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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The "Ladies of Llangollen"</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
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+ .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */
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+
+ .pagenum {position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
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+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The "Ladies of Llangollen", by John Hicklin</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The "Ladies of Llangollen", by John Hicklin
+
+
+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: The "Ladies of Llangollen"
+ as Sketched by Many Hands; with Notices of Other Objects
+ of Interest in "That Sweetest of Vales"
+
+
+Author: John Hicklin
+
+
+
+Release Date: March 13, 2007 [eBook #20810]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE "LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN"***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1847 Thomas Catherall edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org.&nbsp; We would like to thank Llangollen Library,
+Denbighshire, for allowing access to the copy from which this transcription
+was made.</p>
+<h1>THE &ldquo;LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN,&rdquo;<br />
+<span class="smcap">as sketched by many hands</span>;<br />
+<span class="smcap">with notices of</span><br />
+OTHER OBJECTS OF INTEREST<br />
+<span class="smcap">in</span><br />
+&ldquo;THAT SWEETEST OF VALES.&rdquo;</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center">BY JOHN HICKLIN,<br />
+<span class="smcap">editor of the</span> &ldquo;<span class="smcap">chester
+courant</span>,&rdquo; <span class="smcap">author of the</span>
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">history of chester cathedral</span>,&rdquo;
+<span class="smcap">etc. etc.</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">CHESTER:<br />
+THOMAS CATHERALL, EASTGATE ROW;<br />
+<span class="smcap">london: whittaker &amp; co.</span>; <span
+class="smcap">ackermann &amp; co.</span>, <span
+class="smcap">strand</span>;<br />
+<span class="smcap">dublin</span>: <span class="smcap">t.
+cranfield</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">mdcccxlvii</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page ii--><a name="pageii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. ii</span><span class="smcap">to</span><br />
+MISS LOLLY AND MISS ANDREW,<br />
+<span class="smcap">the</span><br />
+PROPRIETORS AND OCCUPIERS OF PLAS NEWYDD.<br />
+<span class="smcap">the famed retreat of</span><br />
+&ldquo;The Ladies of Llangollen,&rdquo;<br />
+<span class="smcap">the following pages</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">are most respectfully inscribed</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">their obedient servant</span>,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">THE PUBLISHER.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>THE
+LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN.</h2>
+<p>From the early age of Cambrian history, when the peerless beauty of the
+high-born Myfanwy Fechan awoke the passion and the poesy of her admiring
+bard, Howel ap Einion Llygliw, down to the modern days of the more humble,
+but not less renowned maiden, &ldquo;Sweet Jenny Jones;&rdquo; Llangollen,
+&ldquo;that sweetest of vales,&rdquo; seems to have been associated with
+recollections of tender and romantic interest.&nbsp; Our narrative,
+however, albeit it relates to the Ladies of Llangollen, refers not to
+whispered vows and moonlight serenades between gallant chiefs and damsels
+of noble birth; nor to sentimental tales of love in a cottage; but it is
+rather devoted to the records of a friendship, whose incidents and
+eccentricities have engaged the attention of many eminent <i>literati</i>
+and tourists.&nbsp; Most persons who take any interest in the scenery or
+topography of North Wales, have either seen or read of that singular <!--
+page 2--><a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>residence,
+Plas Newydd, at Llangollen, for so many years the home of Lady Eleanor
+Butler and Miss Ponsonby.</p>
+<p>About the year 1778, these ladies, impelled by a desire to lead a
+secluded life of celibacy, forsook the gay and fashionable circles in which
+they had moved; and in their search for a fitting spot, on which to pass
+their days together in devoted friendship to each other, and in acts of
+benevolence and charity to their neighbours, they visited Llangollen.&nbsp;
+Rambling along this charming locality one balmy evening, when the tranquil
+beauty of the lovely valley was lighted up by the mild splendour of the
+moon, their eyes rested upon a cottage that stood on a gentle eminence near
+the village; and there they resolved to fix their abode.&nbsp; They
+accordingly purchased the estate; built a new cottage on the site of the
+old one, in a remarkably unique and somewhat grotesque style of
+architecture; and laid out gardens, pleasure grounds, and rural walks with
+grottoes, temples, conservatories, rustic bridges, and other accessories
+for enjoying, in the undisturbed quiet of their own domain, the natural
+charms of their picturesque retreat.&nbsp; Their mode of life being
+singular, and their costume still more so (for they assumed a style of
+head-dress resembling that of men, and always wore long cloth coats, rather
+like ladies&rsquo; riding habits), they soon attracted the attention of the
+many travellers who passed through North Wales; and as they kept up an
+extensive and active correspondence with several eminent authors <!-- page
+3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>and persons of
+distinction, the &ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen,&rdquo; for so they were
+always designated, made a much greater sensation in their seclusion, than
+many less remarkable persons who are constantly living in the business and
+bustle of society.&nbsp; Hence many literary pilgrimages were made to the
+recluses of Plas Newydd; and the &ldquo;even tenor&rdquo; of their way was
+often diversified by the calls of the illustrious, the learned, and the
+curious; from whom they were as willing to learn what was passing in
+politics, literature, and general gossip, as were their visitors desirous
+of having a peep within the charmed circle of this mountain solitude.&nbsp;
+Their motive for adopting this romantic seclusion is thus stated in
+&ldquo;Steward&rsquo;s Collections and Recollections:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby were young ladies of beauty
+and rank, who loved each other with so true an affection, that they could
+never bear the afflicting idea of a separation, which the marriage of
+either might occasion.&nbsp; They therefore resolved on lives of celibacy,
+and refusing many handsome offers, and remaining deaf to the persuasions of
+their friends, they retired to the beautiful Yale of Llangollen, to enjoy
+the happiness of each other&rsquo;s company, that as their friendship began
+in infancy, it might be perpetuated through life.&nbsp; The traveller, in
+passing by the celebrated abode of these interesting women, must
+contemplate with a sigh that excessive friendship which could tear from the
+bosom of society two of its brightest ornaments, to bury them in the depths
+of seclusion:&mdash;</p>
+<p><!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+4</span>&lsquo;Full many a gem, of purest ray serene,<br />
+&nbsp; The dark unfathom&rsquo;d caves of ocean bear;<br />
+Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,<br />
+&nbsp; And waste its sweetness on the desert air.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is on this subject Miss Seward employs her poetical talents,
+in her well-known poem of &lsquo;Llangollen Vale.&rsquo;&mdash;The
+following is an account of these celebrated ladies, extracted from a
+periodical work published in the year 1796.&nbsp; &lsquo;Miss Butler and
+Miss Ponsonby are now retired from the society of men into the wilds (!) of
+Llangollen in Wales, where they have resided seventeen years.&nbsp; Miss
+Butler is of the Ormond family, and had five offers of marriage, all of
+which she rejected.&nbsp; As Miss Ponsonby, her particular friend and
+companion, was supposed to have been the bar to her matrimonial union, it
+was thought proper to separate them, and Miss Butler was confined.&nbsp;
+The two ladies, however, found means to elope together, but being soon
+overtaken, were brought back to their respective relations.&nbsp; Many
+attempts were again made to draw Miss Butler into marriage, though in vain;
+not many weeks after, the ladies eloped again, each having a small sum with
+her.&nbsp; The place of their retreat was confided to a female servant of
+the house.&nbsp; Here they lived many years, unknown to any of the
+neighbouring villagers, otherwise than by the appellation of the
+&lsquo;Ladies of the Vale.&rsquo;&nbsp; No persuasions could ever get them
+from this retreat.&nbsp; A lady from Ireland told the collector of these
+articles the following anecdote relative to these female friends:&mdash;An
+<!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>Irish
+nobleman (Lord Fingal) happening to be travelling in the neighbourhood of
+Llangollen Vale, and having heard much of Lady E. Butler and Miss Ponsonby,
+felt a desire to see and converse with them.&nbsp; But how he could obtain
+this pleasure (as the ladies seldom or never saw company, and were fond of
+a recluse life) was the question.&nbsp; At length he bethought himself of a
+method the most likely to answer the purpose, without the appearance of
+forwardness or indelicacy.&nbsp; He sent his servant with the following
+verbal message:&mdash;&lsquo;Lord Fingal, travelling in this neighbourhood,
+sends his respectful compliments to Miss Butler and Miss Ponsonby, and
+informs them that he sets out to-morrow morning for Ireland, and would be
+happy to be the bearer of any commands of theirs to that
+country.&rsquo;&nbsp; This message had the effect which his lordship
+desired.&nbsp; He received, in return, a kind and friendly invitation to
+take tea with the ladies, which he, of course, accepted with much
+pleasure.&mdash;Lord Fingal (the collector&rsquo;s informant added) was
+peculiarly charmed with the amiable behaviour of these interesting
+enthusiasts of friendship.&nbsp; He found not in them the gravity,
+formality, and demureness of virgin recluses, but the ease of liveliness,
+and animated conversation of happy, cultivated, and polished
+minds.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On June 2, 1829, death severed the faithful friendship which had existed
+for so many years between the eccentric residents at Plas Newydd, by
+removing from this earthly scene Lady Eleanor <!-- page 6--><a
+name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>Butler, who had attained
+the advanced age of 90; and in December 9, 1831, Miss Ponsonby, who was
+seldom seen (except by her domestics) after the decease of her attached
+companion, was called to her &ldquo;long home.&rdquo;&nbsp; They are both
+buried in the church-yard of Llangollen, where a stone monument is erected
+to their memory.&nbsp; On this record of mortality are inserted the
+following memorials:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">Sacred to the Memory of<br />
+<i>The Right Honourable</i><br />
+LADY ELEANOR CHARLOTTE BUTLER,<br />
+Late of Pl&acirc;s Newydd in this Parish.<br />
+<i>Deceased</i> 2<i>nd June</i>, 1829,<br />
+Aged 90 Years.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Daughter of the Sixteenth</i>, <i>Sister
+of the Seventeenth</i><br />
+<i>EARLS OF ORMONDE AND OSSORY</i>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Aunt to the late, and to the present<br />
+MARQUESS OF ORMONDE.</p>
+<p><i>Endeared to her friends by an almost unequalled excellence of
+heart</i>, <i>and by manners worthy of her illustrious birth</i>, <i>the
+admiration and delight of a very numerous acquaintance from a brilliant
+vivacity of mind undiminished to the latest period of a prolonged
+existence</i>.&nbsp; <i>Her amiable condescension &amp; benevolence secured
+the grateful attachment of those by whom they had been so long and so
+extensively experienced</i>.&nbsp; <i>Her various perfections crowned by
+the most pious and cheerful submission to the Divine Will</i>, <i>can only
+be appreciated</i>, <i>where it is humbly believed</i>, <i>they are</i> now
+<i>enjoying their Eternal Reward</i>, <i>and by her of whom for more than
+fifty years</i>, <i>they constituted that happiness</i>, <i>which through
+our Blessed Redeemer</i>, <i>she trusts will be renewed</i> when THIS TOMB
+<i>shall have closed over its latest tenant</i>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;Sorrow not as others who have no
+hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">1 <i>Thess.</i> <i>Chap.</i> 4. <i>v.</i>
+13.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>SARAH PONSONBY<br />
+departed this Life<br />
+on the 9th December, 1831, Aged 76.</p>
+<p><i>She did not long survive her beloved Companion LADY ELEANOR
+BUTLER</i>, <i>with whom she had lived in this valley for more than half a
+century of uninterrupted friendship</i>.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>But they shall no
+more return to their House</i>, <i>neither shall their place know them any
+more</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>Job</i>, <i>Chap.</i> 7. <i>v.</i> 10.</p>
+<p><i>Reader pause for a moment and reflect not on the uncertainty of human
+life but upon the certainty of its termination</i>, <i>and take comfort
+from the assurance that</i> &ldquo;<i>As it is appointed unto men once to
+die</i>, <i>but after this the judgment</i>: <i>so Christ was once offered
+to bear the sins of many</i>; <i>and unto them that look for Him</i>,
+<i>shall He appear the second time without sin unto
+salvation</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>Heb.</i> <i>Chap.</i> 9. <i>v.</i> 27,
+28.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On the same tombstone is also the following inscription, to the memory
+of a faithful servant, who accompanied &ldquo;the Ladies&rdquo; from
+Ireland, the country of their nativity.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">In Memory of<br />
+MRS. MARY CARRYL,<br />
+<i>Deceased 22 November</i>, 1809.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">This Monument is erected by Eleanor Butler
+and Sarah<br />
+Ponsonby of Plas Newydd in this Parish.</p>
+<p><i>Released from Earth and all its transient woes</i>,<br />
+<i>She whose remains beneath this Stone repose</i>,<br />
+<i>Steadfast in faith resigned her parting breath</i>,<br />
+<i>Looked up with Christian joy and smiled in death</i>.<br />
+<i>Patient</i>, <i>Industrious</i>, <i>Faithful</i>, <i>Generous</i>,
+<i>Kind</i>,<br />
+<i>Her Conduct left the proudest far behind</i>;<i><br />
+Her Virtues dignified her humble birth</i>,<br />
+<i>And raised her mind above this sordid earth</i>.<br />
+<i>Attachment</i> (<i>Sacred bond of grateful breasts</i>)<i><br />
+Extinguished but with life</i>, <i>this Tomb attests</i>,<br />
+<i>Reared by Two Friends who will her loss bemoan</i>,<br />
+<i>Till with her ashes</i>&mdash;<i>Here shall rest their own</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 8--><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>In
+1832, the home of &ldquo;the Ladies of Llangollen&rdquo; was sold by
+auction, by the late renowned &ldquo;knight of the hammer,&rdquo; Mr.
+George Robins, who put forth the following advertisement, in his
+characteristic style of decorative description.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;IN NORTH WALES.<br />
+* * * * *<br />
+Particulars and Conditions of Sale<br />
+<span class="smcap">of the</span><br />
+LADY ELEANOR BUTLER AND MISS<br />
+PONSONBY&rsquo;S<br />
+LITTLE PARADISE<br />
+AT LLANGOLLEN,<br />
+Of which a more enlarged description will appear<br />
+on the other side.<br />
+IT IS ALL FREEHOLD,<br />
+And it need hardly be remarked that it is in the<br />
+most favoured Spot in<br />
+NORTH WALES;<br />
+Which will be Sold by Auction<br />
+<span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+* * * * *<br />
+<span class="smcap">Mr.</span> GEORGE ROBINS,<br />
+* * * * *<br />
+<span class="smcap">at the auction mart</span>, <span
+class="smcap">london</span>,<br />
+On THURSDAY, <span class="smcap">June</span> 28, 1832, at Twelve
+o&rsquo;Clock,<br />
+<span class="smcap">in one lot</span>,<br />
+BY DIRECTION OF THE EXECUTORS.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 9--><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>May
+be viewed only with Tickets, and Particulars had Twenty-one Days prior to
+the Sale at the Lion Hotel, Shrewsbury; the Inns at Llangollen, and Corwen;
+the Great Hotel, Bangor; Waterloo, Liverpool; York House, Bath; and at Mr.
+GEORGE ROBINS&rsquo;s Offices, London.</p>
+<p>N.B.&nbsp; The appropriate Furniture, Service of Plate, Elegancies of
+the Chateau, extensive Library of Books, and all the valuable Appendages,
+will be submitted to Public Competition the latter End of the Month of
+July, by Direction of the Executors.</p>
+<h3>PARTICULARS, &amp;c.</h3>
+<p>Mr. ROBINS is not a little proud that it hath been his good fortune to
+be selected by the Executors of the Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby
+to direct the sale of their far-famed Domicile.&nbsp; He feels that an
+apology will be due to all those who are familiar with its beauties and
+peculiarities, for the very imperfect recital which follows, while those
+who are yet to be gratified with the sight of it, may imagine he has drawn
+some little upon &ldquo;Fancy&rsquo;s sketch.&rdquo;&nbsp; There is nothing
+of pretension in its outward form, it indicates but moderately the comfort
+that presides within, inasmuch as will be found congregated all the
+<i>agremens</i> pertaining to more consequential habitations.&nbsp;
+Considerable tact is conspicuous everywhere; but none more unequivocally
+displayed than in the lightsome little Dining Room, contrasted with the
+gloomy, yet superior grace of the Library, <!-- page 10--><a
+name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>into which it
+opens.&nbsp; This room is fitted up in the Gothic style, the Windows are of
+ancient painted glass &ldquo;<i>shedding their dim religious
+light</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<h4>THE SALOON OF THE MINERVAS</h4>
+<p>Is the repository of the choice Library.&nbsp; The auxiliary Offices are
+very commensurate, the grounds are disposed in such good order as is the
+natural consequence of pure taste, the Kitchen Garden is neatness itself,
+and the Fruit trees are of the rarest and finest sort, and luxuriant in
+their produce.&nbsp; Many and shaded</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">gravel walks encircle
+this elysium</span>,</p>
+<p>Which is adorned with curious and rare Shrubs and Flowers.&nbsp; It is
+nothing in extent but</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">EVERYTHING IN GRACE AND BEAUTY,</p>
+<p>United with a great variety of foliage.&nbsp; Upon the Freehold is a
+considerable quantity of valuable Timber which overhangs</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">a deep and hollow
+glen</span>;</p>
+<p>In its entangled bottom, a frothing brook leaps and clamours o&rsquo;er
+the rough stones in its channel towards</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">THE VALE OF LLANGOLLEN.</p>
+<p>To speak of the latter would be quite superfluous, few, if any, are
+unacquainted with the wildness and surpassing beauty of the most admired
+spot in North Wales.&nbsp; Its contiguity to the little romantic village,
+giving the opportunity either to indulge in <!-- page 11--><a
+name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>the gaiety of this
+place, or recreate in retirement, (as shall seem best suited to varied
+inclination), there are fortunately both auxiliaries to this scene (it had
+almost been said of enchantment).&nbsp; The verdant Lawns, dotted with rare
+plants, the scenic beauties, and the woodland scenery combined, plead in
+extenuation of this lofty tone.&nbsp; The whole is encompassed by rich
+meadows, wearing a park-like appearance; held with the freehold, which is
+limited to less than Five Acres.&nbsp; A truly beautiful Portico of carved
+Oak leads to this</p>
+<h4>DOMICILE OF COMFORT.</h4>
+<p>The whole lower Story of which, on the outside, is covered with the
+richest carved Oak, and within which will be found a Dining Room 15 feet by
+15, with handsome Chimney Piece, and carved Oak Doors and Wainscoting.</p>
+<p>A Library, 13 feet by 14 feet 6 inches, with Three Gothic Windows of
+carved Oak and splendid stained Glass, exhibiting old Armorial Bearings,
+and forming a Bow Window, handsome Chimney Piece of yellow and white
+marble, and Recesses fitted up with Gothic Book Cases, and the Doors and
+Architrave of old carved Oak.</p>
+<p>An admirably constructed Kitchen, carved Oak Doors and Window Facia, a
+very handsome carved Oak Screen and Seat, Grate Ovens, Hearths, Stew Holes,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>A Housekeeper&rsquo;s Room, beautifully fitted up with carved Oak
+Presses, Oak Doors and Window Frames.</p>
+<p><!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>A
+large Larder with fixed Tables, Hooks, &amp;c. together with an ample
+Cellar, both so situated as to be perfectly cool in the hottest
+weather.</p>
+<p>Wash-house, Scullery, Coal-house, &amp;c., a Staircase of carved Oak,
+Walls and Ceilings of the same beautifully ornamented Gothic
+Architecture.&nbsp; This is one of the most beautiful things that can be
+conceived.</p>
+<h4>FIRST FLOOR.</h4>
+<p>An excellent Bed Room, fixed Book Shelves and carved Oak Door, Chimney
+Piece and Window Facia, an excellent best Bed Room, Oak Doors, fancy
+Cornice, and cross Ceiling Beams of carved Oak, a very handsome Chimney
+Piece of the same.</p>
+<p>A light Dressing Room and Closet, Gothic carved Oak Doors, &amp;c.
+fitted up with Book Shelves.&nbsp; Over the Staircase a commodious Pantry,
+Shelves and Presses for China and Plate, Oak Doors of carved open
+work.&nbsp; The Sashes of the Windows are all Metal.</p>
+<h4>ATTIC STORY.</h4>
+<p>Two good Servants&rsquo; Rooms, and a Store Room.&nbsp; The Premises
+consist of</p>
+<h4>FOUR GARDENS</h4>
+<p>In the best order, and well stocked with all kinds of Fruit Trees,
+Vegetables, and Flowers.</p>
+<h4>FIVE PASTURE FIELDS</h4>
+<p>Of the richest Land, well timbered, Rustic Bridges, Summer Houses of
+richly carved Oak, and Rustic <!-- page 13--><a name="page13"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 13</span>Seats, Cow and Calf-house, Garden-house, Yard,
+Store-house, &amp;c.&nbsp; An excellent Engine Pump.</p>
+<p>This celebrated Place was the Property, and for more than half a Century
+the Residence of the late <span class="smcap">Lady</span> ELEANOR BUTLER
+<span class="smcap">and Miss</span> PONSONBY.&nbsp; It is situated upon a
+Piece of rich Table Land, just above the Port and Market-town of
+Llangollen, and commands a View of the Valley of the Dee, both up and down,
+is close to Valle Crucis, Dinas Br&acirc;n, and many of the most beautiful
+Scenes in Wales.&nbsp; The Taxes are very light.</p>
+<h4>CONTENTS OF THE FREEHOLD PART OF THE ESTATE.</h4>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>A.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>R.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>P.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>House, Offices, and Shrubbery</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>3</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>14</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Flower Garden</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>27</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Garden House, Court and Poultry ditto</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>12</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Part of Lawn</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>3</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>8</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Nursery</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>20</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Field</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>12</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Total</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>4</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>0</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>13</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h4>THE LANDS CONTIGUOUS ARE AS FOLLOWS:</h4>
+<p>1<span class="smcap">a.</span> 1<span class="smcap">r.</span> 20<span
+class="smcap">p.</span> part of Lawn; and 3<span class="smcap">r.</span>
+26<span class="smcap">p.</span> of Gardens and Shrubbery, held from year to
+year, from Ousley Gore, Esq., at a rent of &pound;</p>
+<p>3<span class="smcap">r.</span> 13<span class="smcap">p.</span> part of
+Lawn and Flower Garden, held in same manner from Hon. F. West, at a rent of
+&pound;</p>
+<p>4<span class="smcap">a.</span> 1<span class="smcap">r.</span> 30<span
+class="smcap">p.</span> being two Fields, the Glen, and a <!-- page 14--><a
+name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>Kitchen Garden, from
+Hon. Mr. Mostyn, yearly at a rent of &pound;</p>
+<p>1<span class="smcap">a.</span> 2<span class="smcap">r.</span> 16<span
+class="smcap">p.</span> a Field from J. Dicken, Esq. at a yearly rent of
+&pound;</p>
+<p>TOTAL QUANTITY, 13 ACRES 38 PERCHES.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>The exaggerated style of this ornate announcement will, doubtless,
+excite a smile, and we suspect that some of our readers, who know the
+locality, will laugh outright at the very fanciful stretch of imagination,
+which led the worthy auctioneer to speak of the &ldquo;<i>Port</i> of
+Llangollen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The purchasers of the property were Miss Lolly and Miss Andrew, the
+present owners and occupiers of Plas Newydd, between whom and the late
+&ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen,&rdquo; an intimate friendship existed.</p>
+<p>In August 1832, Mr. Robins offered by public auction the furniture and
+fittings of this unique villa; the following is a copy of the
+advertisement, and the catalogue of the sale extended over seventy quarto
+pages.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;LLANGOLLEN, NORTH WALES.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Mr.</span> GEORGE ROBINS</p>
+<p>Has the pleasure most respectfully to announce to the Nobility, Lovers
+of the Fine Arts, and those who delight in objects of interest, and indeed
+to the Public generally, that having sold &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Plas
+Newydd</span>,&rdquo; he is instructed by the Executors of</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 15</span>THE LADY ELEANOR BUTLER<br />
+<span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+MISS PONSONBY,</p>
+<p>To offer for <span class="smcap">Unreserved Competition</span>, at the
+Domicile so long hallowed as the abode of friendship,</p>
+<p>On MONDAY, the 13th day of AUGUST, 1832,<br />
+And many succeeding Days, at Eleven for Twelve<br />
+o&rsquo;clock precisely, on each day,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the following</span><br
+/>
+INTERESTING AND VALUABLE PROPERTY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">appertaining to the residence</span>,</p>
+<p>And which for extent, variety and novelty, forms a most brilliant
+Assemblage, certainly unexampled in the Annals of Auctions; it having been
+congregated by those highly talented Ladies, the fair &ldquo;<span
+class="smcap">Mistresses of Plas Newydd</span>,&rdquo; during a series of
+50 years, aided by their joint taste, and at considerable expense,
+including the appropriate</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">FURNITURE OF THE CHATEAU,</p>
+<p>Comprising a Drawing Room suite in curtains, glasses, centre, card, and
+occasional tables; ottomans, sofas, couches, chairs of various
+descriptions, yet in unison, whatnots, cheffioneers; the dining room is
+very complete; there are excellent dining tables, chairs, sideboard,
+writing tables and library chairs.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">A RANGE OF BOOKCASES &amp; MANY OBJECTS,<br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">elaborately carved in oak</span>;<br />
+<!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>A
+STRONG BOX OF GREAT ANTIQUITY, AND<br />
+CARVED,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">It was once the Property of his late Royal
+Highness</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">THE DUKE OF YORK.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">The Furniture of the Bed Chambers and Offices
+is of a corresponding character;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">EXCELLENT TABLE AND BED LINEN,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">The equipments of the Garden are of a very
+superior description;<br />
+<span class="smcap">a variety of seats</span>, <span class="smcap">curious
+etruscan flower vases</span>, <span class="smcap">garden implements</span>,
+<span class="smcap">etc.</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">A GREEN HOUSE OF GREAT BEAUTY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">ornamented with painted and stained glass</span>;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">An extensive Collection of Plants, Dairy and
+Brewing Utensils;<br />
+SERVICES OF CHINA AND GLASS,<br />
+In complete sets, for the Table, the Dejeun&eacute;, the Dessert, &amp;c.
