summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/40238-8.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '40238-8.txt')
-rw-r--r--40238-8.txt9098
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 9098 deletions
diff --git a/40238-8.txt b/40238-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index aeb2a7f..0000000
--- a/40238-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9098 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe on
-Rivers and Lakes of Europe, by John Macgregor
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe on Rivers and Lakes of Europe
-
-Author: John Macgregor
-
-Release Date: July 15, 2012 [EBook #40238]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A THOUSAND MILES IN THE ROB ROY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, fh and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
- The dagger symbol is denoted by the [+] sign
- The asterism symbol is denoted by **
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- A
- THOUSAND MILES
- IN THE
- ROB ROY CANOE
-
- ON RIVERS AND LAKES OF
- EUROPE.
-
- BY J. MACGREGOR, M.A.,
-
- TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE;
- BARRISTER AT LAW:
-
- With Numerous Illustrations and a Map.
-
- _SIXTH THOUSAND._
-
- LONDON:
- SAMPSON LOW, SON, AND MARSTON
- MILTON HOUSE, LUDGATE-HILL.
- 1866.
-
- (_The Right of Translation reserved._)
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The voyage about to be described was made last Autumn in a small Canoe,
-with a double paddle and sails, which the writer managed alone.
-
-The route led sometimes over mountains and through forests and plains,
-where the boat had to be carried or dragged.
-
-The waters navigated were as follows:--
-
-The Rivers Thames, Sambre, Meuse, Rhine, Main, Danube, Reuss, Aar, Ill,
-Moselle, Meurthe, Marne, and Seine.
-
-The Lakes Titisee, Constance, Unter See, Zurich, Zug, and Lucerne,
-together with six canals in Belgium and France, and two expeditions in
-the open sea of the British Channel.
-
- TEMPLE, LONDON,
- _April 25, 1866_.
-
-
-
-
- THE AUTHOR'S PROFITS FROM THE FIRST AND SECOND EDITIONS, WERE
- GIVEN TO THE ROYAL NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION AND TO THE
- SHIPWRECKED MARINERS' SOCIETY.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- Page
-
- RAPIDS OF THE REUSS (_Frontispiece_). --
-
- SEA ROLLERS IN THE CHANNEL 19
-
- SWIMMING HERD ON THE MEUSE 28
-
- SINGERS' WAGGON ON THE DANUBE 49
-
- A CROWD IN THE MORNING 65
-
- HAYMAKERS AMAZED 80
-
- NIGHT SURPRISE AT GEGGLINGEN 93
-
- THE ROB ROY IN A BUSTLE 110
-
- SAILING UPON LAKE ZUG 134
-
- SHIRKING A WATERFALL 152
-
- A CRITICAL MOMENT 168
-
- ASTRIDE THE STERN 186
-
- THE ROB ROY AND THE COW 213
-
- POLITE TO THE LADIES 230
-
- GROUP OF FRENCH FISHERS 246
-
- PASSING A DANGEROUS BARRIER 263
-
- A CHOKED CANAL 281
-
- RIGGING ASHORE 290
-
- ROUTE OF THE CANOE (_Map_) 291
-
- CHART OF CURRENTS AND ROCKS 302
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I. Page
-
- Canoe Travelling--Other Modes--The Rob
- Roy--Hints--Tourists--The Rivers--The Dress--I and We 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- The Start--The Nore--Porpoises--A Gale--The Channel--Ostend
- Canal--River Meuse--Earl of Aberdeen--Holland--The
- Rhine--The Premier's Son--River Main--Heron
- Stalking--The Prince of Wales 12
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Hollenthal Pass--Ladies--Black Forest--Night Music--Beds--Lake
- Titisee--Pontius Pilate--Storm--Starers--Banket--Four
- in hand--Source of the Danube 38
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- River Donau--Singers--Shady nooks--Geisingen--Mill
- Weirs--Rapids--Morning Crowd--Donkey's
- Stable--Islands--Monks--Spiders--Concert--Fish--A
- race 55
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Sigmaringen--Treacherous trees--Congress of herons--Flying
- Dutchman--Tub and shovel--Bottle race--Snags--Bridge
- Perils--Ya Vol--Ferry Rope--Benighted--Ten eggs 75
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Day-dream--River Iller--Ulm--A stiff king--Lake Constance--Seeing
- in the dark--Switzerland--Coloured
- Canvas--Sign talk--Synagogue--Amelia--Gibberish 96
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Fog--Fancy pictures--Boy soldiers--Boat's billet--Eating--Lake
- Zurich--Crinoline--Hot walk--Staring--Lake
- Zug--Swiss shots--Fishing Britons--Talk-book 118
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Sailing on Lucerne--Seeburg--River scenes--Night and
- snow--The Reuss--A dear dinner--Seeing a rope--Passing
- a fall--Sullen roar--Bremgarten rapids 142
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Hunger--Music at the mill--Sentiment and chops--River
- Limmat--Fixed on a fall--River Aar--Rhine again--Douaniers--Falls
- of Lauffenburg--The cow cart 159
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- Field of Foam--Precipice--Puzzled--Philosophy--Rheinfelden
- Rapids--Dazzled--Lower Rapids--Astride--Fate
- of the Four-oar--Very Salt--Ladies--Whirlpool--Funny
- English--Insulting a baby--Bride 177
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- Private concert--Thunderer--La Hardt Forest--Mulhouse
- Canal--River Ill--Reading Stories--Madame Nico--Night
- Noises--Pets--Ducking--The Vosges mountains--Admirers--Boat
- on wheels--New wine 196
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- Bonfire--My wife--Matthews--Tunnel
- picture--Imposture--Fancy--Moselle--Cocher--Saturday
- Review Tracts--Gymnastics--The
- paddle--A spell--Overhead--Feminine
- forum--Public breakfast 216
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- River Moselle--The Tramp--Halcyon--Painted woman--Beating
- to quarters--Boat in a hedge--River Meurthe--Moving
- House--Tears of a mother--Five francs 234
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- Ladies in muslin--Chalons Camp--Officers shouting--Volunteers'
- umbrella--Reims--Leaks--Madame
- Clicquot--Heavy blow--The Elephant--First Cloud 255
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- Meaux on the Marne--Hammering--Popish forms--Wise
- dogs--Blocked in a Tunnel--A dry voyage--Arbour
- and Garret--Odd fellows--Dream on the Seine--Almost
- over--No admittance--Charing-cross 276
-
-
- APPENDIX.
-
- Hints for Canoists--The Rob Roy's Stores--Chart of rocks
- and currents--The Kent--Danger--Exercise--Sun--Walking
- machine--Odds and ends--Future voyages 291
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- Canoe Travelling--Other Modes--The Rob
- Roy--Hints--Tourists--The Rivers--The Dress--I and We--The
- Election.
-
-
-The object of this book is to describe a new mode of travelling on the
-Continent, by which new people and things are met with, while healthy
-exercise is enjoyed, and an interest ever varied with excitement keeps
-fully alert the energies of the mind.
-
-Some years ago the Water Lily was rowed by four men on the Rhine and on
-the Danube, and its "log" delighted all readers. Afterwards, the boat
-Water Witch laboured up French rivers, and through a hundred tedious
-locks on the Bâle canal. But these and other voyages of three or five
-men in an open boat were necessarily very limited. In the wildest parts
-of the best rivers the channel is too narrow for oars, or, if wide, it
-is too shallow for a row-boat; and the tortuous passages, the rocks and
-banks, the weeds and snags, the milldams, barriers, fallen trees,
-rapids, whirlpools, and waterfalls that constantly occur on a river
-winding among hills, make those very parts where the scenery is wildest
-and best to be quite unapproachable in an open boat, for it would be
-swamped by the sharp waves, or upset over the sunken rocks which it is
-utterly impossible for a steersman to see.
-
-But these very things, which are obstacles or dangers to the "pair oar,"
-become interesting features to the voyager in a covered canoe. For now,
-as he sits in his little bark, he looks forward, and not backward. He
-sees all his course, and the scenery besides. With one powerful sweep of
-his paddle he can instantly turn the canoe, when only a foot distant
-from fatal destruction. He can steer within an inch in a narrow place,
-or pass through reeds and weeds, branches and grass; can hoist and lower
-his sail without changing his seat; can shove with his paddle when
-aground, or jump out in good time to prevent a decided smash. He can
-wade and haul the light craft over shallows, or drag it on dry ground,
-through fields and hedges, over dykes, barriers, and walls; can carry it
-by hand up ladders and stairs, and can transport his boat over high
-mountains and broad plains in a cart drawn by a horse, a bullock, or a
-cow.
-
-Nay, more than this, the covered canoe is far stronger than an open
-boat, and may be fearlessly dropped headforemost into a deep pool, a
-lock, or a millrace, and yet, when the breakers are high, in the open
-sea or in fresh water rapids, they can only wash over the covered deck,
-while it is always dry within.
-
-Again, the canoe is safer than a rowing-boat, because you sit so low in
-it, and never require to shift your place or lose hold of the paddle;
-while for comfort during long hours, for days and weeks of hard work, it
-is evidently the best, because you lean all the time against a
-backboard, and the moment you rest the paddle on your lap you are as
-much at ease as in an arm-chair; so that, while drifting along with the
-current or the wind, you can gaze around, and eat or read or chat with
-the starers on the bank, and yet, in a moment of sudden danger, the
-hands are at once on the faithful paddle ready for action.
-
-Finally, you can lie at full length in the canoe, with the sail as an
-awning for the sun, or a shelter for rain, and you can sleep in it thus
-at night, under cover, with an opening for air to leeward, and at least
-as much room for turning in your bed as sufficed for the great Duke of
-Wellington; or, if you are tired of the water for a time, you can leave
-your boat at an inn--it will not be "eating its head off," like a horse;
-or you can send it home or sell it, and take to the road yourself, or
-sink into the dull old cushions of the "Première Classe," and dream you
-are seeing the world.
-
-With such advantages, then, and with good weather and good health, the
-canoe voyage about to be described was truly delightful, and I never
-enjoyed so much continuous pleasure in any other tour.
-
-But, before this deliberate assertion has weight with intending
-"canoists," it may well be asked from one who thus praises the paddle,
-"Has he travelled in other ways, so as to know their several pleasures?
-Has he climbed glaciers and volcanoes, dived into caves and catacombs,
-trotted in the Norway carriole, ambled on an Arab, and galloped on the
-Russian steppes? Does he know the charms of a Nile boat, or a Trinity
-Eight, or a sail in the Ĉgean, or a mule in Spain? Has he swung upon a
-camel, or glided in a sleigh, or trundled in a Rantoone?"
-
-Yes, he has most thoroughly enjoyed these and other modes of locomotion
-in the four corners of the world; but the pleasure in the canoe was far
-better than all.
-
-The weather last summer was, indeed, exceptionally good; but then rain
-would have diminished some of the difficulties, though it might have
-been a bore to paddle ten hours in a downpour. Two inches more of water
-in the rivers would have saved many a grounding and wading, while, at
-worst, the rain could have wetted only the upper man, which a cape can
-cover; so, even in bad weather, give me the canoe.
-
-Messrs. Searle and Sons, of Lambeth, soon built for me the very boat I
-wanted.
-
-The Rob Roy is built of oak, and covered fore and aft with cedar. She is
-made just short enough to go into the German railway waggons; that is to
-say, fifteen feet in length, twenty-eight inches broad, nine inches
-deep, weighs eighty pounds, and draws three inches of water, with an
-inch of keel. A paddle seven feet long, with a blade at each end, and a
-lug sail and jib, are the means of propulsion; and a pretty blue silk
-Union Jack is the only ornament.
-
-The elliptic hole in which I sit is fifty-four inches long and twenty
-broad, and has a macintosh cover fastened round the combing and to a
-button on my breast; while between my knees is my baggage for three
-months, in a black bag one foot square and five inches deep.
-
-But, having got this little boat, the difficulty was to find where she
-could go to, or what rivers were at once feasible to paddle on, and
-pretty to see.
-
-Inquiries in London as to this had no result. Even the Paris Boat Club
-knew nothing of French rivers. The best German and Austrian maps were
-frequently wrong. They made villages on the banks which I found were a
-mile away in a wood, and so were useless to one who had made up his mind
-(a good resolve) never to leave his boat.
-
-It was soon, therefore, evident that, after quitting the Rhine, this was
-to be a voyage of discovery. And as I would most gladly have accepted
-any hints on the matter myself, so I venture to hope that this narrative
-will lessen the trouble, while it stimulates the desire of the numerous
-travellers who will spend their vacation in a canoe.[I.]
-
- [I.] See Appendix. Special hints for those who intend to "canoe
- it" will usually be given in the footnotes, or in the Appendix.
-
-Not that I shall attempt to make a "handbook" to any of the streams. The
-man who has a spark of enterprise would turn from a river of which every
-reach was mapped and its channels all lettered. Fancy the free
-traveller, equipped for a delicious summer of savage life, quietly
-submitting to be cramped and tutored by a "Chart of the Upper Mosel,"
-in the style of the following extracts copied literally from two
-Guide-books;--
-
-(1) "Turn to the r. (right), cross the brook, and ascend by a broad and
-steep forest track (in 40 min.) to the hamlet of Albersbach, situate in
-the midst of verdant meadows. In five min. more a cross is reached,
-where the path to the l. must be taken; in 10 min. to the r., in the
-hollow, to the saw mill; in 10 min. more through the gate to the r.; in
-3 min. the least trodden path to the l. leading to the Gaschpels Hof;
-after 1/4 hr. the stony track into the wood must be ascended," &c.,
-&c.--_From B----'s Rhine, p. 94_.
-
-(2) "_To the ridge of the Riffelberg_ 8,000 ft. _Hotel_ on top very
-good. 2 hrs. up. Guide 4 fr. Horse and man 10 fr. Path past the Church:
-then l. over fields; then up through a wood 1 hr. Past châlets: then r.
-across a stream."-- _----'s Handbook_.
-
-This sort of guide-book is not to be ridiculed. It is useful for some
-travellers as a ruled copy-book is of use to some writers. For first
-tours it may be needful and pleasant to have all made easy, to be
-carried in steamers or railways like a parcel, to stop at hotels
-Anglified by the crowd of English guests, and to ride, walk, or drive
-among people who know already just what you will want to eat, and see,
-and do.
-
-Year after year it is enough of excitement to some tourists to be
-shifted in squads from town to town, according to the routine of an
-excursion ticket. Those who are a little more advanced will venture to
-devise a tour from the mazy pages of Bradshaw, and with portmanteau and
-bag, and hat-box and sticks, they find more than enough of judgment and
-tact is needed when they arrive in a night train, and must fix on an
-omnibus in a strange town. Safe at last in the bedroom of the hotel,
-they cannot but exclaim with satisfaction "Well, here we are all right
-at last!"
-
-But after mountains and caves, churches and galleries, ruins and
-battle-fields have been pretty well seen, and after tact and fortitude
-have been educated by experience, the tourist is ready for new lines of
-travel which might have given him at first more anxiety than pleasure,
-and these he will find in deeper searches among the natural scenery and
-national character of the very countries he has only skimmed before.
-
-The rivers and streams on the Continent are scarcely known to the
-English tourist, and the beauty and life upon them no one has well seen.
-
-In his guide-book route, indeed, from town to town, the tourist has
-crossed this and that stream--has admired a few yards of the water, and
-has then left it for ever. He is carried again on a noble river by night
-in a steamboat, or is whisked along its banks in a railway, and, between
-two tunnels, gets a moment's glimpse at the lovely water, and lo! it is
-gone.
-
-But a mine of rich beauty remains there to be explored, and fresh gems
-of life and character are waiting there to be gathered. These are not
-mapped and labelled and ticketed in any handbook yet; and far better so,
-for the enjoyment of such treasures is enhanced to the best traveller by
-the energy and pluck required to get at them.
-
-On this new world of waters we are to launch the boat, the man, and his
-baggage, for we must describe all three,
-
- "Arma virumque canoe."
-
-So what sort of dress did he wear?
-
-The clothes I took for this tour consisted of a complete suit of grey
-flannel for use in the boat, and another suit of light but ordinary
-dress for shore work and Sundays.
-
-The "Norfolk jacket" is a loose frock-coat, like a blouse, with
-shoulder-straps, and belted at the waist, and garnished by six pockets.
-With this excellent new-fashioned coat, a something in each of its
-pockets, and a Cambridge straw hat, canvas wading shoes, blue
-spectacles, a waterproof overcoat, and my spare jib for a sun shawl,
-there was sure to be a full day's enjoyment in defiance of rain or sun,
-deeps or shallows, hunger or _ennui_.
-
-Four hours' work to begin, and then three of rest or floating, reading
-or sailing, and again, a three hours' heavy pull, and then with a swim
-in the river or a bath at the inn, a change of garments and a pleasant
-walk, all was made quite fresh again for a lively evening, a hearty
-dinner, talk, books, pictures, letters, and bed.
-
-Now I foresee that in the description of this tour I shall have to write
-"I," and the word "me" must be used by me very often indeed; but having
-the misfortune to be neither an Emperor, an editor, nor a married man,
-who can speak in the plural, I cannot help it if I am put down as a
-bachelor _egotist_, reserving the "we" for myself and my boat.
-
-The manner of working the double-bladed paddle was easily learned by a
-few days' practice on the Thames, and so excellent is the exercise for
-the muscles of the limbs and body that I have continued it at intervals,
-even during the winter, when a pretty sharp "look out" must be kept to
-pilot safely among the red and yellow lights of steamers, barges,
-embankments, and bridges in an evening's voyage from Putney to
-Westminster.
-
-All being ready and the weather very hot at the end of July, when the
-country had caught the election fever, and M.P.'s had run off to
-scramble for seats, and the lawyers had run after them to thicken the
-bustle, and the last bullet at Wimbledon had come "thud" on the target,
-it was time for the Rob Roy to start.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE START.
-
- The Thames--The Cornwall--Porpoises--A Gale--The
- Channel--Ostend Canal--The Meuse--Earl of
- Aberdeen--Holland--The Rhine--The Premier's Son--The River
- Main--Heron stalking--The Prince of Wales.
-
-
-The Rob Roy bounded away joyously on the top of the tide through
-Westminster Bridge, and swiftly shooting the narrow piles at
-Blackfriars, danced along the waves of the Pool, which looked all golden
-in the morning sun, but were in fact of veritable pea-soup hue.
-
-A fine breeze at Greenwich enabled me to set the new white sail, and we
-skimmed along with a cheery hissing sound. At such times the river is a
-lively scene with steamers and sea-bound ships, bluff little tugs, and
-big looming barges. I had many a chat with the passing sailors, for it
-was well to begin this at once, seeing that every day afterwards I was
-to have talk with the river folk in English, French, Dutch, German, or
-else some hotchpotch patois.
-
-The bargee is not a bad fellow if you begin with good humour, but he
-will not stand banter. Often they began the colloquy with, "Holloah you
-two!" or "Any room inside?" or "Got your life insured, Gov'nor?" but I
-smiled and nodded to every one, and every one on every river and lake
-was friendly to me.
-
-Gravesend was to be the port for the night, but Purfleet looked so
-pretty that I took a tack or two to reconnoitre, and resolved to stop at
-the very nice hotel on the river, which I beg to recommend.
-
-While lolling about in my boat at anchor in the hot sun a fly stung my
-hand; and although it was not remarked at once, the arm speedily
-swelled, and I had to poultice the hand at night and to go to church
-next day with a sling, which appendage excited a great deal of comment
-in the village Sunday-school. This little incident is mentioned because
-it was the only occasion on which any insect troubled me on the voyage,
-though several croakers had predicted that in rivers and marshes there
-would be hundreds of wasps, venomous flies, and gnats, not to mention
-other residents within doors.
-
-Just as I entered the door of the quiet little church, an only gentleman
-about to go in fell down dead in the path. It was impossible not to be
-much impressed with this sudden death as a solemn warning, especially to
-one in vigorous health.
-
-The "Cornwall" Reformatory School-ship is moored at Purfleet. Some of
-the boys came ashore for a walk, neatly clad and very well behaved.
-Captain Burton, who commands this interesting vessel, received me on
-board very kindly, and the evening service between decks was a sight to
-remember for ever.
-
-About 100 boys sat in rows along the old frigate's main-deck, with the
-open ports looking on the river, now reddened by a setting sun, and the
-cool air pleasantly fanning us. The lads chanted the Psalms to the music
-of a harmonium, played with excellent feeling and good taste, and the
-Captain read a suitable portion from some selected book, and then prayer
-was offered; and all this was by and for poor vagrant boys, whose claim
-on society is great indeed if measured by the wrong it has done them in
-neglect if not in precept, nay, even in example.
-
-Next morning the canoe was lowered down a ladder from the hay-loft, where
-it had been kept (it had to go up into many far more strange places in
-subsequent days), and the Cornwall boys bid me a pleasant voyage--a wish
-most fully realized indeed.
-
-After taking in supplies at Gravesend, I shoved off into the tide, and
-lit a cigar, and now I felt I had fairly started. Then there began a
-strange feeling of _freedom_ and _novelty_ which lasted to the end of
-the tour.
-
-Something like it is felt when you first march off with a knapsack ready
-to walk anywhere, or when you start alone in a sailing-boat for a long
-cruise.
-
-But then in walking you are bounded by every sea and river, and in a
-common sailing-boat you are bounded by every shallow and shore; whereas,
-I was in a canoe, which could be paddled or sailed, hauled, or carried
-over land or water to Rome, if I liked, or to Hong-Kong.
-
-The wind was fair again, and up went my sail. The reaches got wider and
-the water more salt, but I knew every part of the course, for I had once
-spent a fortnight about the mouth of the Thames in my pretty little
-sailing-boat, the Kent, alone, with only a dog, a chart, a compass, and
-a bachelor's kettle.
-
-The new steamer Alexandra, which plies from London daily, passed me
-here, its high-terraced American decks covered with people, and the
-crowd gave a fine loud cheer to the Rob Roy, for the newspapers had
-mentioned its departure. Presently the land seemed to fade away at each
-side in pale distance, and the water was more sea than river, till near
-the Nore we entered a great shoal of porpoises. Often as I have seen
-these harmless and agile playfellows I had never been so close to them
-before, and in a boat so small as to be almost disregarded by them, wily
-though they be. I allowed the canoe to rock on the waves, and the
-porpoises frequently came near enough to be struck by my paddle, but I
-did not wage war, for a flap of a tail would have soon turned me upside
-down.
-
-After a pleasant sail to Southend and along the beach, the wind changed,
-and a storm of heavy rain had to be met in its teeth by taking to the
-paddle, until near Shoeburyness, where I meant to stop a day or two in
-the camp of the National Artillery Association, which was assembled here
-for its first Prize shooting.
-
-The Royal Artillery received us Volunteers on this occasion with the
-greatest kindness, and as they had appropriated quarters of officers
-absent on leave for the use of members of the Council of the
-Association, I was soon comfortably ensconced. The camp, however, in a
-wet field was moist enough; but the fine tall fellows who had come from
-Yorkshire, Somerset, or Aberdeen to handle the 68-pounders, trudged
-about in the mud with good humour and thick boots, and sang round the
-camp-fire in a drizzle of rain, and then pounded away at the targets
-next day, for these were volunteers of the right sort.
-
-As the wind had then risen to a gale it seemed a good opportunity for a
-thorough trial of the canoe in rough water, so I paddled her to a corner
-where she would be least injured by being thrown ashore after an upset,
-and where she would be safe while I might run to change clothes after a
-swim.
-
-The buoyancy of the boat astonished me, and her stability was in every
-way satisfactory. In the midst of the waves I even managed to rig up the
-mast and sail, and as I had no baggage on board and so did not mind
-being perfectly wet through in the experiments, there was nothing left
-untried, and the confidence then gained for after times was invaluable.
-
-Early next morning I started directly in the teeth of the wind, and
-paddled against a very heavy sea to Southend, where a nice warm bath was
-enjoyed while my clothes were getting dried, and then the Rob Roy had
-its first railway journey in one of the little cars on the Southend pier
-to the steamboat.
-
-It was amusing to see how much interest and curiosity the canoe excited
-even on the Thames, where all kinds of new and old and wonderful boats
-may be seen. The reasons for this I never exactly made out. Some
-wondered to see so small a boat at sea, others had never seen a canoe
-before, the manner of rowing was new to most, and the sail made many
-smile. The graceful shape of the boat pleased others, the cedar covering
-and the jaunty flag, and a good many stared at the captain's uniform,
-and they stared more after they had asked, "Where are you going to?" and
-were often told, "I really do not know."
-
-From Sheerness to Dover was the route, and on the branch line train the
-Rob Roy had to be carried on the coals in the engine-tender, with
-torrents of rain and plenty of hot sparks driven into her by the gale;
-but after some delay at a junction the canoe was formally introduced to
-a baggage-waggon and ticketed like a portmanteau, the first of a series
-of transits in this way.
-
-The London Chatham and Dover Railway Company took this new kind of "box"
-as passengers' luggage, so I had nothing to pay, and the steamer to
-Ostend was equally large-hearted, so I say, "Canoemen, choose this
-channel."
-
-But before crossing to Belgium I had a day at Dover, where I bought some
-stuff and had a jib made for the boat by deft and fair fingers, had
-paddled the Rob Roy on the green waves which toss about off the
-pier-head most delectably. The same performance was repeated on the top
-of the swell, tumbling and breaking on the "digue"[II.] at Ostend, where,
-even with little wind, the rollers ran high on a strong ebb tide. Fat
-bathers wallowed in the shallows, and fair ones, dressed most bizarre,
-were swimming like ducks. All of these, and the babies squalling
-hysterically at each dip, were duly admired; and then I had a quieter
-run under sail on their wide and straight canal.
-
-[Illustration: Rollers off the Digue.]
-
- [II.] At Ostend I found an English gentleman preparing for a
- voyage on the Danube, for which he was to build a "centre board" boat.
- Although no doubt a sailing boat could reach the Danube by the Bamberg
- canal, yet, after four tours on that river from its source as far as
- Pest, I am convinced that to trust to sailing upon it would entail much
- tedious delay, useless trouble, and constant anxiety. If the wind is
- ahead you have all the labour of tacking, and are frequently in slack
- water near the banks, and often in channels where the only course would
- be dead to windward. If the wind is aft the danger of "running" is
- extreme where you have to "broach to" and stop suddenly near a shallow
- or a barrier. With a strong side wind, indeed, you can sail safely, but
- this must come from north or south, and the high banks vastly reduce its
- effect.
-
-With just a little persuasion the railway people consented to put the
-canoe in the baggage-van, and to charge a franc or two for "extra
-luggage" to Brussels. Here she was carried on a cart through the town to
-another station, and in the evening we were at Namur, where the Rob Roy
-was housed for the night in the landlord's private parlour, resting
-gracefully upon two chairs.
-
-Two porters carried her through the streets next morning, and I took a
-paddle on the Sambre, but very soon turned down stream and smoothly
-glided to the Meuse.
-
-Glancing water, brilliant sun, a light boat, and a light heart, all your
-baggage on board, and on a fast current,--who would exchange this for
-any diligence or railway, or steamboat, or horse? A pleasant stream was
-enough to satisfy at this early period of the voyage, for the excitement
-of rocks and rapids had not yet become a charm.
-
-It is good policy, too, that a quiet, easy, respectable sort of river
-like the Meuse should be taken in the earlier stage of a water tour,
-when there is novelty enough in being on a river at all. The river-banks
-one would call tame if seen from shore are altogether new when you open
-up the vista from the middle of the stream. The picture that is rolled
-sideways to the common traveller now pours out from before you, ever
-enlarging from a centre, and in the gentle sway of the stream the
-landscape seems to swell on this side and on that with new things ever
-advancing to meet you in succession.
-
-How careful I was at the first shallow! getting out and wading as I
-lowered the boat. A month afterwards I would dash over them with a shove
-here and a stroke there in answer to a hoarse croak of the stones at the
-bottom grinding against my keel.
-
-And the first barrier--how anxious it made me, to think by what means
-shall I get over. A man appeared just in time (N.B.--They _always_ do),
-and twopence made him happy for his share of carrying the boat round by
-land, and I jumped in again as before.
-
-Sailing was easy, too, in a fine wide river, strong and deep, and with a
-favouring breeze, and when the little steamer passed I drew alongside
-and got my penny roll and penny glass of beer, while the wondering
-passengers (the first of many amazed foreigners) smiled, chattered, and
-then looked grave--for was it not indecorous to laugh at an Englishman
-evidently mad, poor fellow?
-
-The voyage was chequered by innumerable little events, all perfectly
-different from those one meets on shore, and when I came to the forts at
-Huy and knew the first day's work was done, the persuasion was complete
-that quite a new order of sensations had been set going.
-
-Next morning I found the boat safe in the coach-house and the sails
-still drying on the harness-pegs, where we had left them, but the ostler
-and all his folks were nowhere to be seen. Everybody had gone to join
-the long funeral procession of a great musician, who lived fifty years
-at Huy, though we never heard of him before, or of Huy either; yet you
-see it is in our Map at page 291.
-
-The pleasure of meandering with a new river is very peculiar and
-fascinating. Each few yards brings a novelty, or starts an excitement. A
-crane jumps up here, a duck flutters there, splash leaps a gleaming
-trout by your side, the rushing sound of rocks warns you round that
-corner, or anon you come suddenly upon a millrace. All these, in
-addition to the scenery and the people and the weather, and the
-determination that you _must_ get on, over, through, or under every
-difficulty, and cannot leave your boat in a desolate wold, and ought to
-arrive at a house before dark, and that your luncheon bag is long since
-empty; all these, I say, keep the mind awake, which would perchance dose
-away for 100 miles in a first-class carriage.
-
-It is, as in the voyage of life, that our cares and hardships are our
-very Mentors of living. Our minds would only vegetate if all life were
-like a straight canal, and we in a boat being towed along it. The
-afflictions that agitate the soul are as its shallows, rocks, and
-whirlpools, and the bark that has not been tossed on billows knows not
-half the sweetness of the harbour of rest.
-
-The river soon got fast and lively, and hour after hour of vigorous work
-prepared me well for breakfast. Trees seemed to spring up in front and
-grow tall, but it was only because I came rapidly towards them. Pleasant
-villages floated as it were to meet me, gently moving. All life got to
-be a smooth and gliding thing, of dreamy pictures and far-off sounds,
-without fuss and without dust or anything sudden or loud, till at
-length the bustle and hammers of Liege neared the Rob Roy--for it was
-always the objects and not myself that seemed to move. Here I saw a fast
-steamer, the Seraing, propelled by water forced from its sides, and as
-my boat hopped and bobbed in the steamer's waves we entered a dock
-together, and the canoe was soon hoisted into a garden for the night.
-
-Gun-barrels are the rage in Liege. Everybody there makes or carries or
-sells gun-barrels. Even women walk about with twenty stocked rifles on
-their backs, and each rifle, remember, weighs 10 lbs. They sell plenty
-of fruit in the market, and there are churches well worth a visit here,
-but gun-barrels, after all, are the prevailing idea of the place.
-
-However, it is not my purpose to describe the towns seen on this tour. I
-had seen Liege well, years before, and indeed almost every town
-mentioned in these pages. The charm then of the voyage was not in going
-to strange lands, but in seeing old places in a new way.
-
-Here at length the Earl of Aberdeen met me, according to our plans
-arranged long before. He had got a canoe built for the trip, but a foot
-longer and two inches narrower than the Rob Roy, and, moreover, made of
-fir instead of strong oak. It was sent from London to Liege, and the
-"combing" round the edge of the deck was broken in the journey, so we
-spent some hours at a cabinet-maker's, where it was neatly mended.
-
-Launching our boats unobserved on the river, we soon left Liege in the
-distance and braved the hot sun.
-
-The pleasant companionship of two travellers, each quite free in his own
-boat, was very enjoyable. Sometimes we sailed, then paddled a mile or
-two, or joined to help the boats over a weir, or towed them along while
-we walked on the bank for a change.[III.]
-
- [III.] Frequent trials afterwards convinced me that towing is only
- useful if you feel very cramped from sitting. And this constraint is
- felt less and less as you get accustomed to sit ten or twelve hours at a
- time. Experience enables you to make the seat perfectly comfortable, and
- on the better rivers you have so frequently to get out that any
- additional change is quite needless. Towing is slower progress than
- paddling, even when your arms are tired, though my canoe was so light to
- tow that for miles I have drawn it by my little finger on a canal.
-
-Each of us took whichever side of the river pleased him best, and we
-talked across long acres of water between, to the evident surprise of
-sedate people on the banks, who often could see only one of the strange
-elocutionists, the other being hidden by bushes or tall sedge. When
-talking thus aloud had amplified into somewhat uproarious singing, the
-chorus was far more energetic than harmonious, but then the Briton is at
-once the most timid and shy of mortal travellers, and the most _outré_
-and singular when he chooses to be free.
-
-The midday beams on a river in August are sure to conquer your fresh
-energies at last, and so we had to pull up at a village for bread and
-wine.
-
-The moment I got into my boat again a shrill whining cry in the river
-attracted my attention, and it came from a poor little boy, who had
-somehow fallen into the water, and was now making his last faint efforts
-to cling to a great barge in the stream. Naturally I rushed over to save
-him, and my boat went so fast and so straight that its sharp prow caught
-the hapless urchin in the rear, and with such a pointed reminder too
-that he screamed and struggled and thus got safely on the barge, which
-was beyond his reach, until thus roughly but fortunately aided.
-
-On most of the Belgian, German, and French rivers there are excellent
-floating baths, an obvious convenience which I do not recollect
-observing on a single river in Britain, though in summer we have quite
-as many bathers as there are abroad.
-
-The floating baths consist of a wooden framework, say 100 feet long,
-moored in the stream, and through which the water runs freely, while a
-set of strong bars and chains and iron network forms a false bottom,
-shallow at one end and deeper at the other, so that the bather cannot be
-carried away by the current.
-
-Round the sides there are bathing boxes and steps, ladders, and spring
-boards for the various degree of aquatic proficiency.
-
-The youths and even the little boys on the Rhine are very good swimmers,
-and many of them dive well. Sometimes there is a ladies' bath of similar
-construction, from which a good deal of very lively noise may be heard
-when the fair bathers are in a talkative mood.
-
-The soldiers at military stations near the rivers are marched down
-regularly to bathe, and one day we found a large number of young
-recruits assembled for their general dip.
-
-While some were in the water others were firing at the targets for ball
-practice. There were three targets, each made of cardboard sheets,
-fastened upon wooden uprights. A marker safely protected in a ball-proof
-_mantelet_ was placed so close to these targets that he could see all
-three at once. One man of the firing party opposite each target having
-fired, his bullet passed through the pasteboard and left a clear round
-hole in it, while the ball itself was buried in the earth behind, and
-so could be recovered again, instead of being dashed into fragments as
-on our iron targets, and then spattered about on all sides, to the great
-danger of the marker and everybody else.
-
-When three men had thus fired, signals were made by drum, flag, and
-bugle, and the firing ceased. The marker then came out and pointed to
-the bullet-mark on each target, and having patched up the holes he
-returned within his mantelet, and the firing was resumed. This very safe
-and simple method of ball practice is much better than that used in our
-military shooting.
-
-Once as we rounded a point there was a large herd of cattle swimming
-across the stream in close column, and I went right into the middle of
-them to observe how they would welcome a stranger. In the Nile you see
-the black oxen swim over the stream night and morning, reminding you of
-Pharaoh's dream about the "kine" coming up out of the river, a notion
-that used to puzzle in boyhood days, but which is by no means
-incongruous when thus explained. The Bible is a book that bears full
-light to be cast upon it, for truth looks more true under more light.
-
-We had been delayed this morning in our start, and so the evening
-fell sombre ere we came near the resting-place. This was the town of
-Maastricht, in Holland, and it is stated to be one of the most strongly
-fortified places in Europe; that is, of the old fashion, with straight
-high walls quite impervious to the Armstrong and Whitworth guns--of a
-century gone by.
-
-[Illustration: CATTLE SWIMMING THE MEUSE. Page 28.]
-
-But all we knew as we came near it at night was, that the stream was
-good and strong, and that no lights appeared. Emerging from trees we
-were right in the middle of the town, but where were the houses? had
-they no windows, no lamps, not even a candle?
-
-Two great high walls bounded the river, but not a gate or port could we
-find, though one of us carefully scanned the right and the other
-cautiously scraped along the left of this very strange place.
-
-It appears that the commerce and boats all turn into a canal above the
-old tumble-down fortress, and so the blank brick sides bounded us thus
-inhospitably. Soon we came to a bridge, looming overhead in the
-blackness, and our arrival there was greeted by a shower of stones from
-some Dutch lads upon it, pattering pitilessly upon the delicate
-cedar-covered canoes.
-
-Turning up stream, and after a closer scrutiny, we found a place where
-we could cling to the wall, which here sloped a little with debris, and
-now there was nothing for it but to haul the boats up bodily over the
-impregnable fortification, and thus carry them into the sleepy town. No
-wonder the _octroi_ guard stared as his lamplight fell on two gaunt men
-in grey, carrying what seemed to him a pair of long coffins, but he was
-a sensible though surprised individual, and he guided us well, stamping
-through the dark deserted streets to an hotel.
-
-Though the canoes in a cart made a decided impression at the
-railway-station next day, and arguments logically proved that the boats
-must go as baggage, the porters were dense to conviction, and obdurate
-to persuasion, until all at once a sudden change took place; they rushed
-at us, caught up the two neglected "batteaux," ran with them to the
-luggage-van, pushed them in, and banged the door, piped the whistle, and
-as the train went off--"Do you know why they have yielded so suddenly?"
-said a Dutchman, who could speak English. "Not at all," said we.
-"Because I told them one of you was the son of the Prime Minister, and
-the other Lord Russell's son."
-
-But a change of railway had to be made at Aix-la-Chapelle, and after a
-hard struggle we had nearly surrendered the boats to the "merchandise
-train," to limp along the line at night and to arrive "perhaps
-to-morrow." Indeed the Superintendent of that department seemed to
-clutch the boats as his prize, but as he gloried a little too loudly,
-the "Chef" of the passengers' baggage came, listened, and with calm mien
-ordered for us a special covered truck, and on arriving at Cologne there
-was "nothing to pay."[IV.]
-
- [IV.] This is an exceptional case, and I wrote from England to
- thank the officer. It would be unreasonable again to expect any baggage
- to be thus favoured. A canoe is at best a clumsy inconvenience in the
- luggage-van, and no one can wonder that it is objected to. In France the
- railway _fourgons_ are shorter than in other countries, and the
- officials there insisted on treating my canoe as merchandise. The
- instances given above show what occurred in Belgium and Holland. In
- Germany little difficulty was made about the boat as luggage. In
- Switzerland there was no objection raised, for was not I an English
- traveller? As for the English railway guards, they have the good sense
- to see that a long light article like a canoe can be readily carried on
- the top of a passenger carriage. Probably some distinct rules will be
- instituted by the railways in each country, when they are found to be
- liable to a nautical incursion, but after all one can very well arrange
- to walk or see sights now and then, while the boat travels slower by a
- goods-train.
-
-To be quiet we went to the Belle Vue, at Deutz, which is opposite
-Cologne, but a great Singing Society had its gala there, and sang and
-drank prodigiously. Next day (Sunday too) this same quiet Deutz had a
-"Schutzen Fest," where the man who had hit the target best was dragged
-about in an open carriage with his wife, both wearing brass crowns, and
-bowing royally to a screaming crowd, while blue lights glared and
-rockets shot up in the serene darkness.
-
-At Cologne, while Lord A. went to take our tickets at the steamer, the
-boats were put in a handcart, which I shoved from behind as a man pulled
-it in front. In our way to the river I was assailed by a poor vagrant
-sort of fellow, who insisted on being employed as a porter, and being
-enraged at a refusal he actually took up a large stone and ran after the
-cart in a threatening passion. I could not take my hands from the boats,
-though in fear that his missile would smash them if he threw it, but I
-kicked up my legs behind as we trotted along. One of the sentries saw
-the man's conduct, and soon a policeman brought him to me as a prisoner,
-but as he trembled now with fear more than before with anger, I declined
-to make any charge, though the police pressed this course, saying,
-"Travellers are sacred here." This incident is mentioned because it was
-the sole occasion when any discourtesy happened to me during this tour.
-
-We took the canoes by steamer to a wide part of the Rhine at Bingen.
-Here the scenery is good, and we spent an active day on the river,
-sailing in a splendid breeze, landing on islands, scudding about in
-steamers' waves, and, in fact, enjoying a combination of yacht voyage,
-pic-nic, and boat race.
-
-This was a fine long day of pleasure, though in one of the sudden
-squalls my canoe happened to ground on a bank just at the most critical
-time, and the bamboo mast broke short. The uncouth and ridiculous
-appearance of a sail falling overboard is like that of an umbrella
-turned inside out in a gust of wind. But I got another stronger mast,
-and made the broken one into a boom.
-
-Lord Aberdeen went by train to inspect the river Nahe, but reported
-unfavourably; and I paddled up from its mouth, but the water was very
-low.
-
-Few arguments were needed to stop me from going against stream; for I
-have a profound respect for the universal principle of gravitation, and
-quite allow that in rowing it is well to have it with you by always
-going down stream, and so the good rule was to make steam, horse, or man
-take the canoe against the current, and to let gravity help the boat to
-carry me down.
-
-Time pressed for my fellow-paddler to return to England, so we went on
-to Mayence, and thence by rail to Asschaffenburg on the Main. The canoes
-again travelled in grand state, having a truck to themselves; but
-instead of the stately philosopher superintendent of Aix-la-Chapelle,
-who managed this gratuitously, we had a fussy little person to deal
-with, and to pay accordingly,--the only case of decided cheating I can
-recollect during the voyage.
-
-A fellow-passenger in the railway was deeply interested about our tour;
-and we had spoken of its various details for some time to him before we
-found that he supposed we were travelling with "two small cannons,"
-mistaking the word "canôts" for "canons." He had even asked about their
-length and weight, and had heard with perfect placidity that our
-"canons" were fifteen feet long, and weighed eighty pounds, and that we
-took them only for "plaisir," not to sell. Had we carried two pet
-cameleopards, he probably would not have been astonished.
-
-The guests at the German inn of this long-named town amused us much by
-their respectful curiosity. Our dress in perfect unison, both alike in
-grey flannel, puzzled them exceedingly; but this sort of perplexity
-about costume and whence why and whither was an everyday occurrence for
-months afterwards with me.
-
-A fine breeze enabled us to start on the river Main under sail, though
-we lost much time in forcing the boats to do yachts' work; and I am
-inclined to believe that sailing on rivers is rather a mistake unless
-with a favourable wind. The Main is an easy stream to follow, and the
-scenery only so-so. A storm of rain at length made it lunch-time, so we
-sheltered ourselves in a bleak sort of arbour attached to an inn, where
-they could give us only sour black bread and raw bacon. Eating this poor
-cheer in a wet, rustling breeze and pattering rain, half-chilled in our
-macintoshes, was the only time I fared badly, so little of "roughing it"
-was there in this luxurious tour.
-
-Fine weather came soon again and pleasure,--nay, positive sporting; for
-there were wild ducks quite impudent in their familiarity, and herons
-wading about with that look of injured innocence they put on when you
-dare to disturb them. So my friend capped his revolver-pistol, and I
-acted as a pointer dog, stealing along the other side of the river, and
-indicating the position of the game with my paddle.
-
-Vast trouble was taken. Lord A. went ashore, and crawled on the bank a
-long way to a wily bird, but, though the sportsman had shown himself at
-Wimbledon to be one of the best shots in the world, it was evidently not
-easy to shoot a heron with a pocket revolver.
-
-As the darker shades fell, even this rather stupid river became
-beautiful; and our evening bath was in a quiet pool, with pure yellow
-sand to rest on if you tired in swimming. At Hanau we stopped for the
-night.
-
-The wanderings and turnings of the Main next day have really left no
-impression on my memory, except that we had a pleasant time, and at last
-came to a large Schloss, where we observed on the river a boat evidently
-English. While we examined this craft, a man told us it belonged to the
-Prince of Wales, "and he is looking at you now from the balcony."
-
-For this was the Duchess of Cambridge's Schloss at Rumpenheim, and
-presently a four-in-hand crossed the ferry, and the Prince and Princess
-of Wales drove in it by the river-side, while we plied a vigorous paddle
-against the powerful west wind until we reached Frankfort, where our wet
-jackets were soon dried at the _Russie_, one of the best hotels in
-Europe.
-
-The Frankfort boatmen were much interested next day to see the two
-English canoes flitting about so lightly on their river; sometimes
-skimming the surface with the wind, and despising the contrary stream;
-then wheeling about, and paddling hither and thither in shallows where
-it seemed as if the banks were only moist.
-
-On one occasion we both got into my canoe, and it supported the
-additional weight perfectly well, which seemed to prove that the
-dimensions of it were unnecessarily large for the displacement required.
-However, there was not room for both of us to use our paddles
-comfortably in the same canoe.
-
-On the Sunday, the Royal personages came to the English church at
-Frankfort, and, with that quiet behaviour of good taste which wins more
-admiration that any pageantry, they walked from the place of worship
-like the rest of the hearers.
-
-There is a true grandeur in simplicity when the occasion is one of
-solemn things.
-
-Next day my active and pleasant companion had to leave me on his return
-to England. Not satisfied with a fortnight's rifle practice at
-Wimbledon, where the best prize of the year was won by his skill, he
-must return to the moors and coverts for more deadly sport; and the
-calls of more important business, besides, required his presence at
-home. He paddled down the Rhine to Cologne, and on the way several times
-performed the difficult feat of hooking on his canoe to a steamer going
-at full speed.
-
-Meantime, my boat went along with me by railway to Freyburg, from whence
-the new voyage was really to begin, for as yet the Rob Roy had not
-paddled in parts unknown.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
- Höllenthal Pass--Ladies--Black Forest--Night Music--Beds--Lake
- Titisee--Pontius Pilate--Storm--Starers--Singers--Source of the
- Danube.
-
-
-Planning your summer tour is one of the most agreeable of occupations.
-It is in June or July that the Foreign Bradshaw becomes suddenly of
-intense interest, and the well-known pages of "Steamers and
-Railways"--why, it is worth while being a bachelor to be able to read
-each of these as part of your sketched-out plan, and (oh, selfish
-thought!) to have only one mind to consult as to whither away.
-
-All this pleasure is a good deal influenced, however, by true answers to
-these questions,--Have you worked hard in working time, so as to be
-entitled to play in these playhours? Is this to be a vacation of
-refreshment, or an idle lounge and killing of time? Are you going off to
-rest, and to recruit delicate health, or with vigour to enjoy a summer
-of active exertion?
-
-But now the infallible Bradshaw could not help me with the canoe one
-iota, and Baedeker was not written for a boat; so at Freyburg my plans
-resolved themselves into the simple direction, "Go at once to the source
-of the Danube."
-
-Next morning, therefore, found the Rob Roy in a cart, and the
-grey-clothed traveller walking beside it on the dusty Höllenthal road.
-The gay, light-hearted exultation of being strong and well, and on a
-right errand, and with unknown things to do and places to see and people
-to meet, who can describe this? How easy it is at such times to be glad,
-and to think this is being "thankful."
-
-After moralizing for a few miles, a carriage full of English people
-overtook me, and soon we became companions. "The English are so distant,
-so silent, such _hauteur_, and gloomy distrust," forsooth! A false
-verdict, say I. The ladies carried me off through the very pretty glen,
-and the canoe on its cart trundled slowly after us behind, through the
-Höllenthal Pass, which is too seldom visited by travellers, who so often
-admire the spire of Freyburg (from the railway perhaps), passing it on
-their route to Switzerland.
-
-This entrance to the Schwartzwald, or Black Forest, is a woody, rocky,
-and grim defile, with an excellent road, and good inns.
-
-The villages are of wood, and there is a saw-mill in every other house,
-giving a busy, wholesome sound, mellowed by the patter of the
-water-wheel. Further on, where tourists' scenery stops, it is a grand,
-dark-coloured ocean of hills. The houses get larger and larger, and
-fewer and fewer, and nearly every one has a little chapel built
-alongside, with a wooden saint's image of life-size nailed on the gable
-end. One night I was in one of these huge domiciles, when all the
-servants and ploughboys came in, and half said, half sung, their
-prayers, in a whining but yet musical tone, and then retired for a
-hearty supper.
-
-Our carriage mounted still among crags, that bowed from each side to
-meet across the narrow gorge, and were crested on high by the grand
-trees that will be felled and floated down the Rhine on one of those
-huge rafts you meet at Strasbourg. But everybody must have seen a Rhine
-raft, so I need not describe it, with its acres of wood and its street
-of cabin dwellings, and its gay bannerets. A large raft needs 500 men to
-navigate it, and the timber will sell for 30,000_l._
-
-At the top of this pass was the watershed of this first chain of hills,
-where my English friends took leave of me. The Rob Roy was safely housed
-in the Baar Inn, and I set off for a long walk to find if the tiny
-stream there would possibly be navigable.
-
-Alone on a hillside in a foreign land, and with an evening sun on the
-wild mountains, the playful breeze and the bleating sheep around
-you--there is a certain sense of independent delight that possesses the
-mind then with a buoyant gladness; but how can I explain it in words,
-unless you have felt this sort of pleasure?
-
-However, the rivulet was found to be eminently unsuited for a canoe; so
-now let me go to bed in my wooden room, where the washingbasin is oval,
-and the partitions are so thin that one hears all the noises of the
-place at midnight. Now, the long-drawn snore of the landlord; then, the
-tittle-tattle of the servants not asleep yet,--a pussy's plaintive mew,
-and the scraping of a mouse; the cows breathing in soft slumber; and,
-again, the sharp rattle of a horse's chain.
-
-The elaborate construction of that edifice of housewifery called a
-"bett" here, and which we are expected to sleep upon, can only be
-understood when you have to undermine and dismantle it night after night
-to arrive at a reasonable flat surface on which to recline.
-
-First you take off a great fluff bag, at least two feet thick, then a
-counterpane, and then a brilliant scarlet blanket; next you extract one
-enormous pillow, another enormous pillow, and a huge wedge-shaped
-bolster,--all, it appears, requisite for the Teutonic race, who yet
-could surely put themselves to sleep at an angle of forty-five degrees,
-without all this trouble, by merely tilting up the end of a flat
-bedstead.
