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diff --git a/4030-h/4030-h.htm b/4030-h/4030-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..524e770 --- /dev/null +++ b/4030-h/4030-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,1828 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<HTML> +<HEAD> + +<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> + +<TITLE> +The Project Gutenberg E-text of Travellers' Stories, by Eliza Lee Follen +</TITLE> + +<STYLE TYPE="text/css"> +BODY { color: Black; + background: White; + margin-right: 10%; + margin-left: 10%; + font-family: "Times New Roman", serif; + text-align: justify } + +P {text-indent: 4% } + +P.noindent {text-indent: 0% } + +P.poem {text-indent: 0%; + margin-left: 10%; + font-size: small } + +P.letter {text-indent: 0%; + font-size: small ; + margin-left: 10% ; + margin-right: 10% } + +P.finis { font-size: larger ; + text-align: center ; + text-indent: 0% ; + margin-left: 0% ; + margin-right: 0% } + +</STYLE> + +</HEAD> + +<BODY> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Travellers' Tales, by Eliza Lee Follen + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Travellers' Tales + +Author: Eliza Lee Follen + +Posting Date: June 7, 2009 [EBook #4030] +Release Date: May, 2003 +First Posted: October 14, 2001 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELLERS' TALES *** + + + + +Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines. + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<BR><BR> + +<H1 ALIGN="center"> +TRAVELLERS' STORIES +</H1> + +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +BY +</H3> + +<H2 ALIGN="center"> +MRS. FOLLEN +</H2> + +<BR> + +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +Illustrated with Engravings. +</H3> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<H2 ALIGN="center"> +TRAVELLERS' STORIES +</H2> + +<BR> + +<P> +It is the pleasant twilight hour, and Frank and Harry Chilton are in +their accustomed seat by their mother's side in the old sofa, that same +comfortable old sofa, which might have listened to many pleasant and +interesting stories that will never be told. +</P> + +<P> +Mother, said Frank, you have often promised us that some time you would +tell us about your travels in Europe. This is a good stormy evening, +and no one will come in to interrupt you; so please, dear Mother, tell +us all you can remember. +</P> + +<P> +It is now, boys, five years since my return from Europe. Much that I +did and saw while there I forget. However, as I have been lately +looking over my hasty journal, I will see what I can remember. +</P> + +<P> +On the first of August I set sail in the steamer Caledonia for England. +At four o'clock in the afternoon, we were out of sight of land; one by +one, we had taken leave of every object which could be seen from the +departing vessel; and now nothing was visible to us but the sky, the +ocean meeting it in its wide, unbroken circle the sun gradually sinking +in the west, and our small but only house, the ship. How strange, how +sublime the scene was! so lonely, so magnificent, so solemn! At last +the sun set, gilding the clouds, and looking, to my tearful eyes, as if +that too said farewell! Then the moon appeared; and the long, +indefinite line of light from where her rays first touched the waters +to our ship, and the dancing of the waves as they crossed it, catching +the light as they passed, were so beautiful that I was unwilling to +leave the deck when the hour for rest arrived. +</P> + +<P> +The wind was against us, and we did not get on very fast; but I enjoyed +the novel scene the next day, and passed all my time on deck, watching +the sailors and the passengers, and noticing the difference between +Englishmen and Americans. +</P> + +<P> +On Sunday it was very cold, and the wind, still contrary, rose higher +and higher; it was impossible to set any sail, but I still kept on +deck, and thus avoided sickness. Soon after breakfast I saw a white +foam rising in different places occasionally, and was told that it was +whales spouting; I saw a great number, and enjoyed it highly. Presently +some one called out, "An iceberg!" and, far off against the sky, I saw +this floating wonder. It was very beautiful; such a dazzling white, so +calm and majestic, and so lonely; it was shaped, as I thought, like an +old cathedral, but others thought like a sleeping lion, taking what I +called the ruined tower for his head and mane. +</P> + +<P> +Soon after this, the man on the lookout cried, "Steamship America;" and +in a few moments more we saw her coming swiftly towards us with her +sails all set, for the wind was fair for her. Captain Leitch then told +me that he should stop his vessel and send a boat on board, and that he +would send a letter by it if I would write one quickly; to others he +said the same thing. In a moment the deck was cleared, and in a few +more moments all had returned with their letters; and never was there a +more beautiful sight than these two fine steamers manoeuvring to stop +at a respectful distance from each other; then our little boat was +lowered, and O, how pretty it was to see her dancing over the rough +waves to the other steamer! We sent to the America the sad news of the +loss of the Kestrel. After what seemed to us a long time, the boat +returned and brought papers, &c., but no important news; and in a few +moments the two steamers courtesied to each other, and each went on her +way. +</P> + +<P> +After six days, the waves had risen to a terrible height; the wind was +all but a gale; the ocean, as far as one could see, was one roaring +foam; one after another the angry billows rose to the height of twenty +or thirty feet, and rolled on, curling over their green sides, and then +broke with a voice of thunder against our vessel. +</P> + +<P> +I crawled out of the cabin, assisted by two gentlemen, and from the +lower deck saw the sublime commotion over the bulwarks, when the ship +rolled over on the side where I was sitting. The sea broke over our +vessel repeatedly; it went over the top of the smoke pipe, and struck +the fore-topsail in the middle but did, not hurt either of them. The +fourth officer was washed out of his berth by a sea when he was asleep. +One of the paddles broke, but in a very short time was replaced. One of +the wheels was often entirely out of water, but no harm was done us by +any of these disasters; and on we went safe through the troubled waters. +</P> + +<P> +At night, when we were planning how we should secure ourselves from +rolling about the cabin, there came a sudden lurch of the ship, and +every thing movable was sent SLAM BANG on one side of the cabin; and +such a crash of crockery in the pantry! A few minutes after came a +sound as if we had struck a rock. "What is that?" I asked of the +stewardess. +</P> + +<P> +"Only a sea, ma'am," she replied. In my heart I hoped we should not +have another such box on the ear. +</P> + +<P> +We had a horrid night, but the next day it grew quieter, though it was +still rough, and the wind ahead. Soon after, it grew fair, and the +captain promised us that on Monday, before twelve o'clock, we should +see Ireland; and sure enough it was so. I was on deck again just at +twelve; the sun came out of the clouds, and the mate took an +observation. +</P> + +<P> +"That is worth five pounds," said he; "now I know just where we are." +</P> + +<P> +Then the captain went up on the wheel-box, and we heard the welcome +sound, "Tory Island." We were then greatly rejoiced; this was the +twelfth day of our voyage. At night, for one hour, the wind blew a +gale, and the ship rocked in a very disagreeable manner; but at six +o'clock on Tuesday morning we were on deck, and there was the beautiful +Welsh coast, and Snowdon just taking off his night-cap; and soon we saw +"England, that precious stone set in a silver sea." +</P> + +<P> +Next to the thought of friends whom we had parted from for so long a +time, my mind during the voyage was occupied with the idea of Columbus. +When I looked upon the rude, boundless ocean, and remembered that when +he set out with his little vessel to go to a land that no one knew any +thing of, not even that there was such a land, he was guided altogether +by his faith in its existence; that he had no sympathy, but only +opposition; that he had no charts, nothing but the compass, that sure +but mysterious guide,—the thought of his sublime courage, of his +patient faith, was so present to my mind, that it seemed as if I was +actually sometimes in his presence. +</P> + +<P> +The other idea was the wonderful skill displayed in the construction of +the small, but wonderfully powerful and beautifully arranged and safe +home, in which we were moving on this immense and turbid ocean, +carrying