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">SIDEBOARD OF PLATE,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Comprising many rare chased and antique
+items; dishes and covers, salvers, waiters, tea and coffee equipages,
+candlesticks, liquor and cruet frames, spoons and forks;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">and a variety of useful
+articles for the sideboard and table</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">JEWELLERY AND ELEGANCIES,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Presenting many pleasing and valuable
+Ornaments <!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+17</span>for the person, in necklaces, car-rings, crosses and brooches,
+most of them inclosing the hair of the donors, particularly one of great
+interest, possessing</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">A LOCK OF &ldquo;MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS&rdquo;
+HAIR.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">interesting
+miscellanies</span>, <span class="smcap">curiosities and relics</span>,
+<span class="smcap">viz.</span></p>
+<p>Very fine missals, beautifully illuminated; autographs of numerous
+renowned personages, particularly a letter by &ldquo;Charles the
+First&rdquo; to Lady Fisher, from Whitehall, during his confinement;
+presentation snuff boxes, many of value, and most with lines of dedication;
+relics of great antiquity, and many of modern date, presented by
+travellers, forming altogether a Museum of great interest and
+amusement.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">several remarkably fine
+cameos and intaglios</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">A MODEL OF THE WARWICK VASE, IN SILVER,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Richly Chased, most exquisite in Workmanship
+and perfectly Unique.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Many curious models, bronze busts, and in
+Sevres bisquit; <span class="smcap">Musical and other elegant
+Clocks</span>, in ormolu; China essence, and flower vases; a large
+&AElig;olian harp, telescopes, microscopes, &amp;c.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">AN EXTENSIVE AND VALUABLE LIBRARY OF
+BOOKS,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Comprising many Thousand Volumes, elegantly
+bound in folio, quarto, and octavo, (large and small.)</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 18</span>A SERIES OF ETCHINGS.<br />
+THE POWER AND PROGRESS OF GENIUS,<br />
+<span class="smcap">executed by</span><br />
+THE PRINCESS ELIZABETH,<br />
+<span class="smcap">and presented by her</span><br />
+TO THE PRINCESS AMELIA;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">an autograph letter
+from</span><br />
+THE PRESENT KING OF FRANCE,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Accompanying the Memoirs du Duc de
+Montressor, in scarlet and morocco, a present from His Majesty to Lady
+Butler and Miss Ponsonby; with many other contributions and valuable
+presents from persons of the highest rank and literary acquirements to
+these highly gifted Ladies.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">PICTURES, VALUABLE DRAWINGS, AND PRINTS,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">In frames and in portfolios, comprising a
+collection the most choice and valuable, many by the first Artists of the
+day, Portraits of Kings, exalted and renowned Characters, and Views of the
+most celebrated Scenery of various Countries.&nbsp; A small quantity of</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">RARE WINES AND LIQUEURS;</p>
+<p>Viz., Old Port, Sherry, Madeira, Lisbon, Bucellas, Vidonia, Maraschino,
+Noyeau, Eau de la Reine, and other estimable Liqueurs.</p>
+<p>*** The entire Sale will be on View at the Chateau from the 4th to the
+13th of August.</p>
+<p>The CATALOGUES will be ready Three Weeks <!-- page 19--><a
+name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>prior to the Sale; and
+may be had at 3s. each, at the Villa; Phillips&rsquo;s Hotel, and the
+King&rsquo;s Head, Llangollen; the Lion, Shrewsbury; the Owen Glendower,
+Corwen; the Great Hotel, at Bangor; the Waterloo Hotel, Liverpool; the Hen
+and Chickens, Birmingham; York Hotel, Bath; of Mr. Guernon,
+Molesworth-street, Dublin, and at Mr. <span class="smcap">George
+Robins&rsquo;</span> Offices, Covent Garden.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>The present occupiers were also purchasers of many of the rare
+&ldquo;curiosities and relics.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We shall now proceed to cite the descriptions which have been put upon
+record by several distinguished and popular authors, relative to the
+&ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It appears from Volume VI. of the published Letters of the late Miss
+Anna Seward, that a friendly intimacy was cultivated between that clever
+<i>literateur</i> and the recluses of Plas Newydd; and it would seem from
+her correspondence, that their tastes were very comprehensive and
+multifarious; poetry and politics, music and mystery, tragedy and tattle,
+being alike acceptable.&nbsp; In a letter addressed to Lady Eleanor Butler
+and Miss Ponsonby, under date Lichfield, October 4, 1802, Miss Seward
+exclaims:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! dearest ladies, it is under the pressure of a severe cold,
+fierce cough, and inflamed lungs, that I address you.&nbsp; A duty so
+delightful had, but for this incapacitating malady, been earlier paid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have to thank dear Miss Ponsonby for a manuscript <!-- page
+20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>of many verses,
+which she had the goodness to make for me in hours so engrossed, amid
+engagements so indispensable.&nbsp; I had the honour to receive it as I was
+stepping into the chaise which was to convey Mrs. Smith and myself far from
+that Edenic region where we had recently passed so many happy hours; from
+those bowers in Llangollen Vale, whence the purest pleasures have so often
+flowed to my heart and mind, as from a full and overflowing
+fountain.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From Lichfield, Nov. 9, 1802, Miss Seward discourses to Miss Ponsonby on
+modern tragedy, and concludes with the following bit of
+&ldquo;blue-stocking gossip:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Though I know her not, I am pleased that Mrs. Spencer has had the
+good fortune to interest and delight you; for I am always desirous that men
+of genius should not do what they are so prone to do, marry every-day
+women.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naughty brook, for having behaved outrageously again!&nbsp; That
+little stream of the mountain is a true spoiled child, whom we love the
+better for its faults, and for all the trouble and alarm they
+occasion.&nbsp; You see I presume to involve myself, as if, in some sort,
+the interesting little virago belonged to me.&nbsp; Certainly it is my
+peculiar pet amongst your scenic children, dear to my taste, as they are
+beautiful; to my heart as being yours.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In a letter from Lichfield, June 13, 1805, Miss Seward
+begins:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;With a trembling hand, my beloved Miss Ponsonby, <!-- page
+21--><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>do I take up
+the pen to thank you for a thrice kind letter.&nbsp; It had not remained
+several weeks unacknowledged, but for this terrible malady of the head,
+which has oppressed me with so much severity during the interim.&nbsp; I
+think it must soon lay me low.&nbsp; Not at my time of life does the
+constitution, pushed from its equipoise by long enduring disease, regain it
+amid the struggles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Immediately on receiving your last, I sent for Madoc; by far the
+most captivating work of its genuinely inspired author.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the same letter the following passage occurs:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Our young friend Cary has published his translation of
+Dante&rsquo;s Inferno.&nbsp; It is thought the best which has appeared, and
+the sale goes on well.&nbsp; He presents a copy to yourself and Lady
+Eleanor, and I trust you will receive it soon.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>After some literary disquisitions on the Inferno, the Lay of the Last
+Minstrel, and Madoc; and an allusion to King George&rsquo;s visit to
+Lichfield, the letter thus concludes:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Present me devoutly to your beloved Lady Eleanor.&nbsp; Most
+interesting is your description of that visit, mutually paid to that
+desolate and silent Dinbren.&nbsp; How worthy of yourselves that hour of
+consecration, with all its tributary sighs!&nbsp; Too happy were the days
+and weeks which I passed beneath its roof, and in its beautiful and sublime
+environs, to permit such revisitation from me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would break my heart amid its present consciousness, <!-- page
+22--><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>spread over
+with a dark and impervious pall, which can never be drawn away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear, and amiable Miss Ponsonby, farewell.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From Lichfield, October 31st, 1805, we have another letter to Miss
+Ponsonby, with the following tremendous opening:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing, my dear Madam, is so common as hypocrisy and treachery
+where property is concerned; but a greater excess of them never poured
+their dark currents from the vulgar heart, than in those circumstances
+which your last letter narrates.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thus ever be extortionate villany baffled&mdash;and long
+unclouded be the peace which succeeds to that attempted injury.&nbsp; I
+cannot express how much I am obliged that you took the kind trouble of
+retracing the road of peril, which had so nearly engulfed a scene, whose
+beauties rise perpetually in my sleeping and waking dreams.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>What ever could have happened at Plas Newydd to excite so grand a burst
+of tragic passion: here <i>is</i> matter for curious speculation!&nbsp;
+Then Miss Seward runs into a not very wise dissertation on politics; then
+reverts to literary subjects, of which Horace Walpole&rsquo;s genius is the
+chief topic; bemoans her own dizziness of the head; has another touch at
+Mr. Pitt; and finally ejaculates &ldquo;Adieu, dearest Madam!&nbsp; Your
+beloved Lady Eleanor will accept my affectionate devoirs!&rdquo;&nbsp; Why
+did not Miss Seward go to Llangollen, to end her days in peace?</p>
+<p><!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>In
+the lively Memoirs of that celebrated Comedian, the late Mr. Charles
+Matthews, we have the following humourous letters, descriptive of the
+&ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;Oswestry, Sept. 4th. 1820.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The dear inseparable inimitables, Lady Butler and Miss Ponsonby,
+were in the boxes here on Friday.&nbsp; They came twelve miles from
+Llangollen, and returned, as they never sleep from home.&nbsp; Oh, such
+curiosities!&nbsp; I was nearly convulsed.&nbsp; I could scarcely get on
+for the first ten minutes after my eye caught them.&nbsp; Though I had
+never seen them, I instantaneously knew them.&nbsp; As they are seated,
+there is not one point to distinguish them from men: the dressing and
+powdering of the hair; their well-starched neckcloths; the upper part of
+their habits, which they always wear, even at a dinner-party, made
+precisely like men&rsquo;s coats; and regular black beaver men&rsquo;s
+hats.&nbsp; They looked exactly like two respectable superannuated old
+clergymen; one the picture of Boruwlaski.&nbsp; I was highly flattered, as
+they never were in the theatre before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The packets now sail at seven in the morning; all <i>day</i>-work
+instead of night, which is delightful; and the weather is heavenly.&nbsp;
+People are here extremely hospitable; but, of all days in the year, Mr.
+Ormsby Gore went to Carnarvon assizes (being high sheriff) the day before I
+arrived.&nbsp; He only returned yesterday; and almost forced me away from
+the inn.&nbsp; I, however, could not conveniently <!-- page 24--><a
+name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>go there, but have been
+to call this morning.&nbsp; Such a place!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the by, have you any magnolias in the grounds? if not, get me
+one or two.&nbsp; I saw a Portugal laurel, only four years old, full half
+the size of that great beauty at Lord Mansfield&rsquo;s; pray have one or
+two of them placed by themselves on our new lawn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have to-day received an invitation to call, if I have time as I
+pass, at Llangollen, to receive in due form, from the dear old gentlemen
+called Lady Butler and Miss Ponsonby, their thanks for the entertainment I
+afforded them at the theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;Porkington, Oct. 24th.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I have seen them, heard them, touched them.&nbsp; The pets,
+&ldquo;<i>the ladies</i>,&rdquo; as they are called, dined here
+yesterday&mdash;Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby, the curiosities of
+Llangollen mentioned by Miss Seward in her letters, about the year
+1760.&nbsp; I mentioned to you in a former letter the effect they produced
+upon me in public, but never shall I forget the first burst yesterday upon
+entering the drawing-room: to find the dear antediluvian darlings, attired
+for dinner in the same manified dress, with the Croix de St. Louis, and
+other orders, and myriads of large brooches, with stones large enough for
+snuff-boxes, stuck in their starched neckcloths!&nbsp; I have not room to
+describe their most fascinating persons.&nbsp; I have an invitation from
+them, which I much fear I cannot accept.&nbsp; They <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>returned home last
+night, fourteen miles, after twelve o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; They have not
+slept one night from home for above forty years.&nbsp; I longed to put Lady
+Eleanor under a bell-glass, and bring her to Highgate for you to look
+at.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In August 1825, Sir Walter Scott visited Llangollen, and the account of
+his interview with the famed &ldquo;ladies of the vale,&rdquo; is given
+with much humour and smartness by Mr. Lockhart, in his interesting Memoirs
+of the immortal &ldquo;Author of Waverley.&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Our progress through North Wales produced nothing worth
+recording, except perhaps the feeling of delight which everything in the
+aspect of the common people, their dress, their houses, their gardens, and
+their husbandry, could not fail to call up in persons who had just been
+seeing Ireland for the first time; and a short visit (which was, indeed,
+the only one he made) to the far-famed &ldquo;ladies&rdquo; of
+Llangollen.&nbsp; They had received some hint that Sir Walter meant to pass
+their way; and on stopping at the inn, he received an invitation so
+pressing, to add one more to the long list of the illustrious visitors of
+their retreat, that it was impossible for him not to comply.&nbsp; We had
+read histories and descriptions enough of these romantic spinsters, and
+were prepared to be well amused; but the reality surpassed all
+expectation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An extract from a gossiping letter of the following week will
+perhaps be sufficient for Llangollen.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 26</span>&ldquo;&lsquo;Elleray, August 24.</p>
+<p>* * * &ldquo;&lsquo;We slept on Wednesday evening at Capel Curig, which
+Sir W. supposes to mean the Chapel of the Crags; a pretty little inn in a
+most picturesque situation certainly, and as to the matter of toasted
+cheese, quite exquisite.&nbsp; Next day we advanced through, I verily
+believe, the most perfect gem of a country eye ever saw, having almost all
+the wildness of Highland backgrounds, and all the loveliness of rich
+English landscape nearer us, and streams like the purest and most babbling
+of our own.&nbsp; At Llangollen your papa was waylaid by the celebrated
+&lsquo;Ladies&rsquo;&mdash;viz. Lady Eleanor Butler and the Honourable Miss
+Ponsonby, who having been one or both crossed in love, forswore all dreams
+of matrimony in the heyday of youth, beauty, and fashion, and selected this
+charming spot for the repose of their now time-honoured virginity.&nbsp; It
+was many a day, however, before they could get implicit credit for being
+the innocent friends they really were, among the people of the
+neighbourhood; for their elopement from Ireland had been performed under
+suspicious circumstances; and as Lady Eleanor arrived here in her natural
+aspect of a pretty girl, while Miss Ponsonby had condescended to accompany
+her in the garb of a smart footman in buckskin breeches, years and years
+elapsed ere full justice was done to the character of their romance. <a
+name="citation26"></a><a href="#footnote26" class="citation">[26]</a>&nbsp;
+<!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>We
+proceeded up the hill, and found everything about them and their habitation
+odd and extravagant beyond report.&nbsp; Imagine two women, one apparently
+seventy, the other sixty-five, dressed in heavy blue riding habits,
+enormous shoes, and men&rsquo;s hats, with their petticoats so tucked up,
+that at the first glance of them, fussing and tottering about their porch
+in the agony of expectation, we took them for a couple of hazy or crazy old
+sailors.&nbsp; On nearer inspection they both wear a world of brooches,
+rings, &amp;c., and Lady Eleanor positively <i>orders</i>&mdash;several
+stars and crosses, and a red ribbon, exactly like a K.C.B.&nbsp; To crown
+all, they have crop heads, shaggy, rough, bushy, and as white as snow, the
+one with age alone, the other assisted by a sprinkling of powder.&nbsp; The
+elder lady is almost blind, and every way much decayed; the other, the
+ci-devant groom, in good preservation.&nbsp; But who could paint the
+prints, the dogs, the cats, the miniatures, the cram of cabinets, clocks,
+glass-cases, books, bijouterie, dragon-china, nodding mandarins, and
+whirligigs of every shape and hue&mdash;the whole house outside and in (for
+we must see everything to the dressing-closets), <i>covered</i> with carved
+oak, very rich and fine some of it&mdash;and the illustrated copies of Sir
+W.&rsquo;s poems, and the joking simpering compliments about Waverley, and
+the anxiety to know who McIvor really was, and the absolute devouring of
+the poor Unknown, who had to carry off, besides all the rest, one small bit
+of literal <i>butter</i> dug up in a Milesian stone jar lately from the
+<!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+28</span>bottom of some Irish bog.&nbsp; Great romance (<i>i.e.</i> absurd
+innocence of character) one must have looked for; but it was confounding to
+find this mixed up with such eager curiosity, and enormous knowledge of the
+tattle and scandal of the world they had so long left.&nbsp; Their tables
+were piled with newspapers from every corner of the kingdom, and they
+seemed to have the deaths and marriages of the antipodes at their
+fingers&rsquo; ends.&nbsp; Their albums and autographs, from Louis XVIII.
