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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Letters written during a short
+residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, by Mary Wollstonecraft</title>
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The
+Project Gutenberg eBook of Letters written during a short residence in
+Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, by Mary Wollstonecraft</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of
+the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em;
+margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Letters written during
+a short residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em;
+margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Mary
+Wollstonecraft</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em;
+margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Henry Morley</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 30, 2007
+ [eBook #3529]<br />
+[Most recently updated: June 5, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding:
+UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em;
+text-indent:-2em'>Transcribed from the 1889 Cassell &amp; Company
+edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE
+PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LETTERS WRITTEN DURING A SHORT
+RESIDENCE IN SWEDEN, NORWAY, AND DENMARK ***</div>
+
+
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">cassell&rsquo;s
+national library</span>.</p>
+<h1>LETTERS<br />
+<span class="smcap">written</span><br />
+<span class="smcap"><i>during a short residence</i></span><br />
+<span class="smcap">in</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Sweden</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Norway</span>, <span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Denmark</span></h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">CASSELL &amp; COMPANY, Limited:<br
+/>
+<span class="smcap"><i>london</i></span>, <span
+class="smcap"><i>paris</i></span>, <span class="smcap"><i>new
+york &amp; melbourne</i></span>.<br />
+1889.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Mary Wollstonecraft was born on the 27th of April, 1759.&nbsp;
+Her father&mdash;a quick-tempered and unsettled man, capable of
+beating wife, or child, or dog&mdash;was the son of a
+manufacturer who made money in Spitalfields, when Spitalfields
+was prosperous.&nbsp; Her mother was a rigorous Irishwoman, of
+the Dixons of Ballyshannon.&nbsp; Edward John
+Wollstonecraft&mdash;of whose children, besides Mary, the second
+child, three sons and two daughters lived to be men and
+women&mdash;in course of time got rid of about ten thousand
+pounds, which had been left him by his father.&nbsp; He began to
+get rid of it by farming.&nbsp; Mary Wollstonecraft&rsquo;s
+first-remembered home was in a farm at Epping.&nbsp; When she was
+five years old the family moved to another farm, by the
+Chelmsford Road.&nbsp; When she was between six and seven years
+old they moved again, to the neighbourhood of Barking.&nbsp;
+There they remained three years before the next move, which was
+to a farm near Beverley, in Yorkshire.&nbsp; In Yorkshire they
+remained six years, and Mary Wollstonecraft had there what
+education fell to her lot between the ages of ten and
+sixteen.&nbsp; Edward John Wollstonecraft then gave up farming to
+venture upon a commercial speculation.&nbsp; This caused him to
+live for a year and a half at Queen&rsquo;s Row, Hoxton.&nbsp;
+His daughter Mary was then sixteen; and while at Hoxton she had
+her education advanced by the friendly care of a deformed
+clergyman&mdash;a Mr. Clare&mdash;who lived next door, and stayed
+so much at home that his one pair of shoes had lasted him for
+fourteen years.</p>
+<p>But Mary Wollstonecraft&rsquo;s chief friend at this time was
+an accomplished girl only two years older than herself, who
+maintained her father, mother, and family by skill in
+drawing.&nbsp; Her name was Frances Blood, and she especially, by
+her example and direct instruction, drew out her young
+friend&rsquo;s powers.&nbsp; In 1776, Mary Wollstonecraft&rsquo;s
+father, a rolling stone, rolled into Wales.&nbsp; Again he was a
+farmer.&nbsp; Next year again he was a Londoner; and Mary had
+influence enough to persuade him to choose a house at Walworth,
+where she would be near to her friend Fanny.&nbsp; Then, however,
+the conditions of her home life caused her to be often on the
+point of going away to earn a living for herself.&nbsp; In 1778,
+when she was nineteen, Mary Wollstonecraft did leave home, to
+take a situation as companion with a rich tradesman&rsquo;s widow
+at Bath, of whom it was said that none of her companions could
+stay with her.&nbsp; Mary Wollstonecraft, nevertheless, stayed
+two years with the difficult widow, and made herself
+respected.&nbsp; Her mother&rsquo;s failing health then caused
+Mary to return to her.&nbsp; The father was then living at
+Enfield, and trying to save the small remainder of his means by
+not venturing upon any business at all.&nbsp; The mother died
+after long suffering, wholly dependent on her daughter
+Mary&rsquo;s constant care.&nbsp; The mother&rsquo;s last words
+were often quoted by Mary Wollstonecraft in her own last years of
+distress&mdash;&ldquo;A little patience, and all will be
+over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After the mother&rsquo;s death, Mary Wollstonecraft left home
+again, to live with her friend, Fanny Blood, who was at Walham
+Green.&nbsp; In 1782 she went to nurse a married sister through a
+dangerous illness.&nbsp; The father&rsquo;s need of support next
+pressed upon her.&nbsp; He had spent not only his own money, but
+also the little that had been specially reserved for his
+children.&nbsp; It is said to be the privilege of a passionate
+man that he always gets what he wants; he gets to be avoided, and
+they never find a convenient corner of their own who shut
+themselves out from the kindly fellowship of life.</p>
+<p>In 1783 Mary Wollstonecraft&mdash;aged twenty-four&mdash;with
+two of her sisters, joined Fanny Blood in setting up a day school
+at Islington, which was removed in a few months to Newington
+Green.&nbsp; Early in 1785 Fanny Blood, far gone in consumption,
+sailed for Lisbon to marry an Irish surgeon who was settled
+there.&nbsp; After her marriage it was evident that she had but a
+few months to live; Mary Wollstonecraft, deaf to all opposing
+counsel, then left her school, and, with help of money from a
+friendly woman, she went out to nurse her, and was by her when
+she died.&nbsp; Mary Wollstonecraft remembered her loss ten years
+afterwards in these &ldquo;Letters from Sweden and Norway,&rdquo;
+when she wrote: &ldquo;The grave has closed over a dear friend,
+the friend of my youth; still she is present with me, and I hear
+her soft voice warbling as I stray over the heath.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary Wollstonecraft left Lisbon for England late in December,
+1785.&nbsp; When she came back she found Fanny&rsquo;s poor
+parents anxious to go back to Ireland; and as she had been often
+told that she could earn by writing, she wrote a pamphlet of 162
+small pages&mdash;&ldquo;Thoughts on the Education of
+Daughters&rdquo;&mdash;and got ten pounds for it.&nbsp; This she
+gave to her friend&rsquo;s parents to enable them to go back to
+their kindred.&nbsp; In all she did there is clear evidence of an
+ardent, generous, impulsive nature.&nbsp; One day her friend
+Fanny Blood had repined at the unhappy surroundings in the home
+she was maintaining for her father and mother, and longed for a
+little home of her own to do her work in.&nbsp; Her friend
+quietly found rooms, got furniture together, and told her that
+her little home was ready; she had only to walk into it.&nbsp;
+Then it seemed strange to Mary Wollstonecraft that Fanny Blood
+was withheld by thoughts that had not been uppermost in the mood
+of complaint.&nbsp; She thought her friend irresolute, where she
+had herself been generously rash.&nbsp; Her end would have been
+happier had she been helped, as many are, by that calm influence
+of home in which some knowledge of the world passes from father
+and mother to son and daughter, without visible teaching and
+preaching, in easiest companionship of young and old from day to
+day.</p>
+<p>The little payment for her pamphlet on the &ldquo;Education of
+Daughters&rdquo; caused Mary Wollstonecraft to think more
+seriously of earning by her pen.&nbsp; The pamphlet seems also to
+have advanced her credit as a teacher.&nbsp; After giving up her
+day school, she spent some weeks at Eton with the Rev. Mr. Prior,
+one of the masters there, who recommended her as governess to the
+daughters of Lord Kingsborough, an Irish viscount, eldest son of
+the Earl of Kingston.&nbsp; Her way of teaching was by winning
+love, and she obtained the warm affection of the eldest of her
+pupils, who became afterwards Countess Mount-Cashel.&nbsp; In the
+summer of 1787, Lord Kingsborough&rsquo;s family, including Mary
+Wollstonecraft, was at Bristol Hot-wells, before going to the
+Continent.&nbsp; While there, Mary Wollstonecraft wrote her
+little tale published as &ldquo;Mary, a Fiction,&rdquo; wherein
+there was much based on the memory of her own friendship for
+Fanny Blood.</p>
+<p>The publisher of Mary Wollstonecraft&rsquo;s &ldquo;Thoughts
+on the Education of Daughters&rdquo; was the same Joseph Johnson
+who in 1785 was the publisher of Cowper&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Task.&rdquo;&nbsp; With her little story written and a
+little money saved, the resolve to live by her pen could now be
+carried out.&nbsp; Mary Wollstonecraft, therefore, parted from
+her friends at Bristol, went to London, saw her publisher, and
+frankly told him her determination.&nbsp; He met her with
+fatherly kindness, and received her as a guest in his house while
+she was making her arrangements.&nbsp; At Michaelmas, 1787, she
+settled in a house in George Street, on the Surrey side of
+Blackfriars Bridge.&nbsp; There she produced a little book for
+children, of &ldquo;Original Stories from Real Life,&rdquo; and
+earned by drudgery for Joseph Johnson.&nbsp; She translated, she
+abridged, she made a volume of Selections, and she wrote for an
+&ldquo;Analytical Review,&rdquo; which Mr. Johnson founded in the
+middle of the year 1788.&nbsp; Among the books translated by her
+was Necker &ldquo;On the Importance of Religious
+Opinions.&rdquo;&nbsp; Among the books abridged by her was
+Salzmann&rsquo;s &ldquo;Elements of Morality.&rdquo;&nbsp; With
+all this hard work she lived as sparely as she could, that she
+might help her family.&nbsp; She supported her father.&nbsp; That
+she might enable her sisters to earn their living as teachers,
+she sent one of them to Paris, and maintained her there for two
+years; the other she placed in a school near London as
+parlour-boarder until she was admitted into it as a paid
+teacher.&nbsp; She placed one brother at Woolwich to qualify for
+the Navy, and he obtained a lieutenant&rsquo;s commission.&nbsp;
+For another brother, articled to an attorney whom he did not
+like, she obtained a transfer of indentures; and when it became
+clear that his quarrel was more with law than with the lawyers,
+she placed him with a farmer before fitting him out for
+emigration to America.&nbsp; She then sent him, so well prepared
+for his work there that he prospered well.&nbsp; She tried even
+to disentangle her father&rsquo;s affairs; but the confusion in
+them was beyond her powers of arrangement.&nbsp; Added to all
+this faithful work, she took upon herself the charge of an orphan
+child, seven years old, whose mother had been in the number of
+her friends.&nbsp; That was the life of Mary Wollstonecraft,
+thirty years old, in 1789, the year of the Fall of the Bastille;
+the noble life now to be touched in its enthusiasms by the spirit
+of the Revolution, to be caught in the great storm, shattered,
+and lost among its wrecks.</p>
+<p>To Burke&rsquo;s attack on the French Revolution Mary
+Wollstonecraft wrote an Answer&mdash;one of many answers provoked
+by it&mdash;that attracted much attention.&nbsp; This was
+followed by her &ldquo;Vindication of the Rights of Woman,&rdquo;
+while the air was full of declamation on the &ldquo;Rights of
+Man.&rdquo;&nbsp; The claims made in this little book were in
+advance of the opinion of that day, but they are claims that have
+in our day been conceded.&nbsp; They are certainly not
+revolutionary in the opinion of the world that has become a
+hundred years older since the book was written.</p>
+<p>At this time Mary Wollstonecraft had moved to rooms in Store
+Street, Bedford Square.&nbsp; She was fascinated by Fuseli the
+painter, and he was a married man.&nbsp; She felt herself to be
+too strongly drawn towards him, and she went to Paris at the
+close of the year 1792, to break the spell.&nbsp; She felt lonely
+and sad, and was not the happier for being in a mansion lent to
+her, from which the owner was away, and in which she lived
+surrounded by his servants.&nbsp; Strong womanly instincts were
+astir within her, and they were not all wise folk who had been
+drawn around her by her generous enthusiasm for the new hopes of
+the world, that made it then, as Wordsworth felt, a very heaven
+to the young.</p>
+<p>Four months after she had gone to Paris, Mary Wollstonecraft
+met at the house of a merchant, with whose wife she had become
+intimate, an American named Gilbert Imlay.&nbsp; He won her
+affections.&nbsp; That was in April, 1793.&nbsp; He had no means,
+and she had home embarrassments, for which she was unwilling that
+he should become in any way responsible.&nbsp; A part of the new
+dream in some minds then was of a love too pure to need or bear
+the bondage of authority.&nbsp; The mere forced union of marriage
+ties implied, it was said, a distrust of fidelity.&nbsp; When
+Gilbert Imlay would have married Mary Wollstonecraft, she herself
+refused to bind him; she would keep him legally exempt from her
+responsibilities towards the father, sisters, brothers, whom she
+was supporting.&nbsp; She took his name and called herself his
+wife, when the French Convention, indignant at the conduct of the
+British Government, issued a decree from the effects of which she
+would escape as the wife of a citizen of the United States.&nbsp;
+But she did not marry.&nbsp; She witnessed many of the horrors
+that came of the loosened passions of an untaught populace.&nbsp;
+A child was born to her&mdash;a girl whom she named after the
+dead friend of her own girlhood.&nbsp; And then she found that
+she had leant upon a reed.&nbsp; She was neglected; and was at
+last forsaken.&nbsp; Having sent her to London, Imlay there
+visited her, to explain himself away.&nbsp; She resolved on
+suicide, and in dissuading her from that he gave her hope
+again.&nbsp; He needed somebody who had good judgment, and who
+cared for his interests, to represent him in some business
+affairs in Norway.&nbsp; She undertook to act for him, and set
+out on the voyage only a week after she had determined to destroy
+herself.</p>
+<p>The interest of this book which describes her travel is
+quickened by a knowledge of the heart-sorrow that underlies it
+all.&nbsp; Gilbert Imlay had promised to meet her upon her
+return, and go with her to Switzerland.&nbsp; But the letters she
+had from him in Sweden and Norway were cold, and she came back to
+find that she was wholly forsaken for an actress from a strolling
+company of players.&nbsp; Then she went up the river to drown
+herself.&nbsp; She paced the road at Putney on an October night,
+in 1795, in heavy rain, until her clothes were drenched, that she
+might sink more surely, and then threw herself from the top of
+Putney Bridge.</p>
+<p>She was rescued, and lived on with deadened spirit.&nbsp; In
+1796 these &ldquo;Letters from Sweden and Norway&rdquo; were
+published.&nbsp; Early in 1797 she was married to William
+Godwin.&nbsp; On the 10th of September in the same year, at the
+age of thirty-eight, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin died, after the
+birth of the daughter who lived to become the wife of
+Shelley.&nbsp; The mother also would have lived, if a womanly
+feeling, in itself to be respected, had not led her also to
+unwise departure from the customs of the world.&nbsp; Peace be to
+her memory.&nbsp; None but kind thoughts can dwell upon the life
+of this too faithful disciple of Rousseau.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">H. M.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER I.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Eleven days of weariness on board a vessel not intended for
+the accommodation of passengers have so exhausted my spirits, to
+say nothing of the other causes, with which you are already
+sufficiently acquainted, that it is with some difficulty I adhere
+to my determination of giving you my observations, as I travel
+through new scenes, whilst warmed with the impression they have
+made on me.</p>
+<p>The captain, as I mentioned to you, promised to put me on
+shore at Arendall or Gothenburg in his way to Elsineur, but
+contrary winds obliged us to pass both places during the
+night.&nbsp; In the morning, however, after we had lost sight of
+the entrance of the latter bay, the vessel was becalmed; and the
+captain, to oblige me, hanging out a signal for a pilot, bore
+down towards the shore.</p>
+<p>My attention was particularly directed to the lighthouse, and
+you can scarcely imagine with what anxiety I watched two long
+hours for a boat to emancipate me; still no one appeared.&nbsp;
+Every cloud that flitted on the horizon was hailed as a
+liberator, till approaching nearer, like most of the prospects
+sketched by hope, it dissolved under the eye into
+disappointment.</p>
+<p>Weary of expectation, I then began to converse with the
+captain on the subject, and from the tenor of the information my
+questions drew forth I soon concluded that if I waited for a boat
+I had little chance of getting on shore at this place.&nbsp;
+Despotism, as is usually the case, I found had here cramped the
+industry of man.&nbsp; The pilots being paid by the king, and
+scantily, they will not run into any danger, or even quit their
+hovels, if they can possibly avoid it, only to fulfil what is
+termed their duty.&nbsp; How different is it on the English
+coast, where, in the most stormy weather, boats immediately hail
+you, brought out by the expectation of extraordinary profit.</p>
+<p>Disliking to sail for Elsineur, and still more to lie at
+anchor or cruise about the coast for several days, I exerted all
+my rhetoric to prevail on the captain to let me have the
+ship&rsquo;s boat, and though I added the most forcible of
+arguments, I for a long time addressed him in vain.</p>
+<p>It is a kind of rule at sea not to send out a boat.&nbsp; The
+captain was a good-natured man; but men with common minds seldom
+break through general rules.&nbsp; Prudence is ever the resort of
+weakness, and they rarely go as far as they may in any
+undertaking who are determined not to go beyond it on any
+account.&nbsp; If, however, I had some trouble with the captain,
+I did not lose much time with the sailors, for they, all
+alacrity, hoisted out the boat the moment I obtained permission,
+and promised to row me to the lighthouse.</p>
+<p>I did not once allow myself to doubt of obtaining a conveyance
+from thence round the rocks&mdash;and then away for
+Gothenburg&mdash;confinement is so unpleasant.</p>
+<p>The day was fine, and I enjoyed the water till, approaching
+the little island, poor Marguerite, whose timidity always acts as
+a feeler before her adventuring spirit, began to wonder at our
+not seeing any inhabitants.&nbsp; I did not listen to her.&nbsp;
+But when, on landing, the same silence prevailed, I caught the
+alarm, which was not lessened by the sight of two old men whom we
+forced out of their wretched hut.&nbsp; Scarcely human in their
+appearance, we with difficulty obtained an intelligible reply to
+our questions, the result of which was that they had no boat, and
+were not allowed to quit their post on any pretence.&nbsp; But
+they informed us that there was at the other side, eight or ten
+miles over, a pilot&rsquo;s dwelling.&nbsp; Two guineas tempted
+the sailors to risk the captain&rsquo;s displeasure, and once
+more embark to row me over.</p>
+<p>The weather was pleasant, and the appearance of the shore so
+grand that I should have enjoyed the two hours it took to reach
+it, but for the fatigue which was too visible in the countenances
+of the sailors, who, instead of uttering a complaint, were, with
+the thoughtless hilarity peculiar to them, joking about the
+possibility of the captain&rsquo;s taking advantage of a slight
+westerly breeze, which was springing up, to sail without
+them.&nbsp; Yet, in spite of their good humour, I could not help
+growing uneasy when the shore, receding, as it were, as we
+advanced, seemed to promise no end to their toil.&nbsp; This
+anxiety increased when, turning into the most picturesque bay I
+ever saw, my eyes sought in vain for the vestige of a human
+habitation.&nbsp; Before I could determine what step to take in
+such a dilemma (for I could not bear to think of returning to the
+ship), the sight of a barge relieved me, and we hastened towards
+it for information.&nbsp; We were immediately directed to pass
+some jutting rocks, when we should see a pilot&rsquo;s hut.</p>
+<p>There was a solemn silence in this scene which made itself be
+felt.&nbsp; The sunbeams that played on the ocean, scarcely
+ruffled by the lightest breeze, contrasted with the huge dark
+rocks, that looked like the rude materials of creation forming
+the barrier of unwrought space, forcibly struck me, but I should
+not have been sorry if the cottage had not appeared equally
+tranquil.&nbsp; Approaching a retreat where strangers, especially
+women, so seldom appeared, I wondered that curiosity did not
+bring the beings who inhabited it to the windows or door.&nbsp; I
+did not immediately recollect that men who remain so near the
+brute creation, as only to exert themselves to find the food
+necessary to sustain life, have little or no imagination to call
+forth the curiosity necessary to fructify the faint glimmerings
+of mind which entitle them to rank as lords of the
+creation.&nbsp; Had they either they could not contentedly remain
+rooted in the clods they so indolently cultivate.</p>
+<p>Whilst the sailors went to seek for the sluggish inhabitants,
+these conclusions occurred to me; and, recollecting the extreme
+fondness which the Parisians ever testify for novelty, their very
+curiosity appeared to me a proof of the progress they had made in
+refinement.&nbsp; Yes, in the art of living&mdash;in the art of
+escaping from the cares which embarrass the first steps towards
+the attainment of the pleasures of social life.</p>
+<p>The pilots informed the sailors that they were under the
+direction of a lieutenant retired from the service, who spoke
+English; adding that they could do nothing without his orders,
+and even the offer of money could hardly conquer their laziness
+and prevail on them to accompany us to his dwelling.&nbsp; They
+would not go with me alone, which I wanted them to have done,
+because I wished to dismiss the sailors as soon as
+possible.&nbsp; Once more we rowed off, they following tardily,
+till, turning round another bold protuberance of the rocks, we
+saw a boat making towards us, and soon learnt that it was the
+lieutenant himself, coming with some earnestness to see who we
+were.</p>
+<p>To save the sailors any further toil, I had my baggage
+instantly removed into his boat; for, as he could speak English,
+a previous parley was not necessary, though Marguerite&rsquo;s
+respect for me could hardly keep her from expressing the fear,
+strongly marked on her countenance, which my putting ourselves
+into the power of a strange man excited.&nbsp; He pointed out his
+cottage; and, drawing near to it, I was not sorry to see a female
+figure, though I had not, like Marguerite, been thinking of
+robberies, murders, or the other evil which instantly, as the
+sailors would have said, runs foul of a woman&rsquo;s
+imagination.</p>
+<p>On entering I was still better pleased to find a clean house,
+with some degree of rural elegance.&nbsp; The beds were of
+muslin, coarse it is true, but dazzlingly white; and the floor
+was strewed over with little sprigs of juniper (the custom, as I
+afterwards found, of the country), which formed a contrast with
+the curtains, and produced an agreeable sensation of freshness,
+to soften the ardour of noon.&nbsp; Still nothing was so pleasing
+as the alacrity of hospitality&mdash;all that the house afforded
+was quickly spread on the whitest linen.&nbsp; Remember, I had
+just left the vessel, where, without being fastidious, I had
+continually been disgusted.&nbsp; Fish, milk, butter, and cheese,
+and, I am sorry to add, brandy, the bane of this country, were
+spread on the board.&nbsp; After we had dined hospitality made
+them, with some degree of mystery, bring us some excellent
+coffee.&nbsp; I did not then know that it was prohibited.</p>
+<p>The good man of the house apologised for coming in
+continually, but declared that he was so glad to speak English he
+could not stay out.&nbsp; He need not have apologised; I was
+equally glad of his company.&nbsp; With the wife I could only
+exchange smiles, and she was employed observing the make of our
+clothes.&nbsp; My hands, I found, had first led her to discover
+that I was the lady.&nbsp; I had, of course, my quantum of
+reverences; for the politeness of the north seems to partake of
+the coldness of the climate and the rigidity of its iron-sinewed
+rocks.&nbsp; Amongst the peasantry there is, however, so much of
+the simplicity of the golden age in this land of flint&mdash;so
+much overflowing of heart and fellow-feeling, that only
+benevolence and the honest sympathy of nature diffused smiles
+over my countenance when they kept me standing, regardless of my
+fatigue, whilst they dropped courtesy after courtesy.</p>
+<p>The situation of this house was beautiful, though chosen for
+convenience.&nbsp; The master being the officer who commanded all
+the pilots on the coast, and the person appointed to guard
+wrecks, it was necessary for him to fix on a spot that would
+overlook the whole bay.&nbsp; As he had seen some service, he
+wore, not without a pride I thought becoming, a badge to prove
+that he had merited well of his country.&nbsp; It was happy, I
+thought, that he had been paid in honour, for the stipend he
+received was little more than twelve pounds a year.&nbsp; I do
+not trouble myself or you with the calculation of Swedish
+ducats.&nbsp; Thus, my friend, you perceive the necessity of
+perquisites.&nbsp; This same narrow policy runs through
+everything.&nbsp; I shall have occasion further to animadvert on
+it.</p>
+<p>Though my host amused me with an account of himself, which
+gave me an idea of the manners of the people I was about to
+visit, I was eager to climb the rocks to view the country, and
+see whether the honest tars had regained their ship.&nbsp; With
+the help of the lieutenant&rsquo;s telescope, I saw the vessel
+under way with a fair though gentle gale.&nbsp; The sea was calm,
+playful even as the most shallow stream, and on the vast basin I
+did not see a dark speck to indicate the boat.&nbsp; My
+conductors were consequently arrived.</p>
+<p>Straying further, my eye was attracted by the sight of some
+heartsease that peeped through the rocks.&nbsp; I caught at it as
+a good omen, and going to preserve it in a letter that had not
+conveyed balm to my heart, a cruel remembrance suffused my eyes;
+but it passed away like an April shower.&nbsp; If you are deep
+read in Shakespeare, you will recollect that this was the little
+western flower tinged by love&rsquo;s dart, which &ldquo;maidens
+call love in idleness.&rdquo;&nbsp; The gaiety of my babe was
+unmixed; regardless of omens or sentiments, she found a few wild
+strawberries more grateful than flowers or fancies.</p>
+<p>The lieutenant informed me that this was a commodious
+bay.&nbsp; Of that I could not judge, though I felt its
+picturesque beauty.&nbsp; Rocks were piled on rocks, forming a
+suitable bulwark to the ocean.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come no
+further,&rdquo; they emphatically said, turning their dark sides
+to the waves to augment the idle roar.&nbsp; The view was
+sterile; still little patches of earth of the most exquisite
+verdure, enamelled with the sweetest wild flowers, seemed to
+promise the goats and a few straggling cows luxurious
+herbage.&nbsp; How silent and peaceful was the scene!&nbsp; I
+gazed around with rapture, and felt more of that spontaneous
+pleasure which gives credibility to our expectation of happiness
+than I had for a long, long time before.&nbsp; I forgot the
+horrors I had witnessed in France, which had cast a gloom over
+all nature, and suffering the enthusiasm of my
+character&mdash;too often, gracious God! damped by the tears of
+disappointed affection&mdash;to be lighted up afresh, care took
+wing while simple fellow-feeling expanded my heart.</p>
+<p>To prolong this enjoyment, I readily assented to the proposal
+of our host to pay a visit to a family, the master of which spoke
+English, who was the drollest dog in the country, he added,
+repeating some of his stories with a hearty laugh.</p>
+<p>I walked on, still delighted with the rude beauties of the
+scene; for the sublime often gave place imperceptibly to the
+beautiful, dilating the emotions which were painfully
+concentrated.</p>
+<p>When we entered this abode, the largest I had yet seen, I was
+introduced to a numerous family; but the father, from whom I was
+led to expect so much entertainment, was absent.&nbsp; The
+lieutenant consequently was obliged to be the interpreter of our
+reciprocal compliments.&nbsp; The phrases were awkwardly
+transmitted, it is true; but looks and gestures were sufficient
+to make them intelligible and interesting.&nbsp; The girls were
+all vivacity, and respect for me could scarcely keep them from
+romping with my host, who, asking for a pinch of snuff, was
+presented with a box, out of which an artificial mouse, fastened
+to the bottom, sprang.&nbsp; Though this trick had doubtless been
+played time out of mind, yet the laughter it excited was not less
+genuine.</p>
+<p>They were overflowing with civility; but, to prevent their
+almost killing my babe with kindness, I was obliged to shorten my
+visit; and two or three of the girls accompanied us, bringing
+with them a part of whatever the house afforded to contribute
+towards rendering my supper more plentiful; and plentiful in fact
+it was, though I with difficulty did honour to some of the
+dishes, not relishing the quantity of sugar and spices put into
+everything.&nbsp; At supper my host told me bluntly that I was a
+woman of observation, for I asked him <i>men&rsquo;s
+questions</i>.</p>
+<p>The arrangements for my journey were quickly made.&nbsp; I
+could only have a car with post-horses, as I did not choose to
+wait till a carriage could be sent for to Gothenburg.&nbsp; The
+expense of my journey (about one or two and twenty English miles)
+I found would not amount to more than eleven or twelve shillings,
+paying, he assured me, generously.&nbsp; I gave him a guinea and
+a half.&nbsp; But it was with the greatest difficulty that I
+could make him take so much&mdash;indeed anything&mdash;for my
+lodging and fare.&nbsp; He declared that it was next to robbing
+me, explaining how much I ought to pay on the road.&nbsp;
+However, as I was positive, he took the guinea for himself; but,
+as a condition, insisted on accompanying me, to prevent my
+meeting with any trouble or imposition on the way.</p>
+<p>I then retired to my apartment with regret.&nbsp; The night
+was so fine that I would gladly have rambled about much longer,
+yet, recollecting that I must rise very early, I reluctantly went
+to bed; but my senses had been so awake, and my imagination still
+continued so busy, that I sought for rest in vain.&nbsp; Rising
+before six, I scented the sweet morning air; I had long before
+heard the birds twittering to hail the dawning day, though it
+could scarcely have been allowed to have departed.</p>
+<p>Nothing, in fact, can equal the beauty of the northern
+summer&rsquo;s evening and night, if night it may be called that
+only wants the glare of day, the full light which frequently
+seems so impertinent, for I could write at midnight very well
+without a candle.&nbsp; I contemplated all Nature at rest; the
+rocks, even grown darker in their appearance, looked as if they
+partook of the general repose, and reclined more heavily on their
+foundation.&nbsp; &ldquo;What,&rdquo; I exclaimed, &ldquo;is this
+active principle which keeps me still awake?&nbsp; Why fly my
+thoughts abroad, when everything around me appears at
+home?&rdquo;&nbsp; My child was sleeping with equal
+calmness&mdash;innocent and sweet as the closing flowers.&nbsp;
+Some recollections, attached to the idea of home, mingled with
+reflections respecting the state of society I had been
+contemplating that evening, made a tear drop on the rosy cheek I
+had just kissed, and emotions that trembled on the brink of
+ecstasy and agony gave a poignancy to my sensations which made me
+feel more alive than usual.</p>
+<p>What are these imperious sympathies?&nbsp; How frequently has
+melancholy and even misanthropy taken possession of me, when the
+world has disgusted me, and friends have proved unkind.&nbsp; I
+have then considered myself as a particle broken off from the
+grand mass of mankind; I was alone, till some involuntary
+sympathetic emotion, like the attraction of adhesion, made me
+feel that I was still a part of a mighty whole, from which I
+could not sever myself&mdash;not, perhaps, for the reflection has
+been carried very far, by snapping the thread of an existence,
+which loses its charms in proportion as the cruel experience of
+life stops or poisons the current of the heart.&nbsp; Futurity,
+what hast thou not to give to those who know that there is such a
+thing as happiness!&nbsp; I speak not of philosophical
+contentment, though pain has afforded them the strongest
+conviction of it.</p>
+<p>After our coffee and milk&mdash;for the mistress of the house
+had been roused long before us by her hospitality&mdash;my
+baggage was taken forward in a boat by my host, because the car
+could not safely have been brought to the house.</p>
+<p>The road at first was very rocky and troublesome, but our
+driver was careful, and the horses accustomed to the frequent and
+sudden acclivities and descents; so that, not apprehending any
+danger, I played with my girl, whom I would not leave to
+Marguerite&rsquo;s care, on account of her timidity.</p>
+<p>Stopping at a little inn to bait the horses, I saw the first
+countenance in Sweden that displeased me, though the man was
+better dressed than any one who had as yet fallen in my
+way.&nbsp; An altercation took place between him and my host, the
+purport of which I could not guess, excepting that I was the
+occasion of it, be it what it would.&nbsp; The sequel was his
+leaving the house angrily; and I was immediately informed that he
+was the custom-house officer.&nbsp; The professional had indeed
+effaced the national character, for, living as he did within
+these frank hospitable people, still only the exciseman appeared,
+the counterpart of some I had met with in England and
+France.&nbsp; I was unprovided with a passport, not having
+entered any great town.&nbsp; At Gothenburg I knew I could
+immediately obtain one, and only the trouble made me object to
+the searching my trunks.&nbsp; He blustered for money; but the
+lieutenant was determined to guard me, according to promise, from
+imposition.</p>
+<p>To avoid being interrogated at the town-gate, and obliged to
+go in the rain to give an account of myself (merely a form)
+before we could get the refreshment we stood in need of, he
+requested us to descend&mdash;I might have said step&mdash;from
+our car, and walk into town.</p>
+<p>I expected to have found a tolerable inn, but was ushered into
+a most comfortless one; and, because it was about five
+o&rsquo;clock, three or four hours after their dining hour, I
+could not prevail on them to give me anything warm to eat.</p>
+<p>The appearance of the accommodations obliged me to deliver one
+of my recommendatory letters, and the gentleman to whom it was
+addressed sent to look out for a lodging for me whilst I partook
+of his supper.&nbsp; As nothing passed at this supper to
+characterise the country, I shall here close my letter.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Yours truly.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER II.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Gothenburg is a clean airy town, and, having been built by the
+Dutch, has canals running through each street; and in some of
+them there are rows of trees that would render it very pleasant
+were it not for the pavement, which is intolerably bad.</p>
+<p>There are several rich commercial houses&mdash;Scotch, French,
+and Swedish; but the Scotch, I believe, have been the most
+successful.&nbsp; The commerce and commission business with
+France since the war has been very lucrative, and enriched the
+merchants I am afraid at the expense of the other inhabitants, by
+raising the price of the necessaries of life.</p>
+<p>As all the men of consequence&mdash;I mean men of the largest
+fortune&mdash;are merchants, their principal enjoyment is a
+relaxation from business at the table, which is spread at, I
+think, too early an hour (between one and two) for men who have