-
-Simple but real courtesy have I found throughout. Every one says "Gut
-tag;" and, even in a hotel, on getting up from breakfast a guest who has
-not spoken a word will wish "Gut morgen" as he departs, and perhaps "Bon
-appetit" to those not satisfied like himself. About eight o'clock the
-light repast of tea or coffee, bread, butter, and honey begins the day;
-at noon is "mittagessen," the mid-day meal, leaving all proper excuse
-for another dining operation in the shape of a supper at seven.
-
-No fine manners here! My driver sat down to dinner with me, and the
-waiter along with him, smoking a cigar between whiles, as he waited on
-us both. But all this is just as one sees in Canada and in Norway, and
-wherever there are mountains, woods, and torrent streams, with a sparse
-population; and, as in Norway too, you see at once that all can read,
-and they do read. There is more reading in one day in a common house in
-Germany than in a month in the same sort of place in France.
-
-I had hired the cart and driver by the day, but he by no means admired
-my first directions next morning--namely, to take the boat off the main
-road, so as to get to the Titisee, a pretty mountain lake about four
-miles long, and surrounded by wooded knolls. His arguments and
-objections were evidently superficial, and something deeper than he said
-was in his mind. In fact, it appears that, by a superstition long
-cherished there, Pontius Pilate is supposed to be in that deep, still
-lake, and dark rumours were told that he would surely drag me down if I
-ventured upon it.[V.]
-
- [V.] The legend about Pilate extends over Germany and Italy.
- Even on the flanks of Stromboli there is a _talus_ of the volcano which
- the people dare not approach, "because of Pontius Pilate."
-
-Of course, this decided the matter, and when I launched the Rob Roy from
-the pebbly shore in a fine foggy morning, and in full view of the
-inhabitants of the region (eight in number at last census), we had a
-most pleasant paddle for several miles.
-
-At a distance the boat was invisible being so low in the water, and they
-said that "only a man was seen, whirling a paddle about his head."
-
-There is nothing interesting about this lake, except that it is 3,000
-feet above the sea and very lonely, in the middle of the Black Forest.
-Certainly no English boat has been there before, and probably no other
-will visit the deserted water.
-
-After this, the Rob Roy is carted again still further into the forests.
-Lumbering vehicles meet us, all carrying wood. Some have joined three
-carts together, and have eight horses. Others have a bullock or two
-besides, and all the men are intelligent enough, for they stop and
-stare, and my driver deigns to tell them, in a patois wholly beyond me,
-as to what a strange fare he has got with a boat and no other luggage.
-However, they invariably conclude that the canoe is being carried about
-for sale, and it could have been well sold frequently already.
-
-About mid-day my sage driver began to mutter something at intervals, but
-I could only make out from his gestures and glances that it had to do
-with a storm overhead. The mixture of English, French, and German on the
-borders of the Rhine accustoms one to hear odd words. "Shall have you
-pottyto?" says a waiter, and he is asking if you will have potatoes.
-Another hands you a dish, saying, it is "sweetbone," and you must know
-it is "sweetbread."
-
-Yes, the storm came, and as it seldom does come except in such places. I
-once heard a thunder peal while standing on the crater of Mount
-Vesuvius, and I have seen the bright lightning, in cold and grand
-beauty, playing on the Falls of Niagara in a sombre night, but the
-vividness of the flashes to-day in the Black Forest, and the crashing,
-rolling, and booming of the terrible and majestic battery of heaven was
-astounding. Once a bolt fell so near and with such a blaze that the
-horse albeit tired enough started off down a hill and made me quite
-nervous lest he should overturn the cart and injure my precious boat,
-which naturally was more and more dear to me as it was longer my sole
-companion.
-
-As we toiled up the Rothenhaus Pass, down came the rain, whistling and
-rushing through the cold, dark forests of larch, and blackening the top
-of great Feldberg, the highest mountain here, and then pouring heavy and
-fast on the cart and horse, the man, the canoe, and myself. This was the
-last rain my boat got in the tour. All other days I spent in her were
-perfectly dry.
-
-People stared out of their windows to see a cart and a boat in this
-heavy shower--what! a boat, up here in the hills? Where can it be going,
-and whose is it? Then they ran out to us, and forced the driver to
-harangue, and he tried to satisfy their curiosity, but his explanation
-never seemed to be quite exhaustive, for they turned homeward shaking
-their heads and looking grave, even though I nodded and laughed at them
-through the bars of the cart, lifting up my head among the wet straw.
-
-The weather dried up its tears at last, and the sun glittered on the
-road, still sparkling with its rivulets of rain, but the boat was soon
-dried by a sponge, while a smart walk warmed its well-soaked captain.
-
-The horse too had got into a cheerful vein and actually trotted with
-excitement, for now it was down hill, and bright sun--a welcome change
-in ten minutes from our labouring up a steep forest road in a
-thunder-storm.
-
-The most rigid teetotaller (I am only a temperance man) would probably
-allow that just a very small glass of kirchwasser might be prescribed at
-this moment with advantage, and as there was no "faculty" there but
-myself, I administered the dose medicinally to the driver and to his
-employer, and gave a bran-mash and a rub down to the horse, which made
-all three of us better satisfied with ourselves and each other, and so
-we jogged on again.
-
-By dusk I marched into Donaueschingen, and on crossing the little
-bridge, saw at once I could begin the Danube from its very source, for
-there was at least three inches of water in the middle of the stream.
-
-In five minutes a crowd assembled round the boat, even before it could
-be loosened from the cart.[VI.]
-
- [VI.] After trying various modes of securing the canoe in a
- springless cart for long journeys on rough and hilly roads, I am
- convinced that the best way is to fasten two ropes across the top of a
- long cart and let the boat lie on these, which will bear it like springs
- and so modify the jolts. The painter is then made fast fore and aft, so
- as to keep the boat from moving back and forward. All plans for using
- trusses of straw, &c., fail after a few miles of rolling gravel and
- coarse ruts.
-
-The ordinary idlers came first, then the more shy townspeople, and then
-a number of strange folk, whose exact position I could not make out,
-until it was explained that the great singing meeting for that part of
-Germany was to be held next day in the town, and so there were 600
-visitors, all men of some means and intelligence, who were collected
-from a wide country round about.
-
-The town was in gala for this meeting of song. The inns were full, but
-still the good landlord of the "Poste" by the bridge gave me an
-excellent room, and the canoe was duly borne aloft in procession to the
-coachhouse.
-
-What a din these tenors and basses did make at the table d'hôte!
-Everything about the boat had to be told a dozen times over to them,
-while my driver had a separate lecture-room on the subject below.
-
-The town was well worth inspection next day, for it was in a violent fit
-of decoration. Every house was tidied up, and all the streets were
-swept clean. From the humbler windows hung green boughs and garlands,
-rugs, quilts, and blankets; while banners, Venetian streamers, arches,
-mottoes, and wreaths of flowers announced the wealthier houses. Crowds
-of gaping peasants paraded the streets and jostled against bands
-drumming and tromboning (if there be such a word), and marching in a
-somewhat ricketty manner over the undoubtedly rough pavement. Every now
-and then the bustle had a fresh paroxysm when four horses rattled along,
-bringing in new visitors from some distant choir. They are coming you
-see in a long four-wheeled cart, covered with evergreens and bearing
-four pine trees in it erect among sacks which are used as seats--only
-the inmates do not sit but stand up in the cart, and shout, and sing,
-and wave banners aloft, while the hundreds of on-lookers roar out the
-"Hoch," the German Hurrah! with only one note.
-
-As every window had its ornament or device, I made one for mine also,
-and my sails were festooned (rather tastefully, I flatter myself) to
-support the little blue silk English jack of the canoe. This
-complimentary display was speedily recognized by the Germans, who
-greeted it with cheers, and sung glees below, and improvised verses
-about England, and then sang round the boat itself, laughing, shouting,
-and hurraing boisterously with the vigour of youthful lungs. Never tell
-me again that the Germans are phlegmatic!
-
-[Illustration: Singers' Waggon.]
-
-They had a "banket" in the evening at the Museum. It was "free for all,"
-and so 400 came on these cheap terms, and all drank beer from long
-glass cylinders at a penny a glass, all smoked cigars at a farthing a
-piece, and all talked and all sang, though a splendid brass band was
-playing beside them, and whenever it stopped a glee or chorus commenced.
-
-The whole affair was a scene of bewildering excitement, very curious to
-contemplate for one sitting in the midst. Next me I found a young
-bookseller who had sold me a French book in the morning. He said I must
-take a ticket for the Sunday concert; but I told him I was an
-Englishman, and had learned in my country that it was God's will and for
-man's good to keep Sunday for far better things, which are too much
-forgotten when one day in seven is not saved from the business,
-excitement, and giddiness of every-day life.
-
-And is there not a feeling of dull sameness about time in those
-countries and places where the week is not steadied and centred round a
-solid day on which lofty and deep things, pure and lasting things may
-have at least some hours of our attention?
-
-So I left the merry singers to bang their drums and hoch! at each other
-in the great hall provided for their use by the Prince of Furstemburg.
-He had reared this near his stables, in which are many good horses, some
-of the best being English, and named on their stalls "Miss," "Pet,"
-"Lady," or "Tom," &c.
-
-An English gentleman whom I met afterwards had been travelling through
-Germany with a four-in-hand drag, and he came to Donaueschingen, where
-the Prince soon heard of his arrival. Next day His Serene Highness was
-at his stables, and seeing an English visitor there, he politely
-conducted the stranger over the whole establishment, explaining every
-item with minute care. He found out afterwards that this visitor was not
-the English gentleman, but only his groom!
-
-The intelligence, activity, and good temper of most of the German
-waiters in hotels will surely be observed by travellers whose daily
-enjoyment depends so much on that class. Here, for instance, is a little
-waiter at the Poste Inn. He is the size of a boy, but looks twenty years
-older. His face is flat, and broad, and brown, and so is his jacket. His
-shoulders are high, and he reminds you of those four everlasting German
-juveniles, with thick comforters about their necks, who stand in London
-streets blowing brass music, with their cheeks puffed out, and their
-cold grey eyes turning on all the passing objects while the music, or at
-any rate a noise, blurts out as if mechanically from the big, unpolished
-instruments held by red benumbed fingers.
-
-This waiter lad then is all the day at the beck of all, and never gets a
-night undisturbed, yet he is as obliging at ten o'clock in the dark as
-for the early coffee at sunrise, and he quite agrees with each guest, in
-the belief that _his_ particular cutlet or cognac is the most important
-feature of the hour.
-
-I honour this sort of man. He fills a hard place well, and Bismarck or
-Mussurus cannot do more.
-
-Then again, there is Ulric, the other waiter, hired only for to-day as
-an "extra," to meet the crush of hungry vocalists who will soon fill the
-_saal_. He is timid yet, being young, and only used to a village inn
-where "The Poste at Donaueschingen" is looked up to with solemn
-admiration as the pink of fashion. He was learning French too, and was
-sentimental, so I gave him a very matter-of-fact book, and then he asked
-me to let him sit in the canoe while I was to paddle it down the river
-to his home! The naïve simplicity of this request was truly refreshing,
-and if we had been sure of shallow water all the way, and yet not too
-shallow, it would perhaps have been amusing to admit such a passenger.
-
-The actual source of the Danube is by no means agreed upon any more than
-the source of the Nile. I had a day's exploration of the country, after
-seeking exact information on this point from the townspeople in vain.
-The land round Donaueschingen is a spongy soil, with numerous rivulets
-and a few large streams. I went along one of these, the Brege, which
-rises twenty miles away, near St. Martin, and investigated about ten
-miles of another, the Brigach, a brook rising near St. Georgen, about a
-mile from the source of the Neckar, which river runs to the Rhine. These
-streams join near Donaueschingen, but in the town there bubbles up a
-clear spring of water in the gardens of the Prince near the church, and
-this, the infant Danube, runs into the other water already wide enough
-for a boat, but which then for the first time has the name of Donau.
-
-The name, it is said, is never given to either of the two larger
-rivulets, because sometimes both have been known to fail in dry summers,
-while the bubbling spring has been perennial for ages.
-
-The Brege and another confluent are caused to fill an artificial pond
-close by the Brigach. This lake is wooded round, and has a pretty
-island, and swans, and gold fish. A waterwheel (in vain covered for
-concealment) pumps up water to flow from an inverted horn amid a group
-of statuary in this romantic pond, and the stream flowing from it also
-joins the others, now the Danube.[VII.]
-
- [VII.] The old Roman Ister. The name Donau is pronounced
- "Doanou." Hilpert says, "Dönau allied to Dón and Düna (a river)." In
- Celtic _Dune_ means "river," and _Don_ means "brown," while "_au_" in
- German is "island" (like the English "eyot").
-
- The other three rivers mentioned above, and depicted in the plan on the
- map with this book, seem to preserve traces of their Roman names. Thus
- the "Brigach" is the stream coming from the north where "Alt Breisach"
- now represents the Roman "Mons Brisiacus," while the "Brege" may be
- referred to "Brigantii," the people about the "Brigantinus Lacus," now
- the "Boden See" (Lake Constance), where also Bregentz now represents the
- Roman "Brigantius." The river Neckar was "Nicer" of old, and the Black
- Forest was "Hercynia Silva."
-
- The reader being now sufficiently confused about the source of the
- Danube and its name, let us leave the Latin in the quagmire and jump
- nimbly into our canoe.
-
-That there might be no mistake however in this matter about the various
-rivulets, I went up each stream until it would not float a canoe. Then
-from near the little bridge, on August 28, while the singers _sol-faed_
-excessively at the boat, and shouted "hocks" and farewells to the
-English "flagge," and the landlord bowed (his bill of thirteen francs
-for three full days being duly paid), and the populace stared, the Rob
-Roy shot off like an arrow on a river delightfully new.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- The Danube--Singers--Shady nooks--Geisingen--Mill
- weirs--Rapids--Morning Crowd--Donkey's
- stable--Islands--Monks--Spiders--Concert--Fish--A race.
-
-
-At first the river is a few feet broad, but it soon enlarges, and the
-streams of a great plain quickly bring its volume to that of the Thames
-at Kingston. The quiet, dark Donau winds about then in slow serpentine
-smoothness for hours in a level mead, with waving sedge on the banks and
-silken sleepy weeds in the water. Here the long-necked, long-winged,
-long-legged heron, that seems to have forgotten to get a body, flocks by
-scores with ducks of the various wild breeds, while pretty painted
-butterflies and fierce-looking dragon-flies float, as it were, on the
-summer sunbeams, and simmer in the air. The haymakers are at work; and
-half their work is hammering the soft edges of their very miserable
-scythes, which they then dip in the water. Now they have a chat; and as
-I whiz by round a corner, there is a row of open mouths and wondering
-eyes, but an immediate return to courtesy with a touch of the hat, and
-"Gut tag" when presence of mind is restored. Then they call to their
-mates, and laugh with rustic satisfaction--a laugh that is real and
-true, not cynical, but the recognition of a strange incongruity, that of
-a reasonable being pent up in a boat and hundreds of miles from home,
-yet whistling most cheerfully all the time.
-
-Soon the hills on either side have houses and old castles, and then
-wood, and, lastly, rock; and with these, mingling the bold, the wild,
-and the sylvan, there begins a grand panorama of river beauties to be
-unrolled for days and days. No river I have seen equals this Upper
-Danube, and I have visited many pretty streams. The wood is so thick,
-the rocks so quaint and high and varied, the water so clear, and the
-grass so green. Winding here and turning there, and rushing fast down
-this reach and paddling slow along that, with each minute a fresh view,
-and of new things, the mind is ever on the _qui vive_, or the boat will
-go bump on a bank, crash on a rock, or plunge into a tree full of gnats
-and spiders. This is veritable travelling, where skill and tact are
-needed to bear you along, and where each exertion of either is rewarded
-at once. I think, also, it promotes decision of character, for you
-_must_ choose, and that promptly, too, between, say, five channels
-opened suddenly before you. Three are probably safe, but which of these
-three is the shortest, deepest, and most practicable? In an instant, if
-you hesitate, the boat is on a bank; and it is remarkable how speedily
-the exercise of this resolution becomes experienced into habit, but of
-course only after some severe lessons.
-
-It is exciting to direct a camel over the sandy desert when you have
-lost your fellow-travellers, and to guide a horse in trackless wilds
-alone; but the pleasure of paddling a canoe down a rapid, high-banked,
-and unknown river, is far more than these.
-
-Part of this pleasure flows from the mere sense of rapid motion. In
-going down a swift reach of the river there is the same sensation about
-one's diaphragm which is felt when one goes forward smoothly on a lofty
-rope swing. Now the first few days of the Danube are upon very fast
-waters. Between its source and Ulm the descent of the river is about
-1,500 feet.[VIII.] This would give 300 feet of fall for each of a five
-days' journey; and it will be seen from this that the prospect for the
-day's voyage is most cheering when you launch in the morning and know
-you will have to descend about the height of St. Paul's Cathedral before
-halting for the night.
-
- [VIII.] The best geographical books give different estimates of
- this, some above and others below the amount here stated.
-
-Another part of the pleasure--it is not to be denied--consists in the
-satisfaction of overcoming difficulties. When you have followed a
-channel chosen from several, and, after half-a-mile of it, you see one
-and another of the rejected channels emerging from its island to join
-that you are in, there is a natural pride in observing that any other
-streamlet but the one you had chosen would certainly have been a
-mistake.
-
-These reflections are by the way; and we have been winding the while
-through a rich grassy plain till a bridge over the river made it seem
-quite a civilized spot, and, just as I passed under, there drove along
-one of the green-boughed waggons of jovial singers returning from
-Donaueschingen. Of course they recognised the canoe, and stopped to give
-her a hearty cheer, ending with a general chorus made up of the few
-English words of their vocabulary, "All r-r-r-r-ight, Englishmánn!" "All
-r-r-r-r-ight, Englishmánn!"[IX.]
-
- [IX.] See sketch, _ante_, page 49.
-
-The coincidence of these noisy but good-humoured people having been
-assembled in the morning, when the canoe had started from the source of
-the Danube, caused the news of its adventure to be rapidly carried to
-all the neighbouring towns, so that the Rob Roy was welcomed at once,
-and the newspapers recorded its progress not only in Germany and France,
-but in England, and even in Sweden and in America.
-
-At the village of Geisingen it was discovered that the boiler of my
-engine needed some fuel, or, in plain terms, I must breakfast. The
-houses of the town were not close to the river, but some workmen were
-near at hand, and I had to leave the canoe in the centre of the stream
-moored to a plank, with very strict injunctions (in most distinct
-English!) to an intelligent boy to take charge of her until my return;
-and then I walked to the principal street, and to the best-looking
-house, and knocked, entered, asked for breakfast, and sat down, and was
-speedily supplied with an excellent meal. One after another the people
-came in to look at the queer stranger who was clad so oddly, and had
-come--aye, _how_ had he come? that was what they argued about in
-whispers till he paid his bill, and then they followed to see where he
-would go, and thus was there always a congregation of inquisitive but
-respectful observers as we started anew.
-
-Off again, though the August sun is hot. But we cannot stop now. The
-shade will be better enjoyed when resting in the boat under a high rock,
-or in a cool water cave, or beneath a wooden bridge, or within the
-longer shadow of a pine-clad cliff.
-
-Often I tried to rest those midday hours (for one cannot always work) on
-shore, in a house, or on a grassy bank; but it was never so pleasant as
-at full length in the canoe, under a thick grown oak-tree, with a book
-to read dreamily, and a mild cigar at six for a penny, grown in the
-fields we passed, and made up at yesterday's inn.[X.]
-
- [X.] Two stimulants well known in England are much used in
- Germany,--tea and tobacco.
-
- (1) The tobacco plant (sometimes styled a weed, because it also grows
- wild) produces leaves, which are dried and rolled, and then treated with
- fire, using an appropriate instrument, by which the fumes are inhaled.
- The effect upon many persons is to soothe; but it impairs the appetite
- of others. The use is carried to excess in Turkey. The leaves contain a
- deadly poison.
-
- (2) The tea weed (sometimes styled a plant, because it also grows under
- cultivation) produces leaves, which are dried and rolled, and then
- treated with fire, using an appropriate instrument, by which the
- infusion is imbibed. The effect upon many persons is to cheer; but it
- impairs the sleep of others. The use is carried to excess in Russia. The
- leaves contain a deadly poison.
-
- Both these luxuries are cheap and portable, and are daily enjoyed by
- millions of persons in all climates. Both require care and moderation in
- their use. Both have advocates and enemies; and it cannot be settled by
- argument whether the plant or the weed is the more useful or hurtful to
- mankind.
-
-Let it be well understood that this picture only describes the resting
-time, and not the active hours of progress in the cooler part of the day
-before and after the bright meridian sun.
-
-In working hours there was no lazy lolling, the enjoyment was that of
-delightful exertion, varied at every reach of the river.
-
-You start, indeed, quietly enough, but are sure soon to hear the
-well-known rushing sound of a milldam, and this almost every day, five
-or six times. On coming to it I usually went straight along the top edge
-of the weir, looking over for a good place to descend by, and surveying
-the innumerable little streams below to see my best course afterwards.
-By this time the miller and his family and his men, and all the
-neighbours, would run down to see the new sight, but I always lifted out
-my little black knapsack and put my paddle on shore, and then stepped
-out and pulled my boat over or round the obstruction, sometimes through
-a hayfield or two, or by a lane, or along a wall, and then launched her
-again in deep water. Dams less than four feet high one can "shoot" with
-a headlong plunge into the little billows at the foot, but this wrenches
-the boot if it strikes against a stone, and it is better to get out and
-ease her through, lift her over, or drag her round.
-
-In other places I had to sit astride on the stern of the canoe, with
-both legs in the water, fending her off from big stones on either side,
-and cautiously steering.[XI.]
-
- [XI.] The invention of this method was made here, but its
- invaluable advantages were more apparent in passing the second rapid of
- Rheinfelden. See _post_, page 186, where described, with a sketch.
-
-But with these amusements, and a little wading, you sit quite dry, and,
-leaning against the backboard, smoothly glide past every danger, lolling
-at ease where the current is excessive, and where it would not be safe
-to add impetus, for the shock of a collision there would break the
-strongest boat.
-
-If incidents like these, and the scenery and the people ashore, were not
-enough to satisfy the ever greedy mind, some louder plashing, with a
-deeper roar, would announce the rapids. This sound was sure to waken up
-any sleepiness, and once in the middle of rough water all had to be
-energy and life.
-
-I never had a positive upset, but of course I had to jump out
-frequently to save the boat, for the first care was the canoe, and the
-second was my luggage, to keep it all dry, the sketch-book in
-particular, while the third object was to get on comfortably and fast.
-
-After hours of these pleasures of work and rest, and a vast deal seen
-and heard and felt that would take too long to tell, the waning sun, and
-the cravings within for dinner, warned me truly that I had come near the
-stopping-place for the night.
-
-The town of Tuttlingen is built on both sides of the river, and almost
-every house is a dyer's shop or a tannery, with men beating, scraping,
-and washing hides in the water. As I allowed the boat to drift among
-these the boys soon found her out--a new object--and therefore to boys
-(and may it always be so) well worth a shout and a run; so a whole posse
-of little Germans scampered along beside me, but I could not see any
-feasible-looking inn.
-
-It is one of the privileges of this water tour that you can survey
-calmly all the whereabouts; and being out of reach of the touters and
-porters who harass the wretched traveller delivered to their grasp from
-an omnibus or a steamboat, you can philosophize on the whole _morale_ of
-a town, and if so inclined can pass it, and simply go on. In fact, on
-several occasions I did not fancy a town, so we went on to another.
-However, I was fairly nonplussed now. It would not do to go further, for
-it was not a thickly-peopled country; but I went nearly to the end of
-the place in search of a good landing, till I turned into a millrace and
-stepped ashore.
-
-The crowd pressed so closely that I had to fix on a boy who had a toy
-barrow with four little wheels, and amid much laughter I persuaded the
-boy to lend it (of course as a great honour to him), and so I pulled the
-boat on this to the hotel. The boy's sixpence of reward was a fact that
-brought all the juvenile population together, and though we hoisted the
-canoe into a hayloft and gave very positive injunction to the ostler to
-keep her safe, there was soon a string of older sightseers admitted one
-by one; and even at night they were mounting the ladder with lanterns,
-women as well as men, to examine the "schiff."
-
-A total change of garments usually enabled me to stroll through the
-villages in the evening without being recognised, but here I was
-instantly known as I emerged for a walk, and it was evident that an
-unusual attendance must be expected in the morning.
-
-Tuttlingen is a very curious old town, with a good inn and bad pavement,
-tall houses, all leaning here and there, and big, clumsy,
-honest-looking men lounging after their work, and wonderfully
-satisfied to chat in groups amid the signal darkness of unlighted
-streets; very fat horses and pleasant-looking women, a bridge, and
-numerous schoolboys; these are my impressions of Tuttlingen.
-
-[Illustration: MORNING VISITORS. Page 65.]
-
-Even at six o'clock next morning these boys had begun to assemble for
-the sight they expected, and those of them who had satchels on their
-backs seemed grievously disappointed to find the start would not come
-off before their hour for early school.
-
-However, the grown-up people came instead, and flocked to the bridge and
-its approaches. While I was endeavouring to answer all the usual
-questions as to the boat, a man respectfully asked me to delay the start
-five minutes, as his aged father, who was bedridden, wished exceedingly
-just to see the canoe. In all such cases it is a pleasure to give
-pleasure, and to sympathize with the boundless delight of the boys,
-remembering how as a boy a boat delighted me; and then, again, these
-worthy, mother-like, wholesome-faced dames, how could one object to
-their prying gaze, mingled as it was with friendly smile and genuine
-interest?
-
-The stream on which I started here was not the main channel of the
-Danube, but a narrow arm of the river conducted through the town, while
-the other part fell over the mill-weir. The woodcut shows the scene at
-starting, and there were crowds as large as this at other towns; but a
-picture never can repeat the shouts and bustle, or the sound of guns
-firing and bells ringing, which on more than one occasion celebrated the
-Rob Roy's morning paddle.
-
-The lovely scenery of this day's voyage often reminded me of that upon
-the Wye,[XII.] in its best parts between Ross and Chepstow. There were the
-white rocks and dark trees, and caverns, crags, and jutting peaks you
-meet near Tintern; but then the Wye has no islands, and its muddy water
-at full tide has a worse substitute in muddier banks when the sea has
-ebbed.
-
- [XII.] Murray says: "The Meuse has been compared to the Wye; but
- is even more romantic than the English river." I would rank the Wye as
- much above the Meuse as below the Danube for romance in scenery.
-
-The islands on beauteous Donau were of all sizes and shapes. Some low
-and flat, and thickly covered with shrubs; others of stalwart rock,
-stretching up at a sharp angle, under which the glassy water bubbled all
-fresh and clear.
-
-Almost each minute there was a new scene, and often I backed against
-the current to hold my post in the best view of some grand picture.
-Magnificent crags reached high up on both sides, and impenetrable
-forests rung with echoes when I shouted in the glee of health, freedom,
-and exquisite enjoyment.
-
-But scenes and sentiments will not feed the hungry paddler, so I decided
-to stop at Friedingen, a village on the bank. There was a difficulty now
-as to where the canoe could be left, for no inn seemed near enough to
-let me guard her while I breakfasted. At length a mason helped me to
-carry the Rob Roy into a donkey's stable, and a boy volunteered to guide
-the stranger to the best inn. The first, and the second, and the third
-he led me to were all beerhouses, where only drink could be had; and as
-the crowd augmented at every stage, I dismissed the ragged cicerone, and
-trusted myself instead to the sure leading of that unnamed instinct
-which guides a hungry man to food. Even the place found at last, was
-soon filled with wondering spectators. A piece of a German and English
-dictionary from my baggage excited universal attention, and was several
-times carried outside to those who had not secured reserved seats
-within.
-
-The magnificent scenery culminated at Beuron, where a great convent on a
-rich mound of grass is nearly surrounded by the Danube, amid a spacious
-amphitheatre of magnificent white cliffs perfectly upright, and clad
-with the heaviest wood.
-
-The place looks so lonely, though fair, that you could scarcely believe
-you might stop there for the night, and so I had nearly swept by it
-again into perfect solitude, but at last pulled up under a tree, and
-walked through well ploughed fields to the little hamlet in this
-sequestered spot.
-
-The field labourers were of course surprised at the apparition of a man
-in flannel, who must have come out of the river; but the people at the
-Kloster had already heard of the "schiff," and the Rob Roy was soon
-mounted on two men's shoulders, and borne in triumph to the excellent
-hotel. The Prince who founded the monastery is, I believe, himself a
-monk.
-
-Now tolls the bell for "even song," while my dinner is spread in an
-arbour looking out on this grand scene, made grander still by dark
-clouds gathering on the mountains, and a loud and long thunder peal,
-with torrents of rain.
-
-This deluge of wet came opportunely when I had such good shelter, as it
-cooled the air, and would strengthen the stream of the river; so I
-admired the venerable monks with complacent satisfaction, a feeling
-never so complete as when you are inside, and you look at people who
-are out in the rain.
-
-A young girl on a visit to her friends here could talk bad French
-rapidly, so she was sent to gossip with me as I dined; and then the
-whole family inspected my sketch-book, a proceeding which happened at
-least twice every day for many weeks of the voyage. This emboldened me
-to ask for some music, and we adjourned to a great hall, where a concert
-was soon in progress with a guitar, a piano, and a violin, all well
-played; and the Germans are never at a loss for a song.
-
-My young visitor, Melanie, then became the interpreter in a curious
-conversation with the others, who could speak only German; and I
-ventured to turn our thoughts on some of the nobler things which ought
-not to be long absent from the mind--I mean, what is loved, and feared,
-enjoyed, and derided, as "religion."
-
-In my very limited baggage I had brought some selected pieces and
-Scripture anecdotes and other papers in French and German, and these
-were used on appropriate occasions, and were always well received, often
-with exceedingly great interest and sincere gratitude.
-
-Some people are shy about giving tracts, or are even afraid of them. But
-then some people are shy of speaking at all, or even dislike to ride,
-or skate, or row. One need not laugh at another for this.
-
-The practice of carrying a few printed pages to convey in clear language
-what one cannot accurately speak in a foreign tongue is surely
-allowable, to say the least. But I invariably find it to be very useful
-and interesting to myself and to others; and, as it hurts nobody, and
-has nothing in it of which to be proud or ashamed, and as hundreds of
-men do it, and as I have done it for years, and will do it again, I am
-far too old a traveller to be laughed out of it now.
-
-The Kloster at Beuron is a favourite place for excursionists from the
-towns in the neighbourhood, and no doubt some day soon it will be a
-regular "place to see" for English travellers rowing down the Danube;
-for it is thus, and only thus, you can approach it with full effect. The
-moon had come forth as I leaned out of my bedroom window, and it
-whitened the ample circus of beetling crags, and darkened the trees,
-while a fainter and redder light glimmered from the monks' chapel, as
-the low tones of midnight chanting now and then reached the ear. Perhaps
-it is better to wear a monk's cowl than to wear consistently a layman's
-common coat in the workday throng of life; and it _may_ be better to
-fast and chant and kneel at shrines than to be temperate and thankful
-and prayerful in the busy world. But I doubt.
-
-After leaving Beuron, with the firing of guns and the usual pleasant
-good wishes from the shore, the Danube carried us between two lofty
-rocks, and down calm reaches for hours. The water was unspeakably clear;
-you could see right into deep caverns far below. I used to gaze
-downwards for so long a time at the fish moving about, and to strike at
-them with my long paddle (never once hitting any), that I forgot the
-boat was swinging along all the time, till bump she went on a bank, or
-crash against a rocky isle, or rumbling into some thick trees, when a
-shower of leaves, spiders, and rubbish wakened up my reverie. Then,
-warned by the shock, I return to the plain duty of looking ahead, until,
-perhaps, after an hour's active rushing through narrow "guts," and over
-little falls, and getting out and hauling the boat down larger ones, my
-eyes are wandering again, gazing at the peaks overhead, and at the
-eagles soaring above them, and at the clear blue sky above all; till
-again the Rob Roy heels over on a sunken stone, and I have to jump out
-nimbly to save her from utter destruction. For days together I had my
-feet bare, and my trousers tucked up, ready to wade at any moment, and
-perfectly comfortable all the time, for a fiery sun dried every thing in
-a few minutes.
-
-The physical enjoyment of such a life to one in good health and good
-spirits, with a good boat and good scenery, is only to be appreciated
-after experience; for these little reminders that one must not actually
-_sleep_ on a rushing river never resulted in any disaster, and I came
-home without a cold or a scratch, or a hole in the boat, or one single
-day regretted. May this be so for many a John Bull let loose on the
-Continent to "paddle his own canoe."
-
-On the rivers where there is no navigation and no towing paths it was
-impossible to estimate the distances traversed each day, except by the
-number of hours I was at work, the average speed, the strength of the
-wind and current, and the number of stoppages for food or rest, or
-mill-weirs, waterfalls, or barriers. Thirty miles was reckoned to be a
-good day's work, and I have sometimes gone forty miles in a day; but
-twenty was quite enough when the scenery and incidents on the way filled
-up every moment of time with varied sensations of new pleasures.
-
-It will generally be found, I think, that for walking in a pleasant
-country twenty miles a day is enough for mind and body to be active and
-observant all the time. But the events that occur in river work are far
-more frequent and interesting than those on the road, for you have all
-the circumstances of your boat in addition to what fills the
-pedestrian's journal, and after a little time your canoe becomes so much
-a companion (friend, shall I say?) that every turn it takes and every
-knock and grate on its side is felt as if it were your own. The boat
-gets to be individualized, and so does the river, till at last there is
-a pleasant rivalry set up, for it is "man and boat" _versus_ the river
-and all it can place in your way.
-
-After a few tours on the Continent your first hour in a railway or
-diligence may be new and enjoyable, but you soon begin to wish for the
-end of the road, and after a short stay in the town you have come to you
-begin to talk (or think) of when you are to leave. Now a feature of the
-boating tour is that quiet progress can be enjoyed all the time, because
-you have personal exertion or engagement for every moment, and your
-observation of the scenery around is now most minute and interesting,
-because every bend and slope of it tells at once what you have to do.
-
-Certainly the pleasure of a day is not to be measured by the number of
-miles you have gone over. The voyage yesterday, for instance, was one of
-the very best for enjoyment of scenery, incident, and exercise, yet it
-was the shortest day I had. The guide-book says, "Tuttlingen is twelve
-miles"--by river, say eighteen--"from Kloster Beuron, where the fine
-scenery begins. This part of the Danube is not navigable."
-
-I will not say that on some occasions I did not wish for the end of the
-day's work, when arms were weary, and the sun was low, and yearnings of
-the inner man grumbling for dinner, especially when no one could tell
-how far it was to any house, or whether you could stop there all night
-if you reached it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
- Sigmaringen--Treacherous trees--Congress of herons--Flying
- Dutchman--Tub and shovel--Bottle race--Snags--Bridge perils--Ya
- Vol--Ferry rope--Benighted.
-
-
-The sides of the river were now less precipitous, and the road came
-within a field or two of the water, and made it seem quite homely for a
-time.
-
-I had heard a loud jingling sound on this road for at least
-half-an-hour, and observed a long cart with two horses trotting fast,
-and evidently daring to race with the Rob Roy. But at length such
-earnest signals were made from it that I stopped, and the cart at once
-pulled up, and from it there ran across the field a man breathless and
-hot, without his hat, and followed by two young ladies, equally hurried.
-He was a German, resident for a short time in London, and now at home
-for a month's holiday, and he was prodigal of thanks for my "great
-courtesy" in having stopped that the ladies might see the canoe which
-they had followed thus for some miles, having heard of its fame at their
-village. On another occasion three youths voluntarily ran alongside the
-boat and panted in the sun, and tumbled over stocks and stones at such a
-rate, that after a mile of the supererogatory exercise, I asked what it
-was all about. Excellent villagers! they had taken all this trouble to
-arrive at a point further down the stream where they knew there was a
-hard place, and they thought they might help me in passing it.
-
-Such exertions on behalf of a stranger were really most kind, and when I
-allowed them to give a nominal help, where in reality it was easy enough
-to get on unaided, they were much delighted and more than rewarded, and
-went back prattling their purest Suabian in a highly satisfied frame of
-mind.
-
-Many are the bends and currents, but at last we arrive at the town of
-Sigmaringen. It has certainly an aristocratic air, though there are only
-3,000 inhabitants; but then it has a Principality, though the whole
-population of this is only 52,000. Fancy a parish in London with a
-Prince all to themselves, and--bearing such a fine grand name too--"His
-Royal Serene Highness the Hereditary Prince of Hohenzollern
-Sigmaringen." But though I have often laughed at this petty kingdom in
-the Geography books, I shall never do so again, for it contains some of
-the most beautiful river scenery in the world, and I never had more
-unalloyed pleasure in passing through a foreign dominion.
-
-There are pretty gardens here, and a handsome Protestant church, and a
-few good shops, schlosses on the hills, and older castles perched on
-high rocks in the usual picturesque and uncomfortable places where our
-ancestors built their nests.
-
-The Deutscher Hof is the hotel just opened three weeks ago, and all its
-inmates are in a flutter when their first English guest marches up to
-the door with a boat and a great company of gazers. The waiter too, all
-fresh from a year in London at the Palace Hotel, Buckingham Gate, how
-glad he is that his English is now in requisition, sitting by me at
-dinner and talking most sensibly all the time.
-
-The weather still continued superb as we paddled away. Deep green woods
-dipped their lower branches in the water, but I found that the stream
-had sometimes a fashion of carrying the boat under these, and it is
-especially needful to guard against this when a sharp bend with a fast
-current hurries you into a wooded corner. Indeed, strange as it may
-seem, there was more danger to the boat from these trees than from rocks
-or banks, and far more trouble. For when the boat gets under their low
-branches your paddle is quite powerless, because you cannot lower one
-end to hold the water without raising the other and so catching it in
-the trees. Then if you put your head down forward you cannot see, and
-the boughs are generally as hard as an ordinary skull when the two are
-in collision. Finally, if you lean backwards the twigs scrape your face
-and catch upon a nose even of ordinary length, and if you take your hand
-from the paddle to protect the face away goes the paddle into the river.
-Therefore, although my hat was never knocked off, and my skull was
-always the hardest, and my paddle was never lost, and my nose was never
-de-Romanized by the branches, I set it down as a maxim, to keep clear of
-trees in a stream.
-
-Still it was tempting to go under shady groves when I tried to surprise
-a flock of herons or a family of wild ducks.
-
-Once we came upon twenty-four herons all together. As my boat advanced
-silently, steadily gliding, it was curious to watch these birds, who had
-certainly never been disturbed before by any boat in such a place.
-
-They stared eagerly at me and then looked at each other, and evidently
-took a vote of the assembly as to what all this could mean. If birds'
-faces can give any expression of their opinions, it is certain that one
-of these herons was saying then to the others "Did you ever?" and an
-indignant sneer was on another's beak that plainly answered, "Such
-impudence indeed!" while a third added, with a sarcastic chirp, "And a
-foreigner too!" But, after consultation, they always got up and circled
-round, flew down stream, and then settled all again together in an
-adjourned meeting. A few minutes brought me to their new retreat, and so
-we went on for miles, they always flying down stream, and always
-assembling, though over and over again disturbed, until an amendment on
-the plan was moved and they bent their way aside.
-
-A pleasant and favourable breeze springing up, which soon freshened into
-a gale, I now set my sails, and the boat went with very great speed;
-dashing over rocks and bounding past the haymakers so fast that when one
-who caught sight of her had shouted to the rest of his "mates," the
-sight was departed for ever before they came, and I heard them behind me
-arguing, probably about the ghost.
-
-But it was a shame to be a phantom ship too often, and it was far more
-amusing to go right into the middle of these people, who knew nothing
-about the canoe, who had never seen a boat, and never met a foreigner in
-their lives. Thus, when a waterfall was found too high to "shoot," or a
-wide barrier made it advisable to take the boat by land, I used to walk
-straight into the hayfields, pushing the boat point foremost through a
-hedge, or dragging her steadily over the wet newly-mown grass in literal
-imitation of the American craft which could go "wherever there was a
-heavy dew." On such occasions the amazement of the untaught clowns,
-beholding suddenly such an apparition, was beyond all description. Some
-even ran away, very often children cried outright, and when I looked
-gravely on the ground as I marched and dragged the boat, and then
-suddenly stopped in their midst with a hearty laugh and an address in
-English, the whole proceeding may have appeared to them at least as
-strange as it did to me.
-
-[Illustration: "In the Hayfields."]
-
-The water of the river all at once became here of a pale white colour,
-and I was mourning that my pretty scenes below were clouded; but in
-about thirty miles the pebbly deeps appeared again, and the stream
-resumed its charming limpid clearness. This matter of dark or bright
-water is of some importance, because, when it is clear you can easily
-estimate after a little experience the general depth, even at some
-distance, by the shades and hues of the water, while the sunk rocks, big
-stones, and other particular obstacles are of course more visible then.
-
-Usually I got well enough fed at some village, or at least at a house,
-but in this lonely part of the river it seemed wise to take provender
-with me in the boat, and to picnic in some quiet pool, with a shady tree
-above. One of the very few boats I saw on the river appeared as I was
-thus engaged, and a little boy was in it. His specimen of naval
-architecture (no doubt the only one he had ever seen) was an odd
-contrast to the beautifully finished canoe made by Searle. He had a pole
-and a shovel; the latter article he used as a paddle, and his boat was
-of enormous thickness and clumsiness, made of three planks, abundantly
-clamped with iron. I gave him some bread, and we had a chat; then some
-butter, and then some cheese. He would not take wine, but he produced a
-cigar from his wet jacket, and also two matches, which he lighted with
-great skill. We soon got to be friends, as people do who are together
-alone, and in the same mode of travelling, riding, or sailing, or on
-camels' backs. So we smiled in sympathy, and I asked him if he could
-read, and gave him a neat little page prettily printed in German, with a
-red border. This he read very nicely and was glad to put in his ragged
-pocket; but he could scarcely part from me, and struggled vainly to urge
-his tub along with the shovel till we came to a run of dashing waves,
-and then of course I had to leave him behind, looking and yearning, with
-a low, murmuring sound, and a sorrowful, earnest gaze I shall never
-forget.
-
-Shoals of large and small fish are in this river, and very few
-fishermen. I did not see ten men fishing in ten days. But the pretty
-little Kingfisher does not neglect his proper duties, and ever and anon
-his round blue back shines in the sun as he hurries away with a note of
-protest against the stranger who has invaded his preserves. Bees are
-buzzing while the sun is hot, and when it sinks, out gush the endless
-mazes of gnats to hop and flit their tangled dances, the creatures of a
-day--born since the morning, and to die at night.
-
-Before the Danube parted with the rocks that had been on each side for
-days together, it played some strange pranks among them, and they with
-it.
-
-Often they rose at each side a hundred feet without a bend, and then
-behind these were broken cliffs heaved this way and that, or tossed
-upside down, or as bridges hanging over chasms.
-
-Here and there a huge splinted tooth-like spire of stone stuck out of
-the water, leaning at an angle. Sometimes in front there was a veritable
-upright wall, as smooth as if it were chiselled, and entirely cutting
-off the middle of the stream. In advancing steadily to such a place it
-was really impossible to determine on which side the stream could by any
-means find an exit, and once indeed I was persuaded that it must descend
-below.
-
-In other cases the river, which had splayed out its width to that of the
-Thames at Hungerford, would suddenly narrow its size to a six-foot
-passage, and rush down that with a "whishhh!" The Rob Roy cheerily sped
-through these, but I landed to scan the course before attempting the
-most difficult cuts.--Oh how lonely it was! A more difficult vagary to
-cope with was when in a dozen petty streams the water tumbled over as
-many little cascades, and only one was passable--sometimes not one. The
-interest of finding these, examining, trying, failing, and succeeding,
-was a continuous delight, and filled up every mile with a series of
-exciting incidents, till at length the rocks were done.
-
-And now we enter a vast plain, with the stream bending round on itself,
-and hurrying swiftly on through the innumerable islands, eddies, and
-"snags," or trees uprooted, sticking in the water. At the most critical
-part of this labyrinth we were going a tremendous pace, when suddenly we
-came to a fork in the river, with the volumes of water going down both
-channels nearly equal. We could not descend by one of these because a
-tree would catch the mast, so I instantly turned into the other, when up
-started a man and shouted impetuously that no boat could pass by _that_
-course. It was a moment of danger, but I lowered the sails in that
-moment, took down my mast, and, despite stream and gale, I managed to
-paddle back to the proper channel. As no man had been seen for hours
-before, the arrival of this warning note was opportune.
-
-A new amusement was invented to-day--it was to pitch out my empty
-wine-bottle and to watch its curious bobbings and whirlings as the
-current carried it along, while I floated near and compared the natural
-course taken by the bottle with the selected route which intelligence
-gave to the Rob Roy. Soon the bottle became impersonated, and we were
-racing together, and then a sympathy began for its well-known cork as it
-plumped down when its bottom struck a stone--for the bottle drew more
-water than my canoe--and every time it grounded there came a loud and
-melancholy clink of the glass, and down it went.
-
-The thick bushes near the river skirted it now for miles, and at one
-place I could see above me, through the upper branches, about 20
-haymakers, men and women, who were honestly working away, and therefore
-had not observed my approach.
-
-I resolved to have a bit of fun here, so we closed in to the bank, but
-still so as to see the industrious group. Then suddenly I began in a
-very loud voice with--
-
- "Rule, Britannia,
- Britannia rules the waves."
-
-Long before I got to the word "slaves" the whole party were like
-statues, silent and fixed in amazement. Then they looked right, left,
-before, behind, and upwards in all directions, except, of course, into
-the river, for why should they look _there_? nothing had ever come up
-from the river to disturb their quiet mead. I next whistled a lively
-air, and then dashing out of my hiding-place stood up in my boat, and
-made a brief (but, we trust, brilliant) speech to them in the best
-English I could muster, and in a moment afterwards we had vanished from
-their sight.
-
-A little further on there was some road-making in progress, and I pulled
-up my boat under a tree and walked up to the "barraque," or workman's
-canteen, and entered among 30 or 40 German "navvies," who were sitting
-at their midday beer. I ordered a glass and drank their health standing,
-paid, bowed, and departed, but a general rush ensued to see where on
-earth this flannel-clad being had come from, and they stood on the bank
-in a row as I waded, shoved, hauled, paddled, and carried my boat
-through a troublesome labyrinth of channels and embankments, with which
-their engineering had begun to spoil the river.
-
-But the bridges one had now more frequently to meet were far worse
-encroachments of civilization, for most of them were so low that my mast
-would not pass under without heeling the boat over to one side, so as to
-make the mast lean down obliquely. In one case of this kind she was very
-nearly shipwrecked, for the wind was so good that I would not lower the
-sail, and this and a swift current took us (me and my boat--she is now,
-you see, installed as a "person") rapidly to the centre arch, when just
-as we entered I noticed a fierce-looking snag with a sharp point exactly
-in my course. To swerve to the side would be to strike the wooden pier,
-but even this would be better (for I might ward off the violence of a
-blow near my hands) than to run on the snag, which would be certain to
-cut a hole.
-
-With a heavy thump on the pier the canoe began to capsize, and only by
-the nearest escape was she saved from foundering. What I thought was a
-snag turned out to be the point of an iron stake or railing, carelessly
-thrown into the water from the bridge above.
-
-It may be here remarked that many hidden dangers occur near bridges, for
-there are wooden or iron bars fixed under water, or rough sharp stones
-lying about, which, being left there when the bridge was building, are
-never removed from a river not navigable or used by boats.
-
-Another kind of obstruction is the thin wire rope suspended across the
-rivers, where a ferry is established by running a flat boat over the
-stream with cords attached to the wire rope. The rope is black in
-colour, and therefore is not noticed till you approach it too near to
-lower the mast, but this sort of danger is easily avoided by the
-somewhat sharp "look-out" which a week or two on the water makes quite
-instinctive and habitual. Perhaps one of the many advantages of a river
-tour is the increased acuteness of observation which it requires and
-fosters.
-
-I stopped next at a clumsy sort of town called Riedlingen, where an
-Englishman is a very rare visitor. The excitement here about the boat
-became almost ridiculous, and one German, who had been in America and
-could jabber a little in English, was deputed to ask questions, while
-the rest heard the answers interpreted.
-
-Next morning at eight o'clock at least a thousand people gathered on the
-bridge and its approaches to see the boat start, and shoals of
-schoolboys ran in, each with his little knapsack of books.[XIII.]
-
- [XIII.] Knapsack, from "schnap," "sach," provision bag, for "bits
- and bats," as we should say; havresack is from "hafer," "forage bag."
- Query.--Does this youthful carriage of the knapsack adapt boys for
- military service, and does it account for the high shoulders of many
- Germans?
-
-The scenery after this became of only ordinary interest compared with
-what I had passed through, but there would have been little spare time
-to look at it had it been ever so picturesque, for the wind was quite a
-gale,[XIV.] and right in my favour, and the stream was fast and tortuous
-with banks, eddies, and innumerable islands and cross channels, so that
-the navigation occupied all one's energy, especially as it was a point
-of honour not to haul down the sail in a fair wind.
-
- [XIV.] In the newspaper accounts of the weather it was stated that
- at this time a storm swept over Central Europe.
-
-Midday came, and yet I could find no place to breakfast, though the
-excitement and exertion of thus sailing was really hard work. But still
-we hurried on, for dark clouds were gathering behind, and thunder and
-rain seemed very near.
-
-"Ah," said I inwardly, "had I only listened to that worthy dame's
-entreaties this morning to take good provision for the day!" She had
-smiled like the best of mothers, and timidly asked to be allowed to
-touch my watch-chain, "it was so _schon_," so beautiful to see. But,
-oddly enough, we had taken no solid food on board to-day, being so
-impatient to get off when the wind was strong and fair. The rapid pace
-then brought us to Ehingen, the village I had marked on the map for this
-night's rest. But now we came there it was found to be _too soon_--I
-could not stop for the day with such a splendid breeze inviting
-progress; nor would it do to leave the boat on the bank and go to the
-village to eat, for it was too far from the river, and so the current
-and sails must hurry us on as before.