within her the great central fire by which the engine was +moved, which, in spite of winds and waves, carried us safely along; +then the science which enabled the master of this curious nutshell of +man's contriving to know just in what part of this waste of trackless +waters we were. All these things I knew before, and had often thought +of them, but was never so impressed with them; it was almost as if they +were new to me. +</P> + +<P> +Before I quit the ocean, I must tell you of what I saw for which I +cannot account, and, had not one of the gentlemen seen it too, I should +almost have doubted my senses. When we were entirely out of sight of +land, I saw a white butterfly hovering over the waves, and looking as +if he were at home. Where the beautiful creature came from, or how he +lived, or what would become of him, no one could tell. He seemed to me +to be there as a symbol and a declaration that the souls of those whose +bodies lay in the ocean were yet living and present with those they had +loved. +</P> + +<P> +When we arrived at Liverpool, we found a very dear friend, whom we had +known in America, on the wharf ready to receive us. He took us to his +house, and we felt that we were not, after all, in a strange land. Love +and kindness are the home of all souls, and show us what heaven must be. +</P> + +<P> +The thing that impressed me most was the dim light of the English day, +the soft, undefined shadows, compared with our brilliant sunshine and +sharply defined shade—then the coloring of the houses, the streets, +the ground, of every thing; no bright colors, all sober, some very +dark,—the idea of age, gravity, and stability. Nobody seems in a +hurry. Our country seems so young and vehement; this so grave and +collected! +</P> + +<P> +Now I will tell you something about my visit to my dear friend Harriet +Martineau, whose beautiful little books, "Feats on the Fiord," "The +Crofton Boys," and the others, you love so much to read. She lives at +Ambleside, in what is called the Lake Country. Ambleside is a beautiful +country town in the valley of the Rotha, and not far from Lake +Windermere. Around the town rise high hills, which perhaps may be +called mountains. These mountains are not, like many of ours, clothed +to the summit with thick wild forests, but have fewer trees, and are +often bare at the summit. The mixture of gray rock and green grass +forms such a beautiful coloring over their graceful and sometimes +grotesque outline that you would not have them other than they are. +</P> + +<P> +The Ambleside houses are of dark-gray stone, and almost all of them +have ivy and flowers about them. One small house, the oldest in the +village, was several hundred years old; and out of all the crevices +between the stones hung harebells and other wild flowers; one side of +it and much of the roof were covered with ivy. This house was only +about ten feet square, and it looked to me like a great rustic flower +pot. +</P> + +<P> +I should like some time to read you a description of this lovely place, +written by Miss Martineau herself. Then you will almost hear the +murmuring sound of the Brathay and the Rotha, and breathe the perfume +of the wild heather, and catch the freshness of the morning breeze, as +she offers you these mountain luxuries in her glowing words. +</P> + +<P> +Miss Martineau lives a little out of the village. You drive up to the +house through a shrubbery of laurels, and roses, and fuschias, and +other plants,—young trees and flowers,—to the beautiful little porch, +covered with honeysuckles and creeping plants. The back of the house is +turned to the road, and the front looks out over the loveliest green +meadows, to the grand, quiet hills, sometimes clear and sharp in their +outline against the blue sky, and at others wreathed with mist; and one +might sit for hours at the large bay window in the parlor, watching +these changes, and asking no other enjoyment. +</P> + +<P> +It was also a great pleasure to witness the true and happy life of my +friend. I saw there the highest ideas of duty, usefulness, and +benevolence carried into daily practice. Miss Martineau took us one +morning to see the poet Wordsworth. He lived in a low, old-fashioned +stone house, surrounded by laurels, and roses, and fuschias, and other +flowers and flowering shrubs. The porch is all covered with ivy. We +found the venerable man in his low, dark parlor. He very kindly showed +us his study, and then took us over his grounds. +</P> + +<P> +When we took our leave, I asked him to give each of us a leaf from a +fine laurel tree near him; this he did very kindly, and smiled as +kindly at my effort at a compliment, in saying to him something about +one who had received so many laurels having some to spare to others. I +thanked him for his goodness in giving me so much of his time, and bade +the venerable man good by, very much pleased with my visit, and very +grateful to the kind friend who had introduced me to him, and insured +me a welcome. I shall never forget that day. +</P> + +<P> +Ambleside is a very fashionable place for travellers to visit in the +summer months, and we saw there many distinguished and agreeable people. +</P> + +<P> +I had a conversation with an intelligent lad of fourteen years of age, +which impressed me very much. He was talking with me about our country, +and finding faults with it of various kinds. While I could, I defended +it. He thought our revolution was only a rebellion. I told him that all +revolutions were only successful rebellions, and that we bore with the +tyranny of his country as long as we could. "I don't like the +Americans," said he; he blushed as he thought of the discourtesy of +saying this to me, and then added, "they are so inconsistent; they call +themselves republicans, and then hold slaves, and that is so wicked and +absurd." He went on to say all he thought and felt about the wickedness +of slavery. I heard him to the end, and then said, "There is nothing +you have said upon that subject that I do not agree to entirely. You +cannot say too much against slavery; but I call myself an abolitionist, +and while I live, I mean to say and do all I can against it. There are +many people in America, also, who feel as I do, and we hope to see it +abolished." +</P> + +<P> +While we were in Westmoreland, we made an excursion of four days among +the beautiful lakes. Miss Martineau was our guide and companion. She +knows the name of every mountain, every lake, every glen and dale, +every stream and tarn, and her guidance lent a new charm to the scenes +of grandeur and beauty through which she conducted us. +</P> + +<P> +We took a vehicle which the people call a jaunting car; it is a square +open carriage with two side seats and a door behind; and is drawn by +one horse. Two easy steps and a door easily opened let you in and out +when you please. The car holds four persons. The driver has a seat in +front, and under it he tied our carpet bag. +</P> + +<P> +Never did four souls enjoy themselves more than we on this little +excursion. I could not give you an adequate idea of what we saw, or of +the pleasure we took. Think of coming down from one of these beautiful +hills into Eskdale, or Ennesdale, of walking four miles on the banks of +Ullswater, of looking with your living eyes on Derwent Water, +Grassmere, Windermere, and many other lovely spots of which you have +seen pictures and read descriptions; and of being one in the +pleasantest party in the world, as you think, stopping where, and when, +and as long as any one pleases. +</P> + +<P> +It was on this journey that I first saw a real ruin. The ruins of +Calder Abbey I had never heard of; but the impression it made upon me I +can never forget; partly, perhaps, that it was the first ruin upon +which I ever gazed. One row of the pillars of the great aisle remains +standing. The answering row is gone. Two tall arches of the body of the +main building remain also, and different pieces of the walls. It is of +sandstone; the clusters of columns in the aisle look as if they were +almost held together by the ivy and honeysuckles that wave around their +mouldering capitals with every motion of the wind. In every crevice, +the harebell, the foxglove, and innumerable other flowers peep forth, +and swing in the wind. On the tops of the arches and walls large +flowering shrubs are growing; on the highest is a small tree, and +within the walls are oak trees more than a century old. The abbey was +built seven hundred years ago; and the ruins that are now standing look +as if they might stand many centuries longer. The owner of the place +has made all smooth and nice around it, so that you may imagine the +floor of the church to look like green velvet. It seems as if the ivy +and the flowers were