothing but a desert and snow. Perhaps my lot might have been to
+die of hunger. I should have wandered about seeking dwellings and
+human beings, and have entangled myself so completely among these
+wastes that I could never have found my way.
+
+When at a distance I descried a new field of snow (and unfortunately
+we came upon them but too frequently), I felt very uncomfortable;
+those alone who have themselves been in a similar situation can
+estimate the whole extent of my anxiety.
+
+If I had been travelling in company with others, these fears would
+not have disturbed me; for there reciprocal assistance can be
+rendered, and the consciousness of this fact seems materially to
+diminish the danger.
+
+During the season in which the snow ceases to form a secure
+covering, this road is but little travelled. We saw nowhere a trace
+of footsteps, either of men or animals; we were the only living
+beings in this dreadful region. I certainly scolded my guide
+roundly for bringing me by such a road. But what did I gain by
+this? It would have been as dangerous to turn back as to go on.
+
+A change in the weather, which till now had been rather favourable,
+increased the difficulties of this journey. Already when we left
+Kalmannstunga, the sky began to be overcast, and the sun enlivened
+us with its rays only for a few minutes at a time. On our reaching
+the higher mountains the weather became worse; for here we
+encountered clouds and fog, which wreaked their vengeance upon us,
+and which only careered by to make room for others. An icy storm
+from the neighbouring glaciers was their constant companion, and
+made me shiver so much that I could scarcely keep my saddle. We had
+now ridden above thirteen hours. The rain poured down incessantly,
+and we were half dead with cold and wet; so I at length determined
+to halt for the night at the first cottage: at last we found one
+between two or three miles from Thingvalla. I had now a roof above
+my head; but beyond this I had gained nothing. The cottage
+consisted of a single room, and was almost completely filled by four
+broad bedsteads. I counted seven adults and three children, who had
+all to be accommodated in these four beds. In addition to this, the
+kvef, a kind of croup, prevailed this spring to such an extent that
+scarcely any one escaped it. Wherever I went, I found the people
+afflicted with this complaint; and here this was also the case; the
+noise of groaning and coughing on all sides was quite deplorable.
+The floor, moreover, was revoltingly dirty.
+
+The good people were so kind as immediately to place one of their
+beds at my disposal; but I would rather have passed the night on the
+threshold of the door than in this disgusting hole. I chose for my
+lodging-place the narrow passage which separated the kitchen from
+the room; I found there a couple of blocks, across which a few
+boards had been laid, and this constituted the milk-room: it might
+have been more properly called the smoke-room; for in the roof were
+a few air-holes, through which the smoke escaped. In this smoke or
+milk-room--whichever it may be called--I prepared to pass the night
+as best I could. My cloak being wet through, I had been compelled
+to hang it on a stick to dry; and thus found myself under the
+necessity of borrowing a mattress from these unhealthy people. I
+laid myself down boldly, and pretended sleepiness, in order to
+deliver myself from the curiosity of my entertainers. They retired
+to their room, and so I was alone and undisturbed. But yet I could
+not sleep; the cold wind, blowing in upon me through the air-holes,
+chilled and wetted as I already was, kept me awake against my will.
+I had also another misfortune to endure. As often as I attempted to
+sit upright on my luxurious couch, my head would receive a severe
+concussion. I had forgotten the poles which are fixed across each
+of these antechambers, for the purpose of hanging up fish to dry,
+&c. Unfortunately I could not bear this arrangement in mind until
+after I had received half a dozen salutations of this description.
+
+
+June 21st.
+
+At length the morning so long sighed for came; the rain had indeed
+ceased; but the clouds still hung about the mountains, and promised
+a speedy fall; I nevertheless resolved rather to submit myself to
+the fury of the elements than to remain longer in my present
+quarters, and so ordered the horses to be saddled.
+
+Before my departure roast lamb and butter were offered me. I
+thanked my entertainers; but refrained from tasting any thing,
+excusing myself on the plea of not feeling hungry, which was in
+reality the case; for if I only looked at the dirty people who
+surrounded me, my appetite vanished instantly. So long as my stock
+of bread and cheese lasted, I kept to it, and ate nothing else.
+
+Taking leave of my good hosts, we continued our journey to
+Reikjavik, by the same road on which I had travelled on my journey
+hither. This had not been my original plan on starting from
+Reikjavik; I had intended to proceed from Thingvalla directly to the
+Geyser, to Hecla, &c.; but the horses were already exhausted, and
+the weather so dreadfully bad, without prospect of speedy amendment,
+that I preferred returning to Reikjavik, and waiting for better
+times in my pleasant little room at the house of the good baker.
+
+We rode on as well as we could amidst ceaseless storms of wind and
+rain. The most disagreeable circumstance of all was our being
+obliged to spend the hours devoted to rest in the open air, under a
+by no means cloudless sky, as during our whole day's journey we saw
+not a single hut, save the solitary one in the lava desert, which
+serves as a resting-place for travellers during the winter. So we
+continued our journey until we reached a scanty meadow. Here I had
+my choice either to walk about for two hours, or to sit down upon
+the wet grass. I could find nothing better to do than to turn my
+back upon the wind and rain, to remain standing on one spot, to have
+patience, and for amusement to observe the direction in which the
+clouds scudded by. At the same time I discussed my frugal meal,
+more for want of something to do than from hunger; if I felt
+thirsty, I had only to turn round and open my mouth.
+
+If there are natures peculiarly fitted for travelling, I am
+fortunate in being blessed with such an one. No rain or wind was
+powerful enough to give me even a cold. During this whole excursion
+I had tasted no warm or nourishing food; I had slept every night
+upon a bench or a chest; had ridden nearly 255 miles in six days;
+and had besides scrambled about bravely in the cavern of Surthellir;
+and, in spite of all this privation and fatigue, I arrived at
+Reikjavik in good health and spirits.
+
+Short summary of this journey:
+
+ Miles
+First day, from Reikjavik to Thingvalla 46
+Second day, from Thingvalla to Reikholt 51
+Third day, from Reikholt to the different
+springs, and back again 19
+Fourth day, from Reikholt to Surthellir, and
+back to Kalmannstunga 40
+Fifth day, from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla 51
+Sixth day, from Thingvalla to Reikjavik 46
+Total 253
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+
+The weather soon cleared up, and I continued my journey to the
+Geyser and to Mount Hecla on the 24th June. On the first day, when
+we rode to Thingvalla, we passed no new scenery, but saw instead an
+extremely beautiful atmospheric phenomenon.
+
+As we approached the lake, some thin mist-clouds lowered over it and
+over the earth, so that it seemed as if it would rain. One portion
+of the firmament glowed with the brightest blue; while the other
+part was obscured by thick clouds, through which the sun was just
+breaking. Some of its rays reached the clouds of mist, and
+illuminated them in a wonderfully beautiful manner. The most
+delicate shades of colour seemed breathed, as it were, over them
+like a dissolving rainbow, whose glowing colours were intermingled
+and yet singly perceptible. This play of colours continued for half
+an hour, then faded gradually till it vanished entirely, and the
+ordinary atmosphere took its place. It was one of the most
+beautiful appearances I had ever witnessed.
+
+
+June 25th.
+
+The roads separate about a mile behind the little town of
+Thingvalla; the one to the left goes to Reikholt, the right-hand one
+leads to the Geyser. We rode for some time along the shores of the
+lake, and found at the end of the valley an awful chasm in the rock,
+similar to the one of Almanagiau, which we had passed on such a
+wretched road.
+
+The contiguous valley bore a great resemblance to that of
+Thingvalla; but the third one was again fearful. Lava covered it,
+and was quite overgrown with that whitish moss, which has a
+beautiful appearance when it only covers a portion of the lava, and
+when black masses rise above it, but which here presented a most
+monotonous aspect.
+
+We also passed two grottoes which opened at our feet. At the
+entrance of one stood a pillar of rock supporting an immense slab of
+lava, which formed an awe-inspiring portal. I had unfortunately not
+known of the existence of these caves, and was consequently
+unprepared to visit them. Torches, at least, would have been
+requisite. But I subsequently heard that they were not at all deep,
+and contained nothing of interest.
+
+In the course of the day we passed through valleys such as I had
+seen nowhere else in Iceland. Beautiful meadow-lawns, perfectly
+level, covered the country for miles. These rich valleys were, of
+course, tolerably well populated; we frequently passed three or four
+contiguous cottages, and saw horses, cows, and sheep grazing on
+these fields in considerable numbers.
+
+The mountains which bounded these valleys on the left seemed to me
+very remarkable; they were partly brown, black, or dark blue, like
+the others; but the bulk of which they were composed I considered to
+be fine loam-soil layers, if I may trust my imperfect mineralogical
+knowledge. Some of these mountains were topped by large isolated
+lava rocks, real giants; and it seemed inexplicable to me how they
+could stand on the soft soil beneath.
+
+In one of these valleys we passed a considerable lake, on and around
+which rose circling clouds of steam proceeding from hot springs, but
+of no great size. But after we had already travelled about twenty-
+five miles, we came to the most remarkable object I had ever met
+with; this was a river with a most peculiar bed.
+
+This river-bed is broad and somewhat steep; it consists of lava
+strata, and is divided lengthwise in the middle by a cleft eighteen
+to twenty feet deep, and fifteen to eighteen feet broad, towards
+which the bubbling and surging waters rush, so that the sound is
+heard at some distance. A little wooden bridge, which stands in the
+middle of the stream, and over which the high waves constantly play,
+leads over the chasm. Any one not aware of the fact can hardly
+explain this appearance to himself, nor understand the noise and
+surging of the stream. The little bridge in the centre would be
+taken for the ruins of a fallen bridge, and the chasm is not seen
+from the shore, because the foaming waves overtop it. An
+indescribable fear would seize upon the traveller when he beheld the
+venturous guide ride into the stream, and was obliged to follow
+without pity or mercy.
+
+The priest of Thingvalla had prepared me for the scene, and had
+advised me to WALK over the bridge; but as the water at this season
+stood so high that the waves from both sides dashed two feet above
+the bridge, I could not descend from my horse, and was obliged to
+ride across.
+
+The whole passage through the stream is so peculiar, that it must be
+seen, and can scarcely be described. The water gushes and plays on
+all sides with fearful force; it rushes into the chasm with
+impetuous violence, forms waterfalls on both sides, and breaks
+itself on the projecting rocks. Not far from the bridge the cleft
+terminates; and the whole breadth of the waters falls over rocks
+thirty to forty feet high. The nearer we approached the centre, the
+deeper, more violent, and impetuous grew the stream, and the more
+deafening was the noise. The horses became restless and shy; and
+when we came to the bridge, they began to tremble, they reared, they
+turned to all sides but the right one, and refused to obey the
+bridle. With infinite trouble we at last succeeded in bringing them
+across this dangerous place.
+
+The valley which is traversed by this peculiar river is narrow, and
+quite enclosed by lava mountains and hills; the inanimate, silent
+nature around is perfectly adapted to imprint this scene for ever on
+the traveller's memory.
+
+This remarkable stream had been the last difficulty; and now we
+proceeded quietly and safely through the beautiful valleys till we
+approached the Geyser, which a projecting hillock enviously
+concealed from my anxiously curious gaze. At last this hillock was
+passed; and I saw the Geyser with its surrounding scenery, with its
+immense steam pillars, and the clouds and cloudlets rising from it.
+The hill was about two miles distant from the Geyser and the other
+hot springs. There they were, boiling and bubbling all around, and
+through the midst lay the road to the basin. Eighty paces from it
+we halted.
+
+And now I stood before the chief object of my journey; I saw it, it
+was so near me, and yet I did not venture to approach it. But a
+peasant who had followed us from one of the neighbouring cottages,
+and had probably guessed my anxiety and my fear, took me by the hand
+and constituted himself my cicerone. He had unfortunately, it being
+Sunday, paid too great a devotion to the brandy-bottle, so that he
+staggered rather than walked, and I hesitated to trust myself to the
+guidance of this man, not knowing whether he had reason enough left
+to distinguish how far we might with safety venture. My guide, who
+had accompanied me from Reikjavik, assured me indeed that I might
+trust him in spite of his intoxication, and that he would himself go
+with us to translate the peasant's Icelandic jargon into Danish; but
+nevertheless I followed with great trepidation.
+
+He led me to the margin of the basin of the great Geyser, which lies
+on the top of a gentle elevation of about ten feet, and contains the
+outer and the inner basins. The diameter of the outer basin may be
+about thirty feet; that of the inner one six to seven feet. Both
+were filled to the brim, the water was pure as crystal, but boiled
+and bubbled only slightly. We soon left this spot; for when the
+basins are quite filled with water it is very dangerous to approach
+them, as they may empty themselves any moment by an eruption. We
+therefore went to inspect the other springs.
+
+My unsteady guide pointed those out which we might unhesitatingly
+approach, and warned me from the others. Then we returned to the
+great Geyser, where he gave me some precautionary rules, in case of
+an intervening eruption, and then left me to prepare some
+accommodation for my stay. I will briefly enumerate the rules he
+gave me.
+
+"The pillar of water always rises perpendicularly, and the
+overflowing water has its chief outlets on one and the same side.
+The water does indeed escape on the other side, but only in
+inconsiderable quantities, and in shapeless little ducts, which one
+may easily evade. On this side one may therefore approach within
+forty paces even during the most violent eruptions. The eruption
+announces itself by a dull roaring; and as soon as this is heard,
+the traveller must hastily retire to the above-named distance, as
+the eruption always follows very quickly after the noise. The
+water, however, does not rise high every time, often only very
+inconsiderably, so that, to see a very fine explosion, it is often
+necessary to stay some days here."
+
+The French scholar, M. P. Geimard, has provided for the
+accommodation of travellers with a truly noble disinterestedness.
+He traversed the whole of Iceland some years ago and left two large
+tents behind him; one here, and the other in Thingvalla. The one
+here is particularly appropriate, as travellers are frequently
+obliged, as stated above, to wait several days for a fine eruption.
+Every traveller certainly owes M. Geimard the warmest thanks for
+this convenience. A peasant, the same who guides travellers to the
+springs, has the charge of it, and is bound to pitch it for any one
+for a fee of one or two florins.
+
+When my tent was ready it was nearly eleven o'clock. My companions
+retired, and I remained alone.
+
+It is usual to watch through the night in order not to miss an
+eruption. Now, although an alternate watching is no very arduous
+matter for several travellers, it became a very hard task for me
+alone, and an Icelandic peasant cannot be trusted; an eruption of
+Mount Hecla would scarcely arouse him.
+
+I sat sometimes before and sometimes in my tent, and listened with
+anxious expectation for the coming events; at last, after midnight--
+the witching hour--I heard some hollow sounds, as if a cannon were
+being fired at a great distance, and its echoing sounds were borne
+by the breeze. I rushed from my tent and expected subterranean
+noises, violent cracking and trembling of the earth, according to
+the descriptions I had read. I could scarcely repress a slight
+sensation of fear. To be alone at midnight in such a scene is
+certainly no joke.
+
+Many of my friends may remember my telling them, before my
+departure, that I expected I should need the most courage on my
+Icelandic journey during the nights at the Geyser.
+
+These hollow sounds were repeated, at very short intervals, thirteen
+times; and each time the basin overflowed and ejected a considerable
+quantity of water. The sounds did not seem to proceed from
+subterranean ragings, but from the violent agitation of the waters.
+In a minute and a half all was over; the water no longer overflowed,
+the caldron and basin remained filled, and I returned to my tent
+disappointed in every way. This phenomenon was repeated every two
+hours and a half, or, at the latest, every three hours and a half.
+I saw and heard nothing else all night, the next day, or the second
+night. I waited in vain for an eruption.
+
+When I had accustomed myself to these temporary effusions of my
+neighbour, I either indulged in a gentle slumber in the intermediate
+time, or I visited the other springs and explored. I wished to
+discover the boiling vapour and the coloured springs which many
+travellers assert they have seen here.
+
+All the hot-springs are united with a circumference of 800 to 900
+paces: several of them are very remarkable, but the majority
+insignificant.
+
+They are situated in the angle of an immense valley at the foot of a
+hill, behind which extends a chain of mountains. The valley is
+entirely covered with grass, and the vegetation only decreases a
+little in the immediate vicinity of the springs. Cottages are built
+every where in the neighbourhood; the nearest to the springs are
+only about 700 to 800 paces distant.
+
+I counted twelve large basins with boiling and gushing springs; of
+smaller ones there were many more.
+
+Among the gushing springs the Strokker is the most remarkable. It
+boils and bubbles with most extraordinary violence at a depth of
+about twenty feet, shoots up suddenly, and projects its waters into
+the air. Its eruptions sometimes last half an hour, and the column
+occasionally ascends to a height of forty feet. I witnessed several
+of its eruptions; but unfortunately not one of the largest. The
+highest I saw could not have been above thirty feet, and did not
+last more than a quarter of an hour. The Strokker is the only
+spring, except the Geyser, which has to be approached with great
+caution. The eruptions sometimes succeed each other quickly, and
+sometimes cease for a few hours, and are not preceded by any sign.
+Another spring spouts constantly, but never higher than three to
+four feet. A third one lies about four or five feet deep, in a
+rather broad basin, and produces only a few little bubbles. But
+this calmness is deceptive: it seldom lasts more than half a
+minute, rarely two or three minutes; then the spring begins to
+bubble, to boil, and to wave and spout to a height of two or three
+feet; without, however, reaching the level of the basin. In some
+springs I heard boiling and foaming like a gentle bellowing; but saw
+no water, sometimes not even steam, rising.
+
+Two of the most remarkable springs which can perhaps be found in the
+world are situated immediately above the Geyser, in two openings,
+which are separated by a wall of rock scarcely a foot wide. This
+partition does not rise above the surface of the soil, but descends
+into the earth; the water boils slowly, and has an equable, moderate
+discharge. The beauty of these springs consists in their remarkable
+transparency. All the varied forms and caves, the projecting peaks,
+and edges of rock, are visible far down, until the eye is lost in
+the depths of darkness. But the greatest beauty of the spring is
+the splendid colouring proceeding from the rock; it is of the
+tenderest, most transparent, pale blue and green, and resembles the
+reflection of a Bengal flame. But what is most strange is, that
+this play of colour proceeds from the rock, and only extends eight
+to ten inches from it, while the other water is colourless as common
+water, only more transparent, and purer.
+
+I could not believe it at first, and thought it must be occasioned
+by the sun; I therefore visited the springs at different times,
+sometimes when the sun shone brightly, sometimes when it was
+obscured by clouds, once even after its setting; but the colouring
+always remained the same.
+
+One may fearlessly approach the brink of these springs. The
+platform which projects directly from them, and under which one can
+see in all directions, is indeed only a thin ledge of rock, but
+strong enough to prevent any accident. The beauty consists, as I
+have said, in the magical illumination, and in the transparency, by
+which all the caves and grottoes to the greatest depths become
+visible to the eye. Involuntarily I thought of Schiller's Diver.
+{40} I seemed to see the goblet hang on the peaks and jags of the
+rock; I could fancy I saw the monsters rise from the bottom. It
+must be a peculiar pleasure to read this splendid poem in such an
+appropriate spot.
+
+I found scarcely any basins of Brodem or coloured waters. The only
+one of the kind which I saw was a small basin, in which a brownish-
+red substance, rather denser than water, was boiling. Another
+smaller spring, with dirty brown water, I should have quite
+overlooked, if I had not so industriously searched for these
+curiosities.
+
+At last, after long waiting, on the second day of my stay, on the
+27th June, at half-past eight in the morning, I was destined to see
+an eruption of the Geyser in its greatest perfection. The peasant,
+who came daily in the morning and in the evening to inquire whether
+I had already seen an eruption, was with me when the hollow sounds
+which precede it were again heard. We hastened out, and I again
+despaired of seeing any thing; the water only overflowed as usual,
+and the sound was already ceasing. But all at once, when the last
+sounds had scarcely died away, the explosion began. Words fail me
+when I try to describe it: such a magnificent and overpowering
+sight can only be seen once in a lifetime.
+
+All my expectations and suppositions were far surpassed. The water
+spouted upwards with indescribable force and bulk; one pillar rose
+higher than the other; each seemed to emulate the other. When I had
+in some measure recovered from the surprise, and regained composure,
+I looked at the tent. How little, how dwarfish it seemed as
+compared to the height of these pillars of water! And yet it was
+about twenty feet high. It did, indeed, lie ten feet lower than the
+basin of the Geyser; but if tent had been raised above tent, these
+ten feet could only be deducted once, and I calculated, though my
+calculation may not be correct, that one would need to pile up five
+or six tents to have the height of one of the pillars. Without
+exaggeration, I think the largest spout rose above one hundred feet
+high, and was three to four feet in diameter.
+
+Fortunately I had looked at my watch at the beginning of the hollow
+sounds, the forerunners of the eruption, for during its continuance
+I should probably have forgotten to do so. The whole lasted four
+minutes, of which the greater half must have been taken up by the
+eruption itself.
+
+When this wonderful scene was over, the peasant accompanied me to
+the basin. We could now approach it and the boiler without danger,
+and examine both at leisure. There was now nothing to fear; the
+water had entirely disappeared from the outer basin. We entered it
+and approached the inner basin, in which the water had sunk seven or
+eight feet, where it boiled and bubbled fiercely.
+
+With a hammer I broke some crust out of the outer as well as out of
+the inner basin; the former was white, the latter brown. I also
+tasted the water; it had not an unpleasant taste, and can only
+contain an inconsiderable proportion of sulphur, as the steam does
+not even smell of it.
+
+I went to the basin of the Geyser every half hour to observe how
+much time was required to fill it again. After an hour I could
+still descend into the outer basin; but half an hour later the inner
+basin was already full, and commenced to overflow. As long as the
+water only filled the inner basin it boiled violently; but the
+higher it rose in the outer one, the less it boiled, and nearly
+ceased when the basin was filled: it only threw little bubbles here
+and there.
+
+After a lapse of two hours--it was just noon--the basin was filled
+nearly to the brim; and while I stood beside it the water began
+again to bubble violently, and to emit the hollow sounds. I had
+scarcely time to retreat, for the pillars of water rose immediately.
+This time they spouted during the noise, and were more bulky than
+those of the first explosion, which might proceed from their not
+rising so high, and therefore remaining more compact. Their height
+may have been from forty to fifty feet. The basins this time
+remained nearly as full after the eruption as before.
+
+I had now seen two eruptions of the Geyser, and felt amply
+compensated for my persevering patience and watchfulness. But I was
+destined to be more fortunate, and to experience its explosions in
+all their variety. The spring spouted again at seven o'clock in the
+evening, ascended higher than at noon, and brought up some stones,
+which looked like black spots and points in the white frothy water-
+column. And during the third night it presented itself under
+another phase: the water rose in dreadful, quickly-succeeding
+waves, without throwing rays; the basin overflowed violently, and
+generated such a mass of steam as is rarely seen. The wind
+accidentally blew it to the spot where I stood, and it enveloped me
+so closely that I could scarcely see a few feet off. But I
+perceived neither smell nor oppression, merely a slight degree of
+warmth.
+
+
+June 28th.
+
+As I had now seen the Geyser play so often and so beautifully, I
+ordered my horses for nine o'clock this morning, to continue my
+journey. I made the more haste to leave, as a Dutch prince was
+expected, who had lately arrived at Reikjavik, with a large retinue,
+in a splendid man-of-war.
+
+I had the luck to see another eruption before my departure at half-
+past eight o'clock; and this one was nearly as beautiful as the
+first. This time also the outer basin was entirely emptied, and the
+inner one to a depth of six or seven feet. I could therefore again
+descend into the basin, and bid farewell to the Geyser at the very
+brink of the crater, which, of course, I did.
+
+I had now been three nights and two days in the immediate vicinity
+of the Geyser, and had witnessed five eruptions, of which two were
+of the most considerable that had ever been known. But I can assure
+my readers that I did not find every thing as I had anticipated it
+according to the descriptions and accounts I had read. I never
+heard a greater noise than I have mentioned, and never felt any
+trembling of the earth, although I paid the greatest attention to
+every little circumstance, and held my head to the ground during an
+eruption.
+
+It is singular how many people repeat every thing they hear from
+others--how some, with an over-excited imagination, seem to see,
+hear, and feel things which do not exist; and how others, again,
+tell the most unblushing falsehoods. I met an example of this in
+Reikjavik, in the house of the apothecary Moller, in the person of
+an officer of a French frigate, who asserted that he had "ridden to
+the very edge of the crater of Mount Vesuvius." He probably did not
+anticipate meeting any one in Reikjavik who had also been to the
+crater of Vesuvius. Nothing irritates me so much as such falsehoods
+and boastings; and I could not therefore resist asking him how he
+had managed that feat. I told him that I had been there, and feared
+danger as little as he could do; but that I had been compelled to
+descend from my donkey near the top of the mountain, and let my feet
+carry me the remainder of the journey. He seemed rather
+embarrassed, and pretended he had meant to say NEARLY to the crater;
+but I feel convinced he will tell this story so often that he will
+at last believe it himself.
+
+I hope I do not weary my readers by dwelling so long on the subject
+of the Geyser. I will now vary the subject by relating a few
+circumstances that came under my notice, which, though trifling in
+themselves, were yet very significant. The most unimportant facts
+of an almost unknown country are often interesting, and are often
+most conclusive evidences of the general character of the nation.
+
+I have already spoken of my intoxicated guide. It is yet
+inexplicable to me how he could have conducted me so safely in such
+a semi-conscious state; and had he not been the only one, I should
+certainly not have trusted myself to his guidance.
+
+Of the want of cleanliness of the Icelanders, no one who has not
+witnessed it can have any idea; and if I attempted to describe some
+of their nauseous habits, I might fill volumes. They seem to have
+no feeling of propriety, and I must, in this respect, rank them as
+far inferior to the Bedouins and Arabs--even to the Greenlanders. I
+can, therefore, not conceive how this nation could once have been
+distinguished for wealth, bravery, and civilisation.
+
+On this day I proceeded on my journey about twenty-eight miles
+farther to Skalholt.
+
+For the first five miles we retraced our former road; then we turned
+to the left and traversed the beautiful long valley in which the
+Geyser is situated. For many miles we could see its clouds of steam
+rising to the sky. The roads were tolerable only when they passed
+along the sides of hills and mountains; in the plains they were
+generally marshy and full of water. We sometimes lost all traces of
+a road, and only pushed on towards the quarter in which the place of
+our destination was situated; and feared withal to sink at every
+pace into the soft and unresisting soil.
+
+I found the indolence of the Icelandic peasants quite unpardonable.
+All the valleys through which we passed were large morasses richly
+overgrown with grass. If the single parishes would unite to dig
+trenches and drain the soil, they would have the finest meadows.
+This is proved near the many precipices where the water has an
+outlet; in these spots the grass grows most luxuriantly, and daisies
+and herbs flourish there, and even wild clover. A few cottages are
+generally congregated on these oases.
+
+Before arriving at the village of Thorfastadir, we already perceived
+Hecla surrounded by the beautiful jokuls.
+
+I arrived at Thorfastadir while a funeral was going on. As I
+entered the church the mourners were busily seeking courage and
+consolation in the brandy-bottle. The law commands, indeed, that
+this be not done in the church; but if every one obeyed the law,
+what need would there be of judges? The Icelanders must think so,
+else they would discontinue the unseemly practice.
+
+When the priest came, a psalm or a prayer--I could not tell which it
+was, being Icelandic--was so earnestly shouted by peasants under the
+leadership of the priest and elders, that the good people waxed
+quite warm and out of breath. Then the priest placed himself before
+the coffin, which, for want of room, had been laid on the backs of
+the seats, and with a very loud voice read a prayer which lasted
+more than half an hour. With this the ceremony within the church
+was concluded, and the coffin was carried round the church to the
+grave, followed by the priest and the rest of the company. This
+grave was deeper than any I had ever seen. When the coffin had been
+lowered, the priest threw three handfuls of earth upon it, but none
+of the mourners followed his example. Among the earth which had
+been dug out of the grave I noticed four skulls, several human
+bones, and a board of a former coffin. These were all thrown in
+again upon the coffin, and the grave filled in presence of the
+priest and the people. One man trod the soil firm, then a little
+mound was made and covered with grass-plots which were lying ready.
+The whole business was completed with miraculous speed.
+
+The little town of Skalholt, my station this night, was once as
+celebrated in religious matters as Thingvalla had been politically
+famous. Here, soon after the introduction of Christianity, the
+first bishopric was founded in 1098, and the church is said to have
+been one of the largest and richest. Now Skalholt is a miserable
+place, and consists of three or four cottages, and a wretched wooden
+church, which may perhaps contain a hundred persons; it has not even
+its own priest, but belongs to Thorfastadir.
+
+My first business on arriving was to inspect the yet remaining
+relics of past ages. First I was shewn an oil-picture which hangs
+in the church, and is said to represent the first bishop of
+Skalholt, Thorlakur, who was worshipped almost as a saint for his
+strict and pious life.
+
+After this, preparations were made to clear away the steps of the
+altar and several boards of the flooring. I stood expectantly
+looking on, thinking that I should now have to descend into a vault
+to inspect the embalmed body of the bishop. I must confess this
+prospect was not the most agreeable, when I thought of the
+approaching night which I should have to spend in this church,
+perhaps immediately over the grave of the old skeleton. I had
+besides already had too much to do with the dead for one day, and
+could not rid myself of the unpleasant grave-odour which I had
+imbibed in Thorfastadir, and which seemed to cling to my dress and
+my nose. {41} I was therefore not a little pleased when, instead of
+the dreaded vault and mummy, I was only shewn a marble slab, on
+which were inscribed the usual notifications of the birth, death,
+&c. of this great bishop. Besides this, I saw an old embroidered
+stole and a simple golden chalice, both of which are said to be
+relics of the age of Thorlakar.
+
+Then we ascended into the so-called store-room, which is only
+separated from the lower portion of the church by a few boards, and
+which extends to the altar. Here are kept the bells and the organ,
+if the church possesses one, the provisions, and a variety of tools.
+They opened an immense chest for me there, which seemed to contain
+only large pieces of tallow made in the form of cheeses; but under
+this tallow I found the library, where I discovered an interesting
+treasure. This was, besides several very old books in the Icelandic
+tongue, three thick folio volumes, which I could read very easily;
+they were German, and contained Luther's doctrines, letters,
+epistles, &c.