+and George IV., down to magazine poets and quack-doctors, are a
+museum.&nbsp; I shall never see the spirit of blue-stockingism again in
+such perfect incarnation.&nbsp; Peveril won&rsquo;t get over their final
+kissing match for a week.&nbsp; Yet it is too bad to laugh at these good
+old girls; they have long been the guardian angels of the village, and are
+worshipped by man, woman, and child about them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In July, 1828, the charming vale of Llangollen was visited by a German
+Prince (Puckler-Muskau of Prussia), who has thus left on record the
+impressions which his excursion in that vicinity excited:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The most beautiful reality, however, awaited me this morning in
+Wales.&nbsp; The vision of clouds seemed to have been the harbinger of the
+magnificence of the vale of Llangollen,&mdash;a spot which, in my opinion,
+far surpasses all the beauties of the Rhine-land, and has, moreover, a
+character quite its own, from the unusual forms of the peaked tops, and
+rugged declivities of its mountains.&nbsp; The Dee, a rapid stream, winds
+through the green valley in <!-- page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 29</span>a thousand fantastic bendings, overhung with
+thick underwood.&nbsp; On each side high mountains rise abruptly from the
+plain, and are crowned with antique ruins, modern country-houses,
+manufactories, whose towering chimneys send out columns of thick smoke, or
+with grotesque groups of upright rocks.&nbsp; The vegetation is everywhere
+rich, and hill and vale are filled with lofty trees, whose varied hues add
+so infinitely to the beauty and picturesque effect of a landscape.&nbsp; In
+the midst of this luxuriant nature, arises, with a grandeur heightened by
+contrast, a single long, black, bare range of mountains, clothed only with
+thick, dark heather,&rdquo; and from time to time skirting the high
+road.&nbsp; This magnificent road, which from London to Holyhead, is as
+even as a &lsquo;parquet,&rsquo; here runs along the side of the left range
+of mountains, at about their middle elevation and following all their
+windings; so that in riding along at a brisk trot or gallop, the traveller
+is presented at every minute with a completely new prospect; and without
+changing his position, overlooks the valley now before him, now behind, now
+at his side.&nbsp; On one side is an aqueduct of twenty-five slender
+arches, a work which would have done honour to Rome.&nbsp; Through this a
+second river is led over the valley and across the Dee, at an elevation of
+an hundred and twenty feet above the bed of the natural stream.&nbsp; A few
+miles further on, the little town of Llangollen offers a delightful resting
+place, and is deservedly much resorted to.</p>
+<p><!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+30</span>&ldquo;There is a beautiful view from the churchyard near the inn:
+here I climbed upon a tomb, and stood for half an hour enjoying with deep
+and grateful delight the beauties so richly spread before me.&nbsp;
+Immediately below me bloomed a terraced garden, filled with vine,
+honeysuckle, rose, and a hundred gay flowers, which descended to the very
+edge of the foaming stream.&nbsp; On the right hand, my eye followed the
+crisped waves in their restless murmuring course through the overhanging
+thicket; before me rose two lines of wood, divided by a strip of
+meadow-land filled with grazing cattle; and high above all, rose the bare
+conical peak of a mountain crowned by the ruins of the old Welsh castle
+Dinas Br&acirc;n, or the Crow&rsquo;s Fortress.&nbsp; On the left, the
+stone houses of the town lie scattered along the valley; the river forms a
+considerable waterfall near the picturesque bridge, while three colossal
+rocks rise immediately behind it like giant guards, and shut out all the
+more distant wonders of this enchanting region.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Before I left Llangollen I recollected the two celebrated ladies
+who have inhabited this valley for more than half a century, and of whom I
+had heard once as a child, and again recently in London.&nbsp; You have
+doubtless heard your father talk of them;&mdash;&lsquo;si non, voil&agrave;
+leur histoire.&rsquo;&nbsp; Fifty-six years ago, two young, pretty and
+fashionable ladies, Lady Eleanor Butler, and the daughter of the late Lord
+Ponsonby, took it in their heads to hate men, to love only each other, and
+to live from that hour <!-- page 31--><a name="page31"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 31</span>in some remote hermitage.&nbsp; The resolution
+was immediately executed; and from that time neither lady has ever passed a
+night out of their cottage.&nbsp; On the other hand, no one who is
+presentable travels in Wales unprovided with an introduction to them.&nbsp;
+It is affirmed that the &lsquo;scandal&rsquo; of the great world interests
+them as much as when they lived in it; and that their curiosity to know
+what passes has preserved all its freshness.&nbsp; I had compliments to
+deliver to them from several ladies, but I had neglected to furnish myself
+with a letter.&nbsp; I therefore sent my card, determined if they declined
+my visit, as I was led to fear, to storm the cottage.&nbsp; Here, as
+elsewhere, however, in England, a title easily opened the door, and I
+immediately received a gracious invitation to a second breakfast.&nbsp;
+Passing along a charming road, through a trim and pretty pleasure-ground,
+in a quarter of an hour I reached a small but tasteful gothic cottage,
+situated directly opposite to Dinas Bran, various glimpses of which were
+visible through openings cut in the trees.&nbsp; I alighted, and was
+received at the door by the two ladies.&nbsp; Fortunately I was already
+prepared by hearsay for their peculiarities; I might otherwise have found
+it difficult to repress some expression of astonishment.&nbsp; Imagine two
+ladies, the eldest of whom, Lady Eleanor, a short robust woman, begins to
+feel her years a little, being now eighty-three; the other, a tall and
+imposing person, esteems herself still youthful, being only
+seventy-four.&nbsp; Both wore their still abundant hair <!-- page 32--><a
+name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>combed straight back
+and powdered, a round man&rsquo;s hat, a man&rsquo;s cravat and waistcoat,
+but in the place of &lsquo;inexpressibles,&rsquo; a short petticoat and
+boots: the whole covered by a coat of blue cloth, of a cut quite
+peculiar,&mdash;a sort of middle term between a man&rsquo;s coat and a
+lady&rsquo;s riding-habit.&nbsp; Over this, Lady Eleanor wore, first, the
+grand cordon of the order of St. Louis across her shoulder; secondly, the
+same order around her neck; thirdly, the small cross of the same in her
+button-hole, and &lsquo;pour comble de gloire,&rsquo; a golden lily of
+nearly the natural size, as a star,&mdash;all, as she said, presents of the
+Bourbon family.&nbsp; So far the whole effect was somewhat ludicrous.&nbsp;
+But now, you must imagine both ladies with that agreeable
+&lsquo;aisance,&rsquo; that air of the world of the &lsquo;ancien
+regime,&rsquo; courteous and entertaining, without the slightest
+affectation; speaking French as well as any Englishwoman of my
+acquaintance; and above all, with that essentially polite, unconstrained,
+and simply cheerful manner of the good society of that day, which, in our
+serious hardworking age of business, appears to be going to utter
+decay.&nbsp; I was really affected with a melancholy sort of pleasure in
+contemplating it in the persons of the amiable old ladies who are among the
+last of its living representatives; nor could I witness without lively
+sympathy the unremitting, natural and affectionate attention with which the
+younger treated her somewhat infirmer friend, and anticipated all her
+wants.&nbsp; The charm of such actions lies chiefly in the manner in which
+they <!-- page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>are performed,&mdash;in things which appear small and
+insignificant, but which are never lost upon a susceptible heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I began by saying that I esteemed myself fortunate in being
+permitted to deliver to the fair recluses the compliments with which I was
+charged by my grandfather, who had had the honour of visiting them fifty
+years ago.&nbsp; Their beauty indeed they had lost, but not their memory:
+they remembered the C--- C--- very well, immediately produced an old
+memorial of him, and expressed their wonder that so young a man was dead
+already.&nbsp; Not only the venerable ladies, but their house, was full of
+interest; indeed it contained some real treasures.&nbsp; There is scarcely
+a remarkable person of the last half century who has not sent them a
+portrait or some curiosity or antique as a token of remembrance.&nbsp; The
+collection of these, a well-furnished library, a delightful situation, an
+equable, tranquil life, and perfect friendship and union,&mdash;these have
+been their possessions; and if we may judge by their robust old age and
+their cheerful temper, they have not chosen amiss.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>During the summer of 1833, Miss Catherine Sinclair, the clever authoress
+of &ldquo;Modern Accomplishments,&rdquo; made an excursion through Wales,
+and thus describes her visit to Plas Newydd:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;No eyes but those of a poet are worthy to behold the celebrated
+valley of Llangollen, where we next proceeded, after having drawn largely
+on the firm of Messrs. Wordsworth, Cowper, Thomson, and <!-- page 34--><a
+name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>Co. for language to pay
+a due tribute of admiration to this surpassing scene,&mdash;but who has a
+genius equal to the majesty of nature?&nbsp; I thought of the Mahometan who
+turned back when he observed some such rich and fertile plain, saying, he
+had been only promised one Paradise, and did not wish to enjoy it upon
+earth.&nbsp; Instead of following his example, however, we advanced, trying
+to fancy ourselves on the banks of the Rhine, to which so many travellers
+have compared this beautiful valley.&nbsp; Pray employ your unrivalled
+taste in imagining the rugged mountains,&mdash;the sparkling
+river,&mdash;the ancient trees,&mdash;the smiling cottages,&mdash;the
+daisied meadows, and the fertile gardens, all grouped or scattered in the
+way you think best,&mdash;and invention can suggest nothing more
+perfect.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The valley of Llangollen belonged once to the far-famed Owen
+Glendower, mentioned in Shakespeare&rsquo;s Plays, as &lsquo;not in the
+roll of common men.&rsquo;&nbsp; His palace stood near this formerly, and
+here he maintained a war during twelve years against Henry IV., being a
+keen adherent of Richard&rsquo;s; besides which, a private feud against
+Lord Grey de Ruthyn whetted his exertions.&nbsp; Peace was, however, about
+to be concluded in 1415, between the Welsh chief and the English king, on
+very honourable terms, when, as we frequently observe, if any one attains
+his utmost earthly desires, Owen died.&nbsp; But though the vale of
+Llangollen boasts of such a hero, its chief celebrity arises from a pair of
+heroines; and we lost no time in doing homage <!-- page 35--><a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>to their memories, by
+scrambling our way up a steep ascent to that well-known cottage, where the
+late Lady Eleanor Butler and the Honourable Miss Ponsonby, during more than
+half a century, devoted their long lives so romantically to friendship,
+celibacy, and the knitting of blue stockings.&nbsp; It seems only
+astonishing that this is so very rare an occurrence, for any one with a
+friend so richly endowed as my accomplished correspondent, might feel safe
+from the possibility of tiring, and might like to connect her name with so
+charming a scene and with so romantic a story.&nbsp; Two successors to
+these fair hermits have already sprung up, as substitutes for the original
+occupants, following the same exclusive plan of life; and in a moment of
+enthusiasm I felt much inclined to knock at the door and ask if they would
+make it a trio.&nbsp; In the case of Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby,
+very transient visits only were acceptable, and even their own names
+remained long concealed, as the friends eloped clandestinely without
+confiding to any one, except a maid servant, the place of their
+retreat.&nbsp; The cause of this very close seclusion having been variously
+conjectured, excited much gossipping curiosity at the time; but from
+whatever cause the hermitage originated, here, embowered in roses, they
+&lsquo;made a solitude and called it peace.&rsquo;&nbsp; After discussing
+the Ladies of Llangollen, our thoughts naturally diverged into a general
+consideration, whether the greatest number of voluntary recluses have
+relinquished social intercourse <!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 36</span>on account of disappointed affection, mortified
+vanity, or mistaken devotion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a beau ideal of earthly felicity springs up to the
+imagination in taking a glance at the beautiful cottage of Llangollen! all
+the every-day vexations and vulgar cares of life, seem there swept aside,
+and nothing left for the inhabitants but to lead a life of graceful
+leisure, tying up carnations, engrafting roses, gazing at the splendid
+scenery around, and talking in perpetual ecstacies about flowers and
+perfumes.&nbsp; Almost every grown-up person entertains, at the out-set of
+life, notions of happiness with a cottage nearly similar to that which a
+little girl enjoys with her first doll,&mdash;dressing it up, altering,
+arranging, painting, and spoiling it; but this hermitage really is a
+singular looking toy.&nbsp; The building is long and low, so completely
+cased in richly-carved oak, that it might be mistaken for an enormous
+wardrobe.&nbsp; The garden slopes upwards from the river Dee, and is
+greatly embellished by a splendid beech hedge about forty feet high;
+several charming little summer houses are sprinkled about the grounds; and
+in one most romantic arbour, overlooking the fine cascade, we found a
+volume lying open on the seat, which proved to be Southey&rsquo;s Roderick;
+suitable reading for such a scene of poetical beauty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An attempt at embellishment has been made, by placing a stuffed
+bear near the house, probably in imitation of the Zoological Gardens; but
+the idea is rather a failure, and would appear more suitable <!-- page
+37--><a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>over the door
+of a perfumer&rsquo;s shop, to intimate the presence of bear&rsquo;s
+grease.&nbsp; A little gim-crack model of a wooden house is also visible,
+by way of an ornament, stuck on the summit of a wooden pillar, but the
+effect is disproportioned to all surrounding objects, even more than the
+designs on Chinese paper; where men of six feet high are represented
+entering mansions half their own height, and birds may be seen flying
+larger than either the houses or their inhabitants.&nbsp; In a cottage
+built of oak and roofed with thatch, it would be very desirable that the
+inhabitants should have some taste for the study of entomology, as they
+might find an inexhaustible hunting-field among the wooden walls and
+creepers.&nbsp; It has been disputed whether more inconvenience is endured
+from the extreme cold of an English winter, or from the swarms of insects
+inevitably encountered during the heat of an Italian summer; but those who
+inhabit this &lsquo;Fairy Palace of the Vale,&rsquo; might be able from
+experience at home, to decide the question.&nbsp; They could afford
+sufficient employment for an entire pin-manufactory, to supply impaling
+machines for all the specimens of insects that might be collected and
+classified here.&nbsp; The birds too, were so vociferous, that we seemed
+standing in an aviary, and the locality would not at all have suited Lady
+---, who scolded her gardener for &lsquo;letting the sparrows make such a
+noise under her windows in the morning.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is much to be
+lamented how many &lsquo;harmonious blackbirds&rsquo; annually fall victims
+to the preservation of cherries; <!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 38</span>and though the &lsquo;four-and-twenty baked in
+a pie,&rsquo; might be rather too loud when they all &lsquo;began to
+sing,&rsquo; yet a few in a garden are so enlivening and delightful, that
+it would be better never to taste fruit again than to lose such a concert
+of natural melody as we enjoyed at Llangollen.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Mr. Roscoe, in his remarkably interesting &ldquo;Wanderings in North
+Wales,&rdquo; is less enthusiastic than some tourists on the subject of our
+present narrative; he says:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Plas Newydd, for so many years the residence of the fair recluses
+of the lovely vale of Llangollen, stands on a gentle eminence close to the
+town, ornamented with a carved railing in front, and decorated with
+grotesque gables and ornaments.&nbsp; The present proprietors are also two
+maiden ladies, who seem disposed to perpetuate the conventual celebrity of
+this place; and are certainly not less urbane than the former possessors,
+in permitting visitors to gratify their taste in the inspection of the
+beautiful grounds.&nbsp; Attended by my <i>cicerone</i>, the gardener, I
+passed from one object of natural beauty to another,&mdash;the vale of
+Pen-gwern surrounded by part of the Berwyn chain, the woody dingle, and
+brawling brook of the Cyflymed, with many others, which are supplied with
+the most gratifying conveniences for their leisurely inspection.&nbsp;
+After all, I must confess, filled as was my mind by the impressions of the
+majestic scenes with which it had become familiar, the miniature landscapes
+supplied by the situation of Plas Newydd, fell far short of the
+anticipation <!-- page 39--><a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+39</span>I had formed, and they forcibly recalled the emotion I remembered
+to have felt after viewing the mimic hills and vales, and passionless
+cascades of the poet Shenstone, in his retreat at the Leasowes, near
+Hagley.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Miss Costello, who made the tour of North Wales in 1844 is even less
+complimentary, and is thus smartly satirical in the peculiarities of the
+departed &ldquo;Ladies:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;One of the great attractions of Llangollen a few years ago was
+the romantic story attached to the place and the residence there of Lady
+Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby.&nbsp; Pilgrimages were made to this
+shrine of friendship, and the ladies were overwhelmed with visitors, and
+their cottage filled with offerings.&nbsp; Their tomb is now in the
+churchyard, and their cottage let; and very few persons recollect much
+about them, or feel any interest in a sentimental history, which belonged
+to the last century, and now can only excite a smile at the eccentricity of
+its heroines, who, under pretence of retiring from society, made themselves
+conspicuous throughout the country.&nbsp; Most of their accumulated stores
+were sold by public auction, on the death of the last of the friends, and
+the cottage, as it now stands, is by no means either a rural or picturesque
+object.&nbsp; It is covered inside and out with carved wood, some of value,
+and some quite worthless; and all that remains of the taste of the former
+proprietors merely proves how little was required to please fifty years
+ago.&nbsp; The trees, planted by the friends, are now <!-- page 40--><a
+name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>grown high, and shut
+out all view of the country; in fact, the whole place has a vulgar,
+common-place appearance, and excited in my mind no sort of interest, nor
+was my indifference agreeably dispelled by the view of an engraving, hung
+up in the little boudoir, representing the two ladies sitting at their
+table covered with curiosities, both dressed in masculine habits, and both
+frightfully ugly.&nbsp; These portraits, it seems, were taken by an
+amateur, by stealth, as neither of &lsquo;The Ladies of Llangollen&rsquo;
+would consent to sit, and a lamentable record is it which creates most
+unpleasing sensations to the lover of the graceful, beautiful, and
+venerable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The &lsquo;ladies&rsquo; were, although singular in the extreme,
+remarkably charitable and considerate of the necessities of their
+neighbours, and their loss has been greatly felt.&nbsp; They seemed vain
+and pompous, but accomplished and intellectual, and were a strange compound
+of wisdom and folly, pride and condescension.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The celebrated Madame de Genlis, in an entertaining miscellany, under
+the title of &ldquo;Souvenirs de Felicie L---,&rdquo; has given the
+following graphic narrative of &ldquo;The Fair Recluses of
+Llangollen:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;During my residence in England (says she), nothing struck me so
+much as the delicious cottage of Llangollen, in North Wales.&nbsp; It is
+not a little extraordinary, that a circumstance so singular and remarkable
+as that connected with this retreat, should hitherto have escaped the
+notice of all <!-- page 41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+41</span>modern travellers.&nbsp; The manner in which I became acquainted
+with it was this:&mdash;During our long-stay at Bury, a small company of
+five or six persons, including ourselves, met every evening from seven till
+half-past ten o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; We diverted ourselves with music and
+conversation, so that the time past very agreeably.&nbsp; One night
+friendship happened to be the subject of conversation, and I declared that
+I would with pleasure undertake a long journey to see two persons who had
+long been united by the bonds of genuine friendship.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,
+Madam,&rsquo; replied Mr. Stuart (now Lord Castlereagh), go to Llangollen;
+you will there see a model of perfect friendship, which will afford you the
+more delight, as it is exhibited by two females who are yet young and
+charming in every respect.&nbsp; Would you like to hear the history of Lady
+Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby?&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;It would give me the
+greatest pleasure.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;I will relate it to
+you.&rsquo;&nbsp; At these words the company drew nearer to Mr. Stuart, we
+formed a little circle round him, and after recollecting himself a few
+moments, he thus began his narrative:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Lady Eleanor Butler, was born in Dublin.&nbsp; She was
+left an orphan while in her cradle; and possessing an ample fortune,
+together with an amiable disposition and a beautiful person, her hand was
+solicited by persons belonging to the first families in Ireland.&nbsp; At
+an early age she manifested great repugnance to the idea of giving herself
+a master.&nbsp; This love of independence, which she never dissembled, <!--
+page 42--><a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>did no
+injury to her reputation; her conduct has always been irreproachable, and
+no female is more highly distinguished for sweetness of temper, modesty,
+and all the virtues which adorn her sex.&nbsp; In tender infancy a mutual
+attachment took place between her and Miss Ponsonby, by an accident which
+made a deep impression on their imagination.&nbsp; They had no difficulty
+to persuade themselves that heaven had formed them for each other; that is,
+that it had designed each of them to devote her existence to the other, so
+that they might glide together down the stream of life, in the bosom of
+peace, the most intimate friendship, and delicious independence.&nbsp; This
+idea their sensibility was destined to realize.&nbsp; Their friendship
+gradually grew stronger with their years, so that at seventeen they
+mutually engaged never to sacrifice their liberty, or to part from each
+other.&nbsp; From that moment they formed the design of withdrawing from
+the world, and of settling for good in some sequestered retreat.&nbsp;
+Having heard of the charming scenery of Wales, they secretly absconded from
+their friends for the purpose of fixing upon their future residence.&nbsp;
+They visited Llangollen, and there, on the summit of a mountain, they found
+a little detached cottage, with the situation of which they were
+delighted.&nbsp; Here they resolved to form their establishment.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile the guardians of the young fugitives sent people after them, and
+they were conveyed back to Dublin.&nbsp; They declared that they would
+return to their mountain as soon as they <!-- page 43--><a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>were of age.&nbsp;
+Accordingly, at twenty-one, in spite of the entreaties and remonstrances of
+their relatives and friends, they quitted Ireland for ever, and flew to
+Llangollen.&nbsp; Miss Ponsonby is not rich, but Lady Eleanor possesses a
+considerable fortune.&nbsp; She purchased the little hut and the property
+of the mountain, where she built a cottage, very simple in external
+appearance, but the interior of which displays the greatest elegance.&nbsp;
+On the top of the mountain she has formed about the house a court and
+flower-garden; a hedge of rosebushes is the only enclosure that surrounds
+this rural habitation.&nbsp; A convenient carriage-road, the steepness of
+which has been diminished by art, was carried along the mountain.&nbsp; On
+the side of the latter some ancient pines of prodigious height were
+preserved; fruit trees were planted, and a great quantity of cherry trees
+in particular, which produce the best and finest cherries in England.&nbsp;
+The two friends likewise possess a farm for their cattle, with a pretty
+farm-house and a kitchen-garden at the foot of the mountain.&nbsp; In this
+sequestered abode these two extraordinary persons, with minds equally
+cultivated, and accomplishments equally pleasing, have now resided ten
+years, without ever having been absent from it a single night.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless they are not unsociable, they sometimes pay visits to the
+neighbouring gentry, and receive with the greatest politeness travellers on
+their way to or from Ireland, who <!-- page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 44</span>are recommended to them by any of their old
+friends.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This account strongly excited my curiosity, and produced the same
+effect on Mademoiselle d&rsquo;Orleans and my two young companions.&nbsp;
+We determined the same night to set out immediately for Llangollen, by the
+circuitous route of Brighton, Portsmouth, and the Isle of Wight.&nbsp; It
+was the latter end of July when we arrived at Llangollen.&nbsp; This place
+has not the rich appearance of the English villages in general, but nothing
+can equal the cleanliness of the houses, and among the lower classes of any
+country this is an infallible proof of abundance.&nbsp; Llangollen,
+surrounded with woods and meadows, clothed with the freshest verdure, is
+situated at the foot of the mountain belonging to the two friends, which
+there forms a majestic pyramid covered with trees and flowers.&nbsp; We
+arrived at the cottage, the only object of our journey, an hour before
+sunset.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The two friends had received in the morning by a messenger the
+letter which Mr. Stuart had given me for them.&nbsp; We were received with
+a grace, a cordiality, and kindness, of which it would be impossible for me
+to give any idea.&nbsp; I could not turn my eyes from those two ladies,
+rendered so interesting by their friendship and so extraordinary on account
+of their way of life.&nbsp; I perceived in them none of that vanity which
+takes delight in the surprize of others.&nbsp; Their mutual attachment, and
+<!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>their
+whole conduct evince such simplicity, that astonishment soon gives way to
+softer emotions; all they do and say breathes the utmost frankness and
+sincerity.&nbsp; One circumstance which I cannot help remarking is, that
+after living so many years in this sequestered retreat, they speak French
+with equal fluency and purity.&nbsp; I was likewise much struck with the
+little resemblance there is between them.&nbsp; Lady Eleanor has a charming
+face, embellished with the glow of health; her whole appearance and manner
+announce vivacity and the most unaffected gaiety.&nbsp; Miss Ponsonby has a
+fine countenance, but pale and melancholy.&nbsp; One seems to have been
+born in this solitude, so perfectly is she at her ease in it; for her easy
+carriage shews that she has not retained the slightest recollection of the
+world and its vain pleasures.&nbsp; The other, silent and pensive, has too
+much candour and innocence for you to suppose that repentance has conducted
+her into solitude, but you would suppose that she still cherishes some
+painful regrets.&nbsp; Both have the most engaging politeness, and
+highly-cultivated minds.&nbsp; An excellent library, composed of the best
+English, French, and Italian authors, affords them an inexhaustible source
+of diversified amusement and solid occupation; for reading is not truly
+profitable except when a person has time to read again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The interior of the house is delightful on account of the just
+proportion and distribution of the apartments, the elegance of the
+ornaments and <!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+46</span>furniture, and the admirable view which you enjoy from all the
+windows; the drawing-room is adorned with charming landscapes, drawn and
+coloured from nature, by Miss Ponsonby.&nbsp; Lady Eleanor is a great
+proficient in music; and their solitary habitation is filled with
+embroidery by them both, of wonderful execution.&nbsp; Miss Ponsonby, who
+writes the finest hand I ever saw, has copied a number of select pieces in
+verse and prose, which she has ornamented with vignettes and arabesques, in
+the best taste, and which form a most valuable collection.&nbsp; Thus the
+arts are cultivated there with equal modesty and success, and their
+productions are admired with a feeling that is not experienced elsewhere;
+the spectator observes with delight that so much merit is secure in this
+peaceful retreat from the shafts of satire and envy, and that talents
+unaccompanied with ostentation and pride, have there never coveted any
+suffrages but those of friendship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This evening was a scene of enchantment for me; not one painful
+reflection disturbed its felicity.&nbsp; I retired to rest, but my
+imagination was so fully occupied with what I had seen and heard, that my
+thoughts kept me for a long time awake.&nbsp; At length, I was just falling
+asleep, when I was roused by the most melodious sounds.&nbsp; I listened in
+great astonishment; it was not music, but an indistinct and celestial
+harmony which penetrated my very soul.&nbsp; I discovered that it was
+produced by a violent wind which had just then arisen; my ear <!-- page
+47--><a name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>distinguished
+the distant noise and the whistling usually heard on such occasions, but
+the winds changing their nature as they approached this asylum of peace and