+letters to write and accounts to settle after paying due respect
+to the bottle.</p>
+<p>However, when numerous circles are to be brought together, and
+when neither literature nor public amusements furnish topics for
+conversation, a good dinner appears to be the only centre to
+rally round, especially as scandal, the zest of more select
+parties, can only be whispered.&nbsp; As for politics, I have
+seldom found it a subject of continual discussion in a country
+town in any part of the world.&nbsp; The politics of the place,
+being on a smaller scale, suits better with the size of their
+faculties; for, generally speaking, the sphere of observation
+determines the extent of the mind.</p>
+<p>The more I see of the world, the more I am convinced that
+civilisation is a blessing not sufficiently estimated by those
+who have not traced its progress; for it not only refines our
+enjoyments, but produces a variety which enables us to retain the
+primitive delicacy of our sensations.&nbsp; Without the aid of
+the imagination all the pleasures of the senses must sink into
+grossness, unless continual novelty serve as a substitute for the
+imagination, which, being impossible, it was to this weariness, I
+suppose, that Solomon alluded when he declared that there was
+nothing new under the sun!&mdash;nothing for the common
+sensations excited by the senses.&nbsp; Yet who will deny that
+the imagination and understanding have made many, very many
+discoveries since those days, which only seem harbingers of
+others still more noble and beneficial?&nbsp; I never met with
+much imagination amongst people who had not acquired a habit of
+reflection; and in that state of society in which the judgment
+and taste are not called forth, and formed by the cultivation of
+the arts and sciences, little of that delicacy of feeling and
+thinking is to be found characterised by the word
+sentiment.&nbsp; The want of scientific pursuits perhaps accounts
+for the hospitality, as well as for the cordial reception which
+strangers receive from the inhabitants of small towns.</p>
+<p>Hospitality has, I think, been too much praised by travellers
+as a proof of goodness of heart, when, in my opinion,
+indiscriminate hospitality is rather a criterion by which you may
+form a tolerable estimate of the indolence or vacancy of a head;
+or, in other words, a fondness for social pleasures in which the
+mind not having its proportion of exercise, the bottle must be
+pushed about.</p>
+<p>These remarks are equally applicable to Dublin, the most
+hospitable city I ever passed through.&nbsp; But I will try to
+confine my observations more particularly to Sweden.</p>
+<p>It is true I have only had a glance over a small part of it;
+yet of its present state of manners and acquirements I think I
+have formed a distinct idea, without having visited the
+capital&mdash;where, in fact, less of a national character is to
+be found than in the remote parts of the country.</p>
+<p>The Swedes pique themselves on their politeness; but far from
+being the polish of a cultivated mind, it consists merely of
+tiresome forms and ceremonies.&nbsp; So far, indeed, from
+entering immediately into your character, and making you feel
+instantly at your ease, like the well-bred French, their
+over-acted civility is a continual restraint on all your
+actions.&nbsp; The sort of superiority which a fortune gives when
+there is no superiority of education, excepting what consists in
+the observance of senseless forms, has a contrary effect than
+what is intended; so that I could not help reckoning the
+peasantry the politest people of Sweden, who, only aiming at
+pleasing you, never think of being admired for their
+behaviour.</p>
+<p>Their tables, like their compliments, seem equally a
+caricature of the French.&nbsp; The dishes are composed, as well
+as theirs, of a variety of mixtures to destroy the native taste
+of the food without being as relishing.&nbsp; Spices and sugar
+are put into everything, even into the bread; and the only way I
+can account for their partiality to high-seasoned dishes is the
+constant use of salted provisions.&nbsp; Necessity obliges them
+to lay up a store of dried fish and salted meat for the winter;
+and in summer, fresh meat and fish taste insipid after
+them.&nbsp; To which may be added the constant use of
+spirits.&nbsp; Every day, before dinner and supper, even whilst
+the dishes are cooling on the table, men and women repair to a
+side-table; and to obtain an appetite eat bread-and-butter,
+cheese, raw salmon, or anchovies, drinking a glass of
+brandy.&nbsp; Salt fish or meat then immediately follows, to give
+a further whet to the stomach.&nbsp; As the dinner advances,
+pardon me for taking up a few minutes to describe what, alas! has
+detained me two or three hours on the stretch observing, dish
+after dish is changed, in endless rotation, and handed round with
+solemn pace to each guest; but should you happen not to like the
+first dishes, which was often my case, it is a gross breach of
+politeness to ask for part of any other till its turn
+comes.&nbsp; But have patience, and there will be eating
+enough.&nbsp; Allow me to run over the acts of a visiting day,
+not overlooking the interludes.</p>
+<p>Prelude a luncheon&mdash;then a succession of fish, flesh, and
+fowl for two hours, during which time the dessert&mdash;I was
+sorry for the strawberries and cream&mdash;rests on the table to
+be impregnated by the fumes of the viands.&nbsp; Coffee
+immediately follows in the drawing-room, but does not preclude
+punch, ale, tea and cakes, raw salmon, &amp;c.&nbsp; A supper
+brings up the rear, not forgetting the introductory luncheon,
+almost equalling in removes the dinner.&nbsp; A day of this kind
+you would imagine sufficient; but a to-morrow and a
+to-morrow&mdash;A never-ending, still-beginning feast may be
+bearable, perhaps, when stern winter frowns, shaking with
+chilling aspect his hoary locks; but during a summer, sweet as
+fleeting, let me, my kind strangers, escape sometimes into your
+fir groves, wander on the margin of your beautiful lakes, or
+climb your rocks, to view still others in endless perspective,
+which, piled by more than giant&rsquo;s hand, scale the heavens
+to intercept its rays, or to receive the parting tinge of
+lingering day&mdash;day that, scarcely softened unto twilight,
+allows the freshening breeze to wake, and the moon to burst forth
+in all her glory to glide with solemn elegance through the azure
+expanse.</p>
+<p>The cow&rsquo;s bell has ceased to tinkle the herd to rest;
+they have all paced across the heath.&nbsp; Is not this the
+witching time of night?&nbsp; The waters murmur, and fall with
+more than mortal music, and spirits of peace walk abroad to calm
+the agitated breast.&nbsp; Eternity is in these moments.&nbsp;
+Worldly cares melt into the airy stuff that dreams are made of,
+and reveries, mild and enchanting as the first hopes of love or
+the recollection of lost enjoyment, carry the hapless wight into
+futurity, who in bustling life has vainly strove to throw off the
+grief which lies heavy at the heart.&nbsp; Good night!&nbsp; A
+crescent hangs out in the vault before, which woos me to stray
+abroad.&nbsp; It is not a silvery reflection of the sun, but
+glows with all its golden splendour.&nbsp; Who fears the fallen
+dew?&nbsp; It only makes the mown grass smell more
+fragrant.&nbsp; Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER III.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The population of Sweden has been estimated from two millions
+and a half to three millions; a small number for such an immense
+tract of country, of which only so much is cultivated&mdash;and
+that in the simplest manner&mdash;as is absolutely requisite to
+supply the necessaries of life; and near the seashore, whence
+herrings are easily procured, there scarcely appears a vestige of
+cultivation.&nbsp; The scattered huts that stand shivering on the
+naked rocks, braving the pitiless elements, are formed of logs of
+wood rudely hewn; and so little pains are taken with the craggy
+foundation that nothing like a pathway points out the door.</p>
+<p>Gathered into himself by the cold, lowering his visage to
+avoid the cutting blast, is it surprising that the churlish
+pleasure of drinking drams takes place of social enjoyments
+amongst the poor, especially if we take into the account that
+they mostly live on high-seasoned provision and rye bread?&nbsp;
+Hard enough, you may imagine, as it is baked only once a
+year.&nbsp; The servants also, in most families, eat this kind of
+bread, and have a different kind of food from their masters,
+which, in spite of all the arguments I have heard to vindicate
+the custom, appears to me a remnant of barbarism.</p>
+<p>In fact, the situation of the servants in every respect,
+particularly that of the women, shows how far the Swedes are from
+having a just conception of rational equality.&nbsp; They are not
+termed slaves; yet a man may strike a man with impunity because
+he pays him wages, though these wages are so low that necessity
+must teach them to pilfer, whilst servility renders them false
+and boorish.&nbsp; Still the men stand up for the dignity of man
+by oppressing the women.&nbsp; The most menial, and even
+laborious offices, are therefore left to these poor
+drudges.&nbsp; Much of this I have seen.&nbsp; In the winter, I
+am told, they take the linen down to the river to wash it in the
+cold water, and though their hands, cut by the ice, are cracked
+and bleeding, the men, their fellow-servants, will not disgrace
+their manhood by carrying a tub to lighten their burden.</p>
+<p>You will not be surprised to hear that they do not wear shoes
+or stockings, when I inform you that their wages are seldom more
+than twenty or thirty shillings per annum.&nbsp; It is the
+custom, I know, to give them a new year&rsquo;s gift and a
+present at some other period, but can it all amount to a just
+indemnity for their labour?&nbsp; The treatment of servants in
+most countries, I grant, is very unjust, and in England, that
+boasted land of freedom, it is often extremely tyrannical.&nbsp;
+I have frequently, with indignation, heard gentlemen declare that
+they would never allow a servant to answer them; and ladies of
+the most exquisite sensibility, who were continually exclaiming
+against the cruelty of the vulgar to the brute creation, have in
+my presence forgot that their attendants had human feelings as
+well as forms.&nbsp; I do not know a more agreeable sight than to
+see servants part of a family.&nbsp; By taking an interest,
+generally speaking, in their concerns you inspire them with one
+for yours.&nbsp; We must love our servants, or we shall never be
+sufficiently attentive to their happiness; and how can those
+masters be attentive to their happiness who, living above their
+fortunes, are more anxious to outshine their neighbours than to
+allow their household the innocent enjoyments they earn?</p>
+<p>It is, in fact, much more difficult for servants, who are
+tantalised by seeing and preparing the dainties of which they are
+not to partake, to remain honest, than the poor, whose thoughts
+are not led from their homely fare; so that, though the servants
+here are commonly thieves, you seldom hear of housebreaking, or
+robbery on the highway.&nbsp; The country is, perhaps, too thinly
+inhabited to produce many of that description of thieves termed
+footpads, or highwaymen.&nbsp; They are usually the spawn of
+great cities&mdash;the effect of the spurious desires generated
+by wealth, rather than the desperate struggles of poverty to
+escape from misery.</p>
+<p>The enjoyment of the peasantry was drinking brandy and coffee,
+before the latter was prohibited, and the former not allowed to
+be privately distilled, the wars carried on by the late king
+rendering it necessary to increase the revenue, and retain the
+specie in the country by every possible means.</p>
+<p>The taxes before the reign of Charles XII. were
+inconsiderable.&nbsp; Since then the burden has continually been
+growing heavier, and the price of provisions has proportionately
+increased&mdash;nay, the advantage accruing from the exportation
+of corn to France and rye to Germany will probably produce a
+scarcity in both Sweden and Norway, should not a peace put a stop
+to it this autumn, for speculations of various kinds have already
+almost doubled the price.</p>
+<p>Such are the effects of war, that it saps the vitals even of
+the neutral countries, who, obtaining a sudden influx of wealth,
+appear to be rendered flourishing by the destruction which
+ravages the hapless nations who are sacrificed to the ambition of
+their governors.&nbsp; I shall not, however, dwell on the vices,
+though they be of the most contemptible and embruting cast, to
+which a sudden accession of fortune gives birth, because I
+believe it may be delivered as an axiom, that it is only in
+proportion to the industry necessary to acquire wealth that a
+nation is really benefited by it.</p>
+<p>The prohibition of drinking coffee under a penalty, and the
+encouragement given to public distilleries, tend to impoverish
+the poor, who are not affected by the sumptuary laws; for the
+regent has lately laid very severe restraints on the articles of
+dress, which the middling class of people found grievous, because
+it obliged them to throw aside finery that might have lasted them
+for their lives.</p>
+<p>These may be termed vexatious; still the death of the king, by
+saving them from the consequences his ambition would naturally
+have entailed on them, may be reckoned a blessing.</p>
+<p>Besides, the French Revolution has not only rendered all the
+crowned heads more cautious, but has so decreased everywhere
+(excepting amongst themselves) a respect for nobility, that the
+peasantry have not only lost their blind reverence for their
+seigniors, but complain in a manly style of oppressions which
+before they did not think of denominating such, because they were
+taught to consider themselves as a different order of
+beings.&nbsp; And, perhaps, the efforts which the aristocrats are
+making here, as well as in every other part of Europe, to secure
+their sway, will be the most effectual mode of undermining it,
+taking into the calculation that the King of Sweden, like most of
+the potentates of Europe, has continually been augmenting his
+power by encroaching on the privileges of the nobles.</p>
+<p>The well-bred Swedes of the capital are formed on the ancient
+French model, and they in general speak that language; for they
+have a knack at acquiring languages with tolerable fluency.&nbsp;
+This may be reckoned an advantage in some respects; but it
+prevents the cultivation of their own, and any considerable
+advance in literary pursuits.</p>
+<p>A sensible writer has lately observed (I have not his work by
+me, therefore cannot quote his exact words), &ldquo;That the
+Americans very wisely let the Europeans make their books and
+fashions for them.&rdquo;&nbsp; But I cannot coincide with him in
+this opinion.&nbsp; The reflection necessary to produce a certain
+number even of tolerable productions augments more than he is
+aware of the mass of knowledge in the community.&nbsp; Desultory
+reading is commonly a mere pastime.&nbsp; But we must have an
+object to refer our reflections to, or they will seldom go below
+the surface.&nbsp; As in travelling, the keeping of a journal
+excites to many useful inquiries that would not have been thought
+of had the traveller only determined to see all he could see,
+without ever asking himself for what purpose.&nbsp; Besides, the
+very dabbling in literature furnishes harmless topics of
+conversation; for the not having such subjects at hand, though
+they are often insupportably fatiguing, renders the inhabitants
+of little towns prying and censorious.&nbsp; Idleness, rather
+than ill-nature, gives birth to scandal, and to the observation
+of little incidents which narrows the mind.&nbsp; It is
+frequently only the fear of being talked of which produces that
+puerile scrupulosity about trifles incompatible with an enlarged
+plan of usefulness, and with the basis of all moral
+principles&mdash;respect for the virtues which are not merely the
+virtues of convention.</p>
+<p>I am, my friend, more and more convinced that a metropolis, or
+an abode absolutely solitary, is the best calculated for the
+improvement of the heart, as well as the understanding; whether
+we desire to become acquainted with man, nature, or
+ourselves.&nbsp; Mixing with mankind, we are obliged to examine
+our prejudices, and often imperceptibly lose, as we analyse
+them.&nbsp; And in the country, growing intimate with nature, a
+thousand little circumstances, unseen by vulgar eyes, give birth
+to sentiments dear to the imagination, and inquiries which expand
+the soul, particularly when cultivation has not smoothed into
+insipidity all its originality of character.</p>
+<p>I love the country, yet whenever I see a picturesque situation
+chosen on which to erect a dwelling I am always afraid of the
+improvements.&nbsp; It requires uncommon taste to form a whole,
+and to introduce accommodations and ornaments analogous with the
+surrounding scene.</p>
+<p>I visited, near Gothenburg, a house with improved land about
+it, with which I was particularly delighted.&nbsp; It was close
+to a lake embosomed in pine-clad rocks.&nbsp; In one part of the
+meadows your eye was directed to the broad expanse, in another
+you were led into a shade, to see a part of it, in the form of a
+river, rush amongst the fragments of rocks and roots of trees;
+nothing seemed forced.&nbsp; One recess, particularly grand and
+solemn amongst the towering cliffs, had a rude stone table and
+seat placed in it, that might have served for a Druid&rsquo;s
+haunt, whilst a placid stream below enlivened the flowers on its
+margin, where light-footed elves would gladly have danced their
+airy rounds.</p>
+<p>Here the hand of taste was conspicuous though not obtrusive,
+and formed a contrast with another abode in the same
+neighbourhood, on which much money had been lavished; where
+Italian colonnades were placed to excite the wonder of the rude
+crags, and a stone staircase, to threaten with destruction a
+wooden house.&nbsp; Venuses and Apollos condemned to lie hid in
+snow three parts of the year seemed equally displaced, and called
+the attention off from the surrounding sublimity, without
+inspiring any voluptuous sensations.&nbsp; Yet even these
+abortions of vanity have been useful.&nbsp; Numberless workmen
+have been employed, and the superintending artist has improved
+the labourers, whose unskilfulness tormented him, by obliging
+them to submit to the discipline of rules.&nbsp; Adieu!</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Yours affectionately.</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER IV.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The severity of the long Swedish winter tends to render the
+people sluggish, for though this season has its peculiar
+pleasures, too much time is employed to guard against its
+inclemency.&nbsp; Still as warm clothing is absolutely necessary,
+the women spin and the men weave, and by these exertions get a
+fence to keep out the cold.&nbsp; I have rarely passed a knot of
+cottages without seeing cloth laid out to bleach, and when I
+entered, always found the women spinning or knitting.</p>
+<p>A mistaken tenderness, however, for their children, makes them
+even in summer load them with flannels, and having a sort of
+natural antipathy to cold water, the squalid appearance of the
+poor babes, not to speak of the noxious smell which flannel and
+rugs retain, seems a reply to a question I had often
+asked&mdash;Why I did not see more children in the villages I
+passed through?&nbsp; Indeed the children appear to be nipt in
+the bud, having neither the graces nor charms of their age.&nbsp;
+And this, I am persuaded, is much more owing to the ignorance of
+the mothers than to the rudeness of the climate.&nbsp; Rendered
+feeble by the continual perspiration they are kept in, whilst
+every pore is absorbing unwholesome moisture, they give them,
+even at the breast, brandy, salt fish, and every other crude
+substance which air and exercise enables the parent to
+digest.</p>
+<p>The women of fortune here, as well as everywhere else, have
+nurses to suckle their children; and the total want of chastity
+in the lower class of women frequently renders them very unfit
+for the trust.</p>
+<p>You have sometimes remarked to me the difference of the
+manners of the country girls in England and in America;
+attributing the reserve of the former to the climate&mdash;to the
+absence of genial suns.&nbsp; But it must be their stars, not the
+zephyrs, gently stealing on their senses, which here lead frail
+women astray.&nbsp; Who can look at these rocks, and allow the
+voluptuousness of nature to be an excuse for gratifying the
+desires it inspires?&nbsp; We must therefore, find some other
+cause beside voluptuousness, I believe, to account for the
+conduct of the Swedish and American country girls; for I am led
+to conclude, from all the observations I have made, that there is
+always a mixture of sentiment and imagination in voluptuousness,
+to which neither of them have much pretension.</p>
+<p>The country girls of Ireland and Wales equally feel the first
+impulse of nature, which, restrained in England by fear or
+delicacy, proves that society is there in a more advanced
+state.&nbsp; Besides, as the mind is cultivated, and taste gains
+ground, the passions become stronger, and rest on something more
+stable than the casual sympathies of the moment.&nbsp; Health and
+idleness will always account for promiscuous amours; and in some
+degree I term every person idle, the exercise of whose mind does
+not bear some proportion to that of the body.</p>
+<p>The Swedish ladies exercise neither sufficiently; of course,
+grow very fat at an early age; and when they have not this downy
+appearance, a comfortable idea, you will say, in a cold climate,
+they are not remarkable for fine forms.&nbsp; They have, however,
+mostly fine complexions; but indolence makes the lily soon
+displace the rose.&nbsp; The quantity of coffee, spices, and
+other things of that kind, with want of care, almost universally
+spoil their teeth, which contrast but ill with their ruby
+lips.</p>
+<p>The manners of Stockholm are refined, I hear, by the
+introduction of gallantry; but in the country, romping and coarse
+freedoms, with coarser allusions, keep the spirits awake.&nbsp;
+In the article of cleanliness, the women of all descriptions seem
+very deficient; and their dress shows that vanity is more
+inherent in women than taste.</p>
+<p>The men appear to have paid still less court to the
+graces.&nbsp; They are a robust, healthy race, distinguished for
+their common sense and turn for humour, rather than for wit or
+sentiment.&nbsp; I include not, as you may suppose, in this
+general character, some of the nobility and officers, who having
+travelled, are polite and well informed.</p>
+<p>I must own to you that the lower class of people here amuse
+and interest me much more than the middling, with their apish
+good breeding and prejudices.&nbsp; The sympathy and frankness of
+heart conspicuous in the peasantry produces even a simple
+gracefulness of deportment which has frequently struck me as very
+picturesque; I have often also been touched by their extreme
+desire to oblige me, when I could not explain my wants, and by
+their earnest manner of expressing that desire.&nbsp; There is
+such a charm in tenderness!&nbsp; It is so delightful to love our
+fellow-creatures, and meet the honest affections as they break
+forth.&nbsp; Still, my good friend, I begin to think that I
+should not like to live continually in the country with people
+whose minds have such a narrow range.&nbsp; My heart would
+frequently be interested; but my mind would languish for more
+companionable society.</p>
+<p>The beauties of nature appear to me now even more alluring
+than in my youth, because my intercourse with the world has
+formed without vitiating my taste.&nbsp; But, with respect to the
+inhabitants of the country, my fancy has probably, when disgusted
+with artificial manners, solaced itself by joining the advantages
+of cultivation with the interesting sincerity of innocence,
+forgetting the lassitude that ignorance will naturally
+produce.&nbsp; I like to see animals sporting, and sympathise in
+their pains and pleasures.&nbsp; Still I love sometimes to view
+the human face divine, and trace the soul, as well as the heart,
+in its varying lineaments.</p>
+<p>A journey to the country, which I must shortly make, will
+enable me to extend my remarks.&mdash;Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER V.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Had I determined to travel in Sweden merely for pleasure, I
+should probably have chosen the road to Stockholm, though
+convinced, by repeated observation, that the manners of a people
+are best discriminated in the country.&nbsp; The inhabitants of
+the capital are all of the same genus; for the varieties in the
+species we must, therefore, search where the habitations of men
+are so separated as to allow the difference of climate to have
+its natural effect.&nbsp; And with this difference we are,
+perhaps, most forcibly struck at the first view, just as we form
+an estimate of the leading traits of a character at the first
+glance, of which intimacy afterwards makes us almost lose
+sight.</p>
+<p>As my affairs called me to Stromstad (the frontier town of
+Sweden) in my way to Norway, I was to pass over, I heard, the
+most uncultivated part of the country.&nbsp; Still I believe that
+the grand features of Sweden are the same everywhere, and it is
+only the grand features that admit of description.&nbsp; There is
+an individuality in every prospect, which remains in the memory
+as forcibly depicted as the particular features that have
+arrested our attention; yet we cannot find words to discriminate
+that individuality so as to enable a stranger to say, this is the
+face, that the view.&nbsp; We may amuse by setting the
+imagination to work; but we cannot store the memory with a
+fact.</p>
+<p>As I wish to give you a general idea of this country, I shall
+continue in my desultory manner to make such observations and
+reflections as the circumstances draw forth, without losing time,
+by endeavouring to arrange them.</p>
+<p>Travelling in Sweden is very cheap, and even commodious, if
+you make but the proper arrangements.&nbsp; Here, as in other
+parts of the Continent, it is necessary to have your own
+carriage, and to have a servant who can speak the language, if
+you are unacquainted with it.&nbsp; Sometimes a servant who can
+drive would be found very useful, which was our case, for I
+travelled in company with two gentlemen, one of whom had a German
+servant who drove very well.&nbsp; This was all the party; for
+not intending to make a long stay, I left my little girl behind
+me.</p>
+<p>As the roads are not much frequented, to avoid waiting three
+or four hours for horses, we sent, as is the constant custom, an
+<i>avant courier</i> the night before, to order them at every
+post, and we constantly found them ready.&nbsp; Our first set I
+jokingly termed requisition horses; but afterwards we had almost
+always little spirited animals that went on at a round pace.</p>
+<p>The roads, making allowance for the ups and downs, are
+uncommonly good and pleasant.&nbsp; The expense, including the
+postillions and other incidental things, does not amount to more
+than a shilling the Swedish mile.</p>
+<p>The inns are tolerable; but not liking the rye bread, I found
+it necessary to furnish myself with some wheaten before I set
+out.&nbsp; The beds, too, were particularly disagreeable to
+me.&nbsp; It seemed to me that I was sinking into a grave when I
+entered them; for, immersed in down placed in a sort of box, I
+expected to be suffocated before morning.&nbsp; The sleeping
+between two down beds&mdash;they do so even in summer&mdash;must
+be very unwholesome during any season; and I cannot conceive how
+the people can bear it, especially as the summers are very
+warm.&nbsp; But warmth they seem not to feel; and, I should
+think, were afraid of the air, by always keeping their windows
+shut.&nbsp; In the winter, I am persuaded, I could not exist in
+rooms thus closed up, with stoves heated in their manner, for
+they only put wood into them twice a day; and, when the stove is
+thoroughly heated, they shut the flue, not admitting any air to
+renew its elasticity, even when the rooms are crowded with
+company.&nbsp; These stoves are made of earthenware, and often in
+a form that ornaments an apartment, which is never the case with
+the heavy iron ones I have seen elsewhere.&nbsp; Stoves may be
+economical, but I like a fire, a wood one, in preference; and I
+am convinced that the current of air which it attracts renders
+this the best mode of warming rooms.</p>
+<p>We arrived early the second evening at a little village called
+Quistram, where we had determined to pass the night, having been
+informed that we should not afterwards find a tolerable inn until
+we reached Stromstad.</p>
+<p>Advancing towards Quistram, as the sun was beginning to
+decline, I was particularly impressed by the beauty of the
+situation.&nbsp; The road was on the declivity of a rocky
+mountain, slightly covered with a mossy herbage and vagrant
+firs.&nbsp; At the bottom, a river, straggling amongst the
+recesses of stone, was hastening forward to the ocean and its
+grey rocks, of which we had a prospect on the left; whilst on the
+right it stole peacefully forward into the meadows, losing itself
+in a thickly-wooded rising ground.&nbsp; As we drew near, the
+loveliest banks of wild flowers variegated the prospect, and
+promised to exhale odours to add to the sweetness of the air, the
+purity of which you could almost see, alas! not smell, for the
+putrefying herrings, which they use as manure, after the oil has
+been extracted, spread over the patches of earth, claimed by
+cultivation, destroyed every other.</p>
+<p>It was intolerable, and entered with us into the inn, which
+was in other respects a charming retreat.</p>
+<p>Whilst supper was preparing I crossed the bridge, and strolled
+by the river, listening to its murmurs.&nbsp; Approaching the
+bank, the beauty of which had attracted my attention in the
+carriage, I recognised many of my old acquaintance growing with
+great luxuriance.</p>
+<p>Seated on it, I could not avoid noting an obvious
+remark.&nbsp; Sweden appeared to me the country in the world most
+proper to form the botanist and natural historian; every object
+seemed to remind me of the creation of things, of the first
+efforts of sportive nature.&nbsp; When a country arrives at a
+certain state of perfection, it looks as if it were made so; and
+curiosity is not excited.&nbsp; Besides, in social life too many
+objects occur for any to be distinctly observed by the generality
+of mankind; yet a contemplative man, or poet, in the
+country&mdash;I do not mean the country adjacent to
+cities&mdash;feels and sees what would escape vulgar eyes, and
+draws suitable inferences.&nbsp; This train of reflections might
+have led me further, in every sense of the word; but I could not
+escape from the detestable evaporation of the herrings, which
+poisoned all my pleasure.</p>
+<p>After making a tolerable supper&mdash;for it is not easy to
+get fresh provisions on the road&mdash;I retired, to be lulled to
+sleep by the murmuring of a stream, of which I with great
+difficulty obtained sufficient to perform my daily ablutions.</p>
+<p>The last battle between the Danes and Swedes, which gave new
+life to their ancient enmity, was fought at this place 1788; only
+seventeen or eighteen were killed, for the great superiority of
+the Danes and Norwegians obliged the Swedes to submit; but
+sickness, and a scarcity of provision, proved very fatal to their
+opponents on their return.</p>
+<p>It would be very easy to search for the particulars of this
+engagement in the publications of the day; but as this manner of
+filling my pages does not come within my plan, I probably should
+not have remarked that the battle was fought here, were it not to
+relate an anecdote which I had from good authority.</p>
+<p>I noticed, when I first mentioned this place to you, that we
+descended a steep before we came to the inn; an immense ridge of
+rocks stretching out on one side.&nbsp; The inn was sheltered
+under them; and about a hundred yards from it was a bridge that
+crossed the river, the murmurs of which I have celebrated; it was
+not fordable.&nbsp; The Swedish general received orders to stop
+at the bridge and dispute the passage&mdash;a most advantageous
+post for an army so much inferior in force; but the influence of
+beauty is not confined to courts.&nbsp; The mistress of the inn
+was handsome; when I saw her there were still some remains of
+beauty; and, to preserve her house, the general gave up the only
+tenable station.&nbsp; He was afterwards broke for contempt of
+orders.</p>
+<p>Approaching the frontiers, consequently the sea, nature
+resumed an aspect ruder and ruder, or rather seemed the bones of
+the world waiting to be clothed with everything necessary to give
+life and beauty.&nbsp; Still it was sublime.</p>
+<p>The clouds caught their hue of the rocks that menaced
+them.&nbsp; The sun appeared afraid to shine, the birds ceased to
+sing, and the flowers to bloom; but the eagle fixed his nest high
+amongst the rocks, and the vulture hovered over this abode of
+desolation.&nbsp; The farm houses, in which only poverty resided,
+were formed of logs scarcely keeping off the cold and drifting
+snow: out of them the inhabitants seldom peeped, and the sports
+or prattling of children was neither seen or heard.&nbsp; The
+current of life seemed congealed at the source: all were not
+frozen, for it was summer, you remember; but everything appeared
+so dull that I waited to see ice, in order to reconcile me to the
+absence of gaiety.</p>
+<p>The day before, my attention had frequently been attracted by
+the wild beauties of the country we passed through.</p>
+<p>The rocks which tossed their fantastic heads so high were
+often covered with pines and firs, varied in the most picturesque
+manner.&nbsp; Little woods filled up the recesses when forests
+did not darken the scene, and valleys and glens, cleared of the
+trees, displayed a dazzling verdure which contrasted with the
+gloom of the shading pines.&nbsp; The eye stole into many a
+covert where tranquillity seemed to have taken up her abode, and
+the number of little lakes that continually presented themselves
+added to the peaceful composure of the scenery.&nbsp; The little
+cultivation which appeared did not break the enchantment, nor did
+castles rear their turrets aloft to crush the cottages, and prove
+that man is more savage than the natives of the woods.&nbsp; I
+heard of the bears but never saw them stalk forth, which I was
+sorry for; I wished to have seen one in its wild state.&nbsp; In
+the winter, I am told, they sometimes catch a stray cow, which is
+a heavy loss to the owner.</p>
+<p>The farms are small.&nbsp; Indeed most of the houses we saw on
+the road indicated poverty, or rather that the people could just
+live.&nbsp; Towards the frontiers they grew worse and worse in
+their appearance, as if not willing to put sterility itself out
+of countenance.&nbsp; No gardens smiled round the habitations,
+not a potato or cabbage to eat with the fish drying on a stick
+near the door.&nbsp; A little grain here and there appeared, the
+long stalks of which you might almost reckon.&nbsp; The day was
+gloomy when we passed over this rejected spot, the wind bleak,
+and winter seemed to be contending with nature, faintly
+struggling to change the season.&nbsp; Surely, thought I, if the
+sun ever shines here it cannot warm these stones; moss only
+cleaves to them, partaking of their hardness, and nothing like
+vegetable life appears to cheer with hope the heart.</p>
+<p>So far from thinking that the primitive inhabitants of the
+world lived in a southern climate where Paradise spontaneously
+arose, I am led to infer, from various circumstances, that the
+first dwelling of man happened to be a spot like this which led
+him to adore a sun so seldom seen; for this worship, which
+probably preceded that of demons or demigods, certainly never
+began in a southern climate, where the continual presence of the
+sun prevented its being considered as a good; or rather the want
+of it never being felt, this glorious luminary would carelessly
+have diffused its blessings without being hailed as a
+benefactor.&nbsp; Man must therefore have been placed in the
+north, to tempt him to run after the sun, in order that the
+different parts of the earth might be peopled.&nbsp; Nor do I
+wonder that hordes of barbarians always poured out of these
+regions to seek for milder climes, when nothing like cultivation
+attached them to the soil, especially when we take into the view
+that the adventuring spirit, common to man, is naturally stronger
+and more general during the infancy of society.&nbsp; The conduct
+of the followers of Mahomet, and the crusaders, will sufficiently
+corroborate my assertion.</p>
+<p>Approaching nearer to Stromstad, the appearance of the town
+proved to be quite in character with the country we had just
+passed through.&nbsp; I hesitated to use the word country, yet
+could not find another; still it would sound absurd to talk of
+fields of rocks.</p>
+<p>The town was built on and under them.&nbsp; Three or four
+weather-beaten trees were shrinking from the wind, and the grass
+grew so sparingly that I could not avoid thinking Dr.