+
+I had now seen all there was to be seen, and began to satisfy my
+physical wants by calling for some hot water to make coffee, &c. As
+usual, all the inhabitants of the place ranged themselves in and
+before the church, probably to increase their knowledge of the human
+race by studying my peculiarities. I soon, however, closed the
+door, and prepared a splendid couch for myself. At my first
+entrance into the church, I had noticed a long box, quite filled
+with sheep's wool. I threw my rugs over this, and slept as
+comfortably as in the softest bed. In the morning I carefully
+teased the wool up again, and no one could then have imagined where
+I had passed the night.
+
+Nothing amused me more, when I had lodgings of this description,
+than the curiosity of the people, who would rush in every morning,
+as soon as I opened the door. The first thing they said to each
+other was always, "Krar hefur hun sovid" (Where can she have
+slept?). The good people could not conceive how it was possible to
+spend a night ALONE in a church surrounded by a churchyard; they
+perhaps considered me an evil spirit or a witch, and would too
+gladly have ascertained how such a creature slept. When I saw their
+disappointed faces, I had to turn away not to laugh at them.
+
+
+June 29th.
+
+Early the next morning I continued my journey. Not far from
+Skalholt we came to the river Thiorsa, which is deep and rapid. We
+crossed in a boat; but the horses had to swim after us. It is often
+very troublesome to make the horses enter these streams; they see at
+once that they will have to swim. The guide and boatmen cannot
+leave the shore till the horses have been forced into the stream;
+and even then they have to throw stones, to threaten them with the
+whip, and to frighten them by shouts and cries, to prevent them from
+returning.
+
+When we had made nearly twelve miles on marshy roads, we came to the
+beautiful waterfall of the Huitha. This fall is not so remarkable
+for its height, which is scarcely more than fifteen to twenty feet,
+as for its breadth, and for its quantity of water. Some beautiful
+rocks are so placed at the ledge of the fall, that they divide it
+into three parts; but it unites again immediately beneath them. The
+bed of the river, as well as its shores, is of lava.
+
+The colour of the water is also a remarkable feature in this river;
+it inclines so much to milky white, that, when the sun shines on it,
+it requires no very strong imaginative power to take the whole for
+milk.
+
+Nearly a mile above the fall we had to cross the Huitha, one of the
+largest rivers in Iceland. Thence the road lies through meadows,
+which are less marshy than the former ones, till it comes to a broad
+stream of lava, which announces the vicinity of the fearful volcano
+of Hecla.
+
+I had hitherto not passed over such an expanse of country in Iceland
+as that from the Geyser to this place without coming upon streams of
+lava. And this lava-stream seemed to have felt some pity for the
+beautiful meadows, for it frequently separated into two branches,
+and thus enclosed the verdant plain. But it could not withstand the
+violence of the succeeding masses; it had been carried on, and had
+spread death and destruction everywhere. The road to it, through
+plains covered with dark sand, and over steep hills intervening, was
+very fatiguing and laborious.
+
+We proceeded to the little village of Struvellir, where we stopped
+to give our horses a few hours' rest. Here we found a large
+assembly of men and animals. {42} It happened to be Sunday, and a
+warm sunny day, and so a very full service was held in the pretty
+little church. When it was over, I witnessed an amusing rural
+scene. The people poured out of the church,--I counted ninety-six,
+which is an extraordinarily numerous assemblage for Iceland,--formed
+into little groups, chatting and joking, not forgetting, however, to
+moisten their throats with brandy, of which they had taken care to
+bring an ample supply. Then they bridled their horses and prepared
+for departure; now the kisses poured in from all sides, and there
+was no end of leave-taking, for the poor people do not know whether
+they shall ever meet again, and when.
+
+In all Iceland welcome and farewell is expressed by a loud kiss,--a
+practice not very delightful for a non-Icelander, when one considers
+their ugly, dirty faces, the snuffy noses of the old people, and the
+filthy little children. But the Icelanders do not mind this. They
+all kissed the priest, and the priest kissed them; and then they
+kissed each other, till the kissing seemed to have no end. Rank is
+not considered in this ceremony; and I was not a little surprised to
+see how my guide, a common farm-labourer, kissed the six daughters
+of a judge, or the wife and children of a priest, or a judge and the
+priest themselves, and how they returned the compliment without
+reserve. Every country has its peculiar customs!
+
+The religious ceremonies generally begin about noon, and last two or
+three hours. There being no public inn in which to assemble, and no
+stable in which the horses can be fastened, all flock to the open
+space in front of the church, which thus becomes a very animated
+spot. All have to remain in the open air.
+
+When the service was over, I visited the priest, Herr Horfuson; he
+was kind enough to conduct me to the Salsun, nine miles distant,
+principally to engage a guide to Hecla for me.
+
+I was doubly rejoiced to have this good man at my side, as we had to
+cross a dangerous stream, which was very rapid, and so deep that the
+water rose to the horses' breasts. Although we raised our feet as
+high as possible, we were yet thoroughly wet. This wading across
+rivers is one of the most unpleasant modes of travelling. The horse
+swims more than it walks, and this creates a most disagreeable
+sensation; one does not know whither to direct one's eyes; to look
+into the stream would excite giddiness, and the sight of the shore
+is not much better, for that seems to move and to recede, because
+the horse, by the current, is forced a little way down the river.
+To my great comfort the priest rode by my side to hold me, in case I
+should not be able to keep my seat. I passed fortunately through
+this probation; and when we reached the other shore, Herr Horfuson
+pointed out to me how far the current had carried us down the river.
+
+The valley in which Salsun and the Hecla are situated is one of
+those which are found only in Iceland. It contains the greatest
+contrasts. Here are charming fields covered with a rich green
+carpet of softest grass, and there again hills of black, shining
+lava; even the fertile plains are traversed by streams of lava and
+spots of sand. Mount Hecla notoriously has the blackest lava and
+the blackest sand; and it may be imagined how the country looks in
+its immediate neighbourhood. One hill only to the left of Hecla is
+reddish brown, and covered with sand and stones of a similar colour.
+The centre is much depressed, and seems to form a large crater.
+Mount Hecla is directly united with the lava-mountains piled round
+it, and seems from the plain only as a higher point. It is
+surrounded by several glaciers, whose dazzling fields of snow
+descend far down, and whose brilliant plains have probably never
+been trod by human feet; several of its sides were also covered with
+snow. To the left of the valley near Salsun, and at the foot of a
+lava-hill, lies a lovely lake, on whose shores a numerous flock of
+sheep were grazing. Near it rises another beautiful hill, so
+solitary and isolated, that it looks as if it had been cast out by
+its neighbours and banished hither. Indeed, the whole landscape
+here is so peculiarly Icelandic, so strange and remarkable, that it
+will ever remain impressed on my memory.
+
+Salsun lies at the foot of Mount Hecla, but is not seen before one
+reaches it.
+
+Arrived at Salsun, our first care was to seek a guide, and to
+bargain for every thing requisite for the ascension of the mountain.
+The guide was to procure a horse for me, and to take me and my
+former guide to the summit of Hecla. He demanded five thaler and
+two marks (about fifteen shillings), a most exorbitant sum, on which
+he could live for a month. But what could we do? He knew very well
+that there was no other guide to be had, and so I was forced to
+acquiesce. When all was arranged, my kind companion left me,
+wishing me success on my arduous expedition.
+
+I now looked out for a place in which I could spend the night, and a
+filthy hole fell to my lot. A bench, rather shorter that my body,
+was put into it, to serve as my bed; beside it hung a decayed fish,
+which had infected the whole room with its smell. I could scarcely
+breathe; and as there was no other outlet, I was obliged to open the
+door, and thus receive the visits of the numerous and amiable
+inhabitants. What a strengthening and invigorating preparation for
+the morrow's expedition!
+
+At the foot of Mount Hecla, and especially in this village, every
+thing seems to be undermined. Nowhere, not even on Mount Vesuvius,
+had I heard such hollow, droning sounds as here,--the echoes of the
+heavy footsteps of the peasants. These sounds made a very awful
+impression on me as I lay all night alone in that dark hole.
+
+My Hecla guide, as I shall call him to distinguish him from my other
+guide, advised me to start at two o'clock in the morning, to which I
+assented, well knowing, however, that we should not have mounted our
+horses before five o'clock.
+
+As I had anticipated, so it happened. At half-past five we were
+quite prepared and ready for departure. Besides bread and cheese, a
+bottle of water for myself, and one of brandy for my guides, we were
+also provided with long sticks, tipped with iron points to sound the
+depth of the snow, and to lean upon.
+
+We were favoured by a fine warm sunny morning, and galloped briskly
+over the fields and the adjoining plains of sand. My guide
+considered the fine weather a very lucky omen, and told me that M.
+Geimard, the before-mentioned French scholar, had been compelled to
+wait three days for fine weather. Nine years had elapsed, and no
+one had ascended the mountain since then. A prince of Denmark, who
+travelled through Iceland some years before, had been there, but had
+returned without effecting his purpose.
+
+Our road at first led us through beautiful fields, and then over
+plains of black sand enclosed on all sides by streams, hillocks, and
+mountains of piled-up lava. Closer and closer these fearful masses
+approach, and scarcely permit a passage through a narrow cleft; we
+had to climb over blocks and hills of lava, where it is difficult to
+find a firm resting-place for the foot. The lava rolled beside and
+behind us, and we had to proceed carefully not to fall or be hit by
+the rolling lava. But most dangerous were the chasms filled with
+snow over which we had to pass; the snow had been softened by the
+warmth of the season, so that we sank into it nearly every step, or,
+what was worse, slipped back more than we had advanced. I scarcely
+think there can be another mountain whose ascent offers so many
+difficulties.
+
+After a labour of about three hours and a half we neared the summit
+of the mountain, where we were obliged to leave our horses. I
+should, indeed, have preferred to do so long before, as I was
+apprehensive of the poor animals falling as they climbed over these
+precipices--one might almost call them rolling mountains--but my
+guide would not permit it. Sometimes we came to spots where they
+were useful, and then he maintained that I must ride as far as
+possible to reserve my strength for the remaining difficulties. And
+he was right; I scarcely believe I should have been able to go
+through it on foot, for when I thought we were near the top, hills
+of lava again rose between us, and we seemed farther from our
+journey's end than before.
+
+My guide told me that he had never taken any one so far on
+horseback, and I can believe it. Walking was bad enough--riding was
+fearful.
+
+At every fresh declivity new scenes of deserted, melancholy
+districts were revealed to us; every thing was cold and dead, every
+where there was black burnt lava. It was a painful feeling to see
+so much, and behold nothing but a stony desert, an immeasurable
+chaos.
+
+There were still two declivities before us,--the last, but the
+worst. We had to climb steep masses of lava, sharp and pointed,
+which covered the whole side of the mountain. I do not know how
+often I fell and cut my hands on the jagged points of the lava. It
+was a fearful journey!
+
+The dazzling whiteness of the snow contrasted with the bright black
+lava beside it had an almost blinding effect. When crossing fields
+of snow I did not look at the lava; for having tried to do so once
+or twice, I could not see my way afterwards, and had nearly grown
+snow-blind.
+
+After two hours' more labour we reached the summit of the mountain.
+I stood now on Mount Hecla, and eagerly sought the crater on the
+snowless top, but did not find it. I was the more surprised, as I
+had read detailed accounts of it in several descriptions of travel.
+
+I traversed the whole summit of the mountain and climbed to the
+adjoining jokul, but did not perceive an opening, a fissure, a
+depressed space, nor any sign of a crater. Lower down in the sides
+of the mountain, but not in the real cone, I saw some clefts and
+fissures from which the streams of lava probably poured. The height
+of the mountain is said to be 4300 feet.
+
+During the last hour of our ascent the sun had grown dim. Clouds of
+mist blown from the neighbouring glaciers enshrouded the hill-tops,
+and soon enveloped us so closely that we could scarcely see ten
+paces before us. At last they dissolved, fortunately not in rain
+but in snow, which profusely covered the black uneven lava. The
+snow remained on the ground, and the thermometer stood at one degree
+of cold.
+
+In a little while the clear blue sky once more was visible, and the
+sun again shone over us. I remained on the top till the clouds had
+separated beneath us, and afforded me a better distant view over the
+country.
+
+My pen is unfortunately too feeble to bring vividly before my
+readers the picture such as I beheld it here, and to describe to
+them the desolation, the extent and height of these lava-masses. I
+seemed to stand in a crater, and the whole country appeared only a
+burnt-out fire. Here lava was piled up in steep inaccessible
+mountains; there stony rivers, whose length and breadth seemed
+immeasurable, filled the once-verdant fields. Every thing was
+jumbled together, and yet the course of the last eruption could be
+distinctly traced.
+
+I stood there, in the centre of horrible precipices, caves, streams,
+valleys, and mountains, and scarcely comprehended how it was
+possible to penetrate so far, and was overcome with terror at the
+thought which involuntarily obtruded itself--the possibility of
+never finding my way again out of these terrible labyrinths.
+
+Here, from the top of Mount Hecla, I could see far into the
+uninhabited country, the picture of a petrified creation, dead and
+motionless, and yet magnificent,--a picture which once seen can
+never again fade from the memory, and which alone amply compensates
+for all the previous troubles and dangers. A whole world of
+glaciers, lava-mountains, snow and ice-fields, rivers and lakes,
+into which no human foot has ever ventured to penetrate. How nature
+must have laboured and raged till these forms were created! And is
+it over now? Has the destroying element exhausted itself; or does
+it only rest, like the hundred-headed Hydra, to break forth with
+renewed strength, and desolate those regions which, pushed to the
+verge of the sea-shore, encircle the sterile interior as a modest
+wreath? I thank God that he has permitted me to behold this chaos
+in his creation; but I thank him more heartily that he has placed me
+to dwell in regions where the sun does more than merely give light;
+where it inspires and fertilises animals and plants, and fills the
+human heart with joy and thankfulness towards its Creator. {43}
+
+The Westmann Isles, which are said to be visible from the top of
+Hecla, I could not see; they were probably covered by clouds.
+
+During the ascent of the Hecla I had frequently touched lava,--
+sometimes involuntarily, when I fell; sometimes voluntarily, to find
+a hot or at least a warm place. I was unfortunate enough only to
+find cold ones. The falling snow was therefore most welcome, and I
+looked anxiously around to see a place where the subterranean heat
+would melt it. I should then have hastened thither and found what I
+sought. But unfortunately the snow remained unmelted every where.
+I could neither see any clouds of smoke, although I gazed steadily
+at the mountain for hours, and could from my post survey it far down
+the sides.
+
+As we descended we found the snow melting at a depth of 500 to 600
+feet; lower down, the whole mountain smoked, which I thought was the
+consequence of the returning warmth of the sun, for my thermometer
+now stood at nine degrees of heat. I have noticed the same
+circumstance often on unvolcanic mountains. The spots from which
+the smoke rose were also cold.
+
+The smooth jet-black, bright, and dense lava is only found on the
+mountain itself and in its immediate vicinity. But all lava is not
+the same: there is jagged, glassy, and porous lava; the former is
+black, and so is the sand which covers one side of Hecla. The
+farther the lava and sand are from the mountain, the more they lose
+this blackness, and their colour plays into iron-colour and even
+into light-grey; but the lighter-coloured lava generally retains the
+brightness and smoothness of the black lava.
+
+After a troublesome descent, having spent twelve hours on this
+excursion, we arrived safely at Salsun; and I was on the point of
+returning to my lodging, somewhat annoyed at the prospect of
+spending another night in such a hole, when my guide surprised me
+agreeably by the proposition to return to Struvellir at once. The
+horses, he said, were sufficiently rested, and I could get a good
+room there in the priest's house. I soon packed, and in a short
+time we were again on horseback. The second time I came to the deep
+Rangaa, I rode across fearlessly, and needed no protection at any
+side. Such is man: danger only alarms him the first time; when he
+has safely surmounted it once, he scarcely thinks of it the second
+time, and wonders how he can have felt any fear.
+
+I saw five little trees standing in a field near the stream. The
+stems of these, which, considering the scarcity of trees in Iceland,
+may be called remarkable phenomena, were crooked and knotty, but yet
+six or seven feet high, and about four or five inches in diameter.
+
+As my guide had foretold, I found a very comfortable room and a good
+bed in the priest's house. Herr Horfuson is one of the best men I
+have ever met with. He eagerly sought opportunities for giving me
+pleasure, and to him I owe several fine minerals and an Icelandic
+book of the year 1601. May God reward his kindness and benevolence!
+
+
+July 1st.
+
+We retraced our steps as far as the river Huitha, over which we
+rowed, and then turned in another direction. Our journey led us
+through beautiful valleys, many of them producing abundance of
+grass; but unfortunately so much moss grew among it, that these
+large plains were not available for pastures, and only afforded
+comfort to travellers by their aspect of cheerfulness. They were
+quite dry.
+
+The valley in which Hjalmholm, our resting-place for this night, was
+situated, is traversed by a stream of lava, which had, however, been
+modest enough not to fill up the whole valley, but to leave a space
+for the pretty stream Elvas, and for some fields and hillocks, on
+which many cottages stood. It was one of the most populous valleys
+I had seen in Iceland.
+
+Hjalmholm is situated on a hill. In it lives the Sysselmann of the
+Rangaar district, in a large and beautiful house such as I saw no
+where in Iceland except in Reikjavik. He had gone to the capital of
+the island as member of the Allthing; but his daughters received me
+very hospitably and kindly.
+
+We talked and chatted much; I tried to display my knowledge of the
+Danish language before them, and must often have made use of curious
+phrases, for the girls could not contain their laughter. But that
+did not abash me; I laughed with them, applied to my dictionary,
+which I carried with me, and chatted on. They seemed to gather no
+very high idea of the beauty of my countrywomen from my personal
+appearance; for which I humbly crave the forgiveness of my
+countrywomen, assuring them that no one regrets the fact more than I
+do. But dame Nature always treats people of my years very harshly,
+and sets a bad example to youth of the respect due to age. Instead
+of honouring us and giving us the preference, she patronises the
+young folks, and every maiden of sixteen can turn up her nose at us
+venerable matrons. Besides my natural disqualifications, the sharp
+air and the violent storms to which I had been subjected had
+disfigured my face very much. They had affected me more than the
+burning heat of the East. I was very brown, my lips were cracked,
+and my nose, alas, even began to rebel against its ugly colour. It
+seemed anxious to possess a new, dazzling white, tender skin, and
+was casting off the old one in little bits.
+
+The only circumstance which reinstated me in the good opinion of the
+young girls was, that having brushed my hair unusually far out of my
+face, a white space became visible. The girls all cried out
+simultaneously, quite surprised and delighted: "Hun er quit" (she
+is white). I could not refrain from laughing, and bared my arm to
+prove to them that I did not belong to the Arab race.
+
+A great surprise was destined me in this house; for, as I was
+ransacking the Sysselmann's book-case, I found Rotteck's Universal
+History, a German Lexicon, and several poems and writings of German
+poets.
+
+
+July 2d.
+
+The way from Kalmannstunga to Thingvalla leads over nothing but
+lava, and the one to-day went entirely through marshes. As soon as
+we had crossed one, another was before us. Lava seemed to form the
+soil here, for little portions of this mineral rose like islands out
+of the marshes.
+
+The country already grew more open, and we gradually lost sight of
+the glaciers. The high mountains on the left seemed like hills in
+the distance, and the nearer ones were really hills. After riding
+about nine miles we crossed the large stream of Elvas in a boat, and
+then had to tread carefully across a very long, narrow bank, over a
+meadow which was quite under water. If a traveller had met us on
+this bank, I do not know what we should have done; to turn round
+would have been as dangerous as to sink into the morass.
+Fortunately one never meets any travellers in Iceland.
+
+Beyond the dyke the road runs for some miles along the mountains and
+hills, which all consist of lava, and are of a very dark, nearly
+black colour. The stones on these hills were very loose; in the
+plain below many colossal pieces were lying, which must have fallen
+down; and many others threatened to fall every moment. We passed
+the dangerous spot safely, without having had to witness such a
+scene.
+
+I often heard a hollow sound among these hills; I at first took it
+for distant thunder, and examined the horizon to discover the
+approaching storm. But when I saw neither clouds nor lightning, I
+perceived that I must seek the origin of the sounds nearer, and that
+they proceeded from the falling portions of rock.
+
+The higher mountains to the left fade gradually more and more from
+view; but the river Elvas spreads in such a manner, and divides into
+so many branches, that one might mistake it for a lake with many
+islands. It flows into the neighbouring sea, whose expanse becomes
+visible after surmounting a few more small hills.
+
+The vale of Reikum, which we now entered, is, like that of Reikholt,
+rich in hot springs, which are congregated partly in the plain,
+partly on or behind the hills, in a circumference of between two and
+three miles.
+
+When we had reached the village of Reikum I sent my effects at once
+to the little church, took a guide, and proceeded to the boiling
+springs. I found very many, but only two remarkable ones; these,
+however, belong to the most noteworthy of their kind. The one is
+called the little Geyser, the other the Bogensprung.
+
+The little Geyser has an inner basin of about three feet diameter.
+The water boils violently at a depth of from two to three feet, and
+remains within its bounds till it begins to spout, when it projects
+a beautiful voluminous steam of from 20 to 30 feet high.
+
+At half-past eight in the evening I had the good fortune to see one
+of these eruptions, and needed not, as I had done at the great
+Geyser, to bivouac near it for days and nights. The eruption lasted
+some time, and was tolerably equable; only sometimes the column of
+water sank a little, to rise to its former height with renewed
+force. After forty minutes it fell quite down into the basin again.
+The stones we threw in, it rejected at once, or in a few seconds,
+shivered into pieces, to a height of about 12 to 15 feet. Its bulk
+must have been 1 to 1.5 feet in diameter. My guide assured me that
+this spring generally plays only twice, rarely thrice, in twenty-
+four hours, and not, as I have seen it stated, every six minutes. I
+remained near it till midnight, but saw no other eruption.
+
+This spring very much resembles the Strukker near the great Geyser,
+the only difference being that the water sinks much lower in the
+latter.
+
+The second of the two remarkable springs, the arched spring, is
+situated near the little Geyser, on the declivity of a hill. I had
+never seen such a curious formation for the bed of a spring as this
+is. It has no basin, but lies half open at your feet, in a little
+grotto, which is separated into various cavities and holes, and
+which is half-surrounded by a wall of rock bending over it slightly
+at a height of about 2 feet, and then rises 10 to 12 feet higher.
+This spring never is at rest more than a minute; then it begins to
+rise and boil quickly, and emits a voluminous column, which,
+striking against the projecting rock, is flattened by it, and rises
+thence like an arched fan. The height of this peculiarly-spread jet
+of water may be about 12 feet, the arch it describes 15 to 20 feet,
+and its breadth 3 to 8 feet. The time of eruption is often longer
+than that of repose. After an eruption the water always sinks a few
+feet into the cave, and for 15 or 20 seconds admits of a glance into
+this wonderful grotto. But it rises again immediately, fills the
+grotto and the basin, which is only a continuation of the grotto,
+and springs again.
+
+I watched this miraculous play of nature for more than an hour, and
+could not tear myself from it. This spring, which is certainly the
+only one of its kind, gratified me much more than the little Geyser.
+
+There is another spring called the roaring Geyser; but it is nothing
+more than a misshapen hole, in which one hears the water boil, but
+cannot see it. The noise is, also, not at all considerable.
+
+
+July 3d.
+
+Near Reikum we crossed a brook into which all the hot springs flow,
+and which has a pretty fall. We then ascended the adjoining
+mountain, and rode full two hours on the high plain. The plain
+itself was monotonous, as it was only covered with lava-stones and
+moss, but the prospect into the valley was varied and beautiful.
+Vale and sea were spread before me, and I saw the Westmann Islands,
+with their beautiful hills, which the envious clouds had concealed
+from me on the Hecla, lying in the distance. Below me stood some
+houses in the port-town, Eierbach, and near them the waters of the
+Elvas flow into the sea.
+
+At the end of this mountain-level a valley was situated, which was
+also filled with lava, but with that jagged black lava which
+presents such a beautiful appearance. Immense streams crossed it
+from all sides, so that it almost resembled a black lake separated
+from the sea by a chain of equally black mountains.
+
+We descended into this sombre vale through piles of lava and fields
+of snow, and went on through valleys and chasms, over fields of
+lava, plains of meadow-land, past dark mountains and hills, till we
+reached the chief station of my Icelandic journey, the town of
+Reikjavik.
+
+The whole country between Reikum and Reikjavik, a distance of 45 to
+50 miles, is, for the most part, uninhabited. Here and there, in
+the fields of lava, stand little pyramids of the same substance,
+which serve as landmarks; and there are two houses built for such
+persons as are obliged to travel during the winter. But we found
+much traffic on the road, and often overtook caravans of 15 to 20
+horses. Being the beginning of August, it was the time of trade and
+traffic in Iceland. Then the country people travel to Reikjavik
+from considerable distances, to change their produce and
+manufactures, partly for money, partly for necessaries and luxuries.
+At this period the merchants and factors have not hands enough to
+barter the goods or close the accounts which the peasants wish to
+settle for the whole year.
+
+At this season an unusual commotion reigns in Reikjavik. Numerous
+groups of men and horses fill the streets; goods are loaded and
+unloaded; friends who have not met for a year or more welcome each
+other, others take leave. On one spot curious tents {44} are
+erected, before which children play; on another drunken men stagger
+along, or gallop on horseback, so that one is terrified, and fears
+every moment to see them fall.
+
+This unusual traffic unfortunately only lasts six or eight days.
+The peasant hastens home to his hay-harvest; the merchant must
+quickly regulate the produce and manufactures he has purchased, and
+load his ships with them, so that they may sail and reach their
+destination before the storms of the autumnal equinox.
+
+ Miles.
+
+From Reikjavik to Thingvalla is 45
+From Thingvalla to the Geyser 36
+From the Geyser to Skalholt 28
+From Skalholt to Salsun 36
+From Salsun to Struvellir 9
+From Struvellir to Hjalmholm 28
+From Hjalmholm to Reikum 32
+From Reikum to Reikjavik 45
+ 259
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+
+During my travels in Iceland I had of course the opportunity of
+becoming acquainted with its inhabitants, their manners and customs.
+I must confess that I had formed a higher estimate of the peasants.
+When we read in the history of that country that the first
+inhabitants had emigrated thither from civilised states; that they
+had brought knowledge and religion with them; when we hear of the
+simple good-hearted people, and their patriarchal mode of life in
+the accounts of former travellers, and which we know that nearly
+every peasant in Iceland can read and write, and that at least a
+Bible, but generally other religions books also, are found in every
+cot,--one feels inclined to consider this nation the best and most
+civilised in Europe. I deemed their morality sufficiently secured
+by the absence of foreign intercourse, by their isolated position,
+and the poverty of the country. No large town there affords
+opportunity for pomp or gaiety, or for the commission of smaller or
+greater sins. Rarely does a foreigner enter the island, whose
+remoteness, severe climate, inhospitality, and poverty, are
+uninviting. The grandeur and peculiarity of its natural formation
+alone makes it interesting, and that does not suffice for the
+masses.
+
+I therefore expected to find Iceland a real Arcadia in regard to its
+inhabitants, and rejoiced at the anticipation of seeing such an
+Idyllic life realised. I felt so happy when I set foot on the
+island that I could have embraced humanity. But I was soon
+undeceived.
+
+I have often been impatient at my want of enthusiasm, which must be
+great, as I see every thing in a more prosaic form than other
+travellers. I do not maintain that my view is RIGHT, but I at least
+possess the virtue of describing facts as I see them, and do not
+repeat them from the accounts of others.
+
+I have already described the impoliteness and heartlessness of the
+so-called higher classes, and soon lost the good opinion I had
+formed of them. I now came to the working classes in the vicinity
+of Reikjavik. The saying often applied to the Swiss people, "No
+money, no Swiss," one may also apply to the Icelanders. And of this
+fact I can cite several examples.
+
+Scarcely had they heard that I, a foreigner, had arrived, than they
+frequently came to me, and brought quite common objects, such as can
+be found any where in Iceland, and expected me to pay dearly for
+them. At first I purchased from charity, or to be rid of their
+importunities, and threw the things away again; but I was soon
+obliged to give this up, as I should else have been besieged from
+morning to night. Their anxiety to gain money without labour
+annoyed me less than the extortionate prices with which they tried
+to impose on a stranger. For a beetle, such as could be found under
+every stone, they asked 5 kr. (about 2d.); as much for a
+caterpillar, of which thousands were lying on the beach; and for a
+common bird's egg, 10 to 20 kr. (4d. to 8d.) Of course, when I
+declined buying, they reduced their demand, sometimes to less than
+half the original sum; but this was certainly not in consequence of
+their honesty. The baker in whose house I lodged also experienced
+the selfishness of these people. He had engaged a poor labourer to
+tar his house, who, when he had half finished his task, heard of
+other employment. He did not even take the trouble to ask the baker
+to excuse him for a few days; he went away, and did not return to
+finish the interrupted work for a whole week. This conduct was the
+more inexcusable as his children received bread, and even butter,
+twice a week from the baker.
+
+I was fortunate enough to experience similar treatment. Herr
+Knudson had engaged a guide for me, with whom I was to take my
+departure in a few days. But it happened that the magistrate wished
+also to take a trip, and sent for my guide. The latter expected to
+be better paid by him, and went; he did not come to me to discharge
+himself, but merely sent me word on the eve of my departure, that he
+was ill, and could therefore not go with me. I could enumerate many
+more such examples, which do not much tend to give a high estimate
+of Icelandic morality.
+
+I consoled myself with the hope of finding simplicity and honesty in
+the more retired districts, and therefore anticipated a twofold
+pleasure from my journey into the interior. I found many virtues,
+but unfortunately so many faults, that I am no longer inclined to
+exalt the Icelandic peasants as examples.
+
+The best of their virtues is their honesty. I could leave my
+baggage unguarded any where for hours, and never missed the least
+article, for they did not even permit their children to touch any
+thing. In this point they are so conscientious, that if a peasant
+comes from a distance, and wishes to rest in a cottage, he never
+fails to knock at the door, even if it is open. If no one calls
+"come in," he does not enter. One might fearlessly sleep with open
+doors.