+friendship, formed only the most enchanting harmony as they met its trees
+and its walls.&nbsp; I was strongly disposed to believe in prodigies; but
+nevertheless I was determined to investigate the nature of this, but I
+durst not rise for fear of waking Mademoiselle d&rsquo;Orleans, who was
+extremely fatigued with her journey, and slept in a bed close by
+mine.&nbsp; The tempest suddenly ceased, and the harmonious sounds appeared
+to be carried to a distance by the retiring winds.&nbsp; I raised my head
+towards the heavens to catch the last tones of this celestial concert,
+which seemed to be lost in the clouds.&nbsp; I listened with transport like
+St. Cecilia; if I had had my harp in my hands I should certainly have
+dropped it; at that moment all terrestrial music appeared totally
+spiritless and insipid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Next morning the whole mystery was explained.&nbsp; On opening my
+window I found in the balcony an Eolian harp, an instrument with which I
+was then unacquainted, and which, when the wind blows upon it, produces
+such enchanting sounds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I walked out the whole forenoon with the two friends; nothing can
+equal the charms of the surrounding scenery, and of the prospects which the
+mountain whose summit they occupy commands; at this elevation they appear
+the queens of all the beautiful country at their feet.&nbsp; Towards the
+north <!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>they have a view of the village and of a wood; to the south a long
+river washes the foot of the mountain, and fertilizes meadows of prodigious
+extent, beyond which is discovered an amphitheatre of hills, covered with
+intermingled trees and rocks.&nbsp; In the midst of this wild scenery rises
+a majestic tower, which might be taken for the Pharos of this coast, but is
+only the ruins of a magnificent castle, once the residence of the prince of
+the country.&nbsp; This solitary region was doubtless at that time
+flourishing and populous, now it is abandoned to nature alone; nothing is
+now to be seen in it but herds of goats, and a few scattered herdsmen
+sitting upon the rocks and playing upon the Irish harp.&nbsp; Facing this
+rustic and melancholy scene the two friends have raised a verdant seat,
+shaded by two poplars, and thither they told me they often repair in summer
+to read together the poems of Ossian.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The ride from Wrexham to Llangollen is remarkable for the
+sublimity and awful grandeur of the prospects; the most prominent feature
+in the landscape is a high and stupendous chain of mountains, sometimes
+swelling into the clouds, or gently shelving into the vallies, around which
+they form a wide amphitheatre; and by their elevations afford shelter, and
+tend to fertilize the vales at their bases.&nbsp; I was led to
+exclaim&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I love thy mountain&rsquo;s giant forms!<br />
+&nbsp; Darkly clad in gath&rsquo;ring storms;<br />
+I love thy rocks, down whose steep sides,<br />
+&nbsp; With foaming, dizzying crash,<br />
+<!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+49</span>Thunder the torrent&rsquo;s tan-brown tides,<br />
+&nbsp; And roaring whirlwinds dash.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&rsquo;Mid clouds and crags, dark pools and mountains drear,<br
+/>
+&nbsp; The wild-wood&rsquo;s silence, and the billow&rsquo;s roll,<br />
+Great Nature rules, and claims with brow austere,<br />
+&nbsp; The shudd&rsquo;ring homage of the inmost soul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From the craggy sides of the rocks descend the tributary streams
+to supply the river which divides the dales, and which dashes its foaming
+impetuous course along the banks, often edged with broken crags and grey
+rocks, or is seen winding in a deeper and more peaceful stream through dark
+and silent groves, spreading their autumnal shades over the surface, or
+often glistening through fields of verdure and cultivated spots of ground;
+here foaming and chafing some dark ruin&rsquo;s tottering base, there
+reflecting the modern villa or the humble hamlet in its silver bosom, and
+by the variety of scenery giving new beauty to the whole.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The cottages, bridges, villas, towers, rocks, and dark ruins of
+Gothic antiquity, are in unison with the surrounding objects, and the
+attention is frequently called from beholding the beauties of nature to
+pause on the works of art.&nbsp; In the centre of the long valley which
+stretches to Llangollen, is erected a most stupendous aqueduct, by which
+the canal is conveyed from a lofty hill over a wide chasm in the mountains;
+the length of this amazing work of art and human industry, is, I was <!--
+page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>informed,
+three hundred yards, the aqueduct composed of cast iron, is supported on
+fifty stone pillars and arches, and the view of this immense pile
+bestriding the valley is grand beyond description, and contributes much to
+heighten the effect produced by the whole scenery; for here grandeur and
+sublimity sit enthroned on the mountains, and solitude and human privacy,
+with their attendant charms, have fixed their abode in the vallies.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The beauties of the Vale of Llangollen certainly exceed every
+idea I had formed of their grandeur, and on my arrival at the inn in the
+village, the muse embodied the following</p>
+<p>&ldquo;LINES ON VISITING LLANGOLLEN.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Much have I heard, Llangollen, of thy scenes,<br />
+And the wild landscapes of thy mountain greens,<br />
+The rushing streams, that dash thy rocks among,<br />
+Thy snow-topt mountains, thy wild harper&rsquo;s song,<br />
+Thy fruitful vallies deep, where oft between<br />
+Rise hamlets, rocks, and tow&rsquo;rs to grace the scene.<br />
+Where solitude and calm contentment dwell,<br />
+And contemplation roves each rocky dell,<br />
+Or climbs the snow-topt mountain&rsquo;s cloudy height<br />
+To watch the sinking shades of evening light;<br />
+To view the foaming torrent&rsquo;s misty shower,<br />
+To list&rsquo; the brooding tempest&rsquo;s rising roar,<br />
+Mark the blue mists the silvery moonbeams shroud,<br />
+Or golden ev&rsquo;ning edge the dusky cloud;<br />
+Yet, till this hour my doubting heart has thought<br />
+Thy glowing scenes by fancy&rsquo;s pencil wrought,<br />
+Or drest in poetry&rsquo;s enchanting hues,<br />
+And all the flatt&rsquo;ring colours of the muse;<br />
+<!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>But
+if in winter&rsquo;s storms thy beauties charm,<br />
+If the cold breast thy varying landscapes warm,<br />
+In summer&rsquo;s smiles it surely stands confest,<br />
+That he who draws thee fairest paints thee best.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Having thus seen the various amusing and interesting records, which so
+many of our most popular authors have given to the world, respecting the
+once famous &ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen,&rdquo; curiosity induced us to pay
+a visit to this much frequented abode of ancient friendship.&nbsp;
+Accordingly in March, 1847, we made an excursion, in company with our
+respected Publisher, to the celebrated retreat of Plas Newydd; and through
+the favour of Mr. Jacques, an intelligent and hospitable gentleman resident
+at Pen-y-bryn, Llangollen, we were introduced to the present owners, Miss
+Lolly and Miss Andrew, and met with a most courteous reception.&nbsp; Their
+manners are easy, dignified, and lady-like; totally free from all
+affectation, and in nowise marked by that frigid stateliness and pedantic
+formality, which a censorious world proverbially attributes to a state of
+elderly maidenhood.&nbsp; In all its characteristic particulars, the
+cottage remains in the same condition as in the days of Lady Eleanor and
+Miss Ponsonby; but its present possessors have introduced several judicious
+alterations in the interior, which, though carried out in strict harmony
+with the general design of its former occupants, exhibit an improved taste
+and a cultivated judgment.&nbsp; <!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 52</span>The house is delightfully situated, and is
+well-adapted to realize the notion of the poet&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis pleasant from the loop-holes of retreat<br />
+To look at such a world; to see great Babel<br />
+And not feel the crush;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>but the site is not well chosen for developing the many charming
+prospects which the vale of Llangollen affords; and, indeed, the entire
+arrangements, both of dwelling and pleasure grounds, seem to be suggestive
+rather of another poetical maxim in great favour with anchorites and
+recluses&mdash;&ldquo;Retire, the world shut out.&rdquo;&nbsp; We cannot
+agree with Miss Seward, who describes this hermitage as &ldquo;a retreat
+which breathes all the witchery of genius, taste, and
+sentiment.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is rather fantastical than tasteful, and savours
+more of eccentricity than sentiment.&nbsp; In the Gothic entrance, there
+are undoubtedly many fine specimens of carved wood-work, some of which we
+suspect were the plunder of despoiled convents and churches during the
+continental wars of the last century; but classical, mythological, and
+scripture subjects are intermingled in odd confusion, and with &ldquo;most
+admired disorder.&rdquo;&nbsp; The rooms are small and comfortable, with
+very low ceilings; the prospect from the dining-room is flat and tame; but
+several of the miniature views, as seen through small openings of the
+painted window in the library, are remarkably picturesque, and reveal
+themselves with a pleasing effect to the eye of the artist or the admirer
+<!-- page 53--><a name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>of
+natural scenery.&nbsp; The cottage yet contains many articles of furniture
+and choice rarities, which belonged to the former owners; whose portraits
+adorn the fanciful little boudoir.&nbsp; Disguised as they are by the
+strangeness of their costume, we should not like to hazard any opinion of
+our own as to their personal charms; especially as Miss Seward has been so
+minutely particular in telling us &ldquo;all about them.&rdquo;&nbsp; That
+clever and amusing gossip says of the &ldquo;ladies,&rdquo; whom she
+rhapsodizes as &ldquo;the enchantresses&rdquo; of Plas Newydd&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Eleanor is of middle height, and somewhat beyond the
+<i>embonpoint</i> as to plumpness; her face round and fair, with the glow
+of luxuriant health.&nbsp; She has not fine features, but they are
+agreeable; enthusiasm in her eye, hilarity and benevolence in her
+smile.&nbsp; Exhaustless is her fund of historic and traditionary
+knowledge, and of every thing passing in the present eventful period.&nbsp;
+She expresses all she feels with an ingenuous ardour, at which, the
+cold-spirited beings stare.&nbsp; I am informed that both these ladies read
+and speak most of the modern languages.&nbsp; Of the Italian poets,
+especially of Dante, they are warm admirers.&nbsp; Miss Ponsonby, somewhat
+taller than her friend, is neither slender nor otherwise, but very
+graceful.&nbsp; Easy, elegant, yet pensive, is her address and manner.</p>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;Her voice, like lovers&rsquo; watched, is kind and
+low.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A face rather long than round, a complexion clear <!-- page 54--><a
+name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>but without bloom, with
+a countenance which, from its soft melancholy, has a peculiar
+interest.&nbsp; If her features are not beautiful, they are very sweet and
+feminine.&nbsp; Though the pensive spirit within permits not her lovely
+dimples to give mirth to her smile, they increase its sweetness, and,
+consequently, her power of engaging the affections.&nbsp; We see, through
+her veil of shading reserve, that all the talents and accomplishments which
+enrich the mind of Lady Eleanor, exist, with equal powers, in this her
+charming friend.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We commend these pen and ink portraits to the notice of our readers
+without controversy; and the more especially, as they may gratify their
+curiosity still more in this matter, by purchasing from our Publisher a
+well-executed engraving representing, with all due fidelity, excellent
+likenesses of the &ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen;&rdquo; each, as
+<i>Hamlet</i> would say, &ldquo;in her habit as she lived.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Among the treasured relics which the cottage now contains, we were shewn
+the veritable crutch-headed walking stick, on which Lady Eleanor used to
+support her aged steps, when rambling through the village on errands of
+mercy, or sauntering among the pleasure grounds of her mountain-home; and
+we also saw and handled the broad-brimmed hat worn by Miss Ponsonby, whose
+head we should judge to have been small and finely formed.&nbsp; O for the
+genius of a Seward, to have written an ode to that venerable head-dress!
+and in good truth, one might almost fancy we <!-- page 55--><a
+name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>heard the spirit of
+that amiable enthusiast, bidding us, like <i>Gesler&rsquo;s</i> captain,
+&ldquo;bow down and honour it.&rdquo;&nbsp; Seriously, every little
+particular connected with the history and habits of the departed
+&ldquo;Ladies&rdquo; is so anxiously prized at Llangollen, that we felt
+very grateful for the prompt kindness with which the present worthy
+possessors of the unique residence contributed to our information and
+amusement.&nbsp; We may therefore tell, for the advantage of such of our
+readers as associate their notions of &ldquo;old maids&rdquo; with an
+affectionate regard for the canine and feline tribes, that Lady Eleanor
+Butler possessed a favourite dog of the turnspit-breed, called
+&ldquo;Trust;&rdquo; that Miss Ponsonby had a small white poodle, named
+&ldquo;Busy;&rdquo; and that they had a joint interest in a popular cat,
+answering to the name of &ldquo;Meggins;&rdquo; all of which four-footed
+domestics were especial pets in their garden walks or at their quiet
+fire-side.</p>
+<p>The little domain of Plas-Newydd, if situated in some localities, would
+be esteemed a miniature paradise, but planted as it is amidst so many
+scenes of surpassing loveliness, its limited and somewhat formal
+characteristics suffer by comparison.&nbsp; The arrangement of the ground
+might have suited the peculiar tastes and habits of the
+&ldquo;recluses;&rdquo; but it is certainly very far inferior to the
+picturesque effect, which landscape gardening in the present day could
+<i>there</i> produce.&nbsp; The prettiest portions of these much-vaunted
+precints are the shady knoll, overhanging a romantic glen, <!-- page
+56--><a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>down which a
+brawling streamlet leaps its frothing course over a craggy bed; and the
+rural walk by the gothic fount, into which a pellucid mountain-rill pours
+its refreshing waters.&nbsp; Among the remembrances of former days, is the
+effigy of a guardian &lsquo;lion,&rsquo; (which, under the name of a
+&lsquo;bear,&rsquo; has been noted by an author whom we have quoted;) the
+melancholy quadruped is now considerably &ldquo;used up,&rdquo; and excites
+a laugh at the burlesque on the monarch of the forest, which his attenuated
+figure and shrivelled hide present.&nbsp; Plas-Newydd is unquestionably a
+delightful residence; and its adjacent pleasure grounds and gardens afford
+most inviting facilities for those who love to make a practical study of
+horticulture; to ruminate amidst its tranquil retreats over the published
+works of some favourite authors; or to &ldquo;meditate,&rdquo; like the
+patriarch, at &ldquo;even-tide&rdquo; on the wonders and glories of Eternal
+Power.&nbsp; Apart therefore from the romantic recollections, with which
+the singular history of the &ldquo;Ladies of Llangollen&rdquo; has invested
+this fair spot of earth, it presents to the tourist certain attractions,
+which the reflective explorer of the lovely vallies of the Dee should not
+neglect.&nbsp; We heard from some of the older inhabitants several
+anecdotes of the benevolence and charity of the departed
+&ldquo;Ladies,&rdquo; whose memory is most affectionately cherished in the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; It has been said that on religious subjects, these
+ancient friends were divided in opinion; one being a Roman Catholic and
+<!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>the
+other a Protestant; but the parish clerk, an intelligent old man who knew
+them well, assured us that they both regularly attended the services in the
+Church of Llangollen, and received the Sacrament of the Lord&rsquo;s
+Supper, both there, and at their own cottage during the last illness of
+Lady Eleanor Butler, from the vicar.&nbsp; With all their eccentricity,
+their attachment to each other must have been of a pure, unchanging, and
+fervent character; else would they never have forsworn in the full bloom of
+youth and beauty, the gay fascinations or the elegant ease of courtly life
+for the dull monotony of seclusion and celibacy.&nbsp; Both in feeling and
+intellect, Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby were no common persons; it
+may of a truth be said of them, that &ldquo;they lived to a good old age
+and died honoured and respected;&rdquo; and if ever the beings of a
+brighter and holier sphere are permitted to cast back occasional glimpses
+on the world which they have left, their spirits may sometimes hover over
+the sacred spot where their ashes repose, and haunt the moon-lit banks of
+the silvery Dee, in its murmuring current by the lowly church-yard of
+Llangollen.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 58--><a name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+58</span>VALLE CRUCIS ABBEY.</h2>
+<p>The picturesque ruins of this venerable structure stand in a lovely and
+sequestered valley, about two miles from Llangollen, and are approached by
+as delightful and inviting road as ever rambler need wish to tread.&nbsp;
+The Rev. John Williams, in his learned description of this ancient
+monastery, says:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The abbey was founded about the year 1200, <a
+name="citation58a"></a><a href="#footnote58a" class="citation">[58a]</a>
+and in conformity with the rule <a name="citation58b"></a><a
+href="#footnote58b" class="citation">[58b]</a> of the Cistercian
+fraternity, was dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary.&nbsp; The names by
+which it was generally known to the Welsh had, however, a particular
+reference to the locality where it was situated: thus, &lsquo;Monachlog y
+Glyn,&rsquo; &lsquo;Monachlog Glyn Egwestl,&rsquo; &lsquo;Monachlog Pant y
+Groes.&rsquo;&nbsp; And in Latin it was called &lsquo;Abbatia <a
+name="citation58c"></a><a href="#footnote58c" class="citation">[58c]</a> de
+Valle Crucis,&rsquo; and &lsquo;Abbatia de Llanegwest.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The remains of the abbey extant at the present day consist of the
+church, and of a building on the southern side, part of which seems to have
+formed the Abbot&rsquo;s lodgings, and part to have been the refectory,
+with the dormitory above.&nbsp; The church is a cruciform building, of
+which the northern side <!-- page 59--><a name="page59"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 59</span>has been almost entirely destroyed, and without
+any vestige remaining of its roof, except in the eastern aisle of the
+southern transept.&nbsp; In the midst of these hallowed precincts the
+rubbish is heaped up to a great height, caused, probably, by the fall of
+the northern wall, and by the remains of the roof:&mdash;the pavement, if
+there be any of it subsisting, is entirely concealed, and ash-trees grow
+luxuriantly upon the mounds, adding to the picturesque effect of the ruin,
+but saddening the heart of the antiquary.&nbsp; We are unable, therefore,
+to determine the number of piers that formed the side of the nave; but from
+the space between the western end and the central piers, at the
+intersection of the transepts, we should conjecture this number to have
+been three, thus making four arches on either side.&nbsp; The choir was
+without aisles, but each transept had one on the eastern side, which seems
+to have been used as a chapel.&nbsp; The oldest portion of the church is
+the choir; the eastern end of which was lighted by three bold and lofty
+lancet arches, rising from no great height above the level of the pavement
+to half the altitude of the building, and by two proportionably smaller
+lancets above.&nbsp; In the apex of the gable was probably a small
+aperture, but of this no trace remains; the gable is mutilated, and we
+judge only from the analogy of the western end of the nave.&nbsp; In each
+of the northern and southern walls of the choir is a lancet window; and two
+similar windows, but lower in height, occur in each of the eastern walls of
+the transept aisles.&nbsp; High up <!-- page 60--><a
+name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>in the southern wall,
+also, is to be seen a small loophole, communicating with a passage which
+leads over the vaulting of the southern transept aisle to the abbatial
+building adjoining the church.&nbsp; This passage is now blocked up, but it
+is conjectured to have served either as a closet wherein the abbot could
+attend service privately, or else as a place of confinement or penitence
+for the monks.&nbsp; The architecture of this portion of the church
+corresponds in its style with the date of the foundation,&mdash;the
+commencement of the thirteenth century: the lancets, with their mouldings,
+are strictly of that date, and the capitals of the shafts, which are worked
+with great boldness, are of the late Norman period, rather than of that
+which is called Early-pointed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of all that portion of the nave which occurs between the central
+tower and the western end, nothing remains but the outer wall of the
+southern aisle; the western end of it, however, still stands, and is a
+beautiful example of the richest and purest architecture of the middle of
+the thirteenth century.&nbsp; Over a central doorway, with deeply recessed
+mouldings and shafts, and with a bold dog-tooth ornament, each projection
+of which is elegantly carved into four converging fleurs-de-lys, occur
+three lofty windows, the central one taller than those at its
+sides&mdash;all with remarkably bold splays, both internally and
+externally, enriched with shafts and mouldings.&nbsp; The central window
+appears to have been of only one light, though broad, and to have had its
+arch occupied by a foliation of six <!-- page 61--><a
+name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 61</span>cusps, and therefore of
+seven recesses,&mdash;the foliating spaces being solid.&nbsp; The side
+windows are each of two lights, the principal arch-head being solid, but
+pierced with a single aperture divided into six foliations.&nbsp; Above
+these three windows runs a kind of framework, analagous in some respects to
+that at the eastern end of the choir.&nbsp; The gable is pierced above
+these windows with a small but beautiful wheel-window of eight pointed
+compartments, each trifoliated; the divisions being moulded in one order,
+and converging to a central ring, itself pierced to admit the light.&nbsp;
+Above all is a square quatrefoliated aperture in the very apex of the
+gable.&nbsp; On the external face of the western end are two bold
+buttresses of a single stage, that on the south-eastern side being pierced
+with loopholes for a circular staircase formed in the thickness of itself
+and the wall.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Abbey of Valle Crucis was dissolved in the year 1535, and is said to
+have been the first of the Welsh monasteries which underwent the doom of
+abolition.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Romantic Abbey! hallow&rsquo;d be the rest<br />
+Of those, who rear&rsquo;d thee in this wild green vale<br />
+A temple lovely as the place is blest&mdash;<br />
+And stern as beautiful:&mdash;but words would fail<br />
+To paint thy ruin&rsquo;d glories, though the gale<br />
+Of desolation sweeps thro&rsquo; thy hoar pile,<br />
+And waves the long grass thro&rsquo; thy cloisters pale<br />
+Where the dark ivy scorns day&rsquo;s garish smile,<br />
+And weed-grown fragments crown thy desecrated aisle.</p>
+<p><!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 62</span>*
+* * *</p>
+<p>How sweet the sounds!&mdash;whose soft enchantments rose<br />
+&rsquo;Mid those wild woodlands at the matin prime&mdash;<br />
+Or when the vesper song at evening&rsquo;s close<br />
+Wafted the soul beyond the cares of time,<br />
+To that Elysium of a brighter clime<br />
+Where thro&rsquo; heaven&rsquo;s portals golden vistas gleam,<br />
+And the high harps of Seraphim sublime<br />
+Came o&rsquo;er the spirit like a prophet&rsquo;s dream,<br />
+Till faded earth away on glory&rsquo;s endless beam.</p>
+<p>Oft the proud feudal chief, whom human law<br />
+Or kingly pow&rsquo;r could bind not, nor control,<br />
+Has paus&rsquo;d before thy gates in holy awe,<br />
+And felt religion&rsquo;s charm subdue his soul&mdash;<br />
+The heart that joy&rsquo;d to hear the savage howl<br />
+Of battle on the breeze, has soften&rsquo;d been&mdash;<br />
+List&rsquo;ning the hymns of peace that sweetly stole<br />
+O&rsquo;er this lone vale, where fancy&rsquo;s eye hath seen<br />
+Forms bright and angel-like glide thro&rsquo; thy vistas green:</p>
+<p>And angel forms here at thy altar knelt,<br />
+Fair dames, and gentle maidens whose bright eyes<br />
+The sternest heart of warrior-mould could melt,<br />
+Soft&rsquo;ning grim war with gen&rsquo;rous sympathy&mdash;<br />
+Pleading, like pity wafted from the skies<br />
+To quell the stormy rage of savage man:<br />
+And hence the gentle manners had their rise&mdash;<br />
+Hence knights for lady&rsquo;s praise all dangers ran&mdash;<br />
+And thus, the glorious age of chivalry began.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Abbey derives its name (the Vale of the Cross) from a sepulchral
+monument commonly called &ldquo;<span class="smcap">The Pillar of
+Eliseg</span>,&rdquo; which stands on <!-- page 63--><a
+name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>an ancient tumulus in
+the middle of this beautifully secluded glen.&nbsp; It was erected by
+Cyngen ab Cadell Dryrnllug, in memory of his great grandfather Eliseg,
+whose son Brochmail Ysgythrog, grandfather of the founder of this rude
+monument of filial veneration, was engaged in the memorable border wars at
+the close of the sixth century; and was defeated at the Battle of Chester,
+<span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 607.&nbsp; During the great rebellion this
+pillar was thrown down by Oliver Cromwell&rsquo;s &ldquo;Reformers,&rdquo;
+who in their fiery zeal for destruction mistook it for a &ldquo;Popish
+Cross;&rdquo; and it remained for more than a century in its broken
+recumbent condition, when it was restored by the patriotism and
+intelligence of Mr. Lloyd of Trevor Hall, and replaced upon its pedestal
+with a suitable memorial to record the fact.&nbsp; It now forms an
+interesting relic of antiquity, and is probably the oldest British Cross
+(bearing a carved inscription) which exists in these islands.&nbsp; That
+said inscription has long been a puzzle to the learned investigator of
+archaeological remains.</p>
+<p>Having wandered through the verdant meads of the &ldquo;happy
+valley,&rdquo; the adventurous tourist may probably wish to climb the lofty
+hill, which is crowned by the romantic ruins of the Castle of Dinas
+Bran.&nbsp; This memorable fortress of the past, is a remarkable object
+from all parts of the vale; for whose safety and defence it was long the
+abode of a line of chiefs renowned in Cambrian lore.&nbsp; The view from
+the summit is exceedingly picturesque, <!-- page 64--><a
+name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>grand, and imposing;
+and naturally prompts the exclamation of the Poet of the Seasons&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Heavens! what a goodly prospect spreads around.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On descending the mountain-path, the traveller may perchance look round
+for a comfortable resting-place and good refreshment; he will readily find
+both, either at the Hand, or the King&rsquo;s Head Hotel.&nbsp; In the
+album of the latter house of entertainment he may also peruse the following
+bacchanalian effusion in honour of &ldquo;Llangollen Ale,&rdquo; which he
+will then be in the mood to enjoy; and as he quaffs this nectar of the
+valley, he may thus chaunt its praises, if in a convivial humour, to the
+music of a Welsh harp&mdash;</p>
+<h3>LLANGOLLEN ALE.</h3>
+<p>While other poets loudly rant<br />
+&nbsp; About Llangollen&rsquo;s Vale,<br />
+Let me, with better taste, descant<br />
+&nbsp; Upon Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>The daughters of the place are fair,<br />
+&nbsp; Its sons are strong and hale:<br />
+What makes them so?&nbsp; Llangollen air?<br />
+&nbsp; No, no!&mdash;Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>And Nature only beautified<br />
+&nbsp; The landscape, to prevail<br />
+On travellers to turn aside<br />
+&nbsp; And quaff Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>For though the scene might please at first<br />
+&nbsp; As charms would quickly stale;<br />
+While he who tastes will ever thirst<br />
+&nbsp; To drink Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p><!-- page 65--><a name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+65</span>From rock to rock the Dee may roam,<br />
+&nbsp; And chafe without avail;<br />
+It cannot match its yeasty foam<br />
+&nbsp; Against Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>The umber-tinted trees that crown<br />
+&nbsp; Bron-vawr&rsquo;s ridge are pale,<br />
+Contrasted with the nutty brown<br />
+&nbsp; That tints Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>Nor is the keep of Dinas-bran,<br />
+&nbsp; Though high and hard to scale,<br />
+So elevated as the man<br />
+&nbsp; Who drinks Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>Thy shattered arch, beside the way,<br />
+&nbsp; Val-crucis, tells a tale<br />
+Of monks who sometimes went astray<br />
+&nbsp; To quaff Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>And still upon the saintly spot<br />
+&nbsp; The pilgrim may regale<br />
+His fainting spirits with a pot<br />
+&nbsp; Of good Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>For though the ancient portress may<br />
+&nbsp; Not offer it for sale,<br />
+Yet cheerfully to all who pay<br />
+&nbsp; She gives Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>And, Eliseg, thy pillar rude<br />
+&nbsp; Is merely&mdash;I&rsquo;ll be bail&mdash;<br />
+A monument to him who brewed<br />
+&nbsp; The first Llangollen Ale.</p>
+<p>In short, each ruin, stream, or tree,<br />
+&nbsp; Within Llangollen&rsquo;s Vale,<br />
+Where&rsquo;er I turn, whate&rsquo;er I see,<br />
+&nbsp; Is redolent of Ale.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Liverpool</i>.&nbsp; R. R.</p>
+<p><!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>The convivial disposition of the monks of the &ldquo;olden
+time&rdquo; has always been a favourite theme with our romance writers and
+&ldquo;ballad-mongers;&rdquo; but it would appear from a passage which Mr.