+Johnson&rsquo;s hyperbolical assertion &ldquo;that the man
+merited well of his country who made a few blades of grass grow
+where they never grew before,&rdquo; might here have been uttered
+with strict propriety.&nbsp; The steeple likewise towered aloft,
+for what is a church, even amongst the Lutherans, without a
+steeple?&nbsp; But to prevent mischief in such an exposed
+situation, it is wisely placed on a rock at some distance not to
+endanger the roof of the church.</p>
+<p>Rambling about, I saw the door open, and entered, when to my
+great surprise I found the clergyman reading prayers, with only
+the clerk attending.&nbsp; I instantly thought of Swift&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Dearly beloved Roger,&rdquo; but on inquiry I learnt that
+some one had died that morning, and in Sweden it is customary to
+pray for the dead.</p>
+<p>The sun, who I suspected never dared to shine, began now to
+convince me that he came forth only to torment; for though the
+wind was still cutting, the rocks became intolerably warm under
+my feet, whilst the herring effluvia, which I before found so
+very offensive, once more assailed me.&nbsp; I hastened back to
+the house of a merchant, the little sovereign of the place,
+because he was by far the richest, though not the mayor.</p>
+<p>Here we were most hospitably received, and introduced to a
+very fine and numerous family.&nbsp; I have before mentioned to
+you the lilies of the north, I might have added, water lilies,
+for the complexion of many, even of the young women, seem to be
+bleached on the bosom of snow.&nbsp; But in this youthful circle
+the roses bloomed with all their wonted freshness, and I wondered
+from whence the fire was stolen which sparkled in their fine blue
+eyes.</p>
+<p>Here we slept; and I rose early in the morning to prepare for
+my little voyage to Norway.&nbsp; I had determined to go by
+water, and was to leave my companions behind; but not getting a
+boat immediately, and the wind being high and unfavourable, I was
+told that it was not safe to go to sea during such boisterous
+weather; I was, therefore, obliged to wait for the morrow, and
+had the present day on my hands, which I feared would be irksome,
+because the family, who possessed about a dozen French words
+amongst them and not an English phrase, were anxious to amuse me,
+and would not let me remain alone in my room.&nbsp; The town we
+had already walked round and round, and if we advanced farther on
+the coast, it was still to view the same unvaried immensity of
+water surrounded by barrenness.</p>
+<p>The gentlemen, wishing to peep into Norway, proposed going to
+Fredericshall, the first town&mdash;the distance was only three
+Swedish miles.&nbsp; There and back again was but a day&rsquo;s
+journey, and would not, I thought, interfere with my
+voyage.&nbsp; I agreed, and invited the eldest and prettiest of
+the girls to accompany us.&nbsp; I invited her because I like to
+see a beautiful face animated by pleasure, and to have an
+opportunity of regarding the country, whilst the gentlemen were
+amusing themselves with her.</p>
+<p>I did not know, for I had not thought of it, that we were to
+scale some of the most mountainous cliffs of Sweden in our way to
+the ferry which separates the two countries.</p>
+<p>Entering amongst the cliffs, we were sheltered from the wind,
+warm sunbeams began to play, streams to flow, and groves of pines
+diversified the rocks.&nbsp; Sometimes they became suddenly bare
+and sublime.&nbsp; Once, in particular, after mounting the most
+terrific precipice, we had to pass through a tremendous defile,
+where the closing chasm seemed to threaten us with instant
+destruction, when, turning quickly, verdant meadows and a
+beautiful lake relieved and charmed my eyes.</p>
+<p>I had never travelled through Switzerland, but one of my
+companions assured me that I should not there find anything
+superior, if equal, to the wild grandeur of these views.</p>
+<p>As we had not taken this excursion into our plan, the horses
+had not been previously ordered, which obliged us to wait two
+hours at the first post.&nbsp; The day was wearing away.&nbsp;
+The road was so bad that walking up the precipices consumed the
+time insensibly; but as we desired horses at each post ready at a
+certain hour, we reckoned on returning more speedily.</p>
+<p>We stopped to dine at a tolerable farm; they brought us out
+ham, butter, cheese, and milk, and the charge was so moderate
+that I scattered a little money amongst the children who were
+peeping at us, in order to pay them for their trouble.</p>
+<p>Arrived at the ferry, we were still detained, for the people
+who attend at the ferries have a stupid kind of sluggishness in
+their manner, which is very provoking when you are in
+haste.&nbsp; At present I did not feel it, for, scrambling up the
+cliffs, my eye followed the river as it rolled between the grand
+rocky banks; and, to complete the scenery, they were covered with
+firs and pines, through which the wind rustled as if it were
+lulling itself to sleep with the declining sun.</p>
+<p>Behold us now in Norway; and I could not avoid feeling
+surprise at observing the difference in the manners of the
+inhabitants of the two sides of the river, for everything shows
+that the Norwegians are more industrious and more opulent.&nbsp;
+The Swedes (for neighbours are seldom the best friends) accuse
+the Norwegians of knavery, and they retaliate by bringing a
+charge of hypocrisy against the Swedes.&nbsp; Local circumstances
+probably render both unjust, speaking from their feelings rather
+than reason; and is this astonishing when we consider that most
+writers of travels have done the same, whose works have served as
+materials for the compilers of universal histories?&nbsp; All are
+eager to give a national character, which is rarely just, because
+they do not discriminate the natural from the acquired
+difference.&nbsp; The natural, I believe, on due consideration,
+will be found to consist merely in the degree of vivacity, or
+thoughtfulness, pleasures or pain, inspired by the climate,
+whilst the varieties which the forms of government, including
+religion, produce are much more numerous and unstable.</p>
+<p>A people have been characterised as stupid by nature; what a
+paradox! because they did not consider that slaves, having no
+object to stimulate industry, have not their faculties sharpened
+by the only thing that can exercise them, self-interest.&nbsp;
+Others have been brought forward as brutes, having no aptitude
+for the arts and sciences, only because the progress of
+improvement had not reached that stage which produces them.</p>
+<p>Those writers who have considered the history of man, or of
+the human mind, on a more enlarged scale have fallen into similar
+errors, not reflecting that the passions are weak where the
+necessaries of life are too hardly or too easily obtained.</p>
+<p>Travellers who require that every nation should resemble their
+native country, had better stay at home.&nbsp; It is, for
+example, absurd to blame a people for not having that degree of
+personal cleanliness and elegance of manners which only
+refinement of taste produces, and will produce everywhere in
+proportion as society attains a general polish.&nbsp; The most
+essential service, I presume, that authors could render to
+society, would be to promote inquiry and discussion, instead of
+making those dogmatical assertions which only appear calculated
+to gird the human mind round with imaginary circles, like the
+paper globe which represents the one he inhabits.</p>
+<p>This spirit of inquiry is the characteristic of the present
+century, from which the succeeding will, I am persuaded, receive
+a great accumulation of knowledge; and doubtless its diffusion
+will in a great measure destroy the factitious national
+characters which have been supposed permanent, though only
+rendered so by the permanency of ignorance.</p>
+<p>Arriving at Fredericshall, at the siege of which Charles XII.
+lost his life, we had only time to take a transient view of it
+whilst they were preparing us some refreshment.</p>
+<p>Poor Charles!&nbsp; I thought of him with respect.&nbsp; I
+have always felt the same for Alexander, with whom he has been
+classed as a madman by several writers, who have reasoned
+superficially, confounding the morals of the day with the few
+grand principles on which unchangeable morality rests.&nbsp;
+Making no allowance for the ignorance and prejudices of the
+period, they do not perceive how much they themselves are
+indebted to general improvement for the acquirements, and even
+the virtues, which they would not have had the force of mind to
+attain by their individual exertions in a less advanced state of
+society.</p>
+<p>The evening was fine, as is usual at this season, and the
+refreshing odour of the pine woods became more perceptible, for
+it was nine o&rsquo;clock when we left Fredericshall.&nbsp; At
+the ferry we were detained by a dispute relative to our Swedish
+passport, which we did not think of getting countersigned in
+Norway.&nbsp; Midnight was coming on, yet it might with such
+propriety have been termed the noon of night that, had Young ever
+travelled towards the north, I should not have wondered at his
+becoming enamoured of the moon.&nbsp; But it is not the Queen of
+Night alone who reigns here in all her splendour, though the sun,
+loitering just below the horizon, decks her within a golden tinge
+from his car, illuminating the cliffs that hide him; the heavens
+also, of a clear softened blue, throw her forward, and the
+evening star appears a smaller moon to the naked eye.&nbsp; The
+huge shadows of the rocks, fringed with firs, concentrating the
+views without darkening them, excited that tender melancholy
+which, sublimating the imagination, exalts rather than depresses
+the mind.</p>
+<p>My companions fell asleep&mdash;fortunately they did not
+snore; and I contemplated, fearless of idle questions, a night
+such as I had never before seen or felt, to charm the senses, and
+calm the heart.&nbsp; The very air was balmy as it freshened into
+morn, producing the most voluptuous sensations.&nbsp; A vague
+pleasurable sentiment absorbed me, as I opened my bosom to the
+embraces of nature; and my soul rose to its Author, with the
+chirping of the solitary birds, which began to feel, rather than
+see, advancing day.&nbsp; I had leisure to mark its
+progress.&nbsp; The grey morn, streaked with silvery rays,
+ushered in the orient beams (how beautifully varying into
+purple!), yet I was sorry to lose the soft watery clouds which
+preceded them, exciting a kind of expectation that made me almost
+afraid to breathe, lest I should break the charm.&nbsp; I saw the
+sun&mdash;and sighed.</p>
+<p>One of my companions, now awake, perceiving that the
+postillion had mistaken the road, began to swear at him, and
+roused the other two, who reluctantly shook off sleep.</p>
+<p>We had immediately to measure back our steps, and did not
+reach Stromstad before five in the morning.</p>
+<p>The wind had changed in the night, and my boat was ready.</p>
+<p>A dish of coffee, and fresh linen, recruited my spirits, and I
+directly set out again for Norway, purposing to land much higher
+up the coast.</p>
+<p>Wrapping my great-coat round me, I lay down on some sails at
+the bottom of the boat, its motion rocking me to rest, till a
+discourteous wave interrupted my slumbers, and obliged me to rise
+and feel a solitariness which was not so soothing as that of the
+past night.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER VI.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The sea was boisterous, but, as I had an experienced pilot, I
+did not apprehend any danger.&nbsp; Sometimes, I was told, boats
+are driven far out and lost.&nbsp; However, I seldom calculate
+chances so nicely&mdash;sufficient for the day is the obvious
+evil!</p>
+<p>We had to steer amongst islands and huge rocks, rarely losing
+sight of the shore, though it now and then appeared only a mist
+that bordered the water&rsquo;s edge.&nbsp; The pilot assured me
+that the numerous harbours on the Norway coast were very safe,
+and the pilot-boats were always on the watch.&nbsp; The Swedish
+side is very dangerous, I am also informed; and the help of
+experience is not often at hand to enable strange vessels to
+steer clear of the rocks, which lurk below the water close to the
+shore.</p>
+<p>There are no tides here, nor in the Cattegate, and, what
+appeared to me a consequence, no sandy beach.&nbsp; Perhaps this
+observation has been made before; but it did not occur to me till
+I saw the waves continually beating against the bare rocks,
+without ever receding to leave a sediment to harden.</p>
+<p>The wind was fair, till we had to tack about in order to enter
+Laurvig, where we arrived towards three o&rsquo;clock in the
+afternoon.&nbsp; It is a clean, pleasant town, with a
+considerable iron-work, which gives life to it.</p>
+<p>As the Norwegians do not frequently see travellers, they are
+very curious to know their business, and who they are&mdash;so
+curious, that I was half tempted to adopt Dr. Franklin&rsquo;s
+plan, when travelling in America, where they are equally prying,
+which was to write on a paper, for public inspection, my name,
+from whence I came, where I was going, and what was my
+business.&nbsp; But if I were importuned by their curiosity,
+their friendly gestures gratified me.&nbsp; A woman coming alone
+interested them.&nbsp; And I know not whether my weariness gave
+me a look of peculiar delicacy, but they approached to assist me,
+and inquire after my wants, as if they were afraid to hurt, and
+wished to protect me.&nbsp; The sympathy I inspired, thus
+dropping down from the clouds in a strange land, affected me more
+than it would have done had not my spirits been harassed by
+various causes&mdash;by much thinking&mdash;musing almost to
+madness&mdash;and even by a sort of weak melancholy that hung
+about my heart at parting with my daughter for the first
+time.</p>
+<p>You know that, as a female, I am particularly attached to her;
+I feel more than a mother&rsquo;s fondness and anxiety when I
+reflect on the dependent and oppressed state of her sex.&nbsp; I
+dread lest she should be forced to sacrifice her heart to her
+principles, or principles to her heart.&nbsp; With trembling hand
+I shall cultivate sensibility and cherish delicacy of sentiment,
+lest, whilst I lend fresh blushes to the rose, I sharpen the
+thorns that will wound the breast I would fain guard; I dread to
+unfold her mind, lest it should render her unfit for the world
+she is to inhabit.&nbsp; Hapless woman! what a fate is thine!</p>
+<p>But whither am I wandering?&nbsp; I only meant to tell you
+that the impression the kindness of the simple people made
+visible on my countenance increased my sensibility to a painful
+degree.&nbsp; I wished to have had a room to myself, for their
+attention, and rather distressing observation, embarrassed me
+extremely.&nbsp; Yet, as they would bring me eggs, and make my
+coffee, I found I could not leave them without hurting their
+feelings of hospitality.</p>
+<p>It is customary here for the host and hostess to welcome their
+guests as master and mistress of the house.</p>
+<p>My clothes, in their turn, attracted the attention of the
+females, and I could not help thinking of the foolish vanity
+which makes many women so proud of the observation of strangers
+as to take wonder very gratuitously for admiration.&nbsp; This
+error they are very apt to fall into when, arrived in a foreign
+country, the populace stare at them as they pass.&nbsp; Yet the
+make of a cap or the singularity of a gown is often the cause of
+the flattering attention which afterwards supports a fantastic
+superstructure of self-conceit.</p>
+<p>Not having brought a carriage over with me, expecting to have
+met a person where I landed, who was immediately to have procured
+me one, I was detained whilst the good people of the inn sent
+round to all their acquaintance to search for a vehicle.&nbsp; A
+rude sort of cabriole was at last found, and a driver half drunk,
+who was not less eager to make a good bargain on that
+account.&nbsp; I had a Danish captain of a ship and his mate with
+me; the former was to ride on horseback, at which he was not very
+expert, and the latter to partake of my seat.&nbsp; The driver
+mounted behind to guide the horses and flourish the whip over our
+shoulders; he would not suffer the reins out of his own
+hands.&nbsp; There was something so grotesque in our appearance
+that I could not avoid shrinking into myself when I saw a
+gentleman-like man in the group which crowded round the door to
+observe us.&nbsp; I could have broken the driver&rsquo;s whip for
+cracking to call the women and children together, but seeing a
+significant smile on the face, I had before remarked, I burst
+into a laugh to allow him to do so too, and away we flew.&nbsp;
+This is not a flourish of the pen, for we actually went on full
+gallop a long time, the horses being very good; indeed, I have
+never met with better, if so good, post-horses as in
+Norway.&nbsp; They are of a stouter make than the English horses,
+appear to be well fed, and are not easily tired.</p>
+<p>I had to pass over, I was informed, the most fertile and best
+cultivated tract of country in Norway.&nbsp; The distance was
+three Norwegian miles, which are longer than the Swedish.&nbsp;
+The roads were very good; the farmers are obliged to repair them;
+and we scampered through a great extent of country in a more
+improved state than any I had viewed since I left England.&nbsp;
+Still there was sufficient of hills, dales, and rocks to prevent
+the idea of a plain from entering the head, or even of such
+scenery as England and France afford.&nbsp; The prospects were
+also embellished by water, rivers, and lakes before the sea
+proudly claimed my regard, and the road running frequently
+through lofty groves rendered the landscapes beautiful, though
+they were not so romantic as those I had lately seen with such
+delight.</p>
+<p>It was late when I reached Tonsberg, and I was glad to go to
+bed at a decent inn.&nbsp; The next morning the 17th of July,
+conversing with the gentleman with whom I had business to
+transact, I found that I should be detained at Tonsberg three
+weeks, and I lamented that I had not brought my child with
+me.</p>
+<p>The inn was quiet, and my room so pleasant, commanding a view
+of the sea, confined by an amphitheatre of hanging woods, that I
+wished to remain there, though no one in the house could speak
+English or French.&nbsp; The mayor, my friend, however, sent a
+young woman to me who spoke a little English, and she agreed to
+call on me twice a day to receive my orders and translate them to
+my hostess.</p>
+<p>My not understanding the language was an excellent pretext for
+dining alone, which I prevailed on them to let me do at a late
+hour, for the early dinners in Sweden had entirely deranged my
+day.&nbsp; I could not alter it there without disturbing the
+economy of a family where I was as a visitor, necessity having
+forced me to accept of an invitation from a private family, the
+lodgings were so incommodious.</p>
+<p>Amongst the Norwegians I had the arrangement of my own time,
+and I determined to regulate it in such a manner that I might
+enjoy as much of their sweet summer as I possibly could; short,
+it is true, but &ldquo;passing sweet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I never endured a winter in this rude clime, consequently it
+was not the contrast, but the real beauty of the season which
+made the present summer appear to me the finest I had ever
+seen.&nbsp; Sheltered from the north and eastern winds, nothing
+can exceed the salubrity, the soft freshness of the western
+gales.&nbsp; In the evening they also die away; the aspen leaves
+tremble into stillness, and reposing nature seems to be warmed by
+the moon, which here assumes a genial aspect.&nbsp; And if a
+light shower has chanced to fall with the sun, the juniper, the
+underwood of the forest, exhales a wild perfume, mixed with a
+thousand nameless sweets that, soothing the heart, leave images
+in the memory which the imagination will ever hold dear.</p>
+<p>Nature is the nurse of sentiment, the true source of taste;
+yet what misery, as well as rapture, is produced by a quick
+perception of the beautiful and sublime when it is exercised in
+observing animated nature, when every beauteous feeling and
+emotion excites responsive sympathy, and the harmonised soul
+sinks into melancholy or rises to ecstasy, just as the chords are
+touched, like the Æolian harp agitated by the changing
+wind.&nbsp; But how dangerous is it to foster these sentiments in
+such an imperfect state of existence, and how difficult to
+eradicate them when an affection for mankind, a passion for an
+individual, is but the unfolding of that love which embraces all
+that is great and beautiful!</p>
+<p>When a warm heart has received strong impressions, they are
+not to be effaced.&nbsp; Emotions become sentiments, and the
+imagination renders even transient sensations permanent by fondly
+retracing them.&nbsp; I cannot, without a thrill of delight,
+recollect views I have seen, which are not to be forgotten, nor
+looks I have felt in every nerve, which I shall never more
+meet.&nbsp; The grave has closed over a dear friend, the friend
+of my youth.&nbsp; Still she is present with me, and I hear her
+soft voice warbling as I stray over the heath.&nbsp; Fate has
+separated me from another, the fire of whose eyes, tempered by
+infantine tenderness, still warms my breast; even when gazing on
+these tremendous cliffs sublime emotions absorb my soul.&nbsp;
+And, smile not, if I add that the rosy tint of morning reminds me
+of a suffusion which will never more charm my senses, unless it
+reappears on the cheeks of my child.&nbsp; Her sweet blushes I
+may yet hide in my bosom, and she is still too young to ask why
+starts the tear so near akin to pleasure and pain.</p>
+<p>I cannot write any more at present.&nbsp; To-morrow we will
+talk of Tonsberg.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER VII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Though the king of Denmark be an absolute monarch, yet the
+Norwegians appear to enjoy all the blessings of freedom.&nbsp;
+Norway may be termed a sister kingdom; but the people have no
+viceroy to lord it over them, and fatten his dependants with the
+fruit of their labour.</p>
+<p>There are only two counts in the whole country who have
+estates, and exact some feudal observances from their
+tenantry.&nbsp; All the rest of the country is divided into small
+farms, which belong to the cultivator.&nbsp; It is true some few,
+appertaining to the Church, are let, but always on a lease for
+life, generally renewed in favour of the eldest son, who has this
+advantage as well as a right to a double portion of the
+property.&nbsp; But the value of the farm is estimated, and after
+his portion is assigned to him he must be answerable for the
+residue to the remaining part of the family.</p>
+<p>Every farmer for ten years is obliged to attend annually about
+twelve days to learn the military exercise, but it is always at a
+small distance from his dwelling, and does not lead him into any
+new habits of life.</p>
+<p>There are about six thousand regulars also in garrison at
+Christiania and Fredericshall, who are equally reserved, with the
+militia, for the defence of their own country.&nbsp; So that when
+the Prince Royal passed into Sweden in 1788, he was obliged to
+request, not command, them to accompany him on this
+expedition.</p>
+<p>These corps are mostly composed of the sons of the cottagers,
+who being labourers on the farms, are allowed a few acres to
+cultivate for themselves.&nbsp; These men voluntarily enlist, but
+it is only for a limited period (six years), at the expiration of
+which they have the liberty of retiring.&nbsp; The pay is only
+twopence a day and bread; still, considering the cheapness of the
+country, it is more than sixpence in England.</p>
+<p>The distribution of landed property into small farms produces
+a degree of equality which I have seldom seen elsewhere; and the
+rich being all merchants, who are obliged to divide their
+personal fortune amongst their children, the boys always
+receiving twice as much as the girls, property has met a chance
+of accumulating till overgrowing wealth destroys the balance of
+liberty.</p>
+<p>You will be surprised to hear me talk of liberty; yet the
+Norwegians appear to me to be the most free community I have ever
+observed.</p>
+<p>The mayor of each town or district, and the judges in the
+country, exercise an authority almost patriarchal.&nbsp; They can
+do much good, but little harm,&mdash;as every individual can
+appeal from their judgment; and as they may always be forced to
+give a reason for their conduct, it is generally regulated by
+prudence.&nbsp; &ldquo;They have not time to learn to be
+tyrants,&rdquo; said a gentleman to me, with whom I discussed the
+subject.</p>
+<p>The farmers not fearing to be turned out of their farms,
+should they displease a man in power, and having no vote to be
+commanded at an election for a mock representative, are a manly
+race; for not being obliged to submit to any debasing tenure in
+order to live, or advance themselves in the world, they act with
+an independent spirit.&nbsp; I never yet have heard of anything
+like domineering or oppression, excepting such as has arisen from
+natural causes.&nbsp; The freedom the people enjoy may, perhaps,
+render them a little litigious, and subject them to the
+impositions of cunning practitioners of the law; but the
+authority of office is bounded, and the emoluments of it do not
+destroy its utility.</p>
+<p>Last year a man who had abused his power was cashiered, on the
+representation of the people to the bailiff of the district.</p>
+<p>There are four in Norway who might with propriety be termed
+sheriffs; and from their sentence an appeal, by either party, may
+be made to Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>Near most of the towns are commons, on which the cows of all
+the inhabitants, indiscriminately, are allowed to graze.&nbsp;
+The poor, to whom a cow is necessary, are almost supported by
+it.&nbsp; Besides, to render living more easy, they all go out to
+fish in their own boats, and fish is their principal food.</p>
+<p>The lower class of people in the towns are in general sailors;
+and the industrious have usually little ventures of their own
+that serve to render the winter comfortable.</p>
+<p>With respect to the country at large, the importation is
+considerably in favour of Norway.</p>
+<p>They are forbidden, at present, to export corn or rye on
+account of the advanced price.</p>
+<p>The restriction which most resembles the painful subordination
+of Ireland, is that vessels, trading to the West Indies, are
+obliged to pass by their own ports, and unload their cargoes at
+Copenhagen, which they afterwards reship.&nbsp; The duty is
+indeed inconsiderable, but the navigation being dangerous, they
+run a double risk.</p>
+<p>There is an excise on all articles of consumption brought to
+the towns; but the officers are not strict, and it would be
+reckoned invidious to enter a house to search, as in England.</p>
+<p>The Norwegians appear to me a sensible, shrewd people, with
+little scientific knowledge, and still less taste for literature;
+but they are arriving at the epoch which precedes the
+introduction of the arts and sciences.</p>
+<p>Most of the towns are seaports, and seaports are not
+favourable to improvement.&nbsp; The captains acquire a little
+superficial knowledge by travelling, which their indefatigable
+attention to the making of money prevents their digesting; and
+the fortune that they thus laboriously acquire is spent, as it
+usually is in towns of this description, in show and good
+living.&nbsp; They love their country, but have not much public
+spirit.&nbsp; Their exertions are, generally speaking, only for
+their families, which, I conceive, will always be the case, till
+politics, becoming a subject of discussion, enlarges the heart by
+opening the understanding.&nbsp; The French Revolution will have
+this effect.&nbsp; They sing, at present, with great glee, many
+Republican songs, and seem earnestly to wish that the republic
+may stand; yet they appear very much attached to their Prince
+Royal, and, as far as rumour can give an idea of a character, he
+appears to merit their attachment.&nbsp; When I am at Copenhagen,
+I shall be able to ascertain on what foundation their good
+opinion is built; at present I am only the echo of it.</p>
+<p>In the year 1788 he travelled through Norway; and acts of
+mercy gave dignity to the parade, and interest to the joy his
+presence inspired.&nbsp; At this town he pardoned a girl
+condemned to die for murdering an illegitimate child, a crime
+seldom committed in this country.&nbsp; She is since married, and
+become the careful mother of a family.&nbsp; This might be given
+as an instance, that a desperate act is not always a proof of an
+incorrigible depravity of character, the only plausible excuse
+that has been brought forward to justify the infliction of
+capital punishments.</p>
+<p>I will relate two or three other anecdotes to you, for the
+truth of which I will not vouch because the facts were not of
+sufficient consequence for me to take much pains to ascertain
+them; and, true or false, they evince that the people like to
+make a kind of mistress of their prince.</p>
+<p>An officer, mortally wounded at the ill-advised battle of
+Quistram, desired to speak with the prince; and with his dying
+breath, earnestly recommended to his care a young woman of
+Christiania, to whom he was engaged.&nbsp; When the prince
+returned there, a ball was given by the chief inhabitants: he
+inquired whether this unfortunate girl was invited, and requested
+that she might, though of the second class.&nbsp; The girl came;
+she was pretty; and finding herself among her superiors,
+bashfully sat down as near the door as possible, nobody taking
+notice of her.&nbsp; Shortly after, the prince entering,
+immediately inquired for her, and asked her to dance, to the
+mortification of the rich dames.&nbsp; After it was over he
+handed her to the top of the room, and placing himself by her,
+spoke of the loss she had sustained, with tenderness, promising
+to provide for anyone she should marry, as the story goes.&nbsp;
+She is since married, and he has not forgotten his promise.</p>
+<p>A little girl, during the same expedition, in Sweden, who
+informed him that the logs of a bridge were out underneath, was
+taken by his orders to Christiania, and put to school at his
+expense.</p>
+<p>Before I retail other beneficial effects of his journey, it is
+necessary to inform you that the laws here are mild, and do not
+punish capitally for any crime but murder, which seldom
+occurs.&nbsp; Every other offence merely subjects the delinquent
+to imprisonment and labour in the castle, or rather arsenal at
+Christiania, and the fortress at Fredericshall.&nbsp; The first
+and second conviction produces a sentence for a limited number of
+years&mdash;two, three, five, or seven, proportioned to the
+atrocity of the crime.&nbsp; After the third he is whipped,
+branded in the forehead, and condemned to perpetual
+slavery.&nbsp; This is the ordinary course of justice.&nbsp; For
+some flagrant breaches of trust, or acts of wanton cruelty,
+criminals have been condemned to slavery for life the first time
+of conviction, but not frequently.&nbsp; The number of these
+slaves do not, I am informed, amount to more than a hundred,
+which is not considerable, compared with the population, upwards
+of eight hundred thousand.&nbsp; Should I pass through
+Christiania, on my return to Gothenburg, I shall probably have an
+opportunity of learning other particulars.</p>
+<p>There is also a House of Correction at Christiania for
+trifling misdemeanours, where the women are confined to labour
+and imprisonment even for life.&nbsp; The state of the prisoners
+was represented to the prince, in consequence of which he visited
+the arsenal and House of Correction.&nbsp; The slaves at the
+arsenal were loaded with irons of a great weight; he ordered them
+to be lightened as much as possible.</p>
+<p>The people in the House of Correction were commanded not to
+speak to him; but four women, condemned to remain there for life,
+got into the passage, and fell at his feet.&nbsp; He granted them
+a pardon; and inquiring respecting the treatment of the
+prisoners, he was informed that they were frequently whipped
+going in, and coming out, and for any fault, at the discretion of
+the inspectors.&nbsp; This custom he humanely abolished, though
+some of the principal inhabitants, whose situation in life had
+raised them above the temptation of stealing, were of opinion
+that these chastisements were necessary and wholesome.</p>
+<p>In short, everything seems to announce that the prince really
+cherishes the laudable ambition of fulfilling the duties of his
+station.&nbsp; This ambition is cherished and directed by the
+Count Bernstorff, the Prime Minister of Denmark, who is
+universally celebrated for his abilities and virtue.&nbsp; The
+happiness of the people is a substantial eulogium; and, from all
+I can gather, the inhabitants of Denmark and Norway are the least
+oppressed people of Europe.&nbsp; The press is free.&nbsp; They
+translate any of the French publications of the day, deliver
+their opinion on the subject, and discuss those it leads to with
+great freedom, and without fearing to displease the
+Government.</p>
+<p>On the subject of religion they are likewise becoming
+tolerant, at least, and perhaps have advanced a step further in
+free-thinking.&nbsp; One writer has ventured to deny the divinity
+of Jesus Christ, and to question the necessity or utility of the
+Christian system, without being considered universally as a
+monster, which would have been the case a few years ago.&nbsp;
+They have translated many German works on education; and though
+they have not adopted any of their plans, it has become a subject
+of discussion.&nbsp; There are some grammar and free schools;
+but, from what I hear, not very good ones.&nbsp; All the children
+learn to read, write, and cast accounts, for the purposes of
+common life.&nbsp; They have no university; and nothing that
+deserves the name of science is taught; nor do individuals, by
+pursuing any branch of knowledge, excite a degree of curiosity
+which is the forerunner of improvement.&nbsp; Knowledge is not
+absolutely necessary to enable a considerable portion of the
+community to live; and, till it is, I fear it never becomes
+general.</p>
+<p>In this country, where minerals abound, there is not one
+collection; and, in all probability, I venture a conjecture, the
+want of mechanical and chemical knowledge renders the silver
+mines unproductive, for the quantity of silver obtained every
+year is not sufficient to defray the expenses.&nbsp; It has been
+urged that the employment of such a number of hands is very
+beneficial.&nbsp; But a positive loss is never to be done away;
+and the men, thus employed, would naturally find some other means
+of living, instead of being thus a dead weight on Government, or
+rather on the community from whom its revenue is drawn.</p>
+<p>About three English miles from Tonsberg there is a salt work,
+belonging, like all their establishments, to Government, in which
+they employ above a hundred and fifty men, and maintain nearly
+five hundred people, who earn their living.&nbsp; The clear
+profit, an increasing one, amounts to two thousand pounds
+sterling.&nbsp; And as the eldest son of the inspector, an
+ingenious young man, has been sent by the Government to travel,
+and acquire some mathematical and chemical knowledge in Germany,
+it has a chance of being improved.&nbsp; He is the only person I
+have met with here who appears to have a scientific turn of
+mind.&nbsp; I do not mean to assert that I have not met with
+others who have a spirit of inquiry.</p>
+<p>The salt-works at St. Ubes are basins in the sand, and the sun
+produces the evaporation, but here there is no beach.&nbsp;
+Besides, the heat of summer is so short-lived that it would be
+idle to contrive machines for such an inconsiderable portion of
+the year.&nbsp; They therefore always use fires; and the whole
+establishment appears to be regulated with judgment.</p>
+<p>The situation is well chosen and beautiful.&nbsp; I do not
+find, from the observation of a person who has resided here for
+forty years, that the sea advances or recedes on this coast.</p>
+<p>I have already remarked that little attention is paid to
+education, excepting reading, writing, and the rudiments of
+arithmetic; I ought to have added that a catechism is carefully
+taught, and the children obliged to read in the churches, before
+the congregation, to prove that they are not neglected.</p>
+<p>Degrees, to enable any one to practise any profession, must be
+taken at Copenhagen; and the people of this country, having the
+good sense to perceive that men who are to live in a community
+should at least acquire the elements of their knowledge, and form
+their youthful attachments there, are seriously endeavouring to
+establish a university in Norway.&nbsp; And Tonsberg, as a
+central place in the best part of the country, had the most
+suffrages, for, experiencing the bad effects of a metropolis,
+they have determined not to have it in or near Christiania.&nbsp;
+Should such an establishment take place, it will promote inquiry
+throughout the country, and give a new face to society.&nbsp;
+Premiums have been offered, and prize questions written, which I
+am told have merit.&nbsp; The building college-halls, and other
+appendages of the seat of science, might enable Tonsberg to
+recover its pristine consequence, for it is one of the most
+ancient towns of Norway, and once contained nine churches.&nbsp;
+At present there are only two.&nbsp; One is a very old structure,
+and has a Gothic respectability about it, which scarcely amounts
+to grandeur, because, to render a Gothic pile grand, it must have
+a huge unwieldiness of appearance.&nbsp; The chapel of Windsor
+may be an exception to this rule; I mean before it was in its
+present nice, clean state.&nbsp; When I first saw it, the pillars
+within had acquired, by time, a sombre hue, which accorded with
+the architecture; and the gloom increased its dimensions to the
+eye by hiding its parts; but now it all bursts on the view at
+once, and the sublimity has vanished before the brush and broom;
+for it has been white-washed and scraped till it has become as
+bright and neat as the pots and pans in a notable
+house-wife&rsquo;s kitchen&mdash;yes; the very spurs on the
+recumbent knights were deprived of their venerable rust, to give
+a striking proof that a love of order in trifles, and taste for
+proportion and arrangement, are very distinct.&nbsp; The glare of
+light thus introduced entirely destroys the sentiment these piles
+are calculated to inspire; so that, when I heard something like a
+jig from the organ-loft, I thought it an excellent hall for
+dancing or feasting.&nbsp; The measured pace of thought with
+which I had entered the cathedral changed into a trip; and I
+bounded on the terrace, to see the royal family, with a number of
+ridiculous images in my head that I shall not now recall.</p>
+<p>The Norwegians are fond of music, and every little church has
+an organ.&nbsp; In the church I have mentioned there is an
+inscription importing that a king James VI. of Scotland and I. of
+England, who came with more than princely gallantry to escort his
+bride home&mdash;stood there, and heard divine service.</p>
+<p>There is a little recess full of coffins, which contains
+bodies embalmed long since&mdash;so long, that there is not even
+a tradition to lead to a guess at their names.</p>
+<p>A desire of preserving the body seems to have prevailed in
+most countries of the world, futile as it is to term it a
+preservation, when the noblest parts are immediately sacrificed
+merely to save the muscles, skin, and bone from rottenness.&nbsp;
+When I was shown these human petrifactions, I shrank back with
+disgust and horror.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ashes to ashes!&rdquo; thought
+I&mdash;&ldquo;Dust to dust!&rdquo;&nbsp; If this be not
+dissolution, it is something worse than natural decay&mdash;it is
+treason against humanity, thus to lift up the awful veil which
+would fain hide its weakness.&nbsp; The grandeur of the active
+principle is never more strongly felt than at such a sight, for
+nothing is so ugly as the human form when deprived of life, and
+thus dried into stone, merely to preserve the most disgusting
+image of death.&nbsp; The contemplation of noble ruins produces a
+melancholy that exalts the mind.&nbsp; We take a retrospect of
+the exertions of man, the fate of empires and their rulers, and
+marking the grand destruction of ages, it seems the necessary
+change of time leading to improvement.&nbsp; Our very soul
+expands, and we forget our littleness&mdash;how painfully brought
+to our recollection by such vain attempts to snatch from decay
+what is destined so soon to perish.&nbsp; Life, what art
+thou?&nbsp; Where goes this breath?&mdash;this <i>I</i>, so much
+alive?&nbsp; In what element will it mix, giving or receiving
+fresh energy?&nbsp; What will break the enchantment of
+animation?&nbsp; For worlds I would not see a form I
+loved&mdash;embalmed in my heart&mdash;thus sacrilegiously
+handled?&nbsp; Pugh! my stomach turns.&nbsp; Is this all the
+distinction of the rich in the grave?&nbsp; They had better
+quietly allow the scythe of equality to mow them down with the
+common mass, than struggle to become a monument of the
+instability of human greatness.</p>
+<p>The teeth, nails, and skin were whole, without appearing black
+like the Egyptian mummies; and some silk, in which they had been
+wrapped, still preserved its colour&mdash;pink&mdash;with
+tolerable freshness.</p>
+<p>I could not learn how long the bodies had been in this state,
+in which they bid fair to remain till the Day of Judgment, if
+there is to be such a day; and before that time, it will require
+some trouble to make them fit to appear in company with angels
+without disgracing humanity.&nbsp; God bless you!&nbsp; I feel a
+conviction that we have some perfectible principle in our present
+vestment, which will not be destroyed just as we begin to be
+sensible of improvement; and I care not what habit it next puts
+on, sure that it will be wisely formed to suit a higher state of
+existence.&nbsp; Thinking of death makes us tenderly cling to our
+affections; with more than usual tenderness I therefore assure
+you that I am yours, wishing that the temporary death of absence
+may not endure longer than is absolutely necessary.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER VIII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Tonsberg was formerly the residence of one of the little
+sovereigns of Norway; and on an adjacent mountain the vestiges of
+a fort remain, which was battered down by the Swedes, the
+entrance of the bay lying close to it.</p>
+<p>Here I have frequently strayed, sovereign of the waste; I
+seldom met any human creature; and sometimes, reclining on the
+mossy down, under the shelter of a rock, the prattling of the sea
+amongst the pebbles has lulled me to sleep&mdash;no fear of any
+rude satyr&rsquo;s approaching to interrupt my repose.&nbsp;
+Balmy were the slumbers, and soft the gales, that refreshed me,
+when I awoke to follow, with an eye vaguely curious, the white
+sails, as they turned the cliffs, or seemed to take shelter under
+the pines which covered the little islands that so gracefully
+rose to render the terrific ocean beautiful.&nbsp; The fishermen
+were calmly casting their nets, whilst the sea-gulls hovered over
+the unruffled deep.&nbsp; Everything seemed to harmonise into
+tranquillity; even the mournful call of the bittern was in
+cadence with the tinkling bells on the necks of the cows, that,
+pacing slowly one after the other, along an inviting path in the
+vale below, were repairing to the cottages to be milked.&nbsp;
+With what ineffable pleasure have I not gazed&mdash;and gazed
+again, losing my breath through my eyes&mdash;my very soul
+diffused itself in the scene; and, seeming to become all senses,
+glided in the scarcely-agitated waves, melted in the freshening
+breeze, or, taking its flight with fairy wing, to the misty
+mountain which bounded the prospect, fancy tripped over new
+lawns, more beautiful even than the lovely slopes on the winding
+shore before me.&nbsp; I pause, again breathless, to trace, with
+renewed delight, sentiments which entranced me, when, turning my
+humid eyes from the expanse below to the vault above, my sight
+pierced the fleecy clouds that softened the azure brightness; and
+imperceptibly recalling the reveries of childhood, I bowed before
+the awful throne of my Creator, whilst I rested on its
+footstool.</p>
+<p>You have sometimes wondered, my dear friend, at the extreme
+affection of my nature.&nbsp; But such is the temperature of my
+soul.&nbsp; It is not the vivacity of youth, the heyday of
+existence.&nbsp; For years have I endeavoured to calm an
+impetuous tide, labouring to make my feelings take an orderly
+course.&nbsp; It was striving against the stream.&nbsp; I must
+love and admire with warmth, or I sink into sadness.&nbsp; Tokens
+of love which I have received have wrapped me in Elysium,
+purifying the heart they enchanted.&nbsp; My bosom still
+glows.&nbsp; Do not saucily ask, repeating Sterne&rsquo;s
+question, &ldquo;Maria, is it still so warm?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Sufficiently, O my God!&nbsp; has it been chilled by sorrow and
+unkindness; still nature will prevail; and if I blush at
+recollecting past enjoyment, it is the rosy hue of pleasure
+heightened by modesty, for the blush of modesty and shame are as
+distinct as the emotions by which they are produced.</p>
+<p>I need scarcely inform you, after telling you of my walks,
+that my constitution has been renovated here, and that I have
+recovered my activity even whilst attaining a little
+<i>embonpoint</i>.&nbsp; My imprudence last winter, and some
+untoward accidents just at the time I was weaning my child, had
+reduced me to a state of weakness which I never before
+experienced.&nbsp; A slow fever preyed on me every night during
+my residence in Sweden, and after I arrived at Tonsberg.&nbsp; By
+chance I found a fine rivulet filtered through the rocks, and
+confined in a basin for the cattle.&nbsp; It tasted to me like a
+chalybeate; at any rate, it was pure; and the good effect of the
+various waters which invalids are sent to drink depends, I
+believe, more on the air, exercise, and change of scene, than on
+their medicinal qualities.&nbsp; I therefore determined to turn
+my morning walks towards it, and seek for health from the nymph
+of the fountain, partaking of the beverage offered to the tenants
+of the shade.</p>
+<p>Chance likewise led me to discover a new pleasure equally
+beneficial to my health.&nbsp; I wished to avail myself of my
+vicinity to the sea and bathe; but it was not possible near the
+town; there was no convenience.&nbsp; The young woman whom I
+mentioned to you proposed rowing me across the water amongst the
+rocks; but as she was pregnant, I insisted on taking one of the
+oars, and learning to row.&nbsp; It was not difficult, and I do
+not know a pleasanter exercise.&nbsp; I soon became expert, and
+my train of thinking kept time, as it were, with the oars, or I
+suffered the boat to be carried along by the current, indulging a
+pleasing forgetfulness or fallacious hopes.&nbsp; How fallacious!