+
+Crimes are of such rare occurrence here, that the prison of
+Reikjavik was changed into a dwelling-house for the chief warden
+many years since. Small crimes are punished summarily, either in
+Reikjavik or at the seat of the Sysselmann. Criminals of a deeper
+dye are sent to Copenhagen, and are sentenced and punished there.
+
+My landlord at Reikjavik, the master-baker Bernhoft, told me that
+only one crime had been committed in Iceland during the thirteen
+years that he had resided there. This was the murder of an
+illegitimate child immediately after its birth. The most frequently
+occurring crime is cow-stealing.
+
+I was much surprised to find that nearly all the Icelanders can read
+and write. The latter quality only was somewhat rarer with the
+women. Youths and men often wrote a firm, good hand. I also found
+books in every cottage, the Bible always, and frequently poems and
+stories, sometimes even in the Danish language.
+
+They also comprehend very quickly; when I opened my map before them,
+they soon understood its use and application. Their quickness is
+doubly surprising, if we consider that every father instructs his
+own children, and sometimes the neighbouring orphans. This is of
+course only done in the winter; but as winter lasts eight months in
+Iceland, it is long enough.
+
+There is only one school in the whole island, which originally was
+in Bessestadt, but has been removed to Reikjavik since 1846. In
+this school only youths who can read and write are received, and
+they are either educated for priests, and may complete their studies
+here, or for doctors, apothecaries, or judges, when they must
+complete their studies in Copenhagen.
+
+Besides theology, geometry, geography, history, and several
+languages, such as Latin, Danish, and, since 1846, German and also
+French, are taught in the school of Reikjavik.
+
+The chief occupation of the Icelandic peasants consists in fishing,
+which is most industriously pursued in February, March, and April.
+Then the inhabitants of the interior come to the coasting villages
+and hire themselves to the dwellers on the beach, the real
+fishermen, as assistants, taking a portion of the fish as their
+wages. Fishing is attended to at other times also, but then
+exclusively by the real fishermen. In the months of July and August
+many of the latter go into the interior and assist in the hay-
+harvest, for which they receive butter, sheep's wool, and salt lamb.
+Others ascend the mountains and gather the Iceland moss, of which
+they make a decoction, which they drink mixed with milk, or they
+grind it to flour, and bake flat cakes of it, which serve them in
+place of bread.
+
+The work of the women consists in the preparation of the fish for
+drying, smoking, or salting; in tending the cattle, in knitting,
+sometimes in gathering moss. In winter both men and women knit and
+weave.
+
+As regards the hospitality of the Icelanders, {45} I do not think
+one can give them so very much credit for it. It is true that
+priests and peasants gladly receive any European traveller, and
+treat him to every thing in their power; but they know well that the
+traveller who comes to their island is neither an adventurer nor a
+beggar, and will therefore pay them well. I did not meet one
+peasant or priest who did not accept the proffered gift without
+hesitation. But I must say of the priests that they were every
+where obliging and ready to serve me, and satisfied with the
+smallest gift; and their charges, when I required horses for my
+excursions, were always moderate. I only found the peasant less
+interested in districts where a traveller scarcely ever appeared;
+but in such places as were more visited, their charges were often
+exorbitant. For example, I had to pay 20 to 30 kr. (8d. to 1s.) for
+being ferried over a river; and then my guide and I only were rowed
+in the boat, and the horses had to swim. The guide who accompanied
+me on the Hecla also overcharged me; but he knew that I was forced
+to take him, as there is no choice of guides, and one does not give
+up the ascent for the sake of a little money.
+
+This conduct shows that the character of the Icelanders does not
+belong to the best; and that they take advantage of travellers with
+as much shrewdness as the landlords and guides on the continent.
+
+A besetting sin of the Icelanders is their drunkenness. Their
+poverty would probably not be so great if they were less devoted to
+brandy, and worked more industriously. It is dreadful to see what
+deep root this vice has taken. Not only on Sundays, but also on
+week-days, I met peasants who were so intoxicated that I was
+surprised how they could keep in their saddle. I am, however, happy
+to say that I never saw a woman in this degrading condition.
+
+Another of their passions is snuff. They chew and snuff tobacco
+with the same infatuation as it is smoked in other countries. But
+their mode of taking it is very peculiar. Most of the peasants, and
+even many of the priests, have no proper snuff-box, but only a box
+turned of bone, shaped like a powder-flask. When they take snuff,
+they throw back their head, insert the point of the flask in their
+nose, and shake a dose of tobacco into it. They then, with the
+greatest amiability, offer it to their neighbour, he to his, and so
+it goes round till it reaches the owner again.
+
+I think, indeed, that the Icelanders are second to no nation in
+uncleanliness; not even to the Greenlanders, Esquimaux, or
+Laplanders. If I were to describe a portion only of what I
+experienced, my readers would think me guilty of gross exaggeration;
+I prefer, therefore, to leave it to their imagination; merely saying
+that they cannot conceive any thing too dirty for Iceland delicacy.
+
+Beside this very estimable quality, they are also insuperably lazy.
+Not far from the coast are immense meadows, so marshy that it is
+dangerous to cross them. The fault lies less in the soil than the
+people. If they would only make ditches, and thus dry the ground,
+they would have the most splendid grass. That this would grow
+abundantly is proved by the little elevations which rise from above
+the marshes, and which are thickly covered with grass, herbage, and
+wild clover. I also passed large districts covered with good soil,
+and some where the soil was mixed with sand.
+
+I frequently debated with Herr Boge, who has lived in Iceland for
+forty years, and is well versed in farming matters, whether it would
+not be possible to produce important pasture-grounds and hay-fields
+with industry and perseverance. He agreed with me, and thought that
+even potato-fields might be reclaimed, if only the people were not
+so lazy, preferring to suffer hunger and resign all the comforts of
+cleanliness rather than to work. What nature voluntarily gives,
+they are satisfied with, and it never occurs to them to force more
+from her. If a few German peasants were transported hither, what a
+different appearance the country would soon have!
+
+The best soil in Iceland is on the Norderland. There are a few
+potato-grounds there, and some little trees, which, without any
+cultivation, have reached a height of seven to eight feet. Herr
+Boge, established here for thirty years, had planted some mountain-
+ash and birch-trees, which had grown to a height of sixteen feet.
+
+In the Norderland, and every where except on the coast, the people
+live by breeding cattle. Many a peasant there possesses from two to
+four hundred sheep, ten to fifteen cows, and ten to twelve horses.
+There are not many who are so rich, but at all events they are
+better off than the inhabitants of the sea-coast. The soil there is
+for the most part bad, and they are therefore nearly all compelled
+to have recourse to fishing.
+
+Before quitting Iceland, I must relate a tradition told me by many
+Icelanders, not only by peasants, but also by people of the so-
+called higher classes, and who all implicitly believe it.
+
+It is asserted that the inhospitable interior is likewise populated,
+but by a peculiar race of men, to whom alone the paths through these
+deserts are known. These savages have no intercourse with their
+fellow-countrymen during the whole year, and only come to one of the
+ports in the beginning of July, for one day at the utmost, to buy
+several necessaries, for which they pay in money. They then vanish
+suddenly, and no one knows in which direction they are gone. No one
+knows them; they never bring their wives or children with them, and
+never reply to the question whence they come. Their language, also,
+is said to be more difficult than that of the other inhabitants of
+Iceland.
+
+One gentleman, whom I do not wish to name, expressed a wish to have
+the command of twenty to twenty-five well-armed soldiers, to search
+for these wild men.
+
+The people who maintain that they have seen these children of
+nature, assert that they are taller and stronger than other
+Icelanders; that their horses' hoofs, instead of being shod earth
+iron, have shoes of horn; and that they have much money, which they
+can only have acquired by pillage. When I inquired what respectable
+inhabitants of Iceland had been robbed by these savages, and when
+and where, no one could give me an answer. For my part, I scarcely
+think that one man, certainly not a whole race, could live by
+pillage in Iceland.
+
+
+DEPARTURE FROM ICELAND.--JOURNEY TO COPENHAGEN.
+
+
+I had seen all there was to be seen in Iceland, had finished all my
+excursions, and awaited with inexpressible impatience the sailing of
+the vessel which was destined to bring me nearer my beloved home.
+But I had to stay four very long weeks in Reikjavik, my patience
+being more exhausted from day to day, and had after this long delay
+to be satisfied with the most wretched accommodation.
+
+The delay was the more tantalising, as several ships left the port
+in the mean time, and Herr Knudson, with whom I had crossed over
+from Copenhagen, invited me to accompany him on his return; but all
+the vessels went to England or to Spain, and I did not wish to visit
+either of these countries. I was waiting for an opportunity to go
+to Scandinavia, to have at least a glance at these picturesque
+districts.
+
+At last there were two sloops which intended to sail towards the end
+of July. The better of the two went to Altona; the destination of
+the other was Copenhagen. I had intended to travel in the former;
+but a merchant of Reikjavik had already engaged the only berth,--for
+there rarely is more than one in such a small vessel,--and I deemed
+myself lucky to obtain the one in the other ship. Herr Bernhoft
+thought, indeed, that the vessel might be too bad for such a long
+journey, and proposed to examine it, and report on its condition.
+But as I had quite determined to go to Denmark, I requested him to
+waive the examination, and agree with the captain about my passage.
+If, as I anticipated, he found the vessel too wretched, his warnings
+might have shaken my resolution, and I wished to avoid that
+contingency.
+
+We heard, soon, that a young Danish girl, who had been in service in
+Iceland, wished to return by the same vessel. She had been
+suffering so much from home-sickness, that she was determined, under
+any circumstances, to see her beloved fatherland again. If, thought
+I to myself, the home-sickness is powerful enough to make this girl
+indifferent to the danger, longing must take its place in my breast
+and effect the same result.
+
+Our sloop bore the consolatory name of Haabet (hope), and belonged
+to the merchant Fromm, in Copenhagen.
+
+Our departure had been fixed for the 26th of July, and after that
+day I scarcely dared to leave my house, being in constant
+expectation of a summons on board. Violent storms unfortunately
+prevented our departure, and I was not called till the 29th of July,
+when I had to bid farewell to Iceland.
+
+This was comparatively easy. Although I had seen many wonderful
+views, many new and interesting natural phenomena, I yet longed for
+my accustomed fields, in which we do not find magnificent and
+overpowering scenes, but lovelier and more cheerful ones. The
+separation from Herr Knudson and the family of Bernhoft was more
+difficult. I owed all the kindness I had experienced in the island,
+every good advice and useful assistance in my travels, only to them.
+My gratitude to these kind and good people will not easily fade from
+my heart.
+
+At noon I was already on board, and had leisure to admire all the
+gay flags and streamers with which the French frigate anchoring here
+had been decked, to celebrate the anniversary of the July
+revolution.
+
+I endeavoured to turn my attention as much as possible to exterior
+objects, and not to look at our ship, for all that I had
+involuntarily seen had not impressed me very favourably. I
+determined also not to enter the cabin till we were in the open sea
+and the pilots had left our sloop, so that all possibility of return
+would be gone.
+
+Our crew consisted of captain, steersman, two sailors, and a cabin-
+boy, who bore the title of cook; we added that of valet, as he was
+appointed to wait on us.
+
+When the pilots had left us, I sought the entrance of the cabin,--
+the only, and therefore the common apartment. It consisted of a
+hole two feet broad, which gaped at my feet, and in which a
+perpendicular ladder of five steps was inserted. I stood before it
+puzzled to know which would be the best mode of descent, but knew no
+other way than to ask our host the captain. He shewed it me at
+once, by sitting at the entrance and letting his feet down. Let the
+reader imagine such a proceeding with our long dresses, and, above
+all, in bad weather, when the ship was pitched about by storms. But
+the thought that many other people are worse off, and can get on,
+was always the anchor of consolation to which I held; I argued with
+myself that I was made of the same stuff as other human beings, only
+spoiled and pampered, but that I could bear what they bore. In
+consequence of this self-arguing, I sat down at once, tried the new
+sliding-ladder, and arrived below in safety.
+
+I had first to accustom my eyes to the darkness which reigned here,
+the hatches being constructed to admit the light very sparingly. I
+soon, however, saw too much; for all was raggedness, dirt, and
+disorder. But I will describe matters in the order in which they
+occurred to me; for, as I flatter myself that many of my
+countrywomen will in spirit make this journey with me, and as many
+of them probably never had the opportunity of being in such a
+vessel, I wish to describe it to them very accurately. All who are
+accustomed to the sea will testify that I have adhered strictly to
+the truth. But to return to the sloop. Its age emulated mine, she
+being a relic of the last century. At that time little regard was
+paid to the convenience of passengers, and the space was all made
+available for freight; a fact which cannot surprise us, as the
+seaman's life is passed on deck, and the ship was not built for
+travellers. The entire length of the cabin from one berth to the
+other was ten feet; the breadth was six feet. The latter space was
+made still narrower by a box on one side, and by a little table and
+two little seats on the other, so that only sufficient space
+remained to pass through.
+
+At dinner or supper, the ladies--the Danish girl and myself--sat on
+the little benches, where we were so squeezed, that we could
+scarcely move; the two cavaliers--the captain and the steersman--
+were obliged to stand before the table, and eat their meals in that
+position. The table was so small that they were obliged to hold
+their plates in their hands. In short, every thing shewed the cabin
+was made only for the crew, not for the passengers.
+
+The air in this enclosure was also not of the purest; for, besides
+that it formed our bed-room, dining-room, and drawing-room, it was
+also used as store-room, for in the side cupboards provisions of
+various kinds were stored, also oil-colours, and a variety of other
+matter. I preferred to sit on the deck, exposed to the cold and the
+storm, or to be bathed by a wave, than to be half stifled below.
+Sometimes, however, I was obliged to descend, either when rain and
+storms were too violent, or when the ship was so tossed by contrary
+winds that the deck was not safe. The rolling and pitching of our
+little vessel was often so terrible, that we ladies could neither
+sit nor stand, and were therefore obliged to lie down in the
+miserable berths for many a weary day. How I envied my companion!
+she could sleep day and night, which I could not. I was nearly
+always awake, much to my discomfort; for the hatches and the
+entrance were closed during the storm, and an Egyptian darkness, as
+well as a stifling atmosphere, filled the cabin.
+
+In regard to food, all passengers, captain and crew, ate of the same
+dish. The morning meal consisted of miserable tea, or rather of
+nauseous water having the colour of tea. The sailors imbibed theirs
+without sugar, but the captain and the steersman took a small piece
+of candied sugar, which does not melt so quickly as the refined
+sugar, in their mouth, and poured down cup after cup of tea, and ate
+ship's biscuit and butter to it.
+
+The dinner fare varied. The first day we had salt meat, which is
+soaked the evening before, and boiled the next day in sea-water. It
+was so salt, so hard, and so tough, that only a sailor's palate can
+possibly enjoy it. Instead of soup, vegetables, and pudding, we had
+pearl-barley boiled in water, without salt or butter; to which
+treacle and vinegar was added at the dinner-table. All the others
+considered this a delicacy, and marvelled at my depraved taste when
+I declared it to be unpalatable.
+
+The second day brought a piece of bacon, boiled in sea-water, with
+the barley repeated. On the third we had cod-fish with peas.
+Although the latter were boiled hard and without butter, they were
+the most eatable of all the dishes. On the fourth day the bill of
+fare of the first was repeated, and the same course followed again.
+At the end of every dinner we had black coffee. The supper was like
+the breakfast,--tea-water, ship's biscuit and butter.
+
+I wished to have provided myself with some chickens, eggs, and
+potatoes in Reikjavik, but I could not obtain any of these luxuries.
+Very few chickens are kept--only the higher officials or merchants
+have them; eggs of eider-ducks and other birds may often be had, but
+more are never collected than are wanted for the daily supply, and
+then only in spring; for potatoes the season was not advanced
+enough. My readers have now a picture of the luxurious life I led
+on board the ship. Had I been fortunate enough to voyage in a
+better vessel, where the passengers are more commodiously lodged and
+better fed, the seasickness would certainly not have attacked me;
+but in consequence of the stifling atmosphere of the cabin and the
+bad food, I suffered from it the first day. But on the second I was
+well again, regained my appetite, and ate salt meat, bacon, and peas
+as well as a sailor; the stockfish, the barley, and the coffee and
+tea, I left untouched.
+
+A real sailor never drinks water; and this observation of mine was
+confirmed by our captain and steersman: instead of beer or wine,
+they took tea, and, except at meals, cold tea.
+
+On Sunday evenings we had a grand supper, for the captain had eight
+eggs, which he had brought from Denmark, boiled for us four people.
+The crew had a few glasses of punch-essence mixed in their tea.
+
+As my readers are now acquainted with the varied bill of fare in
+such a ship, I will say a few words of the table-linen. This
+consisted only of an old sailcloth, which was spread over the table,
+and looked so dirty and greasy that I thought it would be much
+better and more agreeable to leave the table uncovered. But I soon
+repented the unwise thought, and discovered how important this cloth
+was. One morning I saw our valet treating a piece of sailcloth
+quite outrageously: he had spread it upon the deck, stood upon it,
+and brushed it clean with the ship's broom. I recognised our
+tablecloth by the many spots of dirt and grease, and in the evening
+found the table bare. But what was the consequence? Scarcely had
+the tea-pot been placed on the table than it began to slip off; had
+not the watchful captain quickly caught it, it would have fallen to
+the ground and bathed our feet with its contents. Nothing could
+stand on the polished table, and I sincerely pitied the captain that
+he had not another tablecloth.
+
+My readers will imagine that what I have described would have been
+quite sufficient to make my stay in the vessel any thing but
+agreeable; but I discovered another circumstance, which even made it
+alarming. This was nothing less than that our little vessel was
+constantly letting in a considerable quantity of water, which had to
+be pumped out every few hours. The captain tried to allay my
+uneasiness by asserting that every ship admitted water, and ours
+only leaked a little more because it was so old. I was obliged to
+be content with his explanation, as it was now too late to think of
+a change. Fortunately we did not meet with any storms, and
+therefore incurred less danger.
+
+Our journey lasted twenty days, during twelve of which we saw no
+land; the wind drove us too far east to see the Feroe or the
+Shetland Isles. I should have cared less for this, had I seen some
+of the monsters of the deep instead, but we met with scarcely any of
+these amiable animals. I saw the ray of water which a whale emitted
+from his nostrils, and which exactly resembled a fountain; the
+animal itself was unfortunately too far from our ship for us to see
+its body. A shark came a little nearer; it swam round our vessel
+for a few moments, so that I could easily look at him: it must have
+been from sixteen to eighteen feet long.
+
+The so-called flying-fish afforded a pretty sight. The sea was as
+calm as a mirror, the evening mild and moonlight; and so we remained
+on deck till late, watching the gambols of these animals. As far as
+we could see, the water was covered with them. We could recognise
+the younger fishes by their higher springs; they seemed to be three
+to four feet long, and rose five to six feet above the surface of
+the sea. Their leaping looked like an attempt at flying, but their
+gills did not do them good service in the trial, and they fell back
+immediately. The old fish did not seem to have the same elasticity;
+they only described a small arch like the dolphins, and only rose so
+far above the water that we could see the middle part of their body.
+
+These fish are not caught; they have little oil, and an unpleasant
+taste.
+
+On the thirteenth day we again saw land. We had entered the
+Skagerrak, and saw the peninsula of Jutland, with the town of
+Skaggen. The peninsula looks very dreary from this side; it is flat
+and covered with sand.
+
+On the sixteenth day we entered the Cattegat. For some time past we
+had always either been becalmed or had had contrary winds, and had
+been tossed about in the Skagerrak, the Cattegat, and the Sound for
+nearly a week. On some days we scarcely made fifteen to twenty
+leagues a day. On such calm days I passed the time with fishing;
+but the fish were wise enough not to bite my hook. I was daily
+anticipating a dinner of mackerel, but caught only one.
+
+The multitude of vessels sailing into the Cattegat afforded me more
+amusement; I counted above seventy. The nearer we approached the
+entrance of the Sound, the more imposing was the sight, and the more
+closely were the vessels crowded together. Fortunately we were
+favoured by a bright moonlight; in a dark or stormy night we should
+not with the greatest precaution and skill have been able to avoid a
+collision.
+
+The inhabitants of more southern regions have no idea of the
+extraordinary clearness and brilliancy of a northern moonlight
+night; it seems almost as if the moon had borrowed a portion of the
+sun's lustre. I have seen splendid nights on the coast of Asia, on
+the Mediterranean; but here, on the shores of Scandinavia, they were
+lighter and brighter.
+
+I remained on deck all night; for it pleased me to watch the forests
+of masts crowded together here, and endeavouring simultaneously to
+gain the entrance to the Sound. I should now be able to form a
+tolerable idea of a fleet, for this number of ships must surely
+resemble a merchant-fleet.
+
+On the twentieth day of our journey we entered the port of
+Helsingor. The Sound dues have to be paid here, or, as the sailor
+calls it, the ship must be cleared. This is a very tedious
+interruption, and the stopping and restarting of the ship very
+incommodious. The sails have to be furled, the anchor cast, the
+boat lowered, and the captain proceeds on shore; hours sometimes
+elapse before he has finished. When he returns to the ship, the
+boat has to be hoisted again, the anchor raised, and the sails
+unfurled. Sometimes the wind has changed in the mean time; and in
+consequence of these formalities, the port of Copenhagen cannot be
+reached at the expected time.
+
+If a ship is unfortunate enough to reach Helsingor on a dark night,
+she may not enter at all for fear of a collision. She has to anchor
+in the Cattegat, and thus suffer two interruptions. If she arrives
+at Helsingor in the night before four o'clock, she has to wait, as
+the custom-house is not opened till that time.
+
+The skipper is, however, at liberty to proceed direct to Copenhagen,
+but this liberty costs five thalers (fifteen shillings). If,
+however, the toll may thus be paid in Copenhagen just as easily, the
+obligation to stop at Helsingor is only a trick to gain the higher
+toll; for if a captain is in haste, or the wind is too favourable to
+be lost, he forfeits the five thalers, and sails on to Copenhagen.
+
+Our captain cared neither for time nor trouble; he cleared the ship
+here, and so we did not reach Copenhagen until two o'clock in the
+afternoon. After my long absence, it seemed so familiar, so
+beautiful and grand, as if I had seen nothing so beautiful in my
+whole life. My readers must bear in mind, however, where I came
+from, and how long I had been imprisoned in a vessel in which I
+scarcely had space to move. When I put foot on shore again, I could
+have imitated Columbus, and prostrated myself to kiss the earth.
+
+
+DEPARTURE FROM COPENHAGEN.--CHRISTIANIA.
+
+
+On the 19th August, the day after my arrival from Iceland, at two
+o'clock in the afternoon, I had already embarked again; this time in
+the fine royal Norwegian steamer Christiania, of 170 horsepower,
+bound for the town of Christiania, distant 304 sea-miles from
+Copenhagen. We had soon passed through the Sound and arrived safely
+in the Cattegat, in which we steered more to the right than on the
+journey to Iceland; for we not only intended to see Norway and
+Sweden, but to cast anchor on the coast.
+
+We could plainly see the fine chain of mountains which bound the
+Cattegat on the right, and whose extreme point, the Kulm, runs into
+the sea like a long promontory. Lighthouses are erected here, and
+on the other numerous dangerous spots of the coast, and their lights
+shine all around in the dark night. Some of the lights are movable,
+and some stationary, and point out to the sailor which places to
+avoid.
+
+
+August 20th.
+
+Bad weather is one of the greatest torments of a traveller, and is
+more disagreeable when one passes through districts remarkable for
+beauty and originality. Both grievances were united to-day; it
+rained, almost incessantly; and yet the passage of the Swedish coast
+and of the little fiord to the port of Gottenburg was of peculiar
+interest. The sea here was more like a broad stream which is
+bounded by noble rocks, and interspersed by small and large rocks
+and shoals, over which the waters dashed finely. Near the harbour,
+some buildings lie partly on and partly between the rocks; these
+contain the celebrated royal Swedish iron-foundry, called the new
+foundry. Even numerous American ships were lying here to load this
+metal. {46}
+
+The steamer remains more than four hours in the port of Gottenburg,
+and we had therefore time to go into the town, distant about two
+miles, and whose suburbs extend as far as the port. On the landing-
+quay a captain lives who has always a carriage and two horses ready
+to drive travellers into the town. There are also one-horse
+vehicles, and even an omnibus. The former were already engaged; the
+latter, we were told, drives so slowly, that nearly the whole time
+is lost on the road; so I and two travelling companions hired the
+captain's carriage. The rain poured in torrents on our heads; but
+this did not disturb us much. My two companions had business to
+transact, and curiosity attracted me. I had not at that time known
+that I should have occasion to visit this pretty little town again,
+and would not leave without seeing it.
+
+The suburbs are built entirely of wood, and contain many pretty one-
+story houses, surrounded, for the most part, by little gardens. The
+situation of the suburbs is very peculiar. Rocks, or little fields
+and meadows, often lie between the houses; the rocks even now and
+then cross the streets, and had to be blasted to form a road. The
+view from one of the hills over which the road to the town lies is
+truly beautiful.
+
+The town has two large squares: on the smaller one stands the large
+church; on the larger one the town-hall, the post-office, and many
+pretty houses. In the town every thing is built of bricks. The
+river Ham flows through the large square, and increases the traffic
+by the many ships and barks running into it from the sea, and
+bringing provisions, but principally fuel, to market. Several
+bridges cross it. A visit to the well-stocked fish-market is also
+an interesting feature in a short visit to this town.
+
+I entered a Swedish house for the first time here. I remarked that
+the floor was strewed over with the fine points of the fir-trees,
+which had an agreeable odour, a more healthy one probably than any
+artificial perfume. I found this custom prevalent all over Sweden
+and Norway, but only in hotels and in the dwellings of the poorer
+classes.
+
+About eleven o'clock in the forenoon we continued our journey. We
+steered safely through the many rocks and shoals, and soon reached
+the open sea again. We did not stand out far from the shore, and
+saw several telegraphs erected on the rocks. We soon lost sight of
+Denmark on the left, and arrived at the fortress Friedrichsver
+towards evening, but could not see much of it. Here the so-called
+Scheren begin, which extend sixty leagues, and form the Christian's
+Sound. By what I could see in the dim twilight, the scene was
+beautiful. Numerous islands, some merely consisting of bare rocks,
+others overgrown with slender pines, surrounded us on all sides.
+But our pilot understood his business perfectly, and steered us
+safely through to Sandesund, spite of the dark night. Here we
+anchored, for it would have been too dangerous to proceed. We had
+to wait here for the steamer from Bergen, which exchanged passengers
+with us. The sea was very rough, and this exchange was therefore
+extremely difficult to effect. Neither of the steamers would lower
+a boat; at last our steamer gave way, after midnight, and the
+terrified and wailing passengers were lowered into it. I pitied
+them from my heart, but fortunately no accident happened.
+
+
+August 21st
+
+I could see the situation of Sandesund better by day; and found it
+to consist only of a few houses. The water is so hemmed in here
+that it scarcely attains the breadth of a stream; but it soon widens
+again, and increases in beauty and variety with every yard. We
+seemed to ride on a beautiful lake; for the islands lie so close to
+the mountains in the background, that they look like a continent,
+and the bays they form like the mouths of rivers. The next moment
+the scene changes to a succession of lakes, one coming close on the
+other; and when the ship appears to be hemmed in, a new opening is
+suddenly presented to the eye behind another island. The islands
+themselves are of a most varied character: some only consist of
+bare rocks, with now and then a pine; some are richly covered with
+fields and groves; and the shore presents so many fine scenes, that
+one hardly knows where to look in order not to miss any of the
+beauties of the scenery. Here are high mountains overgrown from the
+bottom to the summit with dark pine-groves; there again lovely
+hills, with verdant meadows, fertile fields, pretty farmsteads and
+yards; and on another side the mountains separate and form a
+beautiful perspective of precipices and valleys. Sometimes I could
+follow the bend of a bay till it mingled with the distant clouds; at
+others we passed the most beautiful valleys, dotted with little
+villages and towns. I cannot describe the beauties of the scenery
+in adequate terms: my words are too weak, and my knowledge too
+insignificant; and I can only give an idea of my emotions, but not
+describe them.
+
+Near Walloe the country grows less beautiful; the mountains decrease
+into hills, and the water is not studded with islands. The little
+town itself is almost concealed behind the hills. A remarkable
+feature is the long row of wooden huts and houses adjoining, which
+all belong to a salt-work established there.
+
+We entered one of the many little arms of the sea to reach the town
+of Moss. Its situation is beautiful, being built amphi-theatrically
+on a hillock which leans against a high mountain. A fine building
+on the sea-shore, whose portico rests upon pillars, is used for a
+bathing institution.
+
+A dock-yard, in which men-of-war are built at the expense of the
+state, is situated near the town of Horten, which is also
+picturesquely placed. There does not seem to be much work doing
+here, for I only saw one ship lying at anchor, and none on the
+stocks. About eight leagues beyond Horten a mountain rises in the
+middle of the sea, and divides it into two streams, uniting again
+beyond it, and forming a pretty view.
+
+We did not see Christiania till we were only ten leagues from it.
+The town, the suburbs, the fortress, the newly-erected royal palace,
+the freemasons' lodge, &c., lie in a semicircle round the port, and
+are bounded by fields, meadows, woods, and hills, forming a
+delightful coup-d'oeil. It seems as if the sea could not part from
+such a lovely view, and runs in narrow streams, through hills and
+plains, to a great distance beyond the town.
+
+Towards eleven o'clock in the forenoon we reached the port of
+Christiania. We had come from Sandesund in seven hours, and had
+stopped four times on the way; but the boats with new-comers, with
+merchandise and letters, had always been ready, had been received,
+and we had proceeded without any considerable delay.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+
+My first care on arriving in this town was to find a countrywoman of
+mine who had been married to a lawyer here. It is said of the
+Viennese that they cannot live away from their Stephen's steeple;
+but here was a proof of the contrary, for there are few couples
+living so happily as these friends, and yet they were nearly one
+thousand miles from St. Stephen's steeple. {47}
+
+I passed through the whole town on the way from the quay to the
+hotel, and thence to my friend. The town is not large, and not very
+pretty. The newly-built portion is the best, for it at least has
+broad, tolerably long streets, in which the houses are of brick, and
+sometimes large. In the by-streets I frequently found wooden
+barracks ready to fall. The square is large, but irregular; and as
+it is used as a general market-place, it is also very dirty.