caressing and supporting the abbey in its +beautiful old age. +</P> + +<P> +As I walked under the arches and upon the soft green turf, that so many +years ago had been a cold rough stone pavement, trodden by beings like +myself; and felt the flowers and vines hanging from the mouldering +capitals touch my face; and saw, in the place where was once a +confessional, an oak tree that had taken centuries to grow, and whose +top branches mingled with the smiling crest of flowers that crowned the +tops of the highest arches,—the thought of the littleness and the +greatness of man, and the everlasting beauty of the works of the +Creator, almost overwhelmed me; and I felt that, after all, I was not +in a decaying, ruined temple, but in an everlasting church, that would +grow green and more beautiful and perfect as time passes on. +</P> + +<P> +There is a fine old park around these lovely ruins; and, not far off, a +beautiful stream of water, with a curious bridge over it. The old monks +well knew how to choose beautiful places to live in. All harmonizes, +except—I grieve to tell of it—a shocking modern house, very near, +very ugly, and, I suppose, ridiculously elegant and comfortable inside. +From this hideosity you must resolutely turn away; and then you may +say, as I did, that your mortal eyes have never rested on any thing so +lovely as the ruins of Calder Abbey. +</P> + +<P> +Sometimes Miss Martineau would tell us some pretty legend, or some good +story. +</P> + +<P> +This was one of the legends: Near the borders of the Ullswater is the +beautiful Ara Force, one of the most lovely falls I have seen in +England. One may stand below, and look up at the rushing stream, or +above, on the top of the fall. Here, long ago, in the time of the +crusades, stood a pair of lovers; and here grows an old oak which was +their trysting tree. The lady was of noble birth, and lived in a castle +near by; and her true knight used to come at the still hour of evening +to meet her at the Ara Force. +</P> + +<P> +At length the lover was called away to the Holy Land. As he left his +lady, he vowed to be her true knight, and to return and wed her. Many +long days passed away, and the lady waited in vain for her true knight. +Though she heard often from others of his chivalrous deeds in the East, +yet no word came from him to tell her he was faithful; and she began to +fear that he was no longer true to her, but was serving some other +lady. Despair at last came upon her; and she grew wan and pale, and +slept no longer soundly: But, when the world was at rest, she would +rise in her sleep, and wander to the trysting tree, and pluck off the +green oak leaves, and throw them into the foaming water. +</P> + +<P> +The knight was all this time faithful, but was not able to send word to +his lady love. At last, he returned to England, and hastened towards +the castle where she lived. +</P> + +<P> +It was late at night when he came to the Ara Force; and he sat him down +under the trysting tree to wait for the morning. When he had been there +a long time, he saw a figure approach, all in white, and pluck off the +oak leaves, and fling them into the stream. Angry to see the sacred +tree thus injured, he rose to prevent it. The figure started and awoke. +In a moment he knew his beloved lady. She was now on the frail bridge. +The sudden shock, and the roar of the Force below, had made her giddy. +He leaped forward to embrace and save her. Alas! too late. Her foot +slipped, and she fell. It was all over. The water tumbling far down +into the rocky chasm beneath told the story of death. +</P> + +<P> +The knight was inconsolable. He retired from the world forever, and +built a monastery near by, on the borders of the lake, where he died. +</P> + +<P> +The frail bridge is now gone, and a strong plank, with a railing, +supplies its place. But the water still roars down the rock as on the +fatal night; and the foam and spray look as if the white garments of +the fair lady were still fluttering over the deep below. +</P> + +<P> +From Ambleside I went with some friends to visit Dr. Nichol at Glasgow. +We took coach first, and then the railroad. For the sake of economy we +took a second class carriage. The second class carriages, on the +English railroad, are, in fact, boxes with small holes for windows, +from which you may, if you are not very short, see something of the +world you are flying through, but not much. Good, honest, hard boards +are on the floor, sides, tops, and seats; in short, all around you. The +backs are not slanted at all. You must sit bolt upright, or not sit at +all. Now and then, these vehicles have a thin leather on the seats—not +often. +</P> + +<P> +Nothing can be more luxurious than a first class carriage. The floors +are nicely carpeted, the seats and backs are all stuffed; each seat is +a very nice easy chair. You can sleep in them almost as well as in a +bed; but these carriages are very expensive; and on this account many +of the gentry take those of the second class, hard as they are. +</P> + +<P> +We arrived at Glasgow at eight o'clock in the evening, and were +unfortunate enough to have a driver to the vehicle we took, who did not +know where the Observatory was. We knew that it was three miles from +the city, and not much more. We were advised by a gentleman, who was in +the same railroad box with us, to take a noddy, or a minibus, to the +Observatory. What these things were, of course, we could only guess, +and we did not care much, so we could only get out of our wooden box. +We came to the conclusion that we could sympathize tolerably well with +poor Box Brown. +</P> + +<P> +We, as we had been advised, took a noddy. A minibus is only a small +omnibus. A noddy is a contrivance that holds four, and has a door at +the end, and only one horse,—very like a Yankee cab. +</P> + +<P> +Glasgow, as every one knows, is one of the greatest manufacturing +cities in the world. Before we arrived, we were astonished at the great +fires from the iron works in the environs; and, as the streets were +well lighted, our eyes were dazzled and delighted with the whole scene, +and we were so pleased with the comfort of our noddy, that we did not +at first feel troubled at the fact that neither our driver nor we knew +where Dr. Nichol's house was. Presently we found ourselves left in the +middle of the street, and saw our noddy man, in a shop as bright as +day, poring over a directory. All he could learn was what we had +already told him, and so on he went, not knowing whether right or +wrong, giving us a fine opportunity of seeing the city in the evening. +At last, he came to the bridge over the Clyde, and there the tollman +directed us to the Observatory. +</P> + +<P> +After a long drive, evidently over not a very good road, the driver +stopped, and told us that here was Dr. Nichol's house. He began to take +off our luggage. We insisted upon his inquiring, first, if that was Dr. +Nichol's. He took off our trunk, and would have us go in; we resisted; +and after a while he rang the bell, and the answer was, "Dr. Nichol +lives in the next house." Still higher we had to climb, and at last +stopped at the veritable Observatory, where our friend, who was +expecting us, lived. Nothing could exceed the hospitality with which we +were received. +</P> + +<P> +Early, one misty, smoky morning, I embarked in one of the famous little +Clyde steamers, and set out on a Highland tour. I had heard of old +Scotia's barren hills, clothed with the purple heather and the yellow +gorse, of her deep glens, of her romantic streams; but the reality went +far beyond the description, or my imagination. The hills are all bare +of trees, but their outline is very beautiful and infinitely varied. +Picture to yourself a ridge of hills or mountains all purple with the +heather, relieved with the silver-gray of the rocks and with patches of +the bright yellow gorse, and all this harmony of color reflected in the +green sea water which runs winding far in among the hills. As the light +changes, these colors are either brought out more strongly, or mingle +into one soft lilac color, or sometimes a sort of purple-gray. Your eye +is enchanted, and never weary of looking and admiring. I would not have +any trees on the Scotch hills; I would not have them other than they +are. If I were dying I could look at them with joy; they are lovely +beyond words to tell. +</P> + +<P> +I was on all the most celebrated and beautiful lakes. I was rowed in an +open boat, by two Highland youths, from one end of Loch Katrine to the +other, and through those beautiful, high, heathery, rocky banks at one +end of the lake, called the Trosachs. These exquisite rocks are +adorned, and every crevice fringed and festooned with harebells, +heather, gorse, and here