+yet, without hope, what is to sustain life, but the fear of
+annihilation&mdash;the only thing of which I have ever felt a
+dread.&nbsp; I cannot bear to think of being no more&mdash;of
+losing myself&mdash;though existence is often but a painful
+consciousness of misery; nay, it appears to me impossible that I
+should cease to exist, or that this active, restless spirit,
+equally alive to joy and sorrow, should only be organised
+dust&mdash;ready to fly abroad the moment the spring snaps, or
+the spark goes out which kept it together.&nbsp; Surely something
+resides in this heart that is not perishable, and life is more
+than a dream.</p>
+<p>Sometimes, to take up my oar once more, when the sea was calm,
+I was amused by disturbing the innumerable young star fish which
+floated just below the surface; I had never observed them before,
+for they have not a hard shell like those which I have seen on
+the seashore.&nbsp; They look like thickened water with a white
+edge, and four purple circles, of different forms, were in the
+middle, over an incredible number of fibres or white lines.&nbsp;
+Touching them, the cloudy substance would turn or close, first on
+one side, then on the other, very gracefully, but when I took one
+of them up in the ladle, with which I heaved the water out of the
+boat, it appeared only a colourless jelly.</p>
+<p>I did not see any of the seals, numbers of which followed our
+boat when we landed in Sweden; but though I like to sport in the
+water I should have had no desire to join in their gambols.</p>
+<p>Enough, you will say, of inanimate nature and of brutes, to
+use the lordly phrase of man; let me hear something of the
+inhabitants.</p>
+<p>The gentleman with whom I had business is the Mayor of
+Tonsberg.&nbsp; He speaks English intelligibly, and, having a
+sound understanding, I was sorry that his numerous occupations
+prevented my gaining as much information from him as I could have
+drawn forth had we frequently conversed.&nbsp; The people of the
+town, as far as I had an opportunity of knowing their sentiments,
+are extremely well satisfied with his manner of discharging his
+office.&nbsp; He has a degree of information and good sense which
+excites respect, whilst a cheerfulness, almost amounting to
+gaiety, enables him to reconcile differences and keep his
+neighbours in good humour.&nbsp; &ldquo;I lost my horse,&rdquo;
+said a woman to me, &ldquo;but ever since, when I want to send to
+the mill, or go out, the Mayor lends me one.&nbsp; He scolds if I
+do not come for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A criminal was branded, during my stay here, for the third
+offence; but the relief he received made him declare that the
+judge was one of the best men in the world.</p>
+<p>I sent this wretch a trifle, at different times, to take with
+him into slavery.&nbsp; As it was more than he expected, he
+wished very much to see me, and this wish brought to my
+remembrance an anecdote I heard when I was in Lisbon.</p>
+<p>A wretch who had been imprisoned several years, during which
+period lamps had been put up, was at last condemned to a cruel
+death, yet, in his way to execution, he only wished for one
+night&rsquo;s respite to see the city lighted.</p>
+<p>Having dined in company at the mayor&rsquo;s I was invited
+with his family to spend the day at one of the richest
+merchant&rsquo;s houses.&nbsp; Though I could not speak Danish I
+knew that I could see a great deal; yes, I am persuaded that I
+have formed a very just opinion of the character of the
+Norwegians, without being able to hold converse with them.</p>
+<p>I had expected to meet some company, yet was a little
+disconcerted at being ushered into an apartment full of well
+dressed people, and glancing my eyes round they rested on several
+very pretty faces.&nbsp; Rosy cheeks, sparkling eyes, and light
+brown or golden locks; for I never saw so much hair with a yellow
+cast, and, with their fine complexions, it looked very
+becoming.</p>
+<p>These women seem a mixture of indolence and vivacity; they
+scarcely ever walk out, and were astonished that I should for
+pleasure, yet they are immoderately fond of dancing.&nbsp;
+Unaffected in their manners, if they have no pretensions to
+elegance, simplicity often produces a gracefulness of deportment,
+when they are animated by a particular desire to please, which
+was the case at present.&nbsp; The solitariness of my situation,
+which they thought terrible, interested them very much in my
+favour.&nbsp; They gathered round me, sung to me, and one of the
+prettiest, to whom I gave my hand with some degree of cordiality,
+to meet the glance of her eyes, kissed me very
+affectionately.</p>
+<p>At dinner, which was conducted with great hospitality, though
+we remained at table too long, they sung several songs, and,
+amongst the rest, translations of some patriotic French
+ones.&nbsp; As the evening advanced they became playful, and we
+kept up a sort of conversation of gestures.&nbsp; As their minds
+were totally uncultivated I did not lose much, perhaps gained, by
+not being able to understand them; for fancy probably filled up,
+more to their advantage, the void in the picture.&nbsp; Be that
+as it may, they excited my sympathy, and I was very much
+flattered when I was told the next day that they said it was a
+pleasure to look at me, I appeared so good-natured.</p>
+<p>The men were generally captains of ships.&nbsp; Several spoke
+English very tolerably, but they were merely matter-of-fact men,
+confined to a very narrow circle of observation.&nbsp; I found it
+difficult to obtain from them any information respecting their
+own country, when the fumes of tobacco did not keep me at a
+distance.</p>
+<p>I was invited to partake of some other feasts, and always had
+to complain of the quantity of provision and the length of time
+taken to consume it; for it would not have been proper to have
+said devour, all went on so fair and softly.&nbsp; The servants
+wait as slowly as their mistresses carve.</p>
+<p>The young women here, as well as in Sweden, have commonly bad
+teeth, which I attribute to the same causes.&nbsp; They are fond
+of finery, but do not pay the necessary attention to their
+persons, to render beauty less transient than a flower, and that
+interesting expression which sentiment and accomplishments give
+seldom supplies its place.</p>
+<p>The servants have, likewise, an inferior sort of food here,
+but their masters are not allowed to strike them with
+impunity.&nbsp; I might have added mistresses, for it was a
+complaint of this kind brought before the mayor which led me to a
+knowledge of the fact.</p>
+<p>The wages are low, which is particularly unjust, because the
+price of clothes is much higher than that of provision.&nbsp; A
+young woman, who is wet nurse to the mistress of the inn where I
+lodge, receives only twelve dollars a year, and pays ten for the
+nursing of her own child.&nbsp; The father had run away to get
+clear of the expense.&nbsp; There was something in this most
+painful state of widowhood which excited my compassion and led me
+to reflections on the instability of the most flattering plans of
+happiness, that were painful in the extreme, till I was ready to
+ask whether this world was not created to exhibit every possible
+combination of wretchedness.&nbsp; I asked these questions of a
+heart writhing with anguish, whilst I listened to a melancholy
+ditty sung by this poor girl.&nbsp; It was too early for thee to
+be abandoned, thought I, and I hastened out of the house to take
+my solitary evening&rsquo;s walk.&nbsp; And here I am again to
+talk of anything but the pangs arising from the discovery of
+estranged affection and the lonely sadness of a deserted
+heart.</p>
+<p>The father and mother, if the father can be ascertained, are
+obliged to maintain an illegitimate child at their joint expense;
+but, should the father disappear, go up the country or to sea,
+the mother must maintain it herself.&nbsp; However, accidents of
+this kind do not prevent their marrying, and then it is not
+unusual to take the child or children home, and they are brought
+up very amicably with the marriage progeny.</p>
+<p>I took some pains to learn what books were written originally
+in their language; but for any certain information respecting the
+state of Danish literature I must wait till I arrive at
+Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>The sound of the language is soft, a great proportion of the
+words ending in vowels; and there is a simplicity in the turn of
+some of the phrases which have been translated to me that pleased
+and interested me.&nbsp; In the country the farmers use the
+<i>thou</i> and <i>thee</i>; and they do not acquire the polite
+plurals of the towns by meeting at market.&nbsp; The not having
+markets established in the large towns appears to me a great
+inconvenience.&nbsp; When the farmers have anything to sell they
+bring it to the neighbouring town and take it from house to
+house.&nbsp; I am surprised that the inhabitants do not feel how
+very incommodious this usage is to both parties, and redress it;
+they, indeed, perceive it, for when I have introduced the subject
+they acknowledged that they were often in want of necessaries,
+there being no butchers, and they were often obliged to buy what
+they did not want; yet it was the custom, and the changing of
+customs of a long standing requires more energy than they yet
+possess.&nbsp; I received a similar reply when I attempted to
+persuade the women that they injured their children by keeping
+them too warm.&nbsp; The only way of parrying off my reasoning
+was that they must do as other people did; in short, reason on
+any subject of change, and they stop you by saying that
+&ldquo;the town would talk.&rdquo;&nbsp; A person of sense, with
+a large fortune to ensure respect, might be very useful here, by
+inducing them to treat their children and manage their sick
+properly, and eat food dressed in a simpler manner&mdash;the
+example, for instance, of a count&rsquo;s lady.</p>
+<p>Reflecting on these prejudices made me revert to the wisdom of
+those legislators who established institutions for the good of
+the body under the pretext of serving heaven for the salvation of
+the soul.&nbsp; These might with strict propriety be termed pious
+frauds; and I admire the Peruvian pair for asserting that they
+came from the sun, when their conduct proved that they meant to
+enlighten a benighted country, whose obedience, or even
+attention, could only be secured by awe.&nbsp; Thus much for
+conquering the <i>inertia</i> of reason; but, when it is once in
+motion, fables once held sacred may be ridiculed; and sacred they
+were when useful to mankind.&nbsp; Prometheus alone stole fire to
+animate the first man; his posterity needs not supernatural aid
+to preserve the species, though love is generally termed a flame;
+and it may not be necessary much longer to suppose men inspired
+by heaven to inculcate the duties which demand special grace when
+reason convinces them that they are the happiest who are the most
+nobly employed.</p>
+<p>In a few days I am to set out for the western part of Norway,
+and then shall return by land to Gothenburg.&nbsp; I cannot think
+of leaving this place without regret.&nbsp; I speak of the place
+before the inhabitants, though there is a tenderness in their
+artless kindness which attaches me to them; but it is an
+attachment that inspires a regret very different from that I felt
+at leaving Hull in my way to Sweden.&nbsp; The domestic happiness
+and good-humoured gaiety of the amiable family where I and my
+Frances were so hospitably received would have been sufficient to
+ensure the tenderest remembrance, without the recollection of the
+social evening to stimulate it, when good breeding gave dignity
+to sympathy and wit zest to reason.</p>
+<p>Adieu!&mdash;I am just informed that my horse has been waiting
+this quarter of an hour.&nbsp; I now venture to ride out
+alone.&nbsp; The steeple serves as a landmark.&nbsp; I once or
+twice lost my way, walking alone, without being able to inquire
+after a path; I was therefore obliged to make to the steeple, or
+windmill, over hedge and ditch.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Yours truly.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER IX.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I have already informed you that there are only two noblemen
+who have estates of any magnitude in Norway.&nbsp; One of these
+has a house near Tonsberg, at which he has not resided for some
+years, having been at court, or on embassies.&nbsp; He is now the
+Danish Ambassador in London.&nbsp; The house is pleasantly
+situated, and the grounds about it fine; but their neglected
+appearance plainly tells that there is nobody at home.</p>
+<p>A stupid kind of sadness, to my eye, always reigns in a huge
+habitation where only servants live to put cases on the furniture
+and open the windows.&nbsp; I enter as I would into the tomb of
+the Capulets, to look at the family pictures that here frown in
+armour, or smile in ermine.&nbsp; The mildew respects not the
+lordly robe, and the worm riots unchecked on the cheek of
+beauty.</p>
+<p>There was nothing in the architecture of the building, or the
+form of the furniture, to detain me from the avenue where the
+aged pines stretched along majestically.&nbsp; Time had given a
+greyish cast to their ever-green foliage; and they stood, like
+sires of the forest, sheltered on all sides by a rising
+progeny.&nbsp; I had not ever seen so many oaks together in
+Norway as in these woods, nor such large aspens as here were
+agitated by the breeze, rendering the wind audible&mdash;nay
+musical; for melody seemed on the wing around me.&nbsp; How
+different was the fresh odour that reanimated me in the avenue,
+from the damp chillness of the apartments; and as little did the
+gloomy thoughtfulness excited by the dusty hangings, and
+worm-eaten pictures, resemble the reveries inspired by the
+soothing melancholy of their shade.&nbsp; In the winter, these
+august pines, towering above the snow, must relieve the eye
+beyond measure and give life to the white waste.</p>
+<p>The continual recurrence of pine and fir groves in the day
+sometimes wearies the sight, but in the evening, nothing can be
+more picturesque, or, more properly speaking, better calculated
+to produce poetical images.&nbsp; Passing through them, I have
+been struck with a mystic kind of reverence, and I did, as it
+were, homage to their venerable shadows.&nbsp; Not nymphs, but
+philosophers, seemed to inhabit them&mdash;ever musing; I could
+scarcely conceive that they were without some consciousness of
+existence&mdash;without a calm enjoyment of the pleasure they
+diffused.</p>
+<p>How often do my feelings produce ideas that remind me of the
+origin of many poetical fictions.&nbsp; In solitude, the
+imagination bodies forth its conceptions unrestrained, and stops
+enraptured to adore the beings of its own creation.&nbsp; These
+are moments of bliss; and the memory recalls them with
+delight.</p>
+<p>But I have almost forgotten the matters of fact I meant to
+relate, respecting the counts.&nbsp; They have the presentation
+of the livings on their estates, appoint the judges, and
+different civil officers, the Crown reserving to itself the
+privilege of sanctioning them.&nbsp; But though they appoint,
+they cannot dismiss.&nbsp; Their tenants also occupy their farms
+for life, and are obliged to obey any summons to work on the part
+he reserves for himself; but they are paid for their
+labour.&nbsp; In short, I have seldom heard of any noblemen so
+innoxious.</p>
+<p>Observing that the gardens round the count&rsquo;s estate were
+better cultivated than any I had before seen, I was led to
+reflect on the advantages which naturally accrue from the feudal
+tenures.&nbsp; The tenants of the count are obliged to work at a
+stated price, in his grounds and garden; and the instruction
+which they imperceptibly receive from the head gardener tends to
+render them useful, and makes them, in the common course of
+things, better husbandmen and gardeners on their own little
+farms.&nbsp; Thus the great, who alone travel in this period of
+society, for the observation of manners and customs made by
+sailors is very confined, bring home improvement to promote their
+own comfort, which is gradually spread abroad amongst the people,
+till they are stimulated to think for themselves.</p>
+<p>The bishops have not large revenues, and the priests are
+appointed by the king before they come to them to be
+ordained.&nbsp; There is commonly some little farm annexed to the
+parsonage, and the inhabitants subscribe voluntarily, three times
+a year, in addition to the church fees, for the support of the
+clergyman.&nbsp; The church lands were seized when Lutheranism
+was introduced, the desire of obtaining them being probably the
+real stimulus of reformation.&nbsp; The tithes, which are never
+required in kind, are divided into three parts&mdash;one to the
+king, another to the incumbent, and the third to repair the
+dilapidations of the parsonage.&nbsp; They do not amount to
+much.&nbsp; And the stipend allowed to the different civil
+officers is also too small, scarcely deserving to be termed an
+independence; that of the custom-house officers is not sufficient
+to procure the necessaries of life&mdash;no wonder, then, if
+necessity leads them to knavery.&nbsp; Much public virtue cannot
+be expected till every employment, putting perquisites out of the
+question, has a salary sufficient to reward
+industry;&mdash;whilst none are so great as to permit the
+possessor to remain idle.&nbsp; It is this want of proportion
+between profit and labour which debases men, producing the
+sycophantic appellations of patron and client, and that
+pernicious <i>esprit du corps</i>, proverbially vicious.</p>
+<p>The farmers are hospitable as well as independent.&nbsp;
+Offering once to pay for some coffee I drank when taking shelter
+from the rain, I was asked, rather angrily, if a little coffee
+was worth paying for.&nbsp; They smoke, and drink drams, but not
+so much as formerly.&nbsp; Drunkenness, often the attendant
+disgrace of hospitality, will here, as well as everywhere else,
+give place to gallantry and refinement of manners; but the change
+will not be suddenly produced.</p>
+<p>The people of every class are constant in their attendance at
+church; they are very fond of dancing, and the Sunday evenings in
+Norway, as in Catholic countries, are spent in exercises which
+exhilarate the spirits without vitiating the heart.&nbsp; The
+rest of labour ought to be gay; and the gladness I have felt in
+France on a Sunday, or Decadi, which I caught from the faces
+around me, was a sentiment more truly religious than all the
+stupid stillness which the streets of London ever inspired where
+the Sabbath is so decorously observed.&nbsp; I recollect, in the
+country parts of England, the churchwardens used to go out during
+the service to see if they could catch any luckless wight playing
+at bowls or skittles; yet what could be more harmless?&nbsp; It
+would even, I think, be a great advantage to the English, if
+feats of activity (I do not include boxing matches) were
+encouraged on a Sunday, as it might stop the progress of
+Methodism, and of that fanatical spirit which appears to be
+gaining ground.&nbsp; I was surprised when I visited Yorkshire,
+on my way to Sweden, to find that sullen narrowness of thinking
+had made such a progress since I was an inhabitant of the
+country.&nbsp; I could hardly have supposed that sixteen or
+seventeen years could have produced such an alteration for the
+worse in the morals of a place&mdash;yes, I say morals; for
+observance of forms, and avoiding of practices, indifferent in
+themselves, often supply the place of that regular attention to
+duties which are so natural, that they seldom are vauntingly
+exercised, though they are worth all the precepts of the law and
+the prophets.&nbsp; Besides, many of these deluded people, with
+the best meaning, actually lose their reason, and become
+miserable, the dread of damnation throwing them into a state
+which merits the term; and still more, in running after their
+preachers, expecting to promote their salvation, they disregard
+their welfare in this world, and neglect the interest and comfort
+of their families; so that, in proportion as they attain a
+reputation for piety, they become idle.</p>
+<p>Aristocracy and fanaticism seem equally to be gaining ground
+in England, particularly in the place I have mentioned; I saw
+very little of either in Norway.&nbsp; The people are regular in
+their attendance on public worship, but religion does not
+interfere with their employments.</p>
+<p>As the farmers cut away the wood they clear the ground.&nbsp;
+Every year, therefore, the country is becoming fitter to support
+the inhabitants.&nbsp; Half a century ago the Dutch, I am told,
+only paid for the cutting down of the wood, and the farmers were
+glad to get rid of it without giving themselves any
+trouble.&nbsp; At present they form a just estimate of its value;
+nay, I was surprised to find even firewood so dear when it
+appears to be in such plenty.&nbsp; The destruction, or gradual
+reduction, of their forests will probably ameliorate the climate,
+and their manners will naturally improve in the same ratio as
+industry requires ingenuity.&nbsp; It is very fortunate that men
+are a long time but just above the brute creation, or the greater
+part of the earth would never have been rendered habitable,
+because it is the patient labour of men, who are only seeking for
+a subsistence, which produces whatever embellishes existence,
+affording leisure for the cultivation of the arts and sciences
+that lift man so far above his first state.&nbsp; I never, my
+friend, thought so deeply of the advantages obtained by human
+industry as since I have been in Norway.&nbsp; The world
+requires, I see, the hand of man to perfect it, and as this task
+naturally unfolds the faculties he exercises, it is physically
+impossible that he should have remained in Rousseau&rsquo;s
+golden age of stupidity.&nbsp; And, considering the question of
+human happiness, where, oh where does it reside?&nbsp; Has it
+taken up its abode with unconscious ignorance or with the
+high-wrought mind?&nbsp; Is it the offspring of thoughtless
+animal spirits or the dye of fancy continually flitting round the
+expected pleasure?</p>
+<p>The increasing population of the earth must necessarily tend
+to its improvement, as the means of existence are multiplied by
+invention.</p>
+<p>You have probably made similar reflections in America, where
+the face of the country, I suppose, resembles the wilds of
+Norway.&nbsp; I am delighted with the romantic views I daily
+contemplate, animated by the purest air; and I am interested by
+the simplicity of manners which reigns around me.&nbsp; Still
+nothing so soon wearies out the feelings as unmarked
+simplicity.&nbsp; I am therefore half convinced that I could not
+live very comfortably exiled from the countries where mankind are
+so much further advanced in knowledge, imperfect as it is, and
+unsatisfactory to the thinking mind.&nbsp; Even now I begin to
+long to hear what you are doing in England and France.&nbsp; My
+thoughts fly from this wilderness to the polished circles of the
+world, till recollecting its vices and follies, I bury myself in
+the woods, but find it necessary to emerge again, that I may not
+lose sight of the wisdom and virtue which exalts my nature.</p>
+<p>What a long time it requires to know ourselves; and yet almost
+every one has more of this knowledge than he is willing to own,
+even to himself.&nbsp; I cannot immediately determine whether I
+ought to rejoice at having turned over in this solitude a new
+page in the history of my own heart, though I may venture to
+assure you that a further acquaintance with mankind only tends to
+increase my respect for your judgment and esteem for your
+character.&nbsp; Farewell!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER X.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I have once more, my friend, taken flight, for I left Tonsberg
+yesterday, but with an intention of returning in my way back to
+Sweden.</p>
+<p>The road to Laurvig is very fine, and the country the best
+cultivated in Norway.&nbsp; I never before admired the beech
+tree, and when I met stragglers here they pleased me still
+less.&nbsp; Long and lank, they would have forced me to allow
+that the line of beauty requires some curves, if the stately
+pine, standing near, erect, throwing her vast arms around, had
+not looked beautiful in opposition to such narrow rules.</p>
+<p>In these respects my very reason obliges me to permit my
+feelings to be my criterion.&nbsp; Whatever excites emotion has
+charms for me, though I insist that the cultivation of the mind
+by warming, nay, almost creating the imagination, produces taste
+and an immense variety of sensations and emotions, partaking of
+the exquisite pleasure inspired by beauty and sublimity.&nbsp; As
+I know of no end to them, the word infinite, so often misapplied,
+might on this occasion be introduced with something like
+propriety.</p>
+<p>But I have rambled away again.&nbsp; I intended to have
+remarked to you the effect produced by a grove of towering beech,
+the airy lightness of their foliage admitting a degree of
+sunshine, which, giving a transparency to the leaves, exhibited
+an appearance of freshness and elegance that I had never before
+remarked.&nbsp; I thought of descriptions of Italian
+scenery.&nbsp; But these evanescent graces seemed the effect of
+enchantment; and I imperceptibly breathed softly, lest I should
+destroy what was real, yet looked so like the creation of
+fancy.&nbsp; Dryden&rsquo;s fable of the flower and the leaf was
+not a more poetical reverie.</p>
+<p>Adieu, however, to fancy, and to all the sentiments which
+ennoble our nature.&nbsp; I arrived at Laurvig, and found myself
+in the midst of a group of lawyers of different
+descriptions.&nbsp; My head turned round, my heart grew sick, as
+I regarded visages deformed by vice, and listened to accounts of
+chicanery that was continually embroiling the ignorant.&nbsp;
+These locusts will probably diminish as the people become more
+enlightened.&nbsp; In this period of social life the commonalty
+are always cunningly attentive to their own interest; but their
+faculties, confined to a few objects, are so narrowed, that they
+cannot discover it in the general good.&nbsp; The profession of
+the law renders a set of men still shrewder and more selfish than
+the rest; and it is these men, whose wits have been sharpened by
+knavery, who here undermine morality, confounding right and
+wrong.</p>
+<p>The Count of Bernstorff, who really appears to me, from all I
+can gather, to have the good of the people at heart, aware of
+this, has lately sent to the mayor of each district to name,
+according to the size of the place, four or six of the
+best-informed inhabitants, not men of the law, out of which the
+citizens were to elect two, who are to be termed mediators.&nbsp;
+Their office is to endeavour to prevent litigious suits, and
+conciliate differences.&nbsp; And no suit is to be commenced
+before the parties have discussed the dispute at their weekly
+meeting.&nbsp; If a reconciliation should, in consequence, take
+place, it is to be registered, and the parties are not allowed to
+retract.</p>
+<p>By these means ignorant people will be prevented from applying
+for advice to men who may justly be termed stirrers-up of
+strife.&nbsp; They have for a long time, to use a significant
+vulgarism, set the people by the ears, and live by the spoil they
+caught up in the scramble.&nbsp; There is some reason to hope
+that this regulation will diminish their number, and restrain
+their mischievous activity.&nbsp; But till trials by jury are
+established, little justice can be expected in Norway.&nbsp;
+Judges who cannot be bribed are often timid, and afraid of
+offending bold knaves, lest they should raise a set of hornets
+about themselves.&nbsp; The fear of censure undermines all energy
+of character; and, labouring to be prudent, they lose sight of
+rectitude.&nbsp; Besides, nothing is left to their conscience, or
+sagacity; they must be governed by evidence, though internally
+convinced that it is false.</p>
+<p>There is a considerable iron manufactory at Laurvig for coarse
+work, and a lake near the town supplies the water necessary for
+working several mills belonging to it.</p>
+<p>This establishment belongs to the Count of Laurvig.&nbsp;
+Without a fortune and influence equal to his, such a work could
+not have been set afloat; personal fortunes are not yet
+sufficient to support such undertakings.&nbsp; Nevertheless the
+inhabitants of the town speak of the size of his estate as an
+evil, because it obstructs commerce.&nbsp; The occupiers of small
+farms are obliged to bring their wood to the neighbouring
+seaports to be shipped; but he, wishing to increase the value of
+his, will not allow it to be thus gradually cut down, which turns
+the trade into another channel.&nbsp; Added to this, nature is
+against them, the bay being open and insecure.&nbsp; I could not
+help smiling when I was informed that in a hard gale a vessel had
+been wrecked in the main street.&nbsp; When there are such a
+number of excellent harbours on the coast, it is a pity that
+accident has made one of the largest towns grow up on a bad
+one.</p>
+<p>The father of the present count was a distant relation of the
+family; he resided constantly in Denmark, and his son follows his
+example.&nbsp; They have not been in possession of the estate
+many years; and their predecessor lived near the town,
+introducing a degree of profligacy of manners which has been
+ruinous to the inhabitants in every respect, their fortunes not
+being equal to the prevailing extravagance.</p>
+<p>What little I have seen of the manners of the people does not
+please me so well as those of Tonsberg.&nbsp; I am forewarned
+that I shall find them still more cunning and fraudulent as I
+advance towards the westward, in proportion as traffic takes
+place of agriculture, for their towns are built on naked rocks,
+the streets are narrow bridges, and the inhabitants are all
+seafaring men, or owners of ships, who keep shops.</p>
+<p>The inn I was at in Laurvig this journey was not the same that
+I was at before.&nbsp; It is a good one&mdash;the people civil,
+and the accommodations decent.&nbsp; They seem to be better
+provided in Sweden; but in justice I ought to add that they
+charge more extravagantly.&nbsp; My bill at Tonsberg was also
+much higher than I had paid in Sweden, and much higher than it
+ought to have been where provision is so cheap.&nbsp; Indeed,
+they seem to consider foreigners as strangers whom they shall
+never see again, and may fairly pluck.&nbsp; And the inhabitants
+of the western coast, isolated, as it were, regard those of the
+east almost as strangers.&nbsp; Each town in that quarter seems
+to be a great family, suspicious of every other, allowing none to
+cheat them but themselves; and, right or wrong, they support one
+another in the face of justice.</p>
+<p>On this journey I was fortunate enough to have one companion
+with more enlarged views than the generality of his countrymen,
+who spoke English tolerably.</p>
+<p>I was informed that we might still advance a mile and a
+quarter in our cabrioles; afterwards there was no choice, but of
+a single horse and wretched path, or a boat, the usual mode of
+travelling.</p>
+<p>We therefore sent our baggage forward in the boat, and
+followed rather slowly, for the road was rocky and sandy.&nbsp;
+We passed, however, through several beech groves, which still
+delighted me by the freshness of their light green foliage, and
+the elegance of their assemblage, forming retreats to veil
+without obscuring the sun.</p>
+<p>I was surprised, at approaching the water, to find a little
+cluster of houses pleasantly situated, and an excellent
+inn.&nbsp; I could have wished to have remained there all night;
+but as the wind was fair, and the evening fine, I was afraid to
+trust to the wind&mdash;the uncertain wind of to-morrow.&nbsp; We
+therefore left Helgeraac immediately with the declining sun.</p>
+<p>Though we were in the open sea, we sailed more amongst the
+rocks and islands than in my passage from Stromstad; and they
+often forced very picturesque combinations.&nbsp; Few of the high
+ridges were entirely bare; the seeds of some pines or firs had
+been wafted by the winds or waves, and they stood to brave the
+elements.</p>
+<p>Sitting, then, in a little boat on the ocean, amidst
+strangers, with sorrow and care pressing hard on
+me&mdash;buffeting me about from clime to clime&mdash;I felt</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Like the lone shrub at random cast,<br />
+That sighs and trembles at each blast!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On some of the largest rocks there were actually groves, the
+retreat of foxes and hares, which, I suppose, had tripped over
+the ice during the winter, without thinking to regain the main
+land before the thaw.</p>
+<p>Several of the islands were inhabited by pilots; and the
+Norwegian pilots are allowed to be the best in the
+world&mdash;perfectly acquainted with their coast, and ever at
+hand to observe the first signal or sail.&nbsp; They pay a small
+tax to the king and to the regulating officer, and enjoy the
+fruit of their indefatigable industry.</p>
+<p>One of the islands, called Virgin Land, is a flat, with some
+depth of earth, extending for half a Norwegian mile, with three
+farms on it, tolerably well cultivated.</p>
+<p>On some of the bare rocks I saw straggling houses; they rose
+above the denomination of huts inhabited by fishermen.&nbsp; My
+companions assured me that they were very comfortable dwellings,
+and that they have not only the necessaries, but even what might
+be reckoned the superfluities of life.&nbsp; It was too late for
+me to go on shore, if you will allow me to give that name to
+shivering rocks, to ascertain the fact.</p>
+<p>But rain coming on, and the night growing dark, the pilot
+declared that it would be dangerous for us to attempt to go to
+the place of our destination&mdash;East Rusoer&mdash;a Norwegian
+mile and a half further; and we determined to stop for the night
+at a little haven, some half dozen houses scattered under the
+curve of a rock.&nbsp; Though it became darker and darker, our
+pilot avoided the blind rocks with great dexterity.</p>
+<p>It was about ten o&rsquo;clock when we arrived, and the old
+hostess quickly prepared me a comfortable bed&mdash;a little too
+soft or so, but I was weary; and opening the window to admit the
+sweetest of breezes to fan me to sleep, I sunk into the most
+luxurious rest: it was more than refreshing.&nbsp; The hospitable
+sprites of the grots surely hovered round my pillow; and, if I
+awoke, it was to listen to the melodious whispering of the wind
+amongst them, or to feel the mild breath of morn.&nbsp; Light
+slumbers produced dreams, where Paradise was before me.&nbsp; My
+little cherub was again hiding her face in my bosom.&nbsp; I
+heard her sweet cooing beat on my heart from the cliffs, and saw
+her tiny footsteps on the sands.&nbsp; New-born hopes seemed,
+like the rainbow, to appear in the clouds of sorrow, faint, yet
+sufficient to amuse away despair.</p>
+<p>Some refreshing but heavy showers have detained us; and here I
+am writing quite alone&mdash;something more than gay, for which I
+want a name.</p>
+<p>I could almost fancy myself in Nootka Sound, or on some of the
+islands on the north-west coast of America.&nbsp; We entered by a
+narrow pass through the rocks, which from this abode appear more
+romantic than you can well imagine; and seal-skins hanging at the
+door to dry add to the illusion.</p>
+<p>It is indeed a corner of the world, but you would be surprised
+to see the cleanliness and comfort of the dwelling.&nbsp; The
+shelves are not only shining with pewter and queen&rsquo;s ware,
+but some articles in silver, more ponderous, it is true, than
+elegant.&nbsp; The linen is good, as well as white.&nbsp; All the
+females spin, and there is a loom in the kitchen.&nbsp; A sort of
+individual taste appeared in the arrangement of the furniture
+(this is not the place for imitation) and a kindness in their
+desire to oblige.&nbsp; How superior to the apish politeness of
+the towns! where the people, affecting to be well bred, fatigue
+with their endless ceremony.</p>
+<p>The mistress is a widow, her daughter is married to a pilot,
+and has three cows.&nbsp; They have a little patch of land at
+about the distance of two English miles, where they make hay for
+the winter, which they bring home in a boat.&nbsp; They live here
+very cheap, getting money from the vessels which stress of
+weather, or other causes, bring into their harbour.&nbsp; I
+suspect, by their furniture, that they smuggle a little.&nbsp; I
+can now credit the account of the other houses, which I last
+night thought exaggerated.</p>
+<p>I have been conversing with one of my companions respecting
+the laws and regulations of Norway.&nbsp; He is a man within
+great portion of common sense and heart&mdash;yes, a warm
+heart.&nbsp; This is not the first time I have remarked heart
+without sentiment; they are distinct.&nbsp; The former depends on
+the rectitude of the feelings, on truth of sympathy; these
+characters have more tenderness than passion; the latter has a
+higher source&mdash;call it imagination, genius, or what you
+will, it is something very different.&nbsp; I have been laughing
+with these simple worthy folk&mdash;to give you one of my
+half-score Danish words&mdash;and letting as much of my heart
+flow out in sympathy as they can take.&nbsp; Adieu!&nbsp; I must
+trip up the rocks.&nbsp; The rain is over.&nbsp; Let me catch
+pleasure on the wing&mdash;I may be melancholy to-morrow.&nbsp;
+Now all my nerves keep time with the melody of nature.&nbsp; Ah!