+
+In the suburbs the houses are mostly built of wood. There are some
+rather pretty public buildings; the finest among them are the royal
+castle and the fortress. They are built on little elevations, and
+afford a beautiful view. The old royal palace is in the town, but
+not at all distinguishable from a common private house. The house
+in which the Storthing {48} assembles is large, and its portico
+rests on pillars; but the steps are of wood, as in all stone houses
+in Scandinavia. The theatre seemed large enough for the population;
+but I did not enter it. The freemasons' lodge is one of the most
+beautiful buildings in the town; it contains two large saloons,
+which are used for assemblies or festivities of various kinds,
+besides serving as the meeting-place of the freemasons. The
+university seemed almost too richly built; it is not finished yet,
+but is so beautiful that it would be an ornament to the largest
+capital. The butchers' market is also very pretty. It is of a
+semi-circular shape, and is surrounded by arched passages, in which
+the buyers stand, sheltered from the weather. The whole edifice is
+built of bricks, left in their natural state, neither stuccoed with
+mortar nor whitewashed. There are not many other palaces or fine
+public buildings, and most of the houses are one-storied.
+
+One of the features of the place--a custom which is of great use to
+the traveller, and prevails in all Scandinavian towns--is, that the
+names of the streets are affixed at every corner, so that the
+passer-by always knows where he is, without the necessity of asking
+his way.
+
+Open canals run through the town; and on such nights as the almanac
+announces a full or bright moon the streets are not lighted.
+
+Wooden quays surround the harbour, on which several large
+warehouses, likewise built of wood, are situated; but, like most of
+the houses, they are roofed with tiles.
+
+The arrangement and display of the stores are simple, and the wares
+very beautiful, though not of home manufacture. Very few factories
+exist here, and every thing has to be imported.
+
+I was much shocked at the raggedly-clad people I met every where in
+the streets; the young men especially looked very ragged. They
+rarely begged; but I should not have been pleased to meet them alone
+in a retired street.
+
+I was fortunate enough to be in Christiania at the time when the
+Storthing was sitting. This takes place every three years; the
+sessions commence in January or February, and usually last three
+months; but so much business had this time accumulated, that the
+king proposed to extend the length of the session. To this
+fortunate accident I owed the pleasure of witnessing some of the
+meetings. The king was expected to close the proceedings in
+September. {49}
+
+The hall of meeting is long and large. Four rows of tapestried
+seats, one rising above the other, run lengthways along the hall,
+and afford room for eighty legislators. Opposite the benches a
+table stands on a raised platform, and at this table the president
+and secretary sit. A gallery, which is open to the public, runs
+round the upper portion of the hall.
+
+Although I understood but little of the Norwegian language, I
+attended the meetings daily for an hour. I could at least
+distinguish whether long or short speeches were made, or whether the
+orator spoke fluently. Unfortunately, the speakers I heard spoke
+the few words they mustered courage to deliver so slowly and
+hesitatingly, that I could not form a very favourable idea of
+Norwegian eloquence. I was told that the Storthing only contained
+three or four good speakers, and they did not display their talents
+during my stay.
+
+I have never seen such a variety of carriages as I met with here.
+The commonest and most incommodious are called Carriols. A carriol
+consists of a narrow, long, open box, resting between two immensely
+high wheels, and provided with a very small seat. You are squeezed
+into this contrivance, and have to stretch your feet forward. You
+are then buckled in with a leather apron as high as the hips, and
+must remain in this position, without moving a limb, from the
+beginning to the end of your ride. A board is hung on behind the
+box for the coachman; and from this perch he, in a kneeling or
+standing position, directs the horses, unless the temporary resident
+of the box should prefer to take the reins himself. As it is very
+unpleasant to hear the quivering of the reins on one side and the
+smacking of the whip on the other, every one, men and women, can
+drive. Besides these carriols, there are phaetons, droschkas, but
+no closed vehicles.
+
+The carts which are used for the transport of beer are of a very
+peculiar construction. The consumption of beer in Christiania is
+very great, and it is at once bottled when made, and not sold in
+casks. The carts for the transport of these bottles consist of
+roomy covered boxes a foot and a half high, which are divided into
+partitions like a cellaret, in which many bottles can be easily and
+safely transported from one part to another.
+
+Another species of basket, which the servants use to carry such
+articles as are damp or dirty, and which my readers will excuse my
+describing, is made of fine white tin, and provided with a handle.
+Straw baskets are only used for bread, and for dry and clean
+provisions.
+
+There are no public gardens or assemblies in Christiania, but
+numerous promenades; indeed, every road from the town leads to the
+most beautiful scenery, and every hill in the neighbourhood affords
+the most delightful prospects.
+
+Ladegardoen is the only spot which is often resorted to by the
+citizens by carriage or on foot. It affords many and splendid views
+of the sea and its islands, of the surrounding mountains, valleys,
+and pine and fir groves. The majority of the country-houses are
+built here. They are generally small, but pretty, and surrounded by
+flower-gardens and orchards. While there, I seemed to be far in the
+south, so green and verdant was the scenery. The corn-fields alone
+betrayed the north. Not that the corn was poor; on the contrary, I
+found many ears bending to the ground under their weight; but now,
+towards the end of August, most of it was standing uncut in the
+fields.
+
+Near the town stands a pine-grove, from which one has splendid
+views; two monuments are raised in it, but neither of them are of
+importance: one is raised to the memory of a crown-prince of
+Sweden, Christian Augustus; the other to Count Hermann Wenel
+Jarlsberg.
+
+
+JOURNEY TO DELEMARKEN.
+
+
+All I had hitherto seen in Norway had gratified me so much, that I
+could not resist the temptation of a journey to the wildly romantic
+regions of Delemarken. I was indeed told that it would be a
+difficult undertaking for a female, alone and almost entirely
+ignorant of the language, to make her way through the peasantry.
+But I found no one to accompany me, and was determined to go; so I
+trusted to fate, and went alone.
+
+According to the inquires I had instituted in respect to this
+journey, I anticipated that my greatest difficulties would arise
+from the absence of all institutions for the speedy and comfortable
+progress of travellers. One is forced to possess a carriage, and to
+hire horses at every station. It is sometimes possible to hire a
+vehicle, but this generally consists only of a miserable peasant's
+cart. I hired, therefore, a carriol for the whole journey, and a
+horse to the next station, the townlet of Drammen, distant about
+twenty-four miles.
+
+On the 25th August, at three o'clock in the afternoon, I left
+Christiania, squeezed myself into my carriage, and, following the
+example of Norwegian dames, I seized the reins. I drove as if I had
+been used to it from infancy. I turned right and left, and my horse
+galloped and trotted gaily on.
+
+The road to Drammen is exquisite, and would afford rich subjects for
+an artist. All the beauties of nature are here combined in most
+perfect harmony. The richness and variety of the scenery are almost
+oppressive, and would be an inexhaustible subject for the painter.
+The vegetation is much richer than I had hoped to find it so far
+north; every hill, every rock, is shaded by verdant foliage; the
+green of the meadows was of incomparable freshness; the grass was
+intermingled with flowers and herbs, and the corn-fields bent under
+their golden weight.
+
+I have been in many countries, and have seen beautiful districts; I
+have been in Switzerland, in Tyrol, in Italy, and in Salzburg; but I
+never saw such peculiarly beautiful scenery as I found here: the
+sea every where intruding and following us to Drammen; here forming
+a lovely lake on which boats were rocking, there a stream rushing
+through hills and meadows; and then again, the splendid expanse
+dotted with proud three-masters and with countless islets. After a
+five hours' ride through rich valleys and splendid groves, I reached
+the town of Drammen, which lies on the shores of the sea and the
+river Storri Elf, and whose vicinity was announced by the beautiful
+country-houses ornamenting the approach to it.
+
+A long, well-built wooden bridge, furnished with beautiful iron
+palisadings, leads over the river. The town of Drammen has pretty
+streets and houses, and above 6000 inhabitants. The hotel where I
+lodged was pretty and clean. My bedroom was a large room, with
+which the most fastidious might have been contented. The supper
+which they provided for me was, however, most frugal, consisting
+only of soft-boiled eggs. They gave me neither salt nor bread with
+them, nor a spoon; nothing but a knife and fork. And it is a
+mystery to me how soft eggs can be eaten without bread, and with a
+knife and fork.
+
+
+August 25th.
+
+I hired a fresh horse here, with which I proceeded to Kongsberg,
+eighteen miles farther. The first seven miles afforded a repetition
+of the romantic scenery of the previous day, with the exception of
+the sea. But instead I had the beautiful river, until I had
+ascended a hill, from whose summit I overlooked a large and
+apparently populous valley, filled with groups of houses and single
+farms. It is strange that there are very few large towns in Norway;
+every peasant builds his house in the midst of his fields.
+
+Beyond this hill the scenery grows more monotonous. The mountains
+are lower, the valley narrower, and the road is enclosed by wood or
+rocks. One peculiarity of Norwegian rocks is their humidity. The
+water penetrates through countless fissures, but only in such small
+quantities as to cover the stones with a kind of veil. When the sun
+shines on these wet surfaces of rock, of which there are many and
+large ones, they shine like mirrors.
+
+Delemarken seems to be tolerably populous. I often met with
+solitary peasant-huts in the large gloomy forests, and they gave
+some life to the monotonous landscape. The industry of the
+Norwegian peasant is very great; for every spot of earth, even on
+the steepest precipices, bore potatoes, barley, or oats; their
+houses also look cheerful, and were painted for the most part of a
+brick-red colour.
+
+I found the roads very good, especially the one from Christiania to
+Drammen; and the one from Drammen to Kongsberg was not very
+objectionable. There is such an abundance of wood in Norway, that
+the streets on each side are fenced by wooden enclosures; and every
+field and meadow is similarly protected against the intrusion of
+cattle, and the miserable roads through the woods are even covered
+with round trunks of trees.
+
+The peasantry in this district have no peculiar costume; only the
+head-covering of the females is curious. They wear a lady's hat,
+such as was fashionable in the last century, ornamented with a bunch
+behind, and with an immense shade in front. They are made of any
+material, generally of the remains of old garments; and only on
+Sundays better ones, and sometimes even silk ones, make their
+appearance.
+
+In the neighbourhood of Kongsberg this head-dress is no longer worn.
+There they wear little caps like the Suabian peasantry, petticoats
+commencing under the shoulders, and very short spencers: a very
+ugly costume, the whole figure being spoilt by the short waist.
+
+The town of Kongsberg is rather extended, and is beautifully
+situated on a hill in the centre of a splendid wooded valley. It
+is, like all the towns in Norway except Christiania, built of wood;
+but it has many pretty, neat houses and some broad streets.
+
+The stream Storri Elf flows past the town, and forms a small but
+very picturesque waterfall a little below the bridge. What pleased
+me most was the colour of the water as it surged over the rock. It
+was about noon as I drove across the bridge; the sun illuminated the
+whole country around, and the waves breaking against the rocks
+seemed by this light of a beautiful pale-yellow colour, so that they
+resembled thick masses of pure transparent amber.
+
+Two remarkable sights claimed my attention at Kongsberg,--a rich
+silver-mine, and a splendid waterfall called the Labrafoss. But as
+my time was limited and I could only remain a few hours in
+Kongsberg, I preferred to see the waterfall and believe the accounts
+of the silver-mine; which were, that the deepest shaft was eight
+hundred feet below the surface, and that it was most difficult to
+remain there, as the cold, the smoke, and the powder-smell had a
+very noxious effect on the traveller accustomed to light and air.
+
+I therefore hired a horse and drove to the fall, which is situated
+in a narrow pass about four miles from Kongsberg. The river
+collects in a quiet calm basin a little distance above the fall, and
+then rushes over the steep precipice with a sudden bound. The
+considerable depth of the fall and the quality of water make it a
+very imposing sight. This is increased by a gigantic rock planted
+like a wall in the lower basin, and opposing its body to the
+progress of the hurrying waters. The waves rebound from the rock,
+and, collecting in mighty masses, rush over it, forming several
+smaller waterfalls in their course.
+
+I watched it from a high rock, and was nevertheless covered by the
+spray to such a degree, that I sometimes could scarcely open my
+eyes. My guide then took me to the lower part of the fall, so that
+I might have a view of it from all sides; and each view seemed
+different and more splendid. I perceived the same yellow
+transparent colour which I had remarked in the fall at Kongsberg in
+the waters which dashed over the rock and were illuminated by the
+sun. I imagine it arises from the rock, which is every where of a
+brownish-red colour, for the water itself was clear and pure.
+
+At four o'clock in the afternoon I left Kongsberg, and drove to
+Bolkesoe, a distance of eighteen miles. It was by no means a
+beautiful or an agreeable drive; for the road was very bad, and took
+me through passes and valleys, across woods and over steep
+mountains, while the night was dark and unilluminated by the moon.
+The thought involuntarily entered my mind, how easily my guide, who
+sat close behind me on the vehicle, could put me out of the world by
+a gentle blow, and take possession of my effects. But I had
+confidence in the upright character of the Norwegians, and drove on
+quietly, devoting my attention entirely to the reins of my little
+steed, which I had to lead with a sure hand over hill and valley,
+over ruts and stones, and along precipices. I heard no sound but
+the rushing of the mountain-river, which leaped, close beside us,
+over the rocks, and was heard rushing in the far distance.
+
+We did not arrive at Bolkesoe until ten o'clock at night. When we
+stopped before an insignificant-looking peasant's cot, and I
+remembered my Icelandic night-accommodations, whose exterior this
+resembled, my courage failed me; but I was agreeably disappointed
+when the peasant's wife led me up a broad staircase into a large
+clean chamber furnished with several good beds, some benches, a
+table, a box, and an iron stove. I found equal comforts on all the
+stations of my journey.
+
+There are no proper hotels or posthouses on the little-frequented
+Norwegian roads; but the wealthy peasants undertake the duties of
+both. I would, however, advise every traveller to provide himself
+with bread and other provisions for the trip; for his peasant-host
+rarely can furnish him with these. His cows are on the hills during
+the summer; fowls are far too great a luxury for him; and his bread
+is scarcely eatable: it consists of large round cakes, scarcely
+half an inch thick, and very hard; or of equally large cakes
+scarcely as thick as a knife, and quite dry. The only eatables I
+found were fish and potatoes; and whenever I could stay for several
+hours, they fetched milk for me from the hills.
+
+The travelling conveniences are still more unattainable; but these I
+will mention in a future chapter, when my experience will be a
+little more extensive.
+
+
+August 26th.
+
+I could not see the situation of the town of Bolkesoe till daylight
+to-day, for when I arrived the darkness of night concealed it. It
+is situated in a pretty wooded vale, on a little hill at whose foot
+lies a beautiful lake of the same name.
+
+The road from here to Tindosoe, about sixteen miles, is not
+practicable for vehicles, and I therefore left my carriol here and
+proceeded on horseback. The country grows more quiet and
+uninhabited, and the valleys become real chasms. Two lakes of
+considerable size form an agreeable variety to the wildness of the
+scenery. The larger one, called the Foelsoe, is of a regular form,
+and above two miles in diameter; it is encircled by picturesque
+mountains. The effect of the shadows which the pine-covered
+mountain-tops throw on the lakes is particularly attractive. I rode
+along its shores for more than an hour, and had leisure to see and
+examine every thing very accurately, for the horses here travel at a
+very slow pace. The reason of this is partly that the guide has no
+horse, and walks beside you in a very sleepy manner; the horse knows
+its master's peculiarities by long experience, and is only too
+willing to encourage him in his slow, dull pace. I spent more than
+five hours in reaching Tindosoe. My next object of interest was the
+celebrated waterfall of Rykanfoss, to reach which we had to cross a
+large lake. Although it had rained incessantly for an hour, and the
+sky looked threatening, I at once hired a boat with two rowers to
+continue my journey without interruption; for I anticipated a storm,
+and then I should not have found a boatman who would have ventured a
+voyage of four or five hours on this dangerous lake. In two hours
+my boat was ready, and I started in the pouring rain, but rejoiced
+at least at the absence of fog, which would have concealed the
+beauties of nature which surrounded me. The lake is eighteen miles
+long, but in many parts only from two to three miles wide. It is
+surrounded by mountains, which rise in terraces without the least
+gap to admit a distant view. As the mountains are nearly all
+covered with dark fir-groves, and overshadow the whole breadth of
+the narrow lake, the water seems quite dark, and almost black. This
+lake is dangerous to navigate on account of the many rocks rising
+perpendicularly out of the water, which, in a storm, shatter a boat
+dashed against them to pieces, and the passengers would find an
+inevitable grave in the deep waters. We had a fresh and a
+favourable breeze, which blew us quickly to our destination. One of
+the rocks on the coast has a very loud echo.
+
+An island about a mile long divides the lake into equal parts; and
+when we had passed it, the landscape became quite peculiar. The
+mountains seemed to push before each other, and try whose foot
+should extend farthest into the sea. This forms numerous lovely
+bays; but few of them are adapted for landing, as the dangerous
+rocks seem to project every where.
+
+The little dots of field and meadow which seem to hang against the
+rock, and the modest cottages of the peasants, which are built on
+the points of the most dangerous precipices, and over which rocks
+and stones tower as mountains, present a very curious appearance.
+The most fearful rocks hang over the huts, and threaten to crush
+them by falling, which would inevitably carry cottage and field with
+them into the sea. It is difficult to say whether the boldness or
+the stupidity of the peasants induces them to choose such localities
+for their dwellings.
+
+From the mountains many rivers flow into the lake, and form
+beautiful falls. This might only have been the case at that time,
+because it was raining incessantly, and the water poured down from
+all sides, so that the mountains seemed embroidered with silver
+threads. It was a beautiful sight; but I would willingly have
+relinquished it for a day of sunshine. It is no trifle to be
+exposed to such a shower-bath from morning till night; I was wet
+through, and had no hope for better weather, as the sky was clouded
+all round. My perseverance was nearly exhausted; and I was on the
+point of relinquishing the purpose of my journey,--the sight of the
+highest Norwegian waterfall,--when it occurred to me that the bad
+weather was most favourable for my plan, as each drop of water would
+increase the splendour of the waterfall.
+
+After three hours and a half's rowing we reached Haukaness-am-See,
+where it is usual to stop a night as there is a pretty farm here,
+and the distance from the fall is still considerable.
+
+
+August 27th.
+
+My first care in the morning was the weather; it was unchanged, and
+the experienced peasants prophesied that it would remain wet. As I
+would not return nor wait for better weather, I could only take to
+my boat again, put on my half-dried cloak, and row on boldly.
+
+The termination of the lake, which we soon reached, was already
+sufficient to compensate for my perseverance. A high mountain
+advances into the lake, and divides it into two beautiful bays. We
+entered the left bay, and landed at Mael, which lies at the mouth of
+the river Rykaness. The distance from Haukaness is a little more
+than two miles. I had to mount a horse to reach the waterfall,
+which was yet eleven miles distant. The road runs through a narrow
+valley, which gradually narrows still more until it can only contain
+the river; and the traveller is obliged to ascend the heights and
+grope on along the sides of the mountains. Below in the vale he
+sees the foam of the waves surging against the rocks; they flow like
+a narrow band of silver in the deep chasm. Sometimes the path is so
+high that one neither sees nor hears the river. The last half mile
+has to be journeyed on foot, and goes past spots which are really
+dangerous; numerous waterfalls rush from the mountain-sides, and
+have to be crossed on paths of tree-trunks laid alongside each
+other; and roads scarcely a foot wide lead along giddy precipices.
+But the traveller may trust unhesitatingly to his guide's arm, who
+has hitherto led every one in safety to his destination.
+
+The road from Haukaness to the waterfall must be the finest that can
+be imagined on a bright sunny day; for I was enchanted with the
+wildly-romantic scenery in spite of the incessant rain and my wet
+clothes, and would on no consideration have missed this sight.
+Unfortunately the bad weather increased, and thick fogs rolled down
+into the valleys. The water flowed down from the mountains, and
+transformed our narrow path into a brook, through which we had to
+wade ankle-deep in water. At last we reached the spot which
+afforded the best view of the fall. It was yet free from mist, and
+I could still admire the extraordinary beauty of the fall and its
+quantity of water. I saw the immense mountain-rock which closes the
+valley, the tremendous pillar of water which dashes over it, and
+rebounds from the rock projecting in the centre of the fall, filling
+the whole valley with clouds of spray, and concealing the depth to
+which it descends. I saw this, one of the rarest and of the most
+magnificent of natural beauties; but alas, I saw it only for a
+moment, and had scarcely time to recover from the surprise of the
+first view when I lost it for ever! I was not destined to see the
+single grandeurs of the fall and of the surrounding scenery, and was
+fain to be content with one look, one glance. Impenetrable mists
+rolled from all sides into the wild glen, and shrouded every thing
+in complete darkness; I sat on a piece of rock, and gazed for two
+hours stedfastly at the spot where a faint outline of the fall was
+scarcely distinguishable through the mist sometimes this faint trace
+even was lost, and I could perceive its vicinity only by the
+dreadful sounds of the fall, and by the trembling of the rock
+beneath my feet.
+
+After I had gazed, and hoped, and raised my eyes entreatingly to
+heaven for a single ray of sunshine, all in vain, I had at last to
+determine on my return. I left my post almost with tears in my
+eyes, and turned my head more backwards than forwards as we left the
+spot. At the least indication of a clearing away of the fog I
+should have returned.
+
+But I retired farther and farther from it till I reached Mael again,
+where I sadly entered my boat, and proceeded uninterruptedly to
+Tindosoe. I arrived there towards ten o'clock at night. The wet,
+the cold, the want of food, and, above all, the depressed and
+disappointed state of my mind, had so affected me, that I went to
+bed with a slight attack of fever, and feared that I should not be
+able to continue my journey on the following day. But my strong
+constitution triumphed over every thing, and at five o'clock in the
+morning I was ready to continue my journey to Bolkesoe on horseback.
+
+I was obliged to hurry for fear of missing the departure of the
+steamer from Christiania. The journey to Delemarken had been
+represented to me as much shorter than I found it in reality; for
+the constant waiting for horses, boats, guides, &c. takes up very
+much time.
+
+
+August 28th.
+
+I had ordered my horse to be ready at five o'clock, but was obliged
+to wait for it until seven o'clock.
+
+Although I made only a short trip into the interior, I had
+sufficient opportunities for experiencing the extortions and
+inconveniences to which a traveller is liable in Norway. No country
+in Europe is so much in its infancy as regards all conveniences for
+locomotion. It is true that horses, carriages, boats, &c. can be
+had at every station, and the law has fixed the price of these
+commodities; but every thing is in the hands of the peasants and the
+publicans, and they are so skilled in tormenting the traveller by
+their intentional slowness, that he is compelled to pay the two-fold
+tax, in order to proceed a little more quickly. The stations are
+short, being rarely above five or six miles, and one is therefore
+constantly changing horses. Arrived at a station, it either happens
+that there is really no horse to be had, or that this is an
+ostensible excuse. The traveller is told that the horse has to be
+fetched from the mountain, and that he can be served in one and a
+half or two hours. Thus he rides one hour, and waits two. It is
+also necessary to keep the tariff, as every trifle, the saddle, the
+carriage, the harness, fetching the horse, the boat, &c., has to be
+paid for extra; and when the traveller does not know the fixed
+prices, he is certain to be dreadfully imposed upon. At every
+station a book lies, containing the legal prices; but it is written
+in the language of the district, and utterly unintelligible to the
+stranger. Into this book, which is examined by the judge of the
+district every month, one may enter complaints against the peasant
+or publican; but they do not seem to fear it, for the guide who
+accompanied me to the fall of Rykanfoss endeavoured to cheat me
+twice in the most barefaced manner, by charging me six-fold for the
+use of the saddles and the fetching of the horse. When I threatened
+to inscribe my complaint in the book, he seemed not to care, and
+insisted on his demand, till I was obliged to pay him. On my return
+to Mael, I kept my word, asked for the book, and entered my
+complaint, although I was alone with all the peasants. It was not
+so much the money which annoyed me, as the shameless imposition. I
+am of opinion that every one should complain when he is wronged; if
+it does not benefit him, it will make the matter more easy for his
+successor.
+
+I must confess, in justice to the peasants, that they were very
+indignant when I told them of the dishonesty of their countryman,
+and did not attempt to prevent my complaint.
+
+To conclude my journey, I need only remark that, although the rain
+had ceased, the sky was still covered with clouds, and the country
+shrouded in mist. I therefore took the shorter road to Christiania,
+by which I had come, although I thereby missed a beautiful district,
+where I should, as I was told, have seen the most splendid
+perspective views in Norway. This would have been on the road from
+Kongsberg over Kroxleben to Christiania. The finest part is near
+Kroxleben.
+
+But the time was too short to take this round, and I returned by way
+of Drammen. In the village of Muni, about five miles from
+Kongsberg, where I arrived at seven o'clock in the evening, the
+amiable host wished to keep me waiting again two hours for a horse;
+and as this would probably have happened at every station, I was
+obliged to hire a horse for the whole distance to Christiania, at a
+threefold price. I slept here for a few hours, left in the night at
+one o'clock, and arrived at Christiania the following afternoon at
+two.
+
+On this journey I found all those people very kind and obliging with
+whom I came into no sort of pecuniary relation; but the hosts, the
+boatmen, the drivers, the guides, were as selfish and grasping as in
+any other country. I believe that kindness and disinterestedness
+would only be found in any district by him who has the good fortune
+to be the first traveller.
+
+This little excursion was very dear; and yet I think I could now
+travel cheaply even in this country, universally acknowledged to be
+dear. I would go with the steamer along the coast to Hammerfest,
+buy a little vehicle and a good horse there, and then travel
+pleasantly, and without annoyance, through the whole country. But
+for a family who wished to travel in a comfortable covered carriage,
+it would be incalculably dear, and in many parts impossible, on
+account of the bad roads.
+
+The Norwegian peasantry are strong and robust, but their features
+are not the most comely, and they seemed neither wealthy nor
+cleanly. They were generally very poorly clad, and always
+barefooted. Their cottages, built of wood and covered with tiles,
+are more roomy than those of the Icelanders; but they are
+nevertheless dirty and wretched. A weakness of the Norwegians is
+their fondness for coffee, which they drink without milk or sugar.
+The old women, as well as the men, smoke their pipes morning and
+night.
+
+ Miles.
+From Christiania to Kongsberg is about 41
+From Kongsberg to the waterfall Labrafoss 5
+From Kongsberg to Bolkosoe 14
+From Bolkosoe to Tindosoe 16
+From Tindosoe across the lake to Mael 16
+From Mael to the waterfall Rykanfoss 11
+ 103
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+
+August 30th.
+
+At seven o'clock this morning I left Christiania, accompanied by the
+good wishes of my countrywoman and her husband, and went back to
+Gottenburg by the same steamer which had brought me thence ten days
+before. I need only mention the splendid view of a portion of
+Christian's Sound--also called Fiord--which I lost on the former
+journey from the darkness of the night. We passed it in the
+afternoon. The situation of the little town of Lauervig is superb.
+It is built on a natural terrace, bordered in the background by
+beautiful mountains. In front, the fortress of Friedrichsver lies
+on a mountain surrounded by rocks, on which little watch-towers are
+erected; to the left lies the vast expanse of sea.
+
+We were delayed an hour at Friedrichsver to transfer the travellers
+for Bergen {50} to a vessel waiting for them, as we had stopped on
+our previous journey at Sandesund for the same purpose.
+
+This is the last view in the fiord; for now we steered into the open
+sea, and in a few hours we had lost sight of land. We saw nothing
+but land and water till we arrived the next morning at the Scheren,
+and steered for Gottenburg.
+
+
+August 31st.
+
+The sea had been rough all night, and we therefore reached
+Gottenburg three hours later than usual. In this agitated sea, the
+surging of the breakers against the many rocks and islets near
+Gottenburg has a very curious effect.
+
+The few travellers who could keep on their feet, who did not suffer
+from sea-sickness, and remained on deck, spoke much of the dangerous
+storm. I had frequently marvelled to hear people who had made a
+journey, if it were even only a short one of forty to sixty leagues,
+relate of some fearful storm they had witnessed. Now I comprehended
+the reason, when I heard the travellers beside me call the brisk
+breeze, which only occasioned what seamen call a little swell, a
+dreadful storm; and they will probably tell at home of the dangers
+they have passed. Storms are, fortunately, not so frequent. I have
+travelled many thousand leagues, and have often met with stormy
+weather, especially on the passage from Copenhagen to Iceland; but I
+only experienced one real storm, but a violent and dangerous one, as
+I was crossing the Black Sea to Constantinople in April 1842.
+
+We arrived at Gottenburg at nine instead of at six o'clock in the
+morning. I landed at once, to make the celebrated trip through the
+locks, over the waterfalls of Trollhatta, with the next Stockholm
+steamer. By the junction of the river Gotha with some of the
+interior lakes, this great construction crosses the whole country,
+and connects the North Sea with the Baltic.
+
+I found the town of Gottenburg very animated, on account of the
+presence of the king of Sweden, who was spending a few days here on
+his way to Christiania to prorogue the Storthing. I arrived on a
+Sunday, and the king, with his son, were in the church. The streets
+swarmed with human beings, all crowding towards the cathedral to
+catch a glimpse of his majesty on his departure. I, of course,
+mingled with the crowd, and was fortunate enough to see the king and
+prince come out of the church, enter their carriage, and drive away
+very near to me. Both were handsome, amiable-looking men. The
+people rushed after the carriage, and eagerly caught the friendly
+bows of the intelligent father and his hopeful son; they followed
+him to his palace, and stationed themselves in front of it,
+impatiently longing for the moment when the royal pair would appear
+at a window.
+
+I could not have arrived at a more favourable time; for every one
+was in holiday attire, and the military, the clergy, the officials,
+citizens and people, were all exerting themselves to the utmost to
+do honour to their king.
+
+I noticed two peasant-girls among the crowd who were peculiarly
+dressed. They wore black petticoats reaching half way down the calf
+of the leg, red stockings, red spensers, and white chemises, with
+long white sleeves; a kerchief was tied round the head. Some of the
+citizens' wives wore caps like the Suabian caps, covered by a little
+black, embroidered veil, which, however, left the face free.