+Roscoe quotes, that the cowled brethren of Valle Crucis Abbey did not
+content themselves in their hours of festivity with draughts of
+&ldquo;Llangollen Ale.&rdquo;&nbsp; The wealth of the institution, he
+infers, may be judged of by the magnificent hospitality of the monks, who
+are described by Owain as having the table usually covered with four
+courses of meat, served up in silver dishes, with sparkling claret for
+their general beverage.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Many have told of the monks of old,<br />
+&nbsp; What a saintly race they were;<br />
+But &rsquo;tis most true, that a merrier crew<br />
+&nbsp; Could scarce be found elsewhere;<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; For they sung and laughed,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And the rich wine quaffed,<br />
+&nbsp; And lived on the daintiest cheer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the Abbot meek, with his form so sleek,<br />
+&nbsp; Was the heartiest of them all,<br />
+And would take his place, with a smiling face,<br />
+&nbsp; When the refection bell would call;<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And they sung and laughed,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; And the rich wine quaffed,<br />
+&nbsp; Till they shook the olden hall.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">finis</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">t. thomas</span>, <span
+class="smcap">printer</span>, <span class="smcap">eastgate row</span>,
+<span class="smcap">chester</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 67--><a name="page67"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 67</span>VIEWS, &amp;c.<br />
+<span class="smcap">lately published</span><br />
+BY THOMAS CATHERALL,<br />
+<span class="smcap">eastgate row</span>, <span
+class="smcap">chester</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">PORTRAITS<br />
+<span class="smcap">of the</span><br />
+RIGHT HON. LADY ELEANOR BUTLER AND MISS PONSONBY,<br />
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">the ladies of llangollen</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Price 2s. 6d.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">PLAS NEWYDD,<br />
+<span class="smcap">near llangollen</span>,<br />
+The Seat of the late Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Price 1s. 6d.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">VALLE CRUCIS ABBEY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">near llangollen</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Price 1s. 6d.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">PILLAR OF ELISEG,<br />
+<span class="smcap">near valle crucis abbey</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Price 1s.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">a great variety
+of</span><br />
+LITHOGRAPHIC VIEWS IN CHESTER AND NORTH WALES,<br />
+<span class="smcap">constantly on sale</span>.</p>
+<h2>Footnotes</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote26"></a><a href="#citation26"
+class="footnote">[26]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;It is, I suppose, needless to say,
+that the editor is far from vouching for the accuracy of these
+details.&nbsp; The letter in the text gives the gossip as it was heard at
+the time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58a"></a><a href="#citation58a"
+class="footnote">[58a]</a>&nbsp; According to Tanner.&nbsp; Bishop Godwin
+saith, <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1100, which is decidedly wrong, if
+Madog was the founder.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58b"></a><a href="#citation58b"
+class="footnote">[58b]</a>&nbsp; Tanner&rsquo;s Notitia Monastica.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58c"></a><a href="#citation58c"
+class="footnote">[58c]</a>&nbsp; Sive Monasterium.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE "LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN"***</p>
+<pre>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The "Ladies of Llangollen", by John Hicklin
+
+
+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: The "Ladies of Llangollen"
+ as Sketched by Many Hands; with Notices of Other Objects
+ of Interest in "That Sweetest of Vales"
+
+
+Author: John Hicklin
+
+
+
+Release Date: March 13, 2007 [eBook #20810]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE "LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN"***
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1847 Thomas Catherall edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org. We would like to thank Llangollen Library,
+Denbighshire, for allowing access to the copy from which this
+transcription was made.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE "LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN,"
+AS SKETCHED BY MANY HANDS;
+WITH NOTICES OF
+OTHER OBJECTS OF INTEREST
+IN
+"THAT SWEETEST OF VALES."
+
+
+ BY JOHN HICKLIN,
+ EDITOR OF THE "CHESTER COURANT," AUTHOR OF THE "HISTORY OF CHESTER
+ CATHEDRAL," ETC. ETC.
+
+ CHESTER:
+ THOMAS CATHERALL, EASTGATE ROW;
+ LONDON: WHITTAKER & CO.; ACKERMANN & CO., STRAND;
+ DUBLIN: T. CRANFIELD.
+
+ MDCCCXLVII.
+
+ TO
+ MISS LOLLY AND MISS ANDREW,
+ THE
+ PROPRIETORS AND OCCUPIERS OF PLAS NEWYDD.
+ THE FAMED RETREAT OF
+ "The Ladies of Llangollen,"
+ THE FOLLOWING PAGES
+ ARE MOST RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED,
+ BY
+ THEIR OBEDIENT SERVANT,
+
+ THE PUBLISHER.
+
+
+
+
+THE LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN.
+
+
+From the early age of Cambrian history, when the peerless beauty of the
+high-born Myfanwy Fechan awoke the passion and the poesy of her admiring
+bard, Howel ap Einion Llygliw, down to the modern days of the more
+humble, but not less renowned maiden, "Sweet Jenny Jones;" Llangollen,
+"that sweetest of vales," seems to have been associated with
+recollections of tender and romantic interest. Our narrative, however,
+albeit it relates to the Ladies of Llangollen, refers not to whispered
+vows and moonlight serenades between gallant chiefs and damsels of noble
+birth; nor to sentimental tales of love in a cottage; but it is rather
+devoted to the records of a friendship, whose incidents and
+eccentricities have engaged the attention of many eminent _literati_ and
+tourists. Most persons who take any interest in the scenery or
+topography of North Wales, have either seen or read of that singular
+residence, Plas Newydd, at Llangollen, for so many years the home of Lady
+Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby.
+
+About the year 1778, these ladies, impelled by a desire to lead a
+secluded life of celibacy, forsook the gay and fashionable circles in
+which they had moved; and in their search for a fitting spot, on which to
+pass their days together in devoted friendship to each other, and in acts
+of benevolence and charity to their neighbours, they visited Llangollen.
+Rambling along this charming locality one balmy evening, when the
+tranquil beauty of the lovely valley was lighted up by the mild splendour
+of the moon, their eyes rested upon a cottage that stood on a gentle
+eminence near the village; and there they resolved to fix their abode.
+They accordingly purchased the estate; built a new cottage on the site of
+the old one, in a remarkably unique and somewhat grotesque style of
+architecture; and laid out gardens, pleasure grounds, and rural walks
+with grottoes, temples, conservatories, rustic bridges, and other
+accessories for enjoying, in the undisturbed quiet of their own domain,
+the natural charms of their picturesque retreat. Their mode of life
+being singular, and their costume still more so (for they assumed a style
+of head-dress resembling that of men, and always wore long cloth coats,
+rather like ladies' riding habits), they soon attracted the attention of
+the many travellers who passed through North Wales; and as they kept up
+an extensive and active correspondence with several eminent authors and
+persons of distinction, the "Ladies of Llangollen," for so they were
+always designated, made a much greater sensation in their seclusion, than
+many less remarkable persons who are constantly living in the business
+and bustle of society. Hence many literary pilgrimages were made to the
+recluses of Plas Newydd; and the "even tenor" of their way was often
+diversified by the calls of the illustrious, the learned, and the
+curious; from whom they were as willing to learn what was passing in
+politics, literature, and general gossip, as were their visitors desirous
+of having a peep within the charmed circle of this mountain solitude.
+Their motive for adopting this romantic seclusion is thus stated in
+"Steward's Collections and Recollections:"--
+
+ "Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby were young ladies of beauty
+ and rank, who loved each other with so true an affection, that they
+ could never bear the afflicting idea of a separation, which the
+ marriage of either might occasion. They therefore resolved on lives
+ of celibacy, and refusing many handsome offers, and remaining deaf to
+ the persuasions of their friends, they retired to the beautiful Yale
+ of Llangollen, to enjoy the happiness of each other's company, that
+ as their friendship began in infancy, it might be perpetuated through
+ life. The traveller, in passing by the celebrated abode of these
+ interesting women, must contemplate with a sigh that excessive
+ friendship which could tear from the bosom of society two of its
+ brightest ornaments, to bury them in the depths of seclusion:--
+
+ 'Full many a gem, of purest ray serene,
+ The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear;
+ Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,
+ And waste its sweetness on the desert air.'
+
+ "It is on this subject Miss Seward employs her poetical talents, in
+ her well-known poem of 'Llangollen Vale.'--The following is an
+ account of these celebrated ladies, extracted from a periodical work
+ published in the year 1796. 'Miss Butler and Miss Ponsonby are now
+ retired from the society of men into the wilds (!) of Llangollen in
+ Wales, where they have resided seventeen years. Miss Butler is of
+ the Ormond family, and had five offers of marriage, all of which she
+ rejected. As Miss Ponsonby, her particular friend and companion, was
+ supposed to have been the bar to her matrimonial union, it was
+ thought proper to separate them, and Miss Butler was confined. The
+ two ladies, however, found means to elope together, but being soon
+ overtaken, were brought back to their respective relations. Many
+ attempts were again made to draw Miss Butler into marriage, though in
+ vain; not many weeks after, the ladies eloped again, each having a
+ small sum with her. The place of their retreat was confided to a
+ female servant of the house. Here they lived many years, unknown to
+ any of the neighbouring villagers, otherwise than by the appellation
+ of the 'Ladies of the Vale.' No persuasions could ever get them from
+ this retreat. A lady from Ireland told the collector of these
+ articles the following anecdote relative to these female friends:--An
+ Irish nobleman (Lord Fingal) happening to be travelling in the
+ neighbourhood of Llangollen Vale, and having heard much of Lady E.
+ Butler and Miss Ponsonby, felt a desire to see and converse with
+ them. But how he could obtain this pleasure (as the ladies seldom or
+ never saw company, and were fond of a recluse life) was the question.
+ At length he bethought himself of a method the most likely to answer
+ the purpose, without the appearance of forwardness or indelicacy. He
+ sent his servant with the following verbal message:--'Lord Fingal,
+ travelling in this neighbourhood, sends his respectful compliments to
+ Miss Butler and Miss Ponsonby, and informs them that he sets out
+ to-morrow morning for Ireland, and would be happy to be the bearer of
+ any commands of theirs to that country.' This message had the effect
+ which his lordship desired. He received, in return, a kind and
+ friendly invitation to take tea with the ladies, which he, of course,
+ accepted with much pleasure.--Lord Fingal (the collector's informant
+ added) was peculiarly charmed with the amiable behaviour of these
+ interesting enthusiasts of friendship. He found not in them the
+ gravity, formality, and demureness of virgin recluses, but the ease
+ of liveliness, and animated conversation of happy, cultivated, and
+ polished minds."
+
+On June 2, 1829, death severed the faithful friendship which had existed
+for so many years between the eccentric residents at Plas Newydd, by
+removing from this earthly scene Lady Eleanor Butler, who had attained
+the advanced age of 90; and in December 9, 1831, Miss Ponsonby, who was
+seldom seen (except by her domestics) after the decease of her attached
+companion, was called to her "long home." They are both buried in the
+church-yard of Llangollen, where a stone monument is erected to their
+memory. On this record of mortality are inserted the following
+memorials:--
+
+ Sacred to the Memory of
+ _The Right Honourable_
+ LADY ELEANOR CHARLOTTE BUTLER,
+ Late of Plas Newydd in this Parish.
+ _Deceased_ 2_nd June_, 1829,
+ Aged 90 Years.
+
+ _Daughter of the Sixteenth_, _Sister of the Seventeenth_
+ _EARLS OF ORMONDE AND OSSORY_.
+
+ Aunt to the late, and to the present
+ MARQUESS OF ORMONDE.
+
+ _Endeared to her friends by an almost unequalled excellence of
+ heart_, _and by manners worthy of her illustrious birth_, _the
+ admiration and delight of a very numerous acquaintance from a
+ brilliant vivacity of mind undiminished to the latest period of a
+ prolonged existence_. _Her amiable condescension & benevolence
+ secured the grateful attachment of those by whom they had been so
+ long and so extensively experienced_. _Her various perfections
+ crowned by the most pious and cheerful submission to the Divine
+ Will_, _can only be appreciated_, _where it is humbly believed_,
+ _they are_ now _enjoying their Eternal Reward_, _and by her of whom
+ for more than fifty years_, _they constituted that happiness_, _which
+ through our Blessed Redeemer_, _she trusts will be renewed_ when THIS
+ TOMB _shall have closed over its latest tenant_.
+
+ "Sorrow not as others who have no hope."
+
+ 1 _Thess._ _Chap._ 4. _v._ 13.
+
+ SARAH PONSONBY
+ departed this Life
+ on the 9th December, 1831, Aged 76.
+
+ _She did not long survive her beloved Companion LADY ELEANOR BUTLER_,
+ _with whom she had lived in this valley for more than half a century
+ of uninterrupted friendship_. "_But they shall no more return to
+ their House_, _neither shall their place know them any more_."
+ _Job_, _Chap._ 7. _v._ 10.
+
+ _Reader pause for a moment and reflect not on the uncertainty of
+ human life but upon the certainty of its termination_, _and take
+ comfort from the assurance that_ "_As it is appointed unto men once
+ to die_, _but after this the judgment_: _so Christ was once offered
+ to bear the sins of many_; _and unto them that look for Him_, _shall
+ He appear the second time without sin unto salvation_." _Heb._
+ _Chap._ 9. _v._ 27, 28.
+
+On the same tombstone is also the following inscription, to the memory of
+a faithful servant, who accompanied "the Ladies" from Ireland, the
+country of their nativity.
+
+ In Memory of
+ MRS. MARY CARRYL,
+ _Deceased 22 November_, 1809.
+
+ This Monument is erected by Eleanor Butler and Sarah
+ Ponsonby of Plas Newydd in this Parish.
+
+ _Released from Earth and all its transient woes_,
+ _She whose remains beneath this Stone repose_,
+ _Steadfast in faith resigned her parting breath_,
+ _Looked up with Christian joy and smiled in death_.
+ _Patient_, _Industrious_, _Faithful_, _Generous_, _Kind_,
+ _Her Conduct left the proudest far behind_;_
+ Her Virtues dignified her humble birth_,
+ _And raised her mind above this sordid earth_.
+ _Attachment_ (_Sacred bond of grateful breasts_)_
+ Extinguished but with life_, _this Tomb attests_,
+ _Reared by Two Friends who will her loss bemoan_,
+ _Till with her ashes_--_Here shall rest their own_.
+
+In 1832, the home of "the Ladies of Llangollen" was sold by auction, by
+the late renowned "knight of the hammer," Mr. George Robins, who put
+forth the following advertisement, in his characteristic style of
+decorative description.
+
+ "IN NORTH WALES.
+ * * * * *
+ Particulars and Conditions of Sale
+ OF THE
+ LADY ELEANOR BUTLER AND MISS
+ PONSONBY'S
+ LITTLE PARADISE
+ AT LLANGOLLEN,
+ Of which a more enlarged description will appear
+ on the other side.
+ IT IS ALL FREEHOLD,
+ And it need hardly be remarked that it is in the
+ most favoured Spot in
+ NORTH WALES;
+ Which will be Sold by Auction
+ BY
+ * * * * *
+ MR. GEORGE ROBINS,
+ * * * * *
+ AT THE AUCTION MART, LONDON,
+ On THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1832, at Twelve o'Clock,
+ IN ONE LOT,
+ BY DIRECTION OF THE EXECUTORS.
+
+May be viewed only with Tickets, and Particulars had Twenty-one Days
+prior to the Sale at the Lion Hotel, Shrewsbury; the Inns at Llangollen,
+and Corwen; the Great Hotel, Bangor; Waterloo, Liverpool; York House,
+Bath; and at Mr. GEORGE ROBINS's Offices, London.
+
+N.B. The appropriate Furniture, Service of Plate, Elegancies of the
+Chateau, extensive Library of Books, and all the valuable Appendages,
+will be submitted to Public Competition the latter End of the Month of
+July, by Direction of the Executors.
+
+
+
+PARTICULARS, &c.
+
+
+Mr. ROBINS is not a little proud that it hath been his good fortune to be
+selected by the Executors of the Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby to
+direct the sale of their far-famed Domicile. He feels that an apology
+will be due to all those who are familiar with its beauties and
+peculiarities, for the very imperfect recital which follows, while those
+who are yet to be gratified with the sight of it, may imagine he has
+drawn some little upon "Fancy's sketch." There is nothing of pretension
+in its outward form, it indicates but moderately the comfort that
+presides within, inasmuch as will be found congregated all the _agremens_
+pertaining to more consequential habitations. Considerable tact is
+conspicuous everywhere; but none more unequivocally displayed than in the
+lightsome little Dining Room, contrasted with the gloomy, yet superior
+grace of the Library, into which it opens. This room is fitted up in the
+Gothic style, the Windows are of ancient painted glass "_shedding their
+dim religious light_."
+
+
+THE SALOON OF THE MINERVAS
+
+
+Is the repository of the choice Library. The auxiliary Offices are very
+commensurate, the grounds are disposed in such good order as is the
+natural consequence of pure taste, the Kitchen Garden is neatness itself,
+and the Fruit trees are of the rarest and finest sort, and luxuriant in
+their produce. Many and shaded
+
+ GRAVEL WALKS ENCIRCLE THIS ELYSIUM,
+
+Which is adorned with curious and rare Shrubs and Flowers. It is nothing
+in extent but
+
+ EVERYTHING IN GRACE AND BEAUTY,
+
+United with a great variety of foliage. Upon the Freehold is a
+considerable quantity of valuable Timber which overhangs
+
+ A DEEP AND HOLLOW GLEN;
+
+In its entangled bottom, a frothing brook leaps and clamours o'er the
+rough stones in its channel towards
+
+ THE VALE OF LLANGOLLEN.
+
+To speak of the latter would be quite superfluous, few, if any, are
+unacquainted with the wildness and surpassing beauty of the most admired
+spot in North Wales. Its contiguity to the little romantic village,
+giving the opportunity either to indulge in the gaiety of this place, or
+recreate in retirement, (as shall seem best suited to varied
+inclination), there are fortunately both auxiliaries to this scene (it
+had almost been said of enchantment). The verdant Lawns, dotted with
+rare plants, the scenic beauties, and the woodland scenery combined,
+plead in extenuation of this lofty tone. The whole is encompassed by
+rich meadows, wearing a park-like appearance; held with the freehold,
+which is limited to less than Five Acres. A truly beautiful Portico of
+carved Oak leads to this
+
+
+DOMICILE OF COMFORT.
+
+
+The whole lower Story of which, on the outside, is covered with the
+richest carved Oak, and within which will be found a Dining Room 15 feet
+by 15, with handsome Chimney Piece, and carved Oak Doors and Wainscoting.
+
+A Library, 13 feet by 14 feet 6 inches, with Three Gothic Windows of
+carved Oak and splendid stained Glass, exhibiting old Armorial Bearings,
+and forming a Bow Window, handsome Chimney Piece of yellow and white
+marble, and Recesses fitted up with Gothic Book Cases, and the Doors and
+Architrave of old carved Oak.
+
+An admirably constructed Kitchen, carved Oak Doors and Window Facia, a
+very handsome carved Oak Screen and Seat, Grate Ovens, Hearths, Stew
+Holes, &c.
+
+A Housekeeper's Room, beautifully fitted up with carved Oak Presses, Oak
+Doors and Window Frames.
+
+A large Larder with fixed Tables, Hooks, &c. together with an ample
+Cellar, both so situated as to be perfectly cool in the hottest weather.
+
+Wash-house, Scullery, Coal-house, &c., a Staircase of carved Oak, Walls
+and Ceilings of the same beautifully ornamented Gothic Architecture.
+This is one of the most beautiful things that can be conceived.
+
+
+FIRST FLOOR.
+
+
+An excellent Bed Room, fixed Book Shelves and carved Oak Door, Chimney
+Piece and Window Facia, an excellent best Bed Room, Oak Doors, fancy
+Cornice, and cross Ceiling Beams of carved Oak, a very handsome Chimney
+Piece of the same.
+
+A light Dressing Room and Closet, Gothic carved Oak Doors, &c. fitted up
+with Book Shelves. Over the Staircase a commodious Pantry, Shelves and
+Presses for China and Plate, Oak Doors of carved open work. The Sashes
+of the Windows are all Metal.
+
+
+ATTIC STORY.
+
+
+Two good Servants' Rooms, and a Store Room. The Premises consist of
+
+
+FOUR GARDENS
+
+
+In the best order, and well stocked with all kinds of Fruit Trees,
+Vegetables, and Flowers.
+
+
+FIVE PASTURE FIELDS
+
+
+Of the richest Land, well timbered, Rustic Bridges, Summer Houses of
+richly carved Oak, and Rustic Seats, Cow and Calf-house, Garden-house,
+Yard, Store-house, &c. An excellent Engine Pump.
+
+This celebrated Place was the Property, and for more than half a Century
+the Residence of the late LADY ELEANOR BUTLER AND MISS PONSONBY. It is
+situated upon a Piece of rich Table Land, just above the Port and
+Market-town of Llangollen, and commands a View of the Valley of the Dee,
+both up and down, is close to Valle Crucis, Dinas Bran, and many of the
+most beautiful Scenes in Wales. The Taxes are very light.
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE FREEHOLD PART OF THE ESTATE.
+ A. R. P.
+House, Offices, 0 3 14
+and Shrubbery
+Flower Garden 0 0 27
+Garden House, 0 0 12
+Court and
+Poultry ditto
+Part of Lawn 0 3 8
+Nursery 0 0 20
+Field 2 0 12
+Total 4 0 13
+
+THE LANDS CONTIGUOUS ARE AS FOLLOWS:
+
+
+1A. 1R. 20P. part of Lawn; and 3R. 26P. of Gardens and Shrubbery, held
+from year to year, from Ousley Gore, Esq., at a rent of pounds
+
+3R. 13P. part of Lawn and Flower Garden, held in same manner from Hon. F.