and there beautiful evergreen trees. We passed +by "Ellen's Isle," as it is called, the most exquisite little island +ever formed, a perfect oval, and all covered with the purple heather, +the golden gorse, and all sorts of flowers and exquisitely beautiful +trees. O, what a little paradise it is! A number of little row-boats, +with fine-looking Highland rowers and gay companies of ladies and +gentlemen, were visiting the island as we passed. They show the oak +tree to which they say Ellen fastened her boat. It was beautiful to see +the glancing of the sunlight on the oars of these boats, and the bright +colors of the shawls and bonnets of the ladies in them, and to witness +this homage to nature and genius which they were paying in their visit +to Ellen's Isle. I was glad to join them, and do reverence too. The +heather is usually not more than two feet high,—sometimes higher, but +often shorter; but on Ellen's Isle it grows to the height of four and +five feet. +</P> + +<P> +Just before we came to Oban, we passed the estate of Lord Heigh, where +we heard the following story. The origin of his name and rank is this: +When King Kenneth ruled in Scotland, he was beaten in a great battle by +the Danes, and his army scattered among the hills, while the enemy was +marching home in triumph. A man in the Scottish army said that he knew +a pass through which the victor must go, where one man might stop a +thousand, and offered himself and his two sons to defend it. He came to +the pass armed only with an ox-yoke, but made such use of his weapon +that the Danes were kept at bay, till the Scots rallied and cut them to +pieces. When Kenneth reached the pass, he found his brave subject lying +in truth quite exhausted. He raised him up, and inquired his name; the +fainting man could only gasp, "Heigh-ho, heigh!" From that moment he +was called the Lord of Heigh, and the king gave him as much land as an +eagle could fly over without alighting. The family arms are an eagle on +the wing over an ox-yoke. +</P> + +<P> +At Edinburgh, I went to see the Regalia, which are kept in a small room +in the castle, in which they were found after being buried there for +more than a century. It is a small room, not more than twelve feet +square. On one side is the iron chest in which the Regalia were found; +and in the middle of the room is a marble table, entirely white, +surrounded by an iron grating, on which is the crown which Robert Bruce +had made for himself, the sword of James the First, the signet ring of +Charles the First, and other jewels that had belonged to some of the +Scottish kings. Around these and the other insignia of their former +royalty the lamps are always burning. This is an altar sacred to Auld +Lang Syne. +</P> + +<P> +I arrived in York at half past two o'clock at night. All was dark in +the city, save the lights in the large station, where we were let out +of our boxes with our luggage. We had contrived occasionally to lie +down on the hard wooden seats, resting our heads on our carpet bags, +and, by a little entreaty, had secured a box to ourselves, so that we +were not quite so weary as we might have been, and were in good spirits +for what was before us, which was to hunt up a lodging place for the +remainder of the night, for all the inns were closed. +</P> + +<P> +After a while, we got a porter to take the luggage. After some hard +knocking we roused an innkeeper, and by three o'clock we were all in as +good beds as mortals could desire. +</P> + +<P> +At nine o'clock we breakfasted, and at ten my delighted eyes rested on +the real, living York Minster; the dream of my youth was realized, and +I stood in its majestic presence. I entered; the service had just +begun; the organ was playing, they were chanting. You could not tell +from whence the music came. It was every where; it enters your soul +like a beautiful poetic thought, and you know not what possesses you. +Only your whole soul is full of worship, peace, and joy. I could hardly +keep from falling on my knees. Look at the fine engravings, and study +it all out as well as you can; still you can form no adequate idea of +the effect of those endless arches, of the exquisite carving in stone, +of the flowers, strange figures, and in short every wild, every +grotesque thing that you can or cannot imagine. Well has it been called +a great poem in stone,—such grace, such aspiration, such power, such +harmony. O, it was worth crossing the Atlantic, that first impression. +</P> + +<P> +After the service, I took a guide and went all over this miracle of +beauty and genius, and read the inscriptions and saw the curiosities. +</P> + +<P> +During my second stay in Liverpool, my friend took me to Chester, that +wonderful old city, just on the borders of Wales. If you can imagine +the front rooms of the second story of a row of houses taken out, and +in their place a floor put over the lower story and a ceiling under the +upper story, and shops in the back rooms, you will form some idea of +Chester. All the streets, nearly, are made in this way. The carts and +horses go in the narrow streets between the houses, but foot passengers +walk in this curious sort of piazzas, put into the houses instead of +being added to them. The most elegant shops are here in these back +rooms, and you walk for whole long streets under cover, with the +dwellings of the inhabitants over your heads and under your feet. Often +the upper story shelves over the third, so that you almost wonder why +the house does not tumble over. +</P> + +<P> +A friend, whom I had never seen, did me the honor to invite me to her +hospitable mansion in Manchester. It was indeed a great privilege to be +allowed to make a part of the family circle, and sit with them by their +fireside, and be made to feel at home so far from one's native land; +and this I experienced all the time I was in England. +</P> + +<P> +I was prepared for the appearance of Manchester. So I was not +astonished at the number of tall chimneys, nor at the quantity of smoke +that issued from them. And I could quite enter into the feelings of the +friend who told me that nothing was more melancholy than to see a clear +atmosphere over the town; the blacker it looked the more prosperity was +indicated, and the more cause for rejoicing. +</P> + +<P> +My kind friend took me to one of the great print factories. My +principal wish for going was to see how the factory people looked, +whether they seemed well and happy. I observed them; they were well +dressed, and were cheerful in their appearance. There were a few +children employed, who looked healthy and happy. There was at this +factory a reading room, nicely warmed and perfectly comfortable, where +the workman, by subscribing a penny or two a week, could obtain the +right to spend his leisure hours and see the periodicals and +newspapers. Each one had a vote in deciding what these papers should +be, as they were paid for by the subscription money of the laborers. +The proprietors paid a certain sum towards the support of the reading +room. +</P> + +<P> +Of course, seeing one prosperous factory and the fortunate workmen in +it, in Manchester, cannot enable one to form any adequate judgment of +the condition of the working people. +</P> + +<P> +I visited the Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb, which appeared to me to +have an admirable teacher. One of his best aids is a young man who was +his pupil. The teacher desired me to ask of this young man the meaning +of some word that had an abstract meaning. I asked him what he +understood by intelligence. He put his hand to his head, and thought +for some time, before he attempted to reply; then he nearly covered the +slate with his definition. He evidently saw the difference between +intelligence and learning or knowledge, but had to use many words to +express his idea; but I thought he had as clear a thought as any of us. +After he had given the best definition he could, he added, "There is +another meaning to the word: it means news, sometimes." +</P> + +<P> +There was, at this Asylum, a little girl, about twelve years old, who +was blind, as well as deaf and dumb. She was a very interesting child +from her countenance and manner, apart from her infirmity. Her face was +far more beautiful than Laura Bridgman's; her head good, but not so +fine at present, not so well developed. Her eyes were closed, and her +long, dark lashes rested on her cheeks with a mournful expression. The +teacher was just getting into communication with her, but had to make +many efforts, such as pressing her head, her heart, and shoulders, as +well as her hands. When he tried to tell her that Laura Bridgman, in +America, was in the same state that she was, and that she had learned a +great deal, and had sent