+
+Here, as in Copenhagen, I noticed boys of ten to twelve years of age
+among the drummers, and in the bands of the military.
+
+The king remained this day and the next in Gottenburg, and continued
+his journey on the Tuesday. On the two evenings of his stay the
+windows in the town were ornamented with wreaths of fresh flowers,
+interspersed with lighted tapers. Some houses displayed
+transparencies, which, however, did not place the inventive powers
+of the amiable Gottenburgers in a very favourable light. They were
+all alike, consisting of a tremendous O (Oscar), surmounted by a
+royal crown.
+
+I was detained four days in Gottenburg; and small consideration
+seems to be paid to the speedy transport of travellers in Sweden.
+The steamer for Stockholm started on the day I arrived from
+Christiania, but unfortunately at five o'clock in the morning; and
+as in the month of September only two steamers go in the week to
+Stockholm, I was compelled to wait till Thursday. The time hung
+heavily on my hands; for I had seen the town itself, and the
+splendid views on the hills between the suburbs, during my former
+visit to the town, and the other portions only consisted of bare
+rocks and cliffs, which were of no interest.
+
+
+September 4th.
+
+The press of travellers was so great this time, that two days before
+the departure the cabins were all engaged; several ladies and
+gentlemen who would not wait for the next steamer were compelled to
+be satisfied with the deck, and I was among them; for the
+probability of such a crowd of passengers had not occurred to me,
+and I applied for a place only two days before our departure.
+During the journey fresh passengers were taken in at every station,
+and the reader may conceive the misery of the poor citizens unused
+to such hardships. Every one sought a shelter for the night, and
+the little cabins of the engineer and steersman were given up to
+some, while others crept into the passages, or squatted down on the
+steps of the stairs leading to the cabins. A place was offered to
+me in the engineer's cabin; but as three or four other persons were
+to share the apartment calculated only for one person, I preferred
+to bivouac night and day upon deck. One of the gentlemen was kind
+enough to lend me a thick cloak, in which I could wrap myself; and
+so I slept much more comfortably under the high canopy of heaven
+than my companions did in their sweating-room.
+
+The arrangements in the vessels navigating the Gotha canal are by no
+means the best. The first class is very comfortable, and the cabin-
+place is divided into pretty light divisions for two persons; but
+the second class is all the more uncomfortable: its cabin is used
+for a common dining-room by day, and by night hammocks are slung up
+in it for sleeping accommodation. The arrangements for the luggage
+are worse still. The canal-boats, having only a very small hold,
+trunks, boxes, portmanteaus, &c. are heaped up on the deck, not
+fastened at all, and very insufficiently protected against rain.
+The consequence of this carelessness on a journey of five or six
+days was, that the rain and the high waves of the lakes frequently
+put the after-deck several inches under water, and then the luggage
+was wetted through. It was worse still in a squall on the Wenner
+lake; for while the ship was rather roughly tossed about, many a
+trunk lost its equilibrium and fell from its high position,
+frequently endangering the safety of the passengers' heads. The
+fares are, however, very cheap, which seemed doubly strange, as the
+many locks must cause considerable expense.
+
+And now for the journey itself. We started at five o'clock in the
+morning, and soon arrived in the river Gotha, whose shores for the
+first few miles are flat and bare. The valley itself is bounded by
+bare, rocky hills. After about nine miles we came to the town of
+Kongelf, which is said to have 1000 inhabitants. It is so situated
+among rocks, that it is almost hidden from view. On a rock opposite
+the town are the ruins of the fortress Bogus. Now the scenery
+begins to be a little more diversified, and forests are mingled with
+the bleak rocks; little valleys appear on both the shores; and the
+river itself, here divided by an islet, frequently expands to a
+considerable breadth. The peasants' cottages were larger and better
+than those in Norway; they are generally painted brick-red, and are
+often built in groups.
+
+The first lock is at Lilla Edet: there are five here; and while the
+ship passes through them, the passengers have leisure to admire the
+contiguous low, but broad and voluminous fall of the Gotha.
+
+This first batch of locks in the canal extends over some distance
+past the fall, and they are partly blasted out of the rock, or built
+of stone. The river past Akestron flows as through a beautiful
+park; the valley is hemmed in by fertile hills, and leaves space
+only for the stream and some picturesque paths winding along its
+shores, and through the pine-groves descending to its banks.
+
+In the afternoon we arrived at the celebrated locks near Trollhatta.
+They are of gigantic construction, which the largest states would be
+honoured in completing, and which occasion surprise when found in a
+country ranking high neither in extent nor in influence. There are
+eleven locks here, which rise 112 feet in a space of 3500 feet.
+They are broad, deep, blasted out of the rock, and walled round with
+fine freestone. They resemble the single steps of a giant's
+staircase; and by this name they might fitly rank as one of the
+wonders of the world. Lock succeeds lock, mighty gates close them,
+and the large vessel rises miraculously to the giddy heights in a
+wildly romantic country.
+
+Scarcely arrived at the locks, the traveller is surrounded by a
+crowd of boys, who offer their services as guides to the waterfalls
+near Trollhatta. There is abundance of time for this excursion; for
+the passage of the ship through the many locks occupies three to
+four hours, and the excursion can be made in half the time. Before
+starting, it is, however, advisable to climb the rock to which the
+locks ascend. A pavilion is erected on its summit, and the view
+from it down over all the locks is exceedingly fine.
+
+Pretty paths hewn out of the wood lead to Trollhatta, which is
+charmingly situated in a lovely valley, surrounded by woods and
+hills, on the shore of a river, whose white foaming waves contrast
+strongly with the dark foliage of the overshadowing groves. The
+canal, which describes a large semicircle round the chief stream,
+glitters in the distance; but the highest locks are quite concealed
+behind rocks; we could neither observe the opening of the gates nor
+the rising of the water in them, and were therefore surprised when
+suddenly the masts and then the ship itself rose from the depth. An
+invisible hand seemed to raise it up between the rocks.
+
+The falls of the river are less distinguished for their height than
+for their diversity and their volumes of water. The principal arm
+of the river is divided at the point of decline into two equal falls
+by a little island of rock. A long narrow suspension-bridge leads
+to this island, and hangs over the fall; but it is such a weak,
+frail construction, that one person only can cross it at a time.
+The owner of this dangerous path keeps it private, and imposes a
+toll of about 3.5d. on all passengers.
+
+A peculiar sensation oppresses the traveller crossing the slender
+path. He sees the stream tearing onwards, breaking itself on the
+projecting rock, and fall surging into the abyss; he sees the
+boiling waves beneath, and feels the bridge vibrate at every
+footstep, and timidly hastens to reach the island, not taking breath
+to look around until he has found footing; on the firm island. A
+solid rock projects a little over the fall, and affords him a safe
+position, whence he sees not only the two falls on either side, but
+also several others formed above and below his point of view. The
+scene is so enchanting, that it is difficult to tear oneself away.
+
+Beyond Trollhatta the river expands almost to a lake, and is
+separated into many arms by the numerous islands. The shores lose
+their beauty, being flat and uninteresting.
+
+We unfortunately did not reach the splendid Wennersee, which is from
+forty-five to sixty-five miles long, and proportionally broad, until
+evening, when it was already too dark to admire the scenery. Our
+ship remained some hours before the insignificant village
+Wennersborg.
+
+We had met six or seven steamers on our journey, which all belonged
+to Swedish or Norwegian merchants; and it afforded us a peculiarly
+interesting sight to see these ships ascend and descend in the high
+locks.
+
+
+September 5th.
+
+As we were leaving Wennersborg late on the previous night, and were
+cruising about the sea, a contrary wind, or rather a squall, arose,
+which would have signified little to a good vessel, but to which our
+small ship was not equal. The poor captain tried in vain to
+navigate the steamer across the lake; he was at last compelled to
+give up the attempt, to return and to cast anchor. We lost our boat
+during this storm; a high wave dashed over the deck and swept it
+away: it had probably been as well fastened as our boxes and
+trunks.
+
+Though it was but nine o'clock in the morning, our captain declared
+that he could not proceed during the day, but that if the weather
+became more favourable, he would start again about midnight.
+Fortunately a fishing-boat ventured to come alongside, and some of
+the passengers landed. I was among them, and made use of this
+opportunity to visit some cottages lying at the edge of a wood near
+the lake. They were very small, but consisted of two chambers,
+which contained several beds and other furniture; the people were
+also somewhat better clad than the Norwegians. Their food too was
+not so unpalatable; they boiled a thick mess of coarse black flour,
+which was eaten with sweet milk.
+
+
+September 6th.
+
+We raised anchor at one o'clock in the morning, and in about five
+hours arrived at the island Eken, which consists entirely of rock,
+and is surrounded by a multitude of smaller islets and cliffs. This
+is one of the most important stations in the lake. A large wooden
+warehouse stands on the shore, and in it is stored the merchandise
+of the vicinity intended for export; and in return it receives the
+cargo from the ships. There are always several vessels lying at
+anchor here.
+
+We had now to wind through a cluster of islands, till we again
+reached the open lake, which, however, was only remarkable for its
+size. Its shores are bare and monotonous, and only dotted here and
+there with woods or low hills; the distant view even is not at all
+noteworthy. One of the finest views is the tolerably large castle
+of Leko, which lies on a rock, and is surrounded by fertile groves.
+
+Further off rises the Kinne Kulle, {51} to which the traveller's
+attention is directed, because it is said to afford an extended
+view, not only over the lake, but far into the country. A curious
+grotto is said to exist in this hill; but unfortunately one loses
+these sights since the establishment of steamers, for we fly past
+every object of interest, and the longest journey will soon be
+described in a few words.
+
+A large glass-factory is established at Bromoe, which fabricates
+window-glass exclusively. We stopped a short time, and took a
+considerable cargo of the brittle material on board.
+
+The factory and the little dwellings attached to it are prettily
+situated on the undulating ground.
+
+Near Sjotorp we entered the river again through several locks. The
+passage of the Wennersee is calculated at about ten or eleven hours.
+
+The river at first winds through woods; and while the ship slowly
+passes through the locks, it is pleasanter to walk a portion of the
+distance in their shade. Farther on it flows through broad valleys,
+which, however, present no very attractive features.
+
+
+September 7th.
+
+Early in the morning we crossed the pretty Vikensee, which
+distinguishes itself, like all Swedish lakes, by the multitude of
+its islands, cliffs, and rocks. These islands are frequently
+covered with trees, which make the view more interesting.
+
+The lake is 306 feet above the level of the North Sea, and is the
+highest point of the journey; from thence the locks begin to
+descend. The number of ascending and descending locks amounts to
+seventy-two.
+
+A short canal leads into the Boltensee, which is comparatively free
+from islands. The passage across this little lake is very charming;
+the shores are diversified by hills, woods, meadows, and fields.
+After it comes the Weltersee, which can be easily defended by the
+beautiful fortress of Karlsborg. This lake has two peculiarities:
+one being the extraordinary purity and transparency of its waters;
+the other, the number of storms which prevail in it. I was told
+that it frequently raged and stormed on the lake while the
+surrounding country remained calm and free. The storm sometimes
+overtakes the ship so suddenly and violently, that escape is
+impossible; and the sagas and fables told of the deceitful tricks of
+these waves are innumerable.
+
+We fortunately escaped, and crossed its surface cheerfully and
+merrily. On its shores are situated the beautiful ladies'
+pensionary, Wadstena, and the celebrated mountain Omberg, at whose
+foot a battle was fought.
+
+The next canal is short, and leads through a lovely wood into the
+little lake of Norbysee. It is customary to walk this distance, and
+inspect the simple monument of Count Platen, who made the plans for
+the locks and canals,--a lasting, colossal undertaking. The
+monument is surrounded by an iron railing, and consists of a slab
+bearing an inscription, simply stating in Swedish his name, the date
+of his death, &c. Nearly opposite the monument, on the other side
+of the canal, is the town of Motala, distinguished principally for
+its large iron factories, in which the spacious work-rooms are
+especially remarkable.
+
+Fifteen locks lead from the Norbysee into the Roxersee, which is a
+descent of 116 feet. The canal winds gracefully through woods and
+meadows, crossed by pretty roads, and studded with elegant little
+houses and larger edifices. Distant church-steeples point out the
+village of Norby, which sometimes peeps forth behind little forests,
+and then vanishes again from the view of the traveller. When the
+sun shines on the waters of this canal, it has a beautiful,
+transparent, pea-green colour, like the purest chrysolite.
+
+The view from the hill which rises immediately before the lake of
+Roxen is exceedingly fine. It looks down upon an immense valley,
+covered with the most beautiful woods and rocks, and upon the broad
+lake, whose arm flows far in land. The evening sun shed its last
+rays over a little town on the lake-shore, and its newly-painted
+tiles shone brightly in its light beams.
+
+While the ship descended through the many locks, we visited the
+neighbouring church of the village of Vretakloster, which contains
+the skeletons of several kings in beautifully-made metal coffins.
+
+We then crossed the lake, which is from four to five miles broad,
+and remained all night before the entrance of the canal leading into
+a bay of the Baltic.
+
+
+September 8th.
+
+This canal is one of the longest; its environs are very pretty, and
+the valley through which it runs is one of the largest we had
+passed. The town of Soderkoping is situated at the foot of high,
+picturesque groups of rocks, which extend to a considerable
+distance.
+
+Every valley and every spot of soil in Sweden are carefully
+cultivated.
+
+The people in general are well dressed, and inhabit small but very
+pretty houses, whose windows are frequently decorated with clean
+white draperies. I visited several of these houses, as we had
+abundance of time for such excursions while the ship was going
+through the locks. I think one might walk the whole distance from
+Gottenburg to Stockholm in the same time that the ship takes for the
+journey. We lose some hours daily with the locks, and are obliged
+to lie still at night on their account. The distance is calculated
+at from 180 to 250 miles, and the journey takes five days.
+
+In the evening we approached the Baltic, which has the same
+character as the Scheren of the North Sea. The ship threads its way
+through a shoal of islands and islets, of rocks and cliffs; and it
+is as difficult to imagine here as there how it is possible to avoid
+all the projecting cliffs, and guide the ship so safely through
+them. The sea divides itself into innumerable arms and bays, into
+small and large lakes, which are formed between the islands and
+rocks, and are hemmed in by beautiful hills. But nothing can exceed
+the beauty of the view of the castle Storry Husby, which lies on a
+high mountain, in a bay. In front of the mountain a beautiful
+meadow-lawn reaches to the shores of the sea, while the back is
+surrounded in the distance by a splendid pine-forest. Near this
+picturesque castle a steeple rises on a neighbouring island, which
+is all that remains of the ancient castle of Stegeborg. Nothing can
+be more romantic than the scenery here, and on the whole journey
+over the fiord; for it presents itself in ever-varying pictures to
+the traveller's notice.
+
+But gradually the hills become lower, the islands more rare; the sea
+supersedes every thing, and seems jealously anxious to exclude other
+objects from the traveller's attention, as if it wished to
+monopolise it. Now we were in the open sea, and saw only water and
+sky; and then again we were so hemmed in by the rocks and cliffs,
+that it would be impossible to extricate the ship without the
+assistance of an experienced pilot.
+
+
+September 9th.
+
+We left the sea, and entered another lake, the Malarsee, celebrated
+for its numerous islands, by a short canal. The town of Sotulje
+lies at its entrance, charmingly situated in a narrow valley at the
+foot of a rather steep hill. This lake at first resembles a broad
+river, but widens at every step, and soon shews itself in its whole
+expanse. The passage of the Malarsee takes four hours, and is one
+of the most charming excursions that can be made. It is said to
+contain about a thousand islets of various sizes; and it may be
+imagined how varied in form and feature the scenery must be, and,
+like the fiord of the Baltic, what a constant succession of new
+scenes it must present.
+
+The shores also are very beautiful: in some spots hills descend
+sharply to the water's edge, the steep rocks forming dangerous
+points; on others dark, sombre pine-forests grow; and again there
+are gay valleys and meadows, with villages or single cottages. Many
+travellers assert that this lake is, after all, very monotonous; but
+I cannot agree with their opinion. I found it so attractive, that I
+could repeat the journey many times without wearying of this lovely
+sameness. It certainly has not the majestic backgrounds of the
+Swiss lakes; but this profusion of small islands is a pleasing
+peculiarity which can be found on no other lake.
+
+On the summit of a steep precipice of the shore the hat of the
+unfortunate Eric is hoisted, fastened to a long pole. History tells
+that this king fled from the enemy in a battle; that one of his
+soldiers pursued him, and reproached him for his cowardice,
+whereupon Eric, filled with shame and despair, gave spurs to his
+horse and leaped into the fearful abyss. At his fall his hat was
+blown from his head, and was left on this spot.
+
+Not far from this point the suburbs of Stockholm make their
+appearance, being spread round one of the broad arms of the lake.
+With increasing curiosity we gazed towards the town as we gradually
+approached it. Many of the pretty villas, which are situated in the
+valleys or on the sides of the hills as forerunners of the town,
+come into view, and the suburbs rise amphi-theatrically on the steep
+shores. The town itself closes the prospect by occupying the whole
+upper shore of the lake, and is flanked by the suburbs at either
+side. The Ritterholm church, with its cast-iron perforated towers,
+and the truly grand royal palace, which is built entirely in the
+Italian style, can be seen and admired from this distance.
+
+We had scarcely cast anchor in the port of Stockholm, when a number
+of Herculean women came and offered us their services as porters.
+They were Delekarliers, {52} who frequently come to Stockholm to
+earn a livelihood as porters, water-carriers, boatwomen, &c. They
+easily find employment, because they possess two excellent
+qualities: they are said to be exceedingly honest and hard-working,
+and, at the same time, have the strength and perseverance of men.
+
+Their dress consists of black petticoats, which come half way over
+the calf of the leg, red bodices, white chemises with long sleeves,
+short narrow aprons of two colours, red stockings, and shoes with
+wooden soles an inch thick. They twist a handkerchief round their
+head, or put on a little close black cap, which fits close on the
+back part of the head.
+
+In Stockholm there are entire houses, as well as single rooms,
+which, as in a hotel, are let by the day. They are much cheaper
+than hotels, and are therefore more in demand. I at once hired one
+of these rooms, which was very clean and bright, and for which, with
+breakfast, I only paid one riksdaler, which is about one shilling.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+
+As my journey was ostensibly only to Iceland, and as I only paid a
+flying visit to this portion of Scandinavia, my readers will pardon
+me if I treat it briefly. This portion of Europe has been so
+frequently and so excellently described by other travellers, that my
+observations would be of little importance.
+
+I remained in Stockholm six days, and made as good use of my time as
+I could. The town is situated on the shores of the Baltic Sea and
+the Malar lake. These two waters are connected by a short canal, on
+whose shores the most delightful houses are erected.
+
+My first visit was to the beautiful church of Ritterholm, which is
+used more for a cemetery and an armory than for a place of worship.
+The vaults serve as burial-places for the kings, and their monuments
+are erected in the side-chapels. On each side of the nave of the
+church are placed effigies of armed knights on horseback, whose
+armour belonged to the former kings of Sweden. The walls and angles
+of the church are profusely decorated with flags and standards, said
+to number five thousand. In addition to this, the keys of conquered
+towns and fortresses hang along the side-walls, and drums are piled
+upon the floor; trophies taken from different nations with which
+Sweden has been at war.
+
+Besides these curiosities, several coats of armour and garments of
+Swedish regents are displayed behind glass-cases in the side-
+chapels. Among them, the dress which Charles XII. wore on the day
+of his death, and his hat perforated by a ball, interested me most.
+His riding-boots stand on the ground beside it. The modern dress
+and hat, embroidered with gold and ornamented with feathers, of the
+last king, the founder of the new dynasty, is not less interesting,
+partly perhaps from the great contrast.
+
+The church of St. Nicholas stands on the same side of the canal, and
+is one of the finest Protestant churches I had seen; it is very
+evident that it was built in Catholic times, and that its former
+decorations have been allowed to remain. It contains several large
+and small oil-paintings, some ancient and some modern monuments, and
+a profusion of gilding. The organ is fine and large; flanking the
+entrance of the church are beautiful reliefs, hewn in stone; and
+above it, carved in wood, a statue of the archangel Michael, larger
+than life, sitting on horseback on a bridge, in the act of killing
+the dragon.
+
+Near the church is situated the royal palace, which needs a more
+fluent pen than mine to describe it. It would fill a volume were I
+to enumerate and describe the treasures, curiosities, and beauties
+of its construction, or its interior arrangement; I can only say
+that I never saw any thing to equal it, except the royal palace of
+Naples. Such an edifice is the more surprising in the north, and in
+a country which has never been overstocked with wealth.
+
+The church of Shifferholm is remarkable only for its position and
+its temple-like form; it stands on the ledge of a rock facing the,
+royal palace, on the opposite shore of the same indentation of the
+Baltic. A long bridge of boats leads from the one to the other.
+
+The church of St. Catharine is large and beautiful. In an outer
+angle of the church is shewn the stone on which one of the brothers
+Sturre was beheaded. {53}
+
+On the Ritterplatz stands the Ritterhouse, a very fine palace; also
+the old royal palace, and several other royal and private mansions;
+but they are not nearly so numerous nor so fine as in Copenhagen,
+and the streets and squares also cannot be compared with those of
+the capital of Denmark.
+
+The finest prospect is from a hill in one of the suburbs called the
+Great Mosbecken; it affords a magnificent view of the sea and the
+lake, of the town and its suburbs, as far as the points of the
+mountains, and of the lovely country-houses which border the shores
+of lake and sea. The town and its environs are so interspersed with
+islets and rocks, that these seem to be part of the town; and this
+gives Stockholm such a curious appearance, that I can compare it to
+no other city I have seen. Wooded hills and naked rocks prolong the
+view, and their ridges extend into the far distance; while level
+fields and lawns take up but a very small proportion of the
+magnificent scenery.
+
+On descending from this hill the traveller should not fail to go to
+Sodermalm, and to inspect the immense iron-stores, where iron is
+heaped up in countless bars. The corn-market of Stockholm is
+insignificant. The principal buildings besides those already
+enumerated are, the bank, the mint, the guard-house, the palace of
+the crown-prince, the theatre, &c. The latter is interesting,
+partly because Gustavus III. was shot in it. He fell on the stage,
+while a grand masquerade was taking place, for which the theatre had
+been changed into a ball-room. The king was shot by a mask, and
+died in a few hours.
+
+There is not a representation in the theatre every night; and on the
+one evening of performance during my visit a festival was to be
+celebrated in the hall of antiquities. The esteemed artist
+Vogelberg, a native of Sweden, had beautifully sculptured the three
+heathen gods, Thor, Balder, and Odin, in colossal size, and brought
+them over from Rome. The statues had only been lately placed, and a
+large company had been invited to meet in the illuminated saloon,
+and do honour to the artist. Solemn hymns were to be sung at the
+uncovering of the statues, beside other festivities. I was
+fortunate enough to receive an invitation to this festival, which
+was to commence a little past seven. Before that I went to the
+theatre, which, I was told, would open at half-past six. I intended
+to remain there half an hour, and then drive to the palace, where my
+friends would meet me to accompany me to the festival. I went to
+the theatre at six, and anxiously waited half an hour for the
+commencement of the overture; it was after half-past six, and no
+signs of the commencement. I looked again at the bill, and saw, to
+my annoyance, that the opera did not begin till seven. But as I
+would not leave until I had seen the stage, I spent the time in
+looking at the theatre itself. It is tolerably large, and has five
+tiers of boxes, but is neither tastefully nor richly decorated. I
+was most surprised at the exorbitant price and the variety of seats.
+I counted twenty-six different kinds; it seems that every row has a
+different price, else I don't understand how they could make such a
+variety.
+
+At last the overture began; I listened to it, saw the curtain rise,
+looked at the fatal spot, and left after the first air. The door-
+keeper followed me, took my arm, and wished to give me a return-
+ticket; and when I told him that I did not require one, as I did not
+intend to return, he said that it had only just commenced, and that
+I ought to stop, and not have spent all the money for nothing. I
+was unfortunately too little acquainted with the Swedish language to
+explain the reason of my departure, so I could give him no answer,
+but went away. I, however, heard him say to some one, "I never met
+with such a woman before; she sat an hour looking at the curtain,
+and goes away as soon as it rises." I looked round and saw how he
+shook his head thoughtfully, and pointed with his forefinger to his
+forehead. I could not refrain from smiling, and enjoyed the scene
+as much as I should have done the second act of Mozart's Don
+Giovanni.
+
+I called for my friends at the royal palace, and spent the evening
+very agreeably in the brilliantly-illuminated galleries of
+antiquities and of pictures. I had the pleasure also of being
+introduced to Herr Vogelberg. His modest, unpretending manners must
+inspire every one with respect, even if one does not know what
+distinguished talent he possesses.
+
+The royal park is one of the finest sights in the neighbourhood of
+Stockholm, and is one of the best of its kind. It is a fine large
+natural park, with an infinity of groves, meadows, hills, and rocks;
+here and there lies a country-house with its fragrant flower-garden,
+or tasteful coffee and refreshment houses, which on fine Sundays are
+filled with visitors from the town. Good roads are made through the
+park, and commodious paths lead to the finest points of view over
+sea and land.
+
+The bust of the popular poet Bellmann stands on an open sunny spot,
+and an annual festival is given here in his honour.
+
+Deeper in the park lies the so-called Rosenthal (Rose valley), a
+real Eden. The late king was so partial to this spot, that he spent
+many hours in the little royal country-house here, which is built on
+a retired spot in the midst of groves and flower-beds. In front of
+the palace stands a splendid vase made of a single piece of
+porphyry. I was told that it was the largest in Europe, but I
+consider the one in the Museum of Naples much larger.
+
+I spent the last hours of my visit to Stockholm in this spot, with
+the amiable family of Herr Boje from Finnland, whose acquaintance I
+had made on the journey from Gottenburg to Stockholm. I shall
+therefore never forget this beautiful park and the agreeable
+associations connected with it.
+
+I made a very agreeable excursion also to the royal palace of Haga,
+to the large cemetery, and to the military school Karlberg.
+
+The royal castle of Haga is surrounded by a magnificent park, which
+owes little to art; it contains some of the finest trees, with here
+and there a hill, and is crossed by majestic alleys and well-kept
+roads for driving and walking. The palace itself is so small, that
+I could not but admire the moderation of the royal family; but I was
+informed that this is the smallest of their summer palaces.
+
+Nearly opposite to this park is the great cemetery; but as it has
+only existed for about seventeen years, the trees in it are yet
+rather young. This would be of little consequence in other
+countries, but in Sweden the cemeteries serve as promenades, and are
+crossed by alleys, ornamented with groves, and provided with seats
+for the accommodation of visitors. This cemetery is surrounded by a
+dark pine-forest, and really seems quite shut off from the outer
+world. It is the only burial-place out of the town; the others all
+lie between the churches and the neighbouring houses, whose fronts
+often form the immediate boundary. Burials take place there
+constantly, so that the inhabitants are quite familiar with the
+aspect of death.
+
+From the great cemetery a road leads to the neighbouring Karlberg,
+which is the academy for military and naval cadets. The extensive
+buildings attached to this seminary are built on the slope of a
+mountain, which is washed on one side by the waters of the lake, and
+surrounded on the other by the beautiful park-plantations.
+
+Before leaving Stockholm I had the honour of being introduced to her
+majesty the Queen of Sweden. She had heard of my travels, and took
+a particular interest in my account of Palestine. In consequence of
+this favour, I received the special permission to inspect the whole
+interior of the palace. Although it was inhabited, I was conducted,
+not only through the state-rooms, but through all the private rooms
+of the court. It would be impossible to describe the splendour
+which reigns here, the treasures of art, the magnificent
+appointments, and the evident taste every where displayed. I was
+delighted with all the treasures and splendour, but still more with
+the warm interest with which her majesty conversed with me about
+Palestine. This interview will ever dwell on my memory as the
+bright salient point of my northern expedition.
+
+
+EXCURSION TO THE OLD ROYAL CASTLE OF GRIPTHOLM ON THE MALARSEE
+
+
+Every Sunday morning, at eight o'clock, a little steamer leaves
+Stockholm for this castle; the distance is about forty-five miles,
+and is passed in four hours; four hours more are allowed for the
+stay, and in the evening the steamer returns to Stockholm. This
+excursion is very interesting, although we pass the greater part of
+the time on that portion of the lake which we had seen on our
+arrival, but for the last few miles the ship turned into a pretty
+bay, at whose apex the castle is situated. It is distinguished for
+its size, its architecture, and its colossal turrets. It is
+unfortunately, however, painted with the favourite brick-red colour
+of the Swedes.
+
+Two immense cannons, which the Swedes once gained in battle from the
+Russians, stand in the courtyard. The apartments in the castle,
+which are kept in good condition, display neither splendour nor
+profusion of appointments, indeed almost the contrary. The pretty
+theatre is, however, an exception: for its walls are inlaid from
+top to bottom with mirrors, its pillars are gilt, and the royal box
+tapestried with rich red velvet. There has been no performance here
+since the death of Gustavus III.
+
+The immensely massive walls are a remarkable feature of this palace,
+and must measure about three yards in thickness in the lower
+stories.
+
+The upper apartments are all large and high, and afford a splendid
+view of the lake from their windows. But it is impossible to enjoy
+these beautiful scenes when one thinks of the sad events which have
+taken place here.
+
+Two kings, John III. and Eric XIV., the latter with four of his
+ministers, who were subsequently beheaded, were imprisoned here for
+many years. The captivity of John III. would not have been so bad,
+if captivity were not bad enough in itself. He was confined in a
+large splendid saloon, but which he was not permitted to quit, and
+which he would therefore probably have gladly exchanged for the
+poorest hut and liberty. His wife inhabited two smaller apartments
+adjoining; she was not treated as a prisoner, and could leave the
+castle at will. His son Sigismund was born here in the year 1566,
+and the room and bed in which he was born are still shewn as
+curiosities.
+
+Eric's fate was much more unfortunate, for he was kept in narrow and
+dark confinement. A small rudely-furnished apartment, with narrow,
+iron-barred windows, in one of the little turrets was his prison.