-
-Now and then I asked some gazing agriculturist on the bank where the
-nearest houses were, but he never could understand that I meant
-_nearest, and also close to the river_; so the end of every discussion
-was that he said, "Ya vol," which means in Yankee tongue, "That's so";
-in Scottish, "Hoot, aye"; in Irish, "Troth, an' it is"; and in French,
-"C'est vrai"; but then none of this helps one a bit.
-
-I therefore got first ravenous and then faint, and after mounting the
-bank to see the turns of the river in advance, I actually fell asleep
-under a tree. The wind had quite subsided when I awoke, and then quaffed
-deep draughts of water and paddled on.
-
-The banks were now of yellow mud, and about eight or ten feet high,
-quite straight up from the water, just like those on the Nile, and
-several affluent streams ran from the plain to join the river. Often,
-indeed, I saw a church tower right ahead, and laboured along to get
-there, but after half-a-mile the stream would turn sharp round to one
-side, and still more and more round, and at last the tower once in front
-was directly behind us. The explanation of this tormenting peculiarity
-was simply this,--that the villages were carefully built _away_ from the
-river bank because it is a bad foundation, and is washed away as new
-channels are formed by the flood.
-
-When the light began to fail I took a good look at the map, and
-serpentine bends were marked on it plain enough indeed, but only in
-one-half of their actual number; and, moreover, I saw that in the forest
-we had now entered there would be no suitable villages at all. The
-overhanging trees made a short twilight soon deepen into night; and to
-add to the interest the snags suddenly became numerous, and some of them
-waved about in the current, as they do on the Upper Mississippi, when
-the tenacious mud holds down the roots merely by its weight. All this
-made it necessary to paddle slowly and with great caution, and to cross
-always to the slack side of the stream instead of by one's usual course,
-which, in descending, is to keep with the rapid current.
-
-Sometimes I had to back out of shallows which were invisible in the
-dark, and often I stopped a long time before a glance of some ripple
-obscurely told me the probable course. The necessity for this caution
-will be evident when it is remembered that in case of an upset here
-_both_ sets of clothes would have been wet together, and without any
-house at hand to dry them.
-
-All at once I heard a bell toll quite near me in the thick wood, and I
-came to the bank, but it was impossible to get ashore on it, so I passed
-that place too, and finally made up my mind to sleep in the boat, and
-soon had all sorts of plans in course of devising.
-
-Just then two drops of rain came on my nose, and I resolved at once to
-stop, for if my clothes got wet before I was snug in the canoe there
-would be little comfort all night, without anything solid to eat since
-morning, and all my cigars already puffed away.
-
-As I now cautiously searched for some root projecting from the bank to
-make fast to, a light appeared straight in front, and I dashed forward
-with the boat to reach it, and speedily ran her into a strange sort of
-lake or pond, where the stream ceased, and a noise on the boat's side
-told of weeds, which proved to be large round leaves on the surface,
-like those of the Victoria Regia lily.
-
-I drew up the boat on shore, and mounted the high bank through a
-thicket, carrying my long paddle as a protection against the large dogs
-which farmhouses sport here, and which might be troublesome to quarrel
-with in the dark. The house I came to on the top of the precipice had
-its window lighted, and several people were talking inside, so I
-knocked loudly, and all was silence. Then I knocked again, and whined
-out that I was a poor benighted "Englander," and hoped they would let me
-in, at which melancholy tale they burst out laughing, and so did I!
-After an argument between us, which was equally intelligible on both
-sides, a fat farmer cautiously took the light upstairs, and, opening a
-window, thrust the candle forward, and gazed out upon me standing erect
-as a true Briton, and with my paddle, too, but in reality a humiliated
-vagrant begging for a night's lodging.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-After due scrutiny he pulled in his head and his candle, shut the
-window, and fell to laughing immoderately. At this I was glad, for I
-never found it difficult to get on with a man who begins in good humour.
-
-Presently the others went up, and I stood their gaze unflinchingly, and,
-besides, made an eloquent appeal in the vernacular--mine, not theirs, be
-it clearly understood.
-
-Finally they were satisfied that I was alone, and, though probably mad,
-yet not quite a match for all of them, so they came down gallantly; but
-then there was the difficulty of persuading the man to grope down to the
-river on this dark night to carry up a boat.
-
-With some exertion we got it up by a better way, and safely locked it in
-the cowhouse of another establishment, and there I was made thoroughly
-comfortable. They said they had nothing to eat but kirchwasser, bread,
-and eggs, and how many eggs would I like? so I said, "To begin with,
-ten," and I ate them every one. By this time the priest had come; they
-often used to send for the _prester_ to do the talk. The large room soon
-got full, and the sketch-book was passed round, and an India-rubber band
-made endless merriment for the smaller fry, all in the old routine, the
-very mention of which it may be tedious to hear of so often, as indeed
-it was to me to perform.
-
-But then in each case it was _their_ first time of going through the
-performance, and they were so kind and courteous one could not refuse to
-please such people. The priest was very communicative, and we tried to
-converse in Latin, for my German was not good enough for him nor his
-French for me. But we soon agreed that it was a long time since our
-schoolboy Latin days, though I recollect having had long conversations
-in Latin with a monk at Nazareth, but there we had ten days together,
-and so had time to practise.
-
-Thus ended the 1st of September, the only occasion on which I had to
-"rough it" at all during the voyage; and even then, it may be seen, the
-very small discomforts were all the results of gross want of prudence on
-my own part, and ended merely by a hard day's work with breakfast and
-dinner merged into a late supper. My bill here was 3_s._ 6_d._, the day
-before, 4_s._ 6_d._, including always wine and luxuries.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- Day-dream--River Iller--Ulm--A stiff king--Lake
- Constance--Seeing in the dark--Switzerland--Coloured
- Canvas--Sign talk--Synagogue--Amelia--Gibberish.
-
-
-The threatening rain had not come during the night, and it was a lovely
-morning next day, like all the rest before and after it; and as we were
-leaving this place I found it was called Gegglingen,[XV.] and was only
-nine miles from Ulm.
-
- [XV.] It will be noticed how the termination "_ingen_" is common
- here. Thus in our water route we have passed Donaueschingen, Geisingen,
- Mehringen, Tuttlingen, Friedingen, Sigmaringen, Riedlingen, Ehingen,
- Dischingen, and Gegglingen, the least and last. In England we have the
- "ing" in Dorking, Kettering, &c.
-
-The lofty tower of the Cathedral of this town soon came in view, but I
-noticed it without any pleasure, for this was to end my week on the
-Danube; and in my ship's log it is entered as "one of the most pleasant
-weeks of my life for scenery, health, weather, exercise, and varied
-adventure."
-
-In a pensive mood, therefore, I landed at a garden, and reclined on a
-warm mossy bank to have a rest and a day-dream, but very soon the loud
-booming of artillery aroused the hill echoes, and then sharp rattling of
-infantry firing. The heights around were crested with fringes of
-blue-coated soldiers and glistening bayonets, amid the soft round,
-cotton-like volumes of smoke from the great guns spurting out fire long
-before the sound comes. It was a review of troops and a sham attack on a
-fort surmounting the hill, near the battlefield of long years ago at
-Ulm. If they fought in heat and fury, let them now rest in peace.
-
-Come back, my thoughts, to the river at my feet.
-
-I had been with this river from its infancy, nay, even from its birth in
-the Schwartzwald. I had followed it right and left, as it seemed to
-toddle in zigzag turnings like a child; and I had wound with it hither
-and thither as it roamed away further like free boyhood. Then it grew in
-size by feeding on the oozy plain, and was still my companion when it
-got the strength of youth, dashing over the rocks, and bounding through
-the forests; and I had come at last to feel its powerful stream stronger
-than my strength, and compelling my respect. And now, at Ulm, I found it
-a noble river, steady and swift, as if in the flower of age; but its
-romance was gone. It had boats on it, and navigation, and bridges, and
-railways, like other great waters; and so I would let it go on alone,
-tumbling, rushing, swelling, till its broad bosom bears whole fleets at
-Ofen, and at length as a great water giant it leaps down headlong into
-the Black Sea.
-
-Having seen Ulm in a former tour, I was in no mood to "go over" the
-sights again, nor need they be related here, for it is only river travel
-and lake sailing that we are concerned with; while reference may be made
-to the Guide-books if you wish to hear this sort of thing: "Ulm, lat.
-97°, an old Cathedral (_a_) town, on two (§) hills (see Appx.). Pop.
-9763; situated [+][+] on the Danube." At that I stop, and
-look into the water once more.
-
-The river is discoloured here,--what is called in Scotland "drumly;" and
-this seems partly owing to the tributary _Iller_, which rises in the
-Tyrol, and falls into the Danube, a little way above the town. The Iller
-has a peculiar air of wild, forlorn bleakness, with its wide channel
-half occupied by cold white gravel, and its banks scored and torn, with
-weird, broken roots, gnarled trees, bleakness and fallen, all lying
-dishevelled; surely in flood times, and of dark wintry nights, a very
-deluge boils and seethes along there.
-
-Then, at last, there are the barges on the Danube, and very rudimental
-they are; huge in size, with flat bottoms, and bows and stems cocked up,
-and a roofed house in the middle of their sprawling length. The German
-boys must have these models before them when they make the Noah's Arks
-for English nurseries; and Murray well says of these barges, they are
-"nothing better than wooden sheds floating in flat trays."
-
-In 1839 a steamer was tried here, but it got on a bank, and the effort
-was abandoned; so you have to go on to Donauwerth before this mode of
-travelling is reached, but from thence you can steam down to the Black
-Sea, and the passage boats below Vienna are very fast and well
-appointed.
-
-Rafts there are at Ulm, but we suppose the timber for them comes by the
-Iller, for I did not notice any logs descending the upper part of the
-Danube.
-
-Again, there are the public washhouses in the river, each of them a
-large floating establishment, with overhanging eaves, under which you
-can see, say, fifty women all in a row, half kneeling or leaning over
-the low bulwarks, and all slapping your best shirts mercilessly.
-
-I made straight over to these ladies, and asked how the Rob Roy could
-get up so steep a bank, and how far it was to the railway; and so their
-senior matron kindly got a man and a hand-cart for the boat, and, as the
-company of women heard it was from England, they all talked louder and
-more together, and pounded and smacked the unfortunate linen with
-additional emphasis.
-
-The bustle at the railway-station was only half about the canoe; the
-other half was for the King of Wurtemburg, who was getting into his
-special train to go to his palace at Fredrickshafen.
-
-Behold me, then, fresh from Gegglingen and snags, in the immediate
-presence of Royalty! But this King was not at all kingly, though
-decidedly stiff. He is, however, rather amusing sometimes; as when by
-his order, issued lately, he compels sentries to salute even empty Royal
-carriages.
-
-I got a newspaper here, and had twelve days to overtake of the world's
-doings while we had roamed in hill, forest, and waves. Yet I had been
-always asked there to "give the news," and chiefly on two points,--the
-Great Eastern, with its electric cable, and the catastrophe on the
-Matterhorn glacier, the two being at times vaguely associated, as if
-the breaking of the cable in the one had something to do with the loss
-of mountaineers in the other.
-
-So, while I read, the train bore us southwards to Fredrickshafen, the
-canoe being charged as baggage three shillings, and patiently submitting
-to have a numbered label pasted on its pretty brown face.
-
-This lively port, on the north side of the Lake of Constance, has a
-charming view in front of it well worth stopping to enjoy. It is not
-fair to treat it as only a half-hour's town, to be seen while you are
-waiting for the lake steamer to take you across to Switzerland.
-
-But now I come to it for a Sunday's rest (if you wish to travel fast and
-far, rest every Sunday), and, as the hotel faced the station, and the
-lake faced the hotel, this is the very place to stop in with a canoe.
-
-So we took the boat upstairs into a loft, where the washerwoman not only
-gave room for the well worked timbers of the Rob Roy to be safe and
-still, but kindly mended my sails, and sundry other odds and ends of a
-wardrobe, somewhat disorganized by rough times.
-
-Next day there was service in the Protestant church, a fine building,
-well filled, and duly guarded by a beadle in bright array.
-
-The service began by a woman singing "Comfort ye" from Handel, in
-exquisite taste and simple style, with a voice that made one forget that
-this solemn melody is usually sung by a man. Then a large number of
-school children were ranged in the chancel, round a crucifix, and sang a
-very beautiful hymn, and next the whole congregation joined in chanting
-the psalms in unison, with tasteful feeling and devoutness. A young
-German preacher gave us an eloquent sermon, and then the people were
-dismissed.
-
-The afternoon was drummed away by two noisy bands, evidently rivals, and
-each determined to excel the other in loudness, while both combined to
-persecute the poor visitors who _do_ wish for quietness, at any rate
-once a week. I could scarcely escape from this din in a long walk by the
-lake, and on coming back found a man bathing by moonlight, while
-rockets, squibs, and Catherine wheels were let off in his boat. Better
-indeed was it to look with entranced eyes on the far off snowy range,
-now lit up by the full harvest moon, and on the sheen of "each
-particular star," bright above, and bright again below, in the mirror of
-the lake.
-
-The Lake of Constance is forty-four miles long, and about nine miles
-wide. I could not see a ripple there when the Rob Roy was launched at
-early morn, with my mind, and body, and soul refreshed, and an eager
-longing to begin the tour of Switzerland once more, but now in so new a
-fashion. Soon we were far from the shore, and in that middle distance of
-the lake where all sides seem equally near, and where the "other side"
-appears never to get any nearer as you go on. Here, in the middle, I
-rested for a while, and the sensation then was certainly new. Beauty was
-everywhere around, and there was full freedom to see it. There was no
-cut-and-dry route to be followed, no road, not even a track on the
-water, no hours, or time to constrain. I could go right or left by a
-stroke of the paddle, and I was utterly my own master of whither to
-steer, and where to stop.
-
-The "pat-a-pat" of a steamer's wheels was the only sound, and that was
-very distant, and when the boat came near, the passengers cheered the
-canoe, and smiles of (was it not?) envy told of how pleasant and pretty
-she looked. After a little wavering in my plans, I settled it was best
-to go to the Swiss side, and, after coasting by the villages, I selected
-a little inn in a retired bay, and moored my boat, and ordered
-breakfast. Here was an old man of eighty-six, landlord and waiter in
-one, a venerable man, and I respect age more while growing older.
-
-He talked with me for five hours while I ate, read, and sketched, and
-feasted my eyes on mountain views, and answered vaguely to his remarks,
-said in a sleepy way, and in a hot, quiet, basking sun. There are
-peaceful and almost dreamy hours of rest in this water tour, and they
-are sweet too after hard toil. It is not all rapids and struggles when
-you journey with a canoe.
-
-Close to the inn was the idiot asylum, an old castle with poor demented
-women in it. The little flag of my boat attracted their attention, and
-all the inmates were allowed to come out and see it, with many smiles of
-pleasure, and many odd remarks and gestures.
-
-Disentangling myself from this strange group, I landed again further
-down, and, under a splendid tree, spent an hour or two in carpenter's
-work (for I had a few tools on board), to repair the boat's damages and
-to brighten her up a bit for the English eyes I must expect in the next
-part of the voyage.
-
-Not a wave had energy to rise on the lake in the hot sun. A sheep-bell
-tinkled now and then, but in a tired, listless, and irregular way. A
-gossamer spider had spun his web from my mast to the tree above, and
-wagtails hopped near me on the stones, and turned an inquiring little
-eye to the boat half in the water, and its master reclining on the
-grass. It was an easy paddle from this to the town of Constance, at the
-end of the lake.
-
-Here a _douanier_ made a descent upon me and was inexorable. "You _must_
-have the boat examined." "Very well, pray examine it." His Chief was
-absent, and I must put the canoe in the Custom-house till to-morrow
-morning. An hour was wasted in palaver about this, and at first I
-protested vigorously against such absurdity in "free Switzerland." But
-Constance is not in Switzerland, it is in the Grand Duchy of Baden, and
-so to keep it "grand," they must do very little things, and at any rate
-can trouble travellers. At length an obliging native, ashamed of the
-proceeding, remonstrated with the douanier, and persuaded him at least
-to search the boat and let it pass.
-
-He took as much time to inspect as if she were a brig of 300 tons, and,
-when he came to look at the stern, I gravely pointed to a round hole cut
-in the partition for this very purpose! Into this hole he peered, while
-the crowd was hushed in silence, and as he saw nothing but darkness,
-extremely dark, for (nothing else was there), he solemnly pronounced the
-canoe "free," and she was duly borne to the hotel.
-
-But Constance once had a man in it who was really "grand," John Huss,
-the noble martyr for the truth. In the Council Hall you see the
-veritable cell in which he was imprisoned some hundreds of years ago,
-and on a former visit I had seen, from the tower, through a telescope,
-the field where the faggots burned him, and from whence his great soul
-leaped up to heaven out of the blazing pile.
-
- "Avenge, O Lord, thy slaughtered saints, whose bones
- Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains cold;
- E'en them who kept thy truth so pure of old
- When all our fathers worshipped stocks and stones."
-
- --_Milton._
-
-Does not a thought or two on such great things make other common things
-look small?
-
-True and good--but we may not stop always in the lake to ponder thus,
-for the current is moving again, so let us launch the Rob Roy on our old
-friend, the Rhine.
-
-It is a change to cross a quiet lake after being hurried on a rapid
-stream like the Danube, and now it is another change to paddle from the
-lake into a wide river like the Rhine, which speeds fast and steady
-among lively scenes. The water is deep, and of a faint blue, but clear
-enough to show what is below. The pebbly bottom seems to roll towards
-you from underneath, and village churches appear to spin quietly round
-on the banks, for the land and its things seem to move, not the water,
-so glassy its surface steadily flowing.
-
-Here are the fishers again, slowly paying out their fine-spun nets, and
-there is a target-hut built on four piles in the river.
-
-The target itself is a great cube of wood, say six feet on each side. It
-is fired at from another hut perched also on post in the water, and a
-"marker" safely placed behind the great block of wood turns it round on
-a vertical pivot, and so patches up the bullet-hole, and indicates its
-position to those who have fired.
-
-The Rhine suddenly narrows soon after leaving the Boden See, or Lake
-Constance as we call it, but the banks again open out till it is a mile
-or two in breadth. Here and there are grassy islands, and you may
-notice, by long stakes stuck on the shallows, which tremble as the water
-presses them, that the channel for steamers is very roundabout, though
-the canoe will skim over any part of it comfortably. Behind each islet
-of tall reeds there is a fishing-boat held fast by two poles stuck in
-the bottom of the river; or it is noiselessly moving to a more lucky
-pool, sculled by the boatman, with his oar at only one side,--rather a
-novel plan,--while he pays out the net with his other hand. Rudely-made
-barges are afloat, and seem to turn round helplessly in the current of
-the deeper parts, or hoist their great square sails in the dead
-calm--perhaps for the appearance of the thing--a very picturesque
-appearance, as the sail has two broad bands of dark blue cloth for its
-centre stripes. But the pointed lateen sail of Geneva is certainly a
-more graceful rig than the lug, especially when there are two masts, and
-the white sails swell towards you, goosewinged, before a flowing breeze.
-
-The river has probably a very uneven bottom in this part, for the water
-sometimes rushes round in great whirlpools, and strange overturnings of
-itself, as if it were boiling from below in exuberant volume with a
-gushing upwards; and then again, it wheels about in a circle with a
-sweep far around, before it settles to go onward.[XVI.]
-
- [XVI.] These maelstroms seem at first to demand extra caution as
- you approach, but they are harmless enough, for the water is deep, and
- it only twists the boat round; and you need not mind this except when
- the sail is up, but have a care _then_ that you are not taken aback. In
- crossing one of these whirlpools at full speed it will be found needless
- to try to counteract the sudden action on your bow by paddling against
- it, for it is better to hold on as if there were no interference, and
- presently the action in the reverse direction puts all quite straight.
-
-On the borders of Switzerland the German and French tongues are both
-generally known at the hotels, and by the people accustomed to do
-business with foreigners travelling among them.
-
-But in your course along a river these convenient waiters and polyglot
-commissionaires are not found exactly in attendance at every village,
-and it is, therefore, to the bystanders or casual loungers your
-observations must be addressed.
-
-Frequent intercourse with natives of strange countries, where there is
-no common language between them and the tourist, will gradually teach
-him a "sign language" which suits all people alike.
-
-Thus, in any place, no matter what was their dialect, it was always easy
-to induce one or two men to aid in carrying the canoe. The _formula_ for
-this was something in the following style.
-
-I first got the boat on shore, and a crowd of course soon collected,
-while I arranged its interior, and sponged out the splashed water, and
-fastened the cover down. Then, tightening my belt for a walk, I looked
-round with a kind smile, and selecting a likely man, would address him
-in English deliberately as follows--suiting each action to the word, for
-I have always found that sign language is made more natural when you
-speak your own tongue all the time you are acting:--"Well now, I think
-as you have looked on enough and have seen all you want, it's about time
-to go to an hotel, a _gasthaus_. Here! you--yes, _you_!--just take that
-end of the boat up, so,--gently, '_langsam!_' '_langsam!_'--all right,
-yes, under your arm, like this,--now march off to the best hotel,
-_gasthaus_."
-
-[Illustration: "Langsam."]
-
-Then the procession naturally formed itself. The most humorous boys of
-course took precedence, because of services or mischief willing to be
-performed; and, meanwhile, they gratuitously danced about and under the
-canoe like Fauns around Silenus. Women only came near and waited
-modestly till the throng had passed. The seniors of the place kept on
-the safer confines of the movement, where dignity of gait might comport
-with close observation.
-
-In a case of sign talking like the foregoing you can be helped by one
-substantive and one adverb; and if you pronounce these clearly, and use
-them correctly, while all the other expressions are evidently _your_
-language and not theirs, they will understand it much better than if you
-try signs in dumb show or say the whole in bad German, and so give rise
-to all possible mistakes of your meaning.
-
-But it is quite another matter when you have forgotten (or have never
-acquired) the foreign word for the noun you wish to name, though, even
-then, by well chosen signs, and among an intelligent people, a good deal
-can be conveyed, as may be shown in the following cases.
-
-Once I was riding among the Arabs along the Algerian coast, on my way
-from Carthage, and my guide, a dense Kabyle, was evidently taking me
-past a place I wished to visit, and which had been duly entered in the
-list when he was engaged.
-
-I could not make him understand this, for my limited Arabic had been
-acquired under a different pronunciation in Syria; but one night, it
-happened that a clever chief had me in a tent, or rather a hut, just
-like the top of a gipsy cart. I explained to him by signs (and talking
-English) that the muleteer was taking me past the place it was desired
-to see. Then I tried to pronounce the name of that place, but was always
-wrong, or he could not make it out; it was Maskutayn, or "bewitched
-waters," a wonderful volcanic valley, full of boiling streams and little
-volcanoes of salt.
-
-At length, sitting in the moonlight, signs were tried even for this
-difficult occasion. I put my chibouque (pipe) under the sand and took
-water in my hand, and as he looked on intently--for the Arabs love this
-speaking action--I put water on the fire in the pipe-bowl, and blew it
-up through the sand, talking English all the time. This was done again,
-and suddenly the black lustrous eyes of the Ishmaelite glistened
-brighter. He slapped his forehead. He jumped up. You could almost be
-sure he said "I know it now;" and then he roused the unfortunate
-muleteer from his snorings to give him an energetic lecture, by means of
-which we were directed next day straight to the very place I desired to
-find.
-
-In a few cases of this international talking it becomes necessary to
-sketch pictures, which are even better than signs, but not among Arabs.
-During a visit to the fair of Nijni Novgorod, in the middle of Russia, I
-passed many hours in the "Chinese street" there, and found it was very
-difficult to communicate with Ching Loo, and even signs were useless.
-But they had some red wax about the tea-chests, and there was a white
-wall beside us, so upon this I put the whole story in large pictures,
-with an explanatory lecture in English all the time, which proceeding
-attracted an audience of several scores of Chinamen and Kalmuks and
-other outlandish people, and the particular group I meant to enlighten
-seemed perfectly to understand all that was desired.
-
-And so we suppose that if you can work your paddle well, and learn the
-general sign language, and a little of the pencil tongue, you can go
-very far in a canoe without being starved or homeless; while you are
-sure to have a wide field in which to study the various degrees of
-intelligence among those you meet.
-
-To come back, however, from the Volga to the Rhine.
-
-The current flows more and more gently as we enter the Zeller See, or
-Unter See, a lake which would be called pretty if our taste has not been
-sated for a while by having a snowy range for the background to the
-views on Constance.
-
-But the Lake of Constance sadly wants islands, and here in the Zeller
-See are several, one of them being of great size. The Emperor of the
-French had passed two days at his chateau on this lake, just before we
-arrived. No doubt he would have waited a week had he known the Rob Roy
-was coming.[XVII.]
-
- [XVII.] His Majesty has not forgotten the canoe, as will be seen by
- the following extract from the Paris intelligence in the "Globe" of
- April 20 (His Majesty's birthday):--
-
- "By an edict, dated April 6, 1866, issued this morning, the
- Ministre d'Etat institutes a special committee for the
- organisation of a special exhibition, at the Exposition
- Universelle of 1867, of all objects connected with the arts and
- industry attached to pleasure boats and river navigation. This
- measure is thought to display the importance which amateur
- navigation has assumed during the last few years--to display
- the honour in which is held this _sport nouveau_, as it is
- denominated in the report, and to be successful in abolishing
- the old and absurd prejudices which have so long prevented its
- development in France. The Emperor, whose fancy for imitating
- everything English leads him to patronise with alacrity all
- imitation of English sports in particular, is said to have
- suggested the present exhibition after reading MacGregor's
- 'Cruise of the Rob Roy,' which developes many new ideas of the
- purposes besides mere pleasure to which pleasure boats may be
- applied, and would be glad to encourage a taste for the
- exploration of solitary streams and lonely currents amongst the
- youth of France."
-
-However, as we were too late to breakfast with his Majesty, I pulled in
-at the village of Steckborn, where an inn is built on the actual edge of
-the water, a state of things most convenient for the aquatic tourist,
-and which you find often along this part of the Rhine. In a case of this
-sort you can tap at the door with the paddle, and order a repast before
-you debark, so that it is boiling and fizzing, and the table is all
-ready, while you put things to rights on board, and come leisurely
-ashore, and then tie the boat to the window balcony, or, at any rate, in
-some place where it can be seen all the time you breakfast or dine, and
-rest, and read, and draw.
-
-Experience proved that very few boys, even of the most mischievous
-species, will meddle with a boat which is floating, but that very few
-men, even of the most amiable order, will refrain from pulling it about
-when the little craft is left on shore.
-
-To have your boat not only moored afloat but in your sight too,--that is
-perfection, and it is worth additional trouble to arrange this, because
-then and for hours of the midday stoppage, you will be wholly at ease,
-or at any rate, you will have one care the less, the weary resting
-traveller will not then be anxious about his absent boat, as if it were
-a valuable horse in a strange stable.
-
-The landlord was much interested in the story of my voyage as depicted
-in the sketch-book, so he brought a friend to see me who could speak
-French, and who had himself constructed a boat of two tin tubes,[XVIII.] on
-which a stage or frame is supported, with a seat and rowlocks, the
-oddest looking thing in nautical existence. I persuaded him to put this
-institution into the water, and we started for a cruise; the double-tube
-metal boat, with its spider-like gear aloft, and the oak canoe, so low
-and rakish, with its varnished cedar deck, and jaunty flag, now racing
-side by side, each of them a rare sight, but the two together quite
-unprecedented.
-
- [XVIII.] Each of these was in shape like the cigar ship which I had
- sailed past on the Thames, and which has since been launched.
-
-The river here is like parts of the Clyde and the Kyles of Bute, with
-French villages let in, and an Italian sky stretched overhead. We rowed
-across to a village where a number of Jews live, for I wished to visit
-their Synagogue; but, lo! this was the Grand Duchy of Baden land, and a
-heavily-armed sentry found us invading the dominion, so he deployed and
-formed square to force us to land somewhere else. The man was civil, but
-his orders were unreasonable, so we merely embarked again and went over
-to Switzerland, and ran our little fleet into a bramble bush, to hide it
-while we mounted to an auberge on the hill for a sixpenny bottle of
-wine.
-
-The pretty Swiss lass in charge said she once knew an Englishman--but
-"it was a pity they were all so proud." He had sent her a letter in
-English, which I asked her to let me read for her. It began, "My dear
-little girl, I love you;" and this did not sound so very proud for a
-beginning. My boating friend promised to make her a tin _cafetiere_, and
-so it may be divined that he was the tinman of the village, and a most
-agreeable tinman too.
-
-She came to see us on board, and her father arrived just in time to
-witness a triangular parting, which must have puzzled him a good deal,
-Amelia waving farewell to a "proud" Englishman and a nautical
-whitesmith, who both took leave also of each other, the last sailing
-away with huge square yards and coloured canvas, and the Rob Roy
-drifting with the stream in the opposite direction.
-
-Every day for weeks past had been as a picnic to me, but I prolonged
-this one into night, the air was so balmy and the red sun setting was so
-soon replaced by the white moon rising, and besides, the navigation here
-had no dangers, and there were villages every few miles.
-
-When I had enough of it, cruising here and there by moonlight, I drew up
-to the town of Stein, but all was now lonely by the water-side. This is
-to be expected when you arrive late; however, a slap or two on the water
-with the paddle, and a loud verse of a song, Italian, Dutch, a pibroch,
-any noise in fact, soon draws the idlers to you, and it is precisely the
-idlers you want.
-
-One of them readily helped me with the boat to an inn, where an
-excellent landlady greeted the strange guest. From this moment all was
-bustle there, and very much it was increased by a German guest, who
-insisted on talking to me in English, which I am sure I did not
-understand a bit better than the Germans who came to listen and look
-on.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
- Fog--Fancy pictures--Boy soldiers--Boat's billet--Eating--Lake
- Zurich--Crinoline--Hot walk--Staring--Lake Zug--Swiss
- shots--Fishing Britons--Talk-book.
-
-
-In the morning there was a most curious change of air; all around was in
-a dense white fog. Truly it was now to be "sensation rowing;" so we
-hastened to get off into this milky atmosphere. I have an idea that we
-passed under a bridge; at least the usual cheers sounded this time as if
-they were above me, but the mist was as thick as our best November
-Cheshire-cheese fogs, and quite as interesting. On several occasions I
-positively could not see the bow of my boat, only a few feet from my
-nose. The whole arrangement was so unexpected and entirely
-novel,--paddling on a fast invisible stream--that I had the liveliest
-emotions of pleasure without seeing anything at all.
-
-But then fancy had free play all the time, and the pictures it drew were
-vivid and full of colour, and, after all, our impressions of external
-objects are only pictures, so say the philosophers; and why not then
-enjoy a tour in a fog, with a good album of pictures making the while in
-the brain?
-
-Sounds too there were, but like those of witches and fairies--though
-perhaps it was only the cackling of some antique washerwomen on the
-banks. However, I addressed the unseen company in both prose and poetry,
-and was full of emphasis, which now and again was increased by my boat
-running straight into the shore.
-
-The clearing away of the fog was one of the most interesting evolutions
-of nature to be seen. In one sort or other every traveller has enjoyed
-the quick or gradual tearing up of a fog curtain on mountain or moor,
-but here it was on a beauteous river.
-
-I wish to describe this process, but I cannot. It was a series of
-"Turner pictures," with glimpses right and left, and far overhead, of
-trees, sky, castles, each lightened and shown for a moment, and then
-gauzed over again and completely hidden; while the mind had to imagine
-all the context of the scenery, and it was sure to be quite wrong when
-another gleam of sun disclosed what was there in reality. For it cleared
-away at last, and Father Sol avenged himself by an extra hot ray, for
-thus trifling with his beams.
-
-The Rhine banks here were sloping but steep, with pleasant meadows,
-vineyards, and woods, mingled with tolerable fairness to all three. In
-short, though I appreciate scenery with an eager admiration, any scenery
-seemed good when the genial exercise of the canoe was the medium for
-enjoying it.
-
-Soon afterwards the woods thickened, the mountains rose behind them, the
-current got faster and faster, the houses, at first dotted on the
-knolls, got closer and more suburb like, and at last a grand sweep of
-the stream opened up Schaffhausen to the eye, while a sullen sound on
-the water warned of "rapids ahead." As I intended to keep them always in
-front, some caution was needed in steering, though there is no
-difficulty here, for steamboats navigate thus far, and of course it is
-easy for a canoe.
-
-But when I glided down to the bridge there was the "Goldenen Schiff"
-hotel, and I resolved to patronise it on account of its name, and
-because there was a gigantic picture of a Briton on the adjoining wall.
-He was in full Highland costume, though the peculiar tartan of his kilt
-showed that there is still one clan we have not yet recognised.
-
-Here began a novel kind of astonishment among the people; for when, on
-my arrival, they asked, "Where have you come from?" and were told,
-"From England," they could not understand how my course seemed as if in
-reality from Germany.
-
-The short morning's work being soon over, there was all the day before
-me to wander about.
-
-Drums and a band presently led me to a corps of little boys in full
-uniform, about 200 of them, all with real guns and with boy officers,
-most martial to behold, albeit they were munching apples between the
-words of command, and pulling wry faces at urchins of eight years old,
-who strove in vain to take long steps with short legs.
-
-They had some skirmishing drill, and used small goats' horns to give the
-orders instead of bugles. These horns are used on the railways too, and
-the note is very clear, and may be heard well a long way off. Indeed I
-think much might be done in our drill at home by something of this sort.
-
-It is a short three miles to the Belle Vue, built above the falls of
-Schaffhausen, and in full view of this noble scene. These great falls of
-the Rhine looked much finer than I had recollected them some twelve
-years before; it is pleasant, but unusual, for one's second visit to
-such sights to be more striking than the first. At night the river was
-splendidly illuminated by Bengal lights of different colours, and the
-effect of this on the tossing foam and rich full body of ever pouring
-water--or fire as it then seemed to be--was to present a spectacle of
-magical beauty and grandeur, well seen from the balcony of the hotel, by
-many travellers from various lands. On one side of me was a Russian, and
-a Brazilian on the other.
-
-Next day, at the railway-station, I put the sharp bow of the Rob Roy in
-at the window of the "baggages" office, and asked for the "boat's
-ticket." The clerk did not seem at all surprised, for he knew I was an
-Englishman, and nothing is too odd, queer, mad in short, for Englishmen
-to do.
-
-But the porters, guards, and engine-drivers made a good deal of talk
-before the canoe was safely stowed among the trunks in the van; and I
-now and then visited her there, just for company's sake, and to see that
-the sharp-cornered, iron-bound boxes of the American tourists had not
-broken holes in her oaken skin. One could not but survey, with some
-anxiety, the lumbering casks on the platform, waiting to be rolled in
-beside the canoe; and the fish baskets, iron bars, crates, and clumsy
-gear of all sorts, which at every stoppage is tumbled in or roughly
-shovelled out of the luggage-van of a train.
-
-This care and sympathy for a mere boat may be called enthusiasm by
-those who have not felt the like towards inanimate objects linked to our
-pleasures or pains by hourly ties of interest; but others will
-understand how a friendship for the boat was felt more every day I
-journeyed with her: her strong points were better known as they were
-more tried, but the weak points, too, of the frail traveller became now
-more apparent, and the desire to bring her safely to England was rapidly
-increased when we had made the homeward turn.
-
-The mere cost of the railway ticket for the boat's carriage to Zurich
-was two or three shillings,--not so much as the expense of taking it
-between the stations and the hotels.
-
-Submitting, then, to be borne again on wheels and through tunnels in the
-good old railway style, we soon arrive among the regular Swiss
-mountains, and where gather the Swiss tourists, for whom arise the Swiss
-hotels, those huge establishments founded and managed so as best to
-fatten on the wandering Englishman, and to give him homoeopathic
-feeding while his purse is bled.
-
-For suffer me again to have a little gossip about _eating_. Yes, it is a
-mundane subject, and undoubtedly physical; but when the traveller has to
-move his body and baggage along a route by his own muscles, by climbing
-or by rowing, or by whipping a mule, it is a matter of high moment, to
-him at least, that fibrine should be easily procurable.
-
-If you wish, then, to live well in Switzerland and Germany go to German
-hotels, and avoid the grand barracks reared on every view-point for the
-English tourist.
-
-See how the omnibus, from the train or the steamer, pours down its
-victims into the landlords' arms. Papa and Mamma, and three daughters
-and a maid: well, of course _they_ will be attended to. Here is another
-timid lady with an alpenstock, a long white cane people get when they
-arrive in Switzerland, and which they never know what on earth to do
-with. Next there will issue from the same vehicle a dozen newly-fledged
-Londoners; and the whole party, men and women, are so demure, so afraid
-of themselves, that the hotel-keeper does just what he likes with them,
-every one.
-
-Without a courier, a wife, heavy baggage, or young ladies, I enter too,
-and dare to order a cutlet and potatoes. After half-an-hour two chops
-come and spinach, each just one bite, and cold. I ask for fruit, and
-some pears are presented that grate on the knife, with a minute bunch of
-grapes, good ones let us acknowledge. For this we pay 2_s._
-
-Next day I row three miles down the lake, and order, just as before, a
-cutlet, potatoes, and fruit, but this time at a second-rate German inn.
-Presently behold two luscious veal cutlets, with splendid potatoes, and
-famous hot plates; and a fruit-basket teeming gracefully with large
-clusters of magnificent grapes, peaches, pears all gushing with juice,
-and mellow apples, and rosy plums. For this I pay 1_s._ 6_d._ The secret
-is that the Germans won't pay the prices which the English fear to
-grumble at, and won't put up with the articles the English fear to
-refuse.
-
-Nor may we blame the hotel-keepers for their part in this business. They
-try to make as much money as they can, and most people who are making
-money try to do the same.
-
-In the twilight the Rob Roy launched on the Lake of Zurich, so lovely by
-evening, cool and calm, with its pretty villages painted again on the
-water below, and soft voices singing, and slow music floating in the
-air, as the moon looked down, and the crests of snow were silvered on
-far-off hills.
-
-The canoe was now put up in a boathouse where all seemed to be secure.
-It was the only time I had found a boathouse for my boat, and the only
-time when she was badly treated; for, next morning, though the man in
-charge appeared to be a solid, honest fellow, I saw at once that the
-canoe had been sadly tumbled about and filled with water, the seat cast
-off and floating outside, the covering deranged, the sails untied, and
-the sacred paddle defiled by clumsy hands.
-
-The man who suffered this to be perpetrated will not soon forget the
-Anglo-German-French set-down he received (with a half-franc), and I
-shall not forget in future to observe the time-honoured practice of
-carrying the canoe invariably into the hotel.
-
-Another piece of experience gained here was this, that to send your
-luggage on by a steamer, intending to regain it on your arrival, adds
-far less of convenience than it does of anxiety and trouble, seeing that
-in this sort of travel you can readily take the baggage with you always
-and everywhere in your boat.
-
-Much of the charm of next day's paddle on the lake consisted in its
-perfect independence of all previous arrangements, and in the absence of
-such thraldom as, "You must be here by ten o'clock;" or, "You have to
-sleep there at night." So now, let the wind blow as it likes, I could
-run before it, and breakfast at this village; or cross to that point to
-bathe; or row round that bay, and lunch on the other side of the lake,
-or anywhere else on the shore, or in the boat itself, as I pleased. I
-felt as a dog must feel on his travels who has no luggage and no
-collar, and has only one coat, which always fits him, and is always
-getting new.
-
-When quite sated with the water, I fixed on Horgen to stop at for a
-rest, to the intense delight of all the Horgen boys. How they did jump
-and caper about the canoe, and scream with the glee of young hearts
-stirred by a new sight!
-
-It was one of the great treats of this voyage to find it gave such hours
-of pleasure to the juvenile population in each place. Along the vista of
-my recollection as I think over the past days of this excursion, many
-thousand childish faces brimming with happiness range their chubby or
-not chubby cheeks.
-
-These young friends were still more joyous when the boat was put into a
-cart, and the driver got up beside it, and the captain of the canoe
-began his hot walk behind.
-
-A number of their mammas came out to smile on the performance, and some
-asked to have a passage to England in the boat, to which there was the
-stock reply, given day by day, "Not much room for the crinoline." Only
-once was there the rejoinder, that the lady would willingly leave her
-expansion at home; though on another occasion (and that in France, too)
-they answered, "We poor folks don't wear crinoline."
-
-In every group there were various forms of inquisitiveness about the
-canoe. First, those who examined it without putting questions; and then
-those who questioned about it without examining. Some lifted it to feel
-the weight; others passed their hands along its smooth deck to feel the
-polished cedar; others looked underneath to see if there was a keel, or
-bent the rope to feel how flexible it was, or poised the paddle (when I
-let them), and said, "How light!" and then more critical inquirers
-measured the boat's dimensions, tapped its sides with their knuckles,
-and looked wise; sketched its form, scrutinized its copper nails, or
-gently touched the silken flag, with its frayed hem and colour fading
-now; in all places this last item, as an object of interest, was always
-the first exclaimed about by the lady portion of the crowd.
-
-It is with such little but pleasant trivialities that a traveller's day
-may be filled in this enchanting atmosphere where simply to exist, to
-breathe, to gaze, and to listen, are enough to pass the sunny hours, if
-not to engage the nobler powers of the mind.
-
-The Lakes of Zurich and Zug are not far separate. About three hours of
-steady road walking takes you from one to the other, over a high neck of
-forest land, and a hot walk this was from twelve to three o'clock, in
-the brightest hours of the day. The heat and the dust made me eager
-again to be afloat. By the map, indeed, it seemed as if one could row
-part of this way on a river which runs into Zug, but maps are no
-guidance as to the fitness of streams for a boat. They make a black line
-wriggling about on the paper do for all rivers alike, and this tells you
-nothing as to the depth or force of the current, nor can the drivers or
-innkeepers tell much more, since they have no particular reason for
-observing how a river comports itself; their business is on the road.
-
-The driver was proud of his unusual fare, a boat with an English flag,
-and he gave a short account of it to every friend he met, an account no
-doubt frightfully exaggerated, but always accepted as sufficient by the
-gratified listener. The worthy carter, however, was quite annoyed that I
-stopped him outside the town of Zug (paying thirteen francs for the
-cart), for I wished to get the canoe into the water unobserved, as the
-morning's work had left me yet no rest, and sweet repose could best be
-had by floating in my boat. However, there was no evading the
-townspeople's desire to see "the schiff in a cart from England." We took
-her behind a clump of stones, but they climbed upon the stones and
-stood. I sat down in a moody silence, but they sat down too in
-respectful patience. I tried then another plan, turned the canoe bottom
-upward, and began lining a seam of the planks with red putty. They
-looked on till it was done, and I began the same seam again, and told
-them that all the other seams must be thus lined. This, at last, was too
-much for some of the wiser ones, who turned away and murmured about my
-slowness, but others at once took their places in the front row. It
-seemed unfriendly to go on thus any longer, and as it was cooler now, I
-pushed the boat into the lake, shipped my luggage on board, and after
-the usual English speech to them all from the water, bid every one
-"adieu."[XIX.]
-
- [XIX.] This word, like other expressive French words, is commonly
- used in Germany and Switzerland.
-
-New vigour came when once the paddle was grasped again, and the soft
-yielding water and gentle heaving on its bosom had fresh pleasure now
-after the dusty road. It seems as if one must be for ever spoiled for
-land travel by this smooth liquid journeying.
-
-Zug is a little lake, and the mountains are over it only at one end, but
-then there are glorious hills, the Rigi and a hundred more, each behind
-another, or raising a peak in the gaps between. I must resolutely
-abstain from describing these here. The sight of them is well known to
-the traveller. The painted pictures of them in every shop window are
-faithful enough for those who have not been nearer, and words can tell
-very little to others of what is seen and felt when you fill the
-delighted eye by looking on the snowy range.
-
-Near one end of the lake I visited the line of targets where the
-Switzers were popping away their little bullets at their short ranges,
-with all sorts of gimcrack instruments to aid them, lenses, crooks, and
-straps for the arms, hair-triggers, and everything done under cover too.
-Very skilful indeed are they in the use of these contrivances; but the
-weapons look like toy-guns after all, and are only one step removed from
-the crossbows you see in Belgium and France, where men meet to shoot at
-stuffed cockrobins fixed on a pole, and do not hit them, and then
-adjourn for beer.
-
-The Swiss are good shots and brave men, and woe be to their invaders.
-Still, in this matter of rifle shooting their _dilettanti_ practice
-through a window, at the short range of 200 yards, seems really childish
-when compared with that of the manly groups at Wimbledon, where, on the
-open heath, in sun or drifting hail, the burly Yorkshireman meets with
-the hardy Scot, and sends his heavier deadly bullet on its swift errand
-right away for a thousand yards in the storm.
-
-Leaving the shooters to their bulls' eyes, I paddled in front of the
-town to scan the hotels, and to judge of the best by appearances. Out
-came the boats of Zug to examine the floating stranger. They went round
-and round, in a criticising mood, just as local dogs strut slowly in
-circles about a new-come cur who is not known to their street, and
-besides is of ambiguous breed. These boats were all larger than mine,
-and most of them were brighter with plenty of paint, and universally
-they were encumbered with most awkward oars.
-
-A courteous Frenchman in one of the boats told me all the Zug news in a
-breath, besides asking numerous questions, and giving a hasty commentary
-on the fishing in the lake. Finally, he pointed out the best hotel, and
-so the naval squadron advanced to the pier, led by the canoe. A gracious
-landlady here put my boat safe in the hotel coachhouse, and offered to
-give me the key of the padlock, to make sure. In the _salle à manger_
-were some English friends from London, so now I felt that here was an
-end of lone wanderings among foreigners, for the summer stream of
-tourists from England was encountered at this point.
-
-An early start next morning found the mists on the mountains, but they
-were quickly furled up out of the way in festoons like muslin curtains.
-
-We skirted the pretty villas on the verge of the lake, and hauled in by
-some apple-trees to rig up the sails. This could be done more easily
-when the boat was drawn ashore than when it was afloat; though, after
-practice, I could not only set the mast and hoist the sails "at sea,"
-but could even stand up and change my coat, or tie the flag on the
-masthead, or survey a difficult channel, while the boat was rocking on
-the waves of a rapid.[XX.]
-
- [XX.] This is so very useful in extending the horizon of view,
- and in enabling you to examine a whole ledge of sunken rocks at once,
- that it is well worth the trouble of a week or two's practice.
-
-Sailing on a lake in Switzerland is a full reward for carrying your mast
-and sails unused for many a long mile. Sometimes, indeed, the sails
-seemed to be after all an encumbrance, but this was when they were not
-available. Every time they came into use again the satisfaction of
-having brought them was reassured.
-
-In sailing while the wind is light you need not always sit, as must be
-done for paddling. Wafted by the breeze you can now recline, lie down,
-or lie up, put your legs anyhow and anywhere, in the water if you like,
-and the peak of the sail is a shade between the sun and your eyes,
-while the ripples seem to tinkle cheerfully against the bow, and the
-wavelets seethe by smoothly near the stern. When you are under sail the
-hill tops look higher than before, for now you see how far they are
-above your "lofty" masthead, and the black rocks on the shore look
-blacker when seen in contrast with a sail like cream.
-
-[Illustration: "Sailing on Lake Zug."]
-
-After a cruise that left nothing more to see of Zug, we put into port at
-Imyn, and though it is a little place, only a few houses, the boys there
-were as troublesome as gnats buzzing about; so the canoe had to be
-locked in the stable out of sight.
-
-Three Britons were waiting here for the steamer. They had come to fish
-in Switzerland. Now fishing and travelling kill each other, so far as my
-experience goes, unless one of them is used as a _passetemps_ because
-you cannot go on with the other. Thus I recollect once at the town of
-Vossevangen, in Norway, when we had to wait some hours for horses, it
-was capital fun to catch three trout with a pin for a hook fastened on
-the lash of a gig-whip, while a fellow-traveller shot with a pistol at
-my Glengarry cap on a stone.
-
-The true fisherman fishes for the fishing, not for the fishes. He
-himself is pleased even if he catches nothing, though he is more pleased
-to bring back a full basket, for that will justify him to his friends.
-
-Now when you stop your travelling that you may angle, if you catch
-nothing you grudge the day spent, and keep thinking how much you might
-have seen in it on the road. On the other hand, if you do happen to
-catch one or two fish, you don't like to leave the place where more
-might be taken, and your first ten miles after departure from it is a
-stage of reflection about pools, stones, bites, and rises, instead of
-what is going on all around. Worst of all, if you have hooked a fish and
-lost him, it is a sad confession of defeat then to give up the sport and
-moodily resume the tour.
-
-As for the three visitors at Imyn, they had just twenty minutes sure, so
-they breakfasted in five minutes, and in the next three minutes had got
-their rods ready, and were out in the garden casting as fast as
-possible, and flogging the water as if the fish also ought to be in a
-hurry to get taken. The hot sun blazed upon the bald head of one of
-these excited anglers, for he had not time to put on his hat. The other
-had got his line entangled in a bush, and of course was _hors de
-combat_. The third was a sort of light skirmisher, rushing about with
-advice, and pointing out shoals of minnows everywhere else but where his
-companions were engaged. However, they managed to capture a few monsters
-of the deep, that is to say, a couple of misguided gudgeons, probably
-dissipated members of their tribe, and late risers, who had missed
-their proper breakfasts. Ardent as I am with the rod I could not enjoy
-fishing after this sort.
-
-To be in this tide of wandering Britons, and yet to look at them and
-listen to them as if you were distinct--this is a post full of interest
-and amusement; and if you can, even for one day, try to be (at least in
-thought) a Swiss resident or a Parisian, and so to regard the English
-around you from the point they are seen from by the foreigners whom they
-visit, the examination becomes far more curious. But this has been done
-by many clever tourists, who have written their notes with more or less
-humour, and with more rather than less severity; so I shall not attempt
-to analyse the strange atoms of the flood from our islands which
-overflows the Continent every year.