her love to all the deaf and dumb, by a lady +who had come to see her, she raised her head, and looked as if trying +to see or hear, and then put out her hand. I took it, and then told the +teacher how Dr. Howe and others communicated with Laura Bridgman by +moving their fingers, and making certain impressions on the palm of her +hand. As I told him, I imitated the motions with my fingers on the palm +of her hand. She gave one of those peculiar screams which Laura +Bridgman does, at times, when she is excited, and her white face glowed +with pleasure and strong emotion. +</P> + +<P> +Her teacher told me I had put myself into communication with her; but +my heart ached to think I could do no more. +</P> + +<P> +In a few moments we left her. She told her teacher to tell me to give +her love to Laura Bridgman, and sat down again upon her little bench, +in the solitude of her perpetual silence and blindness. +</P> + +<P> +When I had been over the institution, and seen the admirable work of +the inmates, and was about leaving, I had to pass near this lovely +child again. When I was within three or four feet of her, she put out +her hand and took hold of me. It seemed as if she knew me from the rest +of the party, after I had thus by chance spoken to her imprisoned soul. +No one will wonder that I could not keep the tears out of my eyes. +</P> + +<P> +I visited another collection of children, who might have been still +more unfortunate than these but for the wise charity of the people of +Manchester. The Swinton Union School is a large, noble building, in the +outskirts of Manchester. The school is a fine looking place, surrounded +by nice gardens and grounds. It can contain one thousand children; +there were then in it six hundred and fifty. They have a fine, large, +well-ventilated school room. They have a large place to wash +themselves, with a sufficient number of separate, fixed basins, +arranged to admit and let off water, a towel and piece of soap for each +child; and they are obliged to wash their faces and hands three times a +day. There are great tanks where they are all bathed twice a week. +</P> + +<P> +They have a fine infant school for the little ones, most admirably +managed. The large girls are taught to wash, and iron, and do +housework. The boys are, some of them, taught the tailor's trade, and +some the shoemaker's, and others the baker's. It was a pretty sight to +see the little fellows sitting on their legs, making their own jackets +and trousers, and laughing together, and looking as happy as boys can +look; and just so with the little shoemakers. They work only four +hours, and then another set take their place. The room was large and +airy, and perfectly comfortable. I saw the clothes they had made, all +nicely pressed and put away in their storerooms, ready for wear. So +with the shoes; they mended their old shoes and their old clothes +themselves. +</P> + +<P> +I saw those of the children who were not at work, at play; for the +school hours were past. I saw their happy faces, their clean, tidy +clothes, and their long rows of nice, clean beds, for I went into every +part of the house, and a beautiful sight it all was. In the kitchen +some girls were making up the bread, and most excellent bread it was, +and a good, large, thick slice there was for every one. I saw the +dining hall, and all that belonged to that part of the concern, and all +was just what it ought to be. +</P> + +<P> +Now, you must know that these are, all, the children of +paupers—children who have no earthly parents, children that the public +must take care of, or they would live or die in the streets. All the +different parishes have erected this building, and put in the best +teachers, and furnished it as I have related to you, and there placed +these poor children, who were growing up in vice and misery. Here they +are taught habits of order, industry, and obedience, and learn a way of +supporting themselves honestly, and are kept till they are old enough +to be put apprentice to some good person who will treat them well. So, +instead of six hundred and fifty ignorant, reckless vagrants, the +community receives that number of well-instructed, well-brought-up +individuals, who can support themselves decently and respectably. +</P> + +<P> +An English country home, where education, high breeding, easy +circumstances, old trees, room enough, and a merry family circle, make +life beautiful—this had always been one of my dreams of earthly +happiness. All this was realized at Mrs. C—'s, at Chobham, where I +stopped for a visit on my way to London. +</P> + +<P> +Every day my kind friends devised some little plan for my amusement, +beyond the constant pleasure of the every-day life. One day they took +me to Windsor, which, you know, is one of the queen's country palaces. +We approached it through the famous avenue of elms in the park. The +effect of the castle, seen through that long, long vista, is very fine. +The English elm, though not so graceful as ours, is more grand and +stately, and better for architectural effects. There were many deer in +the park, which added much to its beauty. At last we were at the +castle; it is a fine building, but would be far more picturesque in +ruins than in its present perfect state. We went first into the chapel; +this is exquisitely beautiful. The Gothic clusters of pillars springing +up from the floor rise unbroken to the roof, and spread out like palm +trees. The emblazoned coats of arms of the knights of the garter +hanging all around on the pillars of the chapel, the beautiful carved +ornaments like lace-work, and many other rare and lovely objects, make +the royal chapel very magnificent. There was a horrible old woman who +went screeching about the room, showing the pictures, &c. She was +particularly apropos in calling us, when she found we were Americans, +into a corner of the chapel to show us the tomb of Lord Harcourt, who +is there represented receiving the sword of some unfortunate American +general, and shrieked out with her cracked voice, "I thought this might +interest you." +</P> + +<P> +After feasting my eyes long enough upon the chapel, I went into the +castle, and joined one of those batches of human beings which are +driven through the state apartments by the guide. The rooms are +magnificent. One contains a beautiful collection of pictures by +Vandyke. We saw the grand malachite vase, presented to Victoria by the +Emperor of Russia, large enough to hold one or two men. After seeing +the rooms, we ascended the tower, whence is a fine view. We then walked +on the terrace, and went to join the rest of our party, who had gone +before us to the hotel. +</P> + +<P> +We then went to get a look at the famous Eton school, about a mile +distant. The Eton boys amused me much. They go there very young, and +remain there a long while, till they are ready to enter the +universities. Their dress indicates their advancement in age and +standing. First comes a jacket, then a little suspicion of a tail, +which gradually lengthens and widens as maturity comes on, till, at +last, it is a perfect tail coat. I saw specimens in these various +stages of growth. +</P> + +<P> +After one of the happiest weeks that ever mortals passed, I said a +reluctant farewell, and departed for London, where more kind friends, +whom I had never seen, were expecting my arrival. I can now, in my +mind's eye, see all the dear family on the steps or in the hall door, +giving us their parting blessing, and the old comfortable-looking +gentlemanly butler arranging my luggage. One of the dear family +accompanied me to the railroad, and saw me fairly on my way to London. +</P> + +<P> +In London we again enjoyed the great pleasure of being received like +old friends, not heard there truly divine music. There is no describing +and no forgetting the effect of one of those sublime religious strains +that seem to burst forth from you know not where, and swell and grow +fuller and louder, and then more and more distant, and fainter and +fainter, till you think it dying in the distance, and then gush out +with an overwhelming fulness of harmony and beauty. One feels as if he +would hear such strains at the hour of death. +</P> + +<P> +Our next object was St. Paul's. How different! how very different! In a +Gothic building, you think that the artist, who designed it, had in +mind the idea of the solemn forest where the crossing branches produce +all those beautiful lines and forms, which so delight your eye, and +where the dim, mysterious light awakens and accords with the religious +sentiment; but the effect of the great dome, which suggests the open +sky, is entirely opposite. The effect upon your mind of standing in the +middle of St. Paul's is very impressive; but what moved