+The entrance was closed by a solid oaken door, in which a small
+opening had been made, through which his food was given him. For
+greater security this oaken door was covered by an iron one. Round
+the outside of the apartment a narrow gallery had been made, on
+which the guards were posted, and could at all times see their
+prisoner through the barred windows. The spot is still shewn at one
+of the windows where the king sat for hours looking into the
+distance, his head leaning on his hand. What must have been his
+feelings as he gazed on the bright sky, the verdant turf, and the
+smiling lake! How many sighs must have been echoed from these
+walls, how many sleepless nights must he have passed during those
+two long years in anxious expectation of the future!
+
+The guide who took us round the castle maintained that the floor was
+more worn on this spot than any where else, and that the window-sash
+had been hollowed by the elbow of the miserable king; but I could
+not perceive any difference. Eric was kept imprisoned here for two
+years, and was then taken to another prison.
+
+There is a large picture-gallery in this castle; but it contains
+principally portraits of kings, not only of Sweden, but of other
+countries, from the Middle Ages down to the present time; also
+portraits of ministers, generals, painters, poets, and learned men;
+of celebrated Swedish females, who have sacrificed themselves for
+their country, and of the most celebrated female beauties. The name
+and date of birth of each person are affixed to his or her portrait,
+so that each visitor may find his favourite without guide or
+catalogue. In many of them the colouring and drawing are wretched
+enough, but we will hope that the resemblance is all the more
+striking.
+
+On our return several gentlemen were kind enough to direct my
+attention to the most interesting points of the lake. Among these I
+must mention Kakeholm, its broadest point; the island of Esmoi, on
+which a Swedish female gained a battle; Norsberg, also celebrated
+for a battle which took place there; and Sturrehof, the property of
+a great Swedish family. Near Bjarkesoe a simple cross is erected,
+ostensibly on the spot where Christianity was first introduced.
+Indeed the Malarsee has so many historical associations, in addition
+to the attractions of its scenery, that it is one of the most
+interesting seas not only of Sweden but of Europe.
+
+
+JOURNEY FROM STOCKHOLM TO UPSALA AND TO THE IRON-MINES OF DANEMORA
+
+
+September 12th.
+
+The intercourse between Stockholm and Upsala is very considerable.
+A steamer leaves both places every day except Sunday, and traverses
+the distance in six hours.
+
+Tempted by this convenient opportunity of easily and quickly
+reaching the celebrated town of Upsala, and by the unusually fine
+weather, I took my passage one evening, and was greatly disappointed
+when, on the following morning, the rain poured down in torrents.
+But if travellers paid much attention to the weather, they would not
+go far; so I nevertheless embarked at half-past seven, and arrived
+safely in Upsala. I remained in the cabin during the passage, and
+could not even enjoy the prospect from the cabin-windows, for the
+rain beat on them from the outside, while inside they were obscured
+by the heat. But I did not venture on deck, hoping to be favoured
+by better weather on my return.
+
+At last, about three o'clock, when I had been in Upsala more than an
+hour, the weather cleared up, and I sallied out to see the sights.
+
+First I visited the cathedral. I entered, and stood still with
+astonishment at the chief portal, on looking up at the high roof
+resting on two rows of pillars, and covering the whole church. It
+is formed in one beautiful straight line, unbroken by a single arch.
+The church itself is simple: behind the grand altar a handsome
+chapel is erected, the ceiling of which is painted azure blue,
+embossed with golden stars. In this chapel Gustavus I. is interred
+between his two wives. The monument which covers the grave is
+large, and made of marble, but clumsy and void of taste. It
+represents a sarcophagus, on which three bodies, the size of life,
+are laid; a marble canopy is raised over them. The walls of the
+chapel are covered with pretty frescoes, representing the most
+remarkable scenes in the life of this monarch. The most interesting
+among them are, one in which he enters a peasant's hut in peasant's
+attire, at the same moment that his pursuers are eagerly inquiring
+after him in front of the hut; the other, when he stands on a
+barrel, also dressed as a peasant, and harangues his people. Two
+large tablets in a broad gold frame contain in Swedish, and not in
+the Latin language, the explanation of the different pictures, so
+that every Swede may easily learn the monarch's history.
+
+Several other monuments are erected in the side-chapels; those of
+Catharine Magelone, John III., Gustavus Erichson, who was beheaded,
+and of the two brothers Sturre, who were murdered. The monument of
+Archbishop Menander, in white marble, is a tasteful and artistic
+modern production. The great Linnaeus is buried under a simple
+marble slab in this church; but his monument is in one of the side-
+chapels, and not over his grave, and consists of a beautiful dark-
+brown porphyry slab, on which his portrait is sculptured in relief.
+
+The splendid organ, which reaches nearly to the roof of the church,
+also deserves special attention. The treasure-chamber does not
+contain great treasures; the blood-stained and dagger-torn garments
+of the unfortunate brothers Sturre are kept in a glass case here;
+and here also stands a wooden statue of the heathen god Thor. This
+wooden affair seems to have originally been an Ecce Homo, which was
+perhaps the ornament of some village church, then carried off by
+some unbeliever, and made more shapeless than its creator, not
+proficient in art, had made it. It has a greater resemblance now to
+a frightful scarecrow than to any thing else.
+
+The churchyard near the church is distinguished for its size and
+beauty. It is surrounded by a wall of stone two feet high,
+surmounted by an iron palisading of equal height, broken by stone
+pillars. On several sides, steps are made into the burying-ground
+over this partition. In this cemetery, as in the one of Stockholm,
+one seems to be in a lovely garden, laid out with alleys, arbours,
+lawns, &c.; but it is more beautiful than the other, because it is
+older. The graves are half concealed by arbours; many were
+ornamented with flowers and wreaths, or hedged by rose-bushes. The
+whole aspect of this cemetery, or rather of this garden, seems
+equally adapted for the amusement of the living or the repose of the
+dead.
+
+The monuments are in no way distinguished; only two are rather
+remarkable, for they consist of tremendous pieces of rock in their
+natural condition, standing upright on the graves. One of these
+monuments resembles a mountain; it covers the ashes of a general,
+and is large enough to have covered his whole army; his relatives
+probably took the graves of Troy as a specimen for their monument.
+It is moreover inscribed by very peculiar signs, which seemed to me
+to be runic characters. The good people have united in this
+monument two characteristics of the ancients of two entirely
+distinct empires.
+
+The university or library building in Upsala is large and beautiful;
+it is situated on a little hill, with a fine front facing the town.
+The park, which is, however, still somewhat young, forms the
+background. {54}
+
+Near this building, on the same hill, stands a royal palace,
+conspicuous for its brick-red colour. It is very large, and the two
+wings are finished by massive round towers.
+
+In the centre of the courtyard, behind the castle, is placed a
+colossal bust of Gustavus I., and a few paces from it two artificial
+hills serve as bastions, on which cannons are planted. This being
+the highest point of the town, affords the best view over it, and
+over the surrounding country.
+
+The town itself is built half of wood and half of stone, and is very
+pretty, being crossed by broad streets, and ornamented with
+tastefully laid-out gardens. It has one disadvantage, which is the
+dark brownish-red colour of the houses, which has a peculiarly
+sombre appearance in the setting sun.
+
+An immense and fertile plain, diversified by dark forests
+contrasting with the bright green meadows and the yellow stubble-
+fields, surrounds the town, and in the distance the silvery river
+Fyris flows towards the sea. Forests close the distant view with
+their dark shadows. I saw but few villages; they may, however, have
+been hidden by the trees, for that they exist seems to be indicated
+by the well-kept high roads crossing the plain in all directions.
+
+Before quitting my position on the bastions of the royal palace I
+cast a glance on the castle-gardens, which were lying lower down the
+hill, and are separated from the castle by a road; they do not seem
+to be large, but are very pretty.
+
+I should have wished to be able to visit the botanic garden near the
+town, which was the favourite resort of Linnaeus, whose splendidly-
+sculptured bust is said to be its chief ornament; but the sun was
+setting behind the mountains, and I repaired to my chamber, to
+prepare for my journey to Danemora.
+
+
+September 13th.
+
+I left Upsala at four o'clock in the morning, to proceed to the far-
+famed iron-mines of Danemora, upwards of thirty miles distant, and
+where I wished to arrive before twelve, as the blasting takes place
+at that hour, after which the pits are closed. As I had been
+informed how slowly travelling is done in this country, and how
+tedious the delays are when the horses are changed, I determined to
+allow time enough for all interruptions, and yet arrive at the
+appointed hour.
+
+A few miles behind Upsala lies Old Upsala (Gamla Upsala). I saw the
+old church and the grave-hills in passing; three of the latter are
+remarkably large, the others smaller. It is presumed that the
+higher ones cover the graves of kings. I saw similar tumuli during
+my journey to Greece, on the spot where Troy is said to have stood.
+The church is not honoured as a ruin; it has yet to do service; and
+it grieved me to see the venerable building propped up and covered
+with fresh mortar on many a time-worn spot.
+
+Half way between Upsala and Danemora we passed a large castle, not
+distinguished for its architecture, its situation, or any thing
+else. Then we neared the river Fyris, and the long lake of
+Danemora; both are quite overgrown with reeds and grass, and have
+flat uninteresting shores; indeed the whole journey offers little
+variety, as the road lies through a plain, only diversified by
+woods, fields, and pieces of rock. These are interesting features,
+because one cannot imagine how they came there, the mountains being
+at a great distance, and the soil by no means rocky.
+
+The little town of Danemora lies in the midst of a wood, and only
+consists of a church and a few large and small detached houses. The
+vicinity of the mines is indicated before arriving at the place by
+immense heaps of stones, which are brought by horse-gins from the
+pits, and which cover a considerable space.
+
+I had fortunately arrived in time to see the blastings. Those in
+the great pit are the most interesting; for its mouth is so very
+large, that it is not necessary to descend in order to see the pit-
+men work; all is visible from above. This is a very peculiar and
+interesting sight. The pit, 480 feet deep, with its colossal doors
+and entrances leading into the galleries, looks like a picture of
+the lower world, from which bridges of rocks, projections, arches
+and caverns formed in the walls, ascend to the upper world. The men
+look like pigmies, and one cannot follow their movements until the
+eye has accustomed itself to the depth and to the darkness
+prevailing below. But the darkness is not very dense; I could
+distinguish most of the ladders, which seemed to me like children's
+toys.
+
+It was nearly twelve, and the workmen left the pits, with the
+exception of those in charge of the mines. They ascended by means
+of little tubs hanging by ropes, and were raised by a windlass. It
+is a terrible sight to see the men soaring up on the little machine,
+especially when two or three ascend at once; for then one man stands
+in the centre, while the other two ride on the edge of the tub.
+
+I should have liked to descend into the great pit, but it was too
+late on this day, and I would not wait another. I should not have
+feared the descent, as I was familiar with such adventures, having
+explored the salt-mines of Wieliczka and Bochnia, in Gallicia, some
+years before, in which I had had to let myself down by a rope, which
+is a much more dangerous method than the tub.
+
+With the stroke of twelve, four blasting trains in the large pit
+were fired. The man whose business it was to apply the match ran
+away in great haste, and sheltered himself behind a wall of rock.
+In a few moments the powder flashed, some stones fell, and then a
+fearful crash was heard all around, followed by the rolling and
+falling of the blasted masses. Repeated echoes announced the
+fearful explosion in the interior of the pits: the whole left a
+terrible impression on me. Scarcely had one mine ceased to rage,
+when the second began, then the third, and so on. These blastings
+take place daily in different mines.
+
+The other pits are deeper, the deepest being 600 feet; but the
+mouths are smaller, and the shafts not perpendicular, so that the
+eye is lost in darkness, which is a still more unpleasant sensation.
+I gazed with oppressed chest into the dark space, vainly
+endeavouring to distinguish something. I should not like to be a
+miner; I could not endure life without the light of day; and when I
+turned from the dark pits, I cast my eyes thankfully on the cheerful
+landscape basking in the sun.
+
+I returned to Upsala on the same day, having made this little
+journey by post. I can merely narrate the facts, without giving an
+opinion on the good or bad conveniences for locomotion, as this was
+more a pleasure-trip than a journey.
+
+As I had hired no carriage, I had a different vehicle at every
+station, and these vehicles consisted of ordinary two-wheeled wooden
+carts. My seat was a truss of hay covered with the horse-cloth. If
+the roads had not been so extremely good, these carts would have
+shaken terribly; but as it was, I must say that I rode more
+comfortably than in the carriols of the Norwegians, although they
+were painted and vanished; for in them I had to be squeezed in with
+my feet stretched out, and could not change my position.
+
+The stations are unequal,--sometimes long, sometimes short. The
+post-horses are provided here, as in Norway, by wealthy peasants,
+called Dschns-peasants. These have to collect a certain number of
+horses every evening for forwarding the travellers the next morning.
+At every post-house a book is kept, in which the traveller can see
+how many horses the peasant has, how many have already been hired,
+and how many are left in the stable. He must then inscribe his
+name, the hour of his departure, and the number of horses he
+requires. By this arrangement deception and extortion are
+prevented, as every thing is open, and the prices fixed. {55}
+
+Patience is also required here, though not so much as in Norway. I
+had always to wait from fifteen to twenty minutes before the
+carriage was brought and the horses and harness prepared, but never
+longer; and I must admit that the Swedish post-masters hurried as
+much as possible, and never demanded double fare, although they must
+have known that I was in haste. The pace of the horse depends on
+the will of the coachman and the powers of his steed; but in no
+other country did I see such consideration paid to the strength of
+the horses. It is quite ridiculous to see what small loads of corn,
+bricks, or wood, are allotted to two horses, and how slowly and
+sleepily they draw their burdens.
+
+The number of wooden gates, which divide the roads into as many
+parts as there are common grounds on it, are a terrible nuisance to
+travellers. The coachman has often to dismount six or eight times
+in an hour to open and close these gates. I was told that these
+delectable gates even exist on the great high road, only not quite
+in such profusion as on the by-roads.
+
+Wood must be as abundant here as in Norway, for every thing is
+enclosed; even fields which seem so barren as not to be worth the
+labour or the wood.
+
+The villages through which I passed were generally pretty and
+cheerful, and I found the cottages, which I entered while the horses
+were changed, neatly and comfortably furnished.
+
+The peasants of this district wear a peculiar costume. The men, and
+frequently also the boys, wear long dark-blue cloth surtouts, and
+cloth caps on their heads; so that, at a distance, they look like
+gentlemen in travelling dress. It seems curious to a foreigner to
+see these apparent gentlemen following the plough or cutting grass.
+At a nearer view, of course the aspect changes, and the rents and
+dirt appear, or the leathern apron worn beneath the coat, like
+carpenters in Austria, becomes visible. The female costume was
+peculiar only in so far that it was poor and ragged. In dress and
+shoes the Norwegian and Swedes are behind the Icelanders, but they
+surpass them in the comfort of their dwellings.
+
+
+September 14th.
+
+To-day I returned to Stockholm on the Malarsee, and the weather
+being more favourable than on my former passage, I could remain on
+deck the whole time. I saw now that we sailed for several miles on
+the river Fyris, which flows through woods and fields into the lake.
+
+The large plain on which old and new Upsala lie was soon out of
+sight, and after passing two bridges, we turned into the Malar. At
+first there are no islands on its flat expanse, and its shores are
+studded with low tree-covered hills; but we soon, however, arrived
+at the region of islands, where the passage becomes more
+interesting, and the beauty of the shores increases. The first fine
+view we saw was the pretty estate Krusenberg, whose castle is
+romantically situated on a fertile hill. But much more beautiful
+and surprising is the splendid castle of Skukloster, a large,
+beautiful, and regular pile, ornamented with four immense round
+turrets at the four corners, and with gardens stretching down to the
+water's edge.
+
+From this place the scenery is full of beauty and variety; every
+moment presents another and a more lovely view. Sometimes the
+waters expand, sometimes they are hemmed in by islands, and become
+as narrow as canals. I was most charmed with those spots where the
+islands lie so close together that no outlet seems possible, till
+another turn shews an opening between them, with a glimpse of the
+lake beyond. The hills on the shores are higher, and the
+promontories larger, the farther the ship advances; and the islands
+appear to be merely projections of the continent, till a nearer
+approach dispels the illusion.
+
+The village of Sixtuna lies in a picturesque and charming little
+valley, filled with ruins, principally of round towers, which are
+said to be the remains of the Roman town of Sixtum; the name being
+retained by the new town with a slight modification.
+
+After this follow cliffs and rocks rising perpendicularly from the
+sea, and whose vicinity would be by no means desirable in a storm.
+Of the castle of Rouse only three beautiful domes rise above the
+trees; a frowning bleak hill conceals the rest from the eye. Then
+comes a palace, the property of a private individual, only
+remarkable for its size. The last of the notabilities is the Rokeby
+bridge, said to be one of the longest in Sweden. It unites the firm
+land with the island on which the royal castle of Drottingholm
+stands. The town of Stockholm now becomes visible; we turn into the
+portion of the lake on which it lies, and arrive there again at two
+o'clock in the afternoon.
+
+
+FROM STOCKHOLM TO TRAVEMUNDE AND HAMBURGH
+
+
+I bade farewell to Stockholm on the 18th September, and embarked in
+the steamer Svithiold, of 100-horse power, at twelve o'clock at
+noon, to go to Travemunde.
+
+Few passages can be more expensive than this one is. The distance
+is five hundred leagues, and the journey generally occupies two and
+a half to three days; for this the fare, without food, is four
+pounds. The food is also exorbitantly dear; in addition to which
+the captain is the purveyor; so that there is no appeal for the
+grossest extortion or insufficiency.
+
+It pained me much when one of the poorer travellers, who suffered
+greatly from sea-sickness, having applied for some soup to the
+steward, who referred him to the amiable captain, to hear him
+declare he would make no exception, and that a basin of soup would
+be charged the whole price of a complete dinner. The poor man was
+to do without the soup, of which he stood so much in need, or scrape
+every farthing together to pay a few shillings daily for his dinner.
+Fortunately for him some benevolent persons on deck paid for his
+meals. Some of the gentlemen brought their own wine with them, for
+which they had to pay as much duty to the captain as the wine was
+worth.
+
+To these pleasures of travelling must be added the fact, that a
+Swedish vessel does not advance at all if the weather is
+unfavourable. Most of the passengers considered that the engines
+were inefficient. However this may be, we were delayed twenty-four
+hours at the first half of our journey, from Stockholm to Calmar,
+although we had only a slight breeze against us and a rather high
+sea, but no storm. In Calmar we cast anchor, and waited for more
+favourable wind. Several gentlemen, whose business in Lubeck was
+pressing, left the steamer, and continued their journey by land.
+
+At first the Baltic very much resembles the Malarsee; for islands,
+rocks, and a variety of scenery make it interesting. To the right
+we saw the immensely long wooden bridge of Lindenborg, which unites
+one of the larger islands with the continent.
+
+At the end of one of the turns of the sea lies the town of
+Wachsholm; and opposite to it, upon a little rocky island, a
+splendid fortress with a colossal round tower. Judging by the
+number of cannons planted along the walls, this fortress must be of
+great importance. A few hours later we passed a similar fortress,
+Friedrichsborg; it is not in such an open situation as the other,
+but is more surrounded by forests. We passed at a considerable
+distance, and could not see much of it, nor of the castle lying on
+the opposite side, which seems to be very magnificent, and is also
+surrounded by woods.
+
+The boundaries of the right shore now disappear, but then again
+appear as a terrible heap of naked rocks, at whose extreme edge is
+situated the fine fortress Dolero. Near it groups of houses are
+built on the bare rocks projecting into the sea, and form an
+extensive town.
+
+September 19th.
+
+To-day we were on the open, somewhat stormy sea. Towards noon we
+arrived at the Calmar Sound, formed by the flat, uniform shores of
+the long island Oland on the left, and on the right by Schmoland.
+In front rose the mountain-island the Jungfrau, to which every Swede
+points with self-satisfied pride. Its height is only remarkable
+compared with the flatness around; beside the proud giant-mountain
+of the same name in Switzerland it would seem like a little hill.
+
+
+September 20th.
+
+On account of the contrary wind, we had cast anchor here last night,
+and this morning continued the journey to Calmar, where we arrived
+about two in the forenoon. The town is situated on an immense
+plain, and is not very interesting. A few hours may be agreeably
+spent here in visiting the beautiful church and the antiquated
+castle, and we had more than enough leisure for it. Wind and
+weather seemed to have conspired against us, and the captain
+announced an indefinite stay at this place. At first we could not
+land, as the waves were too high; but at last one of the larger
+boats came alongside, and the more curious among us ventured to row
+to the land in the unsteady vessel.
+
+The exterior of the church resembles a fine antiquated castle from
+its four corner towers and the lowness of its dome, which rises very
+little above the building, and also because the other turrets here
+and there erected for ornament are scarcely perceptible. The
+interior of the church is remarkable for its size, its height, and a
+particularly fine echo. The tones of the organ are said to produce
+a most striking effect. We sent for the organist, but he was
+nowhere to be found; so we had to content ourselves with the echo of
+our own voices. We went from this place to the old royal castle
+built by Queen Margaret in the sixteenth century. The castle is so
+dilapidated inside that a tarrying in the upper chambers is scarcely
+advisable. The lower rooms of the castle have been repaired, and
+are used as prisons; and as we passed, arms were stretched forth
+from some of the barred windows, and plaintive voices entreated the
+passers-by to bestow some trifle upon the poor inmates. Upwards of
+140 prisoners are said to be confined here. {56}
+
+About three o'clock in the afternoon the wind abated, and we
+continued our journey. The passage is very uniform, and we saw only
+flat, bare shores; a group of trees even was a rarity.
+
+
+September 21st.
+
+When I came on deck this morning the Sound was far behind us. To
+the left we had the open sea; on the right, instead of the bleak
+Schmoland, we had the bleaker Schonen, which was so barren, that we
+hardly saw a paltry fishing-village between the low sterile hills.
+
+At nine o'clock in the morning we anchored in the port of Ystadt.
+The town is pretty, and has a large square, in which stand the house
+of the governor, the theatre, and the town-hall. The streets are
+broad, and the houses partly of wood and partly of stone. The most
+interesting feature is the ancient church, and in it a much-damaged
+wooden altar-piece, which is kept in the vestry. Though the figures
+are coarse and disproportionate, one must admire the composition and
+the carving. The reliefs on the pulpit, and a beautiful monument to
+the right of the altar, also deserve admiration. These are all
+carved in wood.
+
+In the afternoon we passed the Danish island Malmo.
+
+At last, after having been nearly four days on the sea instead of
+two days and a half, we arrived safely in the harbour of Travemunde
+on the 22d September at two o'clock in the morning. And now my sea-
+journeys were over; I parted sorrowfully from the salt waters, for
+it is so delightful to see the water's expanse all around, and
+traverse its mirror-like surface. The sea presents a beautiful
+picture, even when it storms and rages, when waves tower upon waves,
+and threaten to dash the vessel to pieces or to engulf it--when the
+ship alternately dances on their points, or shoots into the abyss;
+and I frequently crept for hours in a corner, or held fast to the
+sides of the ship, and let the waves dash over me. I had overcome
+the terrible sea-sickness during my numerous journeys, and could
+therefore freely admire these fearfully beautiful scenes of excited
+nature, and adore God in His grandest works.
+
+We had scarcely cast anchor in the port when a whole array of
+coachmen surrounded us, volunteering to drive us overland to
+Hamburgh, a journey of thirty-six miles, which it takes eight hours
+to accomplish.
+
+Travemunde is a pretty spot, which really consists of only one
+street, in which the majority of the houses are hotels. The country
+from here to Lubeck, a distance of ten miles, is very pretty. A
+splendid road, on which the carriages roll smoothly along, runs
+through a charming wood past a cemetery, whose beauty exceeds that
+of Upsala; but for the monuments, one might take it for one of the
+most splendid parks or gardens.
+
+I regretted nothing so much as being unable to spend a day in
+Lubeck, for I felt very much attracted by this old Hanse town, with
+its pyramidically-built houses, its venerable dome, and other
+beautiful churches, its spacious squares, &c.; but I was obliged to
+proceed, and could only gaze at and admire it as I hurried through.
+The pavement of the streets is better than I had seen it in any
+northern town; and on the streets, in front of the houses, I saw
+many wooden benches, on which the inhabitants probably spend their
+summer evenings. I saw here for the first time again the gay-
+looking street-mirrors used in Hamburgh. The Trave, which flows
+between Travemunde and Lubeck, has to be crossed by boat. Near
+Oldesloe are the salt-factories, with large buildings and immensely
+high chimneys; an old romantic castle, entirely surrounded by water,
+lies near Arensburg.
+
+Past Arensburg the country begins to be uninteresting, and remains
+so as far as Hamburgh; but it seems to be very fertile, as there is
+an abundance of green fields and fine meadows.
+
+The little journey from Lubeck to Hamburgh is rather dear, on
+account of the almost incredible number of tolls and dues the poor
+coachmen have to pay. They have first to procure a license to drive
+from Lubeck into Hamburgh territory, which costs about 1s. 3d.; then
+mine had to pay twice a double toll of 8d., because we passed
+through before five o'clock in the morning, and the gates, which are
+not opened till five o'clock, were unfastened especially for us;
+besides these, there was a penny toll on nearly every mile.
+
+This dreadful annoyance of the constant stopping and the toll-bars
+is unknown in Norway and in Sweden. There, an annual tax is paid
+for every horse, and the owner can then drive freely through the
+whole country, as no toll-bars are erected.
+
+The farm-houses here are very large and far-spread, but the reason
+is, that stable, barn, and shippen are under the same roof: the
+walls of the houses are of wood filled in with bricks.
+
+After passing Arensburg, we saw the steeples of Wandsbeck and
+Hamburgh in the distance; the two towns seem to be one, and are, in
+fact, only separated by pretty country-houses. But Wandsbeck
+compared to Hamburgh is a village, not a town.
+
+I arrived in Hamburgh about two o'clock in the afternoon; and my
+relatives were so astonished at my arrival, that they almost took me
+for a ghost. I was at first startled by their reception, but soon
+understood the reason of it.
+
+At the time I left Iceland another vessel went to Altona, by which I
+sent a box of minerals and curiosities to my cousin in Hamburgh.
+The sailor who brought the box gave such a description of the
+wretched vessel in which I had gone to Copenhagen, that, after
+having heard nothing of me for two months, he thought I must have
+gone to the bottom of the sea with the ship. I had indeed written
+from Copenhagen, but the letter had been lost; and hence their
+surprise and delight at my arrival.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+
+I had not much time to spare, so that I could only stay a few days
+with my relatives in Hamburgh; on the 26th September, I went in a
+little steamer from Hamburgh to Harburg, where we arrived in three
+quarters of an hour. From thence I proceeded in a stage-carriage to
+Celle, about sixty-five miles.
+
+The country is not very interesting; it consists for the most part
+of plains, which degenerate into heaths and marshes; but there are a
+few fertile spots peeping out here and there.
+
+
+September 27th.
+
+We arrived at Celle in the night. From here to Lehrte, a distance
+of about seven miles, I had to hire a private conveyance, but from
+Lehrte the railway goes direct to Berlin. {57} Many larger and
+smaller towns are passed on this road; but we saw little of them, as
+the stations all lie at some distance, and the railway-train only
+stops a few minutes.
+
+The first town we passed was Brunswick. Immediately beyond the town
+lies the pretty ducal palace, built in the Gothic style, in the
+centre of a fine park. Wolfenbuttel seems to be a considerable
+town, judging by the quantity of houses and church-steeples. A
+pretty wooden bridge, with an elegantly-made iron balustrade, is
+built here across the Ocker. From the town, a beautiful lane leads
+to a gentle hill, on whose top stands a lovely building, used as a
+coffee-house.
+
+As soon as one has passed the Hanoverian domains the country, though
+it is not richer in natural curiosities, is less abundant in marshes
+and heaths, and is very well-cultivated land. Many villages are
+spread around, and many a charming town excites the wish to travel
+through at a slower pace.
+
+We passed Schepenstadt, Jersheim, and Wegersleben, which latter town
+already belongs to Prussia. In Ashersleben and in Magdeburg we
+changed carriages. Near Salze we saw some fine buildings which
+belong to the extensive saltworks existing here. Jernaudau is a
+colony of Moravians. I should have wished to visit the town of
+Kotten,-- for nothing can be more charming than the situation of the
+town in the midst of fragrant gardens,--but we unfortunately only
+stopped there a few minutes. The town of Dessau is also surrounded
+by pretty scenery: several bridges cross the various arms of the
+Elbe; that over the river itself rests on solid stone columns. Of
+Wittenberg we only saw house tops and church-steeples; the same of
+Juterbog, which looks as if it were newly built. Near Lukewalde the
+regions of sand begin, and the uniformity is only broken by a little
+ridge of wooded hills near Trebbin; but when these are past, the
+railway passes on to Berlin through a melancholy, unmitigated desert
+of sand.
+
+I had travelled from six o'clock this morning until seven in the
+evening, over a distance of about two hundred and twenty miles,
+during which time we had frequently changed carriages.
+
+The number of passengers we had taken up on the road was very great,
+on account of the Leipzic fairs; sometimes the train had thirty-five
+to forty carriages, three locomotives, and seven to eight hundred
+passengers; and yet the greatest order had prevailed. It is a great
+convenience that one can take a ticket from Lehrte to Berlin,
+although the railway passes through so many different states,
+because then one needs not look after the luggage or any thing else.
+The officials on the railway are all very civil. As soon as the
+train stopped, the guards announced with a loud voice the time
+allowed, however long or short it might be; so that the passengers
+could act accordingly, and take refreshments in the neighbouring
+hotels. The arrangements for alighting are very convenient: the
+carriages run into deep rails at the stations, so that the ground is
+level with the carriages, and the entrance and exit easy. The
+carriages are like broad coaches; two seats ran breadthwise across
+them, with a large door at each side. The first and second class
+contain eight persons in each division, the third class ten. The
+carriages are all numbered, so that every passenger can easily find
+his seat.
+
+By these simple arrangements the traveller may descend and walk
+about a little, even though the train should only stop two minutes,
+or even purchase some refreshments, without any confusion or
+crowding.