+let me be happy whilst I can.&nbsp; The tear starts as I think of
+it.&nbsp; I must flee from thought, and find refuge from sorrow
+in a strong imagination&mdash;the only solace for a feeling
+heart.&nbsp; Phantoms of bliss! ideal forms of excellence! again
+enclose me in your magic circle, and wipe clear from my
+remembrance the disappointments that reader the sympathy painful,
+which experience rather increases than damps, by giving the
+indulgence of feeling the sanction of reason.</p>
+<p>Once more farewell!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XI.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I left Portoer, the little haven I mentioned, soon after I
+finished my last letter.&nbsp; The sea was rough, and I perceived
+that our pilot was right not to venture farther during a hazy
+night.&nbsp; We had agreed to pay four dollars for a boat from
+Helgeraac.&nbsp; I mention the sum, because they would demand
+twice as much from a stranger.&nbsp; I was obliged to pay fifteen
+for the one I hired at Stromstad.&nbsp; When we were ready to set
+out, our boatman offered to return a dollar and let us go in one
+of the boats of the place, the pilot who lived there being better
+acquainted with the coast.&nbsp; He only demanded a dollar and a
+half, which was reasonable.&nbsp; I found him a civil and rather
+intelligent man; he was in the American service several years,
+during the Revolution.</p>
+<p>I soon perceived that an experienced mariner was necessary to
+guide us, for we were continually obliged to tack about, to avoid
+the rocks, which, scarcely reaching to the surface of the water,
+could only be discovered by the breaking of the waves over
+them.</p>
+<p>The view of this wild coast, as we sailed along it, afforded
+me a continual subject for meditation.&nbsp; I anticipated the
+future improvement of the world, and observed how much man has
+still to do to obtain of the earth all it could yield.&nbsp; I
+even carried my speculations so far as to advance a million or
+two of years to the moment when the earth would perhaps be so
+perfectly cultivated, and so completely peopled, as to render it
+necessary to inhabit every spot&mdash;yes, these bleak
+shores.&nbsp; Imagination went still farther, and pictured the
+state of man when the earth could no longer support him.&nbsp;
+Whither was he to flee from universal famine?&nbsp; Do not smile;
+I really became distressed for these fellow creatures yet
+unborn.&nbsp; The images fastened on me, and the world appeared a
+vast prison.&nbsp; I was soon to be in a smaller one&mdash;for no
+other name can I give to Rusoer.&nbsp; It would be difficult to
+form an idea of the place, if you have never seen one of these
+rocky coasts.</p>
+<p>We were a considerable time entering amongst the islands,
+before we saw about two hundred houses crowded together under a
+very high rock&mdash;still higher appearing above.&nbsp; Talk not
+of Bastilles!&nbsp; To be born here was to be bastilled by
+nature&mdash;shut out from all that opens the understanding, or
+enlarges the heart.&nbsp; Huddled one behind another, not more
+than a quarter of the dwellings even had a prospect of the
+sea.&nbsp; A few planks formed passages from house to house,
+which you must often scale, mounting steps like a ladder to
+enter.</p>
+<p>The only road across the rocks leads to a habitation sterile
+enough, you may suppose, when I tell you that the little earth on
+the adjacent ones was carried there by the late inhabitant.&nbsp;
+A path, almost impracticable for a horse, goes on to Arendall,
+still further to the westward.</p>
+<p>I inquired for a walk, and, mounting near two hundred steps
+made round a rock, walked up and down for about a hundred yards
+viewing the sea, to which I quickly descended by steps that
+cheated the declivity.&nbsp; The ocean and these tremendous
+bulwarks enclosed me on every side.&nbsp; I felt the confinement,
+and wished for wings to reach still loftier cliffs, whose
+slippery sides no foot was so hardy as to tread.&nbsp; Yet what
+was it to see?&mdash;only a boundless waste of water&mdash;not a
+glimpse of smiling nature&mdash;not a patch of lively green to
+relieve the aching sight, or vary the objects of meditation.</p>
+<p>I felt my breath oppressed, though nothing could be clearer
+than the atmosphere.&nbsp; Wandering there alone, I found the
+solitude desirable; my mind was stored with ideas, which this new
+scene associated with astonishing rapidity.&nbsp; But I shuddered
+at the thought of receiving existence, and remaining here, in the
+solitude of ignorance, till forced to leave a world of which I
+had seen so little, for the character of the inhabitants is as
+uncultivated, if not as picturesquely wild, as their abode.</p>
+<p>Having no employment but traffic, of which a contraband trade
+makes the basis of their profit, the coarsest feelings of honesty
+are quickly blunted.&nbsp; You may suppose that I speak in
+general terms; and that, with all the disadvantages of nature and
+circumstances, there are still some respectable exceptions, the
+more praiseworthy, as tricking is a very contagious mental
+disease, that dries up all the generous juices of the
+heart.&nbsp; Nothing genial, in fact, appears around this place,
+or within the circle of its rocks.&nbsp; And, now I recollect, it
+seems to me that the most genial and humane characters I have met
+with in life were most alive to the sentiments inspired by
+tranquil country scenes.&nbsp; What, indeed, is to humanise these
+beings, who rest shut up (for they seldom even open their
+windows), smoking, drinking brandy, and driving bargains?&nbsp; I
+have been almost stifled by these smokers.&nbsp; They begin in
+the morning, and are rarely without their pipe till they go to
+bed.&nbsp; Nothing can be more disgusting than the rooms and men
+towards the evening&mdash;breath, teeth, clothes, and furniture,
+all are spoilt.&nbsp; It is well that the women are not very
+delicate, or they would only love their husbands because they
+were their husbands.&nbsp; Perhaps, you may add, that the remark
+need not be confined to so small a part of the world; and,
+<i>entre nous</i>, I am of the same opinion.&nbsp; You must not
+term this innuendo saucy, for it does not come home.</p>
+<p>If I had not determined to write I should have found my
+confinement here, even for three or four days, tedious.&nbsp; I
+have no books; and to pace up and down a small room, looking at
+tiles overhung by rocks, soon becomes wearisome.&nbsp; I cannot
+mount two hundred steps to walk a hundred yards many times in the
+day.&nbsp; Besides, the rocks, retaining the heat of the sun, are
+intolerably warm.&nbsp; I am, nevertheless, very well; for though
+there is a shrewdness in the character of these people, depraved
+by a sordid love of money which repels me, still the comparisons
+they force me to make keep my heart calm by exercising my
+understanding.</p>
+<p>Everywhere wealth commands too much respect, but here almost
+exclusively; and it is the only object pursued, not through brake
+and briar, but over rocks and waves; yet of what use would riches
+be to me, I have sometimes asked myself, were I confined to live
+in such in a spot?&nbsp; I could only relieve a few distressed
+objects, perhaps render them idle, and all the rest of life would
+be a blank.</p>
+<p>My present journey has given fresh force to my opinion that no
+place is so disagreeable and unimproving as a country town.&nbsp;
+I should like to divide my time between the town and country; in
+a lone house, with the business of farming and planting, where my
+mind would gain strength by solitary musing, and in a metropolis
+to rub off the rust of thought, and polish the taste which the
+contemplation of nature had rendered just.&nbsp; Thus do we wish
+as we float down the stream of life, whilst chance does more to
+gratify a desire of knowledge than our best laid plans.&nbsp; A
+degree of exertion, produced by some want, more or less painful,
+is probably the price we must all pay for knowledge.&nbsp; How
+few authors or artists have arrived at eminence who have not
+lived by their employment?</p>
+<p>I was interrupted yesterday by business, and was prevailed
+upon to dine with the English vice-consul.&nbsp; His house being
+open to the sea, I was more at large; and the hospitality of the
+table pleased me, though the bottle was rather too freely pushed
+about.&nbsp; Their manner of entertaining was such as I have
+frequently remarked when I have been thrown in the way of people
+without education, who have more money than wit&mdash;that is,
+than they know what to do with.&nbsp; The women were unaffected,
+but had not the natural grace which was often conspicuous at
+Tonsberg.&nbsp; There was even a striking difference in their
+dress, these having loaded themselves with finery in the style of
+the sailors&rsquo; girls of Hull or Portsmouth.&nbsp; Taste has
+not yet taught them to make any but an ostentatious display of
+wealth.&nbsp; Yet I could perceive even here the first steps of
+the improvement which I am persuaded will make a very obvious
+progress in the course of half a century, and it ought not to be
+sooner, to keep pace with the cultivation of the earth.&nbsp;
+Improving manners will introduce finer moral feelings.&nbsp; They
+begin to read translations of some of the most useful German
+productions lately published, and one of our party sung a song
+ridiculing the powers coalesced against France, and the company
+drank confusion to those who had dismembered Poland.</p>
+<p>The evening was extremely calm and beautiful.&nbsp; Not being
+able to walk, I requested a boat as the only means of enjoying
+free air.</p>
+<p>The view of the town was now extremely fine.&nbsp; A huge
+rocky mountain stood up behind it, and a vast cliff stretched on
+each side, forming a semicircle.&nbsp; In a recess of the rocks
+was a clump of pines, amongst which a steeple rose picturesquely
+beautiful.</p>
+<p>The churchyard is almost the only verdant spot in the
+place.&nbsp; Here, indeed, friendship extends beyond the grave,
+and to grant a sod of earth is to accord a favour.&nbsp; I should
+rather choose, did it admit of a choice, to sleep in some of the
+caves of the rocks, for I am become better reconciled to them
+since I climbed their craggy sides last night, listening to the
+finest echoes I ever heard.&nbsp; We had a French horn with us,
+and there was an enchanting wildness in the dying away of the
+reverberation that quickly transported me to Shakespeare&rsquo;s
+magic island.&nbsp; Spirits unseen seemed to walk abroad, and
+flit from cliff to cliff to soothe my soul to peace.</p>
+<p>I reluctantly returned to supper, to be shut up in a warm
+room, only to view the vast shadows of the rocks extending on the
+slumbering waves.&nbsp; I stood at the window some time before a
+buzz filled the drawing-room, and now and then the dashing of a
+solitary oar rendered the scene still more solemn.</p>
+<p>Before I came here I could scarcely have imagined that a
+simple object (rocks) could have admitted of so many interesting
+combinations, always grand and often sublime.&nbsp; Good
+night!&nbsp; God bless you!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I left East Rusoer the day before yesterday.&nbsp; The weather
+was very fine; but so calm that we loitered on the water near
+fourteen hours, only to make about six and twenty miles.</p>
+<p>It seemed to me a sort of emancipation when we landed at
+Helgeraac.&nbsp; The confinement which everywhere struck me
+whilst sojourning amongst the rocks, made me hail the earth as a
+land of promise; and the situation shone with fresh lustre from
+the contrast&mdash;from appearing to be a free abode.&nbsp; Here
+it was possible to travel by land&mdash;I never thought this a
+comfort before&mdash;and my eyes, fatigued by the sparkling of
+the sun on the water, now contentedly reposed on the green
+expanse, half persuaded that such verdant meads had never till
+then regaled them.</p>
+<p>I rose early to pursue my journey to Tonsberg.&nbsp; The
+country still wore a face of joy&mdash;and my soul was alive to
+its charms.&nbsp; Leaving the most lofty and romantic of the
+cliffs behind us, we were almost continually descending to
+Tonsberg, through Elysian scenes; for not only the sea, but
+mountains, rivers, lakes, and groves, gave an almost endless
+variety to the prospect.&nbsp; The cottagers were still carrying
+home the hay; and the cottages on this road looked very
+comfortable.&nbsp; Peace and plenty&mdash;I mean not
+abundance&mdash;seemed to reign around&mdash;still I grew sad as
+I drew near my old abode.&nbsp; I was sorry to see the sun so
+high; it was broad noon.&nbsp; Tonsberg was something like a
+home&mdash;yet I was to enter without lighting up pleasure in any
+eye.&nbsp; I dreaded the solitariness of my apartment, and wished
+for night to hide the starting tears, or to shed them on my
+pillow, and close my eyes on a world where I was destined to
+wander alone.&nbsp; Why has nature so many charms for
+me&mdash;calling forth and cherishing refined sentiments, only to
+wound the breast that fosters them?&nbsp; How illusive, perhaps
+the most so, are the plans of happiness founded on virtue and
+principle; what inlets of misery do they not open in a
+half-civilised society?&nbsp; The satisfaction arising from
+conscious rectitude, will not calm an injured heart, when
+tenderness is ever finding excuses; and self-applause is a cold
+solitary feeling, that cannot supply the place of disappointed
+affection, without throwing a gloom over every prospect, which,
+banishing pleasure, does not exclude pain.&nbsp; I reasoned and
+reasoned; but my heart was too full to allow me to remain in the
+house, and I walked, till I was wearied out, to purchase
+rest&mdash;or rather forgetfulness.</p>
+<p>Employment has beguiled this day, and to-morrow I set out for
+Moss, on my way to Stromstad.&nbsp; At Gothenburg I shall embrace
+my Fannikin; probably she will not know me again&mdash;and I
+shall be hurt if she do not.&nbsp; How childish is this! still it
+is a natural feeling.&nbsp; I would not permit myself to indulge
+the &ldquo;thick coming fears&rdquo; of fondness, whilst I was
+detained by business.&nbsp; Yet I never saw a calf bounding in a
+meadow, that did not remind me of my little frolicker.&nbsp; A
+calf, you say.&nbsp; Yes; but a capital one I own.</p>
+<p>I cannot write composedly&mdash;I am every instant sinking
+into reveries&mdash;my heart flutters, I know not why.&nbsp;
+Fool!&nbsp; It is time thou wert at rest.</p>
+<p>Friendship and domestic happiness are continually praised; yet
+how little is there of either in the world, because it requires
+more cultivation of mind to keep awake affection, even in our own
+hearts, than the common run of people suppose.&nbsp; Besides, few
+like to be seen as they really are; and a degree of simplicity,
+and of undisguised confidence, which, to uninterested observers,
+would almost border on weakness, is the charm, nay the essence of
+love or friendship, all the bewitching graces of childhood again
+appearing.&nbsp; As objects merely to exercise my taste, I
+therefore like to see people together who have an affection for
+each other; every turn of their features touches me, and remains
+pictured on my imagination in indelible characters.&nbsp; The
+zest of novelty is, however, necessary to rouse the languid
+sympathies which have been hackneyed in the world; as is the
+factitious behaviour, falsely termed good-breeding, to amuse
+those, who, defective in taste, continually rely for pleasure on
+their animal spirits, which not being maintained by the
+imagination, are unavoidably sooner exhausted than the sentiments
+of the heart.&nbsp; Friendship is in general sincere at the
+commencement, and lasts whilst there is anything to support it;
+but as a mixture of novelty and vanity is the usual prop, no
+wonder if it fall with the slender stay.&nbsp; The fop in the
+play paid a greater compliment than he was aware of when he said
+to a person, whom he meant to flatter, &ldquo;I like you almost
+as well as a <i>new acquaintance</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Why am I
+talking of friendship, after which I have had such a wild-goose
+chase.&nbsp; I thought only of telling you that the crows, as
+well as wild-geese, are here birds of passage.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XIII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I left Tonsberg yesterday, the 22nd of August.&nbsp; It is
+only twelve or thirteen English miles to Moss, through a country
+less wild than any tract I had hitherto passed over in
+Norway.&nbsp; It was often beautiful, but seldom afforded those
+grand views which fill rather than soothe the mind.</p>
+<p>We glided along the meadows and through the woods, with
+sunbeams playing around us; and, though no castles adorned the
+prospects, a greater number of comfortable farms met my eyes
+during this ride than I have ever seen, in the same space, even
+in the most cultivated part of England; and the very appearance
+of the cottages of the labourers sprinkled amidst them excluded
+all those gloomy ideas inspired by the contemplation of
+poverty.</p>
+<p>The hay was still bringing in, for one harvest in Norway
+treads on the heels of the other.&nbsp; The woods were more
+variegated, interspersed with shrubs.&nbsp; We no longer passed
+through forests of vast pines stretching along with savage
+magnificence.&nbsp; Forests that only exhibited the slow decay of
+time or the devastation produced by warring elements.&nbsp; No;
+oaks, ashes, beech, and all the light and graceful tenants of our
+woods here sported luxuriantly.&nbsp; I had not observed many
+oaks before, for the greater part of the oak-planks, I am
+informed, come from the westward.</p>
+<p>In France the farmers generally live in villages, which is a
+great disadvantage to the country; but the Norwegian farmers,
+always owning their farms or being tenants for life, reside in
+the midst of them, allowing some labourers a dwelling rent free,
+who have a little land appertaining to the cottage, not only for
+a garden, but for crops of different kinds, such as rye, oats,
+buck-wheat, hemp, flax, beans, potatoes, and hay, which are sown
+in strips about it, reminding a stranger of the first attempts at
+culture, when every family was obliged to be an independent
+community.</p>
+<p>These cottagers work at a certain price (tenpence per day) for
+the farmers on whose ground they live, and they have spare time
+enough to cultivate their own land and lay in a store of fish for
+the winter.&nbsp; The wives and daughters spin and the husbands
+and sons weave, so that they may fairly be reckoned independent,
+having also a little money in hand to buy coffee, brandy and some
+other superfluities.</p>
+<p>The only thing I disliked was the military service, which
+trammels them more than I at first imagined.&nbsp; It is true
+that the militia is only called out once a year, yet in case of
+war they have no alternative but must abandon their
+families.&nbsp; Even the manufacturers are not exempted, though
+the miners are, in order to encourage undertakings which require
+a capital at the commencement.&nbsp; And, what appears more
+tyrannical, the inhabitants of certain districts are appointed
+for the land, others for the sea service.&nbsp; Consequently, a
+peasant, born a soldier, is not permitted to follow his
+inclination should it lead him to go to sea, a natural desire
+near so many seaports.</p>
+<p>In these regulations the arbitrary government&mdash;the King
+of Denmark being the most absolute monarch in
+Europe&mdash;appears, which in other respects seeks to hide
+itself in a lenity that almost renders the laws nullities.&nbsp;
+If any alteration of old customs is thought of, the opinion of
+the old country is required and maturely considered.&nbsp; I have
+several times had occasion to observe that, fearing to appear
+tyrannical, laws are allowed to become obsolete which ought to be
+put in force or better substituted in their stead; for this
+mistaken moderation, which borders on timidity, favours the least
+respectable part of the people.</p>
+<p>I saw on my way not only good parsonage houses, but
+comfortable dwellings, with glebe land for the clerk, always a
+consequential man in every country, a being proud of a little
+smattering of learning, to use the appropriate epithet, and vain
+of the stiff good-breeding reflected from the vicar, though the
+servility practised in his company gives it a peculiar cast.</p>
+<p>The widow of the clergyman is allowed to receive the benefit
+of the living for a twelvemonth after the death of the
+incumbent.</p>
+<p>Arriving at the ferry (the passage over to Moss is about six
+or eight English miles) I saw the most level shore I had yet seen
+in Norway.&nbsp; The appearance of the circumjacent country had
+been preparing me for the change of scene which was to greet me
+when I reached the coast.&nbsp; For the grand features of nature
+had been dwindling into prettiness as I advanced; yet the rocks,
+on a smaller scale, were finely wooded to the water&rsquo;s
+edge.&nbsp; Little art appeared, yet sublimity everywhere gave
+place to elegance.&nbsp; The road had often assumed the
+appearance of a gravelled one, made in pleasure-grounds; whilst
+the trees excited only an idea of embellishment.&nbsp; Meadows,
+like lawns, in an endless variety, displayed the careless graces
+of nature; and the ripening corn gave a richness to the landscape
+analogous with the other objects.</p>
+<p>Never was a southern sky more beautiful, nor more soft its
+gales.&nbsp; Indeed, I am led to conclude that the sweetest
+summer in the world is the northern one, the vegetation being
+quick and luxuriant the moment the earth is loosened from its icy
+fetters and the bound streams regain their wonted activity.&nbsp;
+The balance of happiness with respect to climate may be more
+equal than I at first imagined; for the inhabitants describe with
+warmth the pleasures of a winter at the thoughts of which I
+shudder.&nbsp; Not only their parties of pleasure but of business
+are reserved for this season, when they travel with astonishing
+rapidity the most direct way, skimming over hedge and ditch.</p>
+<p>On entering Moss I was struck by the animation which seemed to
+result from industry.&nbsp; The richest of the inhabitants keep
+shops, resembling in their manners and even the arrangement of
+their houses the tradespeople of Yorkshire; with an air of more
+independence, or rather consequence, from feeling themselves the
+first people in the place.&nbsp; I had not time to see the
+iron-works, belonging to Mr. Anker, of Christiania, a man of
+fortune and enterprise; and I was not very anxious to see them
+after having viewed those at Laurvig.</p>
+<p>Here I met with an intelligent literary man, who was anxious
+to gather information from me relative to the past and present
+situation of France.&nbsp; The newspapers printed at Copenhagen,
+as well as those in England, give the most exaggerated accounts
+of their atrocities and distresses, but the former without any
+apparent comments or inferences.&nbsp; Still the Norwegians,
+though more connected with the English, speaking their language
+and copying their manners, wish well to the Republican cause, and
+follow with the most lively interest the successes of the French
+arms.&nbsp; So determined were they, in fact, to excuse
+everything, disgracing the struggle of freedom, by admitting the
+tyrant&rsquo;s plea, necessity, that I could hardly persuade them
+that Robespierre was a monster.</p>
+<p>The discussion of this subject is not so general as in
+England, being confined to the few, the clergy and physicians,
+with a small portion of people who have a literary turn and
+leisure; the greater part of the inhabitants having a variety of
+occupations, being owners of ships, shopkeepers, and farmers,
+have employment enough at home.&nbsp; And their ambition to
+become rich may tend to cultivate the common sense which
+characterises and narrows both their hearts and views, confirming
+the former to their families, taking the handmaids of it into the
+circle of pleasure, if not of interest, and the latter to the
+inspection of their workmen, including the noble science of
+bargain-making&mdash;that is, getting everything at the cheapest,
+and selling it at the dearest rate.&nbsp; I am now more than ever
+convinced that it is an intercourse with men of science and
+artists which not only diffuses taste, but gives that freedom to
+the understanding without which I have seldom met with much
+benevolence of character on a large scale.</p>
+<p>Besides, though you do not hear of much pilfering and stealing
+in Norway, yet they will, with a quiet conscience, buy things at
+a price which must convince them they were stolen.&nbsp; I had an
+opportunity of knowing that two or three reputable people had
+purchased some articles of vagrants, who were detected.&nbsp; How
+much of the virtue which appears in the world is put on for the
+world?&nbsp; And how little dictated by self-respect?&mdash;so
+little, that I am ready to repeat the old question, and ask,
+Where is truth, or rather principle, to be found?&nbsp; These
+are, perhaps, the vapourings of a heart ill at ease&mdash;the
+effusions of a sensibility wounded almost to madness.&nbsp; But
+enough of this; we will discuss the subject in another state of
+existence, where truth and justice will reign.&nbsp; How cruel
+are the injuries which make us quarrel with human nature!&nbsp;
+At present black melancholy hovers round my footsteps; and sorrow
+sheds a mildew over all the future prospects, which hope no
+longer gilds.</p>
+<p>A rainy morning prevented my enjoying the pleasure the view of
+a picturesque country would have afforded me; for though this
+road passed through a country a greater extent of which was under
+cultivation than I had usually seen here, it nevertheless
+retained all the wild charms of Norway.&nbsp; Rocks still
+enclosed the valleys, the great sides of which enlivened their
+verdure.&nbsp; Lakes appeared like branches of the sea, and
+branches of the sea assumed the appearance of tranquil lakes;
+whilst streamlets prattled amongst the pebbles and the broken
+mass of stone which had rolled into them, giving fantastic turns
+to the trees, the roots of which they bared.</p>
+<p>It is not, in fact, surprising that the pine should be often
+undermined; it shoots its fibres in such a horizontal direction,
+merely on the surface of the earth, requiring only enough to
+cover those that cling to the crags.&nbsp; Nothing proves to me
+so clearly that it is the air which principally nourishes trees
+and plants as the flourishing appearance of these pines.&nbsp;
+The firs, demanding a deeper soil, are seldom seen in equal
+health, or so numerous on the barren cliffs.&nbsp; They take
+shelter in the crevices, or where, after some revolving ages, the
+pines have prepared them a footing.</p>
+<p>Approaching, or rather descending, to Christiania, though the
+weather continued a little cloudy, my eyes were charmed with the
+view of an extensive undulated valley, stretching out under the
+shelter of a noble amphitheatre of pine-covered mountains.&nbsp;
+Farm houses scattered about animated, nay, graced a scene which
+still retained so much of its native wildness, that the art which
+appeared seemed so necessary, it was scarcely perceived.&nbsp;
+Cattle were grazing in the shaven meadows; and the lively green
+on their swelling sides contrasted with the ripening corn and
+rye.&nbsp; The corn that grew on the slopes had not, indeed, the
+laughing luxuriance of plenty, which I have seen in more genial
+climes.&nbsp; A fresh breeze swept across the grain, parting its
+slender stalks, but the wheat did not wave its head with its
+wonted careless dignity, as if nature had crowned it the king of
+plants.</p>
+<p>The view, immediately on the left, as we drove down the
+mountain, was almost spoilt by the depredations committed on the
+rocks to make alum.&nbsp; I do not know the process.&nbsp; I only
+saw that the rocks looked red after they had been burnt, and
+regretted that the operation should leave a quantity of rubbish
+to introduce an image of human industry in the shape of
+destruction.&nbsp; The situation of Christiania is certainly
+uncommonly fine, and I never saw a bay that so forcibly gave me
+an idea of a place of safety from the storms of the ocean; all
+the surrounding objects were beautiful and even grand.&nbsp; But
+neither the rocky mountains, nor the woods that graced them,
+could be compared with the sublime prospects I had seen to the
+westward; and as for the hills, &ldquo;capped with <i>eternal</i>
+snow,&rdquo; Mr. Coxe&rsquo;s description led me to look for
+them, but they had flown, for I looked vainly around for this
+noble background.</p>
+<p>A few months ago the people of Christiania rose, exasperated
+by the scarcity and consequent high price of grain.&nbsp; The
+immediate cause was the shipping of some, said to be for Moss,
+but which they suspected was only a pretext to send it out of the
+country, and I am not sure that they were wrong in their
+conjecture.&nbsp; Such are the tricks of trade.&nbsp; They threw
+stones at Mr. Anker, the owner of it, as he rode out of town to
+escape from their fury; they assembled about his house, and the
+people demanded afterwards, with so much impetuosity, the liberty
+of those who were taken up in consequence of the tumult, that the
+Grand Bailiff thought it prudent to release them without further
+altercation.</p>
+<p>You may think me too severe on commerce, but from the manner
+it is at present carried on little can be advanced in favour of a
+pursuit that wears out the most sacred principles of humanity and
+rectitude.&nbsp; What is speculation but a species of gambling, I
+might have said fraud, in which address generally gains the
+prize?&nbsp; I was led into these reflections when I heard of
+some tricks practised by merchants, miscalled reputable, and
+certainly men of property, during the present war, in which
+common honesty was violated: damaged goods and provision having
+been shipped for the express purpose of falling into the hands of
+the English, who had pledged themselves to reimburse neutral
+nations for the cargoes they seized; cannon also, sent back as
+unfit for service, have been shipped as a good speculation, the
+captain receiving orders to cruise about till he fell in with an
+English frigate.&nbsp; Many individuals I believe have suffered
+by the seizures of their vessels; still I am persuaded that the
+English Government has been very much imposed upon in the charges
+made by merchants who contrived to get their ships taken.&nbsp;
+This censure is not confined to the Danes.&nbsp; Adieu, for the
+present, I must take advantage of a moment of fine weather to
+walk out and see the town.</p>
+<p>At Christiania I met with that polite reception, which rather
+characterises the progress of manners in the world, than of any
+particular portion of it.&nbsp; The first evening of my arrival I
+supped with some of the most fashionable people of the place, and
+almost imagined myself in a circle of English ladies, so much did
+they resemble them in manners, dress, and even in beauty; for the
+fairest of my countrywomen would not have been sorry to rank with
+the Grand Bailiff&rsquo;s lady.&nbsp; There were several pretty
+girls present, but she outshone them all, and, what interested me
+still more, I could not avoid observing that in acquiring the
+easy politeness which distinguishes people of quality, she had
+preserved her Norwegian simplicity.&nbsp; There was, in fact, a
+graceful timidity in her address, inexpressibly charming.&nbsp;
+This surprised me a little, because her husband was quite a
+Frenchman of the <i>ancien r&eacute;gime</i>, or rather a
+courtier, the same kind of animal in every country.</p>
+<p>Here I saw the cloven foot of despotism.&nbsp; I boasted to
+you that they had no viceroy in Norway, but these Grand Bailiffs,
+particularly the superior one, who resides at Christiania, are
+political monsters of the same species.&nbsp; Needy sycophants
+are provided for by their relations and connections at Copenhagen
+as at other courts.&nbsp; And though the Norwegians are not in
+the abject state of the Irish, yet this second-hand government is
+still felt by their being deprived of several natural advantages
+to benefit the domineering state.</p>
+<p>The Grand Bailiffs are mostly noblemen from Copenhagen, who
+act as men of common minds will always act in such
+situations&mdash;aping a degree of courtly parade which clashes
+with the independent character of a magistrate.&nbsp; Besides,
+they have a degree of power over the country judges, which some
+of them, who exercise a jurisdiction truly patriarchal most
+painfully feel.&nbsp; I can scarcely say why, my friend, but in
+this city thoughtfulness seemed to be sliding into melancholy or
+rather dulness.&nbsp; The fire of fancy, which had been kept
+alive in the country, was almost extinguished by reflections on
+the ills that harass such a large portion of mankind.&nbsp; I
+felt like a bird fluttering on the ground unable to mount, yet
+unwilling to crawl tranquilly like a reptile, whilst still
+conscious it had wings.</p>
+<p>I walked out, for the open air is always my remedy when an
+aching head proceeds from an oppressed heart.&nbsp; Chance
+directed my steps towards the fortress, and the sight of the
+slaves, working with chains on their legs, only served to
+embitter me still more against the regulations of society, which
+treated knaves in such a different manner, especially as there
+was a degree of energy in some of their countenances which
+unavoidably excited my attention, and almost created respect.</p>
+<p>I wished to have seen, through an iron grate, the face of a
+man who has been confined six years for having induced the
+farmers to revolt against some impositions of the
+Government.&nbsp; I could not obtain a clear account of the
+affair, yet, as the complaint was against some farmers of taxes,
+I am inclined to believe that it was not totally without
+foundation.&nbsp; He must have possessed some eloquence, or have
+had truth on his side; for the farmers rose by hundreds to
+support him, and were very much exasperated at his imprisonment,
+which will probably last for life, though he has sent several
+very spirited remonstrances to the upper court, which makes the
+judges so averse to giving a sentence which may be cavilled at,
+that they take advantage of the glorious uncertainty of the law,
+to protract a decision which is only to be regulated by reasons
+of state.</p>
+<p>The greater number of the slaves I saw here were not confined
+for life.&nbsp; Their labour is not hard; and they work in the
+open air, which prevents their constitutions from suffering by
+imprisonment.&nbsp; Still, as they are allowed to associate
+together, and boast of their dexterity, not only to each other
+but to the soldiers around them, in the garrison; they commonly,
+it is natural to conclude, go out more confirmed and more expert
+knaves than when they entered.</p>
+<p>It is not necessary to trace the origin of the association of
+ideas which led me to think that the stars and gold keys, which
+surrounded me the evening before, disgraced the wearers as much
+as the fetters I was viewing&mdash;perhaps more.&nbsp; I even
+began to investigate the reason, which led me to suspect that the
+former produced the latter.</p>
+<p>The Norwegians are extravagantly fond of courtly distinction,
+and of titles, though they have no immunities annexed to them,
+and are easily purchased.&nbsp; The proprietors of mines have
+many privileges: they are almost exempt from taxes, and the
+peasantry born on their estates, as well as those on the
+counts&rsquo;, are not born soldiers or sailors.</p>
+<p>One distinction, or rather trophy of nobility, which might
+have occurred to the Hottentots, amused me; it was a bunch of
+hog&rsquo;s bristles placed on the horses&rsquo; heads,
+surmounting that part of the harness to which a round piece of
+brass often dangles, fatiguing the eye with its idle motion.</p>
+<p>From the fortress I returned to my lodging, and quickly was
+taken out of town to be shown a pretty villa, and English
+garden.&nbsp; To a Norwegian both might have been objects of
+curiosity; and of use, by exciting to the comparison which leads
+to improvement.&nbsp; But whilst I gazed, I was employed in
+restoring the place to nature, or taste, by giving it the
+character of the surrounding scene.&nbsp; Serpentine walks, and
+flowering-shrubs, looked trifling in a grand recess of the rocks,
+shaded by towering pines.&nbsp; Groves of smaller trees might
+have been sheltered under them, which would have melted into the
+landscape, displaying only the art which ought to point out the
+vicinity of a human abode, furnished with some elegance.&nbsp;