me most was the +sound of the people without the walls. No one of our party spoke, and +the noise of the busy multitude without was like the waves of the +ocean. I had heard the voice of many waters while coming over the +Atlantic, and there is no exaggeration; it is just such a sound, such +an ebbing and flowing, and yet such a full and constant roar, as the +waves make after continued high winds. It was truly sublime, this +concentrated sound of this living multitude of human beings, these +breathings and heavings of the heart of the mighty monster, London. +</P> + +<P> +We were shown all over the cathedral; we first ascended to the inside +gallery, and walked around, looking down upon the whole interior; we +then visited the clock, and we heard and felt the quiver of its +tremendous voice. We next entered the famous whispering gallery, which +is made around the base of the dome inside. The faintest whisper is +heard at the point opposite that whence it comes. Then we went outside, +and walked some time around the dome, gazing about with great delight. +Then we ascended to the Golden Gallery, as it is called from the fact +that the balustrade is gilded. It runs around the top of the dome. From +here, you see London all spread out like a map before you,—its towers, +its spires, all its multitudinous abodes, lie beneath your eye. One +little thing remained. The ball was yet above us. The gentlemen of our +party went up various perpendicular ladders, and at last pulled +themselves through a small hole into the ball. There is room, I think, +there for a dozen people, if well packed, not to stand, walk, or sit, +however; these things the nature of the place forbids. It is a strange +feeling, they say, to crouch in this little apartment and hear the wind +roaring and shaking the golden cross above. The whole ball shakes +somewhat, and by a sudden movement one can produce quite a perceptible +motion. +</P> + +<P> +We descended the infinity of stairs, and entered the crypt, as it is +called, under the church. There were many grand tombs there. Nelson's +occupies the centre, and is a fine work. But what impressed me most was +the tomb of Sir Christopher Wren himself; a simple tablet marks his +tomb, with this inscription, which is repeated above in the nave:— +</P> + +<P CLASS="poem"> + Subtus conditur<BR> + Hujus Ecclesias et Urbis Conditor,<BR> + CHRISTOPHERUS WREN;<BR> + Qui vixit annos ultra nonaginta,<BR> + Non sibi, sed bono publico.<BR> + Lector, si monumentum requiris,<BR> + Circumspice.<BR> + Obiit 25 Feb. MDCCXXIII., aetat. XCI.<BR> +</P> + +<P> +We subjoin a translation of this inscription for our young friends:— +</P> + +<P> +"Underneath lies buried Christopher Wren, the builder of this church +and city; who lived beyond the age of ninety years, not for himself, +but for the public good.—Reader, if you ask for his monument, look +around you.—He died on the 25th of February, 1723, aged 91." +</P> + +<P> +He is called the builder of the city, as well as of the church; for Sir +Christopher Wren was the architect of more than fifty of the churches +in London. +</P> + +<P> +One morning, our friend, Miss S., was kind enough to accompany us to +Greenwich, where, you know, is the Hospital for disabled sailors of the +British navy. The day was warm and lovely, like what we call the Indian +summer in America. We took an omnibus to London Bridge; from thence we +proceeded by railway, and in a few minutes were in Greenwich. We +entered the magnificent old Park, and wandered about for a long time, +to our hearts' content, among the venerable old trees, admiring the +graceful deer that were enjoying themselves all around us. At last we +came to the top of a charming hill, where we sat down to rest and look +at the river. Several of the sailors had arranged spy glasses of +various sizes for the accommodation of visitors, and for the good to +themselves of a few pence. We patronized one of these, and then +descended to the Hospital, which is the main object of interest. It was +just time for the old sailors' dinner, and we went into one of their +dining rooms, where there were about three hundred seated at an +excellent meal, plain, but wholesome and plentiful. A very pleasant +sight it was; they were chatting, telling good old stories, and +laughing merrily, and evidently enjoying themselves highly. There were, +at that time, more than seven hundred of these veterans in the +building. Those who chose carried their dinners to their rooms. +</P> + +<P> +The place for the sailors' sleeping rooms was a long hall, with small +rooms on one side and large windows on the other. The rooms were just +large enough for a bed, a bureau, a little table, and, I think, two +chairs. There were shelves around the room, except on the side that +looked into the Hall, where was the door and a window. On these shelves +were ranged little keepsakes, books and various articles of taste, +often beautiful shells; there were hanging up around the rooms profiles +of friends, perhaps the dearest that this life can give us. I could not +help thinking that many a touching story might be told by those silent +but eloquent memorials. We were much amused with looking at a card put +in one of the windows of these little comfortable state rooms, on which +was written these words: "Anti-poke-your-nose-into-other-folks'-business +Society. 5000 Pounds reward annually to any one who will really mind his +own business; with the prospect of an increase of 100 Pounds, if he +shall abstain from poking his nose into other folks' business." We +returned to London in a steamer. +</P> + +<P> +Now you must suppose you are walking with me in Paris, on a bright +Sunday morning in spring. We will go first to the Place Vendome. It is +an oblong square with the corners cut off. The buildings are all of the +same beautiful cream-colored stone, and of the same style of +architecture,—a basement story, very pretty and simple, and upper +stories ornamented with Corinthian pilasters and gilded balconies. +There are high, pointed roofs with pretty luthern windows. The Place is +four hundred and twenty feet by four hundred and fifty. Two large +handsome streets, opposite to each other, the Rue de la Paix, and the +Rue Castiglione, open out of the Place; these alone break the range of +handsome buildings that surround this beautiful spot. In the centre is +the magnificent column, made in imitation of the column of Trajan, and +surmounted by a bronze statue of Napoleon in his military dress. At +first he was placed there in his imperial robes; but when he fell, so +did his statue, and it was melted up to help make an equestrian statue +of Henry IV. In 1833, the present statue was erected; and the people +are very proud of the Little Corporal, as they call him, as he stands +up there, looking over their glorious city, as if born to lead men to +conquest, and to govern the world. Inside the column is a spiral +staircase by which you ascend to the top of the column. You are well +paid for the fatigue of mounting these one hundred and seventy-six +steps, when you get your breath and look down upon Paris glittering in +the sunlight. What pleases me most, however, is the scene immediately +below. All the people are in the streets. Sunday in Paris is a holiday. +Whole families leave work, care,—all their troubles,—and come into +the public places to enjoy themselves. There is no swearing, no +drunkenness, no rudeness, no noise; the old folks seats themselves in +chairs, and the children run about. Some have been to mass, and some +have not, but all are in the spirit of enjoyment. Nothing can be more +enlivening than the aspect of the French people. You cannot resist +their cheerful looks. The appearance of the Place Vendome is truly +enchanting. +</P> + +<P> +Now let us go down, and take a nearer look at what is going on below. +At the foot of the column you will see a group of children collected +round a man with a large basket of little tin carriages which are +constructed in such a way that they will go with the wind on a smooth +place. For some distance round the column is laid the asphaltum +pavement. These little tin carriages run well across this wide +platform; and you might imagine that the tin horses carried them. It is +a pleasant thing to see the delight of the children, and a lesson in +good nature and good manners, to see how carefully all the passers by +turn aside, so as not to interrupt the progress of these pretty toys. +</P> + +<P> +Look up at the beautiful bas reliefs in bronze, on this noble column, +giving the history of so many fierce battles and so much bloodshed, and +at the military hero on the top, and then at these laughing, merry +children at the foot, running after the tin carriages that go with the +wind. Is it not