+
+These conveniences are, of course, impossible when the carriages
+have the length of a house, and contain sixty or seventy persons
+within locked doors, and where the doors are opened by the guards,
+who only call out the name of the station without announcing how
+long the stay is. In such railways it is not advisable for
+travellers to leave their seats; for before they can pass from one
+end of the carriage to the other, through the narrow door and down
+the steep steps, the horn is sounded, and at the same time the train
+moves on; the sound being the signal for the engine-driver, the
+passengers having none.
+
+In these states there was also not the least trouble with the
+passport and the intolerable pass-tickets. No officious police-
+soldier comes to the carriage, and prevents the passengers alighting
+before they have answered all his questions. If passports had to be
+inspected on this journey, it would take a few days, for they must
+always be taken to the passport-office, as they are never examined
+on the spot.
+
+Such annoying interruptions often occur several times in the same
+state. And one need not even come from abroad to experience them,
+as a journey from a provincial to a capital town affords enough
+scope for annoyance.
+
+I had no reason to complain of such annoyances in any of the
+countries through which I had hitherto passed. My passport was only
+demanded in my hotel in the capitals of the countries, if I intended
+to remain several days. In Stockholm, however, I found a curious
+arrangement; every foreigner there is obliged to procure a Swedish
+passport, and pay half-a-crown for it, if he only remains a few
+hours in the town. This is, in reality, only a polite way of taking
+half-a-crown from the strangers, as they probably do not like to
+charge so much for a simple vise!
+
+
+STAY IN BERLIN--RETURN TO VIENNA
+
+
+I have never seen a town more beautifully or regularly built than
+Berlin,--I mean, the town of Berlin itself,--only the finest
+streets, palaces, and squares of Copenhagen would bear a comparison
+with it.
+
+I spent but a few days here, and had therefore scarcely time to see
+the most remarkable and interesting sights.
+
+The splendid royal palace, the extensive buildings for the picture-
+gallery and museums, the great dome--all these are situated very
+near each other.
+
+The Dome church is large and regularly built; a chapel, surrounded
+by an iron enclosure, stands at each side of the entrance. Several
+kings are buried here, and antiquated sarcophagi cover their
+remains, known as the kings' graves. Near them stands a fine cast-
+iron monument, beneath which Count Brandenburg lies.
+
+The Catholic church is built in the style of the Rotunda in Rome;
+but, unlike it, the light falls from windows made around the walls,
+and not from above. Beautiful statues and a simple but tasteful
+altar are the only ornaments of this church. The portico is
+ornamented by beautiful reliefs.
+
+The Werder church is a modern erection, built in the Gothic style,
+and its turrets are ornamented by beautiful bronze reliefs. The
+walls inside are inlaid with coloured wood up to the galleries,
+where they terminate in Gothic scroll-work. The organ has a full,
+clear tone; in front of it stands a painting which, at first sight,
+resembles a scene from heathen mythology more than a sacred subject.
+A number of cupids soar among wreaths of flowers, and surround three
+beautiful female figures.
+
+The mint and the architectural college stand near this church. The
+former is covered with fine sculptures; the latter is square, of a
+brick-red colour, without any architectural embellishment, and
+perfectly resembling an unusually large private house. The ground-
+floor is turned into fine shops.
+
+Near the palace lies the Opera Square, in which stand the celebrated
+opera-house, the arsenal, the university, the library, the academy,
+the guardhouse, and several royal palaces. Three statues ornament
+the square: those of General Count Bulov, General Count
+Scharnhorst, and General Prince Blucher. They are all three
+beautifully sculptured, but the drapery did not please me; it
+consisted of the long military cloth cloak, which, opening in front,
+afforded a glimpse of the splendid uniforms.
+
+The arsenal is one of the finest buildings in Berlin, and forms a
+square; at the time of my stay some repairs were being made, so that
+it was closed. I had to be content with glimpses through the
+windows of the first floor, which showed me immense saloons filled
+by tremendous cannons, ranged in rows.
+
+The guardhouse is contiguous, and resembles a pretty temple, with
+its portico of columns.
+
+The opera-house forms a long detached square. It would have a much
+better effect if the entrances were not so wretched. The one at the
+grand portal looks like a narrow, miserable church-door, low and
+gloomy. The other entrances are worse still, and one would not
+suppose that they could lead to such a splendid interior, whose
+appointments are indescribably luxurious and commodious. The pit is
+filled by rows of comfortably-cushioned chairs with cushioned backs,
+numbered, but not barred. The boxes are divided by very low
+partitions, so that the aristocratic world seems to sit on a
+tribune. The seats in the pit and the first and second tiers are
+covered with dark-red silk damask; the royal box is a splendid
+saloon, the floor of which is covered with the finest carpets.
+Beautiful oil-paintings, in tasteful gold frames, ornament the
+plafond; but the magnificent chandelier is the greatest curiosity.
+It looks so massively worked in bronze, that it is painful to see
+the heavy mass hang so loosely over the heads of the spectators.
+But it is only a delusion; for it is made of paste-board, and
+bronzed over. Innumerable lamps light the place; but one thing
+which I miss in such elegant modern theatres is a clock, which has a
+place in nearly every Italian theatre.
+
+The other buildings on this square are also distinguished for their
+size and the beauty of their architecture.
+
+An unusually broad stone bridge, with a finely-made iron balustrade,
+is built over a little arm of the Spree, and unites the square of
+the opera with that on which the palace stands.
+
+The royal museum is one of the finest architectural piles, and its
+high portal is covered with beautiful frescoes. The picture-gallery
+contains many chefs-d'oeuvre; and I regretted that I had not more
+time to examine it and the hall of antiquities, having only three
+hours for the two.
+
+From the academy runs a long street lined with lime-trees, and which
+is therefore called Under-the-limes (unter den Linden). This alley
+forms a cheerful walk to the Brandenburg-gate, beyond which the
+pleasure-gardens are situated. The longest and finest streets which
+run into the lime-alley are the Friedrichs Street and the Wilhelms
+Street. The Leipziger Street also belongs to the finest, but does
+not run into this promenade.
+
+The Gens-d'arme Square is distinguished by the French and German
+churches, at least by their exterior,--by their high domes, columns,
+and porticoes. The interiors are small and insignificant. On this
+square stands also the royal theatre, a tasteful pile of great
+beauty, with many pillars, and statues of muses and deities.
+
+I ascended the tower on which the telegraph works, on account of the
+view over the town and the flat neighbourhood. A very civil
+official was polite enough to explain the signs of the telegraph to
+me, and to permit me to look at the other telegraphs through his
+telescope.
+
+The Konigstadt, situated on the opposite shore of the Spree, not far
+from the royal palace, contains nothing remarkable. Its chief
+street, the Konigsstrasse, is long, but narrow and dirty. Indeed it
+forms a great contrast to the town of Berlin in every thing; the
+streets are narrow, short, and winding. The post-office and the
+theatres are the most remarkable buildings.
+
+The luxury displayed in the shop-windows is very great. Many a
+mirror and many a plate-glass window reminded me of Hamburgh's
+splendour, which surpasses that of Berlin considerably.
+
+There are not many excursions round Berlin, as the country is flat
+and sandy. The most interesting are to the pleasure-gardens,
+Charlottenburg, and, since the opening of the railway, to Potsdam.
+
+The park or pleasure-garden is outside the Brandenburg-gate; it is
+divided into several parts, one of which reminded me of our fine
+Prater in Vienna. The beautiful alleys were filled with carriages,
+riders, and pedestrians; pretty coffee-houses enlivened the woody
+portions, and merry children gambolled on the green lawns. I felt
+so much reminded of my beloved Prater, that I expected every moment
+to see a well-known face, or receive a friendly greeting. Kroll's
+Casino, sometimes called the Winter-garden, is built on this side of
+the park. I do not know how to describe this building; it is quite
+a fairy palace. All the splendour which fancy can invent in
+furniture, gilding, painting, or tapestry, is here united in the
+splendid halls, saloons, temples, galleries, and boxes. The dining-
+room, which will dine 1800 persons, is not lighted by windows, but
+by a glass roof vaulted over it. Rows of pillars support the
+galleries, or separate the larger and smaller saloons. In the
+niches, and in the corners, round the pillars, abound fragrant
+flowers, and plants in chaste vases or pots, which transform this
+place into a magical garden in winter. Concerts and reunions take
+place here every Sunday, and the press of visitors is extraordinary,
+although smoking is prohibited. This place will accommodate 5000
+persons.
+
+That side of the park which lies in the direction of the Potsdam-
+gate resembles an ornamental garden, with its well-kept alleys,
+flower-beds, terraces, islets, and gold-fish ponds. A handsome
+monument to the memory of Queen Louise is erected on the Louise
+island here.
+
+On this side, the coffee-house Odeon is the best, but cannot be
+compared to Kroll's casino. Here also are rows of very elegant
+country-houses, most of which are built in the Italian style.
+
+
+CHARLOTTENBURG *** DP PROOFED AND CORRECTED TO HERE ***
+
+
+This place is about half an hour's distance from the Brandenburg-
+gate, where the omnibuses that depart every minute are stationed.
+The road leads through the park, beyond which lies a pretty village,
+and adjoining it is the royal country-palace of Charlottenburg. The
+palace is built in two stories, of which the upper one is very low,
+and is probably only used for the domestics. The palace is more
+broad than deep; the roof is terrace-shaped, and in its centre rises
+a pretty dome. The garden is simple, and not very large, but
+contains a considerable orangery. In a dark grove stands a little
+building, the mausoleum in which the image of Queen Louise has been
+excellently executed by the famed artist Rauch. Here also rest the
+ashes of the late king. There is also an island with statues in the
+midst of a large pond, on which some swans float proudly. It is a
+pity that dirt does not stick to these white-feathered animals, else
+they would soon be black swans; for the pond or river surrounding
+the island is one of the dirtiest ditches I have ever seen.
+
+Fatigue would be very intolerable in this park, for there are very
+few benches, but an immense quantity of gnats.
+
+
+POTSDAM.
+
+
+The distance from Berlin to Potsdam is eighteen miles, which is
+passed by the railroad in three-quarters of an hour. The railway is
+very conveniently arranged; the carriages are marked with the names
+of the station, and the traveller enters the carriage on which the
+place of his destination is marked. Thus, the passengers are never
+annoyed by the entrance or exit of passengers, as all occupying the
+same carriage descend at the same time.
+
+The road is very uninteresting; but this is compensated for by
+Potsdam itself, for which a day is scarcely sufficient.
+
+Immediately in front of the town flows the river Havel, crossed by a
+long, beautiful bridge, whose pillars are of stone, and the rest of
+the bridge of iron. The large royal palace lies on the opposite
+shore, and is surrounded by a garden. The garden is not very
+extensive, but large enough for the town, and is open to the public.
+The palace is built in a splendid style, but is unfortunately quite
+useless, as the court has beautiful summer-palaces in the
+neighbourhood of Potsdam, and spends the winter in Berlin.
+
+The castle square is not very good; it is neither large nor regular,
+and not even level. On it stands the large church, which is not yet
+completed, but promises to be a fine structure. The town is
+tolerably large, and has many fine houses. The streets, especially
+the Nauner Street, are wide and long, but badly paved; the stones
+are laid with the pointed side upwards, and for foot-passengers
+there is a stone pavement two feet broad on one side of the street
+only. The promenade of the townspeople is called Am Kanal (beside
+the canal), and is a fine square, through which the canal flows, and
+is ornamented with trees.
+
+Of the royal pleasure-palaces I visited that of Sans Souci first.
+It is surrounded by a pretty park, and lies on a hill, which is
+divided into six terraces. Large conservatories stand on each side
+of these; and in front of them are long alleys of orange and lemon-
+trees.
+
+The palace has only a ground floor, and is surrounded by arbours,
+trees, and vines, so that it is almost concealed from view. I could
+not inspect the interior, as the royal family was living there.
+
+A side-path leads from here to the Ruinenberg, on which the ruins of
+a larger and a smaller temple, raised by the hand of art, are
+tastefully disposed. The top of the hill is taken up by a reservoir
+of water. From this point one can see the back of the palace of
+Sans Souci, and the so-called new palace, separated from the former
+by a small park, and distant only about a quarter of an hour.
+
+The new palace, built by Frederick the Great, is as splendid as one
+can imagine. It forms a lengthened square, with arabesques and flat
+columns, and has a flat roof, which is surrounded by a stone
+balustrade, and ornamented by statues.
+
+The apartments are high and large, and splendidly painted,
+tapestried, and furnished. Oil-paintings, many of them very good,
+cover the walls. One might fill a volume with the description of
+all the wonders of this place, which is, however, not inhabited.
+
+Behind the palace, and separated from it by a large court, are two
+beautiful little palaces, connected by a crescent-shaped hall of
+pillars; broad stone steps lead to the balconies surrounding the
+first story of the edifices. They are used as barracks, and are, as
+such, the most beautiful I have ever seen.
+
+From here a pleasant walk leads to the lovely palace of
+Charlottenburg. Coming from the large new palace it seemed too
+small for the dwelling even of the crown-prince. I should have
+taken it for a splendid pavilion attached to the new palace, to
+which the royal family sometimes walked, and perhaps remained there
+to take refreshment. But when I had inspected it more closely, and
+seen all the comfortable little rooms, furnished with such tasteful
+luxury, I felt that the crown-prince could not have made a better
+choice.
+
+Beautiful fountains play on the terraces; the walls of the corridors
+and anterooms are covered with splendid frescoes, in imitation of
+those found in Pompeii. The rooms abound in excellent engravings,
+paintings, and other works of art; and the greatest taste and
+splendour is displayed even in the minor arrangements.
+
+A pretty Chinese chiosque, filled with good statues, which have been
+unfortunately much damaged and broken, stands near the palace.
+
+These three beautiful royal residences are situated in parks, which
+are so united that they seem only as one. The parks are filled with
+fine trees, and verdant fields crossed by well-kept paths and
+drives; but I saw very few flower-beds in them.
+
+When I had contemplated every thing at leisure, I returned to the
+palace of Sans Souci, to see the beautiful fountains, which play
+twice a week, on Tuesday and Friday, from noon till evening. The
+columns projected from the basin in front of the castle are so
+voluminous, and rise with such force, that I gazed in amazement at
+the artifice. It is real pleasure to be near the basin when the sun
+shines in its full splendour, forming the most beautiful rainbows in
+the falling shower of drops. Equally beautiful is a fountain rising
+from a high vase, enwreathed by living flowers, and falling over it,
+so that it forms a quick, brisk fountain, transparent, and pure as
+the finest crystal. The lid of the vase, also enwreathed with
+growing flowers, rises above the fountain. The Neptune's grotto is
+of no great beauty; the water falls from an urn placed over it, and
+forms little waterfalls as it flows over nautilus-shells.
+
+The marble palace lies on the other side of Potsdam, and is half an
+hour's distance from these palaces; but I had time enough to visit
+it.
+
+Entering the park belonging to this palace, a row of neat peasants'
+cottages is seen on the left; they are all alike, but separated by
+fruit, flower, or kitchen-gardens. The palace lies at the extreme
+end of the park, on a pretty lake formed by the river Havel. It
+certainly has some right to the name of marble palace; but it seems
+presumption to call it so when compared to the marble palaces of
+Venice, or the marble mosques of Constantinople.
+
+The walls of the building are of brick left in its natural colour.
+The lower and upper frame-work, the window-sashes, and the portals,
+are all of marble. The palace is partly surrounded by a gallery
+supported on marble columns. The stairs are of fine white marble,
+and many of the apartments are laid with this mineral. The interior
+is not nearly so luxurious as the other palaces.
+
+This was the last of the sights I saw in Potsdam or the environs of
+Berlin; for I continued my journey to Vienna on the following day.
+
+Before quitting Berlin, I must mention an arrangement which is
+particularly convenient for strangers--namely, the fares for
+hackney-carriages. One need ask no questions, but merely enter the
+carriage, tell the coachman where to drive, and pay him six-pence.
+This moderate fare is for the whole town, which is somewhat
+extensive. At all the railway stations there are numbers of these
+vehicles, which will drive to any hotel, however far it may be from
+the station, for the same moderate fare. If only all cab-drivers
+were so accommodating!
+
+
+October 1st.
+
+The railway goes through Leipzic to Dresden, where I took the mail-
+coach for Prague at eight o'clock the same evening, and arrived
+there in eighteen hours.
+
+As it was night when we passed, we did not enjoy the beautiful views
+of the Nollendorf mountain. In the morning we passed two handsome
+monuments, one of them, a pyramid fifty-four feet high, to the
+memory of Count Colloredo, the other to the memory of the Russian
+troops who had fallen here; both have been erected since the wars of
+Napoleon.
+
+On we went through charming districts to the famed bathing-place
+Teplitz, which is surrounded by the most beautiful scenery; and can
+bear comparison with the finest bathing-places of the world.
+
+Further on we passed a solitary basaltic rock, Boren, which deserves
+attention for its beauty and as a natural curiosity. We
+unfortunately hurried past it, as we wished to reach Prague before
+six o'clock, so that we might not miss the train to Vienna.
+
+My readers may imagine our disappointment on arriving at the gates
+of Prague, when our passports were taken from us and not returned.
+In vain we referred to the vise of the boundary-town Peterswalde; in
+vain we spoke of our haste. The answer always was, "That is nothing
+to us; you can have your papers back to-morrow at the police-
+office." Thus we were put off, and lost twenty-four hours.
+
+I must mention a little joke I had on the ride from Dresden to
+Prague. Two gentlemen and a lady beside myself occupied the mail-
+coach; the lady happened to have read my diary of Palestine, and
+asked me, when she heard my name, if I were that traveller. When I
+had acknowledged I was that same person, our conversation turned on
+that and on my present journey. One of the gentlemen, Herr Katze,
+was very intelligent, and conversed in a most interesting manner on
+countries, nationalities, and scientific subjects. The other
+gentleman was probably equally well informed, but he made less use
+of his acquirements. Herr Katze remained in Teplitz, and the other
+gentleman proceeded with us to Vienna. Before arriving at our
+destination, he asked me if Herr Katze had not requested me to
+mention his name in my next book, and added, that if I would promise
+to do the same, he would tell me his name. I could not refrain from
+smiling, but assured him that Herr Katze had not thought of such a
+thing, and begged him not to communicate his name to me, so that he
+might see that we females were not so curious as we are said to be.
+But the poor man could not refrain from giving me his name--Nicholas
+B.--before we parted. I do not insert it for two reasons: first,
+because I did not promise to name him; and secondly, because I do
+not think it would do him any service.
+
+The railway from Prague to Vienna goes over Olmutz, and makes such a
+considerable round, that the distance is now nearly 320 miles, and
+the arrangements on the railway are very imperfect.
+
+There were no hotels erected on the road, and we had to be content
+with fruit, beer, bread, and butter, &c. the whole time. And these
+provisions were not easily obtained, as we could not venture to
+leave the carriages. The conductor called out at every station that
+we should go on directly, although the train frequently stood
+upwards of half an hour; but as we did not know that before, we were
+obliged to remain on our seats. The conductors were not of the most
+amiable character, which may perhaps be ascribed to the climate; for
+when we approached the boundary of the Austrian states at
+Peterswalde, the inspector received us very gruffly. We wished him
+good evening twice, but he took no notice of it, and demanded our
+papers in a loud and peremptory tone; he probably thought us as deaf
+as we thought him. At Ganserndorf, twenty-five miles from Vienna,
+they took our papers from us in a very uncivil, uncourteous manner.
+
+On the 4th of October, 1845, after an absence of six months, I
+arrived again in sight of the dear Stephen's steeple, as most of my
+countrywomen would say.
+
+I had suffered many hardships; but my love of travelling would not
+have been abated, nor would my courage have failed me, had they been
+ten times greater. I had been amply compensated for all. I had
+seen things which never occur in our common life, and had met with
+people as they are rarely met with--in their natural state. And I
+brought back with me the recollections of my travels, which will
+always remain, and which will afford me renewed pleasure for years.
+
+And now I take leave of my dear readers, requesting them to accept
+with indulgence my descriptions, which are always true, though they
+may not be amusing. If I have, as I can scarcely hope, afforded
+them some amusement, I trust they will in return grant me a small
+corner in their memories.
+
+In conclusion, I beg to add an Appendix, which may not be
+uninteresting to many of my readers, namely:
+
+1. A document which I procured in Reikjavik, giving the salaries of
+the royal Danish officials, and the sources from whence they are
+paid.
+
+2. A list of Icelandic insects, butterflies, flowers, and plants,
+which I collected and brought home with me.
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A
+
+
+
+Salaries of the Royal Danish Officials in Iceland, which they
+receive from the Icelandic land-revenues.
+
+Florins {58}
+
+The Governor of Iceland 2000
+ Office expenses 600
+The deputy for the western district 1586
+ Office expenses 400
+ Rent 200
+The deputy for the northern and eastern districts 1286
+ Office expenses 400
+The bishop of Iceland, who draws his salary from
+ the school-revenues, has paid him from this
+ treasury 800
+The members of the Supreme Court:
+ One judge 1184
+ First assessor 890
+ Second assessor 740
+The land-bailiff of Iceland 600
+ Office expenses 200
+ Rent 150
+The town-bailiff of Reikjavik 300
+The first police-officer of Reikjavik, who is
+ at the same time gaoler, and therefore
+ has 50 fl. more than the second officer 200
+ The second police-officer 150
+The mayor of Reikjavik only draws from this
+ treasury his house-rent, which is 15O
+The sysselman of the Westmanns Islands 296
+The other sysselmen, each 230
+Medical department and midwifery:
+ The physician 900
+ House-rent 150
+ Apothecary of Reikjavik 185
+ House-rent 150
+ The second apothecary at Sikkisholm 90
+ Six surgeons in the country, each 300
+ House-rent for some 30
+ For others 25
+ A medical practitioner on the Northland 110
+ Reikjavik has two midwives, each receives 50
+ The other midwives in Iceland, amounting
+ to thirty, each receives 100
+ These midwives are instructed and
+ examined by the land physician, who
+ has the charge of paying them annually.
+
+Organist of Reikjavik 100
+From the school-revenues
+ The bishop receives 1200
+ The teachers at the high school:
+ The teacher of theology 800
+ The head assistant, besides free lodging 500
+ The second assistant 500
+ House-rent 50
+ The third assistant 500
+ House-rent 50
+ The resident at the school 170
+
+
+
+LIST OF INVERTEBRATED ANIMALS collected in Iceland
+
+
+
+1. CRUSTACEA.
+
+Pagarus Bernhardus, Linnaeus.
+
+2. INSECTA.
+
+a. Coleoptera. Nebria rubripes, Dejean. Patrobus hyperboreus.
+Calathus melanocephalus, Fabr. Notiophilus aquaticus. Amara
+vulgaris, Duftsihm. Ptinus fur, Linn. Aphodius Lapponum, Schh.
+Otiorhynchus laevigatus, Dhl. Otiorhynchus Pinastri, Fabr.
+Otiorhynchus ovatus. Staphylinus maxillosus. Byrrhus pillula.
+
+b. Neuroptera. Limnophilus lineola, Schrank.
+
+c. Hymenoptera. Pimpla instigator, Gravh. Bombus subterraneus,
+Linn.
+
+d. Lepidoptera. Geometra russata, Hub. Geom. alche millata.
+Geom. spec. nov.
+
+e. Diptera. Tipula lunata, Meig. Scatophaga stercoraria. Musca
+vomitaria. Musca mortuorum. Helomyza serrata. Lecogaster
+islandicus, Scheff. {59} Anthomyia decolor, Fallin.
+
+
+
+LIST OF ICELANDIC PLANTS collected by Ida Pfeiffer in the Summer of
+the year 1845
+
+
+
+Felices. Cystopteris fragilis.
+
+Equisetaceae. Equisetum Teltamegra.
+
+Graminae. Festuca uniglumis.
+
+Cyperaceae. Carea filiformis. Carea caespitosa. Eriophorum
+caespitosum.
+
+Juncaceae. Luzula spicata. Luzula campestris.
+
+Salicineae. Salix polaris.
+
+Polygoneae. Remux arifolus. Oxyria reniformes.
+
+Plumbagineae. Armeria alpina (in the interior mountainous
+districts).
+
+Compositae. Chrysanthemum maritimum (on the sea-shore, and on
+marshy fields). Hieracium alpinum (on grassy plains). Taraxacum
+alpinum. Erigeron uniflorum (west of Havenfiord, on rocky soil).
+
+Rubiaceae. Gallium pusillum. Gallium verum.
+
+Labiatae. Thynus serpyllum.
+
+Asperifoliae. Myosotis alpestris. Myosotis scorpioicles.
+
+Scrophularineae. Bartsia alpina (in the interior north-western
+valleys). Rhinanthus alpestris.
+
+Utricularieae. Pinguicula alpina. Pinguicula vulgaris.
+
+Umbelliferae. Archangelica officinalis (Havenfiord).
+
+Saxifrageae. Saxifraga caespitosa (the real Linnaean plant: on
+rocks round Hecla).
+
+Ranunculaceae. Ranunculus auricomus. Ranunculus nivalis.
+Thalictrum alpinum (growing between lava, near Reikjavik). Caltha
+palustris.
+
+Cruciferae. Draba verna. Cardamine pratensis.
+
+Violariceae. Viola hirta.
+
+Caryophylleae. Sagina stricta. Cerastium semidecandrum. Lepigonum
+rubrum. Silene maritima. Lychnis alpina (on the mountain-fields
+round Reikjavik).
+
+Empetreae. Empetrum nigrum.
+
+Geraniaceae. Geranium sylvaticum (in pits near Thingvalla).
+
+Troseaceae. Parnassia palustris.
+
+OEnothereae. Epilobium latifolium (in clefts of the mountain at the
+foot of Hecla). Epilobium alpinum (in Reiker valley, west of
+Havenfiord).
+
+Rosaceae. Rubus arcticus. Potentilla anserina. Potentilla
+gronlandica (on rocks near Kallmanstunga and Kollismola).
+Alchemilla montana. Sanguisorba officinalis. Geum rivale. Dryas
+octopela (near Havenfiord).
+
+Papilionaceae. Trifolium repens.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{1} In this Gutenberg eText only Madame Pfeiffer's work appears--
+DP.
+
+{2} Madame Pfeiffer's first journey was to the Holy Land in 1842;
+and on her return from Iceland she started in 1846 on a "Journey
+round the World," from which she returned in the end of 1848. This
+adventurous lady is now (1853) travelling among the islands of the
+Eastern Archipelago.--ED.
+
+{3} A florin is worth about 2s. 1d.; sixty kreutzers go to a
+florin.
+
+{4} At Kuttenberg the first silver groschens were coined, in the
+year 1300. The silver mines are now exhausted, though other mines,
+of copper, zinc, &c. are wrought in the neighbourhood. The
+population is only half of what it once was.--ED.
+
+{5} The expression of Madame Pfeiffer's about Frederick "paying his
+score to the Austrians," is somewhat vague. The facts are these.
+In 1757 Frederick the Great of Prussia invaded Bohemia, and laid
+siege to Prague. Before this city an Austrian army lay, who were
+attacked with great impetuosity by Frederick, and completely
+defeated. But the town was defended with great valour; and during
+the time thus gained the Austrian general Daun raised fresh troops,
+with which he took the field at Collin. Here he was attacked by
+Frederick, who was routed, and all his baggage and cannon captured.
+This loss was "paying his score;" and the defeat was so complete,
+that the great monarch sat down by the side of a fountain, and
+tracing figures in the sand, was lost for a long time in meditation
+on the means to be adopted to retrieve his fortune.--ED.
+
+{6} I mention this little incident to warn the traveller against
+parting with his effects.
+
+{7} The true version of this affair is as follows. John of Nepomuk
+was a priest serving under the Archbishop of Prague. The king,
+Wenceslaus, was a hasty, cruel tyrant, who was detested by all his
+subjects, and hated by the rest of Germany. Two priests were guilty
+of some crime, and one of the court chamberlains, acting under royal
+orders, caused the priests to be put to death. The archbishop,
+indignant at this, placed the chamberlain under an interdict. This
+so roused the king that he attempted to seize the archbishop, who
+took refuge in flight. John of Nepomuk, however, and another
+priest, were seized and put to the torture to confess what were the
+designs of the archbishop. The king seems to have suspected that
+the queen was in some way connected with the line of conduct pursued
+by the archbishop. John of Nepomuk, however, refused, even though
+the King with his own hand burned him with a torch. Irritated by
+his obstinate silence, the king caused the poor monk to be cast over
+the bridge into the Moldau. This monk was afterwards canonised, and
+made the patron saint of bridges.--ED.
+
+{8} Albert von Wallenstein (or Waldstein), the famous Duke of
+Friedland, is celebrated as one of the ablest commanders of the
+imperial forces during the protracted religious contest known in
+German history as the "Thirty Years' War." During its earlier
+period Wallenstein greatly distinguished himself, and was created by
+the Emperor Ferdinand Duke of Friedland and generalissimo of the
+imperial forces. In the course of a few months Wallenstein raised
+an army of forty thousand men in the Emperor's service. The
+strictest discipline was preserved WITHIN his camp, but his troops
+supported themselves by a system of rapine and plunder unprecedented
+even in those days of military license. Merit was rewarded with
+princely munificence, and the highest offices were within the reach
+of every common soldier who distinguished himself;--trivial breaches
+of discipline were punished with death. The dark and ambitious
+spirit of Wallenstein would not allow him to rest satisfied with the
+rewards and dignities heaped upon him by his imperial master. He
+temporised and entered into negotiations with the enemy; and during
+an interview with a Swedish general (Arnheim), is even said to have
+proposed an alliance to "hunt the Emperor to the devil." It is
+supposed that he aspired to the sovereignty of Bohemia. Ferdinand
+was informed of the ambitious designs of his general, and at length
+determined that Wallenstein should die. He despatched one of his
+generals, Gallas, to the commander-in-chief, with a mandate
+depriving him of his dignity of generalissimo, and nominating Gallas
+as his successor. Surprised before his plans were ripe, and
+deserted by many on whose support he had relied, Wallenstein retired
+hastily upon Egra. During a banquet in the castle, three of his
+generals who remained faithful to their leader were murdered in the
+dead of night. Roused by the noise, Wallenstein leapt from his bed,
+and encountered three soldiers who had been hired to despatch him.