-
-It is the fashion to decry three-fourths of this motley company as
-"snobs," "spendthrifts," or "greenhorns." With humble but firm voice I
-protest against this unfairness; nor can I help thinking that much of
-the hard criticism published by travellers against their fellows is a
-crooked way of saying, what it does not do to assert directly, that the
-writer has at any rate met some travellers inferior to himself.
-
-Of course, among the Englishmen whom I met now and then in the course
-of this voyage there were some strange specimens, and their remarks were
-odd enough, when alluding to the canoe. One said, for example, "Don't
-you think it would have been more commodious to have had an attendant
-with you to look after your luggage and things?" The most obvious answer
-to this was probably that which I gave, "Not for me, if he was to be in
-the boat; and not for him, if he had to run on the bank."
-
-Another Englishman at home asked me in all seriousness about the canoe
-voyage, "Was it not a great waste of time?" And when I inquired how _he_
-had spent his vacation, he said, "Oh, I was all the time _at Brighton_!"
-
-In returning once more to English conversation, one is reminded how very
-useless and unpractical are all the "Talk-books" published to facilitate
-the traveller's conversation in foreign languages. Whether they are
-meant to help you in French, German, Italian, or Spanish, these little
-books, with their well-known double columns of words and phrases, and
-their "Polite Letter-writer" at the end, all seem to be equally
-determined to force words upon you which you never will need to use;
-while the things you are always wanting to say in the new tongue are
-either carefully buried among colloquies on botany or precious stones,
-or among philosophical discussions about metaphysics, or else the
-desirable phrases are not in the book at all.
-
-This need of a brief and good "Talk-book" struck me particularly when I
-had carefully marked in my German one all the pages which would never be
-required in the tour, so that I could cut them out as an unnecessary
-addition to the weight of my ship's library. Why, the little book, when
-thus expurgated, got so lamentably thin that the few pages left of it,
-as just possible to be useful, formed only a wretched skeleton of the
-original volume.
-
-Another fault of these books is that half the matter in them is made up
-of what the imaginary chatting foreigner says _to you_, the unhappy
-Englishman, and this often in long phrases, or even in set speeches.
-
-But when, in actual life, the real foreigner speaks to you, he somehow
-says quite a different set of words from any particular phrases you see
-in the book, and you cannot make out his meaning, because it does not
-correspond with anything you have learned.
-
-It is evident that a dictionary is required to get at the English
-meaning of what is said to you by another; while a talk-book will
-suffice for what you wish to say to him; because you can select in it
-and compose from it before you utter any particular phrase.
-
-The Danish phrase-book for Norway and Sweden is a tolerably good one,
-and it holds in a short compass all the traveller wants; but I think a
-book of this kind for each of the other principal languages might well
-be constructed on the following basis.
-
-First, let us have the expression "I want," and then the English
-substantives most used in travel talk, arranged in alphabetical order,
-and with their foreign equivalents. Next, put the request "Will you,"
-and after it place each of the verbs of action generally required by
-travellers. Then set forth the question, "Does the," with a column of
-events formed by a noun, verb, and preposition in each, such as "coach
-stop at," "road lead to," "steamer start from," &c.; and, lastly, give
-us the comprehensive "Is it," with a long alphabetical list of
-adjectives likely to be employed. Under these four heads, with two pages
-of adverbs and numerals, I think that the primary communications with a
-foreigner can be comprised; and as for conversations with him on special
-subjects, such as politics, or art, or scenery, these are practically
-not likely to be attempted unless you learn his language, and not merely
-some of its most necessary _words_; but this study of language is not
-the purpose for which you get a talk-book.
-
-Having now delivered a homily on international talking, it is time to be
-on the move again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Sailing on Lucerne--Seeburg--River scenes--Night and snow--The
- Reuss--A dear dinner--Seeing a rope--Passing a fall--Bremgarten
- rapids.
-
-
-When the steamer at Imyn had embarked the three sportsmen, and the
-little pier was quiet, we got a cart out for the Rob Roy, and bargained
-to have it rumbled over the hill to the Lake of Lucerne for the sum of
-five francs--it is only half-an-hour's walk. The landlord himself came
-as driver, for he was fully interested about the canoe, and he did not
-omit to let people know his sentiments on the subject all along the way,
-even calling out to the men plucking fruit in the apple-trees, who had
-perhaps failed to notice the phenomenon which was passing on the road
-beneath them. There was a permanent joke on such occasions, and, oddly
-enough, it was used by the drivers in Germany as well as in Switzerland,
-and was of course original and spontaneous with each of them as they
-called out, "Going to America!" and then chuckled at the brilliant
-remark.
-
-The village we came to on Lucerne was the well-known Kussnacht, that
-is, _one_ of the well-known Kussnachts, for there are plenty of these
-honeymoon towns in Central Europe; and with the customary assembly of
-_quidnuncs_, eloquently addressed this time by the landlord-driver, the
-canoe was launched on another lake, perhaps the prettiest lake in the
-world.
-
-Like other people, and at other times, I had traversed this beautiful
-water of the Four Cantons, but those only who have seen it well by
-steamer and by walking, so as to know how it juts in and winds round in
-intricate geography, can imagine how much better you may follow and
-grasp its beauties by searching them out alone and in a canoe.
-
-For thus I could penetrate all the wooded nooks, and dwell on each
-view-point, and visit the rocky islets, and wait long, longer--as long
-as I pleased before some lofty berg, while the ground-swell gently
-undulated, and the passing cloud shaded the hill with grey, and the red
-flag of a steamer fluttered in a distant sunbeam, and the plash of a
-barge's oar broke on the boatman's song; everything around changing just
-a little, and the stream of inward thought and admiration changing too
-as it flowed, but, all the time, and when the eye came back to it again,
-there was the grand mountain still the same,
-
- "Like Teneriffe or Atlas unremoved."
-
-How cool the snow looked up there aloft even in the heat of summer! and,
-to come down again to one's level on the water, how lively the steamer
-was with the music of its band and the quick beat of its wheels curling
-up white foam. Let us speed to meet it and to get a tossing in the
-swell, while Jones and Smith, under the awning, cry out, "Why, to be
-sure, that's the Rob Roy canoe," and Mrs. Jones and the three Miss
-Smiths all lift up their heads from their "Murrays," where they have
-been diligently reading the history of Switzerland from A.D. 1682, and
-then the description in words of all the scenery around, although they
-have suffered its speaking realities in mountain, wood, and lake to pass
-unnoticed.
-
-As I was quite fresh (having worked chiefly the sails on Zug) and now in
-good "training," so as to get on very comfortably with ten or twelve
-hours' rowing in the day, I spent it all in seeing this inexhaustible
-Lake of Lucerne, and yet felt that at least a dozen new pictures had
-been left unseen in this rich volume of the book of nature.
-
-But as this book had no page in it about quarters for the night it was
-time to consider these homely affairs, and to look out for an hotel; not
-one of the big barracks for Englishmen spoken of before, but some quiet
-place where one could stop for Sunday. Coming suddenly then round a
-shady point, behold the very place! But can it be an hotel? Yes, there
-is the name, "Seeburg." Is it quiet? Observe the shady walks. Bathing?
-Why, there is a bath in the lake at the end of the garden. Fishing? At
-least four rods are stretched over the reeds by hopeful hands, and with
-earnest looks behind, watching for the faintest nibble.
-
-Let us run boldly in. Ten minutes, and the boat is safely in a shed, and
-its captain well housed in an excellent room; and, having ordered
-dinner, it was delicious to jump into the lake for a swim, all hot with
-the hot day's work, and to stretch away out to the deep, and circle
-round and round in these limpid waters, with a nice little bath-room to
-come back to, and fresh dry clothes to put on. In the evening we had
-very pretty English music, a family party improvised in an hour, and
-broken up for a moonlight walk, while, all this time (one fancied), in
-the big hotel of the town the guests were in stiff _coteries_, or each
-set retired to its sitting-room, and lamenting how unsociable everybody
-else had become.
-
-I never was more comfortable than here, with a few English families "en
-pension," luxuriating for the sum of six francs per day, and an old
-Russian General, most warlike and courteous, who would chat with you by
-the hour, on the seat under the shady chestnut, and smiled at the four
-persevering fishermen whose bag consisted, I believe, of three bites,
-one of them allowed on all hands to have been _bonâ fide_.
-
-Then on Sunday we went to Lucerne, to church, where a large congregation
-listened to a very good sermon from the well-known Secretary of the
-Society for Colonial and Continental Churches. At least every traveller,
-if not every home-stayed Englishman, ought to support this Association,
-because it many times supplies just that food and rest which the soul
-needs so much on a Sunday abroad, when the pleasures of foreign travel
-are apt to make only the mind and body constitute the man.
-
-I determined to paddle from Lucerne by the river Reuss, which flows out
-of the lake and through the town. This river is one of four--the Rhine,
-Rhone, Reuss, and Ticino, which all rise near together in the
-neighbourhood of the St. Gothard; and yet, while one flows into the
-German ocean, another falls into the Mediterranean, both between them
-having first made nearly the compass of Switzerland.
-
-The walking tourist comes often upon the rapid Reuss as it staggers and
-tumbles among the Swiss mountains. To me it had a special interest, for
-I once ascended the Galenhorn over the glaciers it starts from, and with
-only a useless guide, who lost his head and then lost his way, and then
-lost his temper and began to cry. We groped about in a fog until snow
-began to fall, and the snowstorm lasted for six hours--a weary time
-spent by us wandering in the dark and without food. At length we were
-discovered by some people sent out with lights to search for the
-benighted pleasure-seeker.
-
-The Reuss has many cascades and torrent gorges as it runs among the
-rough crags, and it falls nearly 6,000 feet before it reaches the Lake
-of Lucerne, this lake itself being still 1,400 feet above the sea.
-
-A gradual current towards the end of the lake entices you under the
-bridge where the river starts again on its course, at first gently
-enough, and as if it never could get fierce and hoarse-voiced when it
-has taken you miles away into the woods and can deal with you all alone.
-
-The map showed the Reuss flowing into the Aar, but I could learn nothing
-more about either of these rivers, except that an intelligent man said,
-"The Reuss is a mere torrent," while another recounted how a man some
-years ago went on the Aar in a boat, and was taken up by the police and
-punished for thus perilling his life.
-
-Deducting from these statements the usual 50 per cent. for exaggeration,
-everything appeared satisfactory, so I yielded my boat to the current,
-and, at parting, waved my yellow paddle to certain fair friends who had
-honoured me with their countenance, and who were now assembled on the
-bridge. After this a few judicious strokes took the Rob Roy through the
-town and past the pleasant environs, and we were now again upon running
-water.
-
-The current, after a quiet beginning, soon put on a sort of "business
-air," as if it did not mean to dally, and rapidly got into quick time,
-threading a devious course among the woods, hayfields, and vineyards,
-and it seemed not to murmur (as streams always do), but to sing with
-buoyant exhilaration in the fresh brightness of the morn.
-
-It certainly was a change, from the sluggish feeling of dead water in
-the lakes to the lively tremulous thrilling of a rapid river like the
-Reuss, which, in many places, is as wide as the Rhine at Schaffhausen.
-It is a wild stream, too fast for navigation, and therefore the villages
-are not built on the banks, and there are no boats, and the lonely,
-pathless, forest-covered banks are sometimes bleak enough when seen from
-the water.
-
-For some miles it was easy travelling, the water being seldom less than
-two feet deep, and with rocks readily visible by the eddy bubbling about
-them, because they were sharp and jagged. It is the long smooth and
-round-topped rock which is most treacherous in a fast river, for the
-spray which the current throws round such a rock is often not different
-from an ordinary wave.
-
-Now and then the stream was so swift that I was afraid of losing my
-straw hat, simply from the breeze created by great speed--for it was a
-day without wind.
-
-It cannot be concealed that continuous physical enjoyment such as this
-tour presented is a dangerous luxury if it be not properly used. When I
-thought of the hospitals of London, of the herds of squalid poor in
-foetid alleys, of the pale-faced ragged boys, and the vice, sadness,
-pain, and poverty we are sent to do battle with if we be Christian
-soldiers, I could not help asking, "Am I right in thus enjoying such
-comfort, such scenery, such health?" Certainly not right, unless to get
-vigour of thought and hand, and freshened energy of mind, and larger
-thankfulness and wider love, and so, with all the powers recruited, to
-enter the field again more eager and able to be useful.
-
-In the more lonely parts of the Reuss the trees were in dense thickets
-to the water's edge, and the wild ducks fluttered out from them with a
-splash, and some larger birds like bustards often hovered over the
-canoe. I think among the flying companions I noticed also the bunting,
-or "ammer" (from which German word comes our English "yellow hammer"),
-wood-pigeons, and very beautiful hawks. The herons and kingfishers were
-here as well, but not so many of them as on the Danube.
-
-Nothing particular occurred, although it was a pleasant morning's work,
-until we got through the bridge at Imyl, where an inn was high up on the
-bank. The ostler helped me to carry the boat into the stable, and the
-landlady audaciously charged me 4_s._ 6_d._ for my first dinner (I
-always had two dinners on full working days), being pretty sure that she
-need not expect her customer to stop there again.
-
-The navigation after this began to be more interesting, with gravel
-banks and big stones to avoid, and a channel to be chosen from among
-several, and the wire ropes of the ferries stretched tightly across the
-river requiring to be noticed with proper respect.
-
-You may have observed how difficult it is, sometimes, to see a rope when
-it is stretched and quite horizontal, or at any rate how hard it is to
-judge correctly of its distance from your eye. This can be well noticed
-in walking by the seashore among fishing-boats moored on the beach, when
-you will sometimes even knock your nose against a taut hawser before you
-are aware that it is so close.
-
-This is caused by the fact that the mind estimates the distance of an
-object partly by comparing the two views of its surface obtained by the
-two eyes respectively, and which views are not quite the same, but
-differ, just as the two pictures prepared for the stereoscope. Each eye
-sees a little round one side of the object, and the solid look of the
-object and its distance are thus before the mind.
-
-Now when the rope is horizontal the eyes do not see round the two sides
-in this manner, though if the head is leant sideways it will be found
-that the illusion referred to no longer appears.
-
-Nor is it out of place to inquire thus at length into this matter, for I
-can assure you that one or two blunt slaps on the head from these ropes
-across a river make it at least interesting if not pleasant to examine
-"the reason why." And now we have got the philosophy of the thing, let
-us leave the ropes behind.
-
-The actual number of miles in a day's work is much influenced by the
-number of waterfalls or artificial barriers which are too dry or too
-high to allow the canoe to float over them.
-
-[Illustration: "Shirking a Fall."]
-
-In all such cases, of course, I had to get out and to drag the boat
-round by the fields, as has been already described (p. 80); or to lower
-her carefully among the rocks, as is shown in the accompanying sketch,
-which represents the usual appearance of this part of the day's
-proceedings. Although this sort of work was a change of posture, and
-brought into play new muscular action, yet the strain sometimes put on
-the limbs by the weight of the boat, and the great caution required
-where there was only slippery footing, made these barriers to be
-regarded on the whole as bores.
-
-Full soon however we were to forget such trifling troubles, for more
-serious work impended.
-
-The river banks suddenly assumed a new character. They were steep and
-high, and their height increased as we advanced between the two upright
-walls of stratified gravel and boulders.
-
-A full body of water ran here, the current being of only ordinary force
-at its edges, where it was interrupted by rocks, stones, and shingle,
-and was thus twisted into eddies innumerable.
-
-To avoid these entanglements at the sides, it seemed best, on the whole,
-to keep the boat in mid-channel, though the breakers were far more
-dangerous there, in the full force of the stream.
-
-I began to think that this must be the "hard place coming," which a wise
-man farther up the river had warned me was quite too much for so small a
-boat, unless in flood times, when fewer rocks would be in the way. In
-reply, I had told him that when we got near such a place I would pull
-out my boat and drag it along the bank, if requisite. To this he said,
-"Ah! but the banks are a hundred feet high." So I had mentally resolved
-(but entirely forgot) to stop in good time and to climb up the rocks and
-investigate matters ahead before going into an unknown run of broken
-water.
-
-Such plans are very well in theory, but somehow the approach to these
-rapids was so gradual, and the mind was so much occupied in overcoming
-the particular difficulty of each moment, that no opportunity occurred
-for rest or reflection. The dull heavy roar round the corner got louder
-as the Rob Roy neared the great bend. For here the river makes a turn
-round the whole of a letter S, in fact very nearly in a complete figure
-of 8, and in wheeling thus it glides over a sloping ledge of flat rocks,
-spread obliquely athwart the stream for a hundred feet on either hand,
-and just a few inches below the surface.
-
-The canoe was swept over this singular place by the current, its keel
-and sides grinding and bumping on the stones, and sliding on the soft
-moss which here made the rock so slippery and black.
-
-The progress was aided by sundry pushes and jerks at proper times, but
-we advanced altogether in a clumsy, helpless style, until at length
-there came in sight the great white ridge of tossing foam where the din
-was great, and a sense of excitement and confusion filled the mind.
-
-I was quite conscious that the sight before me was made to look worse
-because of the noise around, and by the feeling of the loneliness and
-powerlessness of a puny man struggling in a waste of breakers, where to
-strike a single one was sure to upset the boat.
-
-From the nature of the place, too, it was evident that it would be
-difficult to save the canoe by swimming alongside it when capsized or
-foundered, and yet it was utterly impossible now to stop.
-
-Right in front, and in the middle, I saw the well-known wave which is
-always raised when a main stream converges, as it rushes down a narrow
-neck. The depression or trough of this was about two feet below, and the
-crest four feet above the level, so the height of the wave was about six
-feet.
-
-Though rather tall it was very thin and sharp-featured, and always
-stationary in position, though the water composing it was going at a
-tremendous pace. After this wave there was another smaller one, as
-frequently happens.
-
-It was not the _height_ of the wave that gave any concern; had it been
-at sea the boat would rise over any lofty billow, but here the wave
-stood still, and the canoe was to be impelled against it with all the
-force of a mighty stream, and so it _must_ go through the body of water,
-for it could not have time to rise.
-
-And so the question remained, "What is _behind_ that wave?" for if it is
-a rock then this is the last hour of the Rob Roy.[XXI.]
-
- [XXI.] I had not then acquired the knowledge of a valuable fact,
- that a sharp wave of this kind _never_ has a rock behind it. A sharp
- wave requires free water at its rear, and it is therefore in the safest
- part of the river so far as concealed dangers are concerned. This at
- least was the conclusion come to after frequent observation afterwards
- of many such places.
-
-The boat plunged headlong into the shining mound of water as I clenched
-my teeth and clutched my paddle. We saw her sharp prow deeply buried,
-and then (I confess) my eyes were shut involuntarily, and before she
-could rise the mass of solid water struck me with a heavy blow full in
-the breast, closing round my neck as if cold hands gripped me, and quite
-taking away my breath.[XXII.]
-
- [XXII.] See a faithful representation of this incident, so far as
- relates to the water, in the Frontispiece.
-
-Vivid thoughts coursed through the brain in this exciting moment, but
-another slap from the lesser wave, and a whirl round in the eddy below,
-told that the battle was over soon, and the little boat slowly rose from
-under a load of water, which still covered my arms, and then, trembling,
-and as if stunned by the heavy shock, she staggered to the shore. The
-river too had done its worst, and it seemed now to draw off from
-hindering us, and so I clung to a rock to rest for some minutes, panting
-with a tired thrilling of nervousness and gladness strangely mingled.
-
-Although the weight of water had been so heavy on my body and legs, very
-little of it had got inside under the waterproof covering, for the whole
-affair was done in a few seconds, and though everything in front was
-completely drenched up to my necktie, the back of my coat was scarcely
-wet. Most fortunately I had removed the flag from its usual place about
-an hour before, and thus it was preserved from being swept away.
-
-Well, now it is over, and we are rested, and begin with a fresh start;
-for there is still some work to do in threading a way among the
-breakers. The main point, however, has been passed, and the difficulties
-after it look small, though at other times they might receive attention.
-
-Here is our resting-place, the old Roman town of Bremgarten, which is
-built in a hollow of this very remarkable serpent bend of the rapid
-Reuss. The houses are stuck on the rocks, and abut on the river itself,
-and as the stream bore me past these I clung to the doorstep of a
-washerwoman's house, and pulled my boat out of the water into her very
-kitchen, to the great amusement and surprise of the worthy lady, who
-wondered still more when I hauled the canoe again through the other side
-of her room until it fairly came out to the street behind!
-
-It must have astonished the people to see a canoe thus suddenly
-appearing on their quiet pavement. They soon crowded round and bore her
-to the hotel, which was a moderately bad one. Next morning the bill was
-twelve francs, nearly double its proper amount; and thus we encountered
-in one day the only two extortionate innkeepers met with at all.[XXIII.]
-
- [XXIII.] However, I made the landlord here take eight francs as a
- compromise.
-
-This quaint old place, with high walls and a foss, and several
-antiquities, was well worth the inspection of my early morning walk next
-day, and then the Rob Roy was ordered to the door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
- Hunger--Music at the mill--Sentiment and chops--River
- Limmat--Fixed on a fall--On the river Aar--The Rhine
- again--Douaniers--Falls of Lauffenburg--The cow cart.
-
-
-The wetting and excitement of yesterday made me rather stiff in
-beginning again; and anon, when a rushing sound was heard in front I was
-aware of a new anxiety as to whether this might not mean the same sort
-of rough work as yesterday's over again, whereas hitherto this sound of
-breakers to come had always promised nothing but pleasure. However,
-things very soon came back to their old way, a continuous and varied
-enjoyment from morning to night.
-
-The river was rapid again, but with no really difficult places. I saw
-one raft in course of preparation, though there were not many boats, for
-as the men there said, "How could we get boats _up_ that stream?"
-
-The villages near the river were often so high up on lofty cliffs, or
-otherwise unsuitable, that I went on for some miles trying in vain to
-fix on one for my (No. 1) dinner. Each bend of the winding water held
-out hopes that down there at last, or round that bluff cape at farthest,
-there must be a proper place to breakfast. But when it was now long past
-the usual hour, and the shores got less inhabited and hunger more
-imperative, we determined to land at a mill which overhung the stream in
-a picturesque spot.
-
-I landed unobserved. This was a blunder in diplomacy, for the canoe was
-always good as credentials; but I climbed up the bank and through the
-garden, and found the hall door open; so I walked timidly into a large,
-comfortable house, leaving my paddle outside lest it might be regarded
-as a bludgeon. I had come as a beggar, not a burglar.
-
-The chords of a piano, well struck and by firm fingers, led me towards
-the drawing-room; for to hear music is almost to make sure of welcome in
-a house, and it was so now.
-
-My bows and reverences scarcely softened the exceedingly strange
-appearance I must have made as an intruder, clothed in universal
-flannel, and offering ten thousand apologies in French, German, and
-English for thus dropping down from the clouds, that is to say, climbing
-up from the water.
-
-The young miller rose from the piano, and bowed. His fair sister
-stopped her sweet song, and blushed. For my part, being only a sort of
-"casual," I modestly asked for bread and wine, and got hopelessly
-involved in an effort to explain how I had come by the river
-unperceived. The excessive courtesy of my new friends was embarrassing,
-and was further complicated by the arrival of another young lady, even
-more surprised and hospitable.
-
-Quickly the refreshments were set on the table, and the miller sealed
-the intimacy by lighting his ample pipe. Our conversation was of the
-most lively and unintelligible character, and soon lapsed into music,
-when Beethoven and Goss told all we had to say in chants and symphonies.
-
-The inevitable sketch-book whiled away a good hour, till the ladies were
-joined by a third damsel, and the adventures of Ulysses had to be told
-to three Penelopes at once. The miller's party became humorous to a
-degree, and they resisted all my efforts to get away, even when the
-family dinner was set on the board, and the domestic servants and
-farm-labourers came in to seat themselves at a lower table. This was a
-picture of rural life not soon to be forgotten.
-
-The stately grandmamma of the mansion now advanced, prim and stiff, and
-with dignity and matronly grace entreated the stranger to join their
-company. The old oak furniture was lightened by a hundred little trifles
-worked by the women, or collected by the tasteful diligence of their
-brother; and the sun shone, and the mill went round, and the river
-rolled by, and all was kindness, "because you are an Englishman."
-
-The power of the _Civis Romanus_ is far better shown when it draws forth
-kindness, than when it compels fear. But as respects the formal
-invitation it would not do to stop and eat, and it would not do to stop
-and not eat, or to make the potatoes get cold, or the granddames' dinner
-too late; so I _must_ go, even though the girls had playfully hidden my
-luggage to keep the guest among them.
-
-The whole party, therefore, adjourned to the little nook where my boat
-had been left concealed; and when they caught sight of its tiny form,
-and its little fluttering flag, the young ladies screamed with delight
-and surprise, clapping their hands and waving adieux as we paddled away.
-
-I left this happy, pleasant scene with mingled feelings, and tried to
-think out what was the daily life in this sequestered mill; and if my
-paddling did for a time become a little sentimental, it may be pardoned
-by travellers who have come among kind friends where they expected
-perhaps a cold rebuff.
-
-The romantic effect of all this was to make me desperately hungry, for
-be it known that bread and wine and Beethoven will not do to dine upon
-if you are rowing forty miles in the sun. So it must be confessed that
-when an hour afterwards I saw an auberge by the water's edge it became
-necessary to stifle my feelings by ordering an omelette and two chops.
-
-The table was soon spread under a shady pear-tree just by the water, and
-the Rob Roy rested gently on the ripples at my feet.
-
-The pleasures of this sunny hour of well-earned repose, freshened by a
-bunch of grapes and a pear plucked from above my head, were just a
-little troubled by a slight apprehension that some day the miller's
-sister might come by and hear how had been comforted my lacerated heart.
-
-Again "to boat," and down by the shady trees, under the towering rocks,
-over the nimble rapids, and winding among orchards, vineyards, and
-wholesome scented hay, the same old story of constant varied pleasure.
-
-The hills were in front now, and their contour showed that some rivers
-were to join company with the Reuss, which here rolled on a fine broad
-stream, like the Thames at Putney. Presently the Limmat flowed in at one
-side, and at the other the river Aar, which last then gives the name to
-all the three, though it did not appear to be the largest.
-
-This is not the only Aar among the rivers, but it is the "old original
-Aar," which Swiss travellers regard as an acquaintance after they have
-seen it dash headlong over the rocks at Handek.
-
-It takes its rise from two glaciers, one of them the Finster Aar
-glacier, not far from Grimsel; and to me this gave it a special
-interest, for I had been hard pushed once in the wilds near that homely
-Hospice.
-
-It was on an afternoon some years ago, when I came from the Furca, by
-the Rhone glacier to the foot of the valley, walking with two Germans;
-and as they were rather "muffs," and meant to stop there, I
-thoughtlessly set off alone to climb the rocks and to get to the Grimsel
-by myself.
-
-This is easy enough in daylight, but it was nearly six o'clock when I
-started, and late in September; so after a short half-hour of mounting,
-the snow began to fall, and the darkness was not made less by the white
-flakes drifting across it. By some happy conjuncture I managed to scale
-the pathless mountain, and struck on a little stream which had often to
-be forded in the dark, but was always leading to the desired valley.
-
-At length the light of the Hospice shone welcome as a haven to steer
-for, and I soon joined the pleasant English guests inside, and bought a
-pair of trousers from the waiter at 3_s._ 6_d._ for a change in the wet.
-
-But paddling on the Aar had no great danger where we met it now, for the
-noisy, brawling torrent was sobered by age, and after much knocking
-about in the world it had settled into a steady and respectable river.
-
-A few of my friends, the snags, were however lodged in the water
-hereabouts, and as they bobbed their heads in uneasy beds, and the river
-was much discoloured, it became worth while to keep a sharp lookout for
-them.
-
-The "river tongue," explained already as consisting of sign language
-with a parallel comment in loud English, was put to a severe test on a
-wide stream like this. Consider, for example, how you could best ask the
-following question (speaking by signs and English only) from a man who
-is on the bank over there a hundred yards distant.
-
-"Is it better for me to go over to those rocks, and keep on the left of
-that island, or to pull my boat out at these stumps, and drag her on
-land into this channel?"
-
-One comfort is the man made out my meaning, for did he not answer, "Ya
-vol?" He could not have done more had we both learned the same
-language, unless indeed he had _heard_ what I said.
-
-Mills occurred here and there. Some of these had the waterwheel simply
-built on the river; others had it so arranged as to allow the shaft to
-be raised or lowered to suit the varying height of water in floods and
-droughts. Others had it floating on barges. Others, again, had a half
-weir built diagonally across part of the river; and it was important to
-look carefully at this wall so as to see on which side it ought to be
-kept in selecting the best course. In a few cases there was another
-construction; two half weirs, converged gradually towards the middle of
-the river, forming a letter V, with its sharp end turned _up_ the
-stream, and leaving a narrow opening there, through which a torrent
-flowed, with rough waves dancing merrily in the pool below.
-
-I had to "shoot" several of these, and at other times to get out and
-lower the boat down them, in the manner explained before.
-
-On one occasion I was in an unaccountably careless fit, and instead of
-first examining the depth of the water on the edge of the little fall, I
-resolved to go straight at it and take my chance.
-
-It must be stated that while a depth of three inches is enough for the
-canoe to float in when all its length is in the water, the same depth
-will by no means suffice at the upper edge of a fall. For when the boat
-arrives there the fore part, say six or seven feet of it, projects for a
-time over the fall and out of the water, and is merely in the air,
-without support, so that the centre of the keel will sink at least six
-or seven inches; and if there be not more water than this the keel
-catches the crest of the weir, and the boat will then stop, and perhaps
-swing round, after which it must fall over sideways, unless considerable
-dexterity is used in the management.
-
-Although a case of this sort had occurred to me before, I got again into
-the same predicament, which was made far more puzzling as the fore end
-of the boat went under a rock at the bottom of the fall, and thus the
-canoe hung upon the edge, and would go neither one way nor another.[XXIV.]
-It would also have been very difficult to get out of the boat in this
-position; for to jump feet foremost would have broken the boat--to
-plunge in head first might have broken my head on the rocks below.
-
- [XXIV.] This adventure was the result of temporary carelessness,
- while that at the rapids was the result of impatience, for the passage
- of these latter could probably have been effected without encountering
- the central wave had an hour or two been spent in examining the place.
- Let not any tourist, then, be deterred from a paddle on the Reuss, which
- is a perfectly suitable river, with no unavoidable dangers.
-
-[Illustration: "Fixed on the fall."]
-
-The canoe was much wrenched in my struggles, which ended, however, by
-man and boat tumbling down sideways, and, marvellous to say, quite
-safely to the bottom.
-
-This performance was not one to be proud of. Surely it was like
-ingratitude to treat the Rob Roy thus, exposing it to needless risk when
-it had carried me so far and so well.
-
-The Aar soon flows into the Rhine, and here is our canoe on old Rhenus
-once more, with the town of Waldshut ("end of the forest") leaning over
-the high bank to welcome us near.
-
-There is a lower path and a row of little houses at the bottom of the
-cliff, past which the Rhine courses with rapid eddies deep and strong.
-Here an old fisherman soon spied me, and roared out his biography at the
-top of his voice; how he had been a courier in Lord Somebody's family;
-how he had journeyed seven years in Italy, and could fish with
-artificial flies, and was seventy years old, with various other reasons
-why I should put my boat into his house.
-
-He was just the man for the moment; but first those two uniformed
-_douaniers_ must be dealt with, and I had to satisfy their dignity by
-paddling up the strong current to their lair; for the fly had touched
-the spiders' web and the spiders were too grand to come out and seize
-it. Good humour, and smiles, and a little judicious irony as to the
-absurd notion of overhauling a canoe which could be carried on your
-back, soon made them release me, if only to uphold their own dignity,
-and I left the boat in the best drawing-room of the ex-courier, and
-ascended the hill to the hotel aloft.
-
-But the man came too, and he had found time to prepare an amended report
-of the boat's journey for the worthy landlord, so, as usual, there was
-soon everything ready for comfort and good cheer.
-
-Waldshut is made up of one wide street almost closed at the end, and
-with pretty gardens about it, and a fine prospect from its high
-position; but an hour's walk appeared to exhaust all the town could
-show, though the scenery round such a place is not to be done with in
-this brief manner.
-
-The visitors soon came to hear and see more nearly what the newspapers
-had told them of the canoe. One gentleman, indeed, seemed to expect me
-to unfold the boat from my pocket, for a French paper had spoken about a
-man going over the country "with a canoe under his arm." The evening was
-enlivened by some signals, burned at my bedroom-window to lighten up the
-street, which little entertainment was evidently entirely new--to the
-Waldshutians at least.
-
-Before we start homewards on the Rhine with our faces due West, it may
-be well very briefly to give the log bearings and direction of the
-canoe's voyage up to this point.
-
-First, by the Thames, July 29, E. (East), to Shoeburyness, thence to
-Sheerness, S. From that by rail to Dover, and by steamer to Ostend, and
-rail again, Aug. 7, to the Meuse, along which the course was nearly E.,
-until its turn into Holland, N.E. Then, Aug. 11, to the Rhine, S.E., and
-ascending it nearly S., until at Frankfort, Aug. 17, we go N.E. by rail
-to Asschaffenburg, and by the river wind back again to Frankfort in
-wide curves. Farther up the Rhine, Aug. 24, our course is due S., till
-from Freyburg the boat is carted E. to the Titisee, and to
-Donaueschingen, and, Aug. 28, descends the Danube, which there flows
-nearly E., but with great bends to N. and S. until, Sept. 2, we are at
-Ulm. The rail next carries us S. to the Lake of Constance, which is
-sailed along in a course S.W., and through the Zeller See to
-Schaffhausen, Sept. 7, about due W. Thence turning S. to Zurich, and
-over the lake and the neck of land, and veering to the W. by Zug, we
-arrive on Lucerne, Sept. 10, where the southernmost point of the voyage
-is reached, and then our prow points to N., till, Sept. 12, we land at
-Waldshut.
-
-This devious course had taken the boat to several different kingdoms and
-states--Holland, Belgium, France, Wurtemburg, Bavaria, and the Grand
-Duchy of Baden, Rhenish Prussia, the Palatinate, Switzerland, and the
-pretty Hollenzollern Sigmaringen. Now we had come back again to the very
-Grand Duchy again, a land where all travellers must mind their p's and
-q's.
-
-The ex-courier took the canoe from his wife's washing-tubs and put her
-on the Rhine, and then he spirited my start by recounting the lively
-things we must expect soon to meet. I must take care to "keep to the
-right," near the falls of Lauffenburg, for an English lord had been
-carried over them and drowned;[XXV.] and I must beware of Rheinfelden
-rapids, because an Englishman had tried to descend them in a boat with a
-fisherman, and their craft was capsized and the fisherman was drowned;
-and I must do this here, and that there, and so many other things
-everywhere else, that all the directions were jumbled up together. But
-it seemed to relieve the man to tell his tale, and doubtless he sat down
-to his breakfast comfortable in mind and body, and cut his meat into
-little bits, and then changed the fork to the right hand to eat them
-every one, as they all do hereabouts, with every appearance of content.
-
- [XXV.] This was Lord Montague, the last of his line, and on the
- same day his family mansion of Cowdray, in Sussex, was burned to the
- ground.
-
-Up with the sails! for the East wind freshens, and the fair wide river
-hurries along. This was a splendid scene to sail in, with lofty banks of
-rock, and rich meads, or terraces laden with grapes. After a good
-morning's pleasure here the wind suddenly rose to a gale, and I took in
-my jib just in time, for a sort of minor hurricane came on, raising tall
-columns of dust on the road alongside, blowing off men's hats, and
-whisking up the hay and leaves and branches high into the air.
-
-Still I kept the lug-sail set; and with wind and current in the same
-direction I scudded faster than I ever sailed before in my life. Great
-exertion was required to manage a light skiff safely with such a
-whirlwind above and a whirlwater below; one's nerves were kept in
-extreme tension, and it was a half-hour of pleasant excitement.
-
-For this reason it was that I did not for some time notice a youth who
-had been running after the boat, yelling and shrieking, and waving his
-coat in the air.
-
-We drew nearer to him, and "luffed up," hailing him with, "What's the
-matter?" and he could only pant out "Wasserfall, Wasserfall, funf
-minuten!"----the breeze had brought me within a hundred yards of the
-falls of Lauffenburg,--the whistle of the wind had drowned the roar of
-the water.
-
-I crossed to the right bank (as the ex-courier had directed), but the
-youth's loud cries to come to the "links," or left side, at last
-prevailed, and he was right in this. The sail was soon lowered, and the
-boat was hauled on a raft, and then this fine young fellow explained
-that five minutes more would have turned the corner and drawn me into
-the horrid current sweeping over the falls.
-
-While he set off in search of a cart to convey the boat, I had time to
-pull her up the high bank and make all snug for a drive, and anon he
-returned with a very grotesque carter and a most crazy vehicle,
-actually drawn by a milch cow! All three of us laughed as we hoisted the
-Rob Roy on this cart, and the cow kicked vehemently, either at the cart,
-or the boat, or the laughing.
-
-Our procession soon entered the little town, but it was difficult to be
-dignified. As the cart with a screeching wheel rattled slowly over the
-big round stones of the street, vacant at midday, the windows were soon
-full of heads, and after one peep at us, down they rushed to see the
-fun.[XXVI.] A cow drawing a boat to the door of a great hotel is
-certainly a quaint proceeding; although in justice to the worthy
-quadruped I should mention that she now behaved in a proper and ladylike
-manner.
-
- [XXVI.] A sketch of this cow-cart will be found, _post_, page 213.
-
-Here the public hit upon every possible way but the right one to
-pronounce the boat's name, painted in blue letters on its bow. Sometimes
-it was "Roab Ro," at others "Rubree," but at length a man in spectacles
-called out, "Ah! ah! Valtarescote!" The mild Sir Walter's novels had not
-been written in vain.
-
-The falls of Lauffenburg[XXVII.] can be seen well from the bridge which
-spans the river, much narrowed at this spot.
-
- [XXVII.] "Lauffenburg" means the "town of the falls," from "laufen,"
- to run; and the Yankee term "loafer" may come from this "herum laufer,"
- one running about.
-
-A raft is coming down as we look at the thundering foam--of course
-without the men upon it; see the great solid frame that seems to resent
-the quickening of its quiet pace, and to hold back with a presentiment
-of evil as every moment draws it nearer to the plunge.
-
-Crash go all the bindings, and the huge, sturdy-logs are hurled
-topsy-turvy into the gorge, bouncing about like chips of firewood, and
-rattling among the foam. Nor was it easy to look calmly on this without
-thinking how the frail canoe would have fared in such a cauldron of cold
-water boiling.
-
-The salmon drawn into this place get terribly puzzled by it, and so are
-caught by hundreds in great iron cages lowered from the rocks for this
-purpose. Fishing stations of the same kind are found at several points
-on the river, where a stage is built on piles, and a beam supports a
-strong net below. In a little house, like a sentry-box, you notice a man
-seated, silent and lonely, while he holds tenderly in his hand a dozen
-strings, which are fastened to the edges of the net. When a fish is
-beguiled into the snare, or is borne in by the swift current
-bewildering, the slightest vibrations of the net are thrilled along the
-cords to the watcher's hand, and then he raises the great beam and
-secures the prize.
-
-My young friend, who had so kindly warned me, and hired the cow, and
-shown the salmon, I now invited to breakfast, and he became the hero of
-the hour, being repeatedly addressed by the other inquirers in an
-unpronounceable German title, which signifies, in short, "Man
-preserver."
-
-Here we heard again of a certain four-oared boat, with five Englishmen
-in it, which had been sent out from London overland to Schaffhausen, and
-then descended the Rhine rowing swiftly. This, the people said, had come
-to Lauffenburg about six weeks before, and I fully sympathised with the
-crew in their charming pull, especially if the weather was such as we
-had enjoyed; that is to say, not one shower in the boat from the source
-of the Danube to the Palace of Westminster.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
- Field of Foam--Precipice--Puzzled--Philosophy--Rheinfelden
- Rapids--Dazzled--Astride--Fate of the Four-oar--Very Salt--The
- Ladies--Whirlpool--Funny English--A baby--The bride.
-
-
-The canoe was now fixed on a hand-cart and dragged once more through the
-streets to a point below the falls, and the Rob Roy became very lively
-on the water after its few hours of rest. All was brilliant around, and
-deep underneath, and azure above, and happy within, till the dull
-distant sound of breakers began and got louder, and at last could not be
-ignored; we have come to the rapids of Rheinfelden.
-
-The exaggeration with which judicious friends at each place describe the
-dangers to be encountered is so general in these latitudes, that one
-learns to receive it calmly, but the scene itself when I came to the
-place was certainly puzzling and grand.
-
-Imagine some hundreds of acres all of water in white crested waves,
-varied only by black rocks resisting a struggling torrent, and a loud,
-thundering roar, mingled with a strange hissing, as the spray from ten
-thousand sharp-pointed billows is tossed into the air.
-
-And then you are alone, too, and the banks are high, and you have a
-precious boat to guard.
-
-While there was time to do it I stood up in my boat to survey, but it
-was a mere horizon of waves, and nothing could be learned from looking.
-Then I coasted towards one side where the shrubs and trees hanging in
-the water brushed the paddle, and seemed so safe because they were on
-shore.
-
-The rapids of Bremgarten could probably be passed most easily by keeping
-to the edge, though with much delay and numerous "getting outs," but an
-attempt now to go along the side in this way was soon shown to be
-useless, for presently I came to a lofty rock jutting out into the
-stream, and the very loud roar behind it fortunately attracted so much
-attention that I pulled into the bank, made the boat fast, and mounted
-through the thicket to the top of the cliff.
-
-I saw at once that to try to pass by this rock in any boat would be
-madness, for the swiftest part of the current ran right under the
-projecting crag, and then wheeled round and plunged over a height of
-some feet into a pool of foam, broken fragments, and powerful waves.
-
-Next, would it be just possible to float the boat past the rock while I
-might hold the painter from above? The rock on careful measurement was
-found too high for this.
-
-To see well over the cliff I had to lie down on my face, and the
-pleasant curiosity felt at first, as to how I should have to act, now
-gradually sickened into the sad conviction, "Impossible!" Then was the
-time to turn with earnest eyes to the wide expanse of the river, and see
-if haply, somewhere at least, even in the middle, a channel might be
-traced. Yes, there certainly was a channel, only one, very far out, and
-very difficult to hit upon when you sit in a boat quite near the level
-of the water; but the attempt must be made, or stay,--might I not get
-the boat carried round by land? Under the trees far off were men who
-might be called to help, labourers quietly working, and never minding
-me. I was tempted, but did not yield.
-
-For a philosophical thought had come upmost, that, after all, the boat
-had not to meet _every_ wave and rock now visible, and the thousand
-breakers dashing around, but only a certain few which would be on each
-side in my crooked and untried way; of the rocks in any one line--say
-fifty of them between me and any point--only two would become a new
-danger in crossing that line.
-
-Then again, rapids look worse from the shore than they really are,
-because you see all their difficulties at once, and you hear the
-general din. On the other hand, waves look much smaller from the bank
-(being half hidden by others) than you find them to be when the boat is
-in the trough between two. The hidden rocks may make a channel which
-looks good enough from the land, to be quite impracticable when you
-attempt it in the water.
-
-Lastly, the current is seen to be swifter from the shore where you can
-observe its speed from a fixed point, than it seems when you are in the
-water where you notice only its velocity in relation to the stream on
-each side, which is itself all the time running at four or five miles an
-hour. But it is the positive speed of the current that ought really to
-be considered, for it is by this the boat will be urged against a
-breaker stationary in the river.
-
-To get to this middle channel at once from the place where I had left my
-boat was not possible. We must enter it higher up the river, so I had to
-pull the canoe up stream, over shallows, and along the bristly margin,
-wading, towing, and struggling, for about half a mile, till at length it
-seemed we must be high enough up stream to let me paddle out swiftly
-across, while the current would take the boat sideways to the rough
-water.
-
-And now in a little quiet bay I rested half an hour to recover strength
-after this exertion, and to prepare fully for a "spurt," which might
-indeed be delayed in starting, but which, once begun, must be vigorous
-and all watchful to the end.
-
-Here various thoughts blended and tumbled about in the mind most
-disorderly. To leave this quiet bank and willingly rush out, in cold
-blood, into a field of white breakers; to tarnish the fair journey with
-a foolhardy prank; to risk the Rob Roy where the touch of one rock was
-utter destruction. Will it be pleasant? Can it be wise? Is it right?
-
-The answer was, to sponge out every drop of water from the boat, to
-fasten the luggage inside, that it might not fall out in an upset, to
-brace the waterproof cover all tight around, and to get its edge in my
-teeth ready to let go in capsizing, and then to pull one gentle stroke
-which put the boat's nose out of the quiet water into the fast stream,
-and hurrah! we are off at a swinging pace.
-
-The sun, now shining exactly up stream, was an exceedingly uncomfortable
-addition to the difficulties; for its glancing beams confounded all the
-horizon in one general band of light, so that rocks, waves, solid water,
-and the most flimsy foam were all the same at a little distance. This,
-the sole disadvantage of a cloudless sky, was so much felt in my
-homeward route that I sometimes prolonged the morning's work by three or
-four hours (with sun behind or on one side), so as to shorten the
-evening's _quota_ where it was dead in the eye of the sun. On the
-present occasion, when it was of great moment to hit the channel
-exactly, I could not see it at all, even with my blue spectacles on.
-They seemed to be utterly powerless against such a fiery blaze; and,
-what was almost worse, my eyes were thereby so dazzled that on looking
-to nearer objects I could scarcely see them either.
-
-This unexpected difficulty was so serious that I thought for a moment of
-keeping on in my present course (directed straight across the river), so
-as to attain the opposite side, and there to wait for the sun to go
-down.
-
-But it was already too late to adopt this plan, for the current had been
-swiftly bearing me down stream, and an instant decision must be made.
-"Now," thought I, "judging by the number of paddle-strokes, we must
-surely be opposite the channel in the middle, and now I must turn to
-it."
-
-By a happy hit, the speed and the direction of the canoe were both well
-fitted, so that when the current had borne us to the breakers the boat's
-bow was just turned exactly down stream, and I entered the channel
-whistling for very loneliness, like a boy in the dark.
-
-But it was soon seen to be "all right, Englishman;" so in ten minutes
-more the canoe had passed the rapids, and we floated along pleasantly on
-that confused "bobbery" of little billows always found below broken
-water,--a sort of mob of waves, which for a time seem to be elbowing and
-jostling in all directions to find their proper places.
-
-I saw here two fishermen by one of the salmon traps described above, and
-at once pulled over to them, to land on a little white bank of sand,
-that I might rest, and bale out, and hear the news.
-
-The men asked if I had come down the rapids in that boat. "Yes." "By the
-middle channel?" "Yes." They smiled to each other, and then both at once
-commenced a most voluble and loud-spoken address in the vilest of
-patois. Their eagerness and energy rose to such a pitch that I began to
-suppose they were angry; but the upshot of all this eloquence (always
-louder when you are seen not to understand one word of it) was this,
-"There are other rapids to come. You will get there in half an hour.
-They are far worse than what you have passed. Your boat _must_ be
-carried round them on land."
-
-To see if this was said to induce me to employ them as porters, I asked
-the men to come along in their boat, so as to be ready to help me; but
-they consulted together, and did not by any means agree in admiring this
-proposal. Then I asked them to explain the best route through the next
-rapids, when they drew such confused diagrams on the sand, and gave such
-complicated directions, that it was impossible to make head or tail of
-their atrocious jargon; so I quietly bowed, wiped out the sand pictures
-with my foot, and started again happy and free; for it is really the
-case that in these things "ignorance is bliss." The excitement of
-finding your way, and the satisfaction when you have found it yourself,
-is well worth all the trouble. Just so in mountain travel. If you go
-merely to work the muscles, and to see the view, it will do to be tied
-by a rope to three guides, and to follow behind them; but then _theirs_
-is all the mental exertion, and tact, and judgment, while yours is only
-the merit of keeping up with the leaders, treading in their steps. And
-therefore I have observed that there is less of this particular pleasure
-of the discoverer when one is ascending Mont Blanc, where by traditional
-rule one must be tied to the guides, than in making out a path over a
-mountain pass undirected, though the heights thus climbed up are not so
-great.
-
-When the boat got near the lower rapids, I went ashore and walked for
-half a mile down the bank, and so was able to examine the bearings well.
-It appeared practicable to get along by the shallower parts of one side,
-so this was resolved upon as my course.
-
-It is surely quite fair to go by the easiest way, provided there is no
-carrying overland adopted, or other plan for shirking the water. The
-method accordingly used in this case was rather a novel mode of
-locomotion, and it was quite successful, as well as highly amusing.
-
-In the wide plain of breakers here, the central district seemed
-radically bad, so we cautiously kept out of the main current, and went
-where the stream ran fast enough nevertheless. I sat stridelegs on the
-deck of the boat near its stern, and was thus floated down until the
-bow, projecting out of the water, went above a ridge of rocks, and the
-boat grounded. Thus I received the shock against my legs (hanging in the
-water), so that the violence of its blow was eased off from the boat.
-
-Then I immediately fixed both feet on the rock, and stood up, and the
-canoe went free from between my knees, and could be lowered down or
-pushed forward until the water got deeper, and when it got too deep to
-wade after her I pulled the boat back between my knees, and sat down
-again on it as before.
-
-[Illustration: "Astride the Stern."]
-
-The chief difficulty in this proceeding was to be equally attentive at
-once to keep hold of the boat, to guide it between rocks, to keep hold
-of the paddle, and to manage not to tumble on loose stones, or to get
-into the water above the waist.
-
-Thus by successive riding and ferrying over the deep pools, and walking
-and wading in the shallows, by pushing the boat here, and by being
-carried upon it there, the lower rapids of Rheinfelden were most
-successfully passed without any damage.
-
-It will be seen from the description already given of the rapids at
-Bremgarten, and now of these two rapids on the Rhine, that the main
-difficulties are only for him who goes there uninformed, and that these
-can be avoided by examining them on the spot at the cost of a walk and a
-short delay. But the pleasure is so much enhanced by the whole thing
-being novel, that, unless for a man who wishes simply to _get past_, it
-is better to seek a channel for oneself, even if a much easier one has
-been found out by other people.