+But few people have sufficient taste to discern, that the art of
+embellishing consists in interesting, not in astonishing.</p>
+<p>Christiania is certainly very pleasantly situated, and the
+environs I passed through, during this ride, afforded many fine
+and cultivated prospects; but, excepting the first view
+approaching to it, rarely present any combination of objects so
+strikingly new, or picturesque, as to command remembrance.&nbsp;
+Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XIV.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Christiania is a clean, neat city; but it has none of the
+graces of architecture, which ought to keep pace with the
+refining manners of a people&mdash;or the outside of the house
+will disgrace the inside, giving the beholder an idea of
+overgrown wealth devoid of taste.&nbsp; Large square wooden
+houses offend the eye, displaying more than Gothic
+barbarism.&nbsp; Huge Gothic piles, indeed, exhibit a
+characteristic sublimity, and a wildness of fancy peculiar to the
+period when they were erected; but size, without grandeur or
+elegance, has an emphatical stamp of meanness, of poverty of
+conception, which only a commercial spirit could give.</p>
+<p>The same thought has struck me, when I have entered the
+meeting-house of my respected friend, Dr. Price.&nbsp; I am
+surprised that the dissenters, who have not laid aside all the
+pomps and vanities of life, should imagine a noble pillar, or
+arch, unhallowed.&nbsp; Whilst men have senses, whatever soothes
+them lends wings to devotion; else why do the beauties of nature,
+where all that charm them are spread around with a lavish hand,
+force even the sorrowing heart to acknowledge that existence is a
+blessing? and this acknowledgment is the most sublime homage we
+can pay to the Deity.</p>
+<p>The argument of convenience is absurd.&nbsp; Who would labour
+for wealth, if it were to procure nothing but conveniences.&nbsp;
+If we wish to render mankind moral from principle, we must, I am
+persuaded, give a greater scope to the enjoyments of the senses
+by blending taste with them.&nbsp; This has frequently occurred
+to me since I have been in the north, and observed that there
+sanguine characters always take refuge in drunkenness after the
+fire of youth is spent.</p>
+<p>But I have flown from Norway.&nbsp; To go back to the wooden
+houses; farms constructed with logs, and even little villages,
+here erected in the same simple manner, have appeared to me very
+picturesque.&nbsp; In the more remote parts I had been
+particularly pleased with many cottages situated close to a
+brook, or bordering on a lake, with the whole farm
+contiguous.&nbsp; As the family increases, a little more land is
+cultivated; thus the country is obviously enriched by
+population.&nbsp; Formerly the farmers might more justly have
+been termed woodcutters.&nbsp; But now they find it necessary to
+spare the woods a little, and this change will be universally
+beneficial; for whilst they lived entirely by selling the trees
+they felled, they did not pay sufficient attention to husbandry;
+consequently, advanced very slowly in agricultural
+knowledge.&nbsp; Necessity will in future more and more spur them
+on; for the ground, cleared of wood, must be cultivated, or the
+farm loses its value; there is no waiting for food till another
+generation of pines be grown to maturity.</p>
+<p>The people of property are very careful of their timber; and,
+rambling through a forest near Tonsberg, belonging to the Count,
+I have stopped to admire the appearance of some of the cottages
+inhabited by a woodman&rsquo;s family&mdash;a man employed to cut
+down the wood necessary for the household and the estate.&nbsp; A
+little lawn was cleared, on which several lofty trees were left
+which nature had grouped, whilst the encircling firs sported with
+wild grace.&nbsp; The dwelling was sheltered by the forest, noble
+pines spreading their branches over the roof; and before the door
+a cow, goat, nag, and children, seemed equally content with their
+lot; and if contentment be all we can attain, it is, perhaps,
+best secured by ignorance.</p>
+<p>As I have been most delighted with the country parts of
+Norway, I was sorry to leave Christiania without going farther to
+the north, though the advancing season admonished me to depart,
+as well as the calls of business and affection.</p>
+<p>June and July are the months to make a tour through Norway;
+for then the evenings and nights are the finest I have ever seen;
+but towards the middle or latter end of August the clouds begin
+to gather, and summer disappears almost before it has ripened the
+fruit of autumn&mdash;even, as it were, slips from your embraces,
+whilst the satisfied senses seem to rest in enjoyment.</p>
+<p>You will ask, perhaps, why I wished to go farther
+northward.&nbsp; Why? not only because the country, from all I
+can gather, is most romantic, abounding in forests and lakes, and
+the air pure, but I have heard much of the intelligence of the
+inhabitants, substantial farmers, who have none of that cunning
+to contaminate their simplicity, which displeased me so much in
+the conduct of the people on the sea coast.&nbsp; A man who has
+been detected in any dishonest act can no longer live among
+them.&nbsp; He is universally shunned, and shame becomes the
+severest punishment.</p>
+<p>Such a contempt have they, in fact, for every species of
+fraud, that they will not allow the people on the western coast
+to be their countrymen; so much do they despise the arts for
+which those traders who live on the rocks are notorious.</p>
+<p>The description I received of them carried me back to the
+fables of the golden age: independence and virtue; affluence
+without vice; cultivation of mind, without depravity of heart;
+with &ldquo;ever smiling Liberty;&rdquo; the nymph of the
+mountain.&nbsp; I want faith!</p>
+<p>My imagination hurries me forward to seek an asylum in such a
+retreat from all the disappointments I am threatened with; but
+reason drags me back, whispering that the world is still the
+world, and man the same compound of weakness and folly, who must
+occasionally excite love and disgust, admiration and
+contempt.&nbsp; But this description, though it seems to have
+been sketched by a fairy pencil, was given me by a man of sound
+understanding, whose fancy seldom appears to run away with
+him.</p>
+<p>A law in Norway, termed the <i>odels right</i>, has lately
+been modified, and probably will be abolished as an impediment to
+commerce.&nbsp; The heir of an estate had the power of
+re-purchasing it at the original purchase money, making allowance
+for such improvements as were absolutely necessary, during the
+space of twenty years.&nbsp; At present ten is the term allowed
+for afterthought; and when the regulation was made, all the men
+of abilities were invited to give their opinion whether it were
+better to abrogate or modify it.&nbsp; It is certainly a
+convenient and safe way of mortgaging land; yet the most rational
+men whom I conversed with on the subject seemed convinced that
+the right was more injurious than beneficial to society; still if
+it contribute to keep the farms in the farmers&rsquo; own hands,
+I should be sorry to hear that it were abolished.</p>
+<p>The aristocracy in Norway, if we keep clear of Christiania, is
+far from being formidable; and it will require a long time to
+enable the merchants to attain a sufficient moneyed interest to
+induce them to reinforce the upper class at the expense of the
+yeomanry, with whom they are usually connected.</p>
+<p>England and America owe their liberty to commerce, which
+created new species of power to undermine the feudal
+system.&nbsp; But let them beware of the consequence; the tyranny
+of wealth is still more galling and debasing than that of
+rank.</p>
+<p>Farewell!&nbsp; I must prepare for my departure.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XV.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I left Christiania yesterday.&nbsp; The weather was not very
+fine, and having been a little delayed on the road, I found that
+it was too late to go round, a couple of miles, to see the
+cascade near Fredericstadt, which I had determined to
+visit.&nbsp; Besides, as Fredericstadt is a fortress, it was
+necessary to arrive there before they shut the gate.</p>
+<p>The road along the river is very romantic, though the views
+are not grand; and the riches of Norway, its timber, floats
+silently down the stream, often impeded in its course by islands
+and little cataracts, the offspring, as it were, of the great one
+I had frequently heard described.</p>
+<p>I found an excellent inn at Fredericstadt, and was gratified
+by the kind attention of the hostess, who, perceiving that my
+clothes were wet, took great pains procure me, as a stranger,
+every comfort for the night.</p>
+<p>It had rained very hard, and we passed the ferry in the dark
+without getting out of our carriage, which I think wrong, as the
+horses are sometimes unruly.&nbsp; Fatigue and melancholy,
+however, had made me regardless whether I went down or across the
+stream, and I did not know that I was wet before the hostess
+marked it.&nbsp; My imagination has never yet severed me from my
+griefs, and my mind has seldom been so free as to allow my body
+to be delicate.</p>
+<p>How I am altered by disappointment!&nbsp; When going to
+Lisbon, the elasticity of my mind was sufficient to ward off
+weariness, and my imagination still could dip her brush in the
+rainbow of fancy, and sketch futurity in glowing colours.&nbsp;
+Now&mdash;but let me talk of something else&mdash;will you go
+with me to the cascade?</p>
+<p>The cross road to it was rugged and dreary; and though a
+considerable extent of land was cultivated on all sides, yet the
+rocks were entirely bare, which surprised me, as they were more
+on a level with the surface than any I had yet seen.&nbsp; On
+inquiry, however, I learnt that some years since a forest had
+been burnt.&nbsp; This appearance of desolation was beyond
+measure gloomy, inspiring emotions that sterility had never
+produced.&nbsp; Fires of this kind are occasioned by the wind
+suddenly rising when the farmers are burning roots of trees,
+stalks of beans, &amp;c., with which they manure the ground.&nbsp;
+The devastation must, indeed, be terrible, when this, literally
+speaking, wildfire, runs along the forest, flying from top to
+top, and crackling amongst the branches.&nbsp; The soil, as well
+as the trees, is swept away by the destructive torrent; and the
+country, despoiled of beauty and riches, is left to mourn for
+ages.</p>
+<p>Admiring, as I do, these noble forests, which seem to bid
+defiance to time, I looked with pain on the ridge of rocks that
+stretched far beyond my eye, formerly crowned with the most
+beautiful verdure.</p>
+<p>I have often mentioned the grandeur, but I feel myself unequal
+to the task of conveying an idea of the beauty and elegance of
+the scene when the spiry tops of the pines are loaded with
+ripening seed, and the sun gives a glow to their light-green
+tinge, which is changing into purple, one tree more or less
+advanced contrasted with another.&nbsp; The profusion with which
+Nature has decked them with pendant honours, prevents all
+surprise at seeing in every crevice some sapling struggling for
+existence.&nbsp; Vast masses of stone are thus encircled, and
+roots torn up by the storms become a shelter for a young
+generation.&nbsp; The pine and fir woods, left entirely to
+Nature, display an endless variety; and the paths in the woods
+are not entangled with fallen leaves, which are only interesting
+whilst they are fluttering between life and death.&nbsp; The grey
+cobweb-like appearance of the aged pines is a much finer image of
+decay; the fibres whitening as they lose their moisture,
+imprisoned life seems to be stealing away.&nbsp; I cannot tell
+why, but death, under every form, appears to me like something
+getting free to expand in I know not what element&mdash;nay, I
+feel that this conscious being must be as unfettered, have the
+wings of thought, before it can be happy.</p>
+<p>Reaching the cascade, or rather cataract, the roaring of which
+had a long time announced its vicinity, my soul was hurried by
+the falls into a new train of reflections.&nbsp; The impetuous
+dashing of the rebounding torrent from the dark cavities which
+mocked the exploring eye produced an equal activity in my
+mind.&nbsp; My thoughts darted from earth to heaven, and I asked
+myself why I was chained to life and its misery.&nbsp; Still the
+tumultuous emotions this sublime object excited were pleasurable;
+and, viewing it, my soul rose with renewed dignity above its
+cares.&nbsp; Grasping at immortality&mdash;it seemed as
+impossible to stop the current of my thoughts, as of the always
+varying, still the same, torrent before me; I stretched out my
+hand to eternity, bounding over the dark speck of life to
+come.</p>
+<p>We turned with regret from the cascade.&nbsp; On a little
+hill, which commands the best view of it, several obelisks are
+erected to commemorate the visits of different kings.&nbsp; The
+appearance of the river above and below the falls is very
+picturesque, the ruggedness of the scenery disappearing as the
+torrent subsides into a peaceful stream.&nbsp; But I did not like
+to see a number of saw-mills crowded together close to the
+cataracts; they destroyed the harmony of the prospect.</p>
+<p>The sight of a bridge erected across a deep valley, at a
+little distance, inspired very dissimilar sensations.&nbsp; It
+was most ingeniously supported by mast-like trunks, just stripped
+of their branches; and logs, placed one across the other,
+produced an appearance equally light and firm, seeming almost to
+be built in the air when we were below it, the height taking from
+the magnitude of the supporting trees give them a slender
+graceful look.</p>
+<p>There are two noble estates in this neighbourhood, the
+proprietors of which seem to have caught more than their portion
+of the enterprising spirit that is gone abroad.&nbsp; Many
+agricultural experiments have been made, and the country appears
+better enclosed and cultivated, yet the cottages had not the
+comfortable aspect of those I had observed near Moss and to the
+westward.&nbsp; Man is always debased by servitude of any
+description, and here the peasantry are not entirely free.&nbsp;
+Adieu!</p>
+<p>I almost forgot to tell you that I did not leave Norway
+without making some inquiries after the monsters said to have
+been seen in the northern sea; but though I conversed with
+several captains, I could not meet with one who had ever heard
+any traditional description of them, much less had any ocular
+demonstration of their existence.&nbsp; Till the fact is better
+ascertained, I should think the account of them ought to be torn
+out of our geographical grammars.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XVI.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I set out from Fredericstadt about three o&rsquo;clock in the
+afternoon, and expected to reach Stromstad before the night
+closed in; but the wind dying away, the weather became so calm
+that we scarcely made any perceptible advances towards the
+opposite coast, though the men were fatigued with rowing.</p>
+<p>Getting amongst the rocks and islands as the moon rose, and
+the stars darted forward out of the clear expanse, I forgot that
+the night stole on whilst indulging affectionate reveries, the
+poetical fictions of sensibility; I was not, therefore, aware of
+the length of time we had been toiling to reach Stromstad.&nbsp;
+And when I began to look around, I did not perceive anything to
+indicate that we were in its neighbourhood.&nbsp; So far from it,
+that when I inquired of the pilot, who spoke a little English, I
+found that he was only accustomed to coast along the Norwegian
+shore; and had been only once across to Stromstad.&nbsp; But he
+had brought with him a fellow better acquainted, he assured me,
+with the rocks by which they were to steer our course, for we had
+not a compass on board; yet, as he was half a fool, I had little
+confidence in his skill.&nbsp; There was then great reason to
+fear that we had lost our way, and were straying amidst a
+labyrinth of rocks without a clue.</p>
+<p>This was something like an adventure, but not of the most
+agreeable cast; besides, I was impatient to arrive at Stromstad,
+to be able to send forward that night a boy to order horses on
+the road to be ready, for I was unwilling to remain there a day
+without having anything to detain me from my little girl, and
+from the letters which I was impatient to get from you.</p>
+<p>I began to expostulate, and even to scold the pilot, for not
+having informed me of his ignorance previous to my
+departure.&nbsp; This made him row with more force, and we turned
+round one rock only to see another, equally destitute of the
+tokens we were in search of to tell us where we were.&nbsp;
+Entering also into creek after creek which promised to be the
+entrance of the bay we were seeking, we advanced merely to find
+ourselves running aground.</p>
+<p>The solitariness of the scene, as we glided under the dark
+shadows of the rocks, pleased me for a while; but the fear of
+passing the whole night thus wandering to and fro, and losing the
+next day, roused me.&nbsp; I begged the pilot to return to one of
+the largest islands, at the side of which we had seen a boat
+moored.&nbsp; As we drew nearer, a light through a window on the
+summit became our beacon; but we were farther off than I
+supposed.</p>
+<p>With some difficulty the pilot got on shore, not
+distinguishing the landing-place; and I remained in the boat,
+knowing that all the relief we could expect was a man to direct
+us.&nbsp; After waiting some time, for there is an insensibility
+in the very movements of these people that would weary more than
+ordinary patience, he brought with him a man who, assisting them
+to row, we landed at Stromstad a little after one in the
+morning.</p>
+<p>It was too late to send off a boy, but I did not go to bed
+before I had made the arrangements necessary to enable me to set
+out as early as possible.</p>
+<p>The sun rose with splendour.&nbsp; My mind was too active to
+allow me to loiter long in bed, though the horses did not arrive
+till between seven and eight.&nbsp; However, as I wished to let
+the boy, who went forward to order the horses, get considerably
+the start of me, I bridled in my impatience.</p>
+<p>This precaution was unavailing, for after the three first
+posts I had to wait two hours, whilst the people at the
+post-house went, fair and softly, to the farm, to bid them bring
+up the horses which were carrying in the first-fruits of the
+harvest.&nbsp; I discovered here that these sluggish peasants had
+their share of cunning.&nbsp; Though they had made me pay for a
+horse, the boy had gone on foot, and only arrived half an hour
+before me.&nbsp; This disconcerted the whole arrangement of the
+day; and being detained again three hours, I reluctantly
+determined to sleep at Quistram, two posts short of Uddervalla,
+where I had hoped to have arrived that night.</p>
+<p>But when I reached Quistram I found I could not approach the
+door of the inn for men, horses, and carts, cows, and pigs
+huddled together.&nbsp; From the concourse of people I had met on
+the road I conjectured that there was a fair in the
+neighbourhood; this crowd convinced me that it was but too
+true.&nbsp; The boisterous merriment that almost every instant
+produced a quarrel, or made me dread one, with the clouds of
+tobacco, and fumes of brandy, gave an infernal appearance to the
+scene.&nbsp; There was everything to drive me back, nothing to
+excite sympathy in a rude tumult of the senses, which I foresaw
+would end in a gross debauch.&nbsp; What was to be done?&nbsp; No
+bed was to be had, or even a quiet corner to retire to for a
+moment; all was lost in noise, riot, and confusion.</p>
+<p>After some debating they promised me horses, which were to go
+on to Uddervalla, two stages.&nbsp; I requested something to eat
+first, not having dined; and the hostess, whom I have mentioned
+to you before as knowing how to take care of herself, brought me
+a plate of fish, for which she charged a rix-dollar and a
+half.&nbsp; This was making hay whilst the sun shone.&nbsp; I was
+glad to get out of the uproar, though not disposed to travel in
+an incommodious open carriage all night, had I thought that there
+was any chance of getting horses.</p>
+<p>Quitting Quistram I met a number of joyous groups, and though
+the evening was fresh many were stretched on the grass like weary
+cattle; and drunken men had fallen by the road-side.&nbsp; On a
+rock, under the shade of lofty trees, a large party of men and
+women had lighted a fire, cutting down fuel around to keep it
+alive all night.&nbsp; They were drinking, smoking, and laughing
+with all their might and main.&nbsp; I felt for the trees whose
+torn branches strewed the ground.&nbsp; Hapless nymphs! your
+haunts, I fear, were polluted by many an unhallowed flame, the
+casual burst of the moment!</p>
+<p>The horses went on very well; but when we drew near the
+post-house the postillion stopped short and neither threats nor
+promises could prevail on him to go forward.&nbsp; He even began
+to howl and weep when I insisted on his keeping his word.&nbsp;
+Nothing, indeed, can equal the stupid obstinacy of some of these
+half-alive beings, who seem to have been made by Prometheus when
+the fire he stole from Heaven was so exhausted that he could only
+spare a spark to give life, not animation, to the inert clay.</p>
+<p>It was some time before we could rouse anybody; and, as I
+expected, horses, we were told, could not be had in less than
+four or five hours.&nbsp; I again attempted to bribe the churlish
+brute who brought us there, but I discovered that, in spite of
+the courteous hostess&rsquo;s promises, he had received orders
+not to go any father.</p>
+<p>As there was no remedy I entered, and was almost driven back
+by the stench&mdash;a softer phrase would not have conveyed an
+idea of the hot vapour that issued from an apartment in which
+some eight or ten people were sleeping, not to reckon the cats
+and dogs stretched on the floor.&nbsp; Two or three of the men or
+women were on the benches, others on old chests; and one figure
+started half out of a trunk to look at me, whom might have taken
+for a ghost, had the chemise been white, to contrast with the
+sallow visage.&nbsp; But the costume of apparitions not being
+preserved I passed, nothing dreading, excepting the effluvia,
+warily amongst the pots, pans, milk-pails, and
+washing-tubs.&nbsp; After scaling a ruinous staircase I was shown
+a bed-chamber.&nbsp; The bed did not invite me to enter; opening,
+therefore, the window, and taking some clean towels out of my
+night-sack, I spread them over the coverlid, on which tired
+Nature found repose, in spite of the previous disgust.</p>
+<p>With the grey of the morn the birds awoke me; and descending
+to inquire for the horses, I hastened through the apartment I
+have already described, not wishing to associate the idea of a
+pigstye with that of a human dwelling.</p>
+<p>I do not now wonder that the girls lose their fine complexions
+at such an early age, or that love here is merely an appetite to
+fulfil the main design of Nature, never enlivened by either
+affection or sentiment.</p>
+<p>For a few posts we found the horses waiting; but afterwards I
+was retarded, as before, by the peasants, who, taking advantage
+of my ignorance of the language, made me pay for the fourth horse
+that ought to have gone forward to have the others in readiness,
+though it had never been sent.&nbsp; I was particularly impatient
+at the last post, as I longed to assure myself that my child was
+well.</p>
+<p>My impatience, however, did not prevent my enjoying the
+journey.&nbsp; I had six weeks before passed over the same
+ground; still it had sufficient novelty to attract my attention,
+and beguile, if not banish, the sorrow that had taken up its
+abode in my heart.&nbsp; How interesting are the varied beauties
+of Nature, and what peculiar charms characterise each
+season!&nbsp; The purple hue which the heath now assumed gave it
+a degree of richness that almost exceeded the lustre of the young
+green of spring, and harmonised exquisitely with the rays of the
+ripening corn.&nbsp; The weather was uninterruptedly fine, and
+the people busy in the fields cutting down the corn, or binding
+up the sheaves, continually varied the prospect.&nbsp; The rocks,
+it is true, were unusually rugged and dreary; yet as the road
+runs for a considerable way by the side of a fine river, with
+extended pastures on the other side, the image of sterility was
+not the predominant object, though the cottages looked still more
+miserable, after having seen the Norwegian farms.&nbsp; The trees
+likewise appeared of me growth of yesterday, compared with those
+Nestors of the forest I have frequently mentioned.&nbsp; The
+women and children were cutting off branches from the beech,
+birch, oak, &amp;c., and leaving them to dry.&nbsp; This way of
+helping out their fodder injures the trees.&nbsp; But the winters
+are so long that the poor cannot afford to lay in a sufficient
+stock of hay.&nbsp; By such means they just keep life in the poor
+cows, for little milk can be expected when they are so miserably
+fed.</p>
+<p>It was Saturday, and the evening was uncommonly serene.&nbsp;
+In the villages I everywhere saw preparations for Sunday; and I
+passed by a little car loaded with rye, that presented, for the
+pencil and heart, the sweetest picture of a harvest home I had
+ever beheld.&nbsp; A little girl was mounted a-straddle on a
+shaggy horse, brandishing a stick over its head; the father was
+walking at the side of the car with a child in his arms, who must
+have come to meet him with tottering steps; the little creature
+was stretching out its arms to cling round his neck; and a boy,
+just above petticoats, was labouring hard with a fork behind to
+keep the sheaves from falling.</p>
+<p>My eyes followed them to the cottage, and an involuntary sigh
+whispered to my heart that I envied the mother, much as I dislike
+cooking, who was preparing their pottage.&nbsp; I was returning
+to my babe, who may never experience a father&rsquo;s care or
+tenderness.&nbsp; The bosom that nurtured her heaved with a pang
+at the thought which only an unhappy mother could feel.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XVII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I was unwilling to leave Gothenburg without visiting
+Trolh&aelig;tt&aelig;.&nbsp; I wished not only to see the
+cascade, but to observe the progress of the stupendous attempt to
+form a canal through the rocks, to the extent of an English mile
+and a half.</p>
+<p>This work is carried on by a company, who employ daily nine
+hundred men; five years was the time mentioned in the proposals
+addressed to the public as necessary for the completion.&nbsp; A
+much more considerable sum than the plan requires has been
+subscribed, for which there is every reason to suppose the
+promoters will receive ample interest.</p>
+<p>The Danes survey the progress of this work with a jealous eye,
+as it is principally undertaken to get clear of the Sound
+duty.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Trolh&aelig;tt&aelig;, I must own that the first
+view of the cascade disappointed me; and the sight of the works,
+as they advanced, though a grand proof of human industry, was not
+calculated to warm the fancy.&nbsp; I, however, wandered about;
+and at last coming to the conflux of the various cataracts
+rushing from different falls, struggling with the huge masses of
+rock, and rebounding from the profound cavities, I immediately
+retracted, acknowledging that it was indeed a grand object.&nbsp;
+A little island stood in the midst, covered with firs, which, by
+dividing the torrent, rendered it more picturesque; one half
+appearing to issue from a dark cavern, that fancy might easily
+imagine a vast fountain throwing up its waters from the very
+centre of the earth.</p>
+<p>I gazed I know not how long, stunned with the noise, and
+growing giddy with only looking at the never-ceasing tumultuous
+motion, I listened, scarcely conscious where I was, when I
+observed a boy, half obscured by the sparkling foam, fishing
+under the impending rock on the other side.&nbsp; How he had
+descended I could not perceive; nothing like human footsteps
+appeared, and the horrific crags seemed to bid defiance even to
+the goat&rsquo;s activity.&nbsp; It looked like an abode only fit
+for the eagle, though in its crevices some pines darted up their
+spiral heads; but they only grew near the cascade, everywhere
+else sterility itself reigned with dreary grandeur; for the huge
+grey massy rocks, which probably had been torn asunder by some
+dreadful convulsion of nature, had not even their first covering
+of a little cleaving moss.&nbsp; There were so many appearances
+to excite the idea of chaos, that, instead of admiring the canal
+and the works, great as they are termed, and little as they
+appear, I could not help regretting that such a noble scene had
+not been left in all its solitary sublimity.&nbsp; Amidst the
+awful roaring of the impetuous torrents, the noise of human
+instruments and the bustle of workmen, even the blowing up of the
+rocks when grand masses trembled in the darkened air, only
+resembled the insignificant sport of children.</p>
+<p>One fall of water, partly made by art, when they were
+attempting to construct sluices, had an uncommonly grand effect;
+the water precipitated itself with immense velocity down a
+perpendicular, at least fifty or sixty yards, into a gulf, so
+concealed by the foam as to give full play to the fancy.&nbsp;
+There was a continual uproar.&nbsp; I stood on a rock to observe
+it, a kind of bridge formed by nature, nearly on a level with the
+commencement of the fall.&nbsp; After musing by it a long time I
+turned towards the other side, and saw a gentle stream stray
+calmly out.&nbsp; I should have concluded that it had no
+communication with the torrent had I not seen a huge log that
+fell headlong down the cascade steal peacefully into the purling
+stream.</p>
+<p>I retired from these wild scenes with regret to a miserable
+inn, and next morning returned to Gothenburg, to prepare for my
+journey to Copenhagen.</p>
+<p>I was sorry to leave Gothenburg without travelling farther
+into Sweden, yet I imagine I should only have seen a romantic
+country thinly inhabited, and these inhabitants struggling with
+poverty.&nbsp; The Norwegian peasantry, mostly independent, have
+a rough kind of frankness in their manner; but the Swedish,
+rendered more abject by misery, have a degree of politeness in
+their address which, though it may sometimes border on
+insincerity, is oftener the effect of a broken spirit, rather
+softened than degraded by wretchedness.</p>
+<p>In Norway there are no notes in circulation of less value than
+a Swedish rix-dollar.&nbsp; A small silver coin, commonly not
+worth more than a penny, and never more than twopence, serves for
+change; but in Sweden they have notes as low as sixpence.&nbsp; I
+never saw any silver pieces there, and could not without
+difficulty, and giving a premium, obtain the value of a
+rix-dollar in a large copper coin to give away on the road to the
+poor who open the gates.</p>
+<p>As another proof of the poverty of Sweden, I ought to mention
+that foreign merchants who have acquired a fortune there are
+obliged to deposit the sixth part when they leave the
+kingdom.&nbsp; This law, you may suppose, is frequently
+evaded.</p>
+<p>In fact, the laws here, as well as in Norway, are so relaxed
+that they rather favour than restrain knavery.</p>
+<p>Whilst I was at Gothenburg, a man who had been confined for
+breaking open his master&rsquo;s desk and running away with five
+or six thousand rix-dollars, was only sentenced to forty
+days&rsquo; confinement on bread and water; and this slight
+punishment his relations rendered nugatory by supplying him with
+more savoury food.</p>
+<p>The Swedes are in general attached to their families, yet a
+divorce may be obtained by either party on proving the infidelity
+of the other or acknowledging it themselves.&nbsp; The women do
+not often recur to this equal privilege, for they either
+retaliate on their husbands by following their own devices or
+sink into the merest domestic drudges, worn down by tyranny to
+servile submission.&nbsp; Do not term me severe if I add, that
+after youth is flown the husband becomes a sot, and the wife
+amuses herself by scolding her servants.&nbsp; In fact, what is
+to be expected in any country where taste and cultivation of mind
+do not supply the place of youthful beauty and animal
+spirits?&nbsp; Affection requires a firmer foundation than
+sympathy, and few people have a principle of action sufficiently
+stable to produce rectitude of feeling; for in spite of all the
+arguments I have heard to justify deviations from duty, I am
+persuaded that even the most spontaneous sensations are more
+under the direction of principle than weak people are willing to
+allow.</p>
+<p>But adieu to moralising.&nbsp; I have been writing these last
+sheets at an inn in Elsineur, where I am waiting for horses; and
+as they are not yet ready, I will give you a short account of my
+journey from Gothenburg, for I set out the morning after I
+returned from Trolh&aelig;tt&aelig;.</p>
+<p>The country during the first day&rsquo;s journey presented a
+most barren appearance, as rocky, yet not so picturesque as
+Norway, because on a diminutive scale.&nbsp; We stopped to sleep
+at a tolerable inn in Falckersberg, a decent little town.</p>
+<p>The next day beeches and oaks began to grace the prospects,
+the sea every now and then appearing to give them dignity.&nbsp;
+I could not avoid observing also, that even in this part of
+Sweden, one of the most sterile, as I was informed, there was
+more ground under cultivation than in Norway.&nbsp; Plains of
+varied crops stretched out to a considerable extent, and sloped
+down to the shore, no longer terrific.&nbsp; And, as far as I
+could judge, from glancing my eye over the country as we drove
+along, agriculture was in a more advanced state, though in the
+habitations a greater appearance of poverty still remained.&nbsp;
+The cottages, indeed, often looked most uncomfortable, but never
+so miserable as those I had remarked on the road to Stromstad,
+and the towns were equal, if not superior, to many of the little
+towns in Wales, or some I have passed through in my way from
+Calais to Paris.</p>
+<p>The inns as we advanced were not to be complained of, unless I
+had always thought of England.&nbsp; The people were civil, and
+much more moderate in their demands than the Norwegians,
+particularly to the westward, where they boldly charge for what
+you never had, and seem to consider you, as they do a wreck, if
+not as lawful prey, yet as a lucky chance, which they ought not
+to neglect to seize.</p>
+<p>The prospect of Elsineur, as we passed the Sound, was
+pleasant.&nbsp; I gave three rix-dollars for my boat, including
+something to drink.&nbsp; I mention the sum, because they impose
+on strangers.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Adieu! till I arrive at
+Copenhagen.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XVIII.&mdash;COPENHAGEN.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The distance from Elsineur to Copenhagen is twenty-two miles;
+the road is very good, over a flat country diversified with wood,
+mostly beech, and decent mansions.&nbsp; There appeared to be a
+great quantity of corn land, and the soil looked much more
+fertile than it is in general so near the sea.&nbsp; The rising
+grounds, indeed, were very few, and around Copenhagen it is a
+perfect plain; of course has nothing to recommend it but
+cultivation, not decorations.&nbsp; If I say that the houses did
+not disgust me, I tell you all I remember of them, for I cannot
+recollect any pleasurable sensations they excited, or that any
+object, produced by nature or art, took me out of myself.&nbsp;
+The view of the city, as we drew near, was rather grand, but
+without any striking feature to interest the imagination,
+excepting the trees which shade the footpaths.</p>
+<p>Just before I reached Copenhagen I saw a number of tents on a
+wide plain, and supposed that the rage for encampments had
+reached this city; but I soon discovered that they were the
+asylum of many of the poor families who had been driven out of
+their habitations by the late fire.</p>
+<p>Entering soon after, I passed amongst the dust and rubbish it
+had left, affrighted by viewing the extent of the devastation,
+for at least a quarter of the city had been destroyed.&nbsp;
+There was little in the appearance of fallen bricks and stacks of