+Speechless with astonishment and indignation, he stretched forth his
+arms, and receiving in his breast the stroke of a halbert, fell dead
+without a groan, in the fifty-first year of his age.
+
+The following anecdote, curiously illustrative of the state of
+affairs in Wallenstein's camp, is related by Schiller in his History
+of the Thirty Years' War, a work containing a full account of the
+life and actions of this extraordinary man. "The extortions of
+Wallenstein's soldiers from the peasants had at one period reached
+such a pitch, that severe penalties were denounced against all
+marauders; and every soldier who should be convicted of theft was
+threatened with a halter. Shortly afterwards, it chanced that
+Wallenstein himself met a soldier straying in the field, whom he
+caused to be seized, as having violated the law, and condemned to
+the gallows without a trial, by his usual word of doom: "Let the
+rascal be hung!" The soldier protested, and proved his innocence.
+"Then let them hang the innocent," cried the inhuman Wallenstein;
+"and the guilty will tremble the more." The preparations for
+carrying this sentence into effect had already commenced, when the
+soldier, who saw himself lost without remedy, formed the desperate
+resolution that he would not die unrevenged. Rushing furiously upon
+his leader, he was seized and disarmed by the bystanders before he
+could carry his intention into effect. "Now let him go," said
+Wallenstein; "it will excite terror enough.""--ED.
+
+{9} Poniatowski was the commander of the Polish legion in the
+armies of Napoleon, by whom he was highly respected. At the battle
+of Leipzig, fought in October 1813, Poniatowski and Marshal
+MacDonald were appointed to command the rear of Napoleon's army,
+which, after two days hard fighting, was compelled to retreat before
+the Allies. These generals defended the retreat of the army so
+gallantly, that all the French troops, except those under their
+immediate command, had evacuated the town. The rear-guard was
+preparing to follow, when the only bridge over the Elster that
+remained open to them was destroyed, through some mistake. This
+effectually barred the escape of the rear of Napoleon's army. A
+few, among whom was Marshal MacDonald, succeeded in swimming across;
+but Poniatowski, after making a brave resistance, and refusing to
+surrender, was drowned in making the same attempt.--ED.
+
+{10} Leipzig has long been famous as the chief book-mart of
+Germany. At the great Easter meetings, publishers from all the
+different states assemble at the "Buchhandler Borse," and a large
+amount of business is done. The fairs of Leipzig have done much
+towards establishing the position of this city as one of the first
+trading towns in Germany. They take place three times annually: at
+New-year, at Easter, and at Michaelmas; but the Easter fair is by
+far the most important. These commercial meetings last about three
+weeks, and during this time the town presents a most animated
+appearance, as the streets are thronged with the costumes of almost
+every nation, the smart dress of the Tyrolese contrasting gaily with
+the sombre garb of the Polish Jews. The amount of business
+transacted at these fairs is very considerable; on several
+occasions, above twenty thousand dealers have assembled. The trade
+is principally in woollen cloths; but lighter wares, and even
+ornaments of every description, are sold to a large extent. The
+manner in which every available place is taken advantage of is very
+curious: archways, cellars, passages, and courtyards are alike
+filled with merchandise, and the streets are at times so crowded as
+to be almost impassable. When the three weeks have passed, the
+wooden booths which have been erected in the market-place and the
+principal streets are taken down, the buyers and sellers vanish
+together, and the visitor would scarcely recognise in the quiet
+streets around him the bustling busy city of a few days ago.--ED.
+
+{11} The fire broke out on 4th May 1842, and raged with the utmost
+fury for three days. Whole streets were destroyed, and at least
+2000 houses burned to the ground. Nearly half a million of money
+was raised in foreign countries to assist in rebuilding the city, of
+which about a tenth was contributed by Britain. Such awful fires,
+fearful though they are at the time, seem absolutely necessary to
+great towns, as they cause needful improvements to be made, which
+the indolence or selfishness of the inhabitants would otherwise
+prevent. There is not a great city that has not at one time or
+another suffered severely from fire, and has risen out of the ruins
+greater than before.--ED.
+
+{12} There are no docks at Hamburgh, consequently all the vessels
+lie in the river Elbe, and both receive and discharge their cargoes
+there. Madame Pfeiffer, however, is mistaken in supposing that only
+London could show a picture of so many ships and so much commercial
+activity surpassing that of Hamburgh. Such a picture, more
+impressive even than that seen in the Elbe, is exhibited every day
+in the Mersey or the Hudson.--ED.
+
+{13} Kiel, however, is a place of considerable trade; and doubtless
+the reason why Madame Pfeiffer saw so few vessels at it was
+precisely the same reason why she saw so many at Hamburgh. Kiel
+contains an excellent university.--ED.
+
+{14} At sea I calculate by sea-miles, of which sixty go to a
+degree.
+
+{15} This great Danish sculptor was born of poor parents at
+Copenhagen, on the 19th November, 1770; his father was an Icelander,
+and earned his living by carving figure-heads for ships. Albert, or
+"Bertel," as he is more generally called, was accustomed during his
+youth to assist his father in his labours on the wharf. At an early
+age he visited the Academy at Copenhagen, where his genius soon
+began to make itself conspicuous. At the age of sixteen he had won
+a silver, and at twenty a gold medal. Two years later he carried
+off the "great" gold medal, and was sent to study abroad at the
+expense of the Academy. In 1797 we find him practising his art at
+Rome under the eye of Zoega the Dane, who does not, however, seem to
+have discovered indications of extraordinary genius in the labours
+of his young countryman. But a work was soon to appear which should
+set all questions as to Thorwaldsen's talent for ever at rest. In
+1801 he produced his celebrated statue of "Jason," which was at once
+pronounced by the great Canova to be "a work in a new and a grand
+style." After this period the path of fame lay open before the
+young sculptor; his bas-reliefs of "Summer" and "Autumn," the "Dance
+of the Muses," "Cupid and Psyche," and numerous other works,
+followed each other in rapid succession; and at length, in 1812,
+Thorwaldsen produced his extraordinary work, "The Triumph of
+Alexander." In 1819 Thorwaldsen returned rich and famous to the
+city he had quitted as a youth twenty-three years before; he was
+received with great honour, and many feasts and rejoicings were held
+to celebrate his arrival. After a sojourn of a year Thorwaldsen
+again visited Rome, where he continued his labours until 1838, when,
+wealthy and independent, he resolved to rest in his native country.
+This time his welcome to Copenhagen was even more enthusiastic than
+in 1819. The whole shore was lined with spectators, and amid
+thundering acclamations the horses were unharnessed from his
+carriage, and the sculptor was drawn in triumph by the people to his
+atelier. During the remainder of his life Thorwaldsen passed much
+of his time on the island of Nyso, where most of his latest works
+were executed. On Sunday, March 9th, 1842, he had been conversing
+with a circle of friends in perfect health. Halm's tragedy of
+Griselda was announced for the evening, and Thorwaldsen proceeded to
+the theatre to witness the performance. During the overture he rose
+to allow a stranger to pass, then resumed his seat, and a moment
+afterwards his head sunk on his breast--he was dead!
+
+His funeral was most sumptuous. Rich and poor united to do honour
+to the memory of the great man, who had endeared himself to them by
+his virtues as by his genius. The crown-prince followed the coffin,
+and the people of Copenhagen stood in two long rows, and uncovered
+their heads as the coffin of the sculptor was carried past. The
+king himself took part in the solemnity. At the time of his decease
+Thorwaldsen had completed his seventy-second year.--ED.
+
+{16} Tycho de Brahe was a distinguished astronomer, who lived
+between 1546 and 1601. He was a native of Denmark. His whole life
+may be said to have been devoted to astronomy. A small work that he
+published when a young man brought him under the notice of the King
+of Denmark, with whose assistance he constructed, on the small
+island of Hulln, a few miles north of Copenhagen, the celebrated
+Observatory of Uranienburg. Here, seated in "the ancient chair"
+referred to in the text, and surrounded by numerous assistants, he
+directed for seventeen years a series of observations, that have
+been found extremely accurate and useful. On the death of his
+patron he retired to Prague in Bohemia, where he was employed by
+Rodolph II. then Emperor of Germany. Here he was assisted by the
+great Kepler, who, on Tycho's death in 1601, succeeded him.--ED.
+
+{17} The fisheries of Iceland have been very valuable, and indeed
+the chief source of the commerce of the country ever since it was
+discovered. The fish chiefly caught are cod and the tusk or cat-
+fish. They are exported in large quantities, cured in various ways.
+Since the discovery of Newfoundland, however, the fisheries of
+Iceland have lost much of their importance. So early as 1415, the
+English sent fishing vessels to the Icelandic coast, and the sailors
+who were on board, it would appear, behaved so badly to the natives
+that Henry V. had to make some compensation to the King of Denmark
+for their conduct. The greatest number of fishing vessels from
+England that ever visited Iceland was during the reign of James I.,
+whose marriage with the sister of the Danish king might probably
+make England at the time the most favoured nation. It was in his
+time that an English pirate, "Gentleman John," as he was called,
+committed great ravages in Iceland, for which James had afterwards
+to make compensation. The chief markets for the fish are in the
+Catholic countries of Europe. In the seventeenth century, a great
+traffic in fish was carried on between Iceland and Spain.--ED.
+
+{18} The dues charged by the Danish Government on all vessels
+passing through the Sound have been levied since 1348, and therefore
+enjoy a prescriptive right of more than five hundred years. They
+bring to the Danish Government a yearly revenue of about a quarter
+of a million; and, in consideration of the dues, the Government has
+to support certain lighthouses, and otherwise to render safe and
+easy the navigation of this great entrance to the Baltic. Sound-
+dues were first paid in the palmy commercial days of the Hanseatic
+League. That powerful combination of merchants had suffered
+severely from the ravages of Danish pirates, royal and otherwise;
+but ultimately they became so powerful that the rich merchant could
+beat the royal buccaneer, and tame his ferocity so effectually as to
+induce him to build and maintain those beacon-lights on the shores
+of the Sound, for whose use they and all nations and merchants after
+them have agreed to pay certain duties.--ED.
+
+{19} The Feroe Islands consist of a great many islets, some of them
+mere rocks, lying about halfway between the north coast of Scotland
+and Iceland. At one time they belonged to Norway, but came into the
+possession of Denmark at the same time as Iceland. They are
+exceedingly mountainous, some of the mountains attaining an
+elevation of about 2800 feet. The largest town or village does not
+contain more than 1500 or 1600 inhabitants. The population live
+chiefly on the produce of their large flocks of sheep, and on the
+down procured, often at great risk to human life, from the eider-
+duck and other birds by which the island is frequented.--ED.
+
+{20} I should be truly sorry if, in this description of our "life
+aboard ship," I had said any thing which could give offence to my
+kind friend Herr Knudson. I have, however, presumed that every one
+is aware that the mode of life at sea is different to life in
+families. I have only to add, that Herr Knudson lived most
+agreeably not only in Copenhagen, but what is far more remarkable,
+in Iceland also, and was provided with every comfort procurable in
+the largest European towns.
+
+{21} It is not only at sea that ingenious excuses for drinking are
+invented. The lovers of good or bad liquor on land find these
+reasons as "plenty as blackberries," and apply them with a
+marvellous want of stint or scruple. In warm climates the liquor is
+drank to keep the drinker cool, in cold to keep him warm; in health
+to prevent him from being sick, in sickness to bring him back to
+health. Very seldom is the real reason, "because I like it," given;
+and all these excuses and reasons must be regarded as implying some
+lingering sense of shame at the act, and as forming part of "the
+homage that vice always pays to virtue."--ED.
+
+{22} The sailors call those waves "Spanish" which, coming from the
+west, distinguish themselves by their size.
+
+{23} These islands form a rocky group, only one of which is
+inhabited, lying about fifteen miles from the coast. They are said
+to derive their name from some natives of Ireland, called West-men,
+who visited Iceland shortly after its discovery by the Norwegians.
+In this there is nothing improbable, for we know that during the
+ninth and tenth centuries the Danes and Normans, called Easterlings,
+made many descents on the Irish coast; and one Norwegian chief is
+reported to have assumed sovereign power in Ireland about the year
+866, though he was afterwards deposed, and flung into a lough, where
+he was drowned: rather an ignominious death for a "sea-king."--ED.
+
+{24} This work, which Madame Pfeiffer does not praise too highly,
+was first published in 1810. After passing through two editions, it
+was reprinted in 1841, at a cheap price, in the valuable people's
+editions of standard works, published by Messrs. Chambers of
+Edinburgh.--ED.
+
+{25} It is related of Ingold that he carried with him on his voyage
+the door of his former house in Ireland, and that when he approached
+the coast he cast it into the sea, watching the point of land which
+it touched; and on that land he fixed his future home. This land is
+the same on which the town of Reikjavik now stands. These old sea-
+kings, like the men of Athens, were "in all things too
+superstitious."--ED.
+
+{26} These sea-rovers, that were to the nations of Europe during
+the middle ages what the Danes, Norwegians, and other northmen were
+at an earlier period, enjoyed at this time the full flow of their
+lawless prosperity. Their insolence and power were so great that
+many nations, our own included, were glad to purchase, by a yearly
+payment, exemption from the attacks of these sea-rovers. The
+Americans paid this tribute so late as 1815. The unfortunate
+Icelanders who were carried off in the seventeenth century nearly
+all died as captives in Algiers. At the end of ten years they were
+liberated; but of the four hundred only thirty-seven were alive when
+the joyful intelligence reached the place of their captivity; and of
+these twenty-four died before rejoining their native land.--ED.
+
+{27} This town, the capital of Iceland, and the seat of government,
+is built on an arm of the sea called the Faxefiord, in the south-
+west part of the island. The resident population does not exceed
+500, but this is greatly increased during the annual fairs. It
+consists mainly of two streets at right angles to each other. It
+contains a large church built of stone, roofed with tiles; an
+observatory; the residences of the governor and the bishop, and the
+prison, which is perhaps the most conspicuous building in the town.-
+-ED.
+
+{28} As Madame Pfeiffer had thus no opportunity of attending a ball
+in Iceland, the following description of one given by Sir George
+Mackenzie may be interesting to the reader.
+
+"We gave a ball to the ladies of Reikjavik and the neighbourhood.
+The company began to assemble about nine o'clock. We were shewn
+into a small low-roofed room, in which were a number of men, but to
+my surprise I saw no females. We soon found them, however, in one
+adjoining, where it is the custom for them to wait till their
+partners go to hand them out. On entering this apartment, I felt
+considerable disappointment at not observing a single woman dressed
+in the Icelandic costume. The dresses had some resemblance to those
+of English chambermaids, but were not so smart. An old lady, the
+wife of the man who kept the tavern, was habited like the pictures
+of our great-grandmothers. Some time after the dancing commenced,
+the bishop's lady, and two others, appeared in the proper dress of
+the country.
+
+"We found ourselves extremely awkward in dancing what the ladies
+were pleased to call English country dances. The music, which came
+from a solitary ill-scraped fiddle, accompanied by the rumbling of
+the same half-rotten drum that had summoned the high court of
+justice, and by the jingling of a rusty triangle, was to me utterly
+unintelligible. The extreme rapidity with which it was necessary to
+go through many complicated evolutions in proper time, completely
+bewildered us; and our mistakes, and frequent collisions with our
+neighbours, afforded much amusement to our fair partners, who found
+it for a long time impracticable to keep us in the right track.
+When allowed to breathe a little, we had an opportunity of remarking
+some singularities in the state of society and manners among the
+Danes of Reikjavik. While unengaged in the dance, the men drink
+punch, and walk about with tobacco-pipes in their mouths, spitting
+plentifully on the floor. The unrestrained evacuation of saliva
+seems to be a fashion all over Iceland; but whether the natives
+learned it from the Danes, or the Danes from the natives, we did not
+ascertain. Several ladies whose virtue could not bear a very strict
+scrutiny were pointed out to us.
+
+"During the dances, tea and coffee were handed about; and negus and
+punch were ready for those who chose to partake of them. A cold
+supper was provided, consisting of hams, beef, cheese, &c., and
+wine. While at table, several of the ladies sang, and acquitted
+themselves tolerably well. But I could not enjoy the performance,
+on account of the incessant talking, which was as fashionable a
+rudeness in Iceland as it is now in Britain. This, however, was not
+considered as in the least unpolite. One of the songs was in praise
+of the donors of the entertainment; and, during the chorus, the
+ceremony of touching each other's glasses was performed. After
+supper, waltzes were danced, in a style that reminded me of soldiers
+marching in cadence to the dead march in Saul. Though there was no
+need of artificial light, a number of candles were placed in the
+rooms. When the company broke up, about three o'clock, the sun was
+high above the horizon."
+
+{29} A man of eighty years of age is seldom seen on the island.--
+Kerguelen.
+
+{30} Kerguelen (writing in 1768) says: "They live during the
+summer principally on cod's heads. A common family make a meal of
+three or four cods' heads boiled in sea-water."--ED.
+
+{31} This bakehouse is the only one in Iceland, and produces as
+good bread and biscuit as any that can be procured in Denmark. [In
+Kerguelen's time (1768) bread was very uncommon in Iceland. It was
+brought from Copenhagen, and consisted of broad thin cakes, or sea-
+biscuits, made of rye-flour, and extremely black.--ED.]
+
+{32} In all high latitudes fat oily substances are consumed to a
+vast extent by the natives. The desire seems to be instinctive, not
+acquired. A different mode of living would undoubtedly render them
+more susceptible to the cold of these inclement regions. Many
+interesting anecdotes are related of the fondness of these
+hyperborean races for a kind of food from which we would turn in
+disgust. Before gas was introduced into Edinburgh, and the city was
+lighted by oil-lamps, several Russian noblemen visited that
+metropolis; and it is said that their longing for the luxury of
+train-oil became one evening so intense, that, unable to procure the
+delicacy in any other way, they emptied the oil-lamps. Parry
+relates that when he was wintering in the Arctic regions, one of the
+seamen, who had been smitten with the charms of an Esquimaux lady,
+wished to make her a present, and knowing the taste peculiar to
+those regions, he gave her with all due honours a pound of candles,
+six to the pound! The present was so acceptable to the lady, that
+she eagerly devoured the lot in the presence of her wondering
+admirer.--ED.
+
+{33} An American travelling in Iceland in 1852 thus describes, in a
+letter to the Boston Post, the mode of travelling:- "All travel is
+on horseback. Immense numbers of horses are raised in the country,
+and they are exceedingly cheap. As for travelling on foot, even
+short journeys, no one ever thinks of it. The roads are so bad for
+walking, and generally so good for riding that shoe-leather, to say
+nothing of fatigue, would cost nearly as much as horse-flesh. Their
+horses are small, compact, hardy little animals, a size larger than
+Shetland ponies, but rarely exceeding from 12 or 13.5 hands high. A
+stranger in travelling must always have a 'guide,' and if he does go
+equipped for a good journey and intends to make good speed, he wants
+as many as six horses; one for himself, one for the guide, one for
+the luggage, and three relay horses. Then when one set of horses
+are tired the saddles are exchanged to the others. The relay horses
+are tied together and are either led or driven before the others. A
+tent is often carried, unless a traveller chooses to chance it for
+his lodgings. Such an article as an hotel is not kept in Iceland
+out of the capital. You must also carry your provisions with you,
+as you will be able to get but little on your route. Plenty of milk
+can be had, and some fresh-water fish. The luggage is carried in
+trunks that are hung on each side of the horse, on a rude frame that
+serves as a pack-saddle. Under this, broad pieces of turf are
+placed to prevent galling the horse's back."
+
+{34} The down of the eider-duck forms a most important and valuable
+article of Icelandic commerce. It is said that the weight of down
+procurable from each nest is about half a pound, which is reduced
+one-half by cleansing. The down is sold at about twelve shillings
+per pound, so that the produce of each nest is about three
+shillings. The eider-duck is nearly as large as the common goose;
+and some have been found on the Fern Islands, off the coast of
+Northumberland.--ED.
+
+{35} The same remark applies with equal force to many people who
+are not Icelanders. It was once the habit among a portion of the
+population of Lancashire, on returning from market, to carry their
+goods in a bag attached to one end of a string slung over their
+shoulders, which was balanced by a bag containing a stone at the
+other. Some time ago, it was pointed out to a worthy man thus
+returning from market, that it would be easier for him to throw away
+the stone, and make half of his load balance the other half, but the
+advice was rejected with disdain; the plan he had adopted was that
+of his forefathers, and he would on no account depart from it.--ED.
+
+{36} The description of the Wolf's Hollow occurs in the second act
+of Der Freyschutz, when Rodolph sings:
+
+"How horrid, dark, and wild, and drear,
+Doth this gaping gulf appear!
+It seems the hue of hell to wear.
+The bellowing thunder bursts yon clouds,
+The moon with blood has stained her light!
+What forms are those in misty shrouds,
+That stalk before my sight?
+And now, hush! hush!
+The owl is hooting in yon bush;
+How yonder oak-tree's blasted arms
+Upon me seem to frown!
+My heart recoils, but all alarms
+Are vain: fate calls, I must down, down."
+
+{37} The reader must bear in mind that, during the season of which
+I speak, there is no twilight, much less night, in Iceland.
+
+{38} The springs of Carlsbad are said to have been unknown until
+about five hundred years ago, when a hunting-dog belonging to one of
+the emperors of Germany fell in, and by his howling attracted the
+hunters to the spot. The temperature of the chief spring is 165
+degrees.--ED.
+
+{39} History tells of this great Icelandic poet, that owing to his
+treachery the free island of Iceland came beneath the Norwegian
+sceptre. For this reason he could never appear in Iceland without a
+strong guard, and therefore visited the Allthing under the
+protection of a small army of 600 men. Being at length surprised by
+his enemies in his house at Reikiadal, he fell beneath their blows,
+after a short and ineffectual resistance. [Snorri Sturluson, the
+most distinguished name of which Iceland can boast, was born, in
+1178, at Hoam. In his early years he was remarkably fortunate in
+his worldly affairs. The fortune he derived from his father was
+small, but by means of a rich marriage, and by inheritance, he soon
+became proprietor of large estates in Iceland. Some writers say
+that his guard of 600 men, during his visit to the Allthing, was
+intended not as a defence, as indicated in Madame Pfeiffer's note,
+but for the purposes of display, and to impress the inhabitants with
+forcible ideas of his influence and power. He was invited to the
+court of the Norwegian king, and there he either promised or was
+bribed to bring Iceland under the Norwegian power. For this he has
+been greatly blamed, and stigmatised as a traitor; though it would
+appear from some historians that he only undertook to do by
+peaceable means what otherwise the Norwegian kings would have
+effected by force, and thus saved his country from a foreign
+invasion. But be this as it may, it is quite clear that he sunk in
+the estimation of his countrymen, and the feeling against him became
+so strong, that he was obliged to fly to Norway. He returned,
+however, in 1239, and in two years afterwards he was assassinated by
+his own son-in-law. The work by which he is chiefly known is the
+Heimskringla, or Chronicle of the Sea-Kings of Norway, one of the
+most valuable pieces of northern history, which has been admirably
+translated into English by Mr. Samuel Laing. This curious name of
+Heimskringla was given to the work because it contains the words
+with which begins, and means literally the circle of the world.--
+ED.]
+
+{40} A translation of this poem will be found in the Appendix.
+[Not included in this Gutenberg eText--DP]
+
+{41} In Iceland, as in Denmark, it is the custom to keep the dead a
+week above ground. It may be readily imagined that to a non-
+Icelandic sense of smell, it is an irksome task to be present at a
+burial from beginning to end, and especially in summer. But I will
+not deny that the continued sensation may have partly proceeded from
+imagination.
+
+{42} Every one in Iceland rides.
+
+{43} I cannot forbear mentioning a curious circumstance here. When
+I was at the foot of Mount Etna in 1842, the fiery element was
+calmed; some months after my departure it flamed with renewed force.
+When, on my return from Hecla, I came to Reikjavik, I said jocularly
+that it would be most strange if this Etna of the north should also
+have an eruption now. Scarcely had I left Iceland more than five
+weeks when an eruption, more violent than the former one, really
+took place. This circumstance is the more remarkable, as it had
+been in repose for eighty years, and was already looked upon as a
+burnt-out volcano. If I were to return to Iceland now, I should be
+looked upon as a prophetess of evil, and my life would scarcely be
+safe.
+
+{44} Every peasant in tolerably good circumstances carries a little
+tent with him when he leaves home for a few days. These tents are,
+at the utmost, three feet high, five or six feet long, and three
+broad.
+
+{45} "Though their poverty disables them from imitating the
+hospitality of their ancestors in all respects, yet the desire of
+doing it still exists: they cheerfully give away the little they
+have to spare, and express the utmost joy and satisfaction if you
+are pleased with the gift." Uno von Troil, 1772.--ED.
+
+{46} The presence of American ships in the port of Gottenburg is
+not to be wondered at, seeing that nearly three-fourths of all the
+iron exported from Gottenburg is to America.--ED.
+
+{47} "St. Stephen's steeple" is 450 feet high, being about 40 feet
+higher than St. Paul's, and forms part of St. Stephen's Cathedral in
+Vienna, a magnificent Gothic building, that dates as far back as the
+twelfth century. It has a great bell, that weighs about eighteen
+tons, being more than double the weight of the bell in St. Peter's
+at Rome, and four times the weight of the "Great Tom of Lincoln."
+The metal used consisted of cannons taken from the Turks during
+their memorable sieges of Vienna. The cathedral is 350 feet long
+and 200 wide, being less than St. Paul's in London, which is 510
+feet long and 282 wide.--ED.
+
+{48} The Storthing is the name given to the Norwegian parliament,
+which assembles once every three years at Christiania. The time and
+place of meeting are fixed by law, and the king has no power to
+prevent or postpone its assembly. It consists of about a hundred
+members, who divide themselves into two houses. The members must
+not be under thirty years of age, and must have lived for ten years
+in Norway. The electors are required to be twenty-five years of
+age, and to be either burgesses of a town, or to possess property of
+the annual value of 30l. The members must possess the same
+qualification. The members of the Storthing are usually plain-
+spoken, sensible men, who have no desire to shine as orators, but
+who despatch with great native sagacity the business brought before
+them. This Storthing is the most independent legislative assembly
+in Europe; for not only has the king no power to prevent its meeting
+at the appointed time, but should he refuse to assent to any laws
+that are passed, these laws come into force without his assent,
+provided they are passed by three successive parliaments.--ED.
+
+{49} The present king of Sweden and Norway is Oscar, one of the few
+fortunate scions of those lowly families that were raised to royal
+power and dignity by Napoleon. His father, Bernadotte, was the son
+of an advocate, and entered the French army as a common soldier; in
+that service he rose to the rank of marshal, and then became crown-
+prince, and ultimately king of Sweden. He died in 1844. The mother
+of Oscar was Desiree Clary, a sister of Julie Clary, wife of Joseph
+Bonaparte, the elder brother of Napoleon. This lady was asked in
+marriage by Napoleon himself, but her father refused his assent; and
+instead of becoming an unfortunate empress of France, she became a
+fortunate queen of Sweden and Norway. Oscar was born at Paris in
+1799, and received his education chiefly in Hanover. He accompanied
+his father to Sweden in 1810, and ascended the throne on his
+father's death in 1844. In 1824 he married Josephine Beauharnois,
+daughter of Prince Eugene, and granddaughter of the brilliant and
+fascinating Josephine, the first and best wife of Napoleon. Oscar
+is much beloved by his subjects; his administration is mild, just,
+and equable; and his personal abilities and acquirements are far
+beyond the average of crowned heads.--ED.
+
+{50} Bergen is a town of about twenty-five thousand inhabitants,
+situated near the Kons Fiord, on the west coast of Norway, and
+distant about 350 miles from Christiania. It is the seat of a
+bishopric, and a place of very considerable trade, its exports being
+chiefly fish. It has given its name to a county and a township in
+the state of New Jersey. There are three other Bergens,--one in the
+island of Rugen, one in the Netherlands, and another in the
+electorate of Hesse.--ED.
+
+{51} Kulle is the Swedish for hill.
+
+{52} Delekarlien is a Swedish province, situated ninety or one
+hundred miles north of Stockholm.
+
+{53} The family of Sturre was one of the most distinguished in
+Sweden. Sten Sturre introduced printing into Sweden, founded the
+University of Upsala, and induced many learned men to come over. He
+was mortally wounded in a battle against the Danes, and died in
+1520.
+
+His successors as governors, Suante, Nilson Sturre, and his son,
+Sten Sturre the younger, still live in the memory of the Swedish
+nation, and are honoured for their patriotism and valour.
+
+{54} The University of Upsala is the most celebrated in the north.
+It owes its origin to Sten Sturre, the regent of the kingdom, by
+whom it was founded in 1476, on the same plan as the University of
+Paris. Through the influence of the Jesuits, who wished to
+establish a new academy in Stockholm, it was dissolved in 1583, but
+re-established in 1598. Gustavus Vasa, who was educated at Upsala,
+gave it many privileges, and much encouragement; and Gustavus
+Adolphus reconstituted it, and give it very liberal endowments.
+There are twenty-four professors, and the number of students is
+between four and five hundred.--ED.
+
+{55} See novel of Ivar, the Skjuts Boy, by Miss Emilie Carlen.
+
+{56} At Calmar was concluded, in 1397, the famous treaty which
+bears its name, by which Denmark, Sweden, and Norway were united
+under one crown, that crown placed nominally on the head of Eric
+Duke of Pomerania, but virtually on that of his aunt Margaret, who
+has received the name of "the Semiramis of the North."--ED.
+
+{57} There is now a railway direct from Hamburgh to Berlin.--ED.
+
+{58} A florin is about two shillings sterling.--ED.
+
+{59} Herr T. Scheffer of Modling, near Vienna, gives the following
+characteristic of this new dipteral animal, which belongs to the
+family muscidae, and resembles the species borborus:
+
+Antennae deflexae, breves, triarticulatae, articulo ultimo phoereco;
+seda nuda.
+
+Hypoctoma subprominulum, fronte lata, setosa. Oculi rotundi,
+remoti. Abdomen quinque annulatum, dorso nudo. Tarsi simplices.
+Alae incumbentes, abdomine longiores, nervo primo simplici.
+
+Niger, abdomine nitido, antennis pedibusque rufopiceis.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext Visit to Iceland, by Madame Ida Pfeiffer
+
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