-
-The town of Rheinfelden was now in view, and I began to wonder how the
-English four-oar boat we had traced as far as Lauffenburg could have
-managed to descend the rapids just now passed. But I learned afterwards
-that the four-oar had come there in a time of flood, when rocks would be
-covered, and probably with only such eddies as I have already noticed
-higher up the river where it was deep. So they pulled on bravely to
-Bâle, where the hotel folks mentioned that when the five moist Britons
-arrived their clothes and baggage were all drenched, and the waiter
-said, with a malicious grin, that thereby his friend the washerwoman
-had earned twenty-seven francs in one night.
-
-On the left bank of the river was a large building with a smooth gravel
-shore in front, to which I steered at once. This was the great
-salt-water baths of Rheinfelden--a favourite resort for crippled
-invalids. The salt rock in the earth beneath impregnates the springs
-with such an intensity of brine that eighty per cent. of fresh water has
-to be added before the saline mixture can be medicinally employed as a
-bath. If you take a glass of the water as it proceeds from the spring,
-and put a little salt in it, the salt will not dissolve, the water is
-already saturated. A drop of it put on your coat speedily dries up and
-leaves a white stain of minute crystals. In fact, this water seemed to
-me to be far more saline than even the water of the Dead Sea, which is
-in all conscience salt enough, as every one knows who has rubbed it on
-his face in that reeking-hot death-stricken valley of Jericho.
-
-Though the shore was pleasant here and the water was calm, I found no
-one to welcome me now, and yet this was the only time I had reason to
-expect somebody to greet the arrival of the canoe. For in the morning a
-worthy German had told me he was going by train to Rheinfelden, and he
-would keep a look out for the canoe, and would surely meet me on the
-beach if I "ever got through the rapids." But I found afterwards that he
-_had_ come there, and with his friends, too, and they had waited and
-waited till at last they gave up the Rob Roy as a "missing ship."
-Excellent man, he must have had some novel excuses to comfort his
-friends with as they retired, disappointed, after waiting in vain!
-
-There was however, not far off, a poor woman washing clothes by the
-river, and thumping and bullying them with a wooden bludgeon as if her
-sole object was to smash up the bachelor's shirt-buttons. A fine boy of
-eight years old was with her, a most intelligent little fellow, whose
-quick eye at once caught sight of the Rob Roy as it dashed round the
-point into the smooth water of the bay, and landed me there a tired,
-tanned traveller, wet and warm.
-
-This juvenile helped me more than any man ever did, and with such
-alacrity, too, and intelligence, and good humour, that I felt grateful
-to the boy. We spread out the sails to dry, and my socks and shoes in
-the sun, and sponged out the boat, and then dragged her up the high
-bank. Here, by good luck, we found two wheels on an axle left alone, for
-what purpose I cannot imagine; but we got a stick and fastened it to
-them as a pole, and then put the boat on this extemporized vehicle, and
-with the boy (having duly got permission from his mamma) soon pulled the
-canoe to the gates of the old town, and then rattling through the
-streets, even to the door of the hotel. A bright franc in the lad's hand
-made him start with amaze, but he instantly rose to the dignity of the
-occasion, and some dozens of other urchins formed an attentive audience
-as he narrated over and over the events of the last half-hour, and ended
-always by showing the treasure in his hand, "and the Herr gave me this!"
-
-The Krone hotel here is very prettily situated. It is a large house,
-with balconies overlooking the water, and a babbling _jet d'eau_ in its
-garden, which is close by the river.
-
-The stream flows fast in front, and retains evidence of having passed
-through troublous times higher up; therefore it makes no small noise as
-it rushes under the arches of the covered wooden bridge, but though
-there are rocks and a few eddies the passage is easy enough if you look
-at it for five minutes to form a mental chart of your course. My German
-friend having found out that the canoe had arrived after all, his
-excitement and pleasure abounded. Now he was proved right. Now his
-promises, broken as it seemed all day, were all fulfilled.
-
-He was a very short, very fat, and very hilarious personage, with a
-minute smattering of English, which he had to speak loudly, so as to
-magnify its value among his Allemand friends, envious of his
-accomplishment.
-
-His explanations of the contents of my sketch-book were truly ludicrous
-as he dilated on it page by page, but he well deserved all gratitude for
-ordering my hotel bedroom and its comforts, which were never more
-acceptable than now after a hard day's work. Music finished the evening,
-and then the hum of the distant rapids sung me a lullaby breathing soft
-slumber.
-
-Next morning, as there was but a short row to Bâle, I took a good long
-rest in bed, and then carried the canoe half way across the bridge where
-a picturesque island is formed into a terraced garden, and here we
-launched the boat on the water. Although the knocks and strains of the
-last few days were very numerous, and many of them of portentous force,
-judging by the sounds they made, the Rob Roy was still hale and hearty,
-and the carpenter's mate had no damages to report to the captain. It was
-not until harder times came, in the remainder of the voyage, that her
-timbers suffered and her planks were tortured by rough usage.
-
-A number of ladies patronized the start on this occasion, and as they
-waved their parasols and the men shouted Hoch! and Bravo! we glided
-down stream, the yellow paddle being waved round my head in an original
-mode of "salute," which I invented specially for returning friendly
-gratulations of this kind.
-
-Speaking about Rheinfelden, Baedeker says, "Below the town another rapid
-of the Rhine forms a sort of whirlpool called the Höllenhaken," a
-formidable announcement, and a terrible name; but what is called here a
-"whirlpool" is not worth notice.
-
-The sound of a railway train beside the river reminds you that this is
-not quite a strange, wild, unseen country. Reminds you I say, because
-really when you are in the river bed, you easily forget all that is
-beyond it on each side.
-
-Let a landscape be ever so well known from the road, it becomes new
-again when you view it from the level of the water. For before the scene
-was bounded by a semicircle with the diameter on the horizon, and the
-arch of sky for its circumference. But when you are seated in the canoe,
-the picture changes to the form of a great sector, with its point on the
-clear water, and each radius inclining aloft through rocks, trees, and
-mossy banks, on this side and on that. And this holds good even on a
-well worn river like the Thames. The land-scenes between Oxford and
-London get pretty well known and admired by travellers, but the views
-will seem both fresh and fair if you row down the river through them.
-Nay, there are few rivers which have such lovely scenery as the Thames
-can show in its windings along that route.
-
-But our canoe is now getting back to civilization, and away from that
-pleasant simplicity where everything done in the streets or the hotel is
-strange to a stranger. Here we have composite candles and therefore no
-snuffers; here the waiter insists on speaking English, and sitting down
-by me, and clutching my arm, he confidentially informs me that there are
-no "bean green," translating "haricots verts," but that perhaps I might
-like a "flower caul," so we assent to a cauliflower.
-
-This is funny enough, but far more amusing is it when the woman waiter
-of some inland German village shouts louder German to you, because that
-she rattles out at first is not understood. She gazes with a new
-sensation at a guest who actually cannot comprehend her voluble words,
-and then guest and waiter burst into laughter.
-
-Here too I saw a boat towed along the Rhine--a painful evidence of being
-near commerce, even though it was in a primitive style; not that there
-was any towing-path, but men walked among the bushes, pulling the boat
-with a rope, and often wading to do so. This sight told me at once that
-I had left the fine free forests where you might land anywhere, and it
-was sure to be lonely and charming.
-
-After a few bends westward we come in sight of the two towers of Bâle,
-but the setting sun makes it almost impossible to see anything in its
-brightness, so we must only paddle on.
-
-The bridge at Bâle was speedily covered by the idle and the curious as
-the canoe pulled up at an hotel a few yards from the water on Sept.
-14th.
-
-It was here that the four-oared boat had arrived some weeks ago with its
-moist crew. The proprietor of the house was therefore much pleased to
-see another English boat come in, so little and so lonely, but still so
-comfortable and so dry. I walked about the town and entered a church
-(Protestant here of course), where a number of people had assembled at a
-baptism. The baby was fixed on a sort of frame, so as to be easily
-handed about from mother to father, and from clerk to minister; I hereby
-protest against this mechanical arrangement as a flagrant indignity to
-the little darling. I have a great respect for babies, sometimes a
-certain awe.
-
-The instant the christening was done, a happy couple came forward to be
-married, an exceedingly clumsy dolt of a bridegroom and a fair bride,
-not very young, that is to say, about fifty-five years old. There were
-no bridesmaids or other perplexing appurtenances, and after the simple
-ceremony the couple just walked away, amid the titters of a numerous
-crowd of women. The bridegroom did not seem to know exactly what to do
-next. He walked before his wife, then behind her, and then on one side,
-but it did not somehow feel quite comfortable, so he assumed a sort of
-diagonal position, and kept nudging her on till they disappeared in some
-house. Altogether, I never saw a more unromantic commencement of married
-life, but there was this redeeming point, that they were not bored by
-that dread infliction--a marriage breakfast--the first meeting of two
-jealous sets of new relations, who are all expected to be made friends
-at once by eating when they are not hungry, and listening when there is
-nothing to say. But, come, it is not proper for me to criticise these
-mysteries, so let us go back to the inn.
-
-In the coffee-room a Frenchman, who had been in London, has just been
-instructing two Mexicans, who are going there, as to hotels, and it is
-excessively amusing to hear his description of the London "Caffy Hous,"
-and the hotels in "Lyces-ter-squar." "It is pronounced squar," he said,
-"in England."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
- Private concert--Thunderer--La Hardt Forest--Mulhouse
- Canal--River Ill--Reading stories--Madame Nico--Night
- noises--Pets--Ducking--Vosges--Admirers--Boat on wheels--New
- wine.
-
-
-Bâle is, in every sense, a turning-point on the Rhine. The course of the
-river here bends abruptly from west to north, and the character of the
-scenery beside it alters at once from high sloping banks to a widespread
-network of streams, all entangled in countless islands, and yet ever
-tending forward, northward, seaward through the great rich valley of the
-Rhine with mountain chains reared on each side like two everlasting
-barriers.
-
-Here then we could start anew almost in any direction, and I had not
-settled yet what route to take, whether by the Saone and Doubs to paddle
-to the Rhone, and so descend to Marseilles, and coast by the Cornici
-road, and sell the boat at Genoa; or--and this second plan must be
-surely a better alternative, if by it we can avoid a sale of the Rob
-Roy--I could not part with her now--so let us at once decide to go back
-through France.
-
-We were yet on the river slowly paddling when this decision was arrived
-at, and the river carried me still, for I determined not to leave its
-pleasant easy current for a slow canal, until the last possible
-opportunity. A diligent study of new maps procured at Bâle, showed that
-a canal ran northward nearly parallel to the Rhine, and approached very
-near to the river at one particular spot, which indeed looked hard
-enough to find even on the map, but was far more dubious when we got
-into a maze of streamlets and little rivers circling among high osiers,
-so thick and close that even on shore it was impossible to see a few
-yards.
-
-But the line of tall poplars along the canal was visible now and then,
-so I made a guesswork turn, and it was not far wrong, or at any rate we
-got so near the canal that by winding about for a little in a pretty
-limpid stream, I brought the Rob Roy at last within carrying distance.
-
-A song or two (without words) and a variation of the music by whistling
-on the fingers would be sure to bring anybody out of the osiers who was
-within reach of the outlandish concert, and so it proved, for a woman's
-head soon peered over a break in the dense cover. She wished to help to
-carry the boat herself, but the skipper's gallantry had scruples as to
-this proposal, so she disappeared and soon fetched a man, and we bore
-the canoe with some trouble through hedges and bushes, and over dykes
-and ditches, and at last through deep grassy fields, till she was safely
-placed on the canal.
-
-The man was delighted by a two-franc piece. He had been well paid for
-listening to bad music. As for the boat she lay still and resigned,
-awaiting my next move, and as for me I sighed to give a last look
-backward, and to say with Byron--
-
- "Adieu to thee, fair Rhine! How long delighted
- The stranger fain would linger on his way!
- Thine is a scene alike where souls united
- Or lonely contemplation thus might stray;
- And could the ceaseless vultures cease to prey
- On self-condemning bosoms, it were here,
- Where Nature, nor too sombre nor too gay,
- Wild but not rude, awful yet not austere,
- Is to the mellow earth as autumn to the year.
-
- Adieu to thee again! a vain adieu!
- There can be no farewell to scene like thine;
- The mind is colour'd by thy every hue;
- And if reluctantly the eyes resign
- Their cherish'd gaze upon thee, lovely Rhine!
- 'Tis with the thankful glance of parting praise;
- More mighty spots may rise, more glaring shine,
- But none unite in one attaching maze
- The brilliant, fair, and soft--the glories of old days.
-
- The negligently grand, the fruitful bloom
- Of coming ripeness, the white city's sheen,
- The rolling stream, the precipice's gloom,
- The forest's growth, and gothic walls between,
- The wild rocks shaped as they had turrets been
- In mockery of man's art; and these withal
- A race of faces happy as the scene,
- Whose fertile bounties here extend to all,
- Still springing o'er thy banks, though empires near them fall.
-
- But these recede. Above me are the Alps,
- The palaces of nature, whose vast walls
- Have pinnacled in clouds their snowy scalps,
- And throned eternity in icy halls
- Of cold sublimity, where forms and falls
- The avalanche--the thunderbolt of snow!
- All that expands the spirit, yet appals,
- Gather around these summits, as to show
- How earth may pierce to heaven, yet leave vain man below."
-
- --_Childe Harold, Canto III._
-
-To my surprise and satisfaction the canal had a decided current in it,
-and in the right direction too. It is true that this current was only
-about two miles an hour, but even that is something; and though the
-little channel was hardly twelve feet wide, yet it was clear and deep,
-and by no means stupid to travel on.
-
-After a few miles I came to a drawbridge, which rested within a foot of
-the water. A man came to raise the bridge by machinery, and he was
-surprised to see my way of passing it instead, that is, to shove my
-boat under it, while I quietly walked over the top and got into the boat
-at the other side. This was, without doubt, the first boat which had
-traversed the canal without the bridge being raised, but I had passed
-several very low bridges on the Danube, some of them not two inches
-above the surface of the water. The very existence of these proves that
-no boats pass there, and mine only passed by pulling it over the bridge
-itself. It may be asked, how such a low bridge fares in flood times? and
-the answer is, that the water simply flows all over it. In some cases
-the planks which form the roadway are removed when the water rises, and
-then the wayfaring man who comes to the river must manage in some other
-mode. His bridge is removed at the very time when the high water makes
-it most necessary.
-
-The bridge man was so intelligent in his remarks that we determined to
-stop there and breakfast, so I left the canoe in his charge and found my
-way to a little publichouse at the hamlet of Gros Kembs, and helped the
-wizened old lady who ruled there to make me an omelette--my help, by the
-bye, consisted in ordering, eating, and paying for the omelette, for the
-rest she was sure to do well enough, as all French women can, and no
-English ones.
-
-The village gossips soon arrived, and each person who saw the boat came
-on to the inn to see the foreigner who could sail in such a _batteau_.
-
-The courteous and respectful behaviour of Continental people is so
-uniform that the stranger among them is bound, I think, to amuse and
-interest these folk in return. This was most easily done by showing all
-my articles of luggage,[XXVIII.] and of course the drawings. A Testament
-with gilt leaves was, however, the chief object of curiosity, and all
-the _savants_ of the party tried in turn to read it.
-
- [XXVIII.] See an inventory of these in the Appendix.
-
-One of these as spokesman, and with commendable gravity, told me he had
-read in their district newspaper about the canoe, but he little expected
-to have the honour of meeting its owner.
-
-Fancy the local organ of such a place! Is it called the "News of the
-Wold," or the "Gros Kembs Thunderer"? Well, whatever was the title of
-the Gazette, it had an article about Pontius Pilate and my visit to the
-Titisee in the Black Forest, and this it was no doubt which made these
-canal people so very inquisitive on the occasion.
-
-The route now lay through the great forest of La Hardt, with dense
-thickets on each side of the canal, and not a sound anywhere to be heard
-but the hum now and then of a dragon fly. One or two woodmen met me as
-they trudged silently home from work, but there was a lonely feeling
-about the place without any of the romance of wild country.
-
-In the most brilliant day the scenery of a canal has at best but scant
-liveliness, the whole thing is so prosaic and artificial, and in fact
-stupid, if one can ever say that of any place where there is fresh air
-and clear water, and blue sky and green trees.
-
-Still I had to push on, and sometimes, for a change, to tow the boat
-while I walked. The difference between a glorious river encircling you
-with lofty rocks and this canal with its earthen walls was something
-like that between walking among high mountains and being shut up by
-mistake in Bloomsbury-square.
-
-No birds chirped or sung, or even flew past, only the buzzing of flies
-was mingled with the distant shriek of a train on the railway. It is
-this railway which has killed the canal, for I saw no boats moving upon
-it. The long continued want of rain had also reduced its powers of
-accommodation for traffic, and the traffic is so little at the best that
-it would not pay to buy water for the supply. For in times of drought
-canal water is very expensive. It was said that the Regent's Canal, in
-London, had to pay 5,000_l._ for what they required last summer, in
-consequence of the dryness of the season.
-
-At length we came to a great fork of the canal in a wide basin, and I
-went along the branch to the town of Mulhouse, a place of great wealth,
-the largest French cotton town--the Manchester of France.
-
-The street boys here were very troublesome, partly because they were
-intelligent, and therefore inquisitive, and partly because manufacturing
-towns make little urchins precocious and forward in their manners.
-
-I hired a truck from a woman and hired a man to drag it, and so took the
-boat to the best hotel, a fine large house, where they at once
-recognized the canoe, and seemed to know all about it from report.
-
-The hotel porter delayed so long next morning to wheel the boat to the
-railway, that when we took her into the luggage office as usual and
-placed the boat on the counter with the trunks and band-boxes, the
-officials declined to put it in the train.
-
-This was the first time it had been refused on a railroad, and I used
-every kind of persuasion, but in vain, and this being the first
-application of the kind on French soil we felt that difficulties were
-ahead, if this precedent was to hold good.
-
-Subsequent experience showed that the French railways will not take a
-canoe as baggage; while the other seven or eight countries we had
-brought the boat through were all amenable to pressure on this point.
-
-We had desired to go by the railway only a few miles, but it would have
-enabled me to avoid about fifty locks on the canal and thus have saved
-two tedious days. As, however, they would not take the boat in a
-passenger train we carried her back to the canal, and I determined to
-face the locks boldly, and to regard them as an exercise of patience and
-of the flexor muscles, as it happens sometimes one's walk is only "a
-constitutional."
-
-The Superintendent of the Rhine and Rhone Canal was very civil, and
-endeavoured to give me the desirable information I required, but which
-he had not got, that is to say, the length, depth, and general character
-of the several rivers we proposed to navigate in connexion with streams
-less "canalizé," so I had to begin again as usual, without any knowledge
-of the way.
-
-With rather an ill-tempered "adieu" to Mulhouse, the Rob Roy set off
-again on its voyage. The water assumed quite a new aspect, now that one
-_must_ go by it, but it was not so much the water as the locks which
-were objectionable. For at each of these there is a certain form of
-operations to be gone through--all very trifling and without variety,
-yet requiring to be carefully performed, or you may have the boat
-injured, or a ducking for yourself.
-
-When we get to a lock I have to draw to the bank, open my waterproof
-covering, put my package and paddle ashore, then step out and haul the
-boat out of the water. By this time two or three persons usually
-congregate. I select the most likely one, and ask him to help in such a
-persuasive but dignified manner that he feels it an honour to carry one
-end of the boat while I take the other, and so we put her in again above
-the barrier, and, if the man looks poor, I give him a few sous. At some
-of the locks they asked me for a "carte de permission," or pass for
-travelling on their canal, but I laughed the matter off, and when they
-pressed it with a "mais monsieur," I kept treating the proposal as a
-good joke, until the officials were fairly baffled and gave in. The fact
-is, we had got into the canal as one gets over the hedge on to a public
-road, and as I did not use any of the water in locks or any of the
-lock-keepers' time, and the "pass" was a mere form, price 5_d._, it was
-but reasonable to go unquestioned; and besides, this "carte" could not
-be obtained except at the beginning. Having set off late, we went on
-until about sunset, when the route suddenly passed into the river Ill,
-a long dull stream, which flows through the Vosges into the Rhine.
-
-This stream was now quite stagnant, and a mere collection of pools
-covered by thick scum. It was therefore a great comfort to have only a
-short voyage upon it.
-
-When the Rob Roy again entered the canal, an acquaintance was formed
-with a fine young lad, who was reading as he sauntered along. He was
-reading of canoe adventures in America, and so I got him to walk some
-miles beside me, and to help the boat over some locks, telling him he
-could thus see how different actual canoeing was from the book stories
-about it made up of romance! He was pining for some expansion of his
-sphere, and specially for foreign travel, and above all to see England.
-
-We went to an _auberge_, where I ordered a bottle of wine, the cost of
-which was twopence halfpenny. After he left, and as it was now dark, I
-halted, put my boat in a lock-keeper's house, and made his son conduct
-me to the little village of Illfurth, a most unsophisticated place
-indeed, with a few vineyards on a hill behind it, though the railway has
-a road station near. It was not easy to mistake which was the best house
-here even in the dark, so I inquired of Madame at "The White Horse" if
-she could give me a bed. "Not in a room for one alone; three others will
-be sleeping in the same chamber."
-
-This she had answered after glancing at my puny package and travel-worn
-dress, but her ideas about the guest were enlarged when she heard of how
-he had come, and so she managed (they always do if you give time and
-smiles and show sketches) to allot me a nice little room to myself, with
-two beds of the hugest size, a water-jug of the most minute dimensions,
-and sheets very coarse and very clean. Another omelette was consumed
-while the customary visitors surrounded the benighted traveller;
-carters, porters, all of them with courteous manners, and behaving so
-well to me and to one another, and talking such good sense, as to make
-me feel how different from this is the noisy taproom of a roadside
-English "public."
-
-Presently two fine fellows of the Gendarmerie came in for their half
-bottle of wine, at one penny, and as both of them had been in the Crimea
-there was soon ample subject for most interesting conversation. This was
-conducted in French, but the people here usually speak a patois utterly
-impossible for one to comprehend. I found they were discussing me under
-various conjectures, and they settled at last that I must be rather an
-odd fish, but certainly "a gentleman," and probably "noble." They were
-most surprised to hear I meant to stop all the next day at Illfurth,
-simply because it was Sunday, but they did not fail to ask for my
-passport, which until this had been carried all the way without a single
-inquiry on the subject.
-
-The sudden change from a first-rate hotel this morning to the roadside
-inn at Illfurth, was more entertaining on account of its variety than
-for its agreeables; but in good health and good weather one can put up
-with anything.
-
-The utter silence of peaceful and cool night in a place like this reigns
-undisturbed until about four o'clock in early morn, when the first sound
-is some matutinal cock, who crows first because he is proud of being
-first awake. After he has asserted his priority thus once or twice,
-another deeper toned rooster replies, and presently a dozen cocks are
-all in full song, and in different keys. In half an hour you hear a
-man's voice; next, some feminine voluble remarks; then a latch is moved
-and clicks, the dog gives a morning bark, and a horse stamps his foot in
-the stable because the flies have aroused to breakfast on his tender
-skin. At length a pig grunts, his gastric juice is fairly awake, the day
-is begun. And so the stream of life, thawed from its sleep, flows
-gently on again, and at length the full tide of village business is soon
-in agitation, with men's faces and women's quite as full of import as if
-this French Stoke Pogis were the capital of the world.
-
-While the inmates prepare for early mass, and my bowl of coffee is set
-before me, there are four dogs, eight cats, and seven canaries (I
-counted them) all looking on, moving, twittering, mewing, each evidently
-sensible that a being from some other land is present among them; and as
-these little pets look with doubtful inquiring eyes on the stranger,
-there is felt more strongly by him too, "Yes, I am in a foreign
-country."
-
-On Sunday I had a quiet rest, and walk, and reading, and an Englishman,
-who had come out for a day from Mulhouse to fish, dined in the pleasant
-arbour of the inn with his family. One of his girls managed to fall into
-a deep pond and was nearly drowned, but I heard her cries, and we soon
-put her to rights. This Briton spoke with quite a foreign accent, having
-been six years in France; but his Lancashire dialect reappeared in
-conversation, and he said he had just been reading about the canoe in a
-Manchester paper. His children had gone that morning to a Sunday-school
-before they came out by railway to fish in the river here; but I could
-not help contrasting their rude manners with the good behaviour of the
-little "lady and gentleman" children of my host. One of these,
-Philibert, was very intelligent, and spent an hour or two with me, so we
-became great friends. He asked all kinds of questions about England and
-America, far more than I was able to answer. I gave him a little book
-with a picture in it, that he might read it to his father, for it
-contained the remarkable conversation between Napoleon and his Marshal
-at St. Helena concerning the Christian religion, a paper well worth
-reading, whoever spoke the words.
-
-This Sunday being an annual village fête a band played, and some very
-uncouth couples waltzed the whole day. Large flocks of sheep, following
-their shepherds, wandered over the arid soil. The poor geese, too, were
-flapping their wings in vain as they tried to swim in water an inch
-deep, where usually there had been pleasant pools in the river. I
-sympathized with the geese, for I missed my river sadly too.
-
-My bill here for the two nights, with plenty to eat and drink, amounted
-to five shillings in all, and I left good Madame Nico with some regret,
-starting again on the canal, which looked more dully and dirty than
-before.
-
-After one or two locks this sort of travelling became so insufferable
-that I suddenly determined to change my plans entirely--for is not one
-free? By the present route several days would be consumed in going over
-the hills by a series of tedious locks; besides, this very canal had
-been already traversed by the four-oar boat Waterwitch some years ago.
-
-A few moments of thought, and I got on the bank to look for a way of
-deliverance. Far off could be seen the vine-clad hills of the Vosges,
-and I decided at once to leave the canal, cross the country to those
-hills, cart the canoe over the range, and so reach the source of the
-Moselle, and thus begin to paddle on quite another set of rivers. We
-therefore turned the prow back, went down the canal, and again entered
-the river Ill, but soon found it was now too shallow to float even my
-canoe. Once more I retraced my way, ascending the locks, and, passing by
-Illfurth, went on to reach a village where a cart could be had.
-Desperation made me paddle hard even in the fierce sun, but it was not
-that this so much troubled me as the humiliation of thus rowing back and
-forward for miles on a dirty, stagnant canal, and passing by the same
-locks two or three times, with the full conviction that the people who
-gazed at the procedure must believe me not only to be mad (this much one
-can put up with), but furiously insane, and dangerous to be at large.
-
-Whether we confess it or not we all like to be admired. The right or
-wrong of this depends on for what and from whom we covet admiration. But
-when the deed you attract attention by is neither a great one, nor a
-deed which others have not done or cannot do, but is one that all other
-people could but would not do, then you are not admired as remarkable
-but only stared at as singular.
-
-The shade of a suspicion that this is so in any act done before
-lookers-on is enough to make it hateful. Nay, you have then the
-sufferings of a martyr, without his cause or his glory. But I fear that
-instead of getting a cart for the canoe I am getting out of depth in
-metaphysics, which means, you know, "When ane maun explains till anither
-what he disna understaun himsel, that's metapheesics."
-
-Well, when we came to the prescribed village, named Haidwiller, we found
-they had plenty of carts, but not one would come to help me even for a
-good round sum. It was their first day with the grapes, and "ancient
-customs must be observed"; so we went on still further to another
-village, where they were letting out the water from the canal to repair
-a lock.
-
-[Illustration: "The Rob Roy on wheels."]
-
-Here was a position of unenviable repose for the poor Rob Roy! No water
-to float in, and no cart to carry her.
-
-To aid deliberation I attacked a large cake of hot flour baked by the
-lock-keeper's dirty wife, and we stuck plums in it to make it go down,
-while the man hied off to the fields to get some animal that could drag
-a clumsy vehicle--cart is too fine a name for it--which I had impressed
-from a ploughman near.
-
-The man came back leading a gloomy-looking bullock, and we started with
-the boat now travelling on wheels, but at a most dignified pace.[XXIX.]
-
- [XXIX.] The sketch represents the lady cow which dragged the cart
- at Lauffenburg, but it will do almost equally well for the present
- equipage.
-
-This was the arrangement till we reached another village, which had no
-vineyards, and where therefore we soon found a horse, instead of the
-gruff bullock; while the natives were lost in amazement to see a boat in
-a cart, and a big foreigner gabbling beside it.
-
-The sun was exceedingly hot, and the road dusty; but I felt the walk
-would be a pleasant change, though my driver kept muttering to himself
-about my preference of pedestrianism to the fearful jolts of his cart.
-
-We passed thus through several villages on a fine fruitful plain, and at
-some of them the horse had to bait, or the driver to lunch, or his
-employer to refresh the inner man, in every case the population being
-favoured with an account by the driver of all he knew about the boat,
-and a great deal more.
-
-At one of the inns on the road some new wine was produced on the table.
-It had been made only the day before, and its colour was exactly like
-that of cold tea, with milk and sugar in it, while its taste was very
-luscious and sweet. This new wine is sometimes in request, but
-especially among the women. "Corn shall make the young men cheerful, and
-new wine the maids." (Zech. ix. 17.)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
- Bonfire--My wife--Matthews--Tunnel
- picture--Imposture--Fancy--Moselle--Cocher--"Saturday Review"
- Tracts--Gymnastics--The paddle--A spell--Overhead--Feminine
- forum--Public breakfast.
-
-
-As evening came on the little flag of the Rob Roy, which was always
-hoisted, even in a cart, showed signs of animation, being now revived by
-a fresh breeze from the beautiful Vosges mountains when we gradually
-brought their outline more distinctly near.
-
-Then we had to cross the river Thur, but that was an easy matter in
-these scorching days of drought. So the cavalcade went on till, the high
-road being reached, we drove the cart into the pretty town of Thann. The
-driver insisted on going to _his_ hotel, but when there I saw it could
-not be the best in a town of this size (experience quickens perception
-in these matters), and I simply took the reins, backed out of the yard,
-and drove to a better one.
-
-Here the hotel-keeper had read of the Rob Roy, so it was received with
-all the honours, and the best of his good things was at my disposal. In
-the evening I burned some magnesium-wire signals to amuse the rustics,
-who came in great crowds along the roads, drawing home their
-bullock-carts, well loaded with large vats full of the new grapes, and
-singing hoarsely as they waved aloft flowers and garlands and danced
-around them,--the rude rejoicings for a bounteous vine harvest. It is
-remarkable how soon the good singing of Germany is lost trace of when
-you cross into France, though the language of the peasant here was
-German enough.
-
-At night we went to see an experiment in putting out fires. A large
-bonfire was lighted in the market-place, and the inventor of the new
-apparatus came forward, carrying on his back a vessel full of water,
-under the pressure of "six atmospheres" of carbonic acid gas. He
-directed this on the fire from a small squirt at the end of a tube, and
-it was certainly most successful in immediately extinguishing the
-flames.[XXX.] This gentleman and other _savants_ of the town then visited
-the boat, and the usual entertainment of the sketch-book closed a
-pleasant day, which had begun with every appearance of being the
-reverse.
-
- [XXX.] This invention, l'Extincteur, has since been exhibited in
- London, and it seems to be a valuable one.
-
-Although this is a busy place, I found only one book-shop in it, and
-that a very bad one. A priest and two nuns were making purchases there,
-and I noticed that more images and pictures than printed books were kept
-for sale.
-
-Next morning a new railroad enabled me to take the boat a little further
-into the hills; but they fought hard to make her go separate, that is,
-in a "merchandise" train, though I said the boat was "my wife," and
-could not travel alone. At last they put their wise heads together,
-filled up five separate printed forms, charged double fare, and the
-whole thing cost me just ninepence. Verily, the French are still
-overloaded with forms, and are still in the straitwaistcoat of
-_système_. The railway winds among green hills, while here and there a
-"fabrik," or factory, nestles in a valley, or illumines a hill-side at
-night with its numerous windows all lighted up. These are the chief
-depôts of that wonderful industry of taste which spreads the shawls and
-scarfs of France before the eyes of an admiring world, for ladies to
-covet, and for their husbands to buy. I was informed that the designs
-for patterns here cost large sums, as if they were the oil paintings of
-the first masters, and that three times as much is paid in France for
-cutting one in wood as will be given by an English manufacturer.
-
-At Wesserling we managed to mount the Rob Roy on a spring vehicle, and
-we set off gaily up the winding road that passes the watershed of the
-Vosges mountains. I never had a more charming drive. For six hours we
-were among woods, vineyards, bright rivulets, and rich pastures. Walking
-up a hill, we overtook a carriage, and found one of the occupants was an
-Englishman. But he had resided in France for more than twenty years, and
-really I could scarcely understand his English. He spoke of "dis ting,"
-and "ve vill go," and frequently mingled French and German words with
-his native tongue. In a newspaper article here we noticed after the name
-"Matthews," the editor had considerately added, "pronounced, in English,
-Massious." This is well enough for a Frenchman, but it certainly is
-difficult to conceive how a man can fail in pronouncing our "th," if he
-is a real live Englishman. When he found out my name, he grasped my
-hand, and said how deeply interested he had been in a pamphlet written
-by one of the same name.[XXXI.]
-
- [XXXI.] The Loss of the Kent East Indiaman by Fire in the Bay of
- Biscay, by General Sir D. Macgregor, K.C.B. (Religious Tract Society,
- Paternoster-row.) See a further note on this in the Appendix.
-
-The spring carriage had been chartered as an expensive luxury in this
-cheap tour, that is to say, my boat and myself were to be carried about
-thirty-five miles in a comfortable four-wheeled vehicle for twenty-six
-francs--not very dear when you consider that it saved a whole day's time
-to me and a whole day's jolting to the canoe, which seemed to enjoy its
-soft bed on the top of the cushion, and to appreciate very well the
-convenience of springs. After a good hard pull up a winding road we got
-to the top of the pass of this "little Switzerland," as it is called,
-and here was a tunnel on the very crest of the watershed.
-
-The arch of this dark tunnel made an excellent frame to a magnificent
-picture; for before me was stretched out broad France. All streams at
-our back went down to the all-absorbing Rhine, but those in front would
-wend their various ways, some to the Mediterranean, others into the Bay
-of Biscay, and the rest into the British Channel.
-
-A thousand peaks and wooded knolls were on this side and that, while a
-dim panorama of five or six villages and sunny plains extended before
-us. This was the chain of the Vosges mountains and their pleasant vales,
-where many valorous men have been reared. The most noted crusaders came
-from this district, and from here too the first of the two great
-Napoleons drew the best soldiers of his army.[XXXII.] Most of the community
-are Protestants.
-
- [XXXII.] The giant called "Anak," who has been exhibiting in London,
- is from the Vosges mountains.
-
-High up on one side of us was a pilgrim station, where thousands of
-people come year by year, and probably they get fine fresh air and
-useful exercise. The French seem to walk farther for superstitious
-purposes than for mere pedestrian amusement.[XXXIII.]
-
- [XXXIII.] Among other celebrated French "stations" there is the
- mountain of La Salette, near Grenoble, where, even in one day, 16,000
- pilgrims have ascended to visit the spot where the Virgin Mary was said
- to have spoken to some shepherds. On the occasion of my pilgrimage there
- I met some donkeys with panniers bringing down holy water (in lemonade
- bottles) which was sold throughout Europe for a shilling a bottle, until
- a priest at the bottom of the mountain started a private pump of his
- own. The woman who had been hired to personate the Holy Saint confessed
- the deception, and it was exploded before the courts of law in a report
- which I read on the spot; but the Roman Catholic papers, even in
- England, published attractive articles to support this flagrant
- imposture, and its truth and goodness were vehemently proclaimed in a
- book by the Romish Bishop of Birmingham, with the assent of the Pope.
- Methinks it is easier to march barefoot 100 miles over sharp stones than
- to plod your honest walk of life on common pavement and with strong
- soled boots.
-
-My English friend now got into my carriage, and we drove a little way
-from the road to the village of Bussang to see the source of the
-Moselle.
-
-This river rises under the "Ballon d'Alsace," a lofty mountain with a
-rounded top, and the stream consists at first of four or five very tiny
-trickling rivulets which unite and come forth in a little spring well
-about the size of a washing-tub, from which the water flows across the
-road in a channel that you can bridge with your fingers.
-
-But this bubbling brook had great interest for me, as I meant to follow
-its growth until it would be strong enough to bear me on its cool, clear
-water, now only like feathers strewed among the grass, and singing its
-first music very pretty and low.
-
-We like to see the source of a great river; a romantic man must have
-much piquant thought at the sight, and a poetic man must be stirred by
-its sentiment. Every great thought must also have had a source or germ,
-and it would be interesting to know how and when some of the grand ideas
-that have afterwards aroused nations first thrilled in the brain of a
-genius, a warrior, a philosopher, or a statesman. And besides having a
-source, each stream of thought has a current too, with ripples and deep
-pools, and scenery as it were around. Some thoughts are lofty, others
-broad; some are straight, and others round about; some are rushing,
-while others glide peacefully; only a few are clear and deep.
-
-But this is not the place to launch upon fancy's dreams, or even to
-describe the real, pretty valleys around us in the Vosges. We go through
-these merely to find water for the Rob Roy, and in this search we keep
-descending every hour.
-
-When the bright stars came out they glittered below thick trees in pools
-of the water now so quickly become a veritable river, and I scanned each
-lagoon in the darkness to know if still it was too small for the boat.
-
-We came to the town of Remiremont and to a bad sort of inn, where all
-was disorder and dirt. The driver sat down with me to a late supper and
-behaved with true French politeness, which always shows better in
-company than in private, or when real self-denial or firm friendship is
-to be tested. So he ate of his five different courses, and had his wine,
-fruit, and neat little etceteras, and my bill next day for our united
-entertainment and lodging was just 3_s._ 4_d._
-
-This _cocher_ was an intelligent man, and conversed on his own range of
-subjects with considerable tact, and when our conversation was turned
-upon the greater things of another world he said, "They must be happy
-there, for none of them have ever come back"--a strange thought, oddly
-phrased. As he became interested in the subject I gave him a paper upon
-it, which he at once commenced to read aloud.[XXXIV.]
-
- [XXXIV.] Some days previously a stranger gave me a bundle of papers
- to read, for which I thanked him much. Afterwards at leisure I examined
- the packet, which consisted of about thirty large pages sewn together,
- and comprising tracts upon politics, science, literature, and religion.
- The last subject was prominent, and was dealt with in a style clever,
- caustic, and censorious, which interested me much. These tracts were
- printed in England and with good paper and type. They are a weekly
- series, distributed everywhere at six shillings a dozen, and each page
- is entitled "The Saturday Review."
-
-Next morning, the 20th of September, the Rob Roy was brought to the door
-in a handcart, and was soon attended by its usual levee.
-
-As we had come into the town late at night the gazers were ignorant of
-any claims this boat might have upon their respect, and some of them
-derided the idea of its being able to float on the river here, or at any
-rate to go more than a mile or two.
-
-But having previously taken a long walk before breakfast to examine the
-Moselle, I was convinced it could be begun even here and in this dry
-season. The porter was therefore directed to go forward, and the boat
-moved towards the river amid plaudits rather ambiguous, until a curious
-old gentleman, with green spectacles and a white hat, kindly brought the
-sceptical mob to their senses by telling them he had read often about
-the boat, and they must not make fun of it now.
-
-Then they all chopped round and changed their minds in a moment--the
-fickle French--and they helped me with a will, and carried the Rob Roy
-about a mile to the spot fixed upon for the start, which was speedily
-executed, with a loud and warm "Adieu!" and "Bon voyage!" from all the
-spectators.
-
-It was pleasant again to grasp the paddle and to find pure clear water
-below, which I had not seen since the Danube, and to have a steady
-current alongside that was so much missed on the sluggish river Ill and
-the Basel Canal.
-
-Pretty water flowers quivered in the ripples round the mossy stones, and
-park-like meadows sloped to the river with fruit trees heavy laden.
-After half an hour of congratulation that we had come to the Moselle
-rather than the Saone and the Doubs, I settled down to my day's work
-with cheerfulness.
-
-The water of this river was very clear and cool, meandering through long
-deep pools, and then over gurgling shallows; and the fish, waterfowl,
-woods, and lovely green fields were a most welcome change from the canal
-we had left. The sun was intensely hot, but the spare "jib," as a shawl
-on my shoulders, defied its fierce rays, and so I glided along in
-solitary enjoyment. The numerous shallows required much activity with
-the paddle, and my boat got more bumped and thumped to-day than in any
-other seven days of the tour. Of course I had often to get out and to
-tow her through the water; sometimes through the fields, or over rocks,
-but this was easily done with canvas shoes on, and flannel trousers that
-are made for constant ducking.
-
-The aspect of the river was rather of a singular character for some
-miles, with low banks sloping backwards, and richly carpeted with grass,
-so that the view on either side was ample; while in front was a spacious
-picture of successive levels, seen to great advantage as the Rob Roy
-glided smoothly on crystal waters lipped with green. Again the playful
-river descends by sudden leaps and deep falls, chiefly artificial, and
-some trouble is caused in getting down each of these, for the boat had
-to be lowered by hand, with a good deal of gymnastic exercise among the
-slippery rocks; the mosses and lichens were studied in anything but
-botanical order.
-
-At this period of the voyage the paddle felt so natural in my hands from
-long use of it every day, that it was held unconsciously. In the
-beginning of my practice I had invented various tethers and ties to
-secure this all-important piece of furniture from being lost if it
-should fall overboard, and I had practised what ought to be done if the
-paddle should ever be beaten out of my hand by a wave, or dropped into
-the water in a moment of carelessness.
-
-But none of these plans were satisfactory in actual service. The strings
-got entangled when I jumped out suddenly, or I forgot the thing was tied
-when it had to be thrown out on the shore, so it was better to have the
-paddle perfectly loose; and thus free, it never was dropped or lost hold
-of even in those times of difficulty or confusion which made twenty
-things to be done, and each to be done first, when an upset was
-imminent, and a jump out had to be managed instead.[XXXV.]
-
- [XXXV.] The bamboo mast was meant originally to serve also as a
- boat-hook or hitcher, and had a ferrule and a fishing gaff neatly
- fastened on the end, which fitted also into the mast step. I recollect
- having used the boat-hook once at Gravesend, but it was instantly seen
- to be a mistake. You don't want a boat-hook when your canoe can come
- close alongside where it is deep, and will ground when it is shallow.
- Besides, to use a boat-hook you must drop the paddle.
-
-The movement of the paddle, then, got to be almost involuntary, just as
-the legs are moved in walking, and the ordinary difficulties of a river
-seemed to be understood by the mind without special observation, and to
-be dealt with naturally, without hesitation or reasoning as to what
-ought to be done. This faculty increased until long gazes upwards to
-the higher grounds or to the clouds were fully indulged without
-apparently interrupting the steady and proper navigation of the boat,
-even when it was moving with speed. On one of these occasions I had got
-into a train of thought on this subject, and was regretting that the
-course of the stream made me turn my back on the best scenery. I had
-spun round two or three times to feast my eyes once more and again upon
-some glowing peaks, lit up by the setting sun, until a sort of
-fascination seized the mind, and a quiet lethargy crept over the system;
-and, moreover, a most illogical persuasion then settled that the boat
-always _did_ go right, and that one need not be so much on the alert to
-steer well. This still held me as we came into a cluster of about a
-dozen rocks all dotted about, and with the stream welling over this one
-and rushing over that, and yet I was spellbound and doggedly did nothing
-to guide the boat's course.
-
-But the water was avenged on this foolish defiance of its power, for in
-a moment I was driven straight on a great rock, only two inches below
-the surface, and the boat at once swung round, broadside on to the
-current, and then slowly but determinedly began to turn over. As it
-canted more and more my lax muscles were rudely aroused to action, for
-the plain fact stared out baldly that I was about to get a regular
-ducking, and all from a stupid, lazy fit.
-
-The worst of it was I was not sitting erect, but stretched almost at
-full length in the boat, and one leg was entangled inside by the strap
-of my bag. In the moments following (that seem minutes in such a case) a
-gush of thoughts went through the mind while the poor little boat was
-still turning over, until at last I gave a spring from my awkward
-position to jump into the water.
-
-The jerk released the canoe from the rock, but only the head and arms of
-its captain fell into the river--though in a most undignified _pose_,
-which was soon laughed off, when my seat was recovered, with a wet head
-and dripping sleeves!
-
-However, this little _faux pas_ quite wakened and sobered me, and I
-looked in half shame to the bank to see if any person had witnessed the
-absurd performance. And it was well to have done with sentiment and
-reveries, for the river had now got quite in earnest about going along.
-
-Permit me again to invite attention to the washerwomen on the river; for
-this institution, which one does not find thus floating on our streams
-in England, becomes a very frequent object of interest if you canoe it
-on the Continent.
-
-[Illustration: "Washing Barge."]
-
-As the well in Eastern countries is the recognised place for gossiping,
-and in colder climes a good deal of politics is settled in the barber's
-shop, so here in fluvial districts the washing barge is the forum of
-feminine eloquence.
-
-The respectability of a town as you approach it is shadowed forth by the
-size and ornaments of the _blanchisseuses'_ float; and as there are
-often fifty faces seen at once, the type of female loveliness may be
-studied for a district at a time. While they wash they talk, and while
-they talk they thump and belabour the clothes; but there is always some
-idle eye wandering which speedily will catch sight of the Rob Roy canoe.
-
-In smaller villages, and where there is no barge for them to use, the
-women have to do without one, and kneel on the ground, so that even in
-far-off parts of the river we shall find them there.
-
-A flat sounding whack! whack! tells me that round the corner we shall
-come upon at least a couple of washerwomen, homely dames, with brown
-faces and tall caps, who are wringing, slapping, and scrubbing the
-"linge." Though this may encourage the French cotton trade, I rejoice
-that my own shirts are of strong woollen stuff, which defies their
-buffeting.
-
-I always fraternized with these ladies, doffing my hat, and drawing back
-my left foot for a bow (though the graceful action is not observed under
-the macintosh). Other travellers, also, may find there is something to
-be seen and heard if they pass five minutes at the washing-barge. But
-even if it were not instructive and amusing thus to study character when
-a whole group is met with at once, surely it is to be remembered that
-the pleasure of seeing a new sight and of hearing a foreigner speak
-cheerful and kind words, is to many of these hard-working, honest
-mothers a bright interlude in a life of toil. To give pleasure is one of
-the best pleasures of a tourist; and it is in acting thus, too, that
-the lone traveller feels no loneliness, while he pleases and is pleased.
-Two Englishmen may travel together agreeably among foreigners for a week
-without learning so much of the life, and mind, and manners of the
-people as would be learned in one day if each of the tourists went
-alone, provided he was not too shy or too proud to open his eyes, and
-ears, and mouth among strangers, and had sense enough to be an exception
-to the rule that "Every Englishman is an island."
-
-Merely for a change, I ran the Rob Roy into a long millrace in search of
-breakfast. This stream having secured hold of the boat stealthily ran
-away with us in a winding course among the hayfields, and quite out of
-reach of the river, until it seemed that after all we were only in a
-streamlet for irrigation, which would vanish into rills an inch deep in
-a water meadow. However, I put a bold face on it, and gravely and
-swiftly sped through the fields, and bestowed a nod now and then on the
-rural gazers. A fine boy of twelve years old soon trotted alongside, and
-I asked him if he was an honest lad, which he answered by a blush, and
-"Yes." "Here is a franc, then. Go and buy me bread and wine, and meet me
-at the mill." A few of the "hands" soon found out the canoe, moored, as
-it was thought, in quiet retirement, with its captain resting under a
-tree, and presently a whole crowd of them swarmed out, and shouted with
-delight as they pressed round to see.
-
-The boy brought a very large bottle of wine, and a loaf big enough to
-dine four men; and I set to work with an oarsman's appetite, and that
-happy _sang froid_ which no multitude of gazers now could disturb.
-
-However, one of the party invited me into her house, and soon set
-delicate viands before the new guest, while the others filled the room
-in an instant, and were replaced by sets of fifty at a time, all very
-good-humoured and respectful.
-
-But it was so hot and bustling here that I resolved to go away and have
-a more pleasant and sulky meal by myself on some inaccessible island.
-The retreat through the crowd had to be regularly prepared for by
-military tactics; so I appointed four of the most troublesome boys as
-"policemen" to guard the boat in its transit across the fields, but they
-discharged their new duties with such vigour that two little fellows
-were soon knocked over into the canoe, and so we launched off, while the
-Manager of the factory called in vain to his cottonspinners, who were
-all now in full cry after the boat, and were making holiday without
-leave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
- River Moselle--Epinal--The Tramp--Halcyon--Painted
- woman--Beating to quarters--Boat in a hedge--The
- Meurthe--Moving House--Tears of a mother--Five francs.
-
-
-Under a dark arbour-like arch of foliage, where the water was deep and
-still, I made fast to the long grass, cast my tired limbs into the
-fantastic folds of ease, and, while the bottle lasted and the bread, I
-watched the bees and butterflies, and the beetles and rats, and the
-coloured tribes of airy and watery life that one can see so well in a
-quiet half hour like this.
-
-How little we are taught at school about these wondrous communities of
-real life, each with its laws and instincts, its beauties of form, and
-marvellous ingenuities!
-
-How little of flowers and insects, not to say of trees and animals, a
-boy learns as school-lessons, while he has beaten into him at one end
-and crammed in at the other the complicated politics of heathen gods,
-and their loves and faction fights, which are neither real nor possible.
-
-The Moselle rapidly enlarged in volume, though one could easily see
-that it had seldom been so low before. It is a very beautiful river to
-row on, especially where we began. Then it winds to the west and north,
-and again, turning a little eastwards, traverses a lovely country
-between Treves and Coblentz, where it joins the ancient Rhine.
-
-My resting-place for this evening was Epinal, a town with little to
-interest; and so we could turn to books and pencils until it was time
-for bed.
-
-Next day the scenery was by no means so attractive, but I had plenty of
-hard work, which was enjoyed very much, my shoes and socks being off all
-day, for it was useless to put them on when so many occasions required
-me to jump out.
-
-Here it was a plain country, with a gravel soil, and fast rushings of
-current; and then long pools like the Serpentine, and winding turns
-leading entirely round some central hill which the river insisted upon
-circumventing.