a strange and moving contrast? Does it not tell a story +that all of us hope may be one day true; when war shall belong only to +history, and when peace shall possess the earth? +</P> + +<P> +Around the base of this beautiful column many of those who served under +Bonaparte, or who remember him with affection, hang wreaths and +garlands as expressions of their tender remembrance. This is still +done; these memorials are ever there. At one time this was forbidden by +the government, but to no purpose. At last, an officer was stationed at +the foot of the column with a water engine, and with orders to play it +upon any one who should bring any votive offerings to the fallen hero. +A lady, whose love and admiration could not be so intimidated, came the +next day in her carriage, which she filled with wreaths of flowers, and +stood up in it, and threw wreath after wreath at the foot of the +column, crying out, as each one fell, "Will you play your engine upon +me?" But not a drop of water was sent at her, and she deposited all her +offerings, and went away unharmed. I suppose a Frenchman would sooner +have been shot than have done any thing to quench the enthusiasm of +this heroic woman. +</P> + +<P> +One thing struck me much in Paris, and most agreeably, and that is the +good appearance of the children. This is not confined to the rich; you +will see a very poor woman leading her child, really well dressed. You +never see boys idling in the streets; you never hear them swearing and +quarrelling. If you ask a boy to show you the way, his manner of doing +it would grace a drawing room. I am told that the French are never +severe with their children; that the French nature will not bear it; +that strong excitement makes the children ill; that the law of love is +the only one they will bear. +</P> + +<P> +Stop with me now on our walk, at this little low cart, just by the +sidewalk; it is as you see larger than a common handcart, and much +lower, and on four small wheels; it is full of china, all marked 13 +sous. See how pretty these cups and saucers are. After your looking at +all the pieces, the owner would say, "Bon jour" very kindly to you, if +you took nothing, but we will take this pretty cup and saucer; as a +remembrance of his little cart. As we walk along, we shall see many +others, containing every thing you can imagine. +</P> + +<P> +I bought many things in the streets,—combs, saucepans, +clothes-brushes, &c. Look into this shop window; see these lovely +flowers, and, in the midst of them, a small fountain is playing all the +time to keep them fresh. Look at those immense bunches in the +windows,—of pansies, violets, hyacinths of all colors, ixias, wall +flowers, tulips, geraniums, narcissus; and O, this is not half the +variety of flowers! look into the shop; there are bushels of them and +other flowers, all ranged round the wall; the perfume salutes the most +insensible passer-by; it tells of the songs of birds, and of the +delights of summer time. You cannot resist its influence. Let us go in +and look at the flowers. The person who keeps the shop has the manners +of a lady; she wishes you good morning; and, if you do not behave just +as you would if you entered a lady's parlor, you are set down as an +American or Englishman, who does not know how to behave. When you leave +the shop also, you must remember to say, "Bon jour," or you commit an +offence. How kindly the lady who keeps this flower shop shows us all +her flowers! how she seems to love them, as if they were her children! +We must get a bouquet to show our gratitude for her kindness, though +she would not demand it. At every street corner is a woman with a +basket of violets and evergreens. She offers them in such a pretty way, +taking care that you shall take their perfume. You cannot resist them. +</P> + +<P> +Now, suppose we were taking a walk, some other morning. Before us is +the "Place de la Concorde," all glistening in the spring sunlight. See, +there, in the centre, is the Obelisk—a monument of the time of +Sesostris, King of Egypt, erected by him before the great temple of +Thebes more than three thousand years ago, or fifteen hundred and fifty +years before Christ. This enormous stone, all of one piece, seventy-two +feet high, seven feet and a half square at the base, of red granite, +and covered with hieroglyphic inscriptions, was given to the French +government by the Viceroy of Egypt, in consideration of an armed and +naval establishment which that government had helped him to form at +Alexandria. Eight hundred men struggled for three months in Egypt, in +the midst of all manner of hardships, building a road and constructing +machinery to drag the obelisk, completely cased in wood, down to the +Nile. It cost two millions of francs to place this monument where it +now stands. This was done with great pomp and ceremony in October, +1836, the royal family and about a hundred and fifty thousand other +people looking on. +</P> + +<P> +Now try to place yourself in imagination at the foot of this great +Obelisk of Luxor, mounted up as it is upon a single block of gray +granite of France, covered all over with gilded engraving of the +machinery used in placing the great thing where it is. The Place de la +Concorde itself, which surrounds you, is eight sided; and if the +excavations around it were filled with water, it would be an island, +seven hundred feet or so across, and connected with the main land by +four elegant little bridges. But instead of water, these "diggings" are +beautifully filled with flower gardens. At the eight corners of the +island are eight pavilions, as they are called; or great watch houses, +of elegant architecture, occupied by the military or the police, as +occasion requires. Each of these forms the base of a gigantic statue, +representing one of the principal cities of France. It is as if the +whole eight were sitting in friendly council for the good of Paris. How +beautiful they are, with their grand expressionless faces, and their +graceful attitudes, and their simple antique drapery. They are all +sitting in their mural crowns,—the fortified cities on cannons, the +commercial ones on bales of goods. Strasburg alone seems full of life. +She has her arm akimbo, as if braving Germany, to which she once +belonged. Look, north from the Obelisk, up the Rue de la Concorde, and +the splendid church of the Madeleine bounds your sight. On your right +are the Gardens of the Tuilleries; on your left are the Champs Elysees; +behind you is the Chamber of Deputies. Both before and behind you, in +the Place itself, you have a splendid fountain, each being a round +basin, fifty feet in diameter, in which stands a smaller basin, with a +still smaller above it, supported and surrounded by bronze figures of +rivers, seas, genii of fruits, flowers, and fisheries, and all manner +of gods of commerce and navigation, all spouting water like mad. +</P> + +<P> +See the famous marble horses from Marly. How impatient they look to +break away from the athletic arm which holds them! what life and spirit +they show! how beautiful they are! Take one look now at the Arc de +Triomphe; it is nearly two miles off, but looks very near. Now turn; +and directly opposite, at some distance, you see what James Lowell +calls the "Front door of the Tuilleries." +</P> + +<P> +The gardens are full of beautiful children. Their mothers or nurses are +sitting under the trees, while the children run about at will. There +are thousands playing at ball, driving hoops, jumping ropes, shouting, +laughing, merry as children will be and ought to be. +</P> + +<P> +Let us take a stroll in the Champs Elysees. You have never seen any +thing so beautiful, so captivating, as the scene. It seems like +enchantment. All the world is here—young and old, poor and rich, +fashionable and unfashionable. All for their amusement. Let us see what +this group are looking at so earnestly. A number of wooden ponies are +wheeled round and round, and each has a rosy-cheeked boy upon it. Here +is another in which they go in boats; another in chairs. This amusement +costs only two or three sous apiece to the children. The parents or the +nurses stand around enjoying it almost as much as the children. Let us +walk on. See that little fountain gleaming through the tender green of +the young leaves as you see them in the pretty wood that forms a +background to the picture. All along in the road you observe fine +equipages of all sorts standing in waiting, while the gay world, or the +poor invalids whom they brought to this place of enchantment, are +walking about or sitting in chairs, courting health and amusement. Here +is something still prettier than any thing you have seen—a beautiful +little carriage that can hold four children and a