+West, at a rent of pounds
+
+4A. 1R. 30P. being two Fields, the Glen, and a Kitchen Garden, from Hon.
+Mr. Mostyn, yearly at a rent of pounds
+
+1A. 2R. 16P. a Field from J. Dicken, Esq. at a yearly rent of pounds
+
+TOTAL QUANTITY, 13 ACRES 38 PERCHES."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The exaggerated style of this ornate announcement will, doubtless, excite
+a smile, and we suspect that some of our readers, who know the locality,
+will laugh outright at the very fanciful stretch of imagination, which
+led the worthy auctioneer to speak of the "_Port_ of Llangollen."
+
+The purchasers of the property were Miss Lolly and Miss Andrew, the
+present owners and occupiers of Plas Newydd, between whom and the late
+"Ladies of Llangollen," an intimate friendship existed.
+
+In August 1832, Mr. Robins offered by public auction the furniture and
+fittings of this unique villa; the following is a copy of the
+advertisement, and the catalogue of the sale extended over seventy quarto
+pages.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "LLANGOLLEN, NORTH WALES.
+ MR. GEORGE ROBINS
+
+Has the pleasure most respectfully to announce to the Nobility, Lovers of
+the Fine Arts, and those who delight in objects of interest, and indeed
+to the Public generally, that having sold "PLAS NEWYDD," he is instructed
+by the Executors of
+
+ THE LADY ELEANOR BUTLER
+ AND
+ MISS PONSONBY,
+
+To offer for UNRESERVED COMPETITION, at the Domicile so long hallowed as
+the abode of friendship,
+
+On MONDAY, the 13th day of AUGUST, 1832,
+And many succeeding Days, at Eleven for Twelve
+o'clock precisely, on each day,
+
+ THE FOLLOWING
+ INTERESTING AND VALUABLE PROPERTY,
+ APPERTAINING TO THE RESIDENCE,
+
+And which for extent, variety and novelty, forms a most brilliant
+Assemblage, certainly unexampled in the Annals of Auctions; it having
+been congregated by those highly talented Ladies, the fair "MISTRESSES OF
+PLAS NEWYDD," during a series of 50 years, aided by their joint taste,
+and at considerable expense, including the appropriate
+
+ FURNITURE OF THE CHATEAU,
+
+Comprising a Drawing Room suite in curtains, glasses, centre, card, and
+occasional tables; ottomans, sofas, couches, chairs of various
+descriptions, yet in unison, whatnots, cheffioneers; the dining room is
+very complete; there are excellent dining tables, chairs, sideboard,
+writing tables and library chairs.
+
+ A RANGE OF BOOKCASES & MANY OBJECTS,
+ ELABORATELY CARVED IN OAK;
+ A STRONG BOX OF GREAT ANTIQUITY, AND
+ CARVED,
+
+ It was once the Property of his late Royal Highness
+
+ THE DUKE OF YORK.
+
+ The Furniture of the Bed Chambers and Offices is of a corresponding
+ character;
+
+ EXCELLENT TABLE AND BED LINEN,
+
+ The equipments of the Garden are of a very superior description;
+ A VARIETY OF SEATS, CURIOUS ETRUSCAN FLOWER VASES, GARDEN IMPLEMENTS,
+ ETC.
+
+ A GREEN HOUSE OF GREAT BEAUTY,
+ ORNAMENTED WITH PAINTED AND STAINED GLASS;
+
+ An extensive Collection of Plants, Dairy and Brewing Utensils;
+ SERVICES OF CHINA AND GLASS,
+ In complete sets, for the Table, the Dejeune, the Dessert, &c. &c.
+
+ SIDEBOARD OF PLATE,
+
+ Comprising many rare chased and antique items; dishes and covers,
+ salvers, waiters, tea and coffee equipages, candlesticks, liquor and
+ cruet frames, spoons and forks;
+
+ AND A VARIETY OF USEFUL ARTICLES FOR THE SIDEBOARD AND TABLE.
+
+ JEWELLERY AND ELEGANCIES,
+
+ Presenting many pleasing and valuable Ornaments for the person, in
+ necklaces, car-rings, crosses and brooches, most of them inclosing the
+ hair of the donors, particularly one of great interest, possessing
+
+ A LOCK OF "MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS" HAIR.
+
+ INTERESTING MISCELLANIES, CURIOSITIES AND RELICS, VIZ.
+
+Very fine missals, beautifully illuminated; autographs of numerous
+renowned personages, particularly a letter by "Charles the First" to Lady
+Fisher, from Whitehall, during his confinement; presentation snuff boxes,
+many of value, and most with lines of dedication; relics of great
+antiquity, and many of modern date, presented by travellers, forming
+altogether a Museum of great interest and amusement.
+
+ SEVERAL REMARKABLY FINE CAMEOS AND INTAGLIOS.
+
+ A MODEL OF THE WARWICK VASE, IN SILVER,
+
+ Richly Chased, most exquisite in Workmanship and perfectly Unique.
+
+ Many curious models, bronze busts, and in Sevres bisquit; MUSICAL AND
+OTHER ELEGANT CLOCKS, in ormolu; China essence, and flower vases; a large
+ AEolian harp, telescopes, microscopes, &c.
+
+ AN EXTENSIVE AND VALUABLE LIBRARY OF BOOKS,
+
+ Comprising many Thousand Volumes, elegantly bound in folio, quarto, and
+ octavo, (large and small.)
+
+ A SERIES OF ETCHINGS.
+ THE POWER AND PROGRESS OF GENIUS,
+ EXECUTED BY
+ THE PRINCESS ELIZABETH,
+ AND PRESENTED BY HER
+ TO THE PRINCESS AMELIA;
+
+ AN AUTOGRAPH LETTER FROM
+ THE PRESENT KING OF FRANCE,
+
+ Accompanying the Memoirs du Duc de Montressor, in scarlet and morocco, a
+ present from His Majesty to Lady Butler and Miss Ponsonby; with many
+ other contributions and valuable presents from persons of the highest
+ rank and literary acquirements to these highly gifted Ladies.
+
+ PICTURES, VALUABLE DRAWINGS, AND PRINTS,
+
+ In frames and in portfolios, comprising a collection the most choice and
+ valuable, many by the first Artists of the day, Portraits of Kings,
+exalted and renowned Characters, and Views of the most celebrated Scenery
+ of various Countries. A small quantity of
+
+ RARE WINES AND LIQUEURS;
+
+Viz., Old Port, Sherry, Madeira, Lisbon, Bucellas, Vidonia, Maraschino,
+Noyeau, Eau de la Reine, and other estimable Liqueurs.
+
+*** The entire Sale will be on View at the Chateau from the 4th to the
+13th of August.
+
+The CATALOGUES will be ready Three Weeks prior to the Sale; and may be
+had at 3s. each, at the Villa; Phillips's Hotel, and the King's Head,
+Llangollen; the Lion, Shrewsbury; the Owen Glendower, Corwen; the Great
+Hotel, at Bangor; the Waterloo Hotel, Liverpool; the Hen and Chickens,
+Birmingham; York Hotel, Bath; of Mr. Guernon, Molesworth-street, Dublin,
+and at Mr. GEORGE ROBINS' Offices, Covent Garden."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The present occupiers were also purchasers of many of the rare
+"curiosities and relics."
+
+We shall now proceed to cite the descriptions which have been put upon
+record by several distinguished and popular authors, relative to the
+"Ladies of Llangollen."
+
+It appears from Volume VI. of the published Letters of the late Miss Anna
+Seward, that a friendly intimacy was cultivated between that clever
+_literateur_ and the recluses of Plas Newydd; and it would seem from her
+correspondence, that their tastes were very comprehensive and
+multifarious; poetry and politics, music and mystery, tragedy and tattle,
+being alike acceptable. In a letter addressed to Lady Eleanor Butler and
+Miss Ponsonby, under date Lichfield, October 4, 1802, Miss Seward
+exclaims:--
+
+ "Ah! dearest ladies, it is under the pressure of a severe cold,
+ fierce cough, and inflamed lungs, that I address you. A duty so
+ delightful had, but for this incapacitating malady, been earlier
+ paid.
+
+ "I have to thank dear Miss Ponsonby for a manuscript of many verses,
+ which she had the goodness to make for me in hours so engrossed, amid
+ engagements so indispensable. I had the honour to receive it as I
+ was stepping into the chaise which was to convey Mrs. Smith and
+ myself far from that Edenic region where we had recently passed so
+ many happy hours; from those bowers in Llangollen Vale, whence the
+ purest pleasures have so often flowed to my heart and mind, as from a
+ full and overflowing fountain."
+
+From Lichfield, Nov. 9, 1802, Miss Seward discourses to Miss Ponsonby on
+modern tragedy, and concludes with the following bit of "blue-stocking
+gossip:"--
+
+ "Though I know her not, I am pleased that Mrs. Spencer has had the
+ good fortune to interest and delight you; for I am always desirous
+ that men of genius should not do what they are so prone to do, marry
+ every-day women.
+
+ "Naughty brook, for having behaved outrageously again! That little
+ stream of the mountain is a true spoiled child, whom we love the
+ better for its faults, and for all the trouble and alarm they
+ occasion. You see I presume to involve myself, as if, in some sort,
+ the interesting little virago belonged to me. Certainly it is my
+ peculiar pet amongst your scenic children, dear to my taste, as they
+ are beautiful; to my heart as being yours."
+
+In a letter from Lichfield, June 13, 1805, Miss Seward begins:--
+
+ "'With a trembling hand, my beloved Miss Ponsonby, do I take up the
+ pen to thank you for a thrice kind letter. It had not remained
+ several weeks unacknowledged, but for this terrible malady of the
+ head, which has oppressed me with so much severity during the
+ interim. I think it must soon lay me low. Not at my time of life
+ does the constitution, pushed from its equipoise by long enduring
+ disease, regain it amid the struggles.
+
+ "Immediately on receiving your last, I sent for Madoc; by far the
+ most captivating work of its genuinely inspired author."
+
+In the same letter the following passage occurs:--
+
+ "Our young friend Cary has published his translation of Dante's
+ Inferno. It is thought the best which has appeared, and the sale
+ goes on well. He presents a copy to yourself and Lady Eleanor, and I
+ trust you will receive it soon."
+
+After some literary disquisitions on the Inferno, the Lay of the Last
+Minstrel, and Madoc; and an allusion to King George's visit to Lichfield,
+the letter thus concludes:--
+
+ "Present me devoutly to your beloved Lady Eleanor. Most interesting
+ is your description of that visit, mutually paid to that desolate and
+ silent Dinbren. How worthy of yourselves that hour of consecration,
+ with all its tributary sighs! Too happy were the days and weeks
+ which I passed beneath its roof, and in its beautiful and sublime
+ environs, to permit such revisitation from me.
+
+ "It would break my heart amid its present consciousness, spread over
+ with a dark and impervious pall, which can never be drawn away.
+
+ "Dear, and amiable Miss Ponsonby, farewell."
+
+From Lichfield, October 31st, 1805, we have another letter to Miss
+Ponsonby, with the following tremendous opening:--
+
+ "Nothing, my dear Madam, is so common as hypocrisy and treachery
+ where property is concerned; but a greater excess of them never
+ poured their dark currents from the vulgar heart, than in those
+ circumstances which your last letter narrates.
+
+ "Thus ever be extortionate villany baffled--and long unclouded be the
+ peace which succeeds to that attempted injury. I cannot express how
+ much I am obliged that you took the kind trouble of retracing the
+ road of peril, which had so nearly engulfed a scene, whose beauties
+ rise perpetually in my sleeping and waking dreams."
+
+What ever could have happened at Plas Newydd to excite so grand a burst
+of tragic passion: here _is_ matter for curious speculation! Then Miss
+Seward runs into a not very wise dissertation on politics; then reverts
+to literary subjects, of which Horace Walpole's genius is the chief
+topic; bemoans her own dizziness of the head; has another touch at Mr.
+Pitt; and finally ejaculates "Adieu, dearest Madam! Your beloved Lady
+Eleanor will accept my affectionate devoirs!" Why did not Miss Seward go
+to Llangollen, to end her days in peace?
+
+In the lively Memoirs of that celebrated Comedian, the late Mr. Charles
+Matthews, we have the following humourous letters, descriptive of the
+"Ladies of Llangollen:"--
+
+ "Oswestry, Sept. 4th. 1820.
+
+ "The dear inseparable inimitables, Lady Butler and Miss Ponsonby,
+ were in the boxes here on Friday. They came twelve miles from
+ Llangollen, and returned, as they never sleep from home. Oh, such
+ curiosities! I was nearly convulsed. I could scarcely get on for
+ the first ten minutes after my eye caught them. Though I had never
+ seen them, I instantaneously knew them. As they are seated, there is
+ not one point to distinguish them from men: the dressing and
+ powdering of the hair; their well-starched neckcloths; the upper part
+ of their habits, which they always wear, even at a dinner-party, made
+ precisely like men's coats; and regular black beaver men's hats.
+ They looked exactly like two respectable superannuated old clergymen;
+ one the picture of Boruwlaski. I was highly flattered, as they never
+ were in the theatre before.
+
+ "The packets now sail at seven in the morning; all _day_-work instead
+ of night, which is delightful; and the weather is heavenly. People
+ are here extremely hospitable; but, of all days in the year, Mr.
+ Ormsby Gore went to Carnarvon assizes (being high sheriff) the day
+ before I arrived. He only returned yesterday; and almost forced me
+ away from the inn. I, however, could not conveniently go there, but
+ have been to call this morning. Such a place!
+
+ "By the by, have you any magnolias in the grounds? if not, get me one
+ or two. I saw a Portugal laurel, only four years old, full half the
+ size of that great beauty at Lord Mansfield's; pray have one or two
+ of them placed by themselves on our new lawn.
+
+ "I have to-day received an invitation to call, if I have time as I
+ pass, at Llangollen, to receive in due form, from the dear old
+ gentlemen called Lady Butler and Miss Ponsonby, their thanks for the
+ entertainment I afforded them at the theatre."
+
+ "Porkington, Oct. 24th.
+
+ "Well, I have seen them, heard them, touched them. The pets, "_the
+ ladies_," as they are called, dined here yesterday--Lady Eleanor
+ Butler and Miss Ponsonby, the curiosities of Llangollen mentioned by
+ Miss Seward in her letters, about the year 1760. I mentioned to you
+ in a former letter the effect they produced upon me in public, but
+ never shall I forget the first burst yesterday upon entering the
+ drawing-room: to find the dear antediluvian darlings, attired for
+ dinner in the same manified dress, with the Croix de St. Louis, and
+ other orders, and myriads of large brooches, with stones large enough
+ for snuff-boxes, stuck in their starched neckcloths! I have not room
+ to describe their most fascinating persons. I have an invitation
+ from them, which I much fear I cannot accept. They returned home
+ last night, fourteen miles, after twelve o'clock. They have not
+ slept one night from home for above forty years. I longed to put
+ Lady Eleanor under a bell-glass, and bring her to Highgate for you to
+ look at."
+
+In August 1825, Sir Walter Scott visited Llangollen, and the account of
+his interview with the famed "ladies of the vale," is given with much
+humour and smartness by Mr. Lockhart, in his interesting Memoirs of the
+immortal "Author of Waverley."--
+
+ "Our progress through North Wales produced nothing worth recording,
+ except perhaps the feeling of delight which everything in the aspect
+ of the common people, their dress, their houses, their gardens, and
+ their husbandry, could not fail to call up in persons who had just
+ been seeing Ireland for the first time; and a short visit (which was,
+ indeed, the only one he made) to the far-famed "ladies" of
+ Llangollen. They had received some hint that Sir Walter meant to
+ pass their way; and on stopping at the inn, he received an invitation
+ so pressing, to add one more to the long list of the illustrious
+ visitors of their retreat, that it was impossible for him not to
+ comply. We had read histories and descriptions enough of these
+ romantic spinsters, and were prepared to be well amused; but the
+ reality surpassed all expectation.
+
+ "An extract from a gossiping letter of the following week will
+ perhaps be sufficient for Llangollen.
+
+ "'Elleray, August 24.
+
+ * * * "'We slept on Wednesday evening at Capel Curig, which Sir W.
+ supposes to mean the Chapel of the Crags; a pretty little inn in a
+ most picturesque situation certainly, and as to the matter of toasted
+ cheese, quite exquisite. Next day we advanced through, I verily
+ believe, the most perfect gem of a country eye ever saw, having
+ almost all the wildness of Highland backgrounds, and all the
+ loveliness of rich English landscape nearer us, and streams like the
+ purest and most babbling of our own. At Llangollen your papa was
+ waylaid by the celebrated 'Ladies'--viz. Lady Eleanor Butler and the
+ Honourable Miss Ponsonby, who having been one or both crossed in
+ love, forswore all dreams of matrimony in the heyday of youth,
+ beauty, and fashion, and selected this charming spot for the repose
+ of their now time-honoured virginity. It was many a day, however,
+ before they could get implicit credit for being the innocent friends
+ they really were, among the people of the neighbourhood; for their
+ elopement from Ireland had been performed under suspicious
+ circumstances; and as Lady Eleanor arrived here in her natural aspect
+ of a pretty girl, while Miss Ponsonby had condescended to accompany
+ her in the garb of a smart footman in buckskin breeches, years and
+ years elapsed ere full justice was done to the character of their
+ romance. {26} We proceeded up the hill, and found everything about
+ them and their habitation odd and extravagant beyond report. Imagine
+ two women, one apparently seventy, the other sixty-five, dressed in
+ heavy blue riding habits, enormous shoes, and men's hats, with their
+ petticoats so tucked up, that at the first glance of them, fussing
+ and tottering about their porch in the agony of expectation, we took
+ them for a couple of hazy or crazy old sailors. On nearer inspection
+ they both wear a world of brooches, rings, &c., and Lady Eleanor
+ positively _orders_--several stars and crosses, and a red ribbon,
+ exactly like a K.C.B. To crown all, they have crop heads, shaggy,
+ rough, bushy, and as white as snow, the one with age alone, the other
+ assisted by a sprinkling of powder. The elder lady is almost blind,
+ and every way much decayed; the other, the ci-devant groom, in good
+ preservation. But who could paint the prints, the dogs, the cats,
+ the miniatures, the cram of cabinets, clocks, glass-cases, books,
+ bijouterie, dragon-china, nodding mandarins, and whirligigs of every
+ shape and hue--the whole house outside and in (for we must see
+ everything to the dressing-closets), _covered_ with carved oak, very
+ rich and fine some of it--and the illustrated copies of Sir W.'s
+ poems, and the joking simpering compliments about Waverley, and the
+ anxiety to know who McIvor really was, and the absolute devouring of
+ the poor Unknown, who had to carry off, besides all the rest, one
+ small bit of literal _butter_ dug up in a Milesian stone jar lately
+ from the bottom of some Irish bog. Great romance (_i.e._ absurd
+ innocence of character) one must have looked for; but it was
+ confounding to find this mixed up with such eager curiosity, and
+ enormous knowledge of the tattle and scandal of the world they had so
+ long left. Their tables were piled with newspapers from every corner
+ of the kingdom, and they seemed to have the deaths and marriages of
+ the antipodes at their fingers' ends. Their albums and autographs,
+ from Louis XVIII. and George IV., down to magazine poets and
+ quack-doctors, are a museum. I shall never see the spirit of
+ blue-stockingism again in such perfect incarnation. Peveril won't
+ get over their final kissing match for a week. Yet it is too bad to
+ laugh at these good old girls; they have long been the guardian
+ angels of the village, and are worshipped by man, woman, and child
+ about them.'"
+
+In July, 1828, the charming vale of Llangollen was visited by a German
+Prince (Puckler-Muskau of Prussia), who has thus left on record the
+impressions which his excursion in that vicinity excited:--
+
+ "The most beautiful reality, however, awaited me this morning in
+ Wales. The vision of clouds seemed to have been the harbinger of the
+ magnificence of the vale of Llangollen,--a spot which, in my opinion,
+ far surpasses all the beauties of the Rhine-land, and has, moreover,
+ a character quite its own, from the unusual forms of the peaked tops,
+ and rugged declivities of its mountains. The Dee, a rapid stream,
+ winds through the green valley in a thousand fantastic bendings,
+ overhung with thick underwood. On each side high mountains rise
+ abruptly from the plain, and are crowned with antique ruins, modern
+ country-houses, manufactories, whose towering chimneys send out
+ columns of thick smoke, or with grotesque groups of upright rocks.
+ The vegetation is everywhere rich, and hill and vale are filled with
+ lofty trees, whose varied hues add so infinitely to the beauty and
+ picturesque effect of a landscape. In the midst of this luxuriant
+ nature, arises, with a grandeur heightened by contrast, a single
+ long, black, bare range of mountains, clothed only with thick, dark
+ heather," and from time to time skirting the high road. This
+ magnificent road, which from London to Holyhead, is as even as a
+ 'parquet,' here runs along the side of the left range of mountains,
+ at about their middle elevation and following all their windings; so
+ that in riding along at a brisk trot or gallop, the traveller is
+ presented at every minute with a completely new prospect; and without
+ changing his position, overlooks the valley now before him, now
+ behind, now at his side. On one side is an aqueduct of twenty-five
+ slender arches, a work which would have done honour to Rome. Through
+ this a second river is led over the valley and across the Dee, at an
+ elevation of an hundred and twenty feet above the bed of the natural
+ stream. A few miles further on, the little town of Llangollen offers
+ a delightful resting place, and is deservedly much resorted to.
+
+ "There is a beautiful view from the churchyard near the inn: here I
+ climbed upon a tomb, and stood for half an hour enjoying with deep
+ and grateful delight the beauties so richly spread before me.
+ Immediately below me bloomed a terraced garden, filled with vine,
+ honeysuckle, rose, and a hundred gay flowers, which descended to the
+ very edge of the foaming stream. On the right hand, my eye followed
+ the crisped waves in their restless murmuring course through the
+ overhanging thicket; before me rose two lines of wood, divided by a
+ strip of meadow-land filled with grazing cattle; and high above all,
+ rose the bare conical peak of a mountain crowned by the ruins of the
+ old Welsh castle Dinas Bran, or the Crow's Fortress. On the left,
+ the stone houses of the town lie scattered along the valley; the
+ river forms a considerable waterfall near the picturesque bridge,
+ while three colossal rocks rise immediately behind it like giant
+ guards, and shut out all the more distant wonders of this enchanting
+ region.
+
+ "Before I left Llangollen I recollected the two celebrated ladies who
+ have inhabited this valley for more than half a century, and of whom
+ I had heard once as a child, and again recently in London. You have
+ doubtless heard your father talk of them;--'si non, voila leur
+ histoire.' Fifty-six years ago, two young, pretty and fashionable
+ ladies, Lady Eleanor Butler, and the daughter of the late Lord
+ Ponsonby, took it in their heads to hate men, to love only each
+ other, and to live from that hour in some remote hermitage. The
+ resolution was immediately executed; and from that time neither lady
+ has ever passed a night out of their cottage. On the other hand, no
+ one who is presentable travels in Wales unprovided with an
+ introduction to them. It is affirmed that the 'scandal' of the great
+ world interests them as much as when they lived in it; and that their
+ curiosity to know what passes has preserved all its freshness. I had
+ compliments to deliver to them from several ladies, but I had
+ neglected to furnish myself with a letter. I therefore sent my card,
+ determined if they declined my visit, as I was led to fear, to storm
+ the cottage. Here, as elsewhere, however, in England, a title easily
+ opened the door, and I immediately received a gracious invitation to
+ a second breakfast. Passing along a charming road, through a trim
+ and pretty pleasure-ground, in a quarter of an hour I reached a small
+ but tasteful gothic cottage, situated directly opposite to Dinas
+ Bran, various glimpses of which were visible through openings cut in
+ the trees. I alighted, and was received at the door by the two
+ ladies. Fortunately I was already prepared by hearsay for their
+ peculiarities; I might otherwise have found it difficult to repress
+ some expression of astonishment. Imagine two ladies, the eldest of
+ whom, Lady Eleanor, a short robust woman, begins to feel her years a
+ little, being now eighty-three; the other, a tall and imposing
+ person, esteems herself still youthful, being only seventy-four.
+ Both wore their still abundant hair combed straight back and
+ powdered, a round man's hat, a man's cravat and waistcoat, but in the
+ place of 'inexpressibles,' a short petticoat and boots: the whole
+ covered by a coat of blue cloth, of a cut quite peculiar,--a sort of
+ middle term between a man's coat and a lady's riding-habit. Over
+ this, Lady Eleanor wore, first, the grand cordon of the order of St.
+ Louis across her shoulder; secondly, the same order around her neck;
+ thirdly, the small cross of the same in her button-hole, and 'pour
+ comble de gloire,' a golden lily of nearly the natural size, as a
+ star,--all, as she said, presents of the Bourbon family. So far the
+ whole effect was somewhat ludicrous. But now, you must imagine both
+ ladies with that agreeable 'aisance,' that air of the world of the
+ 'ancien regime,' courteous and entertaining, without the slightest
+ affectation; speaking French as well as any Englishwoman of my
+ acquaintance; and above all, with that essentially polite,
+ unconstrained, and simply cheerful manner of the good society of that
+ day, which, in our serious hardworking age of business, appears to be
+ going to utter decay. I was really affected with a melancholy sort
+ of pleasure in contemplating it in the persons of the amiable old
+ ladies who are among the last of its living representatives; nor
+ could I witness without lively sympathy the unremitting, natural and
+ affectionate attention with which the younger treated her somewhat
+ infirmer friend, and anticipated all her wants. The charm of such
+ actions lies chiefly in the manner in which they are performed,--in
+ things which appear small and insignificant, but which are never lost
+ upon a susceptible heart.
+
+ "I began by saying that I esteemed myself fortunate in being
+ permitted to deliver to the fair recluses the compliments with which
+ I was charged by my grandfather, who had had the honour of visiting
+ them fifty years ago. Their beauty indeed they had lost, but not
+ their memory: they remembered the C--- C--- very well, immediately
+ produced an old memorial of him, and expressed their wonder that so
+ young a man was dead already. Not only the venerable ladies, but
+ their house, was full of interest; indeed it contained some real
+ treasures. There is scarcely a remarkable person of the last half
+ century who has not sent them a portrait or some curiosity or antique
+ as a token of remembrance. The collection of these, a well-furnished
+ library, a delightful situation, an equable, tranquil life, and
+ perfect friendship and union,--these have been their possessions; and
+ if we may judge by their robust old age and their cheerful temper,
+ they have not chosen amiss."
+
+During the summer of 1833, Miss Catherine Sinclair, the clever authoress
+of "Modern Accomplishments," made an excursion through Wales, and thus
+describes her visit to Plas Newydd:--
+
+ "No eyes but those of a poet are worthy to behold the celebrated
+ valley of Llangollen, where we next proceeded, after having drawn
+ largely on the firm of Messrs. Wordsworth, Cowper, Thomson, and Co.
+ for language to pay a due tribute of admiration to this surpassing
+ scene,--but who has a genius equal to the majesty of nature? I
+ thought of the Mahometan who turned back when he observed some such
+ rich and fertile plain, saying, he had been only promised one
+ Paradise, and did not wish to enjoy it upon earth. Instead of
+ following his example, however, we advanced, trying to fancy
+ ourselves on the banks of the Rhine, to which so many travellers have
+ compared this beautiful valley. Pray employ your unrivalled taste in
+ imagining the rugged mountains,--the sparkling river,--the ancient
+ trees,--the smiling cottages,--the daisied meadows, and the fertile
+ gardens, all grouped or scattered in the way you think best,--and
+ invention can suggest nothing more perfect.
+
+ "The valley of Llangollen belonged once to the far-famed Owen
+ Glendower, mentioned in Shakespeare's Plays, as 'not in the roll of
+ common men.' His palace stood near this formerly, and here he
+ maintained a war during twelve years against Henry IV., being a keen
+ adherent of Richard's; besides which, a private feud against Lord
+ Grey de Ruthyn whetted his exertions. Peace was, however, about to
+ be concluded in 1415, between the Welsh chief and the English king,
+ on very honourable terms, when, as we frequently observe, if any one
+ attains his utmost earthly desires, Owen died. But though the vale
+ of Llangollen boasts of such a hero, its chief celebrity arises from
+ a pair of heroines; and we lost no time in doing homage to their
+ memories, by scrambling our way up a steep ascent to that well-known
+ cottage, where the late Lady Eleanor Butler and the Honourable Miss
+ Ponsonby, during more than half a century, devoted their long lives
+ so romantically to friendship, celibacy, and the knitting of blue
+ stockings. It seems only astonishing that this is so very rare an
+ occurrence, for any one with a friend so richly endowed as my
+ accomplished correspondent, might feel safe from the possibility of
+ tiring, and might like to connect her name with so charming a scene
+ and with so romantic a story. Two successors to these fair hermits
+ have already sprung up, as substitutes for the original occupants,
+ following the same exclusive plan of life; and in a moment of
+ enthusiasm I felt much inclined to knock at the door and ask if they
+ would make it a trio. In the case of Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss
+ Ponsonby, very transient visits only were acceptable, and even their
+ own names remained long concealed, as the friends eloped
+ clandestinely without confiding to any one, except a maid servant,
+ the place of their retreat. The cause of this very close seclusion
+ having been variously conjectured, excited much gossipping curiosity
+ at the time; but from whatever cause the hermitage originated, here,
+ embowered in roses, they 'made a solitude and called it peace.'
+ After discussing the Ladies of Llangollen, our thoughts naturally
+ diverged into a general consideration, whether the greatest number of
+ voluntary recluses have relinquished social intercourse on account of
+ disappointed affection, mortified vanity, or mistaken devotion.
+
+ "What a beau ideal of earthly felicity springs up to the imagination
+ in taking a glance at the beautiful cottage of Llangollen! all the
+ every-day vexations and vulgar cares of life, seem there swept aside,
+ and nothing left for the inhabitants but to lead a life of graceful
+ leisure, tying up carnations, engrafting roses, gazing at the
+ splendid scenery around, and talking in perpetual ecstacies about
+ flowers and perfumes. Almost every grown-up person entertains, at
+ the out-set of life, notions of happiness with a cottage nearly
+ similar to that which a little girl enjoys with her first
+ doll,--dressing it up, altering, arranging, painting, and spoiling
+ it; but this hermitage really is a singular looking toy. The
+ building is long and low, so completely cased in richly-carved oak,
+ that it might be mistaken for an enormous wardrobe. The garden
+ slopes upwards from the river Dee, and is greatly embellished by a
+ splendid beech hedge about forty feet high; several charming little
+ summer houses are sprinkled about the grounds; and in one most
+ romantic arbour, overlooking the fine cascade, we found a volume
+ lying open on the seat, which proved to be Southey's Roderick;
+ suitable reading for such a scene of poetical beauty.
+
+ "An attempt at embellishment has been made, by placing a stuffed bear
+ near the house, probably in imitation of the Zoological Gardens; but
+ the idea is rather a failure, and would appear more suitable over the
+ door of a perfumer's shop, to intimate the presence of bear's grease.
+ A little gim-crack model of a wooden house is also visible, by way of
+ an ornament, stuck on the summit of a wooden pillar, but the effect
+ is disproportioned to all surrounding objects, even more than the
+ designs on Chinese paper; where men of six feet high are represented
+ entering mansions half their own height, and birds may be seen flying
+ larger than either the houses or their inhabitants. In a cottage
+ built of oak and roofed with thatch, it would be very desirable that
+ the inhabitants should have some taste for the study of entomology,
+ as they might find an inexhaustible hunting-field among the wooden
+ walls and creepers. It has been disputed whether more inconvenience
+ is endured from the extreme cold of an English winter, or from the
+ swarms of insects inevitably encountered during the heat of an
+ Italian summer; but those who inhabit this 'Fairy Palace of the
+ Vale,' might be able from experience at home, to decide the question.
+ They could afford sufficient employment for an entire
+ pin-manufactory, to supply impaling machines for all the specimens of
+ insects that might be collected and classified here. The birds too,
+ were so vociferous, that we seemed standing in an aviary, and the
+ locality would not at all have suited Lady ---, who scolded her
+ gardener for 'letting the sparrows make such a noise under her
+ windows in the morning.' It is much to be lamented how many
+ 'harmonious blackbirds' annually fall victims to the preservation of
+ cherries; and though the 'four-and-twenty baked in a pie,' might be
+ rather too loud when they all 'began to sing,' yet a few in a garden
+ are so enlivening and delightful, that it would be better never to
+ taste fruit again than to lose such a concert of natural melody as we
+ enjoyed at Llangollen."
+
+Mr. Roscoe, in his remarkably interesting "Wanderings in North Wales," is
+less enthusiastic than some tourists on the subject of our present
+narrative; he says:--
+
+ "Plas Newydd, for so many years the residence of the fair recluses of
+ the lovely vale of Llangollen, stands on a gentle eminence close to
+ the town, ornamented with a carved railing in front, and decorated
+ with grotesque gables and ornaments. The present proprietors are
+ also two maiden ladies, who seem disposed to perpetuate the
+ conventual celebrity of this place; and are certainly not less urbane
+ than the former possessors, in permitting visitors to gratify their
+ taste in the inspection of the beautiful grounds. Attended by my
+ _cicerone_, the gardener, I passed from one object of natural beauty
+ to another,--the vale of Pen-gwern surrounded by part of the Berwyn
+ chain, the woody dingle, and brawling brook of the Cyflymed, with
+ many others, which are supplied with the most gratifying conveniences
+ for their leisurely inspection. After all, I must confess, filled as
+ was my mind by the impressions of the majestic scenes with which it
+ had become familiar, the miniature landscapes supplied by the
+ situation of Plas Newydd, fell far short of the anticipation I had
+ formed, and they forcibly recalled the emotion I remembered to have
+ felt after viewing the mimic hills and vales, and passionless
+ cascades of the poet Shenstone, in his retreat at the Leasowes, near
+ Hagley."
+
+Miss Costello, who made the tour of North Wales in 1844 is even less
+complimentary, and is thus smartly satirical in the peculiarities of the
+departed "Ladies:"--
+
+ "One of the great attractions of Llangollen a few years ago was the
+ romantic story attached to the place and the residence there of Lady
+ Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby. Pilgrimages were made to this
+ shrine of friendship, and the ladies were overwhelmed with visitors,
+ and their cottage filled with offerings. Their tomb is now in the
+ churchyard, and their cottage let; and very few persons recollect
+ much about them, or feel any interest in a sentimental history, which
+ belonged to the last century, and now can only excite a smile at the
+ eccentricity of its heroines, who, under pretence of retiring from
+ society, made themselves conspicuous throughout the country. Most of
+ their accumulated stores were sold by public auction, on the death of
+ the last of the friends, and the cottage, as it now stands, is by no
+ means either a rural or picturesque object. It is covered inside and
+ out with carved wood, some of value, and some quite worthless; and
+ all that remains of the taste of the former proprietors merely proves
+ how little was required to please fifty years ago. The trees,
+ planted by the friends, are now grown high, and shut out all view of
+ the country; in fact, the whole place has a vulgar, common-place
+ appearance, and excited in my mind no sort of interest, nor was my
+ indifference agreeably dispelled by the view of an engraving, hung up
+ in the little boudoir, representing the two ladies sitting at their
+ table covered with curiosities, both dressed in masculine habits, and
+ both frightfully ugly. These portraits, it seems, were taken by an
+ amateur, by stealth, as neither of 'The Ladies of Llangollen' would
+ consent to sit, and a lamentable record is it which creates most
+ unpleasing sensations to the lover of the graceful, beautiful, and
+ venerable.
+
+ "The 'ladies' were, although singular in the extreme, remarkably
+ charitable and considerate of the necessities of their neighbours,
+ and their loss has been greatly felt. They seemed vain and pompous,
+ but accomplished and intellectual, and were a strange compound of
+ wisdom and folly, pride and condescension."
+
+The celebrated Madame de Genlis, in an entertaining miscellany, under the
+title of "Souvenirs de Felicie L---," has given the following graphic
+narrative of "The Fair Recluses of Llangollen:"--
+
+ "During my residence in England (says she), nothing struck me so much
+ as the delicious cottage of Llangollen, in North Wales. It is not a
+ little extraordinary, that a circumstance so singular and remarkable
+ as that connected with this retreat, should hitherto have escaped the
+ notice of all modern travellers. The manner in which I became
+ acquainted with it was this:--During our long-stay at Bury, a small
+ company of five or six persons, including ourselves, met every
+ evening from seven till half-past ten o'clock. We diverted ourselves
+ with music and conversation, so that the time past very agreeably.
+ One night friendship happened to be the subject of conversation, and
+ I declared that I would with pleasure undertake a long journey to see
+ two persons who had long been united by the bonds of genuine
+ friendship. 'Well, Madam,' replied Mr. Stuart (now Lord
+ Castlereagh), go to Llangollen; you will there see a model of perfect
+ friendship, which will afford you the more delight, as it is
+ exhibited by two females who are yet young and charming in every
+ respect. Would you like to hear the history of Lady Eleanor Butler
+ and Miss Ponsonby?'--'It would give me the greatest pleasure.'--'I
+ will relate it to you.' At these words the company drew nearer to
+ Mr. Stuart, we formed a little circle round him, and after
+ recollecting himself a few moments, he thus began his narrative:--
+
+ "'Lady Eleanor Butler, was born in Dublin. She was left an orphan
+ while in her cradle; and possessing an ample fortune, together with
+ an amiable disposition and a beautiful person, her hand was solicited
+ by persons belonging to the first families in Ireland. At an early
+ age she manifested great repugnance to the idea of giving herself a
+ master. This love of independence, which she never dissembled, did
+ no injury to her reputation; her conduct has always been
+ irreproachable, and no female is more highly distinguished for
+ sweetness of temper, modesty, and all the virtues which adorn her
+ sex. In tender infancy a mutual attachment took place between her
+ and Miss Ponsonby, by an accident which made a deep impression on
+ their imagination. They had no difficulty to persuade themselves
+ that heaven had formed them for each other; that is, that it had
+ designed each of them to devote her existence to the other, so that
+ they might glide together down the stream of life, in the bosom of
+ peace, the most intimate friendship, and delicious independence.
+ This idea their sensibility was destined to realize. Their
+ friendship gradually grew stronger with their years, so that at
+ seventeen they mutually engaged never to sacrifice their liberty, or
+ to part from each other. From that moment they formed the design of
+ withdrawing from the world, and of settling for good in some
+ sequestered retreat. Having heard of the charming scenery of Wales,
+ they secretly absconded from their friends for the purpose of fixing
+ upon their future residence. They visited Llangollen, and there, on
+ the summit of a mountain, they found a little detached cottage, with
+ the situation of which they were delighted. Here they resolved to
+ form their establishment. Meanwhile the guardians of the young
+ fugitives sent people after them, and they were conveyed back to
+ Dublin. They declared that they would return to their mountain as
+ soon as they were of age. Accordingly, at twenty-one, in spite of
+ the entreaties and remonstrances of their relatives and friends, they
+ quitted Ireland for ever, and flew to Llangollen. Miss Ponsonby is
+ not rich, but Lady Eleanor possesses a considerable fortune. She
+ purchased the little hut and the property of the mountain, where she
+ built a cottage, very simple in external appearance, but the interior
+ of which displays the greatest elegance. On the top of the mountain
+ she has formed about the house a court and flower-garden; a hedge of
+ rosebushes is the only enclosure that surrounds this rural
+ habitation. A convenient carriage-road, the steepness of which has
+ been diminished by art, was carried along the mountain. On the side
+ of the latter some ancient pines of prodigious height were preserved;
+ fruit trees were planted, and a great quantity of cherry trees in
+ particular, which produce the best and finest cherries in England.
+ The two friends likewise possess a farm for their cattle, with a
+ pretty farm-house and a kitchen-garden at the foot of the mountain.
+ In this sequestered abode these two extraordinary persons, with minds
+ equally cultivated, and accomplishments equally pleasing, have now
+ resided ten years, without ever having been absent from it a single
+ night. Nevertheless they are not unsociable, they sometimes pay
+ visits to the neighbouring gentry, and receive with the greatest
+ politeness travellers on their way to or from Ireland, who are
+ recommended to them by any of their old friends.'
+
+ "This account strongly excited my curiosity, and produced the same
+ effect on Mademoiselle d'Orleans and my two young companions. We
+ determined the same night to set out immediately for Llangollen, by
+ the circuitous route of Brighton, Portsmouth, and the Isle of Wight.
+ It was the latter end of July when we arrived at Llangollen. This
+ place has not the rich appearance of the English villages in general,
+ but nothing can equal the cleanliness of the houses, and among the
+ lower classes of any country this is an infallible proof of
+ abundance. Llangollen, surrounded with woods and meadows, clothed
+ with the freshest verdure, is situated at the foot of the mountain
+ belonging to the two friends, which there forms a majestic pyramid
+ covered with trees and flowers. We arrived at the cottage, the only
+ object of our journey, an hour before sunset.
+
+ "The two friends had received in the morning by a messenger the
+ letter which Mr. Stuart had given me for them. We were received with
+ a grace, a cordiality, and kindness, of which it would be impossible
+ for me to give any idea. I could not turn my eyes from those two
+ ladies, rendered so interesting by their friendship and so
+ extraordinary on account of their way of life. I perceived in them
+ none of that vanity which takes delight in the surprize of others.
+ Their mutual attachment, and their whole conduct evince such
+ simplicity, that astonishment soon gives way to softer emotions; all
+ they do and say breathes the utmost frankness and sincerity. One
+ circumstance which I cannot help remarking is, that after living so
+ many years in this sequestered retreat, they speak French with equal
+ fluency and purity. I was likewise much struck with the little
+ resemblance there is between them. Lady Eleanor has a charming face,
+ embellished with the glow of health; her whole appearance and manner
+ announce vivacity and the most unaffected gaiety. Miss Ponsonby has
+ a fine countenance, but pale and melancholy. One seems to have been
+ born in this solitude, so perfectly is she at her ease in it; for her
+ easy carriage shews that she has not retained the slightest
+ recollection of the world and its vain pleasures. The other, silent
+ and pensive, has too much candour and innocence for you to suppose
+ that repentance has conducted her into solitude, but you would
+ suppose that she still cherishes some painful regrets. Both have the
+ most engaging politeness, and highly-cultivated minds. An excellent
+ library, composed of the best English, French, and Italian authors,
+ affords them an inexhaustible source of diversified amusement and
+ solid occupation; for reading is not truly profitable except when a
+ person has time to read again.
+
+ "The interior of the house is delightful on account of the just
+ proportion and distribution of the apartments, the elegance of the
+ ornaments and furniture, and the admirable view which you enjoy from
+ all the windows; the drawing-room is adorned with charming
+ landscapes, drawn and coloured from nature, by Miss Ponsonby. Lady
+ Eleanor is a great proficient in music; and their solitary habitation
+ is filled with embroidery by them both, of wonderful execution. Miss
+ Ponsonby, who writes the finest hand I ever saw, has copied a number
+ of select pieces in verse and prose, which she has ornamented with
+ vignettes and arabesques, in the best taste, and which form a most
+ valuable collection. Thus the arts are cultivated there with equal
+ modesty and success, and their productions are admired with a feeling
+ that is not experienced elsewhere; the spectator observes with
+ delight that so much merit is secure in this peaceful retreat from
+ the shafts of satire and envy, and that talents unaccompanied with
+ ostentation and pride, have there never coveted any suffrages but
+ those of friendship.
+
+ "This evening was a scene of enchantment for me; not one painful
+ reflection disturbed its felicity. I retired to rest, but my
+ imagination was so fully occupied with what I had seen and heard,
+ that my thoughts kept me for a long time awake. At length, I was
+ just falling asleep, when I was roused by the most melodious sounds.
+ I listened in great astonishment; it was not music, but an indistinct
+ and celestial harmony which penetrated my very soul. I discovered
+ that it was produced by a violent wind which had just then arisen; my
+ ear distinguished the distant noise and the whistling usually heard
+ on such occasions, but the winds changing their nature as they
+ approached this asylum of peace and friendship, formed only the most
+ enchanting harmony as they met its trees and its walls. I was
+ strongly disposed to believe in prodigies; but nevertheless I was
+ determined to investigate the nature of this, but I durst not rise
+ for fear of waking Mademoiselle d'Orleans, who was extremely fatigued
+ with her journey, and slept in a bed close by mine. The tempest
+ suddenly ceased, and the harmonious sounds appeared to be carried to
+ a distance by the retiring winds. I raised my head towards the
+ heavens to catch the last tones of this celestial concert, which
+ seemed to be lost in the clouds. I listened with transport like St.
+ Cecilia; if I had had my harp in my hands I should certainly have
+ dropped it; at that moment all terrestrial music appeared totally
+ spiritless and insipid.
+
+ "Next morning the whole mystery was explained. On opening my window
+ I found in the balcony an Eolian harp, an instrument with which I was
+ then unacquainted, and which, when the wind blows upon it, produces
+ such enchanting sounds.
+
+ "I walked out the whole forenoon with the two friends; nothing can
+ equal the charms of the surrounding scenery, and of the prospects
+ which the mountain whose summit they occupy commands; at this
+ elevation they appear the queens of all the beautiful country at
+ their feet. Towards the north they have a view of the village and of
+ a wood; to the south a long river washes the foot of the mountain,
+ and fertilizes meadows of prodigious extent, beyond which is
+ discovered an amphitheatre of hills, covered with intermingled trees
+ and rocks. In the midst of this wild scenery rises a majestic tower,
+ which might be taken for the Pharos of this coast, but is only the
+ ruins of a magnificent castle, once the residence of the prince of
+ the country. This solitary region was doubtless at that time
+ flourishing and populous, now it is abandoned to nature alone;
+ nothing is now to be seen in it but herds of goats, and a few
+ scattered herdsmen sitting upon the rocks and playing upon the Irish
+ harp. Facing this rustic and melancholy scene the two friends have
+ raised a verdant seat, shaded by two poplars, and thither they told
+ me they often repair in summer to read together the poems of Ossian.
+
+ "The ride from Wrexham to Llangollen is remarkable for the sublimity
+ and awful grandeur of the prospects; the most prominent feature in
+ the landscape is a high and stupendous chain of mountains, sometimes
+ swelling into the clouds, or gently shelving into the vallies, around
+ which they form a wide amphitheatre; and by their elevations afford
+ shelter, and tend to fertilize the vales at their bases. I was led
+ to exclaim--
+
+ 'I love thy mountain's giant forms!
+ Darkly clad in gath'ring storms;
+ I love thy rocks, down whose steep sides,
+ With foaming, dizzying crash,
+ Thunder the torrent's tan-brown tides,
+ And roaring whirlwinds dash.'
+
+ "For,
+
+ ''Mid clouds and crags, dark pools and mountains drear,
+ The wild-wood's silence, and the billow's roll,
+ Great Nature rules, and claims with brow austere,
+ The shudd'ring homage of the inmost soul.'
+
+ "From the craggy sides of the rocks descend the tributary streams to
+ supply the river which divides the dales, and which dashes its
+ foaming impetuous course along the banks, often edged with broken
+ crags and grey rocks, or is seen winding in a deeper and more
+ peaceful stream through dark and silent groves, spreading their
+ autumnal shades over the surface, or often glistening through fields
+ of verdure and cultivated spots of ground; here foaming and chafing
+ some dark ruin's tottering base, there reflecting the modern villa or
+ the humble hamlet in its silver bosom, and by the variety of scenery
+ giving new beauty to the whole.
+
+ "The cottages, bridges, villas, towers, rocks, and dark ruins of
+ Gothic antiquity, are in unison with the surrounding objects, and the
+ attention is frequently called from beholding the beauties of nature
+ to pause on the works of art. In the centre of the long valley which
+ stretches to Llangollen, is erected a most stupendous aqueduct, by
+ which the canal is conveyed from a lofty hill over a wide chasm in
+ the mountains; the length of this amazing work of art and human
+ industry, is, I was informed, three hundred yards, the aqueduct
+ composed of cast iron, is supported on fifty stone pillars and
+ arches, and the view of this immense pile bestriding the valley is
+ grand beyond description, and contributes much to heighten the effect
+ produced by the whole scenery; for here grandeur and sublimity sit
+ enthroned on the mountains, and solitude and human privacy, with
+ their attendant charms, have fixed their abode in the vallies.
+
+ "The beauties of the Vale of Llangollen certainly exceed every idea I
+ had formed of their grandeur, and on my arrival at the inn in the
+ village, the muse embodied the following
+
+ "LINES ON VISITING LLANGOLLEN.
+
+ 'Much have I heard, Llangollen, of thy scenes,
+ And the wild landscapes of thy mountain greens,
+ The rushing streams, that dash thy rocks among,
+ Thy snow-topt mountains, thy wild harper's song,
+ Thy fruitful vallies deep, where oft between
+ Rise hamlets, rocks, and tow'rs to grace the scene.
+ Where solitude and calm contentment dwell,
+ And contemplation roves each rocky dell,
+ Or climbs the snow-topt mountain's cloudy height
+ To watch the sinking shades of evening light;
+ To view the foaming torrent's misty shower,
+ To list' the brooding tempest's rising roar,
+ Mark the blue mists the silvery moonbeams shroud,
+ Or golden ev'ning edge the dusky cloud;
+ Yet, till this hour my doubting heart has thought
+ Thy glowing scenes by fancy's pencil wrought,
+ Or drest in poetry's enchanting hues,
+ And all the flatt'ring colours of the muse;
+ But if in winter's storms thy beauties charm,
+ If the cold breast thy varying landscapes warm,
+ In summer's smiles it surely stands confest,
+ That he who draws thee fairest paints thee best.'"
+
+Having thus seen the various amusing and interesting records, which so
+many of our most popular authors have given to the world, respecting the
+once famous "Ladies of Llangollen," curiosity induced us to pay a visit
+to this much frequented abode of ancient friendship. Accordingly in
+March, 1847, we made an excursion, in company with our respected
+Publisher, to the celebrated retreat of Plas Newydd; and through the
+favour of Mr. Jacques, an intelligent and hospitable gentleman resident
+at Pen-y-bryn, Llangollen, we were introduced to the present owners, Miss
+Lolly and Miss Andrew, and met with a most courteous reception. Their
+manners are easy, dignified, and lady-like; totally free from all
+affectation, and in nowise marked by that frigid stateliness and pedantic
+formality, which a censorious world proverbially attributes to a state of
+elderly maidenhood. In all its characteristic particulars, the cottage
+remains in the same condition as in the days of Lady Eleanor and Miss
+Ponsonby; but its present possessors have introduced several judicious
+alterations in the interior, which, though carried out in strict harmony
+with the general design of its former occupants, exhibit an improved
+taste and a cultivated judgment. The house is delightfully situated, and
+is well-adapted to realize the notion of the poet--
+
+ "'Tis pleasant from the loop-holes of retreat
+ To look at such a world; to see great Babel
+ And not feel the crush;"
+
+but the site is not well chosen for developing the many charming
+prospects which the vale of Llangollen affords; and, indeed, the entire
+arrangements, both of dwelling and pleasure grounds, seem to be
+suggestive rather of another poetical maxim in great favour with
+anchorites and recluses--"Retire, the world shut out." We cannot agree
+with Miss Seward, who describes this hermitage as "a retreat which
+breathes all the witchery of genius, taste, and sentiment." It is rather
+fantastical than tasteful, and savours more of eccentricity than
+sentiment. In the Gothic entrance, there are undoubtedly many fine
+specimens of carved wood-work, some of which we suspect were the plunder
+of despoiled convents and churches during the continental wars of the
+last century; but classical, mythological, and scripture subjects are
+intermingled in odd confusion, and with "most admired disorder." The
+rooms are small and comfortable, with very low ceilings; the prospect
+from the dining-room is flat and tame; but several of the miniature
+views, as seen through small openings of the painted window in the
+library, are remarkably picturesque, and reveal themselves with a
+pleasing effect to the eye of the artist or the admirer of natural
+scenery. The cottage yet contains many articles of furniture and choice
+rarities, which belonged to the former owners; whose portraits adorn the
+fanciful little boudoir. Disguised as they are by the strangeness of
+their costume, we should not like to hazard any opinion of our own as to
+their personal charms; especially as Miss Seward has been so minutely
+particular in telling us "all about them." That clever and amusing
+gossip says of the "ladies," whom she rhapsodizes as "the enchantresses"
+of Plas Newydd--
+
+ "Lady Eleanor is of middle height, and somewhat beyond the
+ _embonpoint_ as to plumpness; her face round and fair, with the glow
+ of luxuriant health. She has not fine features, but they are
+ agreeable; enthusiasm in her eye, hilarity and benevolence in her
+ smile. Exhaustless is her fund of historic and traditionary
+ knowledge, and of every thing passing in the present eventful period.
+ She expresses all she feels with an ingenuous ardour, at which, the
+ cold-spirited beings stare. I am informed that both these ladies
+ read and speak most of the modern languages. Of the Italian poets,
+ especially of Dante, they are warm admirers. Miss Ponsonby, somewhat
+ taller than her friend, is neither slender nor otherwise, but very
+ graceful. Easy, elegant, yet pensive, is her address and manner.
+
+ "Her voice, like lovers' watched, is kind and low."
+
+ A face rather long than round, a complexion clear but without bloom,
+ with a countenance which, from its soft melancholy, has a peculiar
+ interest. If her features are not beautiful, they are very sweet and
+ feminine. Though the pensive spirit within permits not her lovely
+ dimples to give mirth to her smile, they increase its sweetness, and,
+ consequently, her power of engaging the affections. We see, through
+ her veil of shading reserve, that all the talents and accomplishments
+ which enrich the mind of Lady Eleanor, exist, with equal powers, in
+ this her charming friend."
+
+We commend these pen and ink portraits to the notice of our readers
+without controversy; and the more especially, as they may gratify their
+curiosity still more in this matter, by purchasing from our Publisher a
+well-executed engraving representing, with all due fidelity, excellent
+likenesses of the "Ladies of Llangollen;" each, as _Hamlet_ would say,
+"in her habit as she lived."
+
+Among the treasured relics which the cottage now contains, we were shewn
+the veritable crutch-headed walking stick, on which Lady Eleanor used to
+support her aged steps, when rambling through the village on errands of
+mercy, or sauntering among the pleasure grounds of her mountain-home; and
+we also saw and handled the broad-brimmed hat worn by Miss Ponsonby,
+whose head we should judge to have been small and finely formed. O for
+the genius of a Seward, to have written an ode to that venerable
+head-dress! and in good truth, one might almost fancy we heard the spirit
+of that amiable enthusiast, bidding us, like _Gesler's_ captain, "bow
+down and honour it." Seriously, every little particular connected with
+the history and habits of the departed "Ladies" is so anxiously prized at
+Llangollen, that we felt very grateful for the prompt kindness with which
+the present worthy possessors of the unique residence contributed to our
+information and amusement. We may therefore tell, for the advantage of
+such of our readers as associate their notions of "old maids" with an
+affectionate regard for the canine and feline tribes, that Lady Eleanor
+Butler possessed a favourite dog of the turnspit-breed, called "Trust;"
+that Miss Ponsonby had a small white poodle, named "Busy;" and that they
+had a joint interest in a popular cat, answering to the name of
+"Meggins;" all of which four-footed domestics were especial pets in their
+garden walks or at their quiet fire-side.
+
+The little domain of Plas-Newydd, if situated in some localities, would
+be esteemed a miniature paradise, but planted as it is amidst so many
+scenes of surpassing loveliness, its limited and somewhat formal
+characteristics suffer by comparison. The arrangement of the ground
+might have suited the peculiar tastes and habits of the "recluses;" but
+it is certainly very far inferior to the picturesque effect, which
+landscape gardening in the present day could _there_ produce. The
+prettiest portions of these much-vaunted precints are the shady knoll,
+overhanging a romantic glen, down which a brawling streamlet leaps its
+frothing course over a craggy bed; and the rural walk by the gothic
+fount, into which a pellucid mountain-rill pours its refreshing waters.
+Among the remembrances of former days, is the effigy of a guardian
+'lion,' (which, under the name of a 'bear,' has been noted by an author
+whom we have quoted;) the melancholy quadruped is now considerably "used
+up," and excites a laugh at the burlesque on the monarch of the forest,
+which his attenuated figure and shrivelled hide present. Plas-Newydd is
+unquestionably a delightful residence; and its adjacent pleasure grounds
+and gardens afford most inviting facilities for those who love to make a
+practical study of horticulture; to ruminate amidst its tranquil retreats
+over the published works of some favourite authors; or to "meditate,"
+like the patriarch, at "even-tide" on the wonders and glories of Eternal
+Power. Apart therefore from the romantic recollections, with which the
+singular history of the "Ladies of Llangollen" has invested this fair
+spot of earth, it presents to the tourist certain attractions, which the
+reflective explorer of the lovely vallies of the Dee should not neglect.
+We heard from some of the older inhabitants several anecdotes of the
+benevolence and charity of the departed "Ladies," whose memory is most
+affectionately cherished in the neighbourhood. It has been said that on
+religious subjects, these ancient friends were divided in opinion; one
+being a Roman Catholic and the other a Protestant; but the parish clerk,
+an intelligent old man who knew them well, assured us that they both
+regularly attended the services in the Church of Llangollen, and received
+the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, both there, and at their own cottage
+during the last illness of Lady Eleanor Butler, from the vicar. With all
+their eccentricity, their attachment to each other must have been of a
+pure, unchanging, and fervent character; else would they never have
+forsworn in the full bloom of youth and beauty, the gay fascinations or
+the elegant ease of courtly life for the dull monotony of seclusion and
+celibacy. Both in feeling and intellect, Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss
+Ponsonby were no common persons; it may of a truth be said of them, that
+"they lived to a good old age and died honoured and respected;" and if
+ever the beings of a brighter and holier sphere are permitted to cast
+back occasional glimpses on the world which they have left, their spirits
+may sometimes hover over the sacred spot where their ashes repose, and
+haunt the moon-lit banks of the silvery Dee, in its murmuring current by
+the lowly church-yard of Llangollen.
+
+
+
+
+VALLE CRUCIS ABBEY.
+
+
+The picturesque ruins of this venerable structure stand in a lovely and
+sequestered valley, about two miles from Llangollen, and are approached
+by as delightful and inviting road as ever rambler need wish to tread.
+The Rev. John Williams, in his learned description of this ancient
+monastery, says:
+
+ "The abbey was founded about the year 1200, {58a} and in conformity
+ with the rule {58b} of the Cistercian fraternity, was dedicated to
+ the Blessed Virgin Mary. The names by which it was generally known
+ to the Welsh had, however, a particular reference to the locality
+ where it was situated: thus, 'Monachlog y Glyn,' 'Monachlog Glyn
+ Egwestl,' 'Monachlog Pant y Groes.' And in Latin it was called
+ 'Abbatia {58c} de Valle Crucis,' and 'Abbatia de Llanegwest.'
+
+ "The remains of the abbey extant at the present day consist of the
+ church, and of a building on the southern side, part of which seems
+ to have formed the Abbot's lodgings, and part to have been the
+ refectory, with the dormitory above. The church is a cruciform
+ building, of which the northern side has been almost entirely
+ destroyed, and without any vestige remaining of its roof, except in
+ the eastern aisle of the southern transept. In the midst of these
+ hallowed precincts the rubbish is heaped up to a great height,
+ caused, probably, by the fall of the northern wall, and by the
+ remains of the roof:--the pavement, if there be any of it subsisting,
+ is entirely concealed, and ash-trees grow luxuriantly upon the
+ mounds, adding to the picturesque effect of the ruin, but saddening
+ the heart of the antiquary. We are unable, therefore, to determine
+ the number of piers that formed the side of the nave; but from the
+ space between the western end and the central piers, at the
+ intersection of the transepts, we should conjecture this number to
+ have been three, thus making four arches on either side. The choir
+ was without aisles, but each transept had one on the eastern side,
+ which seems to have been used as a chapel. The oldest portion of the
+ church is the choir; the eastern end of which was lighted by three
+ bold and lofty lancet arches, rising from no great height above the
+ level of the pavement to half the altitude of the building, and by
+ two proportionably smaller lancets above. In the apex of the gable
+ was probably a small aperture, but of this no trace remains; the
+ gable is mutilated, and we judge only from the analogy of the western
+ end of the nave. In each of the northern and southern walls of the
+ choir is a lancet window; and two similar windows, but lower in
+ height, occur in each of the eastern walls of the transept aisles.
+ High up in the southern wall, also, is to be seen a small loophole,
+ communicating with a passage which leads over the vaulting of the
+ southern transept aisle to the abbatial building adjoining the
+ church. This passage is now blocked up, but it is conjectured to
+ have served either as a closet wherein the abbot could attend service
+ privately, or else as a place of confinement or penitence for the
+ monks. The architecture of this portion of the church corresponds in
+ its style with the date of the foundation,--the commencement of the
+ thirteenth century: the lancets, with their mouldings, are strictly
+ of that date, and the capitals of the shafts, which are worked with
+ great boldness, are of the late Norman period, rather than of that
+ which is called Early-pointed."
+
+ "Of all that portion of the nave which occurs between the central
+ tower and the western end, nothing remains but the outer wall of the
+ southern aisle; the western end of it, however, still stands, and is
+ a beautiful example of the richest and purest architecture of the
+ middle of the thirteenth century. Over a central doorway, with
+ deeply recessed mouldings and shafts, and with a bold dog-tooth
+ ornament, each projection of which is elegantly carved into four
+ converging fleurs-de-lys, occur three lofty windows, the central one
+ taller than those at its sides--all with remarkably bold splays, both
+ internally and externally, enriched with shafts and mouldings. The
+ central window appears to have been of only one light, though broad,
+ and to have had its arch occupied by a foliation of six cusps, and
+ therefore of seven recesses,--the foliating spaces being solid. The
+ side windows are each of two lights, the principal arch-head being
+ solid, but pierced with a single aperture divided into six
+ foliations. Above these three windows runs a kind of framework,
+ analagous in some respects to that at the eastern end of the choir.
+ The gable is pierced above these windows with a small but beautiful
+ wheel-window of eight pointed compartments, each trifoliated; the
+ divisions being moulded in one order, and converging to a central
+ ring, itself pierced to admit the light. Above all is a square
+ quatrefoliated aperture in the very apex of the gable. On the
+ external face of the western end are two bold buttresses of a single
+ stage, that on the south-eastern side being pierced with loopholes
+ for a circular staircase formed in the thickness of itself and the
+ wall."
+
+The Abbey of Valle Crucis was dissolved in the year 1535, and is said to
+have been the first of the Welsh monasteries which underwent the doom of
+abolition.
+
+ Romantic Abbey! hallow'd be the rest
+ Of those, who rear'd thee in this wild green vale
+ A temple lovely as the place is blest--
+ And stern as beautiful:--but words would fail
+ To paint thy ruin'd glories, though the gale
+ Of desolation sweeps thro' thy hoar pile,
+ And waves the long grass thro' thy cloisters pale
+ Where the dark ivy scorns day's garish smile,
+ And weed-grown fragments crown thy desecrated aisle.
+
+ * * * *
+
+ How sweet the sounds!--whose soft enchantments rose
+ 'Mid those wild woodlands at the matin prime--
+ Or when the vesper song at evening's close
+ Wafted the soul beyond the cares of time,
+ To that Elysium of a brighter clime
+ Where thro' heaven's portals golden vistas gleam,
+ And the high harps of Seraphim sublime
+ Came o'er the spirit like a prophet's dream,
+ Till faded earth away on glory's endless beam.
+
+ Oft the proud feudal chief, whom human law
+ Or kingly pow'r could bind not, nor control,
+ Has paus'd before thy gates in holy awe,
+ And felt religion's charm subdue his soul--
+ The heart that joy'd to hear the savage howl
+ Of battle on the breeze, has soften'd been--
+ List'ning the hymns of peace that sweetly stole
+ O'er this lone vale, where fancy's eye hath seen
+ Forms bright and angel-like glide thro' thy vistas green:
+
+ And angel forms here at thy altar knelt,
+ Fair dames, and gentle maidens whose bright eyes
+ The sternest heart of warrior-mould could melt,
+ Soft'ning grim war with gen'rous sympathy--
+ Pleading, like pity wafted from the skies
+ To quell the stormy rage of savage man:
+ And hence the gentle manners had their rise--
+ Hence knights for lady's praise all dangers ran--
+ And thus, the glorious age of chivalry began.
+
+The Abbey derives its name (the Vale of the Cross) from a sepulchral
+monument commonly called "THE PILLAR OF ELISEG," which stands on an
+ancient tumulus in the middle of this beautifully secluded glen. It was
+erected by Cyngen ab Cadell Dryrnllug, in memory of his great grandfather
+Eliseg, whose son Brochmail Ysgythrog, grandfather of the founder of this
+rude monument of filial veneration, was engaged in the memorable border
+wars at the close of the sixth century; and was defeated at the Battle of
+Chester, A.D. 607. During the great rebellion this pillar was thrown
+down by Oliver Cromwell's "Reformers," who in their fiery zeal for
+destruction mistook it for a "Popish Cross;" and it remained for more
+than a century in its broken recumbent condition, when it was restored by
+the patriotism and intelligence of Mr. Lloyd of Trevor Hall, and replaced
+upon its pedestal with a suitable memorial to record the fact. It now
+forms an interesting relic of antiquity, and is probably the oldest
+British Cross (bearing a carved inscription) which exists in these
+islands. That said inscription has long been a puzzle to the learned
+investigator of archaeological remains.
+
+Having wandered through the verdant meads of the "happy valley," the
+adventurous tourist may probably wish to climb the lofty hill, which is
+crowned by the romantic ruins of the Castle of Dinas Bran. This
+memorable fortress of the past, is a remarkable object from all parts of
+the vale; for whose safety and defence it was long the abode of a line of
+chiefs renowned in Cambrian lore. The view from the summit is
+exceedingly picturesque, grand, and imposing; and naturally prompts the
+exclamation of the Poet of the Seasons--
+
+ "Heavens! what a goodly prospect spreads around."
+
+On descending the mountain-path, the traveller may perchance look round
+for a comfortable resting-place and good refreshment; he will readily
+find both, either at the Hand, or the King's Head Hotel. In the album of
+the latter house of entertainment he may also peruse the following
+bacchanalian effusion in honour of "Llangollen Ale," which he will then
+be in the mood to enjoy; and as he quaffs this nectar of the valley, he
+may thus chaunt its praises, if in a convivial humour, to the music of a
+Welsh harp--
+
+
+
+LLANGOLLEN ALE.
+
+
+While other poets loudly rant
+ About Llangollen's Vale,
+Let me, with better taste, descant
+ Upon Llangollen Ale.
+
+The daughters of the place are fair,
+ Its sons are strong and hale:
+What makes them so? Llangollen air?
+ No, no!--Llangollen Ale.
+
+And Nature only beautified
+ The landscape, to prevail
+On travellers to turn aside
+ And quaff Llangollen Ale.
+
+For though the scene might please at first
+ As charms would quickly stale;
+While he who tastes will ever thirst
+ To drink Llangollen Ale.
+
+From rock to rock the Dee may roam,
+ And chafe without avail;
+It cannot match its yeasty foam
+ Against Llangollen Ale.
+
+The umber-tinted trees that crown
+ Bron-vawr's ridge are pale,
+Contrasted with the nutty brown
+ That tints Llangollen Ale.
+
+Nor is the keep of Dinas-bran,
+ Though high and hard to scale,
+So elevated as the man
+ Who drinks Llangollen Ale.
+
+Thy shattered arch, beside the way,
+ Val-crucis, tells a tale
+Of monks who sometimes went astray
+ To quaff Llangollen Ale.
+
+And still upon the saintly spot
+ The pilgrim may regale
+His fainting spirits with a pot
+ Of good Llangollen Ale.
+
+For though the ancient portress may
+ Not offer it for sale,
+Yet cheerfully to all who pay
+ She gives Llangollen Ale.
+
+And, Eliseg, thy pillar rude
+ Is merely--I'll be bail--
+A monument to him who brewed
+ The first Llangollen Ale.
+
+In short, each ruin, stream, or tree,
+ Within Llangollen's Vale,
+Where'er I turn, whate'er I see,
+ Is redolent of Ale.
+
+ _Liverpool_. R. R.
+
+The convivial disposition of the monks of the "olden time" has always
+been a favourite theme with our romance writers and "ballad-mongers;" but
+it would appear from a passage which Mr. Roscoe quotes, that the cowled
+brethren of Valle Crucis Abbey did not content themselves in their hours
+of festivity with draughts of "Llangollen Ale." The wealth of the
+institution, he infers, may be judged of by the magnificent hospitality
+of the monks, who are described by Owain as having the table usually
+covered with four courses of meat, served up in silver dishes, with
+sparkling claret for their general beverage.
+
+ "Many have told of the monks of old,
+ What a saintly race they were;
+ But 'tis most true, that a merrier crew
+ Could scarce be found elsewhere;
+ For they sung and laughed,
+ And the rich wine quaffed,
+ And lived on the daintiest cheer.
+
+ "And the Abbot meek, with his form so sleek,
+ Was the heartiest of them all,
+ And would take his place, with a smiling face,
+ When the refection bell would call;
+ And they sung and laughed,
+ And the rich wine quaffed,
+ Till they shook the olden hall."
+
+ FINIS.
+
+ T. THOMAS, PRINTER, EASTGATE ROW, CHESTER.
+
+ VIEWS, &c.
+ LATELY PUBLISHED
+ BY THOMAS CATHERALL,
+ EASTGATE ROW, CHESTER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PORTRAITS
+ OF THE
+ RIGHT HON. LADY ELEANOR BUTLER AND MISS PONSONBY,
+ "THE LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN."
+
+ Price 2s. 6d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PLAS NEWYDD,
+ NEAR LLANGOLLEN,
+ The Seat of the late Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby.
+
+ Price 1s. 6d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ VALLE CRUCIS ABBEY,
+ NEAR LLANGOLLEN.
+
+ Price 1s. 6d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLAR OF ELISEG,
+ NEAR VALLE CRUCIS ABBEY.
+
+ Price 1s.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A GREAT VARIETY OF
+ LITHOGRAPHIC VIEWS IN CHESTER AND NORTH WALES,
+ CONSTANTLY ON SALE.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+
+{26} "It is, I suppose, needless to say, that the editor is far from
+vouching for the accuracy of these details. The letter in the text gives
+the gossip as it was heard at the time."
+
+{58a} According to Tanner. Bishop Godwin saith, A.D. 1100, which is
+decidedly wrong, if Madog was the founder.
+
+{58b} Tanner's Notitia Monastica.
+
+{58c} Sive Monasterium.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE "LADIES OF LLANGOLLEN"***
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