-
-At noon we came upon a large number of labourers at work on a milldam,
-and as this sort of crowd generally betokens something to eat (always,
-at any rate, some drinkable fluid), I left my boat boldly in mid-stream,
-and knocked at a cottage, when an old woman came out. "Madame, I am
-hungry, and you are precisely the lady who can make me an omelette."
-
-"Sir, I have nothing to give you."
-
-"Why," said I, "look at these hens; I am sure they have laid six eggs
-this morning, they seem so conceited."
-
-She evidently thought I was a tramp demanding alms, and when told to
-look at the boat which had come from England, she said she was too old
-and too blind to see. However, we managed to make an omelette together,
-and she stood by (with an eye, perhaps, to her only fork) and chatted
-pleasantly, asking, "What have you got to sell?" I told her I had come
-there only for pleasure. "What sort of pleasure, Monsieur, can you
-possibly hope to find in _this_ place?" But I was far too gallant to say
-bluntly that her particular mansion was not the ultimate object of the
-tour. After receiving a franc for the rough breakfast, she kept up a
-battery of blessings till the Rob Roy started, and she ended by
-shrieking out to a navvy looking on, "I tell you every Englishman is
-rich!"
-
-Next day was bright and blue-skyed as before, and an early start got the
-fine fresh morning air on the water.
-
-The name of this river is sometimes pronounced "Moselle," and at other
-times "Mosel," what we should call "Mozle." When a Frenchman speaks of
-"la Moselle," he puts an equal emphasis on each of the three syllables
-he is pronouncing; whereas generally we Englishmen call this river
-Mosélle.
-
-The name of a long river often indeed goes through changes as it
-traverses various districts and dialects; for instance, the Missouri,
-which you hear the travellers in Kansas call "Mzoory," while they wend
-along the Californian road.
-
-When the scenery is tame to the canoist, and the channel of the river is
-not made interesting by dangers to be avoided, then one can always turn
-again to the animals and birds, and five minutes of watching will be
-sure to see much that is curious.
-
-Here, for instance, we have the little kingfisher again, who had met us
-on the Danube and the Reuss, and whom we knew well in England before;
-but now we are on a visit to _his_ domain, and we see him in his private
-character alone. There are several varieties of this bird, and they
-differ in form and colour of plumage. This "Royal bird," the _Halcyon_
-of antiquity, the _Alcedo_ in classic tongue, is called in German "Eis
-fogl," or "Ice bird," perhaps because he fishes even in winter's frost,
-or because his nest is like a bundle of icicles, being made of minnows'
-bones most curiously wrought together.
-
-But now it is on a summer day, and he is perched on a twig within two
-inches of the water, and under the shade of a briar leaf, his little
-parasol. He is looking for fish, and is so steady that you may easily
-pass him without observing that brilliant back of azure, or the breast
-of blushing red.
-
-When I desired to see these birds, I quietly moved my boat till it
-grounded on a bank, and, after it was stationary thus for a few minutes,
-the Halcyon fisher got quite unconcerned, and plied his task as if
-unseen.
-
-He peers with knowing eye into the shallow below him, and now and then
-he dips his head a bit to make quite sure he has marked a fish worth
-seizing; then suddenly he darts down with a spluttering splash, and
-flies off with a little white minnow, or a struggling sticklebat nipped
-in his beak.
-
-If it is caught thus crosswise, the winged fisherman tosses his prey
-into the air, and nimbly catches it in his mouth, so that it may be
-gulped down properly. Then he quivers and shakes with satisfaction, and
-quickly speeds to another perch, flitting by you with wonderful
-swiftness, as if a sapphire had been flung athwart the sunbeam, flashing
-beauteous colours in its flight.
-
-Or, if bed-time has come, or he is fetching home the family dinner, he
-flutters on and on, and then with a little sharp note of "good-bye,"
-pops into a hole, the dark staircase to his tiny nest, and there he
-finds Mrs. Halcyon sitting in state, and thirteen baby Kingfishers
-gaping for the dainty fish.
-
-This pretty bird has an air of quiet mystery, beauty, and vivid motion,
-all combined, which has made him a favourite with the Rob Roy.
-
-Strangely enough, the river in this part of its course actually gets
-less and less as you descend it. Every few miles some of the water is
-drawn off by a small canal to irrigate the neighbouring land, and in a
-season of drought like this, very little of the abstracted part returns.
-They told me that the Moselle river never has been so "basse" for 30
-years, and I was therefore an unlucky _voyageur_ in having to do for the
-first time what could have been done more easily in any other season.
-
-As evening fell we reached the town of Chatel, and the Rob Roy was sent
-to bed in the washhouse of the hotel. But five minutes had not elapsed
-before a string of visitors came for the daily inspection of the boat.
-
-As I sauntered along the bridge a sprightly youth came up, who had not
-seen the canoe, but who knew I was "one of her crew." He was most
-enthusiastic on the subject, and took me to see _his_ boat, a
-deadly-looking flat-bottomed open cot, painted all manner of patterns;
-and as he was extremely proud of her I did not tell him that a boat is
-like a woman, too good to paint: a pretty one is spoiled by paint, and a
-plain one is made hideous.
-
-Then he came for a look at the Rob Roy, and, poor fellow, it was amusing
-to observe how instantly his countenance fell from pride to intense
-envy. He had a "boating mind," but had never seen a really pretty boat
-till now. However, to console himself he invited me to another hotel to
-drink success to the canoe in Bavarian beer, and to see my drawings, and
-then I found that my intelligent, eager, and, we may add, gentlemanly
-friend was the waiter there!
-
-A melancholy sensation pervaded the Rob Roy to-day, in consequence of a
-sad event, the loss of the captain's knife. We had three knives on board
-in starting from England; one had been given away in reward for some
-signal service, and this which was now lost was one with a metal haft
-and a curious hook at the end, a special description made in Berlin, and
-very useful to the tourist. It is not to be wondered that in so many
-leaps and somersaults, and with such constant requirements for the knife
-to mend pencils, &c., &c., the trusty blade should at last have
-disappeared, but the event suggests to the next canoeman that his
-boat-knife should be secured to a lanyard.
-
-One singular conformation of the river-bed occurred in my short tour
-upon this part of the Moselle. Without much warning the banks of rock
-became quite vertical and narrowed close together. They reminded me of
-the rock-cutting near Liverpool, on the old railway to Manchester. The
-stream was very deep here, but its bed was full of enormous stones and
-crags, very sharp and jagged, which, however, could be easily avoided,
-because the current was gentle.
-
-A man I found fishing told me that a little further on there was an
-"impossible" place, so when after half a mile the well-known sound of
-rushing waters came (the ear got marvellous quick for this), we beat to
-quarters and prepared for action.
-
-The ribbon to keep my hat was tied down. Sleeves and trousers were
-tucked up. The covering was braced tight and the baggage secured below;
-and then came the eager pleasures of anticipating, wishing, hoping,
-fearing, that are mixed up in the word excitement.
-
-The sound was quite near now, but the river took the strangest of all
-the forms I had yet seen.
-
-If you suppose a trench cut along Oxford-street to get at the
-gas-pipes, and if all the water of a river which had filled the street
-before suddenly disappeared in the trench, that would be exactly what
-the Moselle had now become.
-
-The plateau of rock on each side was perfectly dry, though in flood
-times, no doubt, the river covers that too. The water boiled and foamed
-through this channel from 3 to 20 feet deep, but only in the trench,
-which was not five feet wide.
-
-An intelligent man came near to see me enter this curious passage, but
-when we had got a little way in I had to stop the boat, and this too by
-putting my hands on both sides of the river!
-
-Then I got out and carefully let the boat drive along the current, but
-still held by the painter. Soon it got too narrow and fast even for this
-process, so I pulled the canoe upon the dry rock, and sat down to
-breathe and to cool my panting frame.
-
-Two other gentlemen had come near me by this time, and on a bridge above
-were several more with two ladies.
-
-I had to drag the boat some hundred yards over most awkward rocks, and
-these men hovered round and admired, and even talked to me, and actually
-praised my perseverance, yet not one offer of any help did any one of
-them give!
-
-In deep water again, and now exactly under the bridge I looked up and
-found the whole party regarding the Rob Roy with curiosity and smiles.
-Within a few yards was a large house these people had come from, and I
-thought their smiles were surely to preface, "Would you not like a glass
-of wine, Sir, after your hour of hard work?" But as it meant nothing of
-the sort I could not help answering their united adieux! by these words,
-"Adieu, ladies and gentlemen. Many to look, but none to help. The
-exhibition is gratuitous!" Was it wrong to say this? It was utterly
-impossible not to think as much.
-
-One or two other places gave trouble without interest, such as when I
-had to push the boat into a hedge point foremost, and to pull it through
-by main force from the other side, and then found, after all, it was
-pushed into the wrong field, so the operation had to be done over again
-in a reverse direction.
-
-But never mind, all this counted in the day's work, and all the trouble
-of it was forgotten after a good night's sleep, or was entirely
-recompensed by some interesting adventure.
-
-The water of the Moselle is so clear that the scenery under the surface
-continually occupied my attention. In one long reach, unusually deep and
-quiet, I happened to be gazing down at some huge trout, and
-accidentally observed a large stone, the upper part of a fine column, at
-the very bottom of the water, at least ten feet below me. The capital
-showed it to be Ionic, and near it was another, a broken pediment of
-large dimensions, and a little further on a pedestal of white marble. I
-carefully examined both banks, to see if a Roman villa or bridge, or
-other ruin, indicated how these subaqueous reliques had come into this
-strange position, and I inquired diligently at Charmes, the next town;
-but although much curiosity was shown on the subject, no information was
-obtained, except that the Romans had built a fort somewhere on the river
-(but plainly not at that spot), so we may consider that the casual
-glance at the fish revealed a curious fragment of the past hitherto
-probably unnoticed.
-
-After pulling along the Moselle, from as near to its source as my canoe
-could find water, until the scenery became dull at Charmes, we went by
-railway from thence to Blainville, on the river Meurthe, which is a
-tributary of the Moselle, for I thought some new scenery might be found
-in this direction. The Rob Roy was therefore sent by itself in a
-goods-train, the very first separation between us for three months. It
-seemed as if the little boat, leaning on its side in the truck, turned
-from me reproachfully, and we foreboded all sorts of accidents to its
-delicate frame, but the only thing lost was a sponge, a necessary
-appendage to a boat's outfit when you desire to keep it perfectly dry
-and clean.
-
-Two railway porters, with much good-humoured laughing, carried the Rob
-Roy from the station to the river's edge, and again we paddled cheerily
-along, and on a new river, too, with scenery and character quite
-different from that of the Moselle.
-
-The Meurthe winds through rich plains of soft earth, with few rocks and
-little gravel. But then in its shallows it has long thick mossy weeds,
-all under the surface. These were found to be rather troublesome,
-because they got entangled with my paddle, and since they could not be
-seen beforehand the best channel was not discernible, as where rocks or
-gravel give those various forms of ripples which the captain of a canoe
-soon gets to know as if they were a chart telling the number of inches
-of depth. Moreover, when you get grounded among these long weeds, all
-pointed down stream, it is very difficult to "back out," for it is like
-combing hair against the grain.
-
-The larger rivers in France are all thoroughly fished. In every nook you
-find a fisherman. They are just as numerous here as in Germany they are
-rare. And yet one would think that fishing is surely more adapted to the
-contemplative German than to the vivacious French. Yet, here they are
-by hundreds, both men and women, and every day, each staring intently on
-a tiny float, or at the grasshopper bait, and quite satisfied if now and
-then he can pull up a gudgeon the size of your thumb.
-
-[Illustration: "French Fishers."]
-
-Generally, these people are alone, and when they asked me at hotels if I
-did not feel lonely in the canoe, the answer was, "Look at your
-fishermen, for hours by choice alone. They have something to occupy
-attention every moment, and so have I." Sometimes, however, there is a
-whole party in one clumsy boat.
-
-The _pater familias_ sits content, and recks not if all his time is
-spent in baiting his line and lighting his pipe. The lazy "hopeful" lies
-at full length on the grass, while a younger brother strains every nerve
-to hook a knowing fish that is laughing at him under water, and winking
-its pale eye to see the fisher just toppling over. Mademoiselle chatters
-whether there are bites or not, and another, the fair cousin, has got on
-shore, where she can bait her hook and set her cap and simper to the
-bold admirer by her side.
-
-Not one of these that I have spoken to had ever seen an artificial fly.
-
-Then besides, we have the fishers with nets. These are generally three
-men in a boat, with its stem and its stern both cocked up, and the whole
-affair looking as if it must upset or sink. Such boats were painted by
-Raphael in the great Cartoons, where all of us must have observed how
-small the boat is compared with the men it carries.
-
-Again, there are some young lads searching under the stones for
-_ecrevisses_, the freshwater prawns, much in request, but giving very
-little food for a great deal of trouble. Near these fishers the pike
-plies his busy sportsman's life below the surface, and I have sometimes
-seen a poor little trout leap high into the air to escape from the
-long-nosed pursuer, who followed him even out of the water, and snapped
-his jaws on the sweet morsel impudently. This sound, added to the very
-suspicious appearance of the Rob Roy gliding among the islands, decides
-the doubtful point with a duck, the leader of a flock of wild ducks that
-have been swimming down stream in front of me with a quick glance on
-each side, every one of them seemingly indignant at this intrusion on
-their haunts; at last they find it really will not do, so with a scream
-and a spring they flap the water and rise in a body to seek if there be
-not elsewhere at least some one nook to nestle in where John Bull does
-not come.
-
-That bell you hear tinkling is at the ferry, to call the ferryman who
-lives at the other side, and he will jump into his clumsy boat, which is
-tied to a pulley running on a rope stretched tight across the river. He
-has only to put his oar obliquely on the gunwale, and the transverse
-pressure of the current brings the boat rapidly to the other bank.
-
-Paddling on, after a chat with the ferryman (and he is sure to be ready
-for that), a wonderful phenomenon appears. We see a house, large, new,
-and of two stories high, it has actually moved. We noticed it a few
-minutes ago, and now it has changed its position. I gaze in
-astonishment, and while we ponder, lo! the whole house entirely
-disappears. Now, the true explanation of this is soon found when we get
-round the next corner of the reach;--the house is a great wooden bathing
-"etablissement," built on a barge, and it is being slowly dragged up the
-stream.
-
-After wonder comes sentiment. Three women are seen on the river-bank
-evidently in great alarm: a mother, a daughter, and a servant maid, who
-searched in vain for two boys, supposed to have gone away to fish, but
-now missing for many hours. They eagerly inquired if I had seen the
-lads, and implored me with tears to give them advice.
-
-I tried all I could to recollect, but no! I had not seen the boys, and
-so the women went away distracted, and left me sorrowful--who would not
-be so at a woman's tears, a mother's too? But suddenly, when toiling in
-the middle of a very difficult piece of rock-work, lowering the boat, I
-remembered having seen those boys, so I ran over the fields after the
-anxious mamma and soon assured her the children had been safe an hour
-ago, and their faithful servant with them, but that _he_ had become the
-fisherman, and they, like boys, had got tired of the rod, and were
-playing with a goat.
-
-When the poor mother heard we had seen the little fellows and they were
-safe, her tears of joy were quite affecting, and they vividly recalled
-one's schoolboy days, when the thoughtless playtime of childhood so
-often entails anxiety on a loving mother's heart.
-
-Such, then, are the river sights and river wonders, ever new, though
-trifling perhaps when told, but far more lively and entertaining than
-the common incidents of a dusty road, or a whirring, shrieking train.
-
-With a few wadings and bumpings, and one or two "vannes," or weirs, we
-slipped along pleasantly until evening came. Still it was only a slow
-stream, and the towers of St. Nicholas, long visible on the horizon,
-seemed ever to move from side to side without being any nearer, so much
-does this river wind in its course. I paddled at my best pace, but the
-evening rapidly grew darker, until we overtook two French youths in a
-boat, the first occasion on which we had noticed Frenchmen rowing for
-exercise. They could not keep up with the canoe, so we had to leave them
-ingloriously aground on a bank, and yet too lazy to get out and help
-their boat over the difficulty.
-
-Soon after I came to a great weir about fifteen feet in height, the
-deepest we had yet encountered, and half a sigh was heaved when it was
-evident that there was no escape from all the bother of getting out and
-gymnasticizing here after a long day's work. It was a matter of some
-time and trouble to get the boat over this weir in the dark; but what
-was far worse immediately followed, as I found myself in a maze of
-shallows, without light to see how to get through them. Whenever we
-stopped, too, for rest, there was only darkness, silence, and no
-motion--not even the excitement of a current to arouse. Finally, I had
-to wade and haul the boat along, and jump in and ferry myself over the
-pools, for nearly half a mile, until at length the "look-out" man of our
-starboard watch shouted, "A bridge and a house on the lee bow!" and a
-joyous cheer burst forth from the crew.
-
-All this, which may be told in a few sentences, took a full hour of very
-tiresome work, though, as there was no current, there was no danger, and
-it was merely tedious, wet, unlighted, and uncomfortable. Nevertheless I
-sang and whistled all the time.
-
-When the bridge was arrived at, I was sure it must be a town, and then
-there happened a scene almost an exact counterpart of that which took
-place at Gegglingen, on the Danube.
-
-I pulled up my boat on the dark shore, and, all dripping wet, I mounted
-to the house above, and speedily aroused the inmates. A window opened,
-and a worthy couple appeared in their night-dresses, holding a candle to
-examine the intruder. The tableau was most comical. The man asked, "Is
-it a farce?" He could scarcely expect a traveller from England to arrive
-there at such an hour. But he soon helped me to carry the boat to a
-little Restaurant, where a dozen men were drinking, who rushed out with
-lamps to look at the boat, but entirely omitted to help the forlorn
-captain.
-
-Nor was there any room in this Restaurant, so we had to carry the boat
-through the dark streets to another house, where another lot of topers
-received me in like style. We put the Rob Roy into a garden here, and
-her sails flapped next morning while a crowd gazed over the walls with
-anxious curiosity. The worthy husband who had thus left his spouse that
-he might carry my wet boat, all slippery with mud, was highly pleased
-with a five-franc piece, which was the least I thought him to deserve,
-though it was like a five-pound note to him in such a cheap country.
-
-Next morning in the light of day we had a survey of the scene of last
-night's adventure. It was very amusing to trace the various channels we
-had groped about in the darkness.
-
-Here I met a French gentleman, of gay and pleasant manner, but who
-bemoaned his lot as Secretary of a great factory in this outlandish
-place, instead of being in joyous, thoughtless, brilliant Paris, where,
-he said, often for days together he did not sleep in bed, but ran one
-night into the next by balls, theatres, and supper parties.
-
-He kindly took me to see the great salt works, that send refined salt
-all over Europe. This rock salt is hoisted out of a deep mine, in blocks
-like those of coal, having been hewn from the strata below, which are
-pierced by long and lofty galleries. Then it is covered in tanks by
-water, which becomes saturated, and is conducted to flat evaporating
-pans, when the water is expelled by the heat of great furnaces, and the
-salt appears in masses like snow-drift. Salt that is sold by weight they
-judiciously wet again, and other qualities sold by measure they cleverly
-deposit in crooked crystals, so as to take up as much space as possible!
-
-We found a canal here, and as the river was so shallow I mounted to the
-artificial channel, and with a strong and fair wind was soon sailing
-along rapidly. This canal has plenty of traffic upon it, and only a few
-locks; so it was by no means tedious. They asked for my card of
-permission, but I smiled the matter off as before. However, an officer
-of the canal who was walking alongside looked much more seriously at the
-infringement of rules, and when we came to a lock he insisted we must
-produce the "carte." As a last resort, I showed him the well-worn
-sketch-book, and then he at once gave in. In fact, after he had laughed
-at the culprit's caricatures, how could he gravely sentence him to
-penalties?
-
-It is wonderful how a few lines of drawing will please these outlying
-country people. Sometimes we gave a small sketch to a man when it was
-desirable to get rid of him: he was sure to take it away to show
-outside, and when he returned I had departed. Once we gave a little girl
-a portrait of her brother, and next morning she brought it again all
-crumpled up. Her mother said the child had held it all night in her
-hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
- Ladies in muslin--Officers shouting--Volunteers'
- umbrella--Reims--Leaks--Wet--Madame Clicquot--Heavy
- blow--Dinner talk--The Elephant--Cloud.
-
-
-The canal brought me to Nancy, a fine old town, with an archbishop, a
-field-marshal, a good hotel, large washhand basins, drums, bugles, ices,
-and all the other luxuries of life. In the cathedral there was more
-tawdry show about the Mass than I ever remarked before, even in Italy.
-At least thirty celebrants acted in the performance, and the bowings and
-turnings and grimaces of sedate old men clad in gorgeous, dirty
-needlework, fumbling with trifles and muttering Latin, really passed all
-bounds: they were an insult to the population, who are required to
-attend this vicarious worship, and to accept such absurdities as the
-true interpretation of "This do in remembrance of Me."
-
-A large and attentive congregation, nearly all women, listened first to
-an eloquent sermon from a young priest who glorified an old saint. It is
-possible that the ancient worthy was a most respectable monk, but
-probably he was, when he lived, a good deal like the monks one meets in
-the monasteries, and now that I have lived pretty frequently with these
-gentlemen I must say it makes one smile to think of canonizing such
-people, as if any one of them had unapproachable excellence; but perhaps
-this monk distinguished himself by proper daily ablutions, and so earned
-the rare reputation of being reasonably clean.
-
-In the afternoon the relics of the monk were borne through the streets
-by a procession of some thousand women and a few men. These ladies, some
-hundreds of whom were dressed in white muslin, and in two single ranks,
-chanted as they slowly marched, and all the bystanders took off their
-hats, but I really could not see what adoration was due to the
-mouldering bones of a withered friar, so my excellent straw hat was kept
-on my head.
-
-But the French, who live in public, must have a public religion, a
-gregarious worship, with demonstrative action and colours and sounds.
-Deep devotion, silent in its depth, is for the north and not for this
-radiant sun, though you will find that quiet worship again in lower
-latitudes where the very heat precludes activity.
-
-Some twenty years ago, one of the ablest men of the University of
-Cambridge read a paper on the influence which the insular position and
-the climate of Britain has upon our national character, and it appeared
-to be proved clearly that this influence pervades every feature of our
-life.
-
-In a third-rate French town like Nancy, nearly all the pleasant
-_agrements_ depend on the climate, and would be sadly curtailed by rain
-or snow. So, again, when a Frenchman visits England and gets laughed at
-for mistakes in our difficult language, and has to eat only two dishes
-for dinner, and drinks bad coffee, and has no evening lounge in the open
-air, and is then told to look at our domestic life, and finds he cannot
-get an entrance there (for how very few French do enter there), his
-miseries are directly caused by our climate, and no wonder his
-impression of Albion is that we are all fog and cotton and smoke, and
-everything _triste_.
-
-From Nancy we sent the canoe by rail to meet me on the river Marne, and
-while the slow luggage-train lumbered along I took the opportunity of
-visiting the celebrated Camp of Châlons, the Aldershot of France. An
-omnibus takes you from the railway station, and you soon enter a long
-straggling street of very little houses, built badly, and looking as if
-one and all could be pushed down by your hand. These are not the
-military quarters, but the self-grown parasite sutlers' town, which
-springs up near every camp. Here is "Place Solferino," and there "Rue
-Malakhoff," where the sign of the inn is a Chinaman having his pigtail
-lopped off by a Français. The camp is in the middle of a very large
-plain, with plenty of dust and white earth, which "glared" on my eyes
-intensely, this being the hottest day I have experienced during the
-vacation. But there are trees for shade, and a good deal of grass on
-these extensive downs where great armies can manoeuvre and march past
-the Emperor as he sits enthroned under a bower on that hill-crest
-overlooking all.
-
-The permanent buildings for the troops consist of about 500 separate
-houses, substantial, airy, and well lighted, all built of brick, and
-slated, and kept in good repair; each of these is about seventy feet
-long, twenty broad, and of one story high. A million and a-half pounds
-sterling have already been expended on this camp. Behind the quarters
-are the soldiers' gardens, a feature added lately to the camps in
-England. There were only a few thousand soldiers at the place, so we
-soon saw all that was interesting, and then adjourned to a Restaurant,
-where I observed about twenty officers go in a body to breakfast. This
-they did in a separate room, but their loud, coarse, and outrageously
-violent conversation really amazed me. The din was monstrous and
-without intermission. We had never before fallen in with so very bad a
-specimen of French manners, and I cannot help thinking there may have
-been special reasons for these men bellowing for half an hour as they
-ate their breakfast.
-
-The "mess system" has been tried in the French army several times, but
-it seems to fail always, as the French Clubs do, on the whole. It is not
-wise, however, for a traveller to generalize too rapidly upon the
-character of any portion of a great people if he has not lived long
-among them. A hasty glance may discern that a stranger has a long nose,
-but you must have better acquaintance with him before you can truly
-describe the character of your friend. In a little book just published
-in France about the English Bar two facts are noted, that Barristers put
-the name of their "Inn" on their visiting cards, and that the Temple
-Volunteers are drilled admirably by a Serjeant-at-Law, who wields "an
-umbrella with a varnished cover, which glances in the sun like a sword"!
-
-Another interesting town in this department of France is Rheims (spelt
-Reims, and pronounced very nearly Rens). Having still an hour or two
-free, I went there, and enjoyed the visit to the very splendid
-cathedral. It is one of the finest in Europe, very old, very large,
-very rich, and celebrated as the place of coronation for the French
-sovereigns. Besides all this it is kept in good order, and is remarkably
-clean. The outside is covered with stone figures, most of them rude in
-art, but giving at a distance an appearance of prodigal richness of
-material. A little periodical called _France Illustrated_ is published
-at fourpence each number, with a map of the Department, several woodcuts
-of notable places or events, and a brief history of the principal towns,
-concluding with a _résumé_ of the statistics of the Department. A
-publication of this kind would, I think, be very useful in England; and
-for travellers especially, who could purchase at the County town the
-particular number or part then required.
-
-In one of the adjoining Departments, according to this publication, it
-appears that there are about a hundred suicides in the year among a
-population of half a million. Surely this is an alarming proportion; and
-what should we say if Manchester had to report 100 men and women in one
-year who put themselves to death?
-
-But we are subsiding, you see, into the ordinary tales of a traveller,
-because I am waiting now for the train and the Rob Roy, and certainly
-this my only experience of widowerhood made me long again for the
-well-known yellow oaken side of the boat and her pink-brown cedar
-varnished top.
-
-Well, next morning here is the canoe at Epernay, arrived all safe at a
-cost of 2_s._ 6_d._ All safe we thought at first, but we soon found it
-had been sadly bruised, and would surely leak. I turned it upside down
-on the railway platform in the hot sun, and bought two candles and
-occupied three good hours in making repairs and greasing all the seams.
-But after all this trouble, when we put the boat into the Marne, the
-water oozed in all round.
-
-It is humiliating to sit in a leaky boat--it is like a lame horse or a
-crooked gun; of all the needful qualities of a boat the first is to keep
-out the water. So I stopped at the first village, and got a man to mix
-white lead and other things, and we carefully worked this into all the
-seams, leaving it to harden while I had my breakfast in the little
-auberge close by the shore, where they are making the long rafts to go
-down to Paris, and where hot farmers come to sip their two-penny bottle
-of wine.
-
-The raft man was wonderfully proud of his performance with the canoe,
-and he called out to each of his friends as they walked past, to give
-them its long history in short words. When I paid him at last, he said
-he hoped I would never forget that the canoe had been thoroughly mended
-in the middle of France, at the village of ----, but I really do not
-remember the name.
-
-However, there were not wanting tests of his workmanship, for the Rob
-Roy had to be pulled over many dykes and barriers on the Marne. Some of
-these were of a peculiar construction, and were evidently novel in
-design.
-
-A "barrage" reached across the stream, and there were three steps or
-falls on it, with a plateau between each. The water ran over these
-steps, and was sometimes only a few inches in depth on the crest of each
-fall, where it had to descend some eight or ten inches at most.
-
-This, of course, would have been easy enough for the canoe to pass, but
-then a line of iron posts was ranged along each plateau, and chains were
-tied from the top of one post to the bottom of another, diagonally, and
-it will be understood that this was a very puzzling arrangement to steer
-through in a fast current.
-
-In cases of this sort I usually got ashore to reconnoitre, and having
-calculated the angle at which we must enter the passage obliquely (down
-a fall, and across its stream), I managed to get successfully through
-several of these strange barriers. We came at length to one which, on
-examination, I had to acknowledge was "impassable," for the chains were
-slack, and there was only an inch or two of "law" on either side of the
-difficult course through them.
-
-[Illustration: "The Chain Barrier."]
-
-However, a man happened to see my movements and the canoe, and soon he
-called some dozen of his fellow navvies from their work to look at the
-navigator.
-
-The captain was therefore incited by these spectators to try the
-passage, and I mentally resolved at any rate to be cool and placid,
-however much discomfiture was to be endured. The boat was steered to the
-very best of my power, but the bow of the canoe swerved an inch in the
-swift oblique descent, and instantly it got locked in the chains, while
-I quietly got out (whistling an air in slow time), and then, in the
-water with all my clothes on, I steadily lifted the boat through the
-iron network and got into her, dripping wet, but trying to behave as if
-it were only the usual thing. The navvies cheered a long and loud bravo!
-but I felt somewhat ashamed of having yielded to the desire for ignorant
-applause, and when finally round the next corner I got out and changed
-my wet things, a wiser and a sadder man, but dry.
-
-This part of the river is in the heart of the champagne country, and all
-the softly swelling hills about are thickly covered by vineyards. The
-vine for champagne is exceedingly small, and grows round one stick, and
-the hillside looks just like a carding-brush, from the millions of these
-little sharp-pointed rods upright in the ground and close together,
-without any fence whatever between the innumerable lots. The grape for
-champagne is always red, and never white, so they said, though "white
-grapes are grown for eating." During the last two months few people have
-consumed more grapes in this manner than the chief mate of the Rob Roy
-canoe.
-
-On one of these hills we noticed the house of Madame Clicquot, whose
-name has graced many a cork of champagne bottles and of bottles not
-champagne.
-
-The vineyards of Ai, near Epernay, are the most celebrated for their
-wine. After the bottles are filled, they are placed neck downwards, and
-the sediment collects near the cork. Each bottle is then uncorked in
-this position, and the confined gas forces out a little of the wine with
-the sediment, while a skilful man dexterously replaces the cork when
-this sediment has been expelled. One would think that only a very
-skilful man can perform such a feat. When the bottles are stored in
-"caves," or vast cellars, the least change of temperature causes them to
-burst by hundreds. Sometimes one-fourth of the bottles explode in this
-manner, and it is said that the renowned Madame Clicquot lost 400,000 in
-the hot autumn of 1843, before sufficient ice could be fetched from
-Paris to cool her spacious cellars. Every year about fifty million
-bottles of genuine champagne are made in France, and no one can say how
-many more millions of bottles of "French champagne" are imbibed every
-year by a confiding world.
-
-The Marne is a large and deep river, and its waters are kept up by
-barriers every few miles. It is rather troublesome to pass these by
-taking the boat out and letting it down on the other side, and in
-crossing one of them I gave a serious blow to the stern of the canoe
-against an iron bar. This blow started four planks from the sternpost,
-and revealed to me also that the whole frame had suffered from the
-journey at night on an open truck. However, as my own ship's carpenter
-was on board, and had nails and screws, we soon managed to make all
-tight again, and by moonlight came to Dormans, where I got two men to
-carry the boat as usual to an hotel, and had the invariable run of
-visitors from that time until everybody went to bed.
-
-It is curious to remark the different names by which the canoe has been
-called, and among these the following:--"_Batteau_," "_schiff_,"
-"_bôt_," "_barca_," "_canôt_," "_caique_" (the soldiers who have been in
-the Crimea call it thus), "_chaloupe_" "_navire_," "_schipp_" (Low
-German), "_yacht_" ("jacht"--Danish, "jaht," from "jagen," to ride
-quickly--properly a boat drawn by horses). Several people have spoken of
-it as "_batteau à vapeur_," for in the centre of France they have never
-seen a steamboat, but the usual name with the common people is "_petit
-batteau_" and among the educated people "_nacelle_" or "_perissoir_;"
-this last as we call a dangerous boat a "coffin" or "sudden death."
-
-An early start next morning found me slipping along with a tolerable
-current and under sail before a fine fresh breeze, but with the same
-unalterable blue sky. I had several interesting conversations with
-farmers and others riding to market along the road which here skirts the
-river. What most surprises the Frenchman is that a traveller can
-possibly be happy alone! Not one hour have I had of _ennui_, and,
-however selfish it may seem, it is true that for this sort of journey I
-prefer to travel entirely _seul_.
-
-Pleasant trees and pretty gardens are here on every side in plenty, but
-where are the houses of the gentlemen of France, and where are the
-French gentlemen themselves? This is a difference between France and
-England which cannot fail to "knock" the observant traveller (as Artemus
-Ward would say)--the notable absence of country seats during hours and
-hours of passage along the best routes; whereas in England the prospect
-from almost every hill of woodland would have a great house at the end
-of its vista, and the environs of every town would stretch into outworks
-of villas smiling in the sun. The French have ways and fashions which
-are not ours, but their nation is large enough to entitle them to a
-standard of their own, just as the Americans, with so great a people
-agreed on the matter, may surely claim liberty to speak with a twang,
-and to write of a "plow."
-
-I am convinced that it is a mistake to say we Britons are a silent
-people compared with the French or Americans. At some hundred sittings
-of the table d'hôte in both these countries I have found more of dull,
-dead silence than in England at our inns. An Englishman accustomed only
-to the pleasant chat of a domestic dinner feels ill at ease when dining
-with strangers, and so he notices their silence all the more; but the
-French table d'hôte (not in the big barrack hotels, for English
-tourists, we have before remarked upon) has as little general
-conversation, and an American one has far less than in England.
-
-Here in France come six or seven middle-class men to dine. They put the
-napkin kept for each from yesterday, and recognized by the knots they
-tied on it, up to their chins like the pinafore of a baby, and wipe
-plate, fork, and spoons with the other end, and eat bits and scraps of
-many dishes, and scrape their plates almost clean, and then depart, and
-not one word has been uttered.
-
-Then, again, there is the vaunted French climate. Bright sun, no doubt,
-but forget not that it is so very bright as to compel all rooms to be
-darkened from ten to four each day. At noon the town is like a cemetery;
-no one thinks of walking, riding, or looking out of his window in the
-heat. From seven to nine in the morning, and from an hour before sunset
-to any time you please at night, the open air is delicious. But I
-venture to say that in a week of common summer weather we see more of
-the sun in England than in France, for we seldom have so much of it at
-once as to compel us to close our eyes against its fierce rays. In fact,
-the sensation of life in the South, after eleven o'clock in the morning,
-is that of _waiting for the cool hours_, and so day after day is a
-continual reaching forward to something about to come; whereas, an
-English day of sunshine is an enjoyable present from beginning to end.
-Once more, let it be remembered that twilight lasts only for half an
-hour in the sunny South; that delicious season of musing and long
-shadows is a characteristic of the northern latitudes which very few
-Southerners have ever experienced at all.
-
-The run down the Marne for about 200 miles was a pleasant part of the
-voyage, but seldom so exciting in adventure as the paddling on unknown
-waters. Long days of work could therefore be now well endured, for
-constant exercise had trained the body, and a sort of instinct was
-enough, when thus educated by experience, to direct the mind. Therefore
-the Rob Roy's paddle was in my hands for ten hours at a time without
-weariness, and sometimes even for twelve hours at a stretch.
-
-After a comfortable night at Chateau Thierry in the Elephant Hotel,
-which is close to the water, I took my canoe down from the hayloft to
-which it had been hoisted, and once more launched her on the river. The
-current gradually increased, and the vineyards gave place to forest
-trees. See, there are the rafts, some of casks, lashed together with
-osiers, some of planks, others of hewn logs, and others of great rough
-trees. There is a straw hut on them for the captain's cabin, and the
-crew will have a stiff fortnight's work to drag, push, and steer this
-congeries of wood on its way to the Seine. The labour spent merely in
-adjusting and securing the parts is enormous, but labour of that kind
-costs little here.
-
-Further on there is a large flock of sheep conducted to the river to
-drink, in the orthodox pastoral manner of picture-books. But (let us
-confess it) they were also driven by the sagacious shepherd's dogs, who
-seem to know perfectly that the woolly multitude has come precisely to
-drink, and, therefore, the dogs cleverly press forward each particular
-sheep, until it has got a place by the cool brink of the water.
-
-In the next quiet bay a village maid drives her cow to the river, and
-chats across the water with another, also leading in a cow to wade knee
-deep, and to dip its broad nose, and lift it gently again from the cool
-stream. On the road alongside is a funny little waggon, and a whole
-family are within. This concern is actually drawn along by a goat. Its
-little kid skips about, for the time of toil has not yet come to the
-youngling, and it may gambol now.
-
-But here is the bridge of Nogent, so I leave my boat in charge of an old
-man, and give positive pleasure to the cook at the auberge by ordering a
-breakfast. Saints' portraits adorn the walls, and a "sampler" worked by
-some little girl, with only twenty-five letters in the alphabet, for the
-"w" is as yet ignored in classic grammars, though it has now to be
-constantly used in the common books and newspapers. Why, they even adopt
-our sporting terms, and you see in a paper that such a race was only "un
-Walkover," and that another was likely to be "un dead heat."
-
-Suddenly in my quiet paddling here the sky was shaded, and on looking up
-amazed I found a cloud; at last, after six weeks of brilliant blue and
-scorching glare, one fold of the fleecy curtain has been drawn over the
-sun.
-
-The immediate effect of this cooler sky was very invigorating, though,
-after weeks of hot glare (reflected upwards again into the face from
-the water), it seemed the most natural thing to be always in a blaze of
-light, for much of the inconvenience of it was avoided by a plan which
-will be found explained in the Appendix, with some other hints to
-"Boating Men."
-
-The day went pleasantly now, and with only the events of ordinary times,
-which need not be recounted. The stream was steady, the banks were
-peopled, and many a blue-bloused countryman stopped to look at the canoe
-as she glided past, with the captain's socks and canvas shoes on the
-deck behind him, for this was his drying-place for wet clothes.
-
-Now and then a pleasure-boat was seen, and there were several canoes at
-some of the towns, but all of them flat-bottomed and open, and
-desperately unsafe--well named "perissoirs." Some of these were made of
-metal. The use of this is well-known to be a great mistake for any boat
-under ten tons; in all such cases it is much heavier than wood of the
-same strength, considering the strains which a boat must expect to
-undergo.
-
-"La Ferté sous Jouarre" is the long name of the next stopping-place.
-There are several towns called by the name La Ferté (La Fortifié), which
-in some measure corresponds with the termination "caster" or "cester" of
-English names. Millstones are the great specialty of this La Ferté. A
-good millstone costs 50_l._, and there is a large exportation of them.
-The material has the very convenient property of not requiring to be
-chipped into holes, as these exist in this stone naturally.
-
-At La Ferté I put the boat into a hayloft; how often it has occupied
-this elevated lodgings amongst its various adventures; and at dinner
-with me there is an intelligent and hungry bourgeois from Paris, with
-his vulgar and hearty wife, and opposite to them the gossip of the town,
-who kept rattling on the stupid, endless fiddle-faddle of everybody's
-doings, sayings, failings, and earnings. Some amusement, however,
-resulted from the collision of two gossips at our table of four guests,
-for while the one always harped upon family tales of La Ferté, its local
-statistics, and the minute sayings of its people, the other kept
-struggling to turn our thoughts to shoes and slippers, for he was a
-commercial traveller with a cartful of boots to sell. But, after all,
-how much of our conversation in better life is only of the same kind,
-though about larger, or at any rate different things; what might sound
-trifles to our British Cabinet would be the loftiest politics of
-Honolulu.
-
-When we started at eight o'clock next day I felt an unaccountable
-languor; my arms were tired, and my energy seemed, for the first time,
-deficient. This was the result of a week's hard exercise, and of a
-sudden change of wind to the south. Give me our English climate for real
-hard work to prosper in.
-
-One generally associates the north wind with cool and bracing air, and
-certainly in the Mediterranean it is the change of wind to the south,
-the hated _sirocce_, that enervates the traveller at once. But this
-north wind on the Marne came over a vast plain of arid land heated by
-two months of scorching sun, whereas the breezes of last week, though
-from the east, had been tempered in passing over the mountains of the
-Vosges.
-
-Forty-two miles lay before me to be accomplished before arriving
-to-night at my resting-place for Sunday, and it was not a pleasant
-prospect to contemplate with stiff muscles in the shoulders. However,
-after twelve miles I found that about twenty miles in turnings of the
-river could be cut off by putting the boat on a cart, and thus a league
-of walking and 3_s._ 4_d._ of payment solved the difficulty. The old man
-with his cart was interesting to talk to, and we spoke about those deep
-subjects which are of common interest to all.
-
-At a turn in the road we came upon a cart overturned and with a little
-crowd round it, while the earth was covered with a great pool of what
-seemed to be blood, but was only wine. The cart had struck a tree, and
-the wine-cask on it instantly burst, which so frightened the horse that
-he overset the cart.
-
-The Rob Roy was soon in the water again, and the scenery had now become
-much more enjoyable.
-
-I found an old soldier at a ferry who fetched me a bottle of wine, and
-then he and his wife sat in their leaky, flat, green-painted boat, and
-became very great friends with the Englishman. He had been at the taking
-of Constantine in Algeria, a place which really does look quite
-impossible to be taken by storm. But the appearance of a fortress is
-deceptive except to the learned in such matters. Who would think that
-Comorn, in Hungary, is stronger than Constantine? When you get near
-Comorn there is nothing to see, and it is precisely because of this that
-it was able to resist so long.
-
-The breeze soon freshened till I hoisted my sails and was fairly wafted
-on to Meaux, so that, after all, the day, begun with forebodings, became
-as easy and as pleasant as the rest.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
- Meaux on the Marne--Hammering--Popish forms--Wise dogs--Blocked
- in a tunnel--A dry voyage--Arbour and garret--Odd
- fellows--Dream on the Seine--Almost over--No
- admittance--Charing-cross.
-
-
-There are three hemispheres of scenery visible to the traveller who
-voyages thus in a boat on the rivers. First, the great arch of sky, and
-land, and trees, and flowers down to the water's brink; then the whole
-of this reflected beautifully in the surface of the river; and then the
-wondrous depths in the water itself, with its animal life, its rocks and
-glades below, and its flowers and mosses. Now rises the moon so clear,
-and with the sky around it so black that no "man in the moon" can be
-seen.
-
-At the hotel we find a whole party of guests for the marriage-dinner of
-a newly-wedded pair. The younger portion of the company adjourn to the
-garden and let off squibs and crackers, so it seems to be a good time to
-exhibit some of my signal lights from my bedroom-window, and there is
-much cheering as the Englishman illumines the whole neighbourhood. Next
-day the same people all assembled for the marriage breakfast, and
-sherry, madeira, and champagne flowed from the well-squeezed purse of
-the bride's happy father.
-
-I have noticed that the last sound to give way to the stillness of the
-night in a village is that of the blacksmith's hammer, which is much
-more heard abroad than at home. Perhaps this is because much of their
-execrable French ironwork is made in each town; whereas in England it is
-manufactured by machinery in great quantities and at special places. At
-any rate, after travelling on the Continent long enough to become calm
-and observant, seeing, hearing, and, we may add, scenting all around,
-the picture in the mind is full of blue dresses, white stones, jingling
-of bells, and the "cling, cling" of the never idle blacksmith.
-
-This town of Meaux has a bridge with houses on it, and great mill-wheels
-filling up the arches as they used to do in old London-bridge. Pleasant
-gardens front the river, and cafés glitter there at night. These are not
-luxuries but positive necessaries of life for the Frenchman, and it is
-their absence abroad which--we believe--is one chief cause of his being
-so bad a colonist, for the Frenchman has only the expression "with me"
-for "home," and no word for "wife" but "woman."
-
-The cathedral of Meaux is grand and old, and see how they masquerade
-the service in it! Look at the gaunt "Suisse," with his cocked-hat kept
-on in church, with his sword and spear. The twenty priests and twelve
-red-surpliced boys intone to about as many hearers. A monk escorted
-through the church makes believe to sprinkle holy water on all sides
-from that dirty plasterer's brush, and then two boys carry on their
-shoulders a huge round loaf, the "pain benit," which, after fifty
-bowings, is blessed, and escorted back to be cut up, and is then given
-in morsels to the congregation. These endless ceremonies are the meshes
-of the net of Popery, and they are well woven to catch many Frenchmen,
-who must have action, show, the visible tangible outside, whatever may
-be meant by it.
-
-This service sets one a-thinking. Some form there must be in worship.
-One may suppose, indeed, that perfect spirit can adore God without
-attitude, or even any sequence or change. Yet in the Bible we hear of
-Seraphs veiling their bodies with their wings, and of elders prostrate
-at certain times, and saints that have a litany even in heaven. Mortals
-must have some form of adoration, but there is the question, How much?
-and on this great point how many wise and foolish men have written books
-without end, or scarcely any effect!
-
-The riverside was a good place for a quiet Sunday walk. Here a flock of
-300 sheep had come to drink, and nibble at the flowers hanging over the
-water, and the simple-hearted shepherd stood looking on while his dogs
-rushed backward and forward, yearning for some sheep to do wrong, that
-their dog service might be required to prevent or to punish naughty
-conduct. This "Berger" inquires whether England is near Africa, and how
-large our legs of mutton are, and if we have sheep-dogs, and are there
-any rivers in our island on the sea. Meanwhile at the hotel the marriage
-party kept on "breakfasting," even until four o'clock, and non-melodious
-songs were sung. The French, as a people, do not excel in vocal music,
-either in tone or in harmony, but then they are precise in time.
-
-Afloat again next morning, and quite refreshed, we prepared for a long
-day's work. The stream was now clear, and the waving tresses of dark
-green weeds gracefully curved under water, while islands amid deep shady
-bays varied the landscape above.
-
-I saw a canal lock open, and paddled in merely for variety, passing soon
-into a tunnel, in the middle of which there was a huge boat fixed, and
-nobody with it. The boat exactly filled the tunnel, and the men had gone
-to their dinner, so I had first to drag their huge boat out, and then
-the canoe proudly glided into daylight, having a whole tunnel to itself.
-
-At Lagny, where we were to breakfast, I left my boat with a nice old
-gentleman, who was fishing in a nightcap and spectacles, and he assured
-me he would stop there two hours. But when I scrambled back to it
-through the mill (the miller's men amazed among their wholesome dusty
-sacks), the disconsolate Rob Roy was found to be all alone, the first
-time she had been left in a town an "unprotected female."
-
-To escape a long serpent wind of the river, we entered another canal and
-found it about a foot deep, with clear water flowing pleasantly. This
-seemed to be very fortunate, and it was enjoyed most thoroughly for a
-few miles, little knowing what was to come. Presently weeds began, then
-clumps of great rushes, then large bushes and trees, all growing with
-thick grass in the water, and at length this got so dense that the
-prospect before me was precisely like a very large hayfield, with grass
-four feet high, all ready to be mowed, but which had to be mercilessly
-rowed through.
-
-This on a hot day without wind, and in a long vista, unbroken by a man
-or a house, or anything lively, was rather daunting, but we had gone too
-far to recede with honour, and so by dint of pushing and working I
-actually got the boat through some miles of this novel obstruction
-(known only this summer), and brought her safe and sound again to the
-river. At one place there was a bridge over this wet marsh, and two men
-happened to be going over it as the canoe came near. They soon called to
-some neighbours, and the row of spectators exhibited the faculty so
-notable in French people and so rarely found with us, that of being able
-to keep from laughing right out at a foreigner in an awkward case. The
-absurd sight of a man paddling a boat amid miles of thick rushes was
-indeed a severe test of courteous gravity. However, I must say that the
-labour required to penetrate this marsh was far less than one would
-suppose from the appearance of the place. The sharp point of the boat
-entered, and its smooth sides followed through hedges, as it were, of
-aquatic plants, and, on the whole (and after all was done!), I preferred
-the trouble and muscular effort required then to that of the monotonous
-calm of usual canal sailing.
-
-[Illustration: "Canal Miseries."]
-
-Fairly in the broad river again the Rob Roy came to Neuilly, and it was
-plain that my Sunday rest had enabled over thirty miles to be
-accomplished without any fatigue at the end. With some hesitation we
-selected an inn on the water-side. The canoe was taken up to it and put
-on a table in a summer-house, while my own bed was in a garret where one
-could not stand upright--the only occasion where I have been badly
-housed; and pray let no one be misled by the name of this abode--"The
-Jolly Rowers."
-
-Next day the river flowed fast again, and numerous islands made the
-channels difficult to find. The worst of these difficulties is that you
-cannot prepare for them. No map gives any just idea of your route--the
-people on the river itself are profoundly ignorant of its navigation.
-For instance, in starting, my landlord told me that in two hours we
-should reach Paris. After ten miles an intelligent man said, "Distance
-from Paris? it is six hours from here;" while a third informed me a
-little further on, "It is just three leagues and a half from this spot."
-
-The banks were now dotted with villas, and numerous pleasure-boats were
-moored at neat little stairs. The vast number of these boats quite
-astonished me, and the more so as very few of them were ever to be seen
-in actual use.
-
-The French are certainly ingenious in their boat-making, but more of
-ingenuity than of practical exercise is seen on the water. On several
-rivers we remarked the "walking machine," in which a man can walk on the
-water by fixing two small boats on his feet. A curious mode of rowing
-with your face to the bows has lately been invented by a Frenchman, and
-it is described in the Appendix.
-
-We stopped to breakfast at a new canal cutting, and as there were many
-_gamins_ about, I fastened a stone to my painter and took the boat out
-into the middle of the river, and so left her moored within sight of the
-arbour, where I sat, and also within sight of the ardent-eyed boys who
-gazed for hours with wistful looks on the tiny craft and its fluttering
-flag. Their desire to handle as well as to see is only natural for
-these little fellows, and, therefore, if the lads behave well, I always
-make a point of showing them the whole affair quite near, after they
-have had to abstain from it so long as a forbidden pleasure.