driver, drawn by four +white goats, with black horns and beards. +</P> + +<P> +The French are peculiarly kind to animals. No law is necessary in +France for the protection of animals from the cruelty of their masters. +You meet men and women, very respectably dressed, leading dogs with the +greatest care; and in the fashionable drives, every tenth carriage (it +seemed to me) had a dog lying on the seat, or standing on his hind +legs, looking out of the window. A friend told me that, when present at +a grand review where there was a great crowd, she saw a woman, who +could not get near enough to see the show, hold up her dog over the +heads of the people, that he might at least have the pleasure of seeing +what was going on. +</P> + +<P> +I must tell you about the ceremony of making an archbishop, which we +had the good fortune to witness. It took place at Notre Dame. +</P> + +<P> +The nave of the church was full. Around the altar, all the priests and +dignitaries of the church were seated; the officiating archbishop in a +high seat, and an empty chair by his side for the new archbishop when +finished and prepared for the honor. All the priests were in full +dress. Their garments were stiff with gold and silver. My eyes were +dazzled with their splendor. +</P> + +<P> +Perfect silence prevailed, and the ceremony commenced. The priest, who +was to be made into a bishop, had all sorts of things done to him. He +knelt, he prayed, he was prayed over, he was read to, he had hands laid +upon him, he was crossed; incense was thrown up, the organ played, and +all the priests and bishops knelt and rose from their knees, and knelt +and rose again, and again; high mass was said, and the show was very +remarkable. +</P> + +<P> +Once the poor mortal, who was to be consecrated, knelt, and a large +book was put upon him, like a saddle. Finally they took him and tied +napkins upon his arms and his neck, and then led him to a knot of +priests a little out of my sight. In a few moments, he reappeared with +all his canonicals on, except the mitre. Now he was brilliant indeed, +loaded with gold ornaments, stiff with splendor. His face, I noticed, +was very red, and he looked weary. I did not quite understand the +tumbled towels; whether these were to catch the consecrating oil that +they poured on his head, or whether they were emblematic of the filthy +rags of this world, which he laid aside for the new and shining +garments of perfect holiness, I could not find out. Now the new +archbishop knelt again before the old archbishop, and the old one put +the mitre upon the head of the new one. Then the old archbishop +embraced and kissed the new, and after that all the other bishops, who, +as the French say, assisted at the ceremony, performed the same act on +both sides of his face. After this, the new archbishop and his holy +brother walked side by side, followed by all the other bishops and +priests, down from the altar among the audience; and the new dignitary +gave his blessing to all the people. +</P> + +<P> +I wish I could carry you with me to the palace at Versailles. The +magnificent equestrian statue of Louis XIV., which you can see afar off +as you approach, the noble statues in the grand court yard, and the +ancient regal aspect of the whole scene, with its countless fountains +and its seven miles of pictures, are beyond all description. As I stood +lost in wonder and admiration, my friend, who introduced me to this +world of wonders, pointed to a window in one corner of the building; +there, she said, Louis XVI. passed much of his time making locks; and +there, from that balcony, Marie Antoinette appeared with her children +and the king, when she addressed the wild, enraged Parisian mob. We saw +the private apartments of the unhappy queen, and the small door through +which she escaped from the fury of the soldiers. We went to see the +little Trianon which she had built for her amusement; a lovely place it +is. Here she tried to put aside state and the queen, and be a happy +human being. +</P> + +<P> +Here Marie Antoinette had a laiterie, a milk house, where she is said +to have made butter and cheese. Here she caused to be built twelve +cottages after the Swiss fashion, and filled them with poor families +whom she tried to make happy. +</P> + +<P> +We went into her dairy. It was fit for a queen to make butter in. In +the centre of the beautifully shaped room was a large oblong, white +marble table; on each side were places for admitting the water, and +under them beautiful marble reservoirs in the shape of shells, and, +underneath, large slabs of white marble. All is still, all so chaste, +so beautiful, all as it once was, and she, the poor sufferer, what a +story of blighted hope and bitter sorrow! See her the night before her +trial, which she knew would end in death, mending her own old shoes, +that she might appear more decently. The solemn realities of life had +come to her unsought. +</P> + +<P> +I left Paris and travelled through Belgium to Cologne. The day I +arrived was some holiday; so there was grand mass in the cathedral, and +such music!—the immense building was filled with the sound. The full +organ was played, and some of the priest singers took part. Never did +music so overcome me. The sublime piece,—as I thought of Beethoven's, +surely of some great composer,—performed in this glorious old +cathedral, was beyond all that I had ever dreamt of. It seems to me +that I might think of it again in my dying hour with delight. I felt as +if it created a new soul in me. Such gushes of sweet sound, such joyful +fulness of melody, such tender breathings of hope, and love, and peace, +and then such floods of harmony filling all those sublime arches, +ascending to the far distant roof and running along through the dim +aisles—O, one must hear, to have an idea of the effect of such music +in such a place. +</P> + +<P> +At Bonn we took the steamer; the day was perfect, and our pleasure was +full. You must see one of these fine old castles on the top of the +beautiful hills—you must yourself see the blue sky through its ruined +arches—you must see the vines covering every inch of the mountain that +is not solid rock, and witness the lovely effect of the gray rock +mingling with the tender green—you must hear the wild legend of the +owner of the castle in his day of power, and feel the passage of time +and civilization that has changed his fastness of strength and rapine +to a beautiful adornment of this scene of peace and plenty, its glories +all humbled, its terrors all passed away, and its great and only value +the part it plays in a picture, and the lesson it preaches, in its +decay, of the progress of justice and humanity. +</P> + +<P> +From Coblentz to Bingen is the glory of the Rhine scenery; old castles +looking down over these lovely hills covered with vines and cornfields; +little villages nestled in between them; beautiful spires of the +prettiest churches you can imagine, looking as if they gathered the +houses of the villages under their protecting wings. Your soul, in +short, is full of unutterable delight. It was a sort of relief to laugh +at the legend as we passed the little island on which is the Mouse +Tower, so named from the history of Bishop Hatto, who it is said was +eaten up by rats because he refused corn in a time of scarcity to the +starving poor, when he had a plenty rotting in his storehouses. +</P> + +<P> +When I was obliged at last to turn away from all these glories, the +words of Byron were in my heart:— +</P> + +<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%"> + +<P CLASS="poem"> + Adieu to thee again; a vain adieu;<BR> + There can be no farewell to scenes like thine.<BR> + The mind is colored by thy every hue,<BR> + And if reluctantly the eyes resign<BR> + Their cherished gaze upon thee, lovely Rhine,<BR> + 'Tis with the thankful glance of parting praise.<BR> + More mighty spots may rise, more glaring shine,<BR> + But none unite in one attracting maze<BR> + The brilliant, fair, and soft, the glories of old days,<BR> + The negligently grand, the fruitful bloom<BR> + Of summer ripeness, the white cities' sheen,<BR> + The rolling stream, the precipice's gloom,<BR> + The forest's growth, and Gothic walls between<BR> + The wild rocks shaped as they had turrets been,<BR> + In mockery of man's art."<BR> +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR><BR> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Travellers' Tales, by Eliza Lee Follen + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELLERS' TALES *** + +***** This file should be named 4030-h.htm or 4030-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/3/4030/ + +Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. 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