+chimneys to allure the imagination into soothing melancholy
+reveries; nothing to attract the eye of taste, but much to
+afflict the benevolent heart.&nbsp; The depredations of time have
+always something in them to employ the fancy, or lead to musing
+on subjects which, withdrawing the mind from objects of sense,
+seem to give it new dignity; but here I was treading on live
+ashes.&nbsp; The sufferers were still under the pressure of the
+misery occasioned by this dreadful conflagration.&nbsp; I could
+not take refuge in the thought: they suffered, but they are no
+more! a reflection I frequently summon to calm my mind when
+sympathy rises to anguish.&nbsp; I therefore desired the driver
+to hasten to the hotel recommended to me, that I might avert my
+eyes and snap the train of thinking which had sent me into all
+the corners of the city in search of houseless heads.</p>
+<p>This morning I have been walking round the town, till I am
+weary of observing the ravages.&nbsp; I had often heard the
+Danes, even those who had seen Paris and London, speak of
+Copenhagen with rapture.&nbsp; Certainly I have seen it in a very
+disadvantageous light, some of the best streets having been
+burnt, and the whole place thrown into confusion.&nbsp; Still the
+utmost that can, or could ever, I believe, have been said in its
+praise, might be comprised in a few words.&nbsp; The streets are
+open, and many of the houses large; but I saw nothing to rouse
+the idea of elegance or grandeur, if I except the circus where
+the king and prince royal reside.</p>
+<p>The palace, which was consumed about two years ago, must have
+been a handsome, spacious building; the stone-work is still
+standing, and a great number of the poor, during the late fire,
+took refuge in its ruins till they could find some other
+abode.&nbsp; Beds were thrown on the landing-places of the grand
+staircase, where whole families crept from the cold, and every
+little nook is boarded up as a retreat for some poor creatures
+deprived of their home.&nbsp; At present a roof may be sufficient
+to shelter them from the night air; but as the season advances,
+the extent of the calamity will be more severely felt, I fear,
+though the exertions on the part of Government are very
+considerable.&nbsp; Private charity has also, no doubt, done much
+to alleviate the misery which obtrudes itself at every turn;
+still, public spirit appears to me to be hardly alive here.&nbsp;
+Had it existed, the conflagration might have been smothered in
+the beginning, as it was at last, by tearing down several houses
+before the flames had reached them.&nbsp; To this the inhabitants
+would not consent; and the prince royal not having sufficient
+energy of character to know when he ought to be absolute, calmly
+let them pursue their own course, till the whole city seemed to
+be threatened with destruction.&nbsp; Adhering, with puerile
+scrupulosity, to the law which he has imposed on himself, of
+acting exactly right, he did wrong by idly lamenting whilst he
+marked the progress of a mischief that one decided step would
+have stopped.&nbsp; He was afterwards obliged to resort to
+violent measures; but then, who could blame him?&nbsp; And, to
+avoid censure, what sacrifices are not made by weak minds?</p>
+<p>A gentleman who was a witness of the scene assured me,
+likewise, that if the people of property had taken half as much
+pains to extinguish the fire as to preserve their valuables and
+furniture, it would soon have been got under.&nbsp; But they who
+were not immediately in danger did not exert themselves
+sufficiently, till fear, like an electrical shock, roused all the
+inhabitants to a sense of the general evil.&nbsp; Even the
+fire-engines were out of order, though the burning of the palace
+ought to have admonished them of the necessity of keeping them in
+constant repair.&nbsp; But this kind of indolence respecting what
+does not immediately concern them seems to characterise the
+Danes.&nbsp; A sluggish concentration in themselves makes them so
+careful to preserve their property, that they will not venture on
+any enterprise to increase it in which there is a shadow of
+hazard.</p>
+<p>Considering Copenhagen as the capital of Denmark and Norway, I
+was surprised not to see so much industry or taste as in
+Christiania.&nbsp; Indeed, from everything I have had an
+opportunity of observing, the Danes are the people who have made
+the fewest sacrifices to the graces.</p>
+<p>The men of business are domestic tyrants, coldly immersed in
+their own affairs, and so ignorant of the state of other
+countries, that they dogmatically assert that Denmark is the
+happiest country in the world; the Prince Royal the best of all
+possible princes; and Count Bernstorff the wisest of
+ministers.</p>
+<p>As for the women, they are simply notable housewives; without
+accomplishments or any of the charms that adorn more advanced
+social life.&nbsp; This total ignorance may enable them to save
+something in their kitchens, but it is far from rendering them
+better parents.&nbsp; On the contrary, the children are spoiled,
+as they usually are when left to the care of weak, indulgent
+mothers, who having no principle of action to regulate their
+feelings, become the slaves of infants, enfeebling both body and
+mind by false tenderness.</p>
+<p>I am, perhaps, a little prejudiced, as I write from the
+impression of the moment; for I have been tormented to-day by the
+presence of unruly children, and made angry by some invectives
+thrown out against the maternal character of the unfortunate
+Matilda.&nbsp; She was censured, with the most cruel insinuation,
+for her management of her son, though, from what I could gather,
+she gave proofs of good sense as well as tenderness in her
+attention to him.&nbsp; She used to bathe him herself every
+morning; insisted on his being loosely clad; and would not permit
+his attendants to injure his digestion by humouring his
+appetite.&nbsp; She was equally careful to prevent his acquiring
+haughty airs, and playing the tyrant in leading-strings.&nbsp;
+The Queen Dowager would not permit her to suckle him; but the
+next child being a daughter, and not the Heir-Apparent of the
+Crown, less opposition was made to her discharging the duty of a
+mother.</p>
+<p>Poor Matilda! thou hast haunted me ever since may arrival; and
+the view I have had of the manners of the country, exciting my
+sympathy, has increased my respect for thy memory.</p>
+<p>I am now fully convinced that she was the victim of the party
+she displaced, who would have overlooked or encouraged her
+attachment, had not her lover, aiming at being useful, attempted
+to overturn some established abuses before the people, ripe for
+the change, had sufficient spirit to support him when struggling
+in their behalf.&nbsp; Such indeed was the asperity sharpened
+against her that I have heard her, even after so many years have
+elapsed, charged with licentiousness, not only for endeavouring
+to render the public amusements more elegant, but for her very
+charities, because she erected, amongst other institutions, a
+hospital to receive foundlings.&nbsp; Disgusted with many customs
+which pass for virtues, though they are nothing more than
+observances of forms, often at the expense of truth, she probably
+ran into an error common to innovators, in wishing to do
+immediately what can only be done by time.</p>
+<p>Many very cogent reasons have been urged by her friends to
+prove that her affection for Struensee was never carried to the
+length alleged against her by those who feared her
+influence.&nbsp; Be that as it may she certainly was no a woman
+of gallantry, and if she had an attachment for him it did not
+disgrace her heart or understanding, the king being a notorious
+debauchee and an idiot into the bargain.&nbsp; As the
+king&rsquo;s conduct had always been directed by some favourite,
+they also endeavoured to govern him, from a principle of
+self-preservation as well as a laudable ambition; but, not aware
+of the prejudices they had to encounter, the system they adopted
+displayed more benevolence of heart than soundness of
+judgment.&nbsp; As to the charge, still believed, of their giving
+the King drugs to injure his faculties, it is too absurd to be
+refuted.&nbsp; Their oppressors had better have accused them of
+dabbling in the black art, for the potent spell still keeps his
+wits in bondage.</p>
+<p>I cannot describe to you the effect it had on me to see this
+puppet of a monarch moved by the strings which Count Bernstorff
+holds fast; sit, with vacant eye, erect, receiving the homage of
+courtiers who mock him with a show of respect.&nbsp; He is, in
+fact, merely a machine of state, to subscribe the name of a king
+to the acts of the Government, which, to avoid danger, have no
+value unless countersigned by the Prince Royal; for he is allowed
+to be absolutely an idiot, excepting that now and then an
+observation or trick escapes him, which looks more like madness
+than imbecility.</p>
+<p>What a farce is life.&nbsp; This effigy of majesty is allowed
+to burn down to the socket, whilst the hapless Matilda was
+hurried into an untimely grave.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;As flies to wanton boys, are we to the
+gods;<br />
+They kill us for their sport.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: right">Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XIX.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Business having obliged me to go a few miles out of town this
+morning I was surprised at meeting a crowd of people of every
+description, and inquiring the cause of a servant, who spoke
+French, I was informed that a man had been executed two hours
+before, and the body afterwards burnt.&nbsp; I could not help
+looking with horror around&mdash;the fields lost their
+verdure&mdash;and I turned with disgust from the well-dressed
+women who were returning with their children from this
+sight.&nbsp; What a spectacle for humanity!&nbsp; The seeing such
+a flock of idle gazers plunged me into a train of reflections on
+the pernicious effects produced by false notions of
+justice.&nbsp; And I am persuaded that till capital punishments
+are entirely abolished executions ought to have every appearance
+of horror given to them, instead of being, as they are now, a
+scene of amusement for the gaping crowd, where sympathy is
+quickly effaced by curiosity.</p>
+<p>I have always been of opinion that the allowing actors to die
+in the presence of the audience has an immoral tendency, but
+trifling when compared with the ferocity acquired by viewing the
+reality as a show; for it seems to me that in all countries the
+common people go to executions to see how the poor wretch plays
+his part, rather than to commiserate his fate, much less to think
+of the breach of morality which has brought him to such a
+deplorable end.&nbsp; Consequently executions, far from being
+useful examples to the survivors, have, I am persuaded, a quite
+contrary effect, by hardening the heart they ought to
+terrify.&nbsp; Besides the fear of an ignominious death, I
+believe, never deferred anyone from the commission of a crime,
+because, in committing it, the mind is roused to activity about
+present circumstances.&nbsp; It is a game at hazard, at which all
+expect the turn of the die in their own favour, never reflecting
+on the chance of ruin till it comes.&nbsp; In fact, from what I
+saw in the fortresses of Norway, I am more and more convinced
+that the same energy of character which renders a man a daring
+villain would have rendered him useful to society, had that
+society been well organised.&nbsp; When a strong mind is not
+disciplined by cultivation it is a sense of injustice that
+renders it unjust.</p>
+<p>Executions, however, occur very rarely at Copenhagen; for
+timidity, rather than clemency, palsies all the operations of the
+present Government.&nbsp; The malefactor who died this morning
+would not, probably, have been punished with death at any other
+period; but an incendiary excites universal execration; and as
+the greater part of the inhabitants are still distressed by the
+late conflagration, an example was thought absolutely necessary;
+though, from what I can gather, the fire was accidental.</p>
+<p>Not, but that I have very seriously been informed, that
+combustible materials were placed at proper distance, by the
+emissaries of Mr. Pitt; and, to corroborate the fact, many people
+insist that the flames burst out at once in different parts of
+the city; not allowing the wind to have any hand in it.&nbsp; So
+much for the plot.&nbsp; But the fabricators of plots in all
+countries build their conjectures on the &ldquo;baseless fabric
+of a vision;&rdquo; and it seems even a sort of poetical justice,
+that whilst this Minister is crushing at home plots of his own
+conjuring up, on the Continent, and in the north, he should, with
+as little foundation, be accused of wishing to set the world on
+fire.</p>
+<p>I forgot to mention to you, that I was informed, by a man of
+veracity, that two persons came to the stake to drink a glass of
+the criminal&rsquo;s blood, as an infallible remedy for the
+apoplexy.&nbsp; And when I animadverted in the company, where it
+was mentioned, on such a horrible violation of nature, a Danish
+lady reproved me very severely, asking how I knew that it was not
+a cure for the disease? adding, that every attempt was
+justifiable in search of health.&nbsp; I did not, you may
+imagine, enter into an argument with a person the slave of such a
+gross prejudice.&nbsp; And I allude to it not only as a trait of
+the ignorance of the people, but to censure the Government for
+not preventing scenes that throw an odium on the human race.</p>
+<p>Empiricism is not peculiar to Denmark; and I know no way of
+rooting it out, though it be a remnant of exploded witchcraft,
+till the acquiring a general knowledge of the component parts of
+the human frame becomes a part of public education.</p>
+<p>Since the fire, the inhabitants have been very assiduously
+employed in searching for property secreted during the confusion;
+and it is astonishing how many people, formerly termed reputable,
+had availed themselves of the common calamity to purloin what the
+flames spared.&nbsp; Others, expert at making a distinction
+without a difference, concealed what they found, not troubling
+themselves to inquire for the owners, though they scrupled to
+search for plunder anywhere, but amongst the ruins.</p>
+<p>To be honester than the laws require is by most people thought
+a work of supererogation; and to slip through the grate of the
+law has ever exercised the abilities of adventurers, who wish to
+get rich the shortest way.&nbsp; Knavery without personal danger
+is an art brought to great perfection by the statesman and
+swindler; and meaner knaves are not tardy in following their
+footsteps.</p>
+<p>It moves my gall to discover some of the commercial frauds
+practised during the present war.&nbsp; In short, under whatever
+point of view I consider society, it appears to me that an
+adoration of property is the root of all evil.&nbsp; Here it does
+not render the people enterprising, as in America, but thrifty
+and cautious.&nbsp; I never, therefore, was in a capital where
+there was so little appearance of active industry; and as for
+gaiety, I looked in vain for the sprightly gait of the
+Norwegians, who in every respect appear to me to have got the
+start of them.&nbsp; This difference I attribute to their having
+more liberty&mdash;a liberty which they think their right by
+inheritance, whilst the Danes, when they boast of their negative
+happiness, always mention it as the boon of the Prince Royal,
+under the superintending wisdom of Count Bernstorff.&nbsp;
+Vassalage is nevertheless ceasing throughout the kingdom, and
+with it will pass away that sordid avarice which every
+modification of slavery is calculated to produce.</p>
+<p>If the chief use of property be power, in the shape of the
+respect it procures, is it not among the inconsistencies of human
+nature most incomprehensible, that men should find a pleasure in
+hoarding up property which they steal from their necessities,
+even when they are convinced that it would be dangerous to
+display such an enviable superiority?&nbsp; Is not this the
+situation of serfs in every country.&nbsp; Yet a rapacity to
+accumulate money seems to become stronger in proportion as it is
+allowed to be useless.</p>
+<p>Wealth does not appear to be sought for amongst the Danes, to
+obtain the excellent luxuries of life, for a want of taste is
+very conspicuous at Copenhagen; so much so that I am not
+surprised to hear that poor Matilda offended the rigid Lutherans
+by aiming to refine their pleasures.&nbsp; The elegance which she
+wished to introduce was termed lasciviousness; yet I do not find
+that the absence of gallantry renders the wives more chaste, or
+the husbands more constant.&nbsp; Love here seems to corrupt the
+morals without polishing the manners, by banishing confidence and
+truth, the charm as well as cement of domestic life.&nbsp; A
+gentleman, who has resided in this city some time, assures me
+that he could not find language to give me an idea of the gross
+debaucheries into which the lower order of people fall; and the
+promiscuous amours of the men of the middling class with their
+female servants debase both beyond measure, weakening every
+species of family affection.</p>
+<p>I have everywhere been struck by one characteristic difference
+in the conduct of the two sexes; women, in general, are seduced
+by their superiors, and men jilted by their inferiors: rank and
+manners awe the one, and cunning and wantonness subjugate the
+other; ambition creeping into the woman&rsquo;s passion, and
+tyranny giving force to the man&rsquo;s, for most men treat their
+mistresses as kings do their favourites: <i>ergo</i> is not man
+then the tyrant of the creation?</p>
+<p>Still harping on the same subject, you will exclaim&mdash;How
+can I avoid it, when most of the struggles of an eventful life
+have been occasioned by the oppressed state of my sex?&nbsp; We
+reason deeply when we feel forcibly.</p>
+<p>But to return to the straight road of observation.&nbsp; The
+sensuality so prevalent appears to me to arise rather from
+indolence of mind and dull senses, than from an exuberance of
+life, which often fructifies the whole character when the
+vivacity of youthful spirits begins to subside into strength of
+mind.</p>
+<p>I have before mentioned that the men are domestic tyrants,
+considering them as fathers, brothers, or husbands; but there is
+a kind of interregnum between the reign of the father and husband
+which is the only period of freedom and pleasure that the women
+enjoy.&nbsp; Young people who are attached to each other, with
+the consent of their friends, exchange rings, and are permitted
+to enjoy a degree of liberty together which I have never noticed
+in any other country.&nbsp; The days of courtship are, therefore,
+prolonged till it be perfectly convenient to marry: the intimacy
+often becomes very tender; and if the lover obtain the privilege
+of a husband, it can only be termed half by stealth, because the
+family is wilfully blind.&nbsp; It happens very rarely that these
+honorary engagements are dissolved or disregarded, a stigma being
+attached to a breach of faith which is thought more disgraceful,
+if not so criminal, as the violation of the marriage-vow.</p>
+<p>Do not forget that, in my general observations, I do not
+pretend to sketch a national character, but merely to note the
+present state of morals and manners as I trace the progress of
+the world&rsquo;s improvement.&nbsp; Because, during my residence
+in different countries, my principal object has been to take such
+a dispassionate view of men as will lead me to form a just idea
+of the nature of man.&nbsp; And, to deal ingenuously with you, I
+believe I should have been less severe in the remarks I have made
+on the vanity and depravity of the French, had I travelled
+towards the north before I visited France.</p>
+<p>The interesting picture frequently drawn of the virtues of a
+rising people has, I fear, been fallacious, excepting the
+accounts of the enthusiasm which various public struggles have
+produced.&nbsp; We talk of the depravity of the French, and lay a
+stress on the old age of the nation; yet where has more virtuous
+enthusiasm been displayed than during the two last years by the
+common people of France, and in their armies?&nbsp; I am obliged
+sometimes to recollect the numberless instances which I have
+either witnessed, or heard well authenticated, to balance the
+account of horrors, alas! but too true.&nbsp; I am, therefore,
+inclined to believe that the gross vices which I have always seem
+allied with simplicity of manners, are the concomitants of
+ignorance.</p>
+<p>What, for example, has piety, under the heathen or Christian
+system, been, but a blind faith in things contrary to the
+principles of reason?&nbsp; And could poor reason make
+considerable advances when it was reckoned the highest degree of
+virtue to do violence to its dictates?&nbsp; Lutherans, preaching
+reformation, have built a reputation for sanctity on the same
+foundation as the Catholics; yet I do not perceive that a regular
+attendance on public worship, and their other observances, make
+them a whit more true in their affections, or honest in their
+private transactions.&nbsp; It seems, indeed, quite as easy to
+prevaricate with religious injunctions as human laws, when the
+exercise of their reason does not lead people to acquire
+principles for themselves to be the criterion of all those they
+receive from others.</p>
+<p>If travelling, as the completion of a liberal education, were
+to be adopted on rational grounds, the northern states ought to
+be visited before the more polished parts of Europe, to serve as
+the elements even of the knowledge of manners, only to be
+acquired by tracing the various shades in different
+countries.&nbsp; But, when visiting distant climes, a momentary
+social sympathy should not be allowed to influence the
+conclusions of the understanding, for hospitality too frequently
+leads travellers, especially those who travel in search of
+pleasure, to make a false estimate of the virtues of a nation,
+which, I am now convinced, bear an exact proportion to their
+scientific improvements.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Adieu.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XX.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I have formerly censured the French for their extreme
+attachment to theatrical exhibitions, because I thought that they
+tended to render them vain and unnatural characters; but I must
+acknowledge, especially as women of the town never appear in the
+Parisian as at our theatres, that the little saving of the week
+is more usefully expended there every Sunday than in porter or
+brandy, to intoxicate or stupify the mind.&nbsp; The common
+people of France have a great superiority over that class in
+every other country on this very score.&nbsp; It is merely the
+sobriety of the Parisians which renders their f&ecirc;tes more
+interesting, their gaiety never becoming disgusting or dangerous,
+as is always the case when liquor circulates.&nbsp; Intoxication
+is the pleasure of savages, and of all those whose employments
+rather exhaust their animal spirits than exercise their
+faculties.&nbsp; Is not this, in fact, the vice, both in England
+and the northern states of Europe, which appears to be the
+greatest impediment to general improvement?&nbsp; Drinking is
+here the principal relaxation of the men, including smoking, but
+the women are very abstemious, though they have no public
+amusements as a substitute.&nbsp; I ought to except one theatre,
+which appears more than is necessary; for when I was there it was
+not half full, and neither the ladies nor actresses displayed
+much fancy in their dress.</p>
+<p>The play was founded on the story of the &ldquo;Mock
+Doctor;&rdquo; and, from the gestures of the servants, who were
+the best actors, I should imagine contained some humour.&nbsp;
+The farce, termed ballet, was a kind of pantomime, the childish
+incidents of which were sufficient to show the state of the
+dramatic art in Denmark, and the gross taste of the
+audience.&nbsp; A magician, in the disguise of a tinker, enters a
+cottage where the women are all busy ironing, and rubs a dirty
+frying-pan against the linen.&nbsp; The women raise a
+hue-and-cry, and dance after him, rousing their husbands, who
+join in the dance, but get the start of them in the
+pursuit.&nbsp; The tinker, with the frying-pan for a shield,
+renders them immovable, and blacks their cheeks.&nbsp; Each
+laughs at the other, unconscious of his own appearance; meanwhile
+the women enter to enjoy the sport, &ldquo;the rare fun,&rdquo;
+with other incidents of the same species.</p>
+<p>The singing was much on a par with the dancing, the one as
+destitute of grace as the other of expression; but the orchestra
+was well filled, the instrumental being far superior to the vocal
+music.</p>
+<p>I have likewise visited the public library and museum, as well
+as the palace of Rosembourg.&nbsp; This palace, now deserted,
+displays a gloomy kind of grandeur throughout, for the silence of
+spacious apartments always makes itself to be felt; I at least
+feel it, and I listen for the sound of my footsteps as I have
+done at midnight to the ticking of the death-watch, encouraging a
+kind of fanciful superstition.&nbsp; Every object carried me back
+to past times, and impressed the manners of the age forcibly on
+my mind.&nbsp; In this point of view the preservation of old
+palaces and their tarnished furniture is useful, for they may be
+considered as historical documents.</p>
+<p>The vacuum left by departed greatness was everywhere
+observable, whilst the battles and processions portrayed on the
+walls told you who had here excited revelry after retiring from
+slaughter, or dismissed pageantry in search of pleasure.&nbsp; It
+seemed a vast tomb full of the shadowy phantoms of those who had
+played or toiled their hour out and sunk behind the tapestry
+which celebrated the conquests of love or war.&nbsp; Could they
+be no more&mdash;to whom my imagination thus gave life?&nbsp;
+Could the thoughts, of which there remained so many vestiges,
+have vanished quite away?&nbsp; And these beings, composed of
+such noble materials of thinking and feeling, have they only
+melted into the elements to keep in motion the grand mass of
+life?&nbsp; It cannot be!&mdash;as easily could I believe that
+the large silver lions at the top of the banqueting room thought
+and reasoned.&nbsp; But avaunt! ye waking dreams! yet I cannot
+describe the curiosities to you.</p>
+<p>There were cabinets full of baubles and gems, and swords which
+must have been wielded by giant&rsquo;s hand.&nbsp; The
+coronation ornaments wait quietly here till wanted, and the
+wardrobe exhibits the vestments which formerly graced these
+shows.&nbsp; It is a pity they do not lend them to the actors,
+instead of allowing them to perish ingloriously.</p>
+<p>I have not visited any other palace, excepting Hirsholm, the
+gardens of which are laid out with taste, and command the finest
+views the country affords.&nbsp; As they are in the modern and
+English style, I thought I was following the footsteps of
+Matilda, who wished to multiply around her the images of her
+beloved country.&nbsp; I was also gratified by the sight of a
+Norwegian landscape in miniature, which with great propriety
+makes a part of the Danish King&rsquo;s garden.&nbsp; The cottage
+is well imitated, and the whole has a pleasing effect,
+particularly so to me who love Norway&mdash;its peaceful farms
+and spacious wilds.</p>
+<p>The public library consists of a collection much larger than I
+expected to see; and it is well arranged.&nbsp; Of the value of
+the Icelandic manuscripts I could not form a judgment, though the
+alphabet of some of them amused me, by showing what immense
+labour men will submit to, in order to transmit their ideas to
+posterity.&nbsp; I have sometimes thought it a great misfortune
+for individuals to acquire a certain delicacy of sentiment, which
+often makes them weary of the common occurrences of life; yet it
+is this very delicacy of feeling and thinking which probably has
+produced most of the performances that have benefited
+mankind.&nbsp; It might with propriety, perhaps, be termed the
+malady of genius; the cause of that characteristic melancholy
+which &ldquo;grows with its growth, and strengthens with its
+strength.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There are some good pictures in the royal museum.&nbsp; Do not
+start, I am not going to trouble you with a dull catalogue, or
+stupid criticisms on masters to whom time has assigned their just
+niche in the temple of fame; had there been any by living artists
+of this country, I should have noticed them, as making a part of
+the sketches I am drawing of the present state of the
+place.&nbsp; The good pictures were mixed indiscriminately with
+the bad ones, in order to assort the frames.&nbsp; The same fault
+is conspicuous in the new splendid gallery forming at Paris;
+though it seems an obvious thought that a school for artists
+ought to be arranged in such a manner, as to show the progressive
+discoveries and improvements in the art.</p>
+<p>A collection of the dresses, arms, and implements of the
+Laplanders attracted my attention, displaying that first species
+of ingenuity which is rather a proof of patient perseverance,
+than comprehension of mind.&nbsp; The specimens of natural
+history, and curiosities of art, were likewise huddled together
+without that scientific order which alone renders them useful;
+but this may partly have been occasioned by the hasty manner in
+which they were removed from the palace when in flames.</p>
+<p>There are some respectable men of science here, but few
+literary characters, and fewer artists.&nbsp; They want
+encouragement, and will continue, I fear, from the present
+appearance of things, to languish unnoticed a long time; for
+neither the vanity of wealth, nor the enterprising spirit of
+commerce, has yet thrown a glance that way.</p>
+<p>Besides, the Prince Royal, determined to be economical, almost
+descends to parsimony; and perhaps depresses his subjects, by
+labouring not to oppress them; for his intentions always seem to
+be good&mdash;yet nothing can give a more forcible idea of the
+dulness which eats away all activity of mind, than the insipid
+routine of a court, without magnificence or elegance.</p>
+<p>The Prince, from what I can now collect, has very moderate
+abilities; yet is so well disposed, that Count Bernstorff finds
+him as tractable as he could wish; for I consider the Count as
+the real sovereign, scarcely behind the curtain; the Prince
+having none of that obstinate self-sufficiency of youth, so often
+the forerunner of decision of character.&nbsp; He and the
+Princess his wife, dine every day with the King, to save the
+expense of two tables.&nbsp; What a mummery it must be to treat
+as a king a being who has lost the majesty of man!&nbsp; But even
+Count Bernstorff&rsquo;s morality submits to this standing
+imposition; and he avails himself of it sometimes, to soften a
+refusal of his own, by saying it is the <i>will</i> of the King,
+my master, when everybody knows that he has neither will nor
+memory.&nbsp; Much the same use is made of him as, I have
+observed, some termagant wives make of their husbands; they would
+dwell on the necessity of obeying their husbands, poor passive
+souls, who never were allowed <i>to will</i>, when they wanted to
+conceal their own tyranny.</p>
+<p>A story is told here of the King&rsquo;s formerly making a dog
+counsellor of state, because when the dog, accustomed to eat at
+the royal table, snatched a piece of meat off an old
+officer&rsquo;s plate, he reproved him jocosely, saying that he,
+<i>monsieur le chien</i>, had not the privilege of dining with
+his majesty, a privilege annexed to this distinction.</p>
+<p>The burning of the palace was, in fact, a fortunate
+circumstance, as it afforded a pretext for reducing the
+establishment of the household, which was far too great for the
+revenue of the Crown.&nbsp; The Prince Royal, at present, runs
+into the opposite extreme; and the formality, if not the
+parsimony, of the court, seems to extend to all the other
+branches of society, which I had an opportunity of observing;
+though hospitality still characterises their intercourse with
+strangers.</p>
+<p>But let me now stop; I may be a little partial, and view
+everything with the jaundiced eye of melancholy&mdash;for I am
+sad&mdash;and have cause.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">God bless you!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XXI.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I have seen Count Bernstorff; and his conversation confirms me
+in the opinion I had previously formed of him; I mean, since my
+arrival at Copenhagen.&nbsp; He is a worthy man, a little vain of
+his virtue <i>&agrave; la</i> Necker; and more anxious not to do
+wrong, that is to avoid blame, than desirous of doing good;
+especially if any particular good demands a change.&nbsp;
+Prudence, in short, seems to be the basis of his character; and,
+from the tenor of the Government, I should think inclining to
+that cautious circumspection which treads on the heels of
+timidity.&nbsp; He has considerable information, and some
+finesse; or he could not be a Minister.&nbsp; Determined not to
+risk his popularity, for he is tenderly careful of his
+reputation, he will never gloriously fail like Struensee, or
+disturb, with the energy of genius, the stagnant state of the
+public mind.</p>
+<p>I suppose that Lavater, whom he invited to visit him two years
+ago&mdash;some say to fix the principles of the Christian
+religion firmly in the Prince Royal&rsquo;s mind, found lines in
+his face to prove him a statesman of the first order; because he
+has a knack at seeing a great character in the countenances of
+men in exalted stations, who have noticed him or his works.&nbsp;
+Besides, the Count&rsquo;s sentiments relative to the French
+Revolution, agreeing with Lavater&rsquo;s, must have ensured his
+applause.</p>
+<p>The Danes, in general, seem extremely averse to innovation,
+and if happiness only consist in opinion, they are the happiest
+people in the world; for I never saw any so well satisfied with
+their own situation.&nbsp; Yet the climate appears to be very
+disagreeable, the weather being dry and sultry, or moist and
+cold; the atmosphere never having that sharp, bracing purity,
+which in Norway prepares you to brave its rigours.&nbsp; I do not
+hear the inhabitants of this place talk with delight of the
+winter, which is the constant theme of the Norwegians; on the
+contrary, they seem to dread its comfortless inclemency.</p>
+<p>The ramparts are pleasant, and must have been much more so
+before the fire, the walkers not being annoyed by the clouds of
+dust which, at present, the slightest wind wafts from the
+ruins.&nbsp; The windmills, and the comfortable houses
+contiguous, belonging to the millers, as well as the appearance
+of the spacious barracks for the soldiers and sailors, tend to
+render this walk more agreeable.&nbsp; The view of the country
+has not much to recommend it to notice but its extent and
+cultivation: yet as the eye always delights to dwell on verdant
+plains, especially when we are resident in a great city, these
+shady walks should be reckoned amongst the advantages procured by
+the Government for the inhabitants.&nbsp; I like them better than
+the Royal Gardens, also open to the public, because the latter
+seem sunk in the heart of the city, to concentrate its fogs.</p>
+<p>The canals which intersect the streets are equally convenient
+and wholesome; but the view of the sea commanded by the town had
+little to interest me whilst the remembrance of the various bold
+and picturesque shores I had seen was fresh in my memory.&nbsp;
+Still the opulent inhabitants, who seldom go abroad, must find
+the spots where they fix their country seats much pleasanter on
+account of the vicinity of the ocean.</p>
+<p>One of the best streets in Copenhagen is almost filled with
+hospitals, erected by the Government, and, I am assured, as well
+regulated as institutions of this kind are in any country; but
+whether hospitals or workhouses are anywhere superintended with
+sufficient humanity I have frequently had reason to doubt.</p>
+<p>The autumn is so uncommonly fine that I am unwilling to put
+off my journey to Hamburg much longer, lest the weather should
+alter suddenly, and the chilly harbingers of winter catch me
+here, where I have nothing now to detain me but the hospitality
+of the families to whom I had recommendatory letters.&nbsp; I