-
-Strange that this quick curiosity of French boys does not ripen more of
-them into travellers, but it soon gets expended in trifling details of a
-narrow circle, while the sober, sedate, nay, the _triste_, Anglian is
-found scurrying over the world with a carpet-bag, and pushing his way in
-foreign crowds without one word of their language, and all the while as
-merry as a lark. Among the odd modes of locomotion adopted by
-Englishmen, we have already mentioned that of the gentleman travelling
-in Germany with a four-in-hand and two spare horses. We met another
-Briton who had made a tour in a road locomotive which he bought for
-700_l._, and sold again at the same price. One more John Bull, who
-regarded the canoe as a "queer conveyance," went himself abroad on a
-velocipede. None of these, however, could cross seas, lakes, and rivers
-like the canoe, which might be taken wherever a man could walk or a
-plank could swim.
-
-It seemed contrary to nature that, after thus nearing pretty Paris,
-one's back was now to be turned upon it for hours in order to have a
-wide, vague, purposeless voyage into country parts. But the river
-willed it so; for here a great curve began and led off to the left,
-while the traffic of the Marne went straight through a canal to the
-right,--through a canal, and therefore I would not follow it there.
-
-The river got less and less in volume; its water was used for the canal,
-and it could scarcely trickle, with its maimed strength, through a
-spacious sweep of real country life. Here we often got grounded, got
-entangled in long mossy weeds, got fastened in overhanging trees, and,
-in fact, suffered all the evils which the smallest brook had ever
-entailed, though this was a mighty river.
-
-The bend was more and more inexplicable, as it turned more round and
-round, till my face was full in the sunlight at noon, and I saw that the
-course was now due south.
-
-Rustics were there to look at me, and wondering herdsmen too, as if the
-boat was in mid Germany, instead of being close to Paris. Evidently
-boating men in that quarter never came here by the river, and the Rob
-Roy was a _rara avis_ floating on a stream unused.
-
-But the circle was rounded at last, as all circles are, however large
-they be; and we got back to the common route, to civilization, fishing
-men and fishing women, and on the broad Marne once more. So here I
-stopped a bit for a ponder.
-
-And now we unmoor for the last time, and enter the Rob Roy for its final
-trip--the last few miles of the Marne, and of more than a thousand miles
-rowed and sailed since we started from England. I will not disguise my
-feeling of sadness then, and I wished that Paris was still another day
-distant.
-
-For this journey in a canoe has been interesting, agreeable, and useful,
-though its incidents may not be realized by reading what has now been
-described. The sensation of novelty, freedom, health, and variety all
-day and every day was what cannot be recited. The close acquaintance
-with the people of strange lands, and the constant observation of nature
-around, and the unremitting attention necessary for progress, all
-combine to make a voyage of this sort improving to the mind thus kept
-alert, while the body thoroughly enjoys life when regular hard exercise
-in the open air dissipates the lethargy of these warmer climes.
-
-These were my thoughts as I came to the Seine and found a cool bank to
-lie upon under the trees, with my boat gently rocking in the ripples of
-the stream below, and the nearer sound of a great city telling that
-Paris was at hand. "Here," said I, "and now is my last hour of life
-savage and free. Sunny days; alone, but not solitary; worked, but not
-weary"--as in a dream the things, places, and men I had seen floated
-before my eyes half closed. The panorama was wide, and fair to the
-mind's eye; but it had a tale always the same as it went quickly
-past--that vacation was over, and work must begin.
-
-Up, then, for this is not a life of mere enjoyment. Again into the
-harness of "polite society," the hat, the collar, the braces, the
-gloves, the waistcoat, the latch-key--perhaps, the razor--certainly the
-umbrella. How every joint and limb will rebel against these manacles,
-but they must be endured!
-
-The gradual approach to Paris by gliding down the Seine was altogether a
-new sensation. By diligence, railway, or steamer, you have nothing like
-it--not certainly by walking into Paris along a dusty road.
-
-For now we are smoothly carried on a wide and winding river, with
-nothing to do but to look and to listen while the splendid panorama
-majestically unfolds. Villas thicken, gardens get smaller as houses are
-closer, trees get fewer as walls increase. Barges line the banks,
-commerce and its movement, luxury and its adornments, spires and cupolas
-grow out of the dim horizon, and then bridges seem to float towards me,
-and the hum of life gets deeper and busier, while the pretty little
-prattling of the river stream yields to the roar of traffic, and to that
-indescribable thrill which throbs in the air around this the capital of
-the Continent, the centre of the politics, the focus of the pleasure and
-the splendour of the world.
-
-In passing the island at Notre Dame I fortunately took the proper side,
-but even then we found a very awkward rush of water under the bridges.
-This was caused by the extreme lowness of the river, which on this very
-day was three feet lower than in the memory of man. The fall over each
-barrier, though wide enough, was so shallow that I saw at the last
-bridge the crowd above me evidently calculated upon my being upset; and
-they were nearly right too. The absence of other boats showed me (now
-experienced in such omens) that some great difficulty was at hand, but I
-also remarked that by far the greater number of observers had collected
-over one particular arch, where at first there seemed to be the very
-worst chance for getting through. By logical deduction I argued, "that
-must be the best arch, after all, for they evidently expect I will try
-it," and, with a horrid presentiment that my first upset was to be at my
-last bridge, I boldly dashed forward--whirl, whirl the waves, and
-grate--grate--my iron keel; but the Rob Roy rises to the occasion, and a
-rewarding Bravo! from the Frenchmen above is answered by a British "All
-right" from the boat below.
-
-No town was so hard to find a place for the canoe in as the bright, gay
-Paris. I went to the floating baths; they would not have me. We paddled
-to the funny old ship; they shook their heads. We tried a coal wharf;
-but they were only civil there. Even the worthy washerwomen, my quondam
-friends, were altogether callous now about a harbour for the canoe.
-
-In desperation we paddled to a bath that was being repaired, but when my
-boat rounded the corner it was met by a volley of abuse from the
-proprietor for disturbing his fishing; he was just in the act of
-expecting the final bite of a _goujon_.
-
-Relenting as we apologized and told the Rob Roy's tale, he housed her
-there for the night; and I shouldered my luggage and wended my way to an
-hotel.
-
-Here is Meurice's, with the homeward tide of Britons from every Alp and
-cave of Europe flowing through its salons. Here are the gay streets, too
-white to be looked at in the sun, and the _poupeé_ theatres under the
-trees, and the dandies driving so stiff in hired carriages, and the
-dapper, little soldiers, and the gilded cafés.
-
-Yes, it is Paris--and more brilliant than ever!
-
-I faintly tried to hope, but--pray pardon me--I utterly failed to
-believe that any person there had enjoyed his summer months with such
-excessive delight as the captain, the purser, the ship's cook, and cabin
-boy of the Rob Roy canoe.
-
-Eight francs take the boat by rail to Calais. Two shillings take her
-thence to Dover. The railway takes her free to Charing Cross, and there
-two porters put her in the Thames again.
-
-A flowing tide, on a sunny evening, bears her fast and cheerily straight
-to Searle's, there to debark the Rob Roy's cargo safe and sound and
-thankful, and to plant once more upon the shore of old England
-
- The flag that braved a thousand miles,
- The rapid and the snag.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-GOSSIP ASHORE ABOUT THINGS AFLOAT.
-
-Those who intend to make a river voyage on the Continent--and several
-canoes are preparing for this purpose--will probably feel interested in
-some of the following information, while other readers of these pages
-may be indulgent enough to excuse the relation of a few particulars and
-technical details.
-
-It is proposed, then, to give, first, a description of the canoe
-considered to be most suitable for a voyage of this sort after
-experience has aided in modifying the dimensions of the boat already
-used; second, an inventory of the cargo or luggage of the Rob Roy, with
-remarks on the subject, for the guidance of future passengers.
-
-Next there will be found some notes upon rocks and currents in broken
-water; and lastly, some further remarks on the "Kent," and a few
-miscellaneous observations upon various points.
-
-Although the Rob Roy and its luggage were not prepared until after much
-cogitation, it is well that intending canoists should have the benefit
-of what experience has since proved as to the faults and virtues of the
-arrangements devised for a first trip, after these have been thoroughly
-tasted in so pleasant a tour.
-
-The best dimensions for the canoe appear to be--length, 14 feet
-[15][XXXVI.]; beam, 26 inches [28], six inches abaft the midship; depth
-outside, from keel to deck, 9 inches; camber, 1 inch [2]; keel, 1 inch,
-with a strip of iron, half an inch broad, carefully secured all the way
-below, and a copper strip up the stem and stern posts, and round the top
-of each of them.
-
- [XXXVI.] The figures in [ ] are the dimensions of the old Rob Roy.
-
-The new canoe now building will have the beam at the water's edge, and
-the upper plank will "topple in," so that the cedar deck will be only 20
-inches wide.
-
-The "well" or opening in the deck should be 4 feet long [4 feet 6
-inches] and 20 inches wide, with a strong combing all round, sloping
-forward, but not more than 1 inch [2] high at the bow end. This opening
-should be semicircular at the ends, both for appearance sake and
-strength and convenience, so as to avoid corners. The macintosh sheet to
-cover this must be strong, to resist constant wear, light coloured, for
-the sun's heat, and so attached as to be readily loosened and made fast
-again, say 20 times a day, and by cords which will instantly break if
-you have to jump out. In the new canoe this macintosh (the most
-difficult part of the equipment to arrange) is 18 inches long, and a
-light wooden hatch covers the fore part, an arrangement found to be most
-successful.
-
-A water-tight compartment in the hull is a mistake. Its partition
-prevents access to breakages within, and arrests the circulation of air,
-and it cannot be kept long perfectly staunch. There should be extra
-timbers near the seat.
-
-The canoe must be so constructed as to endure without injury, (1) to be
-lifted by any part whatever; (2) to be rested on any part; (3) to be sat
-upon while aground, on any part of the deck, the combing, and the
-interior.
-
-Wheels for transport have been often suggested, but they would be
-useless. On plain ground or grass you can readily do without them. On
-rocks and rough ground, or over ditches and through hedges, wheels could
-not be employed, and at all times they would be in the way. Bilge pieces
-are not required. Strength must be had without them, and their
-projections seriously complicate the difficulties of pushing the boat
-over a pointed rock, both when afloat and when ashore; besides, as they
-are not parallel to the keel they very much retard the boat's speed.
-
-The paddle should be 7 feet long (not more), weight, 2 lbs. 9 oz.,
-strong, with blades 6 inches broad, ends rounded, thick, and banded with
-copper. There should be conical cups of vulcanised India rubber to catch
-the dribbling water, and, if possible, some plan (not yet devised) for
-preventing or arresting the drops from the paddle ends, which fall on
-the deck when you paddle slowly, and when there is not enough
-centrifugal force to throw this water away from the boat.
-
-The painter ought to be of the best flexible rope, not tarred, well able
-to bear 200 lb. weight; more than 20 feet of rope is a constant
-encumbrance. The ends should be silk-whipped and secured through a hole
-in the stem post and another in the stern post (so that either or both
-ends can be readily cast off); the slack may be coiled on deck behind
-you.
-
-There should be a back support of two wooden slips, each 15 inches by 3
-inches, placed like the side strokes of the letter H, and an inch apart,
-but laced together with cord, or joined by a strip of cloth. Rest them
-against the edge of the combing, and so as to be free to yield to the
-motion of the back at each stroke, without hurting the spine. If made
-fast so as always to project, they are much in the way of the painter in
-critical times. They may be hinged below so as to fold down as you get
-out, but in this case they are in the way when you are getting in and
-wish to sit down in an instant ready for work.
-
-The mast should be 5 feet long, strong enough to stand gales without
-stays, stepped just forward of the stretcher, in a tube an inch above
-deck, and so as to be struck without difficulty in a squall, or when
-nearing trees, or a bridge, barrier, ferry-rope, bank, or waterfall, or
-when going aground.
-
-The sail, if a lug, should have a fore leach of 3 feet 10 inches, a head
-of 3 feet 6 inches, and a foot of 4 feet 6 inches; yard and boom of
-bamboo.
-
-The boat can well stand more sail than this at sea, or in lakes and
-broad channels, but the foregoing size for a lug is quite large enough
-to manage in stiff breezes and in narrow rocky tortuous rivers.
-
-A spritsail would be better in some respects, but no plan has, as yet,
-been suggested to me for instantly striking the sprit without
-endangering the deck, so I mean to use a lug still.
-
-The material of the sail should be strong cotton, in one piece, without
-any eyelet or hole whatever, but with a broad hem, enclosing
-well-stretched cord all round. A jib is of little use as a sail. It is
-apt to get aback in sudden turns. Besides, you must land either to set
-it or to take in its outhaul, so as to be quite snug. But the jib does
-well to tie on the shoulders when they are turned to a fierce sun. The
-boom should be attached by a brass shackle, so that when "topped" or
-folded its end closes on the top of the mast. The sails (with the boom
-and yard) should be rolled up round the mast compactly, to be stowed
-away forward, so that the end of the mast resting on the stretcher will
-keep the roll of sails out of the wet. The flag and its staff when not
-fast at the mast-head (by two metal loops) should fit into the
-mast-step, and the flag-staff, 24 inches long, should be light, so as
-not to sink if it falls overboard, as one of mine did.
-
-The floor-boards should be strong, and easily detachable, so that one of
-them can be at once used as a paddle if that falls overboard. They
-should come six inches short of the stern end of a light seat, which
-can thus rest on the timbers, so as to be as low as possible, and its
-top should be of strong cane open-work.
-
-The stretcher should have only one length, and let this be carefully
-determined after trial before starting. The two sides of its foot-board
-should be high and broad, while the middle may be cut down to let the
-hand get to the mast. The stretcher should, of course, be moveable, in
-order that you may lie down with the legs at full length for repose.
-
-One brass cleat for belaying the halyard should be on deck, about the
-middle, and on the right-hand side. A stud on the other side, and this
-cleat will do to make the sheet fast to by one turn on either tack.
-
-
-LIST OF STORES ON BOARD THE ROB ROY.
-
-1. _Useful Stores._--Paddle, painter (31 feet at first, but cut down to
-20 feet), sponge, waterproof cover, 5 feet by 2 feet 3 inches, silk blue
-union jack, 10 inches by 8 inches, on a staff 2 feet long. Mast, boom,
-and yard. Lug sail, jib, and spare jib (used as a sun shawl). Stretcher,
-two back boards, floor boards, basket to sit on (12 inches by 6 inches,
-by 1 inch deep), and holding a macintosh coat. For repairs--iron and
-brass screws, sheet copper and copper nails, putty and whitelead, a
-gimlet, cord, string, and thread, one spare button, needle, pins, canvas
-wading shoes (wooden clogs would be better); all the above should be
-left with the boat. Black bag for 3 months' luggage, size, 12 inches by
-12 inches, by 5 inches deep (just right), closed by three buttons, and
-with shoulder-strap. Flannel Norfolk jacket (flaps not too long, else
-they dip in the water, or the pockets are inverted in getting out and
-in); wide flannel trousers, gathered by a broad back buckle belt, second
-trousers for shore should have braces, but in the boat the back buttons
-are in the way. Flannel shirt on, and another for shore. A straw hat is
-the very best for use--while writing this there are 16 various head
-covers before me used in different tours, but the straw hat is best of
-all for boating. Thin alpaca black Sunday coat, thick waistcoat, black
-leather light-soled spring-sided shoes (should be strong for rocks and
-village pavements), cloth cap (only used as a bag), 2 collars, 3 pocket
-handkerchiefs, ribbon tie, 2 pair of cotton socks (easily got off for
-sudden wading, and drying quickly when put on deck in the sun). Brush,
-comb, and tooth-brush. Testament, passport (will be scarcely needed this
-season), leather purse, large (and _full_), circular notes, small change
-in silver and copper for frequent use, blue spectacles in strong case,
-book for journal and sketches, black, blue, and red chalk, and steel
-pen. Maps, cutting off a six inch square at a time for pocket reference.
-Pipe, tobacco-case, and light-box (metal, to resist moisture from
-without and within), Guide books and pleasant evening reading book. You
-should cut off covers and all useless pages of books, and every page as
-read; no needless weight should be carried hundreds of miles; even a
-fly settling on the boat must be refused a free passage. Illustrated
-papers, tracts, and anecdotes in French and German for Sunday reading
-and daily distribution (far too few had been taken, they were always
-well received). Medicine (rhubarb and court plaister), small knife, and
-pencil. Messrs. Silver's, in Bishopsgate, is the place for stores.
-
-2. _Useless Articles._--Boathook, undervest, waterproof helmet,
-ventilated cap, foreign Conversation books, glass seltzer bottle and
-patent cork (for a drinking flask), tweezers for thorns.
-
-3. _Lost or Stolen Articles._--Bag for back cushion, waterproof bag for
-sitting cushion, long knife, necktie, woven waistcoat, box of quinine,
-steel-hafted knife. These, except the last of them, were not missed. I
-bought another thick waistcoat from a Jew.
-
-
-ROCKS AND CURRENTS.
-
-A few remarks may now be made upon the principal cases in which rocks
-and currents have to be dealt with by the canoist.
-
-Even if a set of rules could be laid down for the management of a boat
-in the difficult parts of a river, it would not be made easier until
-practice has given the boatman that quick judgment as to their
-application which has to be patiently acquired in this and other
-athletic exercises, such as riding or skating, and even in walking.
-
-The canoist, who passes many hours every day for months together in the
-earnest consideration of the river problems always set before him for
-solution, will probably feel some interest in this attempt to classify
-those that occur most frequently.
-
-Steering a boat in a current among rocks is not unlike walking on a
-crowded pavement, where the other passengers are going in various
-directions, and at various speeds; and this operation of threading your
-way in the streets requires a great deal of practice, and not a few
-lessons enforced by collisions, to make a pedestrian thoroughly _au
-fait_ as a good man in a crowd. After years of walking through crowds,
-there is produced by this education of the mind and training of the body
-a certain power--not possessed by a novice--which insensibly directs a
-man in his course and his speed, but still his judgment has had
-insensibly to take cognizance of many varying _data_ in the movements of
-other people which must have their effect upon each step he takes.
-
-After this capacity becomes, as it were, instinctive, or, at any rate,
-acts almost involuntarily, a man can walk briskly along Fleet-street at
-4 p.m., and, without any distinct thought about other people, or about
-his own progress, he can safely get to his journey's end. Indeed, if he
-does begin to think of rules or how to apply them systematically, he is
-then almost sure to knock up against somebody else. Nay, if two men meet
-as they walk through a crowd, and each of them "catches the eye" of the
-other, they will probably cease to move instinctively, and, with
-uncertain data to reason from, a collision is often the result.
-
-As the descent of a current among rocks resembles a walk along the
-pavement through a crowd, so the passage _across_ a rapid is even more
-strictly in resemblance with the course of a man who has to cross a
-street where vehicles are passing at uncertain intervals and at various
-speeds, though all in the same direction. For it is plain that the thing
-to be done is nearly the same, whether the obstacles (as breakers) are
-fixed and the current carries you towards them, or the obstacles (as
-cabs and carts) are moving, while you have to walk through them on
-_terra firma_.
-
-To cross Park-lane in the afternoon requires the very same sort of
-calculation as the passage across the stream in a rapid on the Rhine.
-
-The importance of this subject of "boating instinct" will be considered
-sufficient to justify these remarks when the canoist has by much
-practice at last attained to that desirable proficiency which enables
-him to steer without thinking about it, and therefore to enjoy the
-conversation of other people on the bank or the scenery, while he is
-rapidly speeding through rocks, eddies, and currents.
-
-We may divide the rocks thus encountered in fast water into two
-classes--(1) Those that are _sunk_, so that the boat can float over
-them, and which do not deflect the direction of the surface current. (2)
-Those that are _breakers_, and so deflect the current, and do not allow
-the boat to float over them.
-
-The currents may be divided into--(1) Those that are equable in force,
-and in the same direction through the course to be steered. (2) Those
-that alter their direction in a part of that course.
-
-In the problems before the canoist will be found the combinations of
-every degree and variety of these rocks and currents, but the actual
-circumstances he has to deal with at any specified moment may--it is
-believed--be generally ranged under one or other of the six cases
-depicted in the accompanying woodcut.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 1.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 2.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 3.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 4.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 5.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 6.]
-
-In each of the figures in the diagram the current is supposed to run
-towards the top of the page, and the general course of the canoe is
-supposed to be with the current. The particular direction of the current
-is indicated by the dotted lines. The rocks when shaded are supposed to
-be _sunk_, and when not shaded they are _breakers_. Thus the current is
-uniform in figs. 1, 2, 3; and it is otherwise in figs. 4, 5, 6. The
-rocks are all sunk in figs. 1, 2, 3, and 5; whereas in figs. 4 and 6
-there are breakers. The black line in these figures, and in all the
-others, shows the proper course of the centre of the boat, and it is
-well to habituate oneself to make the course such as that this line
-shall never be nearer to the rock than one-half of the boat's length.
-
-The simplest case that can occur is when the canoe is merely floating
-without "way" through a current, and the current bears it near a rock.
-If this be a breaker, the current, being deflected, will generally carry
-the boat to one side. The steering in such cases is so easy, and its
-frequent occurrence gives so much practice, that no more need be said
-about it.
-
-But if the rock be a sunk rock, and if it be not quite plain from the
-appearance of the water that there is depth enough over the rock to
-float the boat, then it is necessary to pass either above the rock, as
-in fig. 1, or below it, as in fig. 2.
-
-A few days' practice is not thrown away if the canoist seizes every
-opportunity of performing under easy circumstances feats which may at
-other times have to be done under necessity, and which would not be so
-well done if attempted then for the first time.
-
-Let him, therefore, as soon as possible, become adept in crossing above
-or below a single sunk rock with his _boat's bow pointed to any angle of
-the semicircle before him_.
-
-Next we have to consider the cases in which more than one rock will have
-to be avoided. Now, however great the number of the rocks may be, they
-can be divided into sets of three, and in each of the figures 3, 4, 5, 6
-it is supposed that (for reasons which may be different in each case,
-but always sufficient) the canoe has to pass between rocks _A_ and _B_,
-and then between _B_ and _C_, but must not pass otherwise between _A_
-and _C_.
-
-In fig. 3 the course is below _B_, and above _C_, being a combination of
-the instance in fig. 2 with that in fig. 1.
-
-The precise angle to the line of the course which the boat's longer axis
-ought to have will depend upon what is to be done next after passing
-between _B_ and _C_, and hence the importance of being able to effect
-the passages in fig. 1 and fig. 2 with the axis at any required angle.
-
-We may next suppose that one of the three rocks, say _B_, as in fig. 4,
-is a breaker which will deflect the current (as indicated by the dotted
-stream lines), and it will then be necessary to modify the angle of the
-boat's axis, though the boat's centre has to be kept in the same course
-as before.
-
-It will be seen at once that if _A_ were a breaker the angle would be
-influenced in another manner, and that if _C_ were a breaker the angle
-at which the boat should emerge from the group of rocks would be
-influenced by the stream from _C_ also; but it is only necessary to
-remind the reader that all the combinations and permutations of breakers
-and sunk rocks need not be separately discussed,--they may be met by the
-experience obtained in one case of each class of circumstances.
-
-Fig. 5 represents a _circular current_ over the group of three rocks.
-This is a very deceptive case, for it looks so easy that at first it is
-likely to be treated carelessly. If the boat were supposed to be a
-substance floating, but without weight, it would have its direction of
-motion instantly altered by that of the current. But the boat has
-weight, and as it has velocity (that of the current even if the boat is
-not urged also by the paddle so as to have "way" through the water),
-therefore it will have _momentum_, and the tendency will be to continue
-the motion in a straight line, instead of a curve guided solely by the
-current. In all these cases, therefore, it will be found (sometimes
-inexplicably unless with these considerations) that the boat _insists_
-upon passing between _A_ and _C_, where it must not be allowed to go on
-the hypothesis we have started with; and if it effects a compromise by
-running upon _C_, this is by no means satisfactory.
-
-This class of cases includes all those in which the river makes a quick
-turn round a rock or a tongue _B_, where the boundary formed by the rock
-_A_ on the outer bend of the stream is a solid bank, or a fringe of
-growing trees, or of faggots artificially built as a protection against
-the erosion of the water. This case occurs, therefore, very frequently
-in some fast rivers, say, at least, a hundred times in a day's work, and
-perhaps no test of a man's experience and capacity as a canoist is more
-decisive than his manner of steering round a fast, sharp bend.
-
-The tendency of the canoist in such cases is always to bring the boat
-round by paddling forward with the outer hand, thereby adding to the
-"way," and making the force of the current in its circular turn less
-powerful relatively. Whereas, the proper plan is to back with the inner
-hand, and so to stop all way in the direction of the boat's length, and
-to give the current its full force on the boat. Repeated lessons are
-needed before this is learned thoroughly.
-
-The case we have last remarked upon is made easier if either _A_ or _C_
-is a breaker, but it is very much increased in difficulty if the rock
-_B_ is a breaker or is a strong tongue of bank, and so deflects the
-current outwards at this critical point.
-
-The difficulty is often increased by the fact that the water inside of
-the curve of the stream may be shoal, and so the paddle on that side
-strikes the bottom or grinds along it in backing.
-
-When the curve is all in deep water, and there is a pool after _B_, the
-boat ought not to be turned too quickly in endeavouring to avoid the
-rock _C_, else it will sometimes then enter the eddy below _B_, which
-runs up stream sometimes for fifty yards. In such a case the absurd
-position you are thereby thrown into naturally causes you to struggle to
-resist or stem this current; but I have found, after repeated trials of
-every plan I could think of, that if once the back current has taken the
-canoe it is best to let the boat swing with the eddy so as to make an
-entire circuit, until the bow can come back towards _B_ (and below it),
-when the nose of the boat may be again thrust into the main stream,
-which will now turn the boat round again to its proper course. Much time
-and labour may be spent uselessly in a wrong and obstinate contest with
-an eddy.
-
-In fig. 6, where the three rocks are in a straight line, and the middle
-one is a breaker, an instance is given when the proper course must be
-kept by _backing_ during the first part of it.
-
-We must suppose for this that the canoist has attained the power of
-backing with perfect ease, for it will be quite necessary if he intends
-to take his boat safely through several hundred combinations of sunk
-rocks and breakers. Presuming this, the case in fig. 6 will be easy
-enough, though a little reflection will show that it might be very
-difficult, or almost impossible, if the canoist could give only a
-forward motion to the boat.
-
-To pass most artistically, then, through the group of rocks in fig. 6
-the stern should be turned towards _A_, as shown in the diagram, and the
-passage across the current, between _A_ and _B_, is to be effected
-solely by backing water (and chiefly in this case with the left hand)
-until the furthest point of the right of the curve is reached, with the
-boat's length still as before in the position represented in the figure.
-Then the forward action of both hands will take the canoe speedily
-through the passage between _B_ and _C_.
-
-Cases of this sort are rendered more difficult by the distance of _C_
-from the point above _A_, where you are situated when the decision has
-to be made (and in three instants of time) as to what must be done;
-also, it would usually be imprudent to rise in the boat in such a place
-to survey the rock _C_ from a better position.
-
-If it is evident that the plan described above will not be applicable,
-because other and future circumstances will require the boat's bow to
-emerge in the opposite direction (pointing to the right), then you must
-enter forwards, and must back between _B_ and _C_, so as to be ready,
-after passing _C_, to drive forward, and to the right. It is plain that
-this is very much more difficult than the former case, for your backing
-now has to be done against the full stream from the breaker _B_.
-
-In all these instances the action of the wind has been entirely omitted
-from consideration, but it must not be forgotten that a strong breeze
-materially complicates the problem before the canoist. This is
-especially so when the wind is aft; when it is ahead you are not likely
-to forget its presence. A strong fair wind (that has scarcely been felt
-with your back to it) and the swift stream and the boat's speed from
-paddling being all in one direction, the breeze will suddenly become a
-new element in the case when you try to cross above a rock as in fig. 1,
-and find the wind carries you broadside on against all your
-calculations.
-
-Nor have I any observations to make as to sailing among rocks in a
-current. The canoe must be directed solely by the paddle in a long
-rapid, and in the other places the course to be steered by a boat
-sailing is the same as if it were being merely paddled, though the
-action of the wind has to be carefully taken into consideration.
-
-In all these things boldness and skill come only after lessons of
-experience, and the canoist will find himself ready and able, at the end
-of his voyage, to sail down a rapid which he would have approached
-timidly, even with the paddle, at the beginning.
-
-But perhaps enough has been said for the experienced oarsman, while
-surely more than enough has been said to shew the tyro aspirant what
-varied work he has to do, and how interesting are the circumstances that
-will occupy his attention on a delightful river tour.
-
-
-NOTE ON THE "KENT."--The narrative of a shipwreck referred to at page
-219 has been published 40 years ago, and in many foreign languages, but
-its circulation is very large at the present time. The following letter
-about one of the incidents related in the little book, appeared in the
-"Times" of March 22, 1866:--
-
- "LETTERS FROM THE DEEP.
-
- "_To the Editor of the 'Times.'_
-
- "Sir,--As attention has been drawn to the letters written on
- board the ship London, and washed ashore, it may be interesting
- to notice the following remarkable incident respecting a letter
- from another ship wrecked in the Bay of Biscay. In March, 1825,
- the Kent, East Indiaman, took fire in the Bay of Biscay during
- a storm while 641 persons were on board, most of them soldiers
- of the 31st Regiment. When all hope was gone, and before a
- little vessel was seen which ultimately saved more than 500
- people from the Kent, Major ---- wrote a few lines and enclosed
- the paper in a bottle, which was left in the cabin. Nineteen
- months after this the writer of the paper arrived in the island
- of Barbadoes, in command of another Regiment, and he was amazed
- to find that the bottle (cast into the sea by the explosion
- that destroyed the Kent) had been washed ashore on that very
- island. The paper, with its faint pencil lines expressing
- Christian faith, is still preserved; and this account of it can
- be authenticated by those who were saved.
-
- "I am, your obedient servant,
- "ONE OF THEM."
-
-The bottle, after its long immersion, was thickly covered with weeds and
-barnacles. The following are the words of the "Letter from the Deep,"
-which it contained:--
-
- "The ship the Kent, Indiaman, is on fire--Elizabeth Joanna and
- myself commit our spirits into the hands of our blessed
- Redeemer--His grace enables us to be quite composed in the
- awful prospect of entering eternity.
-
- "D. M'GREGOR.
- "_1st March, 1825, Bay of Biscay._"
-
-The writer of that letter lives now with blessings on his venerable
-head, while he who records it anew is humbly grateful to God for his own
-preservation. And may we not say of every one who reads such words,
-written in such an hour, that his life would be unspeakably happy if he
-could lay hold now of so firm a Surety, and be certain to keep fast hold
-to the end?
-
-
-The following notes are on miscellaneous points:--
-
-(_a_) We are sometimes asked about such a canoe voyage as this, "Is it
-not very dangerous?"
-
-There seems to me to be no necessary danger in the descent of a river in
-a canoe; but if you desire to make it as safe as possible you must get
-out at each difficult place and examine the course, and if the course is
-too difficult you may take the boat past the danger by land.
-
-On the other hand, if the excitement and novelty of finding out a course
-on the spur of the moment is to be enjoyed, then, no doubt, there is
-more danger to the boat.
-
-As for danger to the canoist, it is supposed, _imprimis_, that he is
-well able to swim, not only in a bath when stripped, but when
-unexpectedly thrown into the water with his clothes on, and that he
-_knows_ he can rely on this capacity.
-
-If this be so, the chief danger to him occurs when he meets a steamer on
-rough water (rare enough on such a tour); for if his boat is upset by
-that, and his head is broken by the paddle floats, the swimming powers
-are futile for safety.
-
-The danger incurred by the boat is certainly both considerable and
-frequent, but nothing short of the persuasion that the boat would be
-smashed if a great exertion is not made will incite the canoist to those
-very exertions which are the charm of travelling, when spirit, strength,
-and skill are to be proved. Men have their various lines of exercise as
-they have of duty. The huntsman may not understand the pleasures of a
-rapid, nor the boatman care for the delights of a "bullfinch."
-Certainly, however, the waterman can say that a good horse may carry a
-bad rider well, but that the best boat will not take a bad boatman
-through a mile of broken water. In each case there is, perhaps, a little
-of _populus me sibilat_, and it may possibly be made up for by a good
-deal of _at mihi plaudo_.
-
-(_b_) It has been said that the constant use of a canoe paddle must
-contract the chest, but this is certainly a mistake. If, indeed, you
-merely dabble each blade of the paddle in the water without taking the
-full length of the stroke the shoulders are not thrown back, and the
-effect will be injurious; but exactly the same is true if you scull or
-row with a short jerky stroke.
-
-In a proper use of the paddle the arms ought to be in turn fully
-extended, and then brought well back, so that the hand touches the side,
-and the chest is then well plied in both directions.
-
-In using the single-bladed paddle, of which I have had experience in
-Canada and New Brunswick with the Indians in bark canoes and log canoes,
-there seems to be a less beneficial action on the pectoral muscles, but
-after three months' use of the double paddle I found the arms much
-strengthened, while clothes that fitted before were all too narrow round
-the chest when put on after this exercise.
-
-(_c_) In shallow water the paddle should be clasped lightly, so that if
-it strikes the bottom or a rock the hand will yield and not the blade be
-broken.
-
-Great caution should be used when placing the blade in advance to meet a
-rock, or even a gravel bank, otherwise it gets jammed in the rock or
-gravel, or the boat overrides it.
-
-It is better in such a case to retard the speed rather by dragging the
-paddle (tenderly), and always with its flat side downwards, so that the
-edge does not get nipped.
-
-(_d_) M. Farcôt, a French engineer, has lately exhibited on the Thames a
-boat which is rowed by the oarsman sitting with his face to the bow, who
-by this means secures one of the advantages of the canoe--that of seeing
-where you are going.
-
-To effect this, a short prop or mast about three feet high is fixed in
-the boat, and the two sculls are jointed to it by their handles, while
-their weight is partly sustained by a strong spiral spring acting near
-the joint, and in such a manner as to keep the blade of the scull a few
-inches from the surface of the water when it is not pressed down
-purposely.
-
-The sculler then sits with his face towards the mast and the bow, and he
-holds in each hand a rod jointed to the loom of the corresponding scull.
-By this means each scull is moved on the mast as a fulcrum with the
-power applied between that and the water. The operation of feathering is
-partially performed, and to facilitate this there is an ingeniously
-contrived guide.
-
-This invention appears to be new, but it is evident that the plan
-retains many of the disadvantages of common sculls, and it leaves the
-double paddle quite alone as a simple means for propelling a canoe in
-narrow or tortuous channels, or where it has to meet waves, weeds,
-rocks, or trees, and moreover has to sail.
-
-However, the muscular power of the arms can be applied with good effect
-in this new manner, and I found it not very difficult to learn the use
-of this French rowing apparatus, which is undoubtedly very ingenious,
-and deserves a full trial before a verdict is pronounced.
-
-(_e_) In a difficult place where the boat is evidently going too near a
-rock, the disposition of the canoist is to change the direction by a
-_forward_ stroke on one side, but this adds to the force with which a
-collision may be invested. It is often better to _back_ a stroke on the
-other side, and thus to lessen this force; and this is nearly always
-possible to be done even when the boat appears to be simply drifting on
-the stream. In fact, as a maxim, there is always steerage way sufficient
-to enable the paddle to be used exactly as a rudder.
-
-(_f_) When there is a brilliant glare of the sun, and it is low, and
-directly in front, and it is impossible to bear its reflection on the
-water, a good plan is to direct the bow to some point you are to steer
-for, and then observe the reflection of the sun on the cedar deck of the
-boat. Having done this you may lower the peak of your hat so as to cut
-off the direct rays of the sun, and its reflected rays on the water,
-while you steer simply by the light on the deck.
-
-(_g_) When a great current moves across a river to a point where it
-seems very unlikely to have an exit, you may be certain that some
-unusual conformation of the banks or of the river bed will be found
-there, and caution should be used in approaching the place. This,
-however, is less necessary when the river is deep. Such cross currents
-are frequent on the Rhine, but they result merely from unevenness in the
-bottom far below, and thus we see how the rapids, most dangerous when
-the river is low, become quite agreeable and safe in high flood time.
-
-(_h_) The ripple and bubbles among weeds are so totally different from
-those on free water that their appearance at a distance as a criterion
-of the depth, current, and direction of the channel must be learned
-separately. In general, where weeds are under water, and can sway or
-wave about, there will be water enough to pass--the requisite 3 inches.
-Backing up stream against long weeds is so troublesome, and so sure to
-sway the stern round athwart stream, that it is best to force the boat
-forward instead, even if you have to get out and pull her through.
-
-(_i_) Paddling through rushes, or flags, or other plants above the
-water, so as to cut off a corner, is a mistake. Much more "way" is lost
-then by the friction than might be supposed.
-
-(_j_) I noticed a very curious boat-bridge across the Rhine below Basle.
-It seemed to open wide without swinging, and on coming close to it the
-plan was found to be this. The boats of one half of the bridge were
-drawn towards the shore, and a stage connecting them ran on wheels along
-rails inwards from the river, and up an incline on the bank. This system
-is ingenious, convenient, and philosophical.
-
-(_k_) Double-hulled boats have often been tried for sailing, but their
-disadvantages are manifest when the craft is on a large scale, though
-for toy-boats they answer admirably, and they are now quite fashionable
-on the Serpentine.
-
-The double boat of the nautical tinman on the Rhine, before described,
-was a "fond conceit." But there are many double-hulled boats on French
-rivers, and they have this sole recommendation, that you sit high up,
-and so can fish without fearing you may "turn the turtle."
-
-When the two hulls are reduced as much as possible, this sort of boat
-becomes an aquatic "walking machine," for one foot then rests on each
-hull. Propulsion is obtained either by linking the hulls together with
-parallel bars moving on studs, while vanes are on each side, so as to
-act like fins, and to collapse for the alternate forward stroke of each
-foot bound to its hull--or a square paddle, or a pole works on the water
-or on the bottom. I have always noticed that the proprietors of such
-craft are ingenious, obstinate men, proud of their peculiar mode, and
-very touchy when it is criticised. However, it is usually best, and it
-is fortunately always easy, to paddle away from them.
-
-(_l_) The hard exercise of canoe paddling, the open-air motion, constant
-working of the muscles about the stomach, and free perspiration result
-in good appetite and pleasant sleepiness at night. But at the end of the
-voyage the change of diet and cessation of exercise will be apt to cause
-derangement in the whole system, and especially in the digestion, if the
-high condition or "training" be not cautiously lowered into the humdrum
-"constitutionals" of more ordinary life. Still I have found it very
-agreeable to take a paddle in the Rob Roy up to Hammersmith and back
-even in December and March.
-
-The last public occasion on which she appeared was on April 17, when the
-captain offered her aid to the Chief Constructor of the Navy in the
-effort of the Admiralty to launch the ironclad Northumberland. The offer
-was eagerly accepted, and the launch was accordingly successful.
-
-The Rob Roy has since departed for a voyage to Norway and Iceland in the
-schooner yacht Sappho, whose young owner, Mr. W. F. Lawton, has
-promised "to be kind to her." It is intended that a new Rob Roy should
-make a voyage next summer with another canoe called the "Robin Hood."
-
-(_m_) Other pleasant voyages may be suggested for the holiday of the
-canoist. One of these might begin with the Thames, and then down the
-Severn, along the north coast of Devon, and so by the river Dart to
-Plymouth. Another on the Solent, and round the Isle of Wight. The Dee
-might be descended by the canoe, and then to the left through the Menai
-Straits. Or a longer trip may be made through the Cumberland lakes by
-Windermere and the Derwent, or from Edinburgh by the Forth, into the
-Clyde, and through the Kyles of Bute to Oban; then along the Caledonian
-Canal, until the voyager can get into the Tay for a swift run eastward.
-
-But why not begin at Gothenburg and pass through the pretty lakes of
-Sweden to Stockholm, and then skirt the lovely archipelago of green
-isles in the Gulf of Bothnia, until you get to Petersburg?
-
-For one or other of such tours a fishing-rod and an air rifle, and for
-all of them a little dog, would be a great addition to the outfit.
-
-In some breezy lake of these perhaps, or on some rushing river, the
-little Rob Roy may hope to meet the reader's canoe; and when the sun is
-setting, and the wavelets ripple sleepily, the pleasures of the paddle
-will be known far better than they have been told by the pen.
-
-
-C. A. Macintosh, Printer, Great New-street, London.
-
-
-
-
- _Milton House, Ludgate Hill,
- April, 1866._
-
-A List of
-
-SAMPSON LOW & CO.'S
-
-NEW WORKS.
-
-
-_A BIOGRAPHY of ADMIRAL SIR B.P.V. BROKE, Bart., K.C.B._ By the Rev.
-JOHN G. BRIGHTON, Rector of Kent Town. Dedicated by express permission
-to His Royal Highness Prince Alfred. 8vo., price 20_s._
-
-_THE GREAT SCHOOLS of ENGLAND._ A History of the Foundation, Endowments,
-and Discipline of the chief Seminaries of Learning in England; including
-Eton, Winchester, Westminster, St. Paul's, Charterhouse, Merchant
-Taylors', Harrow, Rugby, Shrewsbury, &c.; with notices of distinguished
-Scholars. By HOWARD STAUNTON, Esq. With numerous Illustrations. 8vo.,
-handsomely bound in cloth, price 12_s._
-
- "The book is as full of solid matter as of gossiping narrative
- and pleasant anecdote. As a handbook to our great schools Mr.
- Staunton's volume will have a wide class of
- readers."--_Athenĉum._
-
-_SOCIAL LIFE of the CHINESE_; with some Account of their Religion,
-Government, Educational, and Business Customs and Opinions. By the Rev.
-J. DOOLITTLE, Fourteen Years Member of the Fuhchou Mission of the
-American Board. With 150 Illustrations. 3 vols. 8vo., 24_s._
-
- "We have no hesitation in saying that from these pages may be
- gathered more information about the social life of the Chinese
- than can be obtained from any other source. The importance of
- the work as a key to a right understanding of the character of
- so vast a portion of the human race ought to insure it an
- extensive circulation."--_Athenĉum._
-
-_CAPTAIN HALL'S LIFE with the ESQUIMAUX._ New and Cheaper Edition, with
-Coloured Engravings and upwards of 100 Woodcuts. With a Map. Price 7_s._
-6_d._, cloth extra. Forming the cheapest and most popular Edition of a
-work on Arctic Life and Exploration ever published.
-
- "This is a very remarkable book; and unless we very much
- misunderstand both him and his book, the author is one of those
- men of whom great nations do well to be proud."--_Spectator._
-
-_THE CRUISE of the FROLIC._ By W. H. G. KINGSTON. A Story for Young
-Yacht-loving People. Illustrated Edition, price 5_s._
-
- "Who does not welcome Mr. W.H.G. Kingston? Here he is again
- with an admirable boys' book. If boys do not love this book
- there is no truth in boyhood, and no use in reviewing; it is
- just the book for a present."--_Illustrated Times._
-
-_UNDER the WAVES;_ or, the Hermit Crab in Society. A Book for the
-Seaside. 3_s._ 6_d._; or gilt edges, 4_s._
-
- "This is one of the best books we know of to place in the hands
- of young and intelligent persons during a visit to the
- seaside."--_Reader._
-
-_A WALK from LONDON to the LAND'S END_; with Notes by the Way. By ELIHU
-BURRITT. With Illustrations. 8vo., price 12_s._
-
-_A WALK from LONDON to JOHN O'GROAT'S._ By the same Author. A New and
-Cheaper Edition. Price 6_s._
-
-_ESSAYS by MONTAIGNE._ Choicely printed. With Vignette Portrait. Small
-post 8vo., price 6_s._
-
-_A SECOND SERIES of the GENTLE LIFE._ Uniform with the First Series.
-Second Edition. Small post, price 6_s._
-
-_THE GENTLE LIFE;_ Essays on the Formation of Character of Gentlemen and
-Gentlewomen. Sixth Edition. Price 6_s._
-
-_LIKE UNTO CHRIST._ A New Translation of the 'DE IMITATIONE CHRISTI,'
-usually ascribed to Thomas à Kempis. Beautifully printed on toned paper,
-with a Vignette, from an Original Drawing by Sir Thomas Lawrence. 12mo.
-cloth extra, price 6_s._; or, handsomely bound in calf antique, 12_s._
-
-_BEES and BEE-KEEPING._ By the 'TIMES BEEMASTER.' A Manual for all who
-Keep, or wish to Keep, Bees. With numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo.
-cloth, 5_s._
-
- "Few letters that have appeared in these columns have been more
- popular than those addressed to us by the Beemaster. We do not
- wish to detract from this praise in saying that they were
- popular because the subject is popular. Bees have always been
- interesting to mankind, and no man of ordinary intelligence can
- describe in any detail their natural history without unfolding
- a little romance--a kind of fairy annals, that fills us with
- wonder and insures our attention. But our friend the Beemaster
- has the knack of exposition, and knows how to tell a story
- well; over and above which, he tells a story so that thousands
- can take a practical and not merely a speculative interest in
- it."--_Times._
-
- LONDON: SAMPSON LOW, SON, & MARSTON,
- MILTON HOUSE, LUDGATE HILL.
-
-
-
-
-A List of Books
-
-PUBLISHING BY
-
-_SAMPSON LOW, SON, and MARSTON._
-
-_MILTON HOUSE, LUDGATE HILL, LONDON._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-** _When the price is not given, the work was not ready at the
-time of issuing this list._
-
- [_February 1, 1866._
-
-
-NEW ILLUSTRATED WORKS.
-
-THE GREAT SCHOOLS OF ENGLAND. A History of the Foundation, Endowments,
-and Discipline of the chief Seminaries of Learning in England; including
-Eton, Winchester, Westminster, St. Paul's, Charterhouse, Merchant
-Taylors', Harrow, Rugby, Shrewsbury, &c; with notices of distinguished
-Scholars. By Howard Staunton, Esq. With numerous Illustrations. One
-volume 8vo., handsomely bound in cloth, price 12_s._
-
- "_The book is as full of solid matter as of gossiping narrative
- and pleasant anecdote. As a handbook to our great schools Mr.
- Staunton's volume will have a wide class of
- readers._"--Athenĉum.
-
- "_Cannot fail to be interesting to all fathers and mothers, and
- it appeals to the sympathies of everyone who has been a boy,
- and has been educated at a public school. Good store of
- anecdote, amusing and pathetic, has been provided; and the
- exquisite letters written to the famous poet, soldier, and
- gentleman, Sir Philip Sydney, by his father and mother, when
- the future 'Scipio, Cicero, and Petrarch of his time' was a boy
- at Shrewsbury, are wonderfully moving, and worthy of the
- attention of every father, every mother, and every
- son._"--Illustrated London News.
-
- "_The work is so full of practical information on the details
- of school life at these great foundations that it may be
- regarded as a guide book to all who contemplate sending their
- sons thither. For all such the volume must have a solid value,
- as enabling them to compare the several systems prevailing at
- different places, and to determine beforehand which offers the
- greatest advantages. The subject, however, is interesting to
- all intelligent Englishmen, and the book has, therefore, a
- general attraction beyond the circle which it specially
- addresses._"--London Review.
-
-The Pleasures of Memory. By Samuel Rogers. Illustrated with Twenty
-Designs, forming a volume of "Cundall's Choice of Choice Books." Small
-4to. price 5_s._
-
-The Divine and Moral Songs of Dr. Watts: a New and very choice Edition.
-Illustrated with One Hundred Woodcuts in the first style of the Art,
-from Original Designs by Eminent Artists; engraved by J. D. Cooper.
-Small 4to. cloth extra, price 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-Pictures of Society, Grave and Gay; comprising One Hundred Engravings on
-Wood, from the Pictures of Eminent Artists; including J. E. Millais,
-A.R.A., F. W. Pickersgill, R.A., C. W. Cope, R.A., J. D. Watson, George
-Thomas, Marcus Stone, &c. Illustrated by the Pens of Popular Authors;
-including Mrs. S. C. Hall, E. K. Harvey, Barry Cornwall, Tom Hood,
-Edward Levein, Noel Jones, Cuthbert Bede, J. H. Friswell, Walter
-Thornbury, &c. Beautifully printed by Messrs. Dalziel Brothers.
-Handsomely bound in cloth, with an elaborate and novel Design, by
-Messrs. Leighton and Co. Royal 8vo. price One Guinea.
-
-The Twenty-Third Psalm: with richly-coloured Emblematic Borders. Small
-4to. bevelled boards, price 12_s._
-
-The Three Kings of Orient: a Christmas Carol. Illuminated. Small 4to.
-Bevelled boards, price 12_s._
-
-Christ was Born on Christmas Day: a Carol. With Illustrations by John A.
-Hows. Illustrated and illuminated. Small 4to. bevelled boards, price
-12_s._
-
-An Entirely New Edition of Edgar A. Poe's Poems. Illustrated by Eminent
-Artists. Small 4to. cloth extra, price 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-Poems of the Inner Life. Selected chiefly from Modern Authors, by
-permission. Small 8vo. 6_s._ Choicely printed.
-
-A History of Lace, from the Earliest Period; with upwards of One Hundred
-Illustrations and Coloured Designs. By Mrs. Bury Palliser. One volume,
-8vo. choicely bound in cloth. 31_s._ 6_d._
-
-Pictures of English Life; illustrated by Ten folio page Illustrations on
-wood, by J. D. Cooper, after Drawings by R. Barnes and E. M. Whimperis,
-with appropriate descriptive Poems, printed in floreated borders.
-Imperial folio, cloth extra, 14_s._
-
- "_This handsome volume is entirely in the English
- taste._"--Spectator.
-
- "_Pictures that do you good to look at them._"--Illustrated
- Times.
-
- "_An elegant volume, containing speaking pictures that might
- have owned the parentage of Gainsborough or Morland; thoroughly
- national in character and detail._"--Reader.
-
-Pictures for the People: the same Engravings beautifully printed on
-thick paper. Adapted by their price to the adornment of Cottage walls,
-and by their artistic beauty to the Drawing-room Portfolio. One Shilling
-each.
-
-Favourite English Poems. _Complete Edition._ Comprising a Collection of
-the most celebrated Poems in the English Language, with but one or two
-exceptions unabridged, from Chaucer to Tennyson. With 300 Illustrations
-by the first Artists. Two vols. royal 8vo. half bound, top gilt,
-Roxburgh style, 1_l._ 18_s._; antique calf, 3_l._ 3_s._
-
-** Either Volume sold separately as distinct works. 1. "Early
-English Poems, Chaucer to Dyer." 2. "Favourite English Poems, Thomson to
-Tennyson." Each handsomely bound in cloth, 1_l._ 1_s._; or morocco
-extra, 1_l._ 15_s._
-
- "_One of the choicest gift-books of the year. "Favourite
- English Poems" is not a toy book, to be laid for a week on the
- Christmas table and then thrown aside with the sparkling
- trifles of the Christmas tree, but an honest book, to be
- admired in the season of pleasant remembrances for its artistic
- beauty; and, when the holydays are over, to be placed for
- frequent and affectionate consultation on a favourite
- shelf._"--Athenĉum.
-
-Schiller's Lay of the Bell. Sir E. Bulwer Lytton's translation;
-beautifully illustrated by forty-two wood Engravings, drawn by Thomas
-Scott, and engraved by J. D. Cooper, after the Etchings by Retszch.
-Oblong 4to. cloth extra, 14_s._
-
- "_A very elegant and classic Christmas present._"--Guardian.
-
- "_The work is a standard picture-book, and of its success there
- can be no doubt._"--Examiner.
-
-The Poetry of Nature. Selected and Illustrated with Thirty-six
-Engravings by Harrison Weir. Small 4to. handsomely bound in cloth, gilt
-edges, 12_s._; morocco, 1_l._ 1_s._
-
-A New Edition of Choice Editions of Choice Books. Illustrated by C. W.
-Cope, R.A., T. Creswick, R.A., Edward Duncan, Birket Foster, J. C.
-Horsley, A.R.A., George Hicks, R. Redgrave, R.A., C. Stonehouse, F.
-Tayler, George Thomas, H. J. Townshend, E. H. Wehnert, Harrison Weir,
-&c. Crown 8vo. cloth, 5_s._ each; bevelled boards, 5_s._ 6_d._; or, in
-morocco, gilt edges, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
- Bloomfield's Farmer's Boy.
- Campbell's Pleasures of Hope.
- Cundall's Elizabethan Poetry.
- Coleridge's Ancient Mariner.
- Goldsmith's Deserted Village.
- Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield.
- Gray's Elegy in a Churchyard.
- Keat's Eve of St. Agnes.
- Milton's l'Allegro.
- Roger's Pleasures of Memory.
- Shakespeare's Songs and Sonnets.
- Tennyson's May Queen.
- Wordsworth's Pastoral Poems.
-
- "_Such works are a glorious beatification for a poet. Such
- works as these educate townsmen, who, surrounded by dead and
- artificial things, as country people are by life and nature,
- scarcely learn to look at nature till taught by these
- concentrated specimens of her beauty._"--Athenĉum.
-
-
-LITERATURE, WORKS OF REFERENCE, AND EDUCATION.
-
-THE English Catalogue of Books: giving the date of publication of every
-book published from 1835 to 1863, in addition to the title, size, price,
-and publisher, in one alphabet. An entirely new work, combining the
-Copyrights of the "London Catalogue" and the "British Catalogue." One
-thick volume of 900 pages, half morocco, 45_s._
-
-Like unto Christ. A new translation of the De Imitatione Christi,
-usually ascribed to Thomas à Kempis--forming a volume of _The Gentle
-Life_ Series. Small post 8vo. 6_s._
-
-The Gentle Life: Essays in Aid of the Formation of Character of
-Gentlemen and Gentlewomen. Small post 8vo. Seventh Edition, 6_s._
-
-A Second Volume of the Gentle Life. Uniform with the First Series.
-Second Edition, 6_s._
-
-About in the World: Essays uniform with, and by the author of "The
-Gentle Life." Small post 8vo. 6_s._
-
-Essays by Montaigne. With Vignette Portrait. Small post 8vo. 6_s._
-
-Familiar Words; an Index Verborum, or Dictionary of Quotation of
-Sentences and Phrases which have become embedded in our English tongue.
-Second Edition, revised and enlarged. Post 8vo.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
- "_Not only the most extensive dictionary of quotations which we
- have yet met with, but it has, moreover, this additional merit,
- that in all cases an exact reference is given to every chapter,
- act, scene, book, and number of the line._"--Notes and Queries.
-
-The Complete Poetical Works of John Milton, with a Life of the Author:
-and a Verbal Index containing upwards of 20,000 references to all the
-Poems. By Charles Dexter Cleveland. New Edition. 8vo. 12_s._; morocco,
-21_s._
-
-Life Portraits of Shakspeare; with an Examination of the Authenticity,
-and a History of the various Representations of the Poet. By J. H.
-Friswell, Member of the National Shakspeare Committee. Illustrated by
-Photographs of authentic and received Portraits. Square 8vo. 21_s._; or
-with Photograph of the Will, 25_s._
-
-Memoirs of the Life of William Shakespeare. With an Essay toward the
-Expression of his Genius, and an Account of the Rise and Progress of the
-English Drama. By Richard Grant White. Post 8vo. cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-Her Majesty's Mails: a History of the Post Office, and an Industrial
-Account of its Present Condition. By Wm. Lewins, of the General Post
-Office. 2nd edition, revised, and enlarged, with a Photographic Portrait
-of Sir Rowland Hill. Small post 8vo. 6_s._
-
- "_A book we strongly recommend to those who wish to be fully
- informed on the subject, as an interesting and generally
- accurate account of the history and working of the Post
- Office._"--Edinburgh Review.
-
- "_Will take its stand as a really useful book of reference on
- the history of the Post. We heartily recommend it as a
- thoroughly careful performance._"--Saturday Review.
-
-A History of Banks for Savings; including a full account of the origin
-and progress of Mr. Gladstone's recent prudential measures. By William
-Lewins, Author of 'Her Majesty's Mails.' With a Photograph of the
-Chancellor of the Exchequer. 8vo. cloth.
-
-Varia: Rare Readings from Scarce Books. Reprinted by permission from the
-_Saturday Review_ and _Spectator_. Beautifully printed by Whittingham.
-Fcap. cloth.
-
-The Origin and History of the English Language, and of the early
-literature it embodies. By the Hon. George P. Marsh, U. S. Minister at
-Turin, Author of "Lectures on the English Language." 8vo. cloth extra,
-16_s._
-
-Lectures on the English Language; forming the Introductory Series to the
-foregoing Work. By the same Author. 8vo. Cloth, 16_s._ This is the only
-author's edition.
-
-Man and Nature; or, Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action. By
-George P. Marsh, Author of "Lectures on the English Language," &c. 8vo.
-cloth, 14_s._
-
- "_Mr. Marsh traces the history of human industry as shown in
- the extensive modification and extirpation of animal and
- vegetable life in the woods, the waters, and the sands; and, in
- a concluding chapter, he discusses the probable and possible
- geographical changes yet to be wrought. The whole of Mr.
- Marsh's book is an eloquent showing of the duty of care in the
- establishment of harmony between man's life and the forces of
- nature, so as to bring to their highest points the fertility of
- the soil, the vigour of the animal life, and the salubrity of
- the climate, on which we have to depend for the physical
- well-being of mankind._"--Examiner.
-
-English and Scotch Ballads, &c. An extensive Collection. Designed as a
-Complement to the Works of the British Poets, and embracing nearly all
-the Ancient and Traditionary Ballads both of England and Scotland, in
-all the important varieties of form in which they are extant, with
-Notices of the kindred Ballads of other Nations. Edited by F. J. Child,
-new Edition, revised by the Editor. 8 vols. fcap. cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
-each.
-
-The Handy-book of Patent and Copyright Law, English and Foreign. By
-James Fraser, Esq. Post 8vo. cloth, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-A Concise Summary of the Law of English and French Copyright Law and
-International Law, by Peter Burke. 12mo. 5_s._
-
-Index to the Subjects of Books published in the United Kingdom during
-the last Twenty Years--1837-1857. Containing as many as 74,000
-references under subjects, so as to ensure immediate reference to the
-books on the subject required, each giving title, price, publisher, and
-date. Two valuable Appendices are also given--A, containing full lists
-of all Libraries, Collections, Series, and Miscellanies--and B, a List
-of Literary Societies, Printing Societies, and their Issues. One vol.
-royal 8vo. Morocco, 1_l._ 6_s._
-
-The American Catalogue, or English Guide to American Literature; giving
-the full title of original Works published in the United States of
-America since the year 1800, with especial reference to the works of
-interest to Great Britain, with the size, price, place, date of
-publication, and London prices. With comprehensive Index. 8vo. 2_s._
-6_d._ Also Supplement, 1837-60. 8vo. 6_d._
-
-Dr. Worcester's New and Greatly Enlarged Dictionary of the English
-Language. Adapted for Library or College Reference, comprising 40,000
-Words more than Johnson's Dictionary, and 250 pages more than the Quarto
-Edition of Webster's Dictionary. In one Volume, royal 4to. cloth, 1,834
-pp. price 31_s._ 6_d._ The Cheapest Book ever published.
-
- "The volumes before us show a vast amount of diligence; but
- with Webster it is diligence in combination with
- fancifulness,--with Worcester in combination with good sense
- and judgment. Worcester's is the soberer and safer book, and
- may be pronounced the best existing English
- Lexicon."--_Athenĉum_, July 13, 1861.
-
-The Publishers' Circular, and General Record of British and Foreign
-Literature; giving a transcript of the title-page of every work
-published in Great Britain, and every work of interest published abroad,
-with lists of all the publishing houses.
-
-Published regularly on the 1st and 15th of every Month, and forwarded
-post free to all parts of the world on payment of 8_s._ per annum.
-
-The Ladies' Reader: with some Plain and Simple Rules and Instructions
-for a good style of Reading aloud, and a variety of Selections for
-Exercise. By George Vandenhoff, M.A., Author of "The Art of Elocution."
-Fcap. 8vo. Cloth, 5_s._
-
-The Clerical Assistant: an Elocutionary Guide to the Reading of the
-Scriptures and the Liturgy, several passages being marked for Pitch and
-Emphasis: with some Observations on Clerical Bronchitus. By George
-Vandenhoff, M.A. Fcap. 8vo. Cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Art of Elocution as an essential part of Rhetoric, with instructions
-in Gesture, and an Appendix of Oratorical, Poetical and Dramatic
-extracts. By George Vandenhoff, M.A. Third Edition. 5_s._
-
-Latin-English Lexicon, by Dr. Andrews. 7th Edition. 8vo. 18_s._
-
-The superiority of this justly-famed Lexicon is retained over all others
-by the fulness of its quotations, the including in the vocabulary proper
-names, the distinguishing whether the derivative is classical or
-otherwise, the exactness of the references to the original authors, and
-in the price.
-
- "_Every page bears the impress of industry and
- care._"--Athenĉum.
-
- "_The best Latin Dictionary, whether for the scholar or
- advanced student._"--Spectator.
-
- "_We never saw such a book published at such a
- price._"--Examiner.
-
-The Farm and Fruit of Old. From Virgil. By a Market Gardener. 1_s._
-
-Usque ad Coelum; or, the Dwellings of the People. By Thomas Hare,
-Esq., Barrister-at-Law. Fcap. 1_s._
-
-Domestic Servants, their Duties and Rights. By a Barrister. 1_s._
-
-Signals of Distress, in Refuges and Houses of Charity; in Industrial
-Schools and Reformatories; at Invalids' Dinner Tables, and in the Homes
-of the Little Sisters of the Poor, &c. &c.; among the Fallen, the
-Vicious, and the Criminal; where Missionaries travel, and where Good
-Samaritans clothe the naked. By Blanchard Jerrold, Author of "The Life
-of Douglas Jerrold," &c. Crown 8vo. 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Children of Lutetia; or, Life amongst the Poor of Paris. By
-Blanchard Jerrold. 2 vols, post 8vo. cloth, 16_s._
-
-The Charities of London: an Account of the Origin, Operations, and
-general Condition of the Charitable, Educational, and Religious
-Institutions of London. With copious Index. Also an Alphabetical
-Appendix corrected to May 1863. Fcap. cloth, 5_s._
-
-** The latter also as a separate publication, forms "Low's
-Shilling Guide to the Charities of London."
-
-Prince Albert's Golden Precepts. _Second Edition_, with Photograph. A
-Memorial of the Prince Consort; comprising Maxims and Extracts from
-Addresses of His late Royal Highness. Many now for the first time
-collected and carefully arranged. With an Index. Royal 16mo. beautifully
-printed on toned paper, cloth, gilt edges, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-Our Little Ones in Heaven: Thoughts in Prose and Verse, selected from
-the Writings of favourite Authors; with Frontispiece after Sir Joshua
-Reynolds. Fcap. 8vo. cloth extra, 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-
-NEW BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.
-
-THE GREAT FUN TOY BOOKS: a Series of Eight New One Shilling Story Books
-for Young People. By Thomas Hood and Thomas Archer. Each illustrated by
-Six of Edward Wehnert's well-known Great Fun Pictures. Printed in
-colours, with an appropriate Cover by Charles Bennett.
-
- The Cherry-coloured Cat and her Three Friends.
- The Live Rocking-Horse.
- Master Mischief and Miss Meddle.
- Cousin Nellie's Stories after School.
- Harry High-Stepper.
- Grandmamma's Spectacles.
- How the House was Built.
- Dog Toby and Artistical Arthur.
-
-The Frog's Parish Clerk; and his Adventures in strange Lands. A Tale for
-young folk. By Thomas Archer. Numerous Illustrations. Small post 8vo.
-5_s._
-
-Choice Editions of Children's Fairy Tales. Each illustrated with
-highly-finished Coloured Pictures in facsimile of Water-colour Drawings.
-Square, cloth extra, price 3_s._ 6_d._ each.
-
- Cinderella and the Glass Slipper. Puss in Boots. Beauty and the
- Beast.
-
-Under the Waves; or the Hermit Crab in Society. By Annie E. Ridley.
-Impl. 16mo. cloth extra, with coloured illustration. Cloth, 4_s._; gilt
-edges, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
- "_This is one of the best books we know of to place in the
- hands of young and intelligent persons during a visit to the
- seaside._"--Reader.
-
-_Also beautifully Illustrated:--_
-
- Little Bird Red and Little Bird Blue. Coloured, 5_s._
- Snow-Flakes, and what they told the Children. Coloured, 5_s._
- Child's Book of the Sagacity of Animals. 5_s._; coloured, 7_s._ 6_d._
- Child's Picture Fable Book. 5_s._; or coloured, 7_s._ 6_d._
- Child's Treasury of Story Books. 5_s._; or coloured, 7_s._ 6_d._
- The Nursery Playmate. 200 Pictures. 5_s._; coloured, 9_s._
-
-The Boy's Own Book of Boats. By W. H. G. Kingston. Illustrations by E.
-Weedon, engraved by W. J. Linton. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 5_s._
-
- "_This well-written, well-wrought book._"--Athenĉum.
-
-How to Make Miniature Pumps and a Fire-Engine: a Book for Boys. With
-Seven Illustrations. Fcap. 8vo. 1_s._
-
-The Cruise of the Frolic. By W. H. G. Kingston. Illustrated. Large fcap.
-8vo. cloth, 5_s._
-
- "_Who does not welcome Mr. W. H. G. Kingston? Here he is again
- with an admirable boys' book. If boys do not love this book,
- there is no truth in boyhood, and no use in reviewing; it is
- just the book for a present._"--Illustrated Times.
-
-_Also by the same Author, well illustrated,_
-
- The Boy's Own Book of Boats. Illustrated by Weedon. 5_s._
- Ernest Bracebridge; or, the Boy's Book of Sports. 5_s._
- Jack Buntline: the Life of a Sailor Boy. 2_s._
- The Fire Ships.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-Golden Hair; a Story for Young People. By Sir Lascelles Wraxall, Bart.
-With Eight full page Illustrations, 5_s._
-
- "_Full of incident and adventure, and sure to please boys home
- from school quite as much as his 'Black Panther' of last
- year._"--Reader.
-
- "_A thoroughly good boy's book; the story is full of incident
- and always moves on._"--Spectator.
-
-_Also, same price, full of Illustrations:--_
-
- Black Panther: a Boy's Adventures among the Red Skins.
- Life among the Indians. By George Catlin.
- The Voyage of the Constance. By Mary Gillies.
- Stanton Grange. By the Rev. C. J. Atkinson.
- Boyhood of Martin Luther. By Henry Mayhew.
- Stories of the Woods. From Cooper's Tales.
- The Story of Peter Parley's own Life.
-
-Noodle-doo. By the Author of "The Stories that Little Breeches told."
-With 16 large Engravings on Steel. Plain, 5_s._; coloured, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
- "_Among all the Christmas bookmen Mr. Charles Bennett ranks
- first, for he who best pleases children has the best right to
- priority in a notice of Christmas books, and to all his
- productions we venture to prefer 'Noodle-doo;' it will make the
- youngsters crow again with delight._"--Standard.
-
-_Also, now ready, same size and price, and full of Illustrations._
-
- Great Fun for our Little Friends. By Harriet Myrtle.
- More Fun for our Little Friends. By the same Author.
- The Book of Blockheads. By Charles Bennett.
- The Stories that Little Breeches told. By the same Author.
- Mr. Wind and Madame Rain. Illustrated by Charles Bennett.
-
-Paul Duncan's Little by Little; a Tale for Boys. Edited by Frank
-Freeman. With an Illustration by Charles Keene. Fcap. 8vo. cloth 2_s._;
-gilt edges, 2_s._ 6_d._ Also, same price,
-
- Boy Missionary; a Tale for Young People. By Mrs. J. M. Parker.
- Difficulties Overcome. By Miss Brightwell.
- The Babes in the Basket: a Tale in the West Indian Insurrection.
- Jack Buntline; the Life of a Sailor Boy. By W. H. G. Kingston.
-
-The Swiss Family Robinson; or, the Adventures of a Father and Mother and
-Four Sons on a Desert Island. With Explanatory Notes and Illustrations.
-First and Second Series. New Edition, complete in one volume, 3_s._
-6_d._
-
-Geography for my Children. By Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Author of
-"Uncle Tom's Cabin," &c. Arranged and Edited by an English Lady, under
-the Direction of the Authoress. With upwards of Fifty Illustrations.
-Cloth extra, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-Stories of the Woods; or, the Adventures of Leather-Stocking: A Book for
-Boys, compiled from Cooper's Series of "Leather-Stocking Tales." Fcap.
-cloth, Illustrated, 5_s._
-
- "_I have to own that I think the heroes of another writer, viz.
- 'Leather-Stocking,' 'Uncas,' 'Hard Heart,' 'Tom Coffin,' are
- quite the equals of Sir Walter Scott's men;--perhaps
- 'Leather-Stocking' is better than any one in Scott's lot._"--W.
- M. THACKERAY.
-
-Child's Play. Illustrated with Sixteen Coloured Drawings by E. V. B.,
-printed in fac-simile by W. Dickes' process, and ornamented with Initial
-Letters. New edition, with India paper tints, royal 8vo. cloth extra,
-bevelled cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._ The Original Edition of this work was
-published at One Guinea.
-
-Child's Delight. Forty-two Songs for the Little Ones, with forty-two
-Pictures. 1_s._; coloured, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-Goody Platts, and her Two Cats. By Thomas Miller. Fcap. 8vo. cloth,
-1_s._
-
-Little Blue Hood: a Story for Little People. By Thomas Miller, with
-coloured frontispiece. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-Mark Willson's First Reader. By the Author of "The Picture Alphabet" and
-"The Picture Primer." With 120 Pictures. 1_s._
-
-The Picture Alphabet; or Child's First Letter Book. With new and
-original Designs. 6_d._
-
-The Picture Primer. 6_d._
-
-
-HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY.
-
-The Conspiracy of Count Fieschi: an Episode in Italian History. By M. De
-Celesia. Translated by David Hilton, Esq., Author of a "History of
-Brigandage." With Portrait. 8vo.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-A Biography of Admiral Sir B. P. V. Broke, Bart., K.C.B. By the Rev.
-John Brighton, Rector of Kent Town. Dedicated by express permission to
-His Royal Highness Prince Alfred.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-A History of Brigandage in Italy; with Adventures of the more celebrated
-Brigands. By David Hilton, Esq. 2 vols, post 8vo. cloth, 16_s._
-
-A History of the Gipsies, with Specimens of the Gipsy Language. By
-Walter Simson. Post 8vo.
-
-A History of West Point, the United States Military Academy and its
-Military Importance. By Capt. E. C. Boynton, A. M. With Plans and
-Illustrations. 8vo. 21_s._
-
-The Twelve Great Battles of England, from Hastings to Waterloo. With
-Plans, fcap. 8vo. cloth extra, 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-George Washington's Life, by Washington Irving. 5 vols. royal 8vo.
-12_s._ each Library Illustrated Edition. 5 vols. Imp. 8vo. 4_l._ 4_s._
-
-Plutarch's Lives. An entirely new Library Edition, carefully revised and
-corrected, with some Original Translations by the Editor. Edited by A.
-H. Clough, Esq. sometime Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, and late
-Professor of English Language and Literature at University College. 5
-vols. 8vo. cloth. 2_l._ 10_s._
-
- "_Mr. Clough's work is worthy of all praise, and we hope that
- it will tend to revive the study of Plutarch._"--Times.
-
-Life of John Adams, 2nd President of the United States, by C. F. Adams.
-8vo. 14_s._ Life and Works complete, 10 vols. 14_s._ each.
-
-Life and Administration of Abraham Lincoln. Fcap. 8vo. stiff cover,
-1_s._; with map, speeches, &c. crown 8vo. 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-
-TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE.
-
-A Walk from London to the Land's End. By Elihu Burritt, Author of "A
-Walk from London to John O'Groats:" with several Illustrations. Large
-post 8vo. Uniform with the first edition of "John O'Groats." 12_s._
-
-A Walk from London to John O'Groats. With Notes by the Way. By Elihu
-Burritt. Second and cheaper edition. With Photographic Portrait of the
-Author. Small post 8vo. 6_s._
-
-Social Life of the Chinese: with some account of their religious,
-governmental, educational, and Business customs and opinions. By the
-Rev. Justus Doolittle. With over 100 Illustrations, in two vols. Demy
-8vo. cloth, 24_s._
-
-A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe, or Rivers and Lakes of Europe. By
-John Macgregor, M.A. With numerous Illustrations. Post 8vo. cloth, 5_s._
-
-Captain Hall's Life with the Esquimaux. New and cheaper Edition, with
-Coloured Engravings and upwards of 100 Woodcuts. With a Map. Price 7_s._
-6_d._ cloth extra. Forming the cheapest and most popular Edition of a
-work on Arctic Life and Exploration ever published.
-
- "_This is a very remarkable book, and unless we very much
- misunderstand both him and his book, the author is one of those
- men of whom great nations do well to be proud._"--Spectator.
-
- "_If Capt. Hall should survive the perils of the journey on
- which he is now engaged, we are convinced he will bring home
- some news, be it good or bad, about the Franklin expedition. He
- can hardly be expected back before the autumn of 1866. But if
- he has gone he has left us his vastly entertaining volumes,
- which contain much valuable information, as we have said,
- concerning the Esquimaux tribes. These volumes are the best
- that we have ever met with, concerning the people and things to
- be found among 'the thick ribb'd ice.'_"--Standard.
-
- "_The pen of Wilkie Collins would fail to describe in more
- life-like terms of horror the episode of the cannibal crew
- escaped from a whaler who boarded the 'George Henry' on the
- outward passage of that ship. We are tempted to relate how an
- Innuit throws a summersault in the water in his_ kyack, _boat
- and all, and to introduce our readers to our Author's dogs,
- including the famous Barbekerk; but we must pause, and refer to
- this most interesting work itself, which will repay
- perusal._"--Press.
-
-A Winter in Algeria, 1863-4. By Mrs. George Albert Rogers. With
-illustrations. 8vo. cloth, 12_s._
-
-Ten Days in a French Parsonage. By Rev. G. M. Musgrave. 2 vols. post
-8vo. 16_s._
-
-Turkey. By J. Lewis Farley, F.S.S., Author of "Two Years in Syria." With
-Illustrations in Chromo-lithography, and a Portrait of His Highness Fuad
-Pasha. 8vo.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-Letters on England. By Louis Blanc. 2 vols, post 8vo.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-House and Home in Belgium. By Blanchard Jerrold. Author of "At Home in
-Paris." Post 8vo.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-The Story of the Great March: a Diary of General Sherman's Campaign
-through Georgia and the Carolinas. By Brevet-Major G. W. Nichols,
-Aide-de-Camp to General Sherman. With a coloured Map and numerous
-Illustrations. 12mo. cloth, price 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-Cape Cod. By Henry D. Thoreau. 12mo. cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-Arabian Days and Nights; or, Rays from the East: a Narrative. By
-Marguerite A. Power. 1 vol. Post 8vo. 10_s._ 6_d._
-
- "Miss Power's book is thoroughly interesting and does much
- credit to her talent for observation and description."--_London
- Review._
-
-Wild Scenes in South America; or, Life in the Llanos of Venezuela. By
-Don Ramon Paez. Numerous Illustrations. Post 8vo. cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-After Icebergs with a Painter; a Summer's Voyage to Labrador. By the
-Rev. Louis L. Noble. Post 8vo. with coloured plates, cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Prairie and Overland Traveller; a Companion for Emigrants, Traders,
-Travellers, Hunters, and Soldiers, traversing great Plains and Prairies.
-By Capt. R. B. Marcey. Illustrated. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-The States of Central America, by E. G. Squier. Cloth. 18_s._
-
-Home and Abroad (_Second Series_). A Sketch-book of Life, Men, and
-Travel, by Bayard Taylor. With Illustrations, post 8vo. cloth, 8_s._
-6_d._
-
-Northern Travel. Summer and Winter Pictures of Sweden, Lapland, and
-Norway, by Bayard Taylor. 1 vol. post 8vo., cloth, 8_s._ 6_d._
-
-_Also by the same Author, each complete in 1 vol., with Illustrations._
-
- Central Africa; Egypt and the White Nile. 7_s._ 6_d._
- India, China, and Japan. 7_s._ 6_d._
- Palestine, Asia Minor, Sicily, and Spain. 7_s._ 6_d._
- Travels in Greece and Russia. With an Excursion to Crete. 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-
-INDIA, AMERICA, AND THE COLONIES.
-
-A History of the Discovery and Exploration of Australia; or an Account
-of the Progress of Geographical Discovery in that Continent, from the
-Earliest Period to the Present Day. By the Rev. Julian E. Tenison Woods,
-F.R.G.S., &c., &c. 2 vols, demy 8vo. cloth, 28_s._
-
-The Confederation of the British North American Provinces; their past
-History and future Prospects; with a map, &c. By Thomas Rawlings. 8vo.
-cloth, 5_s._
-
-Canada in 1864; a Hand-book for Settlers. By Henry T. N. Chesshyre.
-Fcap. 8vo. 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Colony of Victoria: its History, Commerce, and Gold Mining: its
-Social and Political Institutions, down to the End of 1863. With
-Remarks, Incidental and Comparative, upon the other Australian Colonies.
-By William Westgarth, Author of "Victoria and the Gold Mines," &c. 8vo.
-with a Map, cloth, 16_s._
-
-Tracks of McKinlay and Party across Australia. By John Davis, one of the
-Expedition. Edited from the MS. Journal of Mr. Davis, with an
-Introductory View of the recent Explorations of Stuart, Burke, Wills,
-Landsborough and others. By Wm. Westgarth. With numerous Illustrations
-in chromo-lithography, and Map. 8vo. cloth, 16_s._
-
-The Ordeal of Free Labour in the British West Indies. By William G.
-Sewell. Post 8vo. cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Progress and Present State of British India; a Manual of Indian
-History, Geography, and Finance, for general use; based upon Official
-Documents, furnished under the authority of Her Majesty's Secretary of
-State for India. By Montgomery Martin, Esq., Author of a "History of the
-British Colonies," &c. In one volume, post 8vo. cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-Colonial Essays. Translated from the Dutch, post 8vo. cloth, 6_s._
-
-The Cotton Kingdom: a Traveller's Observations on Cotton and Slavery in
-America, based upon three former volumes of Travels and Explorations. By
-Frederick Law Olmsted. With a Map. 2 vols, post 8vo. 1_l._ 1_s._
-
- "_Mr. Olmsted gives his readers a wealth of facts conveyed in a
- long stream of anecdotes, the exquisite humour of many of them
- making parts of his book as pleasant to read as a novel of the
- first class._"--Athenĉum.
-
-A History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution of
-the United States of America, with Notices of its Principal Framers. By
-George Ticknor Curtis, Esq. 2 vols. 8vo. Cloth, 1_l._ 4_s._
-
- "_Mr. Curtis writes with dignity and vigour, and his work will
- be one of permanent interest._"--Athenĉum.
-
-The Principles of Political Economy applied to the Condition, the
-Resources, and Institutions of the American People. By Francis Bowen.
-8vo. Cloth, 14_s._
-
-A History of New South Wales from the Discovery of New Holland in 1616
-to the present time. By the late Roderick Flanagan, Esq., Member of the
-Philosophical Society of New South Wales. 2 vols. 8vo. 24_s._
-
-Canada and its Resources. Two Prize Essays, by Hogan and Morris. 7_s._,
-or separately, 1_s._ 6_d._ each, and Map, 3_s._
-
-
-SCIENCE AND DISCOVERY.
-
-A Dictionary of Photography, on the Basis of Sutton's Dictionary.
-Rewritten by Professor Dawson, of King's College, Editor of the "Journal
-of Photography;" and Thomas Sutton, B.A., Editor of "Photograph Notes."
-8vo. with numerous Illustrations.
-
- [_Shortly._
-
-The Physical Geography of the Sea and its Meteorology; or, the Economy
-of the Sea and its Adaptations, its Salts, its Waters, its Climates, its
-Inhabitants, and whatever there may be of general interest in its
-Commercial Uses or Industrial Pursuits. By Commander M. F. Maury, LL.D.
-Tenth Edition, being the Second Edition of the Author's revised and
-enlarged Work. Post 8vo. cloth extra, 8_s._ 6_d._; cheap edition, small
-post 8vo. 5_s._
-
-_This edition, as well as its immediate predecessor, includes all the
-researches and observations of the last three years, and is copyright in
-England and on the Continent._
-
- "We err greatly if Lieut. Maury's book will not hereafter be
- classed with the works of the great men who have taken the lead
- in extending and improving knowledge and art; his book displays
- in a remarkable degree, like the 'Advancement of Learning,' and
- the 'Natural History' of Buffon, profound research and
- magnificent imagination."--_Illustrated London News._
-
-The Structure of Animal Life. By Louis Agassiz. With 46 Diagrams. 8vo.
-cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Kedge Anchor; or, Young Sailor's Assistant, by William Brady.
-Seventy Illustrations. 8vo. 16_s._
-
-Theory of the Winds, by Capt. Charles Wilkes. 8vo. cl. 8_s._ 6_d._
-
-Archaia; or, Studies of the Cosmogony and Natural History of the Hebrew
-Scriptures. By Professor Dawson, Principal of McGill College, Canada.
-Post 8vo. cloth, cheaper edition, 6_s._
-
-Ichnographs, from the Sandstone of the Connecticut River, Massachusetts,
-U. S. A. By James Dean, M.D. One volume, 4to. with Forty-six Plates,
-cloth, 27_s._
-
-The Recent Progress of Astronomy, by Elias Loomis, LL.D. 3rd Edition.
-Post 8vo. 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-An Introduction to Practical Astronomy, by the Same. 8vo. cloth. 8_s._
-
-Manual of Mineralogy, including Observations on Mines, Rocks, Reduction
-of Ores, and the Application of the Science to the Arts, with 260
-Illustrations. Designed for the Use of Schools and Colleges. By James D.
-Dana, A.M., Author of a "System of Mineralogy." New Edition, revised and
-enlarged. 12mo. Half bound, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Ocean Telegraph Cable; its Construction, &c. and Submersion
-Explained. By W. Rowett. 8vo. cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-Cyclopĉdia of Mathematical Science, by Davies and Peck. 8vo. Sheep.
-18_s._
-
-
-TRADE, AGRICULTURE, DOMESTIC ECONOMY, ETC.
-
-Railway Practice, European and American; comprising the economical
-generation of Steam, the adaptation of Wood and Coke-burning Engines to
-Coal Burning, and in Permanent Way, including Road-bed, Sleepers, Rails,
-Joint-fastenings, Street Railways, &c. By Alexander L. Holley, Joint
-Author of Colburn and Holley's "Permanent Way," &c. Demy folio, with 77
-Engravings, half-morocco. 3_l._ 3_s._
-
-Hunt's Merchants' Magazine (Monthly). 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Book of Farm Implements, and their Construction; by John L. Thomas.
-With 200 Illustrations. 12mo. 6_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Practical Surveyor's Guide; by A. Duncan. Fcp. 8vo. 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-Villas and Cottages; by Calvert Vaux, Architect. 300 Illustrations. 8vo.
-cloth. 12_s._
-
-Bee-Keeping. By "The Times" Bee-master. Small post 8vo. numerous
-Illustrations, cloth, 5_s._
-
- "_The Bee-master has done a good work, which outweighs a
- cartload of mistakes, in giving an impetus to bee-keeping
- throughout the country. Here is a simple and graceful
- amusement, which is also a profitable one. The keeping of bees
- needs no great skill and but a small outlay. The result,
- however, besides the amusement which it affords is a store of
- honey that in the present state of the market may make a
- considerable addition to the income of a poor cotter, and may
- even be worthy the ambition of an underpaid curate or a
- lieutenant on half-pay._"--Times, Jan. 11, 1865.
-
-The English and Australian Cookery Book. Small post 8vo. Coloured
-Illustrations, cloth extra, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Bubbles of Finance: the Revelations of a City Man. Fcap. 8vo. fancy
-boards, price 2_s._ 6_d._
-
- _The_ Times _of May 21st in a leading article referring to the
- above work, says:_--"_We advise our young friends to read some
- amusing chapters on 'accommodation' and 'borrowing' which have
- appeared within the last two months in Mr. Charles Dickens's_
- All the Year Round."
-
-Coffee: A Treatise on its Nature and Cultivation. With some remarks on
-the management and purchase of Coffee Estates. By Arthur R. W.
-Lascelles. Post 8vo. cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Railway Freighter's Guide. Defining mutual liabilities of Carriers
-and Freighters, and explaining system of rates, accounts, invoices,
-checks, booking, and permits, and all other details pertaining to
-traffic management, as sanctioned by Acts of Parliament, Bye-laws, and
-General Usage. By J. S. Martin. 12mo. Cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-
-THEOLOGY.
-
-The Land and the Book, or Biblical Illustrations drawn from the Manners
-and Customs, the Scenes and the Scenery of the Holy Land, by W. M.
-Thomson, M.D., twenty-five years a Missionary in Syria and Palestine.
-With 3 Maps and several hundred Illustrations. 2 vols. Post 8vo. cloth.
-1_l._ 1_s._
-
-Missionary Geography for the use of Teachers and Missionary Collectors.
-Fcap. 8vo. with numerous maps and illustrations, 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-A Topographical Picture of Ancient Jerusalem; beautifully coloured. Nine
-feet by six feet, on rollers, varnished. 3_l._ 3_s._
-
-Nature and the Supernatural. By Horace Bushnell, D.D. One vol. New
-Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._ Also by the same Author.
-
- Dr. Bushnell's Christian Nurture. 1_s._ 6_d._
- Dr. Bushnell's Character of Jesus. 6_d._
- Dr. Bushnell's New Life. 1_s._ 6_d._
- Dr. Bushnell's Work and Play. 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-Five Years' Prayer, with the Answers: comprising recent Narratives and
-Incidents in America, Germany, England, Ireland, Scotland, &c. By D.
-Samuel Irenĉus Prime. 12mo. cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; and a Cheap Edition,
-price 1_s._ Also by the same Author.
-
- The Power of Prayer. 12mo. cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Light of the World: a most True Relation of a Pilgrimess travelling
-towards Eternity. Divided into Three Parts; which deserve to be read,
-understood, and considered by all who desire to be saved. Reprinted from
-the edition of 1696. Beautifully printed by Clay on toned paper. Crown
-8vo. pp. 593, bevelled boards, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-A Short Method of Prayer; an Analysis of a Work so entitled by Madame de
-la Mothe-Guyon; by Thomas C. Upham, Professor of Mental and Moral
-Philosophy in Bowdoin College, U.S. America. Printed by Whittingham.
-12mo. cloth. 1_s._
-
-Christian Believing and Living. By F. D. Huntington, D.D. Crown 8vo.
-cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
-
- "For freshness of thought, power of illustration, and
- evangelical earnestness, these writers [Dr. Huntington and Dr.
- Bushnell] are not surpassed by the ablest theologians in the
- palmiest days of the Church."--_Caledonian Mercury._
-
-Life Thoughts. By the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Two Series, complete in
-one volume, well printed and well bound. 2_s._ 6_d._ Superior edition,
-illustrated with ornamented borders. Sm. 4to. cloth extra. 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-Dr. Beecher's Life and Correspondence: an Autobiography. Edited by his
-Son. 2 vols, post 8vo. with Illustrations, price 21_s._
-
- "_One of the most real, interesting, and instructive pieces of
- religious biography of the present day._"--Nonconformist.
-
- "_We have waited for the publication of the second and last
- volume of this interesting, we may well say entertaining,
- biography, before introducing it to our readers. It is now
- complete, and furnishes one of the most various and delightful
- portraits of a fine, sturdy, old representative of antient
- theology and earnest piety, relieved by very sweet and engaging
- pictures of New England society in its religious circles, and
- the ways and usages of the men and women who lived, and loved,
- and married, and had families, nearly a century since.... And
- now we must lay down these very delightful volumes. We trust we
- have sufficiently characterized them, while there are, of
- course, reminiscences, pictures of places and of persons, we
- have been unable even to mention. It was an extraordinary
- family altogether; a glow of bright, affectionate interest
- suffuses all in charming sunshine. It was a life of singular
- purpose, usefulness, and determination; and we think ministers
- especially, and of ministers young students especially, might
- read it, and read it more than once, to advantage.... Without
- attempting any more words, we hope we have sufficiently
- indicated our very high appreciation of, and gratitude for,
- this charming and many-sided biography of a most robust and
- healthy life._"--The Eclectic.
-
- "_All that the old man writes is clever and
- sagacious._"--Athenĉum.
-
- "_If the reader can imagine the Vicar of Wakefield in America,
- this memoir will give a very good idea of what he would be
- among Yankee surroundings. There is the same purity, sincerity,
- and goodness of heart, the same simplicity of manners and
- directness of purpose in Dr. Primrose and Dr. Beecher, though
- the go-ahead society in which the latter divine lived failed
- not to impress its character upon him. This is as instructive
- and charming a book for family reading as can be taken up for
- that purpose._"--Daily News.
-
- "_A hundred pleasant things we must pass by; but readers of
- these charming volumes will not do so._"--Wesleyan Times.
-
-Life and Experience of Madame de la Mothe Guyon. By Professor Upham.
-Edited by an English Clergyman. Crown 8vo. cloth, with Portrait. Third
-Edition, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-_By the same Author._
-
- Life of Madame Catherine Adorna; 12mo. cloth. 4_s._ 6_d._
- The Life of Faith, and Interior Life. 2 vols. 5_s._ 6_d._ each.
- The Divine Union. 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-
-LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE.
-
-Wheaton's Elements of International Law; with a New Supplement to May
-1863: comprising Important Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United
-States of America, settling authoritatively the character of the
-hostilities in which they are involved, and the legal consequences to be
-deduced from them. Royal 8vo. cloth extra, 35_s._
-
-History of the Law of Nations; by Henry Wheaton, LL.D. author of the
-"Elements of International Law." Roy. 8vo. cloth, 31_s._ 6_d._
-
-Commentaries on American Law; by Chancellor Kent. Ninth and entirely New
-Edition. 4 vols. 8vo. calf. 5_l._ 5_s._; cloth, 4_l._ 10_s._
-
-Treatise on the Law of Evidence; by Simon Greenleaf, LL.D. 3 vols. 8vo.
-calf. 4_l._ 4_s._
-
-A Treatise on the Measure of Damages; or, An Enquiry into the Principles
-which govern the Amount of Compensation in Courts of Justice. By
-Theodore Sedgwick. Third revised Edition, enlarged Imperial 8vo. cloth.
-31_s._ 6_d._
-
-Justice Story's Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States. 2
-vols. 36_s._
-
-Justice Story's Commentaries on the Laws, viz. Bailments--Agency--Bills
-of Exchange--Promissory Notes--Partnership--and Conflict of Laws. 6
-vols. 8vo. cloth, each 28_s._
-
-Justice Story's Equity Jurisprudence. 2 vols. 8vo. 63_s._; and Equity
-Pleadings. 1 vol. 8vo. 31_s._ 6_d._
-
-W. W. Story's Treatise on the Law of Contracts. Fourth Edition, greatly
-enlarged and revised. 2 vols. 8vo. cloth, 63_s._
-
-
-MEDICAL.
-
-Human Physiology, Statical and Dynamical; by Dr. Draper. 300
-Illustrations. 8vo. 25_s._
-
-A Treatise on the Practice of Medicine; by Dr. George B. Wood. Fourth
-Edition. 2 vols. 36_s._
-
-A Treatise on Fractures, by J. F. Malgaigne, Chirurgien de l'Hôpital
-Saint Louis, Translated, with Notes and Additions, by John H. Packard,
-M.D. With 106 Illustrations. 8vo. sheep. 1_l._ 1_s._
-
-The History of Prostitution; its Extent, Causes, and Effects throughout
-the World: by William Sanger, M.D. 8vo. cloth. 16_s._
-
-Elements of Chemical Physics; with numerous Illustrations. By Josiah P.
-Cooke. 8vo. cloth. 16_s._
-
- "_As an introduction to Chemical Physics, this is by far the
- most comprehensive work in our language._"--Athenĉum, Nov. 17.
-
-A History of Medicine, from its Origin to the Nineteenth Century. By Dr.
-P. V. Renouard. 8vo. 18_s._
-
-Letters to a Young Physician just entering upon Practice; by James
-Jackson, M.D. Fcp. 8vo. 5_s._
-
-Lectures on the Diseases of Women and Children. By Dr. G. S. Bedford.
-4th Edition. 8vo. 18_s._
-
-The Principles and Practice of Obstetrics. By Gunning S. Bedford, A.M.,
-M.D. With Engravings. 8vo. Cloth, 1_l._ 1_s._
-
-Principles and Practice of Dental Surgery; by C. A. Harris. 6th Edition.
-8vo. 24_s._
-
-Chemical and Pharmaceutical Manipulations; by C. and C. Morfit. Royal
-8vo. Second Edition enlarged. 21_s._
-
-
-FICTION AND MISCELLANEOUS.
-
-Mr. Charles Reade's celebrated Romance, Hard Cash. A new and cheap
-Standard Edition. Price 6_s._ handsomely bound in cloth.
-
- "_There is a freshness and reality about his young people, and
- a degree of warmth and zest in the love-making of these
- impetuosities, which make the first chapter of his book most
- enjoyable reading. The description of the boat-race at Henley
- is beyond anything of the kind we have ever seen in print, and
- the repulse of the two pirates by the old Agra is a perfect
- masterpiece of nautical painting._"--Saturday Review.
-
-_New Popular Novels, to be obtained at all Libraries._
-
- Passing the Time. By Blanchard Jerrold. 2 vols, post 8vo. 16_s._
-
- Marian Rooke. By Henry Sedley. 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- The Gayworthys. 2nd edition, 2 vols, crown 8vo. 16_s._
-
- Sir Felix Foy, Bart. By Dutton Cook. 3 vols, post 8vo. 24_s._
- The Trials of the Tredgolds. By the same. 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- A Mere Story. By the Author of "Twice Lost." 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- Selvaggio. By the Author of "Mary Powell." One vol. 8_s._
-
- Miss Biddy Frobisher. By the Author of "Selvaggio." One vol. 8_s._
-
- John Godfrey's Fortunes. By Bayard Taylor. 3 vols. 24_s._
- Hannah Thurston. By the same Author. 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- A Splendid Fortune. By J. Hain Friswell. 3 vols, post 8vo. 24_s._
-
- Lion-Hearted; a Novel. By Mrs. Grey. 2 vols, post 8vo. 16_s._
-
- A Dangerous Secret. By Annie Thomas. 2 vols. 16_s._
-
- Lynn of the Craggs. By Charlotte Smith. 3 vols, post 8vo. 24_s._
-
- St. Agnes Bay; or, Love at First Sight. Post 8vo. cloth, 7_s._
-
- The White Favour. By H. Holl. 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- The Old House in Crosby Square. By Henry Holl. 2 vols. 16_s._
- More Secrets than One. By the same Author. 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- Footsteps Behind Him. Third Edition. By William J. Stewart. 5_s._
- Picked Up at Sea. By the same Author. 3 vols. 24_s._
-
- Strathcairn. By Charles Allston Collins. 2 vols. post 8vo. 16_s._
-
-A Good Fight in the Battle of Life: a Prize Story founded on Facts.
-Reprinted by permission from "Cassell's Family Paper." Crown 8vo. cloth,
-7_s._ 6_d._
-
-Abel Drake's Wife: a Novel. By John Saunders. An entirely New Edition.
-With Steel Engraving, from a Water-Colour Drawing by John Tenniel. 5_s._
-
-Female Life in Prison. By a Prison Matron. Fourth and cheaper edition;
-with a Photograph, by permission, from the engraving of Mrs. Fry reading
-to the Prisoners in 1816. 1 vol. crown 8vo., 5_s._
-
-Myself and My Relatives. _Second Thousand._ With Frontispiece on Steel
-from a Drawing by John E. Millais, A.R.A. Cr. 8vo. 5_s._
-
-Tales for the Marines. By Walter Thornbury. 2 vols, post 8vo. 16_s._
-
- "_Who would not wish to be a Marine, if that would secure a
- succession of tales like these?_"--Athenĉum.
-
-Helen Felton's Question: a Book for Girls By Agnes Wylde. Cheaper
-Edition, with Frontispiece. Crown 8vo. 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-Faith Gartney's Girlhood. By the Author of "The Gayworthys." Fcap. 8vo.
-with coloured Frontispiece, cloth, price 3_s._ 6_d._; or, Railway
-Edition, boards, 1_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Professor at the Breakfast Table. By Oliver W. Holmes, Author of the
-"Autocrat of the Breakfast Table." Fcap. 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-The Rooks' Garden, and other Papers. By Cuthbert Bede, Author of "The
-Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green." Choicely printed by Constable. Post
-8vo. 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-The White Wife; with other stories, Supernatural, Romantic and
-Legendary. Collected and Illustrated by Cuthbert Bede. Post 8vo. cloth,
-6_s._
-
-Wayside Warbles. By Edward Capern, Rural Postman, Bideford, Devon. Fcap.
-8vo. cloth, 5_s._
-
-Last Gleanings. By the late Frank Fowler. Post 8vo. cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-House and Home Papers. By Mrs. H. B. Stowe. 12mo. boards, 1_s._; cloth
-extra, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-Little Foxes. By Mrs. H. B. Stowe. Cloth extra, 3_s._ 6_d._ Popular
-Edition, fancy boards, 1_s._
-
-The Pearl of Orr's Island. A Story of the Coast of Maine. By Mrs.
-Harriet Beecher Stowe. Author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," "Minister's
-Wooing." In popular form, Part I. 1_s._ 6_d._; Part II. 2_s._; or,
-complete in one volume, with engraving on steel from water-colour by
-John Gilbert. Handsomely bound in cloth, 5_s._
-
-The Minister's Wooing: a Tale of New England. By the Author of "Uncle
-Tom's Cabin." Two Editions:--1. In post 8vo. cloth, with Thirteen
-Illustrations by Hablot K. Browne, 5_s._--2. Popular Edition, crown 8vo.
-cloth, with a Design by the same Artist. 2_s._ 6_d._
-
-Nothing to Wear, and Two Millions, by William Allen Butler. 1_s._
-
-Railway Editions of Popular Fiction. On good paper, well-printed and
-bound, fancy boards.
-
- Paul Foster's Daughter. 2_s._ 6_d._
- The Lost Sir Massingberd. 2_s._ 6_d._
- The Bubbles of Finance. 2_s._ 6_d._
- The Gayworthys. 1_s._ 6_d._
- The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table. 1_s._
- Faith Gartney's Girlhood. 1_s._ 6_d._
- The King's Mail. 2_s._ 6_d._
- My Lady Ludlow. 2_s._ 6_d._
- Mrs. Stowe's Little Foxes. 1_s._
- ---------- House and Home. 1_s._
-
-
-LONDON: SAMPSON LOW, SON, AND MARSTON.
-
-MILTON HOUSE, LUDGATE HILL.
-
-_English, American, and Colonial Booksellers and Publishers._
-
-
-Chiswick Press:--Whittingham and Wilkins, Tooks Court, Chancery Lane.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcribers Notes:
-
- Some minor obvious typographical errors have been corrected
- silently.
-
- Footnotes and illustrations have been moved to underneath the
- paragraph they refer to so as to not disrupt the flow of the
- text.
-
- Inconsistent hyphenation left as printed.
-
- The phrase "a hotel" and "an hotel" have been left as printed.
-
-Changes made are denoted by [square brackets]:
-
- Pg. 176: "in an unpronouncable[unpronounceable] German"
- Pg. 298: "waterproof helmet[added comma] ventilated cap,"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe
-on Rivers and Lakes of Europe, by John Macgregor
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A THOUSAND MILES IN THE ROB ROY ***
-
-***** This file should be named 40238-8.txt or 40238-8.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/2/3/40238/
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, fh and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
-http://gutenberg.org/license).
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
-http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
-809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
-business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
-information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
-page at http://pglaf.org
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit http://pglaf.org
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- http://www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.