+lodged at an hotel situated in a large open square, where the
+troops exercise and the market is kept.&nbsp; My apartments were
+very good; and on account of the fire I was told that I should be
+charged very high; yet, paying my bill just now, I find the
+demands much lower in proportion than in Norway, though my
+dinners were in every respect better.</p>
+<p>I have remained more at home since I arrived at Copenhagen
+than I ought to have done in a strange place, but the mind is not
+always equally active in search of information, and my oppressed
+heart too often sighs out&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;How dull, flat, and unprofitable<br />
+Are to me all the usages of this world:<br />
+That it should come to this!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Farewell!&nbsp; Fare thee well, I say; if thou canst, repeat
+the adieu in a different tone.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XXII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I arrived at Corsoer the night after I quitted Copenhagen,
+purposing to take my passage across the Great Belt the next
+morning, though the weather was rather boisterous.&nbsp; It is
+about four-and-twenty miles but as both I and my little girl are
+never attacked by sea-sickness&mdash;though who can avoid
+<i>ennui</i>?&mdash;I enter a boat with the same indifference as
+I change horses; and as for danger, come when it may, I dread it
+not sufficiently to have any anticipating fears.</p>
+<p>The road from Copenhagen was very good, through an open, flat
+country that had little to recommend it to notice excepting the
+cultivation, which gratified my heart more than my eye.</p>
+<p>I took a barge with a German baron who was hastening back from
+a tour into Denmark, alarmed by the intelligence of the French
+having passed the Rhine.&nbsp; His conversation beguiled the
+time, and gave a sort of stimulus to my spirits, which had been
+growing more and more languid ever since my return to Gothenburg;
+you know why.&nbsp; I had often endeavoured to rouse myself to
+observation by reflecting that I was passing through scenes which
+I should probably never see again, and consequently ought not to
+omit observing.&nbsp; Still I fell into reveries, thinking, by
+way of excuse, that enlargement of mind and refined feelings are
+of little use but to barb the arrows of sorrow which waylay us
+everywhere, eluding the sagacity of wisdom and rendering
+principles unavailing, if considered as a breastwork to secure
+our own hearts.</p>
+<p>Though we had not a direct wind, we were not detained more
+than three hours and a half on the water, just long enough to
+give us an appetite for our dinner.</p>
+<p>We travelled the remainder of the day and the following night
+in company with the same party, the German gentleman whom I have
+mentioned, his friend, and servant.&nbsp; The meetings at the
+post-houses were pleasant to me, who usually heard nothing but
+strange tongues around me.&nbsp; Marguerite and the child often
+fell asleep, and when they were awake I might still reckon myself
+alone, as our train of thoughts had nothing in common.&nbsp;
+Marguerite, it is true, was much amused by the costume of the
+women, particularly by the pannier which adorned both their heads
+and tails, and with great glee recounted to me the stories she
+had treasured up for her family when once more within the
+barriers of dear Paris, not forgetting, with that arch, agreeable
+vanity peculiar to the French, which they exhibit whilst half
+ridiculing it, to remind me of the importance she should assume
+when she informed her friends of all her journeys by sea and
+land, showing the pieces of money she had collected, and
+stammering out a few foreign phrases, which she repeated in a
+true Parisian accent.&nbsp; Happy thoughtlessness! ay, and
+enviable harmless vanity, which thus produced a <i>gaité
+du cœur</i> worth all my philosophy!</p>
+<p>The man I had hired at Copenhagen advised me to go round about
+twenty miles to avoid passing the Little Belt excepting by a
+ferry, as the wind was contrary.&nbsp; But the gentlemen
+overruled his arguments, which we were all very sorry for
+afterwards, when we found ourselves becalmed on the Little Belt
+ten hours, tacking about without ceasing, to gain the shore.</p>
+<p>An oversight likewise made the passage appear much more
+tedious, nay, almost insupportable.&nbsp; When I went on board at
+the Great Belt, I had provided refreshments in case of detention,
+which remaining untouched I thought not then any such precaution
+necessary for the second passage, misled by the epithet of
+&ldquo;little,&rdquo; though I have since been informed that it
+is frequently the longest.&nbsp; This mistake occasioned much
+vexation; for the child, at last, began to cry so bitterly for
+bread, that fancy conjured up before me the wretched Ugolino,
+with his famished children; and I, literally speaking, enveloped
+myself in sympathetic horrors, augmented by every tear my babe
+shed, from which I could not escape till we landed, and a
+luncheon of bread and basin of milk routed the spectres of
+fancy.</p>
+<p>I then supped with my companions, with whom I was soon after
+to part for ever&mdash;always a most melancholy death-like
+idea&mdash;a sort of separation of soul; for all the regret which
+follows those from whom fate separates us seems to be something
+torn from ourselves.&nbsp; These were strangers I remember; yet
+when there is any originality in a countenance, it takes its
+place in our memory, and we are sorry to lose an acquaintance the
+moment he begins to interest us, though picked up on the
+highway.&nbsp; There was, in fact, a degree of intelligence, and
+still more sensibility, in the features and conversation of one
+of the gentlemen, that made me regret the loss of his society
+during the rest of the journey; for he was compelled to travel
+post, by his desire to reach his estate before the arrival of the
+French.</p>
+<p>This was a comfortable inn, as were several others I stopped
+at; but the heavy sandy roads were very fatiguing, after the fine
+ones we had lately skimmed over both in Sweden and Denmark.&nbsp;
+The country resembled the most open part of England&mdash;laid
+out for corn rather than grazing.&nbsp; It was pleasant, yet
+there was little in the prospects to awaken curiosity, by
+displaying the peculiar characteristics of a new country, which
+had so frequently stole me from myself in Norway.&nbsp; We often
+passed over large unenclosed tracts, not graced with trees, or at
+least very sparingly enlivened by them, and the half-formed roads
+seemed to demand the landmarks, set up in the waste, to prevent
+the traveller from straying far out of his way, and plodding
+through the wearisome sand.</p>
+<p>The heaths were dreary, and had none of the wild charms of
+those of Sweden and Norway to cheat time; neither the terrific
+rocks, nor smiling herbage grateful to the sight and scented from
+afar, made us forget their length.&nbsp; Still the country
+appeared much more populous, and the towns, if not the
+farmhouses, were superior to those of Norway.&nbsp; I even
+thought that the inhabitants of the former had more
+intelligence&mdash;at least, I am sure they had more vivacity in
+their countenances than I had seen during my northern tour: their
+senses seemed awake to business and pleasure.&nbsp; I was
+therefore gratified by hearing once more the busy hum of
+industrious men in the day, and the exhilarating sounds of joy in
+the evening; for, as the weather was still fine, the women and
+children were amusing themselves at their doors, or walking under
+the trees, which in many places were planted in the streets; and
+as most of the towns of any note were situated on little bays or
+branches of the Baltic, their appearance as we approached was
+often very picturesque, and, when we entered, displayed the
+comfort and cleanliness of easy, if not the elegance of opulent,
+circumstances.&nbsp; But the cheerfulness of the people in the
+streets was particularly grateful to me, after having been
+depressed by the deathlike silence of those of Denmark, where
+every house made me think of a tomb.&nbsp; The dress of the
+peasantry is suited to the climate; in short, none of that
+poverty and dirt appeared, at the sight of which the heart
+sickens.</p>
+<p>As I only stopped to change horses, take refreshment, and
+sleep, I had not an opportunity of knowing more of the country
+than conclusions which the information gathered by my eyes
+enabled me to draw, and that was sufficient to convince me that I
+should much rather have lived in some of the towns I now pass
+through than in any I had seen in Sweden or Denmark.&nbsp; The
+people struck me as having arrived at that period when the
+faculties will unfold themselves; in short; they look alive to
+improvement, neither congealed by indolence, nor bent down by
+wretchedness to servility.</p>
+<p>From the previous impression&mdash;I scarcely can trace whence
+I received it&mdash;I was agreeably surprised to perceive such an
+appearance of comfort in this part of Germany.&nbsp; I had formed
+a conception of the tyranny of the petty potentates that had
+thrown a gloomy veil over the face of the whole country in my
+imagination, that cleared away like the darkness of night before
+the sun as I saw the reality.&nbsp; I should probably have
+discovered much lurking misery, the consequence of ignorant
+oppression, no doubt, had I had time to inquire into particulars;
+but it did not stalk abroad and infect the surface over which my
+eye glanced.&nbsp; Yes, I am persuaded that a considerable degree
+of general knowledge pervades this country, for it is only from
+the exercise of the mind that the body acquires the activity from
+which I drew these inferences.&nbsp; Indeed, the King of
+Denmark&rsquo;s German dominions&mdash;Holstein&mdash;appeared to
+me far superior to any other part of his kingdom which had fallen
+under my view; and the robust rustics to have their muscles
+braced, instead of the, as it were, lounge of the Danish
+peasantry.</p>
+<p>Arriving at Sleswick, the residence of Prince Charles of
+Hesse-Cassel, the sight of the soldiers recalled all the
+unpleasing ideas of German despotism, which imperceptibly
+vanished as I advanced into the country.&nbsp; I viewed, with a
+mixture of pity and horror, these beings training to be sold to
+slaughter, or be slaughtered, and fell into reflections on an old
+opinion of mine, that it is the preservation of the species, not
+of individuals, which appears to be the design of the Deity
+throughout the whole of Nature.&nbsp; Blossoms come forth only to
+be blighted; fish lay their spawn where it will be devoured; and
+what a large portion of the human race are born merely to be
+swept prematurely away!&nbsp; Does not this waste of budding life
+emphatically assert that it is not men, but Man, whose
+preservation is so necessary to the completion of the grand plan
+of the universe?&nbsp; Children peep into existence, suffer, and
+die; men play like moths about a candle, and sink into the flame;
+war, and &ldquo;the thousand ills which flesh is heir to,&rdquo;
+mow them down in shoals; whilst the more cruel prejudices of
+society palsy existence, introducing not less sure though slower
+decay.</p>
+<p>The castle was heavy and gloomy, yet the grounds about it were
+laid out with some taste; a walk, winding under the shade of
+lofty trees, led to a regularly built and animated town.</p>
+<p>I crossed the drawbridge, and entered to see this shell of a
+court in miniature, mounting ponderous stairs&mdash;it would be a
+solecism to say a flight&mdash;up which a regiment of men might
+have marched, shouldering their firelocks to exercise in vast
+galleries, where all the generations of the Princes of
+Hesse-Cassel might have been mustered rank and file, though not
+the phantoms of all the wretched they had bartered to support
+their state, unless these airy substances could shrink and
+expand, like Milton&rsquo;s devils, to suit the occasion.</p>
+<p>The sight of the presence-chamber, and of the canopy to shade
+the fauteuil which aped a throne, made me smile.&nbsp; All the
+world is a stage, thought I; and few are there in it who do not
+play the part they have learnt by rote; and those who do not,
+seem marks set up to be pelted at by fortune, or rather as
+sign-posts which point out the road to others, whilst forced to
+stand still themselves amidst the mud and dust.</p>
+<p>Waiting for our horses, we were amused by observing the dress
+of the women, which was very grotesque and unwieldy.&nbsp; The
+false notion of beauty which prevails here as well as in Denmark,
+I should think very inconvenient in summer, as it consists in
+giving a rotundity to a certain part of the body, not the most
+slim, when Nature has done her part.&nbsp; This Dutch prejudice
+often leads them to toil under the weight of some ten or a dozen
+petticoats, which, with an enormous basket, literally speaking,
+as a bonnet, or a straw hat of dimensions equally gigantic,
+almost completely conceal the human form as well as face divine,
+often worth showing; still they looked clean, and tripped along,
+as it were, before the wind, with a weight of tackle that I could
+scarcely have lifted.&nbsp; Many of the country girls I met
+appeared to me pretty&mdash;that is, to have fine complexions,
+sparkling eyes, and a kind of arch, hoyden playfulness which
+distinguishes the village coquette.&nbsp; The swains, in their
+Sunday trim, attended some of these fair ones in a more slouching
+pace, though their dress was not so cumbersome.&nbsp; The women
+seem to take the lead in polishing the manners everywhere, this
+being the only way to better their condition.</p>
+<p>From what I have seen throughout my journey, I do not think
+the situation of the poor in England is much, if at all, superior
+to that of the same class in different parts of the world; and in
+Ireland I am sure it is much inferior.&nbsp; I allude to the
+former state of England; for at present the accumulation of
+national wealth only increases the cares of the poor, and hardens
+the hearts of the rich, in spite of the highly extolled rage for
+almsgiving.</p>
+<p>You know that I have always been an enemy to what is termed
+charity, because timid bigots, endeavouring thus to cover their
+sins, do violence to justice, till, acting the demigod, they
+forget that they are men.&nbsp; And there are others who do not
+even think of laying up a treasure in heaven, whose benevolence
+is merely tyranny in disguise; they assist the most worthless,
+because the most servile, and term them helpless only in
+proportion to their fawning.</p>
+<p>After leaving Sleswick, we passed through several pretty
+towns; Itzchol particularly pleased me; and the country, still
+wearing the same aspect, was improved by the appearance of more
+trees and enclosures.&nbsp; But what gratified me most was the
+population.&nbsp; I was weary of travelling four or five hours,
+never meeting a carriage, and scarcely a peasant; and then to
+stop at such wretched huts as I had seen in Sweden was surely
+sufficient to chill any heart awake to sympathy, and throw a
+gloom over my favourite subject of contemplation, the future
+improvement of the world.</p>
+<p>The farmhouses, likewise, with the huge stables, into which we
+drove whilst the horses were putting to or baiting, were very
+clean and commodious.&nbsp; The rooms, with a door into this
+hall-like stable and storehouse in one, were decent; and there
+was a compactness in the appearance of the whole family lying
+thus snugly together under the same roof that carried my fancy
+back to the primitive times, which probably never existed with
+such a golden lustre as the animated imagination lends when only
+able to seize the prominent features.</p>
+<p>At one of them, a pretty young woman, with languishing eyes of
+celestial blue, conducted us into a very neat parlour, and
+observing how loosely and lightly my little girl was clad, began
+to pity her in the sweetest accents, regardless of the rosy down
+of health on her cheeks.&nbsp; This same damsel was
+dressed&mdash;it was Sunday&mdash;with taste and even coquetry,
+in a cotton jacket, ornamented with knots of blue ribbon,
+fancifully disposed to give life to her fine complexion.&nbsp; I
+loitered a little to admire her, for every gesture was graceful;
+and, amidst the other villagers, she looked like a garden lily
+suddenly rearing its head amongst grain and corn-flowers.&nbsp;
+As the house was small, I gave her a piece of money rather larger
+than it was my custom to give to the female waiters&mdash;for I
+could not prevail on her to sit down&mdash;which she received
+with a smile; yet took care to give it, in my presence, to a girl
+who had brought the child a slice of bread; by which I perceived
+that she was the mistress or daughter of the house, and without
+doubt the belle of the village.&nbsp; There was, in short, an
+appearance of cheerful industry, and of that degree of comfort
+which shut out misery, in all the little hamlets as I approached
+Hamburg, which agreeably surprised me.</p>
+<p>The short jackets which the women wear here, as well as in
+France, are not only more becoming to the person, but much better
+calculated for women who have rustic or household employments
+than the long gowns worn in England, dangling in the dirt.</p>
+<p>All the inns on the road were better than I expected, though
+the softness of the beds still harassed me, and prevented my
+finding the rest I was frequently in want of, to enable me to
+bear the fatigue of the next day.&nbsp; The charges were
+moderate, and the people very civil, with a certain honest
+hilarity and independent spirit in their manner, which almost
+made me forget that they were innkeepers, a set of
+men&mdash;waiters, hostesses, chambermaids, &amp;c., down to the
+ostler, whose cunning servility in England I think particularly
+disgusting.</p>
+<p>The prospect of Hamburg at a distance, as well as the fine
+road shaded with trees, led me to expect to see a much pleasanter
+city than I found.</p>
+<p>I was aware of the difficulty of obtaining lodgings, even at
+the inns, on account of the concourse of strangers at present
+resorting to such a centrical situation, and determined to go to
+Altona the next day to seek for an abode, wanting now only
+rest.&nbsp; But even for a single night we were sent from house
+to house, and found at last a vacant room to sleep in, which I
+should have turned from with disgust had there been a choice.</p>
+<p>I scarcely know anything that produces more disagreeable
+sensations, I mean to speak of the passing cares, the
+recollection of which afterwards enlivens our enjoyments, than
+those excited by little disasters of this kind.&nbsp; After a
+long journey, with our eyes directed to some particular spot, to
+arrive and find nothing as it should be is vexatious, and sinks
+the agitated spirits.&nbsp; But I, who received the cruellest of
+disappointments last spring in returning to my home, term such as
+these emphatically passing cares.&nbsp; Know you of what
+materials some hearts are made?&nbsp; I play the child, and weep
+at the recollection&mdash;for the grief is still fresh that
+stunned as well as wounded me&mdash;yet never did drops of
+anguish like these bedew the cheeks of infantine
+innocence&mdash;and why should they mine, that never was stained
+by a blush of guilt?&nbsp; Innocent and credulous as a child, why
+have I not the same happy thoughtlessness?&nbsp; Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XXIII.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>I might have spared myself the disagreeable feelings I
+experienced the first night of my arrival at Hamburg, leaving the
+open air to be shut up in noise and dirt, had I gone immediately
+to Altona, where a lodging had been prepared for me by a
+gentleman from whom I received many civilities during my
+journey.&nbsp; I wished to have travelled in company with him
+from Copenhagen, because I found him intelligent and friendly,
+but business obliged him to hurry forward, and I wrote to him on
+the subject of accommodations as soon as I was informed of the
+difficulties I might have to encounter to house myself and
+brat.</p>
+<p>It is but a short and pleasant walk from Hamburg to Altona,
+under the shade of several rows of trees, and this walk is the
+more agreeable after quitting the rough pavement of either
+place.</p>
+<p>Hamburg is an ill, close-built town, swarming with
+inhabitants, and, from what I could learn, like all the other
+free towns, governed in a manner which bears hard on the poor,
+whilst narrowing the minds of the rich; the character of the man
+is lost in the Hamburger.&nbsp; Always afraid of the
+encroachments of their Danish neighbours, that is, anxiously
+apprehensive of their sharing the golden harvest of commerce with
+them, or taking a little of the trade off their
+hands&mdash;though they have more than they know what to do
+with&mdash;they are ever on the watch, till their very eyes lose
+all expression, excepting the prying glance of suspicion.</p>
+<p>The gates of Hamburg are shut at seven in the winter and nine
+in the summer, lest some strangers, who come to traffic in
+Hamburg, should prefer living, and consequently&mdash;so exactly
+do they calculate&mdash;spend their money out of the walls of the
+Hamburger&rsquo;s world.&nbsp; Immense fortunes have been
+acquired by the per-cents. arising from commissions nominally
+only two and a half, but mounted to eight or ten at least by the
+secret manoeuvres of trade, not to include the advantage of
+purchasing goods wholesale in common with contractors, and that
+of having so much money left in their hands, not to play with, I
+can assure you.&nbsp; Mushroom fortunes have started up during
+the war; the men, indeed, seem of the species of the fungus, and
+the insolent vulgarity which a sudden influx of wealth usually
+produces in common minds is here very conspicuous, which
+contrasts with the distresses of many of the emigrants,
+&ldquo;fallen, fallen from their high estate,&rdquo; such are the
+ups and downs of fortune&rsquo;s wheel.&nbsp; Many emigrants have
+met, with fortitude, such a total change of circumstances as
+scarcely can be paralleled, retiring from a palace to an obscure
+lodging with dignity; but the greater number glide about, the
+ghosts of greatness, with the <i>Croix de St. Louis</i>
+ostentatiously displayed, determined to hope, &ldquo;though
+heaven and earth their wishes crossed.&rdquo;&nbsp; Still good
+breeding points out the gentleman, and sentiments of honour and
+delicacy appear the offspring of greatness of soul when compared
+with the grovelling views of the sordid accumulators of cent. per
+cent.</p>
+<p>Situation seems to be the mould in which men&rsquo;s
+characters are formed: so much so, inferring from what I have
+lately seen, that I mean not to be severe when I
+add&mdash;previously asking why priests are in general cunning
+and statesmen false?&mdash;that men entirely devoted to commerce
+never acquire or lose all taste and greatness of mind.&nbsp; An
+ostentatious display of wealth without elegance, and a greedy
+enjoyment of pleasure without sentiment, embrutes them till they
+term all virtue of an heroic cast, romantic attempts at something
+above our nature, and anxiety about the welfare of others, a
+search after misery in which we have no concern.&nbsp; But you
+will say that I am growing bitter, perhaps personal.&nbsp; Ah!
+shall I whisper to you, that you yourself are strangely altered
+since you have entered deeply into commerce&mdash;more than you
+are aware of; never allowing yourself to reflect, and keeping
+your mind, or rather passions, in a continual state of
+agitation?&nbsp; Nature has given you talents which lie dormant,
+or are wasted in ignoble pursuits.&nbsp; You will rouse yourself
+and shake off the vile dust that obscures you, or my
+understanding, as well as my heart, deceives me
+egregiously&mdash;only tell me when.&nbsp; But to go farther
+afield.</p>
+<p>Madame la Fayette left Altona the day I arrived, to endeavour,
+at Vienna, to obtain the enlargement of her husband, or
+permission to share his prison.&nbsp; She lived in a lodging up
+two pairs of stairs, without a servant, her two daughters
+cheerfully assisting; choosing, as well as herself, to descend to
+anything before unnecessary obligations.&nbsp; During her
+prosperity, and consequent idleness, she did not, I am told,
+enjoy a good state of health, having a train of nervous
+complaints, which, though they have not a name, unless the
+significant word <i>ennui</i> be borrowed, had an existence in
+the higher French circles; but adversity and virtuous exertions
+put these ills to flight, and dispossessed her of a devil who
+deserves the appellation of legion.</p>
+<p>Madame Genus also resided at Altona some time, under an
+assumed name, with many other sufferers of less note though
+higher rank.&nbsp; It is, in fact, scarcely possible to stir out
+without meeting interesting countenances, every lineament of
+which tells you that they have seen better days.</p>
+<p>At Hamburg, I was informed, a duke had entered into
+partnership with his cook, who becoming a <i>traiteur</i>, they
+were both comfortably supported by the profit arising from his
+industry.&nbsp; Many noble instances of the attachment of
+servants to their unfortunate masters have come to my knowledge,
+both here and in France, and touched my heart, the greatest
+delight of which is to discover human virtue.</p>
+<p>At Altona, a president of one of the <i>ci-devant</i>
+parliaments keeps an ordinary, in the French style; and his wife
+with cheerful dignity submits to her fate, though she is arrived
+at an age when people seldom relinquish their prejudices.&nbsp; A
+girl who waits there brought a dozen <i>double louis
+d&rsquo;or</i> concealed in her clothes, at the risk of her life,
+from France, which she preserves lest sickness or any other
+distress should overtake her mistress, &ldquo;who,&rdquo; she
+observed, &ldquo;was not accustomed to hardships.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This house was particularly recommended to me by an acquaintance
+of yours, the author of the &ldquo;American Farmer&rsquo;s
+Letters.&rdquo;&nbsp; I generally dine in company with him: and
+the gentleman whom I have already mentioned is often diverted by
+our declamations against commerce, when we compare notes
+respecting the characteristics of the Hamburgers.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why, madam,&rdquo; said he to me one day, &ldquo;you will
+not meet with a man who has any calf to his leg; body and soul,
+muscles and heart, are equally shrivelled up by a thirst of
+gain.&nbsp; There is nothing generous even in their youthful
+passions; profit is their only stimulus, and calculations the
+sole employment of their faculties, unless we except some gross
+animal gratifications which, snatched at spare moments, tend
+still more to debase the character, because, though touched by
+his tricking wand, they have all the arts, without the wit, of
+the wing-footed god.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Perhaps you may also think us too severe; but I must add that
+the more I saw of the manners of Hamburg, the more was I
+confirmed in my opinion relative to the baleful effect of
+extensive speculations on the moral character.&nbsp; Men are
+strange machines; and their whole system of morality is in
+general held together by one grand principle which loses its
+force the moment they allow themselves to break with impunity
+over the bounds which secured their self-respect.&nbsp; A man
+ceases to love humanity, and then individuals, as he advances in
+the chase after wealth; as one clashes with his interest, the
+other with his pleasures: to business, as it is termed,
+everything must give way; nay, is sacrificed, and all the
+endearing charities of citizen, husband, father, brother, become
+empty names.&nbsp; But&mdash;but what?&nbsp; Why, to snap the
+chain of thought, I must say farewell.&nbsp; Cassandra was not
+the only prophetess whose warning voice has been
+disregarded.&nbsp; How much easier it is to meet with love in the
+world than affection!</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">Yours sincerely.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XXIV.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>My lodgings at Altona are tolerably comfortable, though not in
+any proportion to the price I pay; but, owing to the present
+circumstances, all the necessaries of life are here extravagantly
+dear.&nbsp; Considering it as a temporary residence, the chief
+inconvenience of which I am inclined to complain is the rough
+streets that must be passed before Marguerite and the child can
+reach a level road.</p>
+<p>The views of the Elbe in the vicinity of the town are
+pleasant, particularly as the prospects here afford so little
+variety.&nbsp; I attempted to descend, and walk close to the
+water&rsquo;s edge; but there was no path; and the smell of glue,
+hanging to dry, an extensive manufactory of which is carried on
+close to the beach, I found extremely disagreeable.&nbsp; But to
+commerce everything must give way; profit and profit are the only
+speculations&mdash;&ldquo;double&mdash;double, toil and
+trouble.&rdquo;&nbsp; I have seldom entered a shady walk without
+being soon obliged to turn aside to make room for the
+rope-makers; and the only tree I have seen, that appeared to be
+planted by the hand of taste, is in the churchyard, to shade the
+tomb of the poet Klopstock&rsquo;s wife.</p>
+<p>Most of the merchants have country houses to retire to during
+the summer; and many of them are situated on the banks of the
+Elbe, where they have the pleasure of seeing the packet-boats
+arrive&mdash;the periods of most consequence to divide their
+week.</p>
+<p>The moving picture, consisting of large vessels and small
+craft, which are continually changing their position with the
+tide, renders this noble river, the vital stream of Hamburg, very
+interesting; and the windings have sometimes a very fine effect,
+two or three turns being visible at once, intersecting the flat
+meadows; a sudden bend often increasing the magnitude of the
+river; and the silvery expanse, scarcely gliding, though bearing
+on its bosom so much treasure, looks for a moment like a tranquil
+lake.</p>
+<p>Nothing can be stronger than the contrast which this flat
+country and strand afford, compared with the mountains and rocky
+coast I have lately dwelt so much among.&nbsp; In fancy I return
+to a favourite spot, where I seemed to have retired from man and
+wretchedness; but the din of trade drags me back to all the care
+I left behind, when lost in sublime emotions.&nbsp; Rocks
+aspiring towards the heavens, and, as it were, shutting out
+sorrow, surrounded me, whilst peace appeared to steal along the
+lake to calm my bosom, modulating the wind that agitated the
+neighbouring poplars.&nbsp; Now I hear only an account of the
+tricks of trade, or listen to the distressful tale of some victim
+of ambition.</p>
+<p>The hospitality of Hamburg is confined to Sunday invitations
+to the country houses I have mentioned, when dish after dish
+smokes upon the board, and the conversation ever flowing in the
+muddy channel of business, it is not easy to obtain any
+appropriate information.&nbsp; Had I intended to remain here some
+time, or had my mind been more alive to general inquiries, I
+should have endeavoured to have been introduced to some
+characters not so entirely immersed in commercial affairs, though
+in this whirlpool of gain it is not very easy to find any but the
+wretched or supercilious emigrants, who are not engaged in
+pursuits which, in my eyes, appear as dishonourable as
+gambling.&nbsp; The interests of nations are bartered by
+speculating merchants.&nbsp; My God! with what <i>sang froid</i>
+artful trains of corruption bring lucrative commissions into
+particular hands, disregarding the relative situation of
+different countries, and can much common honesty be expected in
+the discharge of trusts obtained by fraud?&nbsp; But this
+<i>entre nous</i>.</p>
+<p>During my present journey, and whilst residing in France, I
+have had an opportunity of peeping behind the scenes of what are
+vulgarly termed great affairs, only to discover the mean
+machinery which has directed many transactions of moment.&nbsp;
+The sword has been merciful, compared with the depredations made
+on human life by contractors and by the swarm of locusts who have
+battened on the pestilence they spread abroad.&nbsp; These men,
+like the owners of negro ships, never smell on their money the
+blood by which it has been gained, but sleep quietly in their
+beds, terming such occupations lawful callings; yet the lightning
+marks not their roofs to thunder conviction on them &ldquo;and to
+justify the ways of God to man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Why should I weep for myself?&nbsp; &ldquo;Take, O world! thy
+much indebted tear!&rdquo;&nbsp; Adieu!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>LETTER XXV.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>There is a pretty little French theatre at Altona, and the
+actors are much superior to those I saw at Copenhagen.&nbsp; The
+theatres at Hamburg are not open yet, but will very shortly, when
+the shutting of the gates at seven o&rsquo;clock forces the
+citizens to quit their country houses.&nbsp; But, respecting
+Hamburg, I shall not be able to obtain much more information, as
+I have determined to sail with the first fair wind for
+England.</p>
+<p>The presence of the French army would have rendered my
+intended tour through Germany, in my way to Switzerland, almost
+impracticable, had not the advancing season obliged me to alter
+my plan.&nbsp; Besides, though Switzerland is the country which
+for several years I have been particularly desirous to visit, I
+do not feel inclined to ramble any farther this year; nay, I am
+weary of changing the scene, and quitting people and places the
+moment they begin to interest me.&nbsp; This also is vanity!</p>
+<h3>DOVER.</h3>
+<p>I left this letter unfinished, as I was hurried on board, and
+now I have only to tell you that, at the sight of Dover cliffs, I
+wondered how anybody could term them grand; they appear so
+insignificant to me, after those I had seen in Sweden and
+Norway.</p>
+<p>Adieu!&nbsp; My spirit of observation seems to be fled, and I
+have been wandering round this dirty place, literally speaking,
+to kill time, though the thoughts I would fain fly from lie too
+close to my heart to be easily shook off, or even beguiled, by
+any employment, except that of preparing for my journey to
+London.</p>
+<p>God bless you!</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Mary</span>
+----.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>APPENDIX.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Private business and cares have frequently so absorbed me as
+to prevent my obtaining all the information during this journey
+which the novelty of the scenes would have afforded, had my
+attention been continually awake to inquiry.&nbsp; This
+insensibility to present objects I have often had occasion to
+lament since I have been preparing these letters for the press;
+but, as a person of any thought naturally considers the history
+of a strange country to contrast the former with the present
+state of its manners, a conviction of the increasing knowledge
+and happiness of the kingdoms I passed through was perpetually
+the result of my comparative reflections.</p>
+<p>The poverty of the poor in Sweden renders the civilisation
+very partial, and slavery has retarded the improvement of every
+class in Denmark, yet both are advancing; and the gigantic evils
+of despotism and anarchy have in a great measure vanished before
+the meliorating manners of Europe.&nbsp; Innumerable evils still
+remain, it is true, to afflict the humane investigator, and hurry
+the benevolent reformer into a labyrinth of error, who aims at
+destroying prejudices quickly which only time can root out, as
+the public opinion becomes subject to reason.</p>
+<p>An ardent affection for the human race makes enthusiastic
+characters eager to produce alteration in laws and governments
+prematurely.&nbsp; To render them useful and permanent, they must
+be the growth of each particular soil, and the gradual fruit of
+the ripening understanding of the nation, matured by time, not
+forced by an unnatural fermentation.&nbsp; And, to convince me
+that such a change is gaining ground with accelerating pace, the
+view I have had of society during my northern journey would have
+been sufficient had I not previously considered the grand causes
+which combine to carry mankind forward and diminish the sum of
+human misery.</p